Monday, August 15, 2016

A SIMILAR HISTORY TO THE LIBRARY OF ALEXANDRIA

history channel documentary 2016  The parallels between the "sack" of the Library of Alexandria and the close loss of The Kolbrin Bible are important to researchers, analysts and scholars alike.Founded toward the start of the third century BCE, the Library of Alexandria was the biggest on the planet around then. It was blazed amid Julius Caesar's intrusion of Alexandria (48 - 47 BCE). As per the Roman Philosopher and creator, Aulus Gellius (123 - 169) the "sack" of Alexandria devastated 700,000 parchments; the melancholy few that survived just whet our second thoughts over this shocking misfortune. Strangely, the same destiny almost occured for The Kolbrin Bible.

The Britain Book, the last book in The Kolbrin Bible, expresses that Joseph of Arimathea, awesome uncle to Jesus Christ, carried the Egyptian Scrolls with him when he brought the family and companions of Jesus from Judea to Britain. Trustworthy sources express that Joseph established Glastonbury Abbey in Somerset County, in the southwest of Britain, where the parchments were put away to safekeeping. In any case, a great part of The Kolbrin was lost to a fire related crime fire in 1184. Fortunately, a portion of the first original copies were cut into flimsy bronze sheets, and put away in copper-clad boxes. These bronze sheets got to be known as The Bronzebook of Britain and were later consolidated with another accumulation, The Coelbook, to end up The Kolbrin Bible.

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