About This Book
The author argues that Welsh navigators led by Prince Madoc reached the Americas around 1170 A.D., and compiles historical, linguistic, and anecdotal evidence in support. He outlines Welsh migrations and language roots, surveys accounts from clergy and colonial officials, and examines reports of Welsh-speaking or Welsh-descended Native communities, including comparative place-name and cultural observations. Chapters review narratives by Morgan Jones and Charles Beatty, consider claims linking Welsh blood to various indigenous peoples, explore signs such as Freemasonry parallels, and note Welsh involvement during the American Revolution, aiming to establish a continuous Welsh influence predating later European arrivals.
About the Author
You May Also Like
6 picks
Germany in War Time: What an American Girl Saw and Heard
by Mary Ethel McAuley
The Colored Man in the Methodist Episcopal Church
by L. M. Hagood
Christmas under three flags
by Mary Emily Donelson Wilcox
The Life of Cesare Borgia
by Rafael Sabatini
My Year of the Great War
by Frederick Palmer
Noted Speeches of Abraham Lincoln, Including the Lincoln-Douglas Debate
by Abraham Lincoln