2017-07-01

Cristoph - Alone


you know, there arent many reasons, that you should ever be, "alone,", unless your some kind of nutter or creeper, then you deserve, all the alone time you get, but there are places, left in the world, that exist in a kind of semi permanent isolation, it can easily be done, of course, it comes down, to clever choices of locations, and there are more hidden places left, in the world unseen, by human eyes for millennia, they hide in little bubbles, of reality, call them pocket universes, if it helps, (technical term's pha all it serves to do, is withhold knowledge, from others), well not so little any more, there are a few of these invisible islands, there are a few very mysterious ones, i remember in finding, a first edition and in the inside cover it had a part, of a co ordinates, and when held to the light it contained, a strange water mark, an eye in a triangle, and there are a few more books, like this that point to various hidden places, removed from satellite maps, some are, being searched for, and others occasionally pop up, in unexpected ways like, Brasil, also known as Hy-Brasil, or several other variants, is a phantom island, said to lie in the Atlantic Ocean west of Ireland (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lF8j9FVPG_w), (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lF8j9FVPG_w), Brasil, also known as Hy-Brasil or several other variants is a phantom island said to lie in the Atlantic Ocean west of Ireland. Irish myths described it as cloaked in mist except for one day every seven years, when it became visible but still could not be reached, The etymology of the names Brasil and Hy-Brasil is unknown, but in Irish tradition it is thought to come from the Irish Uí Breasail (meaning "descendants (i.e., clan) of Breasal"), one of the ancient clans of northeastern Ireland. cf. Old Irish: Í: island; bres: beauty, worth, great, mighty.[Nautical charts identified an island called "Bracile" west of Ireland in the Atlantic Ocean as far back as 1325, in a portolan chart by Angelino Dulcert. Later it appeared as Insula de Brasil in the Venetian map of Andrea Bianco (1436), attached to one of the larger islands of a group of islands in the Atlantic. This was identified for a time with the modern island of Terceira in the Azores.

Catalan chart of about 1480 labels two islands "Illa de brasil", one to the south west of Ireland (where the mythical place was supposed to be) and one south of "Illa verde" or Greenland.
On maps the island was shown as being circular, often with a central strait or river running east-west across its diameter. Despite the failure of attempts to find it, this appeared regularly on maps lying south west of Galway Bay until 1865, by which time it was called Brasil Rock.

Searches for the island[edit]

Expeditions left Bristol in 1480 and 1481 to search for the island; and a letter written by Pedro de Ayala, shortly after the return of John Cabot (from his expedition in 1497), reports that land found by Cabot had been "discovered in the past by the men from Bristol who found Brasil".[7]
In 1674 a Captain John Nisbet claimed to have seen the island when on a journey from France to Ireland, stating that the island was inhabited by large black rabbits and a magician who lived alone in a stone castle, yet the character and the story were a literary invention by Irish author Richard Head.[8] Roderick O'Flaherty in A Chorographical Description of West or H-Iar Connaught (1684) tells us "There is now living, Morogh O'Ley (Murrough Ó Laoí), who imagines he was personally on O'Brasil for two days, and saw out of it the iles of Aran, Golamhead [by Lettermullen], Irrosbeghill, and other places of the west continent he was acquainted with."
Hy-Brasil has also been identified with Porcupine Bank, a shoal in the Atlantic Ocean about 200 kilometres (120 mi) west of Ireland[9] and discovered in 1862. As early as 1870 a paper was read to the Geological Society of Ireland suggesting this identification.[10] The suggestion has since appeared more than once, e.g., in an 1883 edition of Notes and Queries[11] and in various twentieth-century publications, one of the more recent being Graham Hancock's book Underworld: The Mysterious Origins of Civilization.there are more places out there than you may think, (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kn2tYSiWo3U), (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MrGtg6kF30s), (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zElh9JPGMAk), (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=egT7Y8ZNV6w), (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y8iVE8f0XHc), you may want to check some of those out as, standardz, hahahahahaha, :) #edio

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