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3rd April 2021 16:59
Link to Post #1
Atlantic Voyages by Europeans pre-1300
PART ONE (OF TWO)
In order to preserve the fallacy that Europeans could not have been in North America in the 14th century because to do so challenges the Columbus fiction, it is necessary for academic historians to "overlook" certain pointers. Recent scientific investigations by historians who have no interest in Columbus have provided much to take into account however.
What we already know is that in about 1250 AD, a Viking sea-going boat arrived at Dieppe in France from the island of Marajo, Brazil, carrying information and precise maps made in connection with the felling and smuggling of brazil-wood tree trunks from the Amazon. (Jacques de Mahieu, El Rey Vikingo p.174).
In the 13th century, the French Templars would have known all about Dieppe and the secret timber trade and perhaps they would have been curious to know, if they did not know already, how far the world might extend across the sea west from France.
It is self-evident from the Dieppe 1250 map alone that Viking explorers had been on the coast of Brazil for at least one or more centuries, and so academics are bound to concede as a historical fact that the Vikings might have been on the coast of Brazil to the south, and also on the coast of Nova Scotia to the north, but never, ever, anywhere in between.
In conclusion, PART TWO.
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3rd April 2021 17:08
Link to Post #2