Only one account of Lebanon’s mythical
origins has been left to posterity, and this is the work of Sanchoniatho, a
Phoenician historian born either in Berytus (Beirut) or Tyre on the Lebanese
coast just before the Trojan war, c.1200 BC. He wrote in his native language,
taking his information mostly from city archives and temple records.
In all he compiled nine books, which were
translated into Greek by Philo, a native of Byblos on the Levant coast, who
lived during the reign of the emperor Hadrian (reigned AD 117-138). Fragments
of his translation were fortunately preserved by an early Christian writer
named Eusebius (AD 264-340).44 Some scholars look upon Sanchoniatho’s
writings as spurious, but others see them as preserving archaic myths of the
earliest Phoenicians.
In his long discourse on the cosmogony of
the world and the history of the earliest inhabitants of Lebanon, Sanchoniatho
cites Byblos as Lebanon’s first city.45 It was founded, he says, by
the god Cronus (or Saturn), the son of Ouranus (Uranus or Coelus, who gave his
name to Coele-Syria, ie. Syria), and grandson of Elioun (Canaanite El) and his
wife Beruth (who gave her name to the city-port of Berytus or Beirut).
Sanchoniatho goes on to say that the demi-gods
of Byblos possessed "light and other more complete ships", implying
they were a sea-faring nation. He also states that chief among these people
was Taautus, "who invented the writing of the first letters; him the
Egyptians called Thoor, the Alexandrians Thoyth, and the Greeks Hermes."46
He was Cronus’ "secretary", from whom the god gained advice and
assistance on all matters.
A confusing sequence of events are
described for this period, during which time Cronus is constantly at war with
his father Ouranus. There are also marriages, intermarriages and incestuous
relationships which produce a multitude of characters, many of whom act as
symbols for the expansion of this mythical culture around the Levant and into
Asia Minor (modern Turkey). For instance, there is Sidon, the daughter of
Pontus, who "by the excellence of her singing first invented the hymns of
odes or praises".47 Like Byblos, Sidon was a Phoenician city-port
on the Lebanese coast, while Pontus was an ancient kingdom situated on the
Black Sea in what is today north-eastern Turkey.
Finally, it is said that having visited
"the country of the south" Cronus "gave all Egypt to the god
Taautus, that it might be his kingdom",48 implying that he was its
founder.
Sanchoniatho tells us that knowledge of
the age of the demi-gods of Byblos was handed down for generation after
generation until it was given into the safe-keeping of "the son of
Thabion... the first Hierophant of all among the Phoenicians".49
He in turn delivered them up to the priests and prophets until they came into
the possession of one Isiris, "the inventor of the three letters, the
brother of Chna who is called the first Phoenician."50
There is much more in Sanchoniatho’s
mythical history, but the basic message is that a high culture with sea-faring
capabilities established itself at Byblos before gradually expanding into
other parts of the eastern Mediterranean. More curious is his assertion that
the god Taautus, the Phoenician form of the Egyptian Thoth or Tehuti and the
Greek Hermes, was some kind of founder of the Egyptian Pharaonic culture which
began c.3100 BC.
Was Sanchoniatho’s work simply fable,
based on the Phoenicians’ own maritime achievements, or might it contain
clues concerning an actual high culture that existed in the Levant during
prehistoric times?
Journey to Byblos
Certainly, the implied link between Egypt
and Byblos is real enough. In the legend of Osiris and Isis, as recorded by
the Greek biographer Plutarch (AD 50-120), the evil god Set tricks Osiris into
a wooden coffin which is sealed before being set adrift on the sea. It is
carried by the waves until it finally reaches Byblos, where it comes to rest
in the midst of a tamarisk bush, which immediately grows to become a
magnificent tree of great size. Inside it the coffin containing the body of
Osiris remains encased. The king of that country, on seeing the great tree,
has it cut down and made into "a pillar for the roof of his house".51
Isis learns of what has happened to her husband and is able to attain entry
into the palace as a handmaiden to one of the king’s sons. Each night she
takes on the form of a swallow to fly around the pillar. After a fashion she
convinces the queen to give her the pillar, which is then opened to reveal the
body of Osiris.52
Byblos is the clear name used in
Plutarch’s account, but for some reason noted Egyptologists such as Sir E.A.
Wallis-Budge have seen fit to identify this place-name with a location named
Byblos in the Nile Delta, even though Plutarch himself adds that wood from the
pillar, which was afterwards restored by Isis and given to the queen,
"is, to this day, preserved in the temple of Isis, and worshipped by the
people of Byblos".53 In my opinion, setting this story in the Nile
Delta makes no sense whatever, especially as the coffin was said to have been
"carried (to Byblos) by the sea".54
Lucian, the celebrated Greek writer (AD
120-200), spoke of the Isis-Osiris legend and connected it specifically with
Byblos in Lebanon, adding that "I will tell you why this story seems
credible. Every year a human head floats from Egypt to Byblos". This
"head" apparently took seven days to reach its destination. It never
went off course and came via a "direct route" to Byblos. Lucian
claimed that this once yearly event actually happened when he himself was in
Byblos, for as he records "I myself saw the head in this city".55
What exactly Lucian witnessed, and what
was really behind this head tradition is utterly unfathomable, particularly as
Lucian states that the head he saw was made of "Egyptian papyrus".56
In Christian times a St Kyrillos also apparently witnessed the event, but said
that "what was borne towards him by the wind looked like a small
boat".57 All that can be said with any certainty is that this
peculiar tradition appeared to preserve some kind age-old twinning between
Egypt and Byblos, perhaps during the mythical age of the gods, the Zep Tepi,
or First Time. As has been ably demonstrated by recent works from Hancock,
Bauval et al, this believed mythical age, when gods ruled the earth,
appears to have been an actual stage of human development pre-dating Pharaonic
Egypt by many thousands of years.58
Yet how might this new-found knowledge of
the relationship between Egypt and Byblos relate to Baalbek?
Firstly there appears to have been a
strong link between Isis-Osiris legend and the mountains north-west of Baalbek.
It was said that Isis took "refuge" (presumably at the point in the
story when the king and queen of Byblos discover she is daily incinerating
their child on a blazing fire!) in the lake of Apheca, the ancient name for
Lake Yammouneh some 32km distance from Baalbek, "and thus lived in
Lebanon", or so recorded the Baalbek archaeologist and historian Michel
M. Alouf.59
The more obvious answer, however, appears
to be an apparent twinning that existed between Heliopolis in Egypt and
Heliopolis in Lebanon. The fifth-century Latin grammarian Macrobius wrote
specifically on this subject in his curious work entitled Saturnalia. He
stated that a "statue" was carried ritually from Heliopolis in Egypt
to its Lebanese name-sake by Egyptian priests. He adds that after its arrival
it was worshipped with Assyrian rather than Egyptian rites.60
Some authors have suggested that this
statue was that of the Egyptian sun-god, presumably Re, while others say it
was a representation of Osiris.61 In addition to this statue story,
there was also a strong tradition, recounted by Macrobius and others, that the
Egyptian priests actually erected a temple at Baalbek dedicated to the worship
of the sun.62 If so, then what special place did this ancient location,
sacred to Baal, hold to the Heliopolitan priesthood in Egypt? Might this
transmission of religious ideas from Egypt to Baalbek have been connected in
some way to the once yearly arrival of an Egyptian ‘head’ at Byblos, and
to Osiris’ fateful journey inside a sealed coffin?
Titans and Elohim
Aside from the suggested link with the
Egyptian culture, the writings of Sanchoniatho throw further light on this
apparent pre-Phoenician culture existing in the Levant during prehistoric
times. He says that the "auxiliaries" or "allies" of
Cronus, presumably in battle, were the "Eloeim" a misspelling of the
term Elohim, the sons of whom (the bene ha-elohim) were said to have
been a divine race that came unto the Daughters of Man who subsequently gave
birth to giant offspring known as the Nephilim, or so records the Book of
Genesis and various uncanonical works of Judaic origin.63
Elsewhere I have put forward the
hypothesis that the Sons of the Elohim — who are equated with the angelic
race known as the Watchers in the apocryphal Book of Enoch, as well as in
recently translated Dead Sea literature — were a race of human beings.
Evidence indicates they established a colony in the mountains of Kurdistan in
south-east Turkey sometime after the cessation of the last Ice Age, before
going on to influence the rise of western civilisation. Their progeny, the
Nephilim, were half-mortal, half-Watcher, and there is tentative evidence in
the writings of Sumer and Akkad to suggest that the accounts of great battles
being fought between mythical kings and demons dressed as bird-men might well
preserve the distorted memories of actual conflicts between mortal armies and
Nephilim-led tribes.64 [See New Dawn nos. 40-42]
Might Cronus — who or whatever he
represents — have employed the services of the bene ha-elohim in the
wars against his father, Ouranus? In Greek mythology the Nephilim are equated
directly with the Titans and gigantes, or ‘giants’, who waged war
on the gods of Olympus and, like Cronus, were the offspring of Ouranus. In
many ancient writings preserved during the early Christian era, stories
concerning the Nephilim, or gibborim, ‘mighty men’, of biblical
tradition are confused with the legends surrounding the Titans and gigantes.
All blend together as one, and not perhaps without reason. The giants and
Titans are said to have helped Nimrod, the ‘mighty hunter’ construct the
fabled Tower of Babel which reached towards heaven. On its destruction by God,
legends speak of how the giant races were dispersed across the bible lands.65
According to an Arabic manuscript found
at Baalbek and quoted by Alouf in his informative History of Baalbek
"after the flood, when Nimrod reigned over Lebanon, he sent giants to
rebuild the fortress of Baalbek, which was so named in honour of Baal, the god
of the Moabites and worshippers of the Sun."66 Local tradition
even asserts that the Tower of Babel was actually located at Baalbek.67
The involvement of Nimrod in this legend
is almost certainly a misnomer, born out of the belief that only super-humans
of myth and fable could ever have built such gigantic stature, in the same way
that either named giants or mythical figures, such as Arthur, Merlin or the
devil are accredited with the construction or presence of prehistoric
monuments in Britain. Moreover, stories of giants exist right across Asia
Minor and the Middle East, and these are often cited to explain the presence
of either cyclopean ruins (such as the Greek city of Mycenae, the cyclopean
walls of which were said to have been built by the one-eyed cyclops — hence
the term ‘cyclopean’ masonry) or gigantic natural and man-made features.
On the other hand, the alleged connection
between giants, Titans and Baalbek is quite another matter. It is feasible
that, if the Watchers and Nephilim (and therefore the Titans and gigantes)
are to be seen as a lost race of human beings, any presumed pre-Phoenician
culture in Lebanon could not have failed to have encountered their presence in
the Near East. If so, were alliances forged with them, wars fought alongside
them?
Might the ancient skills and brute
strength of these human races of great stature have been employed in grand
engineering projects such as the construction of the Great Platform? Remember,
the Titans were said to have been born of the same loins as Cronus, and in
alliance with their half-brother, they waged war against their father Ouranus.
Yet family alliances of this type can go wrong, for according to the various
ancient writers on this subject,68 after the fall of the Tower of Babel
and the dispersion of the tribes, a war broke out between Cronus and his
brother Titan. An early Christian writer named Lactantius (AD 250-325) records
that Titan, with the help of the rest of the Titans, imprisoned Cronus and
held him safe until his son Jupiter (or Zeus) was old enough to take the
throne. Does this imply that the Titans deposed Cronus and took control of the
Byblos culture until the coming of Zeus, or Jupiter? What influence might this
forgotten race have brought to bear on the development of Lebanon’s
pre-Phoenician culture? More importantly, when might any of this have taken
place?
Far off in Hell
According to classical mythology, the
Titans were eventually defeated by Jupiter and his fellow Olympian gods and
goddesses. As punishment, they were banished to Tartarus, a mythical region of
hell enclosed by a brazen wall and shrouded perpetually by a cloud of
darkness. The gigantes, too, were linked with this terrible place, for
they are cited by the first-century Roman writer Caius Julius Hyginus (fl.
c.40 BC) as having been the "sons of Tartarus and Terra (ie. the
earth)".69
Although Tartarus has always been seen as
a purely mythical location, there is reason to link it with a Phoenician
city-port and kingdom known as Tartessus (Tarshish in the Bible) that thrived
in the Spanish province of Andalucia during ancient times.
The evidence is this — Gyges, or Gyes,
was a son or Coelus (ie. Ouranus) and a brother of Cronus; he was also seen
both as a gigante and a Titan (demonstrating how they were originally
one and the same race).70 He seems to have been one of the main figures
in the later wars between his titanic brothers and the Olympian gods under the
command of Zeus, and may simply have been Titan under another name.
Classical writers such as Ovid (43 BC-AD
18) wrote that Gyges was punished by being banished to the prison of Tartarus.
Yet an account of this same story given by a Chaldean writer named Thallus,
states that instead of being banished to Tamrus, Gyges was "smitten, and
fled to Tartessus".71 If this is a genuinely separate rendition of
the same story then it means that Tartarus was another name for Tartessus.
The immense antiquity of Tartessus is not
in question. The Greek geographer named Strabo (60 BC-20 AD) claimed that it
possessed "written records" going back a staggering 7000 years. As a
sea-port it is believed to have been situated on a delta of the Guadalquivir
River, even though no trace of it remains today. It is also synonymous with
another ancient sea-port known as Gades, modern Cadiz. E.M. Whishaw in
her important 1930 work Atlantis in Andalucia uses excavated evidence of
neolithic and possibly even palaeolithic sea-ports, sea-walls, cyclopean ruins
and hydraulic works around the towns of Niebla and Huelva on the Andalucian
coast to demonstrate the reality not only of Tartessus’s lost kingdom, but
also the existence of Plato’s Atlantis.
A Sea-Faring Nation
Knowledge of the apparent links between
Tartessus, the gigantes/Titans and the mythical Byblos culture is
compelling evidence of an as yet unknown sea-faring nation in the
Mediterranean area sometime between 7000-3000 BC, the latter half of this
period being the time-frame when many of the megalithic complexes began
appearing in places such as Malta and Sardinia. Charles Hapgood in his 1979
book Maps of the Ancient Sea Kings concluded that the various composite
portolans, such as the Piri Reis map of 1513, show areas of the globe,
including the Mediterranean Sea, as they appeared at least 6000 years ago. He
therefore concluded that those who had originally drawn these maps must have
belonged to "one culture", who possessed maritime connections
all over the globe and flourished during this distant age.72 Was he
referring here to the mythical Byblos culture? Might it have been responsible
for passing on these ancient maps to civilisations such as Egypt, c.3100 BC,
and Phoenicia, c.2500 BC?
The early dynastic boat burials uncovered
at Giza and Abydos have revealed seagoing vessels with high prows that were
never intended to be sailed on the Nile; this is despite the fact that Egypt
had no obvious maritime tradition during this early stage in its development.
Where did this knowledge come from? Was it from the remnants of an earlier
culture, such as the one spoken of by Sanchoniatho as having existed on the
Levant coast in mythical times? Might this sea-faring connection help explain
why the wooden coffin containing the body of Osiris was carried by the sea to
Byblos, and why the priests of Heliopolis in Egypt took such an interest in
Baalbek during Ptolemaic times?
It is a subject that requires much
further research before any definite conclusions can be drawn, but the
apparent advanced capabilities of the proposed Byblos culture allows us to
perceive the antiquity of Baalbek’s Great Platform in a new light. Did the
legends suggesting that it was constructed by super-human giants during the
age of Nimrod preserve some kind of bastardised memory of its foundation by
the Byblos culture under Ouranus, Cronus or his brothers, the Titans? If so,
then who were these mythical individuals and what ancient engineering skills
might their culture have employed in the construction of cyclopean structures
such as the Great Platform?
Stones that Moved
In surviving folklore from both Egypt and
Palestine there are tantalising accounts of how sound, used in association
with ‘magic words’, was able to lift and move large stone blocks and
statues, or open huge stone doors. I was therefore excited to discover that,
according to Sanchoniatho, Ouranus was supposed to have "devised Baetulia,
contriving stones that moved as having life".73 By
"contriving" the nineteenth-century English translator of Philo’s
original Greek text seems to have meant ‘designing’, ‘devising’ or
‘inventing’, implying that Ouranus had made stones to move as if they had
life of their own. Was this a veiled reference to some kind of sonic
technology utilised by the proposed Byblos culture? Could this knowledge help
explain the methods behind the cutting, transportation and positioning of the
1000-tonne blocks used in Baalbek’s Great Platform? It is certainly a very
real possibility.
Why Baalbek?
If we accept for a moment that
Baalbek’s Great Platform, and perhaps even the inner podium that supports
the Temple of Jupiter, might well possess a much greater antiquity than has
previously been imagined, then what purpose might the Baalbek structure have
served?
Zecharia Sitchin in his 1980 book The
Stairway to Heaven proposes that the Great Platform was a landing site and
launch pad for extra-terrestrial vehicles. Perhaps he is right, but in my
opinion its high elevation hints at the fact that it once served as some kind
of platform for the observation of celestial and stellar events. It is a
subject I am currently investigating for a future article.
And just how old is Baalbek?
The French archaeologist Michel Alouf
apparently learnt from the Maronite Patriarch of the Baalbek region, a man
named Estfan Doweihi, that: "...the fortress of Baalbek on Mt. Lebanon is
the most ancient building in the world. Cain, the son of Adam, built it in the
year 133 of the creation, during a fit of raving madness".74
Unfortunately this tells us very little about the site’s real age. Yet if we
can accept the existence of a pre-Phoenician culture that not only employed
the use of cyclopean masonry in its building construction, but also possessed
sea-going vessels and flourished in the Mediterranean somewhere between 7000
BC and 3000 BC, then it opens the door to the possibility that Baalbek’s
‘fortress’ may also date to this early phase of human history.
Yet the question remains as to why this
pre-Phoenician, sea-going nation should have wished to construct an almighty
edifice on an elevated plain between two enormous mountain ranges. What was
the reasoning behind this decision? The site undoubtedly possessed a very
ancient sanctity; however, the architects may well have had more pressing
reasons for placing it where they did. All the indications are that
Sanchoniatho’s Byblos culture eventually experienced a period of fierce wars
that waged between Cronus, or Saturn, and his titanic brothers under the
leadership of Titan or Gyges, and then finally between Cronus’ son Jupiter
and the rest of the Olympian deities. In a strange way the fraternal conflict
between Cronus and his brothers parallels the biblical struggle between Cain
and Abel, suggesting that the link between Cain and Baalbek might well have
some symbolic significance to the site’s early history.75
Is it possible that Baalbek’s first
‘city’ was constructed, not just as a religious centre, but also as an
impenetrable fortress against attacks by whatever we see as constituting the gigantes
and Titans of mythology? If the Great Platform, and perhaps even the inner
podium, really does date to this early period, then might the fortress theory
explain why its architects used such gigantic stones in its construction? Were
they incorporated into the design through a combination of technological
capability and sheer necessity, not through "the interest of
appearance" or some ancient wall-building tradition upheld by the
neo-Phoenicians of the Roman era? Such ideas may even provide some kind of
explanation as to why the mother of all stone blocks, the Stone of the
Pregnant Woman, was left cut and ready for transportation in a nearby quarry.
Did the whole building project have to be abandoned because the site was
over-run, or at least seriously threatened, by invading forces? Scholars have
always accredited the Romans with having built the Great Platform, with its
stupendous Trilithon stones, simply because they could not conceive of an
earlier culture possessing the technological skills needed to have transported
and positioned such enormous weights. The Sphinx-building culture of Egypt is
evidence that such technological skills may well have been available as early
as 10,500 BC, while our current knowledge of the Baalbek platform gives us
firm grounds to push back its accepted construction date by at least a
thousand years.
Even if the dates suggested for
Sanchoniatho’s Byblos culture are open to question, I believe the sacred
fortress hypothesis brings us a lot closer to unlocking the mysteries of
Baalbek. Both visually and in legend its ruins bear the mark of the Titans,
and understanding the site’s true place in history can only help us to
discover the reality of this lost cyclopean age of mankind.
Notes
1. Ragette, Baalbek, p.33.
2. Ibid., p.114.
3. Alouf, M.M., History of Baalbek, p.98.
4. Ibid., p.39, quoting a story told by
Estfan Doweihi, a Maronite Patriarch.
5. Ibid., p.41, quoting an Arab
manuscript actually found at Baalbek.
6. Ragette, p.16.
7. Ibid., p.27, cf. Kalayan, 1969.
8. Ibid., p.16.
9. Ibid., p.16, quoting Josephus.
10. Ibid., p.17.
11. Alouf, p.50.
12. Ibid. pp.42-4.
13. Ragette, p.19.
14. See Ibid., p.20 & accompanying
pl. on f/p.
15. Ibid., p.30.
16. Ibid., p.27.
17. Ibid., p.30.
18. Ibid., p.31, cf. Kalayan, 1969.
19. Ibid., pp.31-2.
20. Alouf, p.98. The sizes of the blocks
from right to left are given as 65 feet, 64 feet 10 inches and 63 feet 2
inches.
21. Ibid., p.98
22. Ibid., p.99
23. Ibid.
24. Ibid., p.106.
25. Ragette, p.33.
26. Ibid.
27. Ibid.
28. Ibid., pp.33-4.
29. Ibid., pp.34.
30. Ibid., p.115
31. Ibid., p.115.
32. Alouf, p.106, quoting Louis Felicien
de Saulcy.
33. Ibid., p.115.
34. Ibid., p.115.
35. Ibid., p.33.
36. Ibid., p.119.
37. Ibid., p.116.
38. Ibid.
39. Ibid., p.94.
40. See Renan, 1864.
41. Ragette, p.94.
42. Ibid., p.94.
43. Ibid.
44. Cory, p.viii.
45. Sanchoniatho, quoted by Cory., p.9.
46. Ibid., p.7.
47. Ibid., p.11.
48. Ibid., p.14.
49. Ibid., p.14.
50. Ibid.
5l. Budge, The Egyptian Book of the Dead,
p.1.
52. Ibid.
53. Ibid., p.1, n 3.
54. Ibid., p.1.
55. Herm, The Phoenicians, p.114
56. Ibid.
57. Ibid.
58. See Hancock, Fingerprints of the
Gods, 1995; Bauval & Hancock, Keeper of Genesis, 1996; Collins, From the
Ashes of Angels, 1996.
59. Alouf, p.32
60. Ibid., p.47-8, cf. Macrobius,
Saturnalia, L.I.C. 23.
61. Ibid., p.47, cf. Volney, Voyage en
Syrie, p.228.
62. Ibid., cf. De Dea Syriae &
Macrobius, L.I.C. 23.
63. See, for instance, Gen. 6:1-2,4.
64. See the author’s From the Ashes of
Angels, Ch.16.
65. See, for instance, the works of
Berossus, Eupolemus, Alexander Polyhistor and the Sibylline Oracles, as quoted
by Cory.
66. Alouf, p.41.
67. Ibid., quoting a traveller named
d’Arvieux’ from his Memoires, Part IIe, Ch.26, c.1660.
68. See, for instance, Berossus,
Alexander Polyhistor and the Sibylline Oracles quoted by Cory.
69. Lempriere, Classical Dictionary, c.v.
‘Gigantes’, p.249.
70. Ibid. & Eupolemus, quoted in
Cory, p.53.
71. Thallus, quoted by Cory, p.53
72. Hapgood, Maps of the Ancient Sea
Kings, p.221.
73. Sanchoniatho, quoted in Cory, p.10.
74. Alouf, p.39.
75. Indeed, local tradition asserts that
the region around Baalbek was the stamping ground of Genesis characters such
as Adam and his sons Abel, Cain and Seth. See Ibid., p.39. The reality of such
myths is quite another matter, especially as equally strong traditions
associate the pre-Flood events of the Book of Genesis with Turkish and Iraqi
Kurdistan.
Bibliography
Alouf, Michel M., History of Baalbek,
1890, American Press, Beirut, 1953
Bauval, R, & G. Hancock, Keeper of
Genesis, Wm Heinemann, London, 1996
Budge, E.A. Wallis, The Egyptian Book of
the Dead, 1895, Dover Publications, NY, 1967
Collins, A., From the Ashes of Angels,
Michael Joseph, London, 1996
Cory, I.C., Ancient Fragments, 1832,
Wizards Bookshelf, Minneapolis, 1975
Hancock, G., Fingerprints of the Gods, Wm
Heinemann, London, 1995
Herm, Gerhard, The Phoenicians, 1973,
Futura, London, 1975
Kalayan, H., ‘Notes on the Heritage of
Baalbek and the Beqa’a’ in Cultural Resources in Lebanon, Beirut,
1969
Lempriere, J., A Classical Dictionary,
Geo. Routledge, London, 1919
Ragette. F., Baalbek, Chatto & Windus,
London, 1980
Renan, E., Mission de Phenicie, Paris,
1864
Whishaw, E.M., Atlantis in Andalucia,
Rider, London, 1930
Andrew Collins is continuing his
investigations into the Baalbek complex and would like to hear from anyone who
shares his interest in this topics. Please write to PO Box 189, Leighon-Sea,
Essex 559 INF, UK. Also see Andrew's
web site.