by SvenLongshanks » Thu Aug 11, 2016 4:58 pm
Yes, it was the same unit of measurement for Stonehenge as used for the great pyramid. I think they call it the royal inch and the royal cubit. The other monuments were built using the megalithic yard, which Professor Thom discovered by measuring hundreds of them. There is some evidence to point to one of Job's ancestors erecting the great pyramid. Apparently they were strangers who came to Egypt, built that and then left. The other pyramids are copies of the first, made by the Mizraim inhabitants of Egypt.
Not just Stonehenge but all the monuments in Britain from the bronze and iron age have no traces of metal ever being used upon them. Later on there are smaller stones with swastikas and other symbols, phoenician, Ogham and Coelbren script, but these are all much smaller and obviously erected for a different purpose much later on.
When the Davidic line was ended in Old Jerusalem, Jeremiah supposedly left with his scribe Baruch and two princesses. He eventually ended up in Ireland and was known as Ollam Fodhla. He also took the Bethel stone with him. One of the princesses married into the Irish kings and went on to give her name Scota to the Scots, who would then intermarry with the Norman kings and bring the Davidic line and the stone to England. But both the original Irish and the original Welsh kings came from Zarah, who was Davids great great great etc. uncle.
The Saxon kings trace their lineage back to Sceaf, who they claim was a son of Noah. I think the word was probably originally Shem and not Sceaf. You can find that lineage in the life of Alfred the Great.