<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->"It is impossible that there should be inhabitants on the opposite side of the Earth, since no such race is recorded by Scripture among the descendants of Adam."Â Â â St. Augustine.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->So only Hamites, Japhetites and Semites - the mythical spawn of the mythical Noah - are allowed, and all populations must be *made* to derive from them.
And that's how Dubois' involved his imaginary friend Magog as well. See Sabha.info.
Here. Christoterrorist missionary madman Abbe Dubois in his "Hindu Manners, Customs and Ceremonies", early 1800s:
http://www.sabha.info/books/HinduManners/H...casusPg100.html
http://www.sabha.info/books/HinduManners/H...phethPg102.html
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->It is practically admitted that India was inhabited very soon after the Deluge.... The fact that it was so close to the plains of Sennaar, where Noah's descendants remained stationary so long, as well as its good climate and the fertility of the country, soon led to its settlement.
[...]
I do not trace the origin of the Brahmins either to Egypt or to Arabia, and <b>I believe</b> them to be the descendants not of Shem, as many argue, but of Japheth. <b>According to my theory</b> they reached India from the morth, and <b>I should place</b> the first abode of their ancestors in the neighbourhood of the Caucasus.
[...]
<b>Surely</b> these seven Hindu Penitents, or philosophers, <b>must be</b> the seven sons of Japheth, who, with their father at their head, led one-third of the human race towards the West, when men began to disperse after the Flood. They did not all reach Europe. Some of them on their way there turned northwards, under the guidance of Magog, second son of Japheth, and penetrated into Tartary as far as the Caucasian Range,
[...]
Any one <b>believing</b> in the connexion between names and facts will be struck with the <b>similarity</b> existing between Magog's name and Gautama's, commonly called Gotama. Ma, or Maha, signifies great, so that Gotama <b>must mean</b> the Great Gog or Magog.
(Oh the striking similarity! The christolevel intellectualism on display by Darth Dubious - I mean Dubois - is beyond comprehension. In <i>so</i> many ways.)
[...]
a son of Noah was able to pass himself off as a god; but <b>it is quite possible</b> that his descendants deified him, when the spirit of idolatry began to reign on earth. It was Magog who settled in Tartary with all those who elected to follow him, having decided to separate from Japheth's other children. From thence he or his descendants spread over India and other countries, which had rightly fallen to Shem's lot. This verified Noah's prophecy that Japheth's dominion would be far-reaching, and that his posterity would dwell in the tents of Shem (Gen. ix. 27).
<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->The great christian unscience, inspired by their non-existent gawd.
And that's how Dubois' involved his imaginary friend Magog as well. See Sabha.info.
Here. Christoterrorist missionary madman Abbe Dubois in his "Hindu Manners, Customs and Ceremonies", early 1800s:
http://www.sabha.info/books/HinduManners/H...casusPg100.html
http://www.sabha.info/books/HinduManners/H...phethPg102.html
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->It is practically admitted that India was inhabited very soon after the Deluge.... The fact that it was so close to the plains of Sennaar, where Noah's descendants remained stationary so long, as well as its good climate and the fertility of the country, soon led to its settlement.
[...]
I do not trace the origin of the Brahmins either to Egypt or to Arabia, and <b>I believe</b> them to be the descendants not of Shem, as many argue, but of Japheth. <b>According to my theory</b> they reached India from the morth, and <b>I should place</b> the first abode of their ancestors in the neighbourhood of the Caucasus.
[...]
<b>Surely</b> these seven Hindu Penitents, or philosophers, <b>must be</b> the seven sons of Japheth, who, with their father at their head, led one-third of the human race towards the West, when men began to disperse after the Flood. They did not all reach Europe. Some of them on their way there turned northwards, under the guidance of Magog, second son of Japheth, and penetrated into Tartary as far as the Caucasian Range,
[...]
Any one <b>believing</b> in the connexion between names and facts will be struck with the <b>similarity</b> existing between Magog's name and Gautama's, commonly called Gotama. Ma, or Maha, signifies great, so that Gotama <b>must mean</b> the Great Gog or Magog.
(Oh the striking similarity! The christolevel intellectualism on display by Darth Dubious - I mean Dubois - is beyond comprehension. In <i>so</i> many ways.)
[...]
a son of Noah was able to pass himself off as a god; but <b>it is quite possible</b> that his descendants deified him, when the spirit of idolatry began to reign on earth. It was Magog who settled in Tartary with all those who elected to follow him, having decided to separate from Japheth's other children. From thence he or his descendants spread over India and other countries, which had rightly fallen to Shem's lot. This verified Noah's prophecy that Japheth's dominion would be far-reaching, and that his posterity would dwell in the tents of Shem (Gen. ix. 27).
<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->The great christian unscience, inspired by their non-existent gawd.