From Stonehenge to Sulla, this first volume deals with the emergence of Western Civilization from the Late Paleolithic Era to the fall of the Western Roman Empire. It includes Sumeria, Egypt, classical Greece and Rome and the First Great Race War of Attila the Hun. Also revealed in this work is the one true cause of the rise and fall of the world’s greatest empires—that all civilizations rise and fall according to their racial homogeneity and nothing else—a nation can survive wars, defeats and natural catastrophes, but not racial dissolution.
Also in this series: Volume II: Europa: The Rise of the Nation States Volume III: Manifest Destiny: European Expansion Across the Globe Volume IV: Twilight: The Impending Death of the West
Contents of this Volume: Foreword Prologue: Some Important Facts Chapter 1: The First White Racial Types Chapter 2: The First Stirrings—The Late Paleolithic Age Chapter 3: Vast Temples and First Cities—The Neolithic Age Chapter 4: Laying the Foundations—The Old European Civilizations Chapter 5: Born of the Black Sea—The Indo-European Invasions Chapter 6: To the Ends of the Earth—Lost White Migrations Chapter 7: Inexorably Overwhelmed—Whites in the Middle East Chapter 8: Nordic Desert Empire—Ancient Egypt Chapter 9: Genesis of Western Thought—Classical Greece Chapter 10: Conqueror and Creator—Alexander the Great Chapter 11: The Age of the Caesars—Pre-Christian Rome Chapter 12: Power and Purpose—The Glory of Rome Chapter 13: Opponents and Allies—Rome and the Celts Chapter 14: The Useful Foe—Rome and the Germans Chapter 15: Racial Cauldron—Rome and the Middle East Chapter 16: By Stealth and Steel—Christianity Chapter 17: The First Great Race War—Attila the Hun 372–454 AD Chapter 18: The Triumph of the Slaves—The Fall of Rome Appendices
Arthur Kemp was born of a British father and a Dutch mother in Southern Rhodesia in 1962. Educated in South Africa, he holds a B.A. degree in Political Science, International Politics and Public Administration, having studied at the University of Cape Town and the University of South Africa. He worked as a journalist on a major national daily newspaper, as an international risk consultant, as a retail market analyst for a blue chip company in the UK, and as a public relations consultant.
2. incorrect understanding of genes/alleles and the differences between genotype and phenotype and a seeming denial of epigenetics or any influence of environment in the first chapter, seemingly genetic determinist (environment definitely contributes something to gene expression and thus to phenotype; estimates are between 20 [by near determinists] and 80% [by all responsible environmentalists who don't deny adaptationism entirely]; I think environment accounts for about 30-40% of the variance personally)
3. hugely incorrect 'not even wrong' false facts and interpretation of church history just to give credence to the author's anti-Christian bias. No, the Nicene council had nothing to do with the canon; no, apocryphal gospels weren't excluded from the canon while being of equal historical worth; yes, Jesus existed and is better attested than Julius Caesar's march on Rome or seizure of power. Even Bart Ehrman agrees on this.
Points granted for:
A unique and needed revisionary project in light of 'Afrocentrism' and other modern mythologies and fashionable academic nostrums like multiculturalism, critical race theory, etc. from a point of view not otherwise available.
This book is worthy of studying - I mean studying as in checking every fact. I have finished reading the book but only fact checked about half of it. So far everything I have checked has been true and the consequences of that make you truly think........