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After the Flood. 'When all men were of one language, some of them built a high tower, as if they would thereby ascend up to heaven; but the gods sent storms of wind and overthrew the tower, and gave everyone his peculiar language; and for this reason it was that the city was called Babylon....After this they were dispersed abroad, on account of ...
After the Flood by Bill Cooper. CONTENTS. Introduction: In the Beginning. Chapter 1 The Knowledge of God amongst the early Pagans. Chapter 2 Where to Begin. Chapter 3 Nennius and the Table of European Nations. Chapter 4 The Chronicles of the early Britons. Chapter 5 The History of the early British Kings.
The Tower of Babel seems to have been built about the time of the birth of Peleg (whose name, meaning "division," probably was given by his father Eber in commemoration of that event; Gen. 10:25) 101 years after the Flood.
Discussion of the Biblical text describing the catastrophic, world-wide flood of Noah and its historicity. Searches for Noah's Ark. Causes of the Flood. Population before the Flood. New Testament confirmation. Sources of the water.
After the Flood, by Bill Cooper. Appendix 3 The Nations of Japheth. Maps. 1. Japheth: The father of all the Indo-European peoples, it would be surprising indeed if his name had gone unremembered among them.
Longevity after the Flood - ldolphin.org
Formal nations and their boundaries were established after the Flood in the Covenant with Noah. Before the Flood the earth was governed, evidently, by patriarchal family units. The above insights show up in Paul's sermon Mars Hill in Athens:
What has survived, however, is a detailed genealogy of the pre-migration, and hence pre-Christian, kings of the Saxons, and this enables us to take Saxon history back, generation by generation, to the earliest years after the Flood.
The following plot is a rough estimate of world population from the time of the Flood of Noah, until the birth of Jesus, (53 generations). For discussion purposes the population at the time of Abraham, eleven generations after the Flood, has been taken to be one million people.
We would say today that there are certain points on which this early British chronology is patently wrong. For example, there were not 942 years between the Flood and Abraham, but only ca 427 until Abraham's entry into Canaan.