Course XXIII - Teaching 13: The End of the Aryan-Celtic Sub-race
Aryan-Celts were not numerous; and if their mission as lineage of the subsequent sub-race is achieved, this was due to physical characteristics of lands they inhabited, which were surrounded by very high volcanic mountains.
But in the end of this sub-race, everything –Nature and men of the Aryan-sub-race– seemingly agreed for their total destruction.
What today we call Mediterranean Sea was extremely rough; its storms would flood and sink an area of lands and expose other new ones.
Eterias’s island remained united by its Northern part to the continent and a new island emerged, where present Sicily is; also another wonderful island emerged in the place now occupied by Greece.
Aryan-Iranians have been relegated to the East by the skilled tactics of Celts who, although their were lesser in number, were terrific in every art of thinking and leading.
But when seas opened gaps between mountains, letting waters invade the lands of Celts, the Iranians made the same, and a cruel fight followed.
This coincided with the gradual sinking of islands inhabited by Atlanteans in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean; and this forced them to look for other lands, and certain tribes of them were able to contact Iranians and Celts, frightening them, because the latter believed the former to be extinct.
These giant black people were mistaken for avenging demons, which spread panic among multitudes.
But weather became harmful to Atlanteans, who again looked for a refuge in islands of the West.
This appearance had produced a truce between Celts and Iranians; but after the retreat of the Atlanteans, war broke out again.
Meanwhile, on coasts of Celtic islands an intricate net of rivers, channels and swamps had been formed, especially in an area between present Sicily and Greece.
Celts perfectly knew this land and established there a kingdom, named Minota, led by a Great Initiate, a defender of the sub-race. Celts would attract Iranians to these swamps, and because they were unaware of dangers threatening them, thousand of them perished.
From these events, the legend of Minotaur and the Labyrinth arose.
But, despite all all this, more and more numerous Iranians finally overcame Celts, burnt their cities, and abducted their women, and from the union of Iranians and Celts, the glorious sub-race of Aryan-Teutonic sub-race emerged, which radically would destroy the Atlanteans.