WILLIAM COMYNS BEAUMONT

'William Comyns Beaumont', also known as 'Comyns Beaumont', (1873–1956)Cambridge Conference Correspondance: ''WILLIAM COMYNS BEAUMONT (1873 - 1956) BRITAIN'S MOST ECCENTRIC AND LEAST KNOWN COSMIC HERETIC'', Benny J Peiser, October 17, 1997 was a British journalist, author, and lecturer. Beaumont was a staff writer for the ''Daily Mail'' and eventually became editor of the ''Bystander'' in 1903[1][2] and then ''The Graphic'' in 1932.[3] Beaumont was an eccentric with several unusual beliefs, many of which were later mirrored by Immanuel Velikovsky's works. (However, according to Frank Joseph: "Beaumont’s work was taken over entirely by Immanuel Velikovsky in his famous ''Worlds in Collision'' (1950), which elaborated on the possibility of a celestial impact as responsible for the sudden extinction of a pre-Flood civilization.")[4]
Among Beaumont's propositions were:

catastrophic climate changes were the results of the action of asteroids on the earth.

★ The Egyptian dynasties up to the 13th century BC ruled in South Wales.

Jerusalem was originally located in Edinburgh.

★ The works of Shakespeare were written by Francis Bacon.

★ Francis Bacon was the illegitimate son of Queen Elizabeth I.

★ There is a Zionist plot to undermine the British Empire.

★ Part of this plot was disinformation disseminated by means of the Bible, which concealed the fact that the Holy Lands were in Britain, not in Palestine.

★ The British Isles were Atlantis.

★ Jesus was born in Glastonbury, and his life played out in Somerset.

Contents
Works
See also
References
Links

Works



★ ''The Riddle of the Earth'', Chapman & Hall, London (or Brentano's, New York), 1925, OCLC 1517479

★ ''The Mysterious Comet: Or the Origin, Building up, and Destruction of Worlds, by means of Cometary Contacts'', Rider & Co., London, 1932, OCLC 8997586

★ ''The Riddle of Prehistoric Britain'', Rider & Co., London, 1946 (Kessinger Publishing Co., 1997, ISBN 1564599000)

★ ''Britain, the Key to World History'', Rider & Co., London, 1947 [5]

★ ''The Private Life of the Virgin Queen'', self-published, 1947, OCLC 601691

★ ''A Rebel in Fleet Street'', Hutchinson & Co., London, 1948 (or 1944) (his autobiography)

★ ''After Atlantis: the Greatest Story Never Told'' (unpublished; referenced in ''Eccentric Lives, Peculiar Notions'', John Michell, 2002, ISBN 1579122280, pp. 136-143)
(see WorldCat: Comyns Beaumont)

See also



Michael Tsarion: Inspired by Beaumont's works and quoted extensively throughout Tsarion's work.

References


1. Churchill College Archives: The Churchill Papers: May 1930 - Jan 1931 correspondance
2. Galactic Central Publications: Magazine Issues
3. Time Magazine: ''Eight Less One'', August 15, 1932
4. The Atlantis Encyclopedia, Frank Joseph, New Page Books, 2005, p.27, ISBN 1-56414-795-9
5. Reviewed in The Scotsman: ''The Grail, Jesus's children and Stone Age lasers: Scotland's madder myths - Scotland is the Lost City of Atlantis'', Diane Maclean, ''The Scotsman'', April 15, 2005


★ http://www.zetatalk.com/theword/tword04v.htm

★ http://www.zetatalk.com/theword/tword04w.htm

★ http://abob.libs.uga.edu/bobk/ccc/cc101797.html

Links



Find-A-Grave: William Comyns Beaumont notes birth/death dates of 1879-1955

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