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         British Mythology:     more books (100)
  1. The king who will return;: An essay in Arthurian legend and British mythology, (Guild of Pastoral Psychology. Lecture) by Robert Fredrick Hobson, 1965
  2. The Mythology and Rites of the British Druids, Ascertained By National Documents; and Compared with the General Traditions and Customs of Heathenism as Illustrated By the Most Eminent Antiquaries of Our Age. (...) by Edward Davies, 1809
  3. History of British Folklore by Richard Dorson, 1999-09-22
  4. A glance at British India: A lecture delivered on behalf of the Young Men's Association in connexion with the Baptist Missionary Society, the Mission House, Moorgate Street by Francis Tucker, 1849
  5. From Olympus to Camelot: The World of European Mythology by David Leeming, 2003-07-17
  6. The Mythology of Imperialism, A revolutionary critique of British literature and society in the modern age by Jonah Raskin, 1971
  7. The Encyclopedia of Celtic Mythology and Folklore (Concise Encyclopedia) by Patricia Monaghan, 2008-02-28
  8. British Goblins by Wirt Sikes, 2008-02-17
  9. Magical and Mystical Sites: Europe and the British Isles by Elizabeth Pepper, John Wilcock, 1992-06
  10. In Search of British Heroes
  11. Legends and Myths of the Aboriginal Indians of British Guiana by William Henry Brett, 2008-02-22
  12. British goblins : Welsh folk-lore, fairy mythology, legends and traditions / by Wirt Sikes ; with illustrations by T. H. Thomas by Wirt (1836-1883) Sikes, 1973
  13. Amazing Animals (British Museum Colouring Books) by Rebecca Jewell, 1999-05
  14. Russian Magic Books in the British Library: Books, Manuscripts, Scholars and Travellers (British Library - Panizzi Lectures) by William Ryan, 1900-01-28

41. KING ARTHUR AND THE HOLY GRAIL
british mythology Portions of The Mabinogion. Old Sarum History Major Castlesin Northeast Wales Castles in Southwest Wales - Norman
http://www.greatdreams.com/arthur.htm
KING ARTHUR AND THE HOLY GRAIL compiled by Dee Finney IS THE SHROUD OF TURIN OF KING ARTHUR? Someone should have asked the question long ago, why did Cortez expect to find gold in the Americas i
n the first place? Why did the crew on the boats of Columbus expect to find gold?
Why did the marauding Spaniards kill eight million native American Indians looking for gold.
The truth is that the royal families of England and Spain had spoken as far back as
King Arthur in 530 AD that their "treasure house" was located in the "Mericas"
(Source for this statement needed Landaff Charters from the sixth century).
The German who suggested that we named the Americas after
Amerigo Vespucci recanted his story when he found the tales
of the "Mericas" stars which lead the way to the "promised land".
BOOKS
Acts of King Arthur and His Noble Knights
by John Steinbeck Labyrinth - Arthurian Resources LeMorte D'Arthur by Thomas Malory Once and Future King by Terence Hanbury White Tales of King Arthur The Golden Bough by James Frazier (9 different versions available) Templar Resources Book Recommendations by Nancy McKenzie by Nancy McKenzie Journey to Avalon Mark Twain - A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court - An on-line book The Woman with the Alabaster Jar - Mary Magdalen and the Holy Grail Sword in The Stone by Terence Hanbury White

42. Britain: Imperial Nostalgia
Such evidence is a timely corrective to the comfortable british mythology that, If Brown really wants to champion British fair play, and create a new
http://mondediplo.com/2005/05/02empire
subscribe back issues search maps ...
NEW LABOUR, OLD BRITAIN
Britain: imperial nostalgia Britain not only conveniently still forgets the crimes of its imperial past, but it has also again begun to romanticise its colonial achievements and declare them a proper source of pride. By Seumas Milne Daily Mail The Wall Street Journal Empire Some empire apologists claim that, however brutal the first phase might have been, the 19th- and 20th-century story was one of liberty and economic progress. But this is nonsense. In late 19th-century and early 20th-century India up to 30 million died in famines, as British administrators insisted on the export of grain (as they had done during the Irish famine of the 1840s) and courts ordered 80,000 floggings a year. Four million died in the avoidable Bengal famine of 1943 - there have been no such famines since independence. What are needed are not apologies or expressions of guilt so much as education, acknowledgment, some measure of reparation and an understanding that barbarity is the inevitable consequence of attempts to impose foreign rule on subject peoples. Like most historical controversies, the argument about empire is as much about the future as the past. Those who write colonial cruelty out of 20th-century history want to legitimise the new imperialism, now bogged down in another colonial war in Iraq - just as those who demonise past attempts to build an alternative to capitalist society are determined to prove that there is none. If Brown really wants to champion British fair play, and create a new relationship with Africa, he would do better to celebrate those who campaigned for colonial freedom rather than the racist despotism they fought against.

43. Sacred Journeys - Facilitators
He has specialised in british mythology, and is the author of audio adaptationsof the Icelandic Eddas ( Fire Ice myths of the Norse people 1997) and
http://www.sacredjourneys.com/facilitators.html
Laura Kristine Amazzone recently completed a Master's in Philosophy and Religion, concentration in Women's spirituality at the California Institute of Integral Studies. Research from her Master's thesis was published in the summer 2002 edition of Revision: A Journal of Consciousness and Transformation. She has traveled extensively studying Asian healing practices and philosophies, and will begin a doctoral program in Asian Comparative Studies in fall 2003 at CIIS. She teaches at UC extension in San Francisco and lectures on Hindu Shakta tantra and the Goddess throughout the Bay Area. In fall 2000 she co-facilitated a pilgrimage to the Goddesses of Nepal through the World Religions Program of New College of California. Jennifer Berezan is an acclaimed singer/songwriter/recording artist whose recordings include In the Eye of the Storm, Borderlines, Voices on the Wind, She Carries Me and Refuge . She has performed and taught music and healing internationally and has led women's sacred pilgrimages throughout Europe. Jennifer is currently working on a new healing piece of music recorded in the Hypogeum in Malta. Deeann Bruno has been training and facilitating adult growth for over 25 years. She likes to teach topics for the empowerment of all people, but especially women and children. During her work spiritually, she has taught workshops about the Goddess, astrology, numerology, the tarot, self-discovery through the Myers Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI), and 10 Steps to Success.

44. World Mythology - Syllabus
During the course, students study the creation myths from different cultures Roman Mythology, british mythology, Norwegian Mythology, Native American
http://www.intelligented.com/common/9-12/syllabi/Mythology_syllabus.htm
World Mythology - Syllabus Course Description World Mythology is an 18-week course with 18 lessons. Each lesson takes 5-6 hours to complete and include online resources, interactive activities, and a quiz or assessment. The course is intended as a literature/language arts elective and is a survey course of world mythologies and is not limited to Classical Greek and Roman myths. During the course, students study the creation myths from different cultures: Classical Greek, Roman Mythology, British Mythology, Norwegian Mythology, Native American Mythology, Pacific Mythology, Middle Eastern (Arabian) Mythology, Africa Mythology, and Oriental Mythology. Students learn to compare and contrast myths and discuss common elements in myths and to interpret the meaning of the myths in the cultural and historical context in which they were written. Students are encouraged to participate in group research projects and activities throughout the course, so that they may collaborate with other students and instructors. Students use many online sources, referring to online public domain references, reference books, and encyclopedias that are found at local public libraries. Field trips are suggested and are accomplished within students' local areas.

45. INTERVIEW WITH ALAN GARNER
I came privately to the Celtic element of british mythology; and I came privately,because I was a classicist, to Beowulf and Sir Gawain and the Green
http://www.lib.rochester.edu/camelot/intrvws/garner.htm
Return to the Contents Page of Thompson's Interviews with Authors of Modern Arthurian Literature
INTERVIEW WITH ALAN GARNER
by
RAYMOND H. THOMPSON
HOLMES CHAPEL, CHESHIRE
12 APRIL 1989
Since I interviewed Alan Garner the day after my arrival in Britain from Canada, I was suffering from jet lag. It dawned, however, a bright spring morning and the Cheshire countryside was clothed in a fresh green growth that lifted the spirits. To my surprise, I found that Garner lived in not one but two houses, the second of which had been moved onto his property and was being lovingly restored. After lunch with Garner and his wife in a traditional farm kitchen, he and I settled down in front of an open fire in his study for the interview, a very appropriate setting for the author of the Alderley Edge books, The Wierdstone of Brisingamen (London: Collins, 1960; rev. ed. London: Penguin, 1963) and The Moon of Gomrath (London: Collins, 1963).
At first sight, neither book seems particularly Arthurian, but closer scrutiny reveals a number of borrowings, particularly the Cave Legend. The story of a king and his followers sleeping in a secret cave certainly predates Arthur, as Garner points out, but it became attached to him in the minds of many who passed it on, including Garner's own family. Why he chose to mute, rather than strengthen, the Arthurian links was one of the topics we explored that afternoon. Another was the challenges he encountered embarking upon a career as an author, for The Wierdstone of Brisingamen

46. Dandalf The Dragon
british mythology Bullfinch s Mythology Celtic Tales Epic Journey Classical Mythology by Geography Cornish Myths Legends Encyclopedia Mythica
http://dandalf.com/dandalf/Mythology.html
A Quest for Arthur American Folklife Center Ancient World Web- Mythology Animal Symbolism in Celtic Mythology ... Virtual Babel Encyclopedia Website Directory Amazon.com Canada Amazon.com USA Arthurian Books BBC America Shop ... Tennyson's "Ulysses" Tiger Direct Clearance Center Vitacost.com Website Resources WhatOnEarth

47. British Goblins: Welsh Folk-lore, Fairy Mythology, Legends And Traditions Index
A study by Wirt Sikes (1881), etext from the Internet Sacred Text Archive.
http://www.sacred-texts.com/neu/celt/wfl/

Sacred Texts
Sagas and Legends Celtic
British Goblins
Welsh Folk-lore, Fairy Mythology, Legends and Traditions
by Wirt Sikes
Title Page
Chapter I: Fairy Tales and the Ancient Mythology

Chapter II: Classification of Welsh Fairies

Chapter III: Lake Fairies
...
Chapter XI: Origins of Welsh Fairies

48. Birchwood Books
Secondhand, out of print, antiquarian and rare titles on mythology and the traditional music of the british Isles.
http://www.birchwoodbooks.co.uk/
Birchwood Books
From the heart of the English countryside
Books on the traditional music of Britain and Ireland
(and a great deal more!)
Welcome to the home of traditional music books on the web. From Yorkshire, in the green heart of England, we supply the world with books on the traditional music of the British Isles - the music of England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales. Whether you're seeking a first edition by one of the great folk song collectors, or a simple guide to learning how to play the fiddle, you've come to the right place. You can browse or search our extensive list of title by clicking here , order with confidence, and know that the book you're seeking will be on your doorstep in just a few days. "The beautiful melodies which have come down to us from the memories of old men and women, have in them the essentials of pure English melody, purer than any other music we possess; a melody unaffected by fashion or the influence of the music of any other nation." Frank Kidson CONTACT US ... OR COME AND SEE US To order a book, to ask for a catalogue, or simply to make an inquiry, you can

49. Myths & Legends Index
british Myths Legends Britain s vast body of national mythology and local legendis one of the world s richest veins of written and verballytransmitted
http://www.britannia.com/history/h100.html
Search Britannia
BRITANNIA GATEWAYS
History
Travel British Life Shop Britannia
Britain's vast body of national mythology and local legend is one of the world's richest veins of written and verbally-transmitted literature and has served for centuries as a primary source of artistic inspiration and general enjoyment.
Timeline
The Arthurian Legend

Articles
The Arthur Cross Rediscovered?

Dartmoor of the Baskervilles

The Newbury Coat

The Real Dick Turpin
... St. George Fascinating British Legends Dando's Dogs Dozmary Pool Mermaid of Zennor St. Michael's Mount ... Flying Dutchman Travels Through Mythology King Arthur's Magical History Tour Robin Hood's Nottinghamshire Robin Hood's Yorkshire Historia Brittonum , c.830 The Dream of Rhonabwy , c.1200 Early Welsh Verse , 7th C. to 14th C Lists Legendary Kings of Britain Legendary Kings of Glamorgan Legendary Kings of the Picts Legendary Characters King Arthur St. Birinus St. Dunstan Gorlois ... Ygerna Customs Barrel Rolling (Ottery St. Mary) Berkshire Customs Royal Legends The Holy Grail Queen Emma's Ordeal by Fire Ghosts Most Haunted House in England Ghosts of York The Orphans' Screams The Grey Lady, Buried Alive!

50. Civilization.ca - Change Of Address
Ethnographic information on the Haida Nation of british Columbia, including history, art, and sacred mythology.
http://www.civilization.ca/membrs/fph/haida/haindexe.html
Civilization.ca
Sorry! The page you requested is no longer at this address. Web addresses for the Canadian Museum of Civilization have changed.
Please redirect your browser to: www.civilization.ca/aborig/haida/haindexe.html Don't forget to update your bookmarks or links with the new address!

51. Roots Of The Ancients - Thinkquest 2001
Belatucadros british god of war and destruction of enemies, his name means fair Lud - In myth, he was a king of Britain who beautified London City.
http://library.thinkquest.org/C0116903/mythology/british.htm
British Mythology
Andraste -
She is the goddess of war in Celtic Britain. Boudicca, or Boadicea, a Celtic queen, sacrificed Roman women to Andraste. Arnemetia - She is a goddess of water. Belatucadros - British god of war and destruction of enemies, his name means "fair shining one." He is equivalent to Beli Brigantia - She is the goddess of the Brigantes, the people of Yorkshire. She is also goddess of two rivers, the Braint and the Brent. These two are named after her. She is associated with flocks and cattle. Camma - Camma is a hunting goddess to the British. Cartimandua - She was the legendary warrior queen of the Brigantes. She led them into battle against the Roman Empire. The Brigantes are the descendants of Brigantia Caswallawn - Caswallawn is the god of war to the British Celts. Cernunnos - He is called "The Horned One" and is a god of fertility, life, wealth, animals, and the underworld. He is depicted with stag antlers, and sometimes a coin-filled purse. He is born at the winter solstice and marries the goddess at Beltane , then dies at the summer solstice. He and the goddess of moon alternate their rule over life and death. He was sometimes accompanied by a serpent with a ram's head, and by a stag. He was later renamed Herne the Hunter for the part he plays in the

52. MacCorkill's Scottish - CELTIC MYTHOLOGY AND FOLKLORE
There are many myths surrouding cats all over the british Isles. Caithness isnamed after the clan of the Catti or Cat People
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Parthenon/2897/celtic3.html
Sconemac's, Celtic Characters, Myth, Folklore, Bibical and Real
Scone's Scottish and Celtic Internet Book
Scottish Highlands and Islands Partnership
"CELTIC MYTHOLOGY AND FOLKLORE"
presented by Sconemac
This material is not public domain and as such must
not be taken from the site, without author's permission.

~~Celtic Page Three~~
CELTIC CHARACTERS - MYTHOLOGY, BIBICAL, REAL
AND FOLKLORE
ALBANACTUS REAL The third son of Brutus after whom Albany or Scotland is named. Andrew; The patron saint of Scotland. Brother of Simon Peter, and fisherman of Capernaum. He became an apostle and tradition says he was martyred in Achaia by being crucified on a decussated or saltire cross. He was said to have given the Pictish army a vision of this cross at the battle of Athelstoneford between King Angus of the Picts and King Athelstan of the Angles. However, it is fairly clear that Andrew was foisted upon Scotland as its patron when the old Celtic and Culdee centers of Dunkeld and Abernethy were superseded by the new bishopric of St. Andrew's. His feast day is 30th November David/Dewi; [NOT MYTH-TRUE] (died 601); The patron of Wales. He was born in Cardiganshire and founded twelve monasteries from Croyland to Penbrokeshire, where the regime was particularly austere, after the celtic fashion. He was nicknamed "Aquaticus" after his habit of only drinking water. Although in Wales he is remembered on March 1st with leeks his symbol is actually the dove.

53. Mythology Of The British Isles By Geoffrey Ashe
Book information on mythology of the british Isles by Geoffrey Ashe a MethuenHistory title.
http://www.methuen.co.uk/mythologybritishisles.html
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Mythology of the British Isles by Geoffrey Ashe
In his Mythology of the British Isles, Geoffrey Ashe uncovers a British mythology which is comparable to the Greek in richness and cohesivenes and which possesses a national genius all its own. Retelling stories and legends from the dark centuries of British prehistory to the ninth century AD - tales of giants and fairy-folk, druids and saints, King Lear and King Arthur, Fingal and Beowulf, Gwendolen and Guinevere - he shows how these stories all interrelate and how they take on fresh significance and vitality from historical and archaeological research.
Order On-Line UK Edition: Amazon.co.uk

54. Mythology Of The British Isles By Geoffrey Ashe
Book information on mythology of the british Isles by Geoffrey Ashe a MethuenHistory title.
http://www.methuen.co.uk/mythologybritishislestexted.html
Home Catalogue Coming Soon Ordering ...
Browse Methuen:
Methuen General Anthologies Children's Books Cultural Studies Fiction Gay Interest History Humour Monty Python Poetry Screen Sport Travel Methuen Drama Bertolt Brecht Contemporary Dramatists Modern Plays Performance Play Anthologies Screenplays Student Editions Theatre Studies Theatre Workshop World Classics Search Methuen: Methuen Home General History ... Geoffrey Ashe Mythology of the British Isles
Mythology of the British Isles by Geoffrey Ashe
A fully revised new paperback edition of Geoffrey Ashe's classic account of the legendary history and national mythology of Britain Recounting stories and legends from the dark centuries of British prehistory to the ninth century AD - tales of giants and fairies, druids and saints, King Lear, King Arthur and Old King Cole - Ashe shows how they all interrelate and take on fresh significance from historical and archaelogical research. The origins and legends of the Giants, the Ancient Britons, the Picts, the Scots and the English are all explained with chronological finesse.
Organised into a clear and simple system based on Robert Graves' classic Greek Myths, Ashe describes the myth or theme first followed by discussion or analysis. This powerful and innovative work will be of equal value to the specialist and the casual reader.

55. Changeling Legends From The British Isles
Changeling Legends from the british Isles. edited by DL Ashliman, University ofPittsburgh The Changeling, Thomas Keightley, The Fairy mythology.
http://www.pitt.edu/~dash/britchange.html
Changeling Legends from the British Isles
edited by
D. L. Ashliman, University of Pittsburgh
Return to:
Table of Contents
  • The Changeling, Thomas Keightley, The Fairy Mythology.
  • Scottish Changelings, Sir Walter Scott, "On the Fairies of Popular Superstition."
  • The Smith and the Fairies, J. F. Campbell, Popular Tales of the West Highlands.
  • How to Find Out a Fairy Changeling , Walter Gregor, Notes on the Folk-Lore of the North-East of Scotland.
  • The Fair Folk, Walter Gregor, Notes on the Folk-Lore of the North-East of Scotland.
  • Torr-a-Bhulig, James MacDougall, Folktales and Fairy Lore in Gaelic and English.
  • The Fairy of Corrie Osben and the Tailor, James MacDougall, Folk Tales and Fairy Lore in Gaelic and English.
  • 56. British Crossroads
    Celtic and English mythology, Fables, Fairie Tales and a bit of Ancient, Medievaland Legendary History. These Crossroads lead to the Fabulous Worlds woven
    http://www.mythiccrossroads.com/british.htm
    Last updated on var site="s14mythiccrossroads" Breton British Cornish English ... Scottish Breton Kingdoms of Brittany by David Nash Ford is a website dedicated to the Early Celtic Kingdoms of Brittany. Bretagne.com offers tales about Ys Arthur , and the Knights of the Round Table British/Welsh British Mythology discusses the Mabinogion. Celtic Mythology is a large collection of links. Changeling Legends from the British Isles by D. L. Ashliman offers extracts from folklore works about fairy changelings in the British Isles. Dark Age Cumbria by Mark King covers the history of North-Western Britain during the period 400 - 1000, emphasizing the legend of King Dunmail. Early British Kingdoms by David Nash Ford is a website dedicated to the Early Celtic Kingdoms of the British Isles and the historical King Arthur Early Medieval Resources for Britain, Ireland, and Brittany by Michelle Ziegler Gazetteer of Sub-Roman Britain (AD 400-600) by Dr. Christopher A. Snyder (part of the Internet Archaeology site) provides a hard scientific look at many of the legendary sites of Britian.

    57. British / Celtic Mythology
    These pages compile links to resources related to british / Celtic mythology,presenting history, languages, music, and specific legends.
    http://classiclit.about.com/od/celticmythology/
    zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') About Homework Help Literature: Classic Lit by Country / Culture ... Myth - By Country / Culture British / Celtic Mythology Homework Help Literature: Classic Essentials Book Reviews ... Help zau(256,140,140,'el','http://z.about.com/0/ip/417/C.htm','');w(xb+xb+' ');zau(256,140,140,'von','http://z.about.com/0/ip/496/7.htm','');w(xb+xb);
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    British / Celtic Mythology
    These pages compile links to resources related to British / Celtic Mythology, presenting history, languages, music, and specific legends.
    Alphabetical
    Recent Animal Symbolism in Celtic Mythology In this article, Lars Noodén discusses the tie between animals in Celtic and Welsh mythology with fertility and vitality. Lugodoc's Guide to Celtic Mythology "Through a monstrous perversion of the Bard's art, Lugodoc has reduced the entire canon of Celtic myth into bite-sized chunks, easily digested by today's 3-minute attention spanned video game-addicted goldfish-minded web-surfing generation." The Sacred Fire The Sacred Fire is a celebration of ancient Celtic history and lore.

    58. Celtic Mythology - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
    Ancient Gaulish and british deities Goidelic Irish mythology The body isnow on display at the british Museum, London.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celtic_mythology
    Celtic mythology
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
    A Celtic cross incorporating the Celtic knotwork motif associated with later Celtic cultures Celtic mythology is the mythology of Celtic polytheism , the apparent religion of the Iron Age Celts . Like other Iron Age Europeans, the early Celts maintained a polytheistic mythology and religious structure. Among Celtic peoples in close contact with Rome, such as the Gauls and Celtiberians , their mythology did not survive the Roman empire , their subsequent conversion to Christianity , and the loss of their Celtic languages, although ironically it is through contemporary Roman and Christian sources that what we do know of their beliefs has come down to us. In contrast, those Celtic peoples who maintained either their political or linguistic identities (such as the Gaels and Brythonic tribes of the British Isles ) did transmit at least vestigial remnants of the mythologies of their Iron Age forebears, which were often recorded in written form during the Middle Ages
    Contents

    59. An Ethical Blank Cheque
    british and US mythology About the Second World War Ignores Our Own Crimes andLegitimizes AngloAmerican Warmaking. by Richard Drayton
    http://www.commondreams.org/views05/0510-24.htm
    Home Newswire About Us Donate ... Archives Featured Views
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    E-Mail This Article Published on Tuesday, May 10, 2005 by the Guardian (UK) An Ethical Blank Check
    British and US Mythology About the Second World War Ignores Our Own Crimes and Legitimizes Anglo-American Warmaking
    by Richard Drayton
    In 1945, as at the end of all wars, the victor powers spun the conflict's history to serve the interests of their elites. Wartime propaganda thus achieved an extraordinary afterlife. As Vladimir Putin showed yesterday, the Great Patriotic War remains a key political resource in Russia. In Britain and the US, too, a certain idea of the second world war is enthusiastically kept alive and less flattering memories suppressed. Five years ago, Robert Lilly, a distinguished American sociologist, prepared a book based on military archives. Taken by Force is a study of the rapes committed by American soldiers in Europe between 1942 and 1945. He submitted his manuscript in 2001. But after September 11, its US publisher suppressed it, and it first appeared in 2003 in a French translation. We know from Anthony Beevor about the sexual violence unleashed by the Red Army, but we prefer not to know about mass rape committed by American and British troops. Lilly suggests a minimum of 10,000 American rapes. Contemporaries described a much wider scale of unpunished sex crime. Time Magazine reported in September 1945: "Our own army and the British army along with ours have done their share of looting and raping ... we too are considered an army of rapists."

    60. Planet AgeofMythology - A Member Of The GameSpy Network
    in 3 current divisions, Age Of mythology, EverQuest and EverQuest 2. In one of my games with british on Carolinas, the bonus made itself very
    http://www.planetageofmythology.com/
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