Note-Part One of this ebook was the same ebook title without any Part One name or with the Part One name added of this series available on Kobo.
This ebook is Part Two of 'Cat Egyptian Pekhet: In Bronze Age England'
The Cat named Pekhet in Egyptian from the time even before King-Queen Hatshepsut period is reviewed by place names in Ancient Bronze Age Period England since modern place names still record this cat; as well as other ancient cat names noted in this book, literally are place names found still placed on the Great Britain maps. Clarke's ground breaking extension to other works made by other scholars in the 1930's now gives several unknown examples that goes much further than any other prior scholars works to indeed prove there is far more evidence then anyone in England would have thought. Clarke lays out a very convincing and strong evidence of the redundancy of this special cat name that has its own time capsule or date stamp of its period of introduction. Like a rare 'time traveler' Clarke shows the way to the explanations; that only those more knowledgeable about Egyptology would dream to know more about, with cultural diffusion at the forefront of the cat names emergence is undeniable for England's own lost history to be understood by both chronology and Clarke's years of study about specific place name patterns of archaic forms. This is a book you can read and then go to the Google Maps and literally look them up to see what Clarke is talking about and he includes hieroglyph examples as par excellence. This is the Part Two book of the previous same title book which extends additional information to help the reader understand the historical context of why the place names appeared in a period of Hatshepsut as well as her nomen names actual left in British place names and landscape. If you love cats and cat stories or even want to make a novel and poetry from as fiction or factual history this book is a must have. The folklore and tales Clarke mixes partly in to explain why the tales literal names even appear as place names of cat and kitten words not far from major megalithic monuments. Though obscure work it is shocking and delightful such careful study would exceed even Shakespeare, Chaucer and and Venerable Bede own expectations of pin pointing accuracy. Clarke supports the re-introduction of the European Lynx (extinct in Ireland) to be brought back into Great Britains ancient eco systems fold.