Map of Roman Italy
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Map of Roman Italy
Numbered locations: 1) Chauvet's Cave.;
Notes & References

[10] Ostia was located south of Rome at the Mediterranean coast.

[20] A map and aerial photo of Carthage can be seen in BAR, Jan 1984, p. 35.

[30] Puteoli (Acts 28:13) means 'sulphurous wells', a seaport on the Mediterranean shore west of Neapolis. The modern city of Pozzuoli is located there now (Long. ca. 14.7'° & Lat. 40.46'°). Sieh Simon Magus auf Deutsch oder here in English.

[40] We have Leone's book, The Secret Plan Of The Order, which was published in 1848. In this work, Jesuit Leone was 19 years of age and a young Jesuit in Cheiri, Italy (a few miles east of Turin), where he, when snooping around in a back room, became trapped when Jesuit General Roothaan and his provincials came in another room and he listened to their conversation, and while hiding he was taking notes. He said, "They revealed that the Jesuit General was intent upon setting-up a World Government by controlling the Roman Catholic hierarchy, the Pope, all the monarchies, and thus all the governments of the world. He published these notes in a book and it went all throughout Europe, which contributed to the people rising-up against the power of the Jesuits in 1848. But that revolution was controlled, and the end result was more power for the Jesuit Order in Europe.

Herxheim Archaeological site #1: Some 500 deposits of bones damaged characteristic for ritual cannibalism were found here and on the basis of pottery similar to another site, assigned to the Neolithic age at Herxheim, located ca. 13 kilometers west of the Rhein, SW of Heidelberg and NW of Karlsruhe at ca. longitude 8.18 & latitude 49.2. Since age cannot be seen, these are quite meaningless age assignments. What the finds do demonstrate is what crass unbelief in the only true God, as in paganism, will lead to.
Where are these regions?? Liguria, the alps between Monacco and Genoa; Tuscany, ruins on the slopes of the Albaner Mtn. SE of Rome; Campania, the area between Rome and the Albaner Mtn.; Lucania, probably now known as the Costa de Sol, between Gibralta and Malaga; Bruttium, unknown; Apulia, the region between Foggia to the heel of Italy; Calabria, the toes of Italy; Venetia, Venice, Italy; Dalmatia, much of the Yugoslavian Adriatic coastal region; Epirus, the mostly Greek Adriatic coastal area south of Albania. These areas were ravaged by the Vandals under Ricimer.

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