NEW VERSION (NOVA VERSÃO)-->Clic http://www.oocities.org/asia/elywife/TRANSLATION_HUDSONr_CUMORA.htm

NEFITAS TAMBÉM COLONIZARAM A BACIA DO RIO HUDSON - USA

(In English-->) NEPHITES ALSO COLONIZED HUDSON RIVER BASIN reaching CUMORAH

 

"CLIQUE" e veja o início da Colonização dos NEFITAS. http://scriptures.lds.org/images/chmaps/map1.jpg  O TEMA é ensinar que a COLONIZAÇÃO NEFITA COMEÇOU em N.Y. (LONG ISLAND) e SUBIU PELO Rio HUDSON e VIRARAM PARA A ESQUERDA, INDO ATÉ CUMORÁ (ANCESTRAL TERRA DOS NEFITAS): já tinha feito parte da Terra JAREDITA.

CHURCH HISTORY MAPS
NORTHEASTERN UNITED STATESViraram à esquerda em ALBANY p/ PALMYRA/Cumorá.

http://scriptures.lds.org/images/chmaps/map2.jpg Chegaram a este local mostrado neste mapa "tão JECA, tão coisa de MUSEU" e até gastam dinheiro em imenso COLISEO ("vaidades nostálgicas", pois na "modernidade" T_O_D_O_S se reunem ao redor do grande COLISEO Internético + TV, para verem eventos GLOBAIS, como os ESPORTIVOS... irradiados de mini-auditórios em que conferenciam e discursam pessoas/autoridades de "TODA" a TERRA GLOBAL). Nem Chefes de Governo usam mais "super-auditórios" para se comunicarem e reunirem com o "povo": tipo Rei Benjamim a ensinar.

Aprenda algumas diferenças entre a COLONIZAÇÃO INGLESA (mais puramente ANGLO-SAXÃ, muito rica em GENTIOS GENÉTICOS e pobre em Casa de Jacó) e a COLONIZAÇÃO HOLANDESA (mais rica em pessoas da Casa de Jacó). Veja como os HOLANDESES estavam a seguir os passos de LEHI (LÉRRI) e NÉFI (NEFITAS) na sua marcha colonizando LONG ISLAND onde hoje é MANHATAN (onde os navios veleiros JAREDITAS e de LÉRRI aportaram)  e depois pelo RIO HUDSON, que levou à descoberta e ocupação/colonização dos GRANDES LAGOS (divisa entre EUA e CANADÁ).

 

Veja a diferença entre os primeiros locais de colonização INGLESA e HOLANDESA:

 

http://www.cr.nps.gov/nr/travel/kingston/buildings/nether.jpg Dutch and English Colonization in New England

 

http://www.cr.nps.gov/nr/travel/kingston/colonization.htm

http://www.cr.nps.gov/nr/travel/kingston/graphics/header.jpg http://www.cr.nps.gov/nr/travel/kingston/graphics/animatea.gif

http://www.cr.nps.gov/nr/travel/kingston/graphics/coltitle.gif

 

Although the Netherlands only controlled the Hudson River Valley from 1609 until 1664, in that short time, Dutch entrepreneurs established New Netherland, a series of trading posts, towns, and forts up and down the Hudson River that laid the groundwork for towns that still exist today. Fort Orange, the northernmost of the Dutch outposts, is known today as Albany; New York City's original name was New Amsterdam, and the New Netherland's third major settlement, Wiltwyck, is known today as Kingston. Unlike New York City and Albany, however, where the traces of colonization can be difficult to find, in Kingston, the history of New York's Dutch colonization is quite evident.

In 1609, two years after English settlers established the colony of Jamestown in Virginia, the Dutch East India Company hired English sailor Henry Hudson to find a northeast passage to India. After unsuccessfully searching for a route above Norway, Hudson turned his ship west and sailed across the Atlantic. Hudson hoped to discover a "northwest passage," that would allow a ship to cross the entirety of the North American continent and gain access to the Pacific Ocean, and from there, India. After arriving off the coast of Cape Cod, Hudson eventually sailed into the mouth of a large river, today called the Hudson River. Making his way as far as present-day Albany before the river became too shallow for his ship to continue north, Hudson returned to Europe and claimed the entire Hudson River Valley for his Dutch employers.

..... OS HOLANDESES construiram fortes de MADEIRA, a maneira dos NEFITAS: “...Board by board, the settlers took their barns and houses down, and carted them uphill to a promontory bluff overlooking the Esopus Creek flood plain. They reconstructed their homes behind a 14-foot high wall made of tree trunks pounded into the ground that created a perimeter of about 1200 x 1300 feet. By day, the men left their walled village, which Director General Stuyvesant had named "Wiltwyck," to go out and farm their fields, leaving the women and children largely confined within the stockade... Although the wooden houses of original settlers are long gone (POR ISSO NÃO SE ENCONTRAM AS CIDADES NEFÍTICAS/LAMANÍTICAS/JAREDÍTICAS: feitas basicamente de madeira)”  http://www.cr.nps.gov/nr/travel/kingston/buildings/Stockade.gif  176 x 221 (o projeto do FORTE tipo das cidades NEFÍTICAS: com muralha de MADEIRA...). Many of these homes began as a single room with a loft above, and gradually expanded, but the simple limestone and mortar materials (QUE FAZIAM O PAPEL DO “CIMENTO” PARA UNIR AS PEDRAS).

*********** A COLONIZAÇÃO NEFÍTICA É BEM SIMILAR À DOS HOLANDESES

http://www.hvnet.com/panoramas/laketiorati.htm  ...EITHER SOURCE WILL GIVE YOU GREAT MAPS LEADING YOU TO DAYS OF SPETACULAR HIKING IN THE HUDSON HIGLANDS past marshes, mountains, crystal clear mountain lakes, abandoned Revolutionary Era IRON MINES and down to the Hudson River itself...

GORP - Two With Great Views - Hudson Highlands Hiking - [ Traduzir esta página ]
... And Clearwater's battle to save the Hudson River initiated America's search for clean
water ... best sand beach on the river, and a
glimpse at old mines and quarries ...
http://gorp.away.com/gorp/publishers/countryman/hik_dutc.htm

http://www.user.shentel.net/neals/apx3.html   1 Ne. 18: 25  

The Dutch learned about ores in what they called Raritan, New Jersey – which according to their use of it could have been anywhere inland from New York harbor – as early as the 1640s. The West India Company ordered Director Stuyvesant to develop this resource. In 1659, the Company first heard about copper at "the Neversinks" and near the Esopus.

Here in the Minisink there were deposits of iron ore, lead, silver, and perhaps copper as well. Most of the mines extracting these metals were on the New Jersey side of the river. One was at the lower point of Paaquarry Flat where the adjacent mountain range nearly touches the water, and another was at the north foot of the same mountain about halfway between the Delaware River and the Esopus. In about 1725 the Dutch built their church on the Pennsylvania side of the river, opposite Tock's Island near the present-day town of Shawnee. The later (1737) Smithfield church used the Dutch church's building. When the Dutch first entered this area, nearly 100 miles from the pockets of European civilization along the Hudson River, there had recently been a bloody conflict with the Indians. For Europeans to go so far into the wilds, there had to be a strong lure; metal deposits may have been that lure.

1 Néfi 18:25 E aconteceu que entanto viajávamos pelo deserto (F_L_O_R_E_S_T_A DESERTA DE OCUPAÇÃO HUMANA, DESOLADA, VAZIA) da Terra da Promissão (BOUNTIFUL, vai até aquele lugar onde os LAMANITAS morreram atravessando o RIO SIDON e em luta com LÉRRI (Lehi) e com MORONI (sem acento... ALI a TRILHA INDÍGENA era a FRONTEIRA a separar a TERRA da PROMISSÃO da TERRA da DESOLAÇÃO), descobrimos que havia animais de toda espécie (PORTANTO NÃO ESTAVAM NO “DESERTO DE AREIAS ESCALDANTES”...) nas FLORESTAS (eles estavam portanto nas FLORESTAS, não em deserto escaldante...): vacas e bois e jumentos e cavalos e cabras e cabras-montesas (TUDO TRAZIDO PELOS JAREDITAS na FROTA de imensos e pesados/lentos NAVIOS VELEIROS CARGUEIROS, e descarregados e aclimatados/selecionados na LONG ISLAND = SANTUÁRIO); e toda espécie de animais selvagens úteis ao homem (já haviam animais no Continente Americano antes da vinda dos ASIÁTICOS, como os JAREDITAS “DO CONVÊNIO” de serem bons, ao similar ao que os NEFITAS fizeram... e os imigrantes juraram também viver e manter e propagar a VERDADEIRA LIBERDADE, sob o silencioso e imóvel testemunho da LIBERDADE a vigiar a chegada deles ao SANTUÁRIO = “REFÚGIO”). ENCONTRAMOS TAMBÉM TODA ESPÉCIE DE MINÉRIOS, TANTO DE OURO QUANTO DE PRATA E DE COBRE.

1 Ne 18:25 And it came to pass that we did find upon the land of promise, as we journeyed in the wilderness, that there were abeasts in the forests of every kind, both the cow and the ox, and the ass and the horse, and the goat and the wild goat, and all manner of wild animals, which were for the use of men. And we did find all manner of bore, both of cgold, and of silver, and of copper. ESTARIA BOA A TRADUÇÃO AO BRASILEIRO?

E aconteceu que encontramos sobre a Terra da Promissão (BOUNTIFUL, a Terra da Primeira Herança dos NEFITAS, que se inicia ao longo do Vale do RIO HUDSON, indo para sua cabeceira), enquanto viajávamos entre os lugares desertos (desolados, sem humanos), que haviam ANIMAIS nas FLORESTAS. Eles eram de todos os tipos, como a vaca e o boi,  o jumento e o cavalo, a cabra e a cabra selvagem, e todo tipo de animais que eram para o uso do homem. E  encontramos todo tipo de minério, tanto de ouro, de prata e de cobre.

COMO SE VÊ, A TRADUÇÃO ESTÁ BOA. Mas como que se impôs a “cultura exclusivista como a superior” (ANGLO-SAXÔNICA). Por certo tradutores brasileiros estavam sob o controle da cultura Anglo-Saxônica. A que prevalece e nos governa, em toda a Igreja, até em tudo o que é o Cultural/Político (algo que existiu entre Portugal e o Brasil: tínhamos de aceitar tudo o que Portugal determinava). 

http://www.hopefarm.com/tlg01.htm

The Lost Gold Mine of the Hudson

by TRISTRAM COFFIN

Anyone familiar with the history of the Hudson Valley knows of the different legends about treasure lost or hidden here. Tales of the pirate Captain Kidd burying treasure somewhere on the banks of the Hudson, or of Conquistadors tunneling for gold near Ellenville or of Old Ninety-Nine's lost cave in the Shawangunks have been told up and down the valley ever since Henry Hudson first saw Indians with gold ornaments during his exploration of the river in 1609. ... The fact that this cave still remains undiscovered can be more-or-less plausibly explained by the natural disasters and the confusion of the location with other stories over the years. But make no mistake, while some might scoff, others see the similarities in the old tales and are convinced that such a mine AND a treasure do exist -- if not in the Hudson Highlands, then somewhere in the Hudson Valley (é parte de uma LENDA, agora romanceada).

http://www.hopefarm.com/indians2.htm

THE DELAWARE INDIANS A BRIEF HISTORY


by Richard C. Adams

The Delaware Indians did not depend solely upon the chase for subsistence, for they grew large fields of corn or maize, squash, beans, sweet potatoes, and tobacco. They manufactured a kind of pottery, dressed deerskins, and made beads or wampum, feather mantels and other ornaments, and used considerable native copper, which they hammered into ornaments or used for arrowheads and pipes. MUITO BEM. HAVIAM MINAS DE COBRE ENTRE ÍNDIOS. .... To read The Redman chapter from Ulster Under the Dutch or an excerpt from Indian Tribes of Hudson's River