And if you still don't think the Phoenicians are the same as the Jews, I will remind you of something I
haven't pointed you toward before. Do you remember who is famous for building Solomon's Temple?
The Freemasons know, since they still feature him. Hiram I, King of Tyre, built Solomon's Temple.
He was Phoenician. The Freemasons will tell you their Hiram was not the King, but just a craftsman in
the same event. They do this so that they don't have to mention the Phoenicians, of course. If you
mention Hiram the King, people will ask, “King of what?” But if Hiram is introduced in the story as
just a craftsman, that question is dodged. See the Wiki page for Hiram Abiff of the Freemason ritual.
Although the page does mention Hiram of Tyre, Phoenicia/Phoenician does not appear on the page.
Hiram also built David's Palace in Jerusalem, so Solomon's Temple was not a one-off. Hiram and
Solomon were not just trading partners or allies, they were co-heads of the largest trading empire in the
world, with Hiram the first name on the heading. The company was Hiram Solomon, not Solomon
Hiram. Hiram was building palaces and temples for the Jews, as if he was setting up his in-laws.
Why? Because he was. David and Solomon were Phoenicians.
Don't believe me? Let's look at the women. David's mother was Nitzevet, which is a Phoenician name.
The Bible is careful not to name her, and her name may have been erased to prevent us recognizing that
Nitzevet is not a Twelve Tribes name. Historians also don't want to tell us anything about her, like
where she came from. Her husband Jesse is also scrubbed. Although we know his paternal
grandparents, we don't know his mother. Solomon's mother was Bathsheba, of course. Her father is
given as Eliam of Gilon. Since Gilon is now in Israel, you are supposed to think Eliam and Bathsheba
were Israelites. But Gilon is only about six miles east of Acre, and both were north of the southern
border of Phoenicia at the time. Acre and Gilon were in Phoenicia. So Bathsheba was Phoenician.
Which means Solomon was also Phoenician, by their own rules. To cover this, most maps of this time
give the entire region to the Tribe of Asher. Sidon and Tyre are drawn within Asher after 1200BC,
based on the Book of Joshua. But this is of course absurd. They admit in other places that Hiram I was
King of Tyre, and that Phoenicia was at a zenith in those years. This was during the “Phoenician
Renaissance”. So how could Phoenicia be part of Asher? As usual, Phoenicia is just wiped off the
map to suit the selective memory of the Jewish historians.
http://mileswmathis.com/tartar.pdf