Princess Scota the eldest daughter of Akhenaten and Nefertiti also known as Princes Meritaten who left Egypt  married Goídel Glas and became the founder of the Scots and Gail's. Roy Glass was the grandson of a skippy and Prince of one of the 72 chieftains who allegedly built the Tower of Babel. 
 
 
 
 
Scota (left) with Goídel Glas voyaging from Egypt, as depicted in a 15th-century manuscript of the Scotichronicon of Walter Bower; in this version Scota and Goídel Glas (Latinized as Gaythelos) are wife and husband.
 
 
Goídel Glas was credited with the creation of Gaelic which is the proto irish language and it's from one of the original 72 languages that allegedly rose from the time of the confusion of tongues the part in the Bible where God gets upset and destroy the tower and disperses the people confusing their languages  The stone of destiny was transported to Ireland via Spain why princess Scota the eldest daughter of Akhenaten and Nefertiti also known as Princes Meritaten who led Egypt .
 
There are a striking number of redheaded royal mummies belonging to the Pharaohs. Discoveries are being made regarding genetics that  show's half of all western european men are somehow related to the egyptian pharaoh KingTutankhamen. Not only do half of Western European men have this connection genetic profile connection but seventy percent of men in Britain all have the same genetic profile or same ancestry as King Tut from Egypt way back when. 
 
Red hair is the rarest natural hair color in humans was thought to be the sign of a witch during the Middle Ages and the distribution of red hair in the world population is about 1% but in Scotland and Ireland it's about ten to thirteen percent of the population that has red hair with thirty to forty-five percent unknowingly carriers of the red hair gene this region is also particularly high in rhesus negative blood type sharing this trait with the Basque Berbers and others in an interesting and important topic.
 
The grave of Scota (or Scotia's Grave) allegedly lies in a valley south of Tralee Town, Co. Kerry, Ireland. The area is known as Glenn Scoithin, "Vale of the little flower." But is more popularly known as Foley's Glen. A trail from the road leads along a stream to a clearing where a circle of large stones marks the grave site, as indicated by a County Council road signpost.
 
 
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