Notes on the Tentative Etymologies of
Guanches Toponyms
1) Anaga was the
northernmost kingdom of the island of Tenerife, and its shape roughly resembled
a heart. Accordingly, the Dravidian An-aka embodies the two ideas.
An means "supreme", "uppermost" and, by extension, "northernmost".
Aka (or akam) means "home", "abode", "heart', "bosom", "innermost".
In contrast to the other kingdoms, all coastal, Anaga extended into, and
encompassed the very heart of Tenerife's interior.
2) The capital of
Taoro was named Arautava or Arautapola, nowadays corrupted to Orotava.
In Dravida, the radix poly, polly, palli, etc. expresses
the idea of "gathering" and, hence, of "city". This corresponds to the
Greek polis and the Sanskrit pura meaning the same. Such
is also the idea expressed by the suffix of Arautapola, the capital city
of Taoro. The word "royal" (arayata) has form such as arayan,
aranta, arahaua and arachan. It is from such forms
that the Sanskrit raja ("king") and the Latin rex, regis
(idem) ultimately derive.
3) Pliny, in his
Natural History, affirms that the name of "Canaria" derives from
the many dogs found on the island (Canis, in Latin). This is an
exoterism, and the name indeed derives from that of Cham, the patriarch
of the Chamites (or Ethiopians), the fallen ones. In reality, the word
Cham means precisely the same as "Ethiopian" or "burnt-faces". The
Dravidian etyms of the word Cham are highly enlightening. The word
means both "artificer", "smith", "architect", as well as "fallen", destroyed",
"dead", "terminated". Both in Dravida and in the Biblical tradition, the name of Cham is also interpreted as meaning "dog", "doggish".
The suffix ari- of "Canary" means
"island", "cliff", "rock", in Dravida, and implies the idea of a sunken land whose
peaks remained above the water. Hence, the Canaries are the Island of the Artificers
who engendered Creation; the Fallen Angels or Nephelim, who "fell" (or
died or were exterminated) at the end of their era, becoming damned dogs.
In other words, the Guanches are "the People of Cham" (Guan-che
or Cham-che), an etym (etymology)not unrelated to that of "Dog" and to that
of the Canaries. (See Note 6, below).
4) The name of
"Pure Land" is the traditional designation of places that, like the Canaries,
have been equated to Paradise. Indeed, Chenok or Cham-ok ("Abode of the
Chams") means the same as "Canaries", as seen in note 3) above. This name
is a direct translation from the Sanskrit Sukhavati (or Shveta-dvipa,
etc.), as we discuss elsewhere. The name of Chenech closely evokes the
one of Chenoch, the first of all cities, founded by Cain (Gen. 4:17).
The name of Chenoch (or Henoch or Enoch) is sometimes rendered as "Initial".
But this is essentially the same as "Foundation", one of the many names
of Paradise (Sutala) in India. In Dravida, either ek or ok mean "abode", "city",
"house".
5) Gomeda (or Gomeda-dvipa,
the "Island of the Fat Cattle") is the name of one of the seven dvipas
(Paradisial islands) of the Hindus. The name of Gomeda plays on that of
Gomedha, "the sacrifice of the bull". Gomeda is also the some as Gomata
("rich in cattle") and Govardhana (idem), two other paradisial cities of
the Hindus. As we explain elsewhere, Gomeda-dvipa, the sunken
"Island of the Fat Cattle", is a name of the Hindu Paradise that served as a model for
ours, as well as for Punt and for Plato's Atlantis. The Dravidian
d, when cerebral, often changes into an r, as was the case here.
6) The precise
etym of the word "Guanche" and its relationship with the other Chamitic
(or "Solar") races has been explained in detail in our article on the Guanches
in this Homepage. The word is composed of the
radices guan and che, which correspond to the Dravida ones
cham and che. Cham means "golden", "coppery", " red",
"solar", "fiery", "flaming", and embodies the idea of "purified by fire",
as in the name of the Ethiopians. The expression "Purified by Fire" is a metaphor for "gold" and for the Golden Races of Cham in India. It has also to do with the Cathars (or "Pures") as we explain elsewhere.
As we said in note 3 above, the name of "Cham" also means "dog" and, more exactly the
wild red dog of the Indies, the Cuon alpinus. Hence, the play on
words of Pliny, deriving the name of the Canaries (and, indirectly, of
the Guanches) "from the multitude of dogs that inhabit these islands".
Likewise, the Dravidian suffix che, related to words such as the
Latin gens ("noble people") means "nobles', "heroes", "kings", "majesties".
It is the Dravidian equivalent of the Sanskrit Rajaputras ("Sons
of Kings"), the very name given to the Kshatryas or "Reds", that is, the
ruddy races of Cham. The "Chams" or "Reds" are the decayed golden races of Atlantis who eventually became vicious, as told by Plato.
7) Hiera ("Holy",
in Greek) is the name of a famous mysterious island in antiquity. Hiera
is often identified with Ireland (Eire = Hiera). But this
is sheer exoterism. Several other islands were also erroneously called
Hiera in antiquity. One such is Thermessa (or Vulcano) near Sicily and
the Etna volcano. Thermessa was reputed to be the abode of Vulcanus (Hephaistos),
the infernal volcanic god of the Greeks and Romans. Hiera is mentioned
by Avienus (Ora, 108), who places it next to Tartessos, another
legendary island of the Outer Ocean, the world-encircling ocean of the
ancients.
Every volcanic island tended to be confused
with the Atlantean ones or with their aliases, the Islands of the Blest.
Such was the case of the Canaries and, also, of Sicily and Thermessa, as
well as of England and Ireland. The English word "iron" has no sure etymology,
and very likely derives from the Dravida iru or irum meaning
the dark metal. Apparently the Portuguese knew the true etymology of the
local name when they renamed it "Ferro" (later Hierro, "Iron" in Spanish). It is curious that the Guanches would have the word for "iron", a metal they did not have. The fact that their word for it is Dravidian can only be explained by postulating a contact between the two nations in prehistoric times. And these times can only have been those of Atlantis. What others?
8) The name of
Tacaronte, if interpreted in Dravida as here, apparently corresponds to the
one of Gomera (see note 5 above).
9) Ita-maram
(Tamaran), "the Land of the Brave" corresponds to the name of Vin-bach
(Bimbache) or Hierro. The Guanches were fierce combatants, and resisted
the Spanish conquest down to the last man. Canarian wrestling is famous
even today, and was originally used to train the Guanche warriors for battle.
10) Taoro was the
chief of the nine realms of Tenerife. It occupied its best lands, in the
most sheltered region of the island. Oru implies the idea of "oneness"
and, hence, of "union", "harmony", "single-mindedness", "leadership".
All such etyms express the idea of Taoro as the leading realm of Tenerife,
the one which insured peace and harmony for all the ten regions of the
island.
11) The name of Tenerife, which we encounter in the two forms, just as in Dravida,
seems to be an allusion to the Teyde volcano, the main feature of the island.
This volcano was, by the natives, equated to Mt. Atlas, as we discuss in
our accompanying text on the Guanches. In Dravida, the idea of "white"
is synonymous with "shiny", as instanced here.
The Teyde volcano is snow-capped, and the
etym is often interpreted as an allusion to this fact. But the main reason
is the shiny lava that illuminates its active volcanic peak. Compare
the etymology of Teyde in the above list (s. v. Echeyde). The Dravidian
etyms can also be interpreted as an allusion to the Fallen Mountain (Ecch-eytt),
that is, to Mt. Atlas which the mountain replicates.