Believe me pushing this is isue is friutless, even I used to believe this, but having done enough homework to realize, it can't possibly be true ...
http://en.wikipedia....ings_of_Britain
The Tea Tephi British-monarchy link is also found in J. H. Allen's Judah's Sceptre and Joseph's Birthright (1902, p. 251). A central tenet of British Israelism is that the British monarchy is from the Davidic line and the legend of Tea Tephi from the 19th century attempted to legitimise this claim. Tea Tephi however has never been traced to an extant Irish source before the 19th century and critics assert she was purely a British Israelite invention.
A collection of alleged bardic traditions and Irish manuscripts which detail Tea Tephi were published by J. A. Goodchild in 1897 as The Book of Tephi, the work is however considered pseudo-historical or a forgery. There is though a queen called Tea (singular) in Irish mythology who appears in the Annals of the Kingdom of Ireland. She is described as the wife of Érimón a Míl Espáine (Milesian) and dated to 1700 BC (Geoffrey Keating: 1287 BC).
These dates are inconsistent with the British Israelite literature which date Tea Tephi to the 6th century BC, but later British Israelites such as Herman Hoeh (Compendium of World History, 1970) claimed that the Milesian Royal House (including Tea) was from an earlier blood descendant of the Davidic Line who entered Britain around 1000 BC. In 2001, the British-Israel-World Federation wrote an article claiming they no longer subscribed to these two identifications, but still strongly stick to the belief that the British monarchy is of Judahite origin.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeremiah
name Jeremiah
Born c. 655 BC
Died 586 B.C.
http://en.wikipedia....ings_of_Ireland
Kings in the Baile Chuind
Óengarb Túathal Máelgarb (d. circa 544) Uí Néill
Aíd probably Áed mac Ainmuirech (d. 598) Uí Néill/Cenél Conaill; seemingly misplaced chronologically
Aíd Olláin probably Áed Uaridnach (d. 612) Uí Néill/Cenél nEógain; seemingly misplaced chronologically
Diermait Diarmait mac Cerbaill (d. circa 565) Uí Néill? Origins obscure.
Feáchno Fiachnae mac Báetáin (d. 626), or perhaps Fiachnae mac Feradaig, father of Suibne Menn Cruthin/Dál nAraidi, or Uí Néill/Cenél nEógain
Milesian High Kings
Eber Finn and Érimón 1287-1286 BC 1700 BC
Érimón 1286-1272 BC 1700-1684 BC
Ollom Fotla 943-913 BC 1318-1278 BC
Eochu Uairches 5th century BC 633-621 BC 856-844 BC
Eochu Fíadmuine and Conaing Bececlach 5th century BC 621-616 BC 844-839 BC
Lugaid Lámderg and Conaing Bececlach 5th century BC 616-609 BC 839-832 BC
Conaing Bececlach (alone) 5th century BC 609-599 BC 832-812 BC
Art mac Lugdach 5th century BC 599-593 BC 812-806 BC
Fíachu Tolgrach 593-586 BC 806-796 BC
Ailill Finn 5th-4th century BC 586-577 BC 796-785 BC
Eochu mac Ailella 5th-4th century BC 577-570 BC
Báetán mac Ninnedo 567
Áed mac Ainmuirech 568-594
Áed Sláine and Colmán Rímid 595-600
Áed Uaridnach 601-607
Máel Coba mac Áedo 608-610
Suibne Menn 611-623
http://en.wikipedia....C3%89rim%C3%B3n
Geoffrey Keating dates Erimon's reign from 1287-1272 BC, the Annals of the Four Masters from 1700 to 1684 BC BC.
http://en.wikipedia....Driel_F%C3%A1id
Irial Fáid ("the prophet"), the youngest son of Érimón by his wife Tea, according to medieval Irish legends and historical traditions, became High King of Ireland after killing Ér, Orba, Ferón and Fergna, sons of Éber Finn, in the Battle of Cul Martha, in revenge for their killing of his brothers Luigne and Laigne. He cleared twelve plains, dug seven royal forts, and fought four battles against the Fomorians. Having ruled for ten years, he died at Mag Muaide, and was succeeded by his son Ethriel. The Lebor Gabála Érenn places his death during the reign of Tautanes in Assyria (1191-1182 BC according to Jerome's Chronicon). Geoffrey Keating dates his reign from 1269 to 1259 BC,[3] the Annals of the Four Masters from 1681-1671 BC
http://en.wikipedia....om_Adam_and_Eve
Some claims, supported, for instance, by the Orange Street Congregational Church and The British Israel World Federation, go that the British Royal Family originates from the kings of Scotland, which come from the kings of Argyleshire, which trace back to the kings of Ireland. Ultimately, according to British Israelism, a portion of the monarchy of Ireland which is linked with those of Britain starts with Tea Tephi, a supposed daughter of Zedekiah, last king of Judah. British Israelists argue that Tea Tephi was taken from Jerusalem to Ireland by the prophet Jeremiah. Once there, British Israelists argue she married Érimón and by him had a child named Íriel Fáid, who became the next High King of Ireland, and was succeeded by his son Ethriel, and so on until the British Royal Family is reached.
Another claim consists of descent from the Viking founder of the Norman dynasty, king Rollo, who married into certain European royalty which had lines tracing back to Joseph of Arimathea.
[The Norman Claim is probably true, But steeped in myth and legend also [Arimathea thru Arthur, but taken as a whole is a given fact], But their are plenty of Rabbinic sources that point to this]
http://en.wikipedia....itish_Israelism
Several early Jewish sources support Two House Theology, which is a key tenet of British Israelism. However these sources do not state where the ten lost tribes of Israel are located. The Babylonian Talmud (Mishnah) Sanhedrin 110b for example notes:
...THE TEN TRIBES WILL NOT RETURN [TO THE LAND OF ISRAEL], FOR IT IS SAID, AND CAST THEM INTO ANOTHER LAND, AS IS THIS DAY: JUST AS THE DAY GOES AND DOES NOT RETURN, SO THEY TOO WENT AND WILL NOT RETURN: THIS IS R. AKIBA'S VIEW. R. ELIEZER SAID: AS THIS DAY — JUST AS THE DAY DARKENS AND THEN BECOMES LIGHT AGAIN, SO THE TEN TRIBES — EVEN AS IT WENT DARK FOR THEM, SO WILL IT BECOME LIGHT FOR THEM
Many Jews however have never subscribed to Two House Theology, and continue to reject this doctrine and therefore oppose British Israelism. Despite this, there have been historic Jews who advocated Two House Theology. Several Medieval Rabbis and Jewish Torah scholars began to locate the ten lost tribes, but the location greatly varied. Modern British Israelites often quote from Maimonides who wrote:
...I believe the Ten Tribes to be in various parts of Europe.
Brit-Am has compiled many more of these Rabbinic sources, including the testimony of Nahmanides who placed the lost tribes of Israel in France and Northern Europe.
Moses ben Isaac Edrehi
Moses ben Isaac Edrehi (1774–1842), a Moroccan-born Rabbi and Kabbalist believed the lost tribes of Israel were also located in Europe, writing in his Historical Account Of The Ten Tribes (1836):
...Orteleus, that great geographer, giving the description of Tartary, notices the kingdom of Arsareth, where the Ten Tribes, retiring, succeeded [other] Scythian inhabitants, and took the name Gauther [Goths], because they were very jealous for the glory of God. In another place, he found the Naphtalites, who had their hordes there. He also discovered the tribe of Dan in the north, which has preserved its name. ...They further add, that the remains of ancient Israel were more numerous here than in Muscovy and Poland - from which it was concluded, that their habitation was fixed in Tartary [ie Scythia] from whence they passed into neighbouring places ... it is no wonder to find the Ten Tribes dispersed there; since it was no great way to go from Assyria, whither they were transplanted, having only Armenia betwixt them.
Jewish scholar Dr. Moses Margoliouth in his History of the Jews in Great Britain (1851) placed the ten lost tribes in Western Europe:
...the Israelites must have visited the western countries (of Europe) in the days of Solomon.
I know Jeremiah after he returned, had to intervene because an Aramean-Arabo portion of the Persian Forces what to steal the kings daughter. During this time the Persian Empire was in a state of revolt at times. Like with Darius.
There are a few posibilities though, they married those who went down to Egypt with them. Ahab's defunct line [Gypsy Kings]. Possibly through Scythpolis or Arsareth she married a Northern Tribes King. Possibly a Foriegn King associated with Egypt.
[The other line probably also crosses with David Solomon and Nathan in Iberia earlier]
... AND WHAT TIM_FROM_PA SAID ... Skeptics, don't understand the Bible, and anyone associated with BI is considered a fraud. But you, Tim and me know this cannot be true. They focus on small details, hoping to catch mistakes. But the big picture tells a different story. Here my thread on some of these connections ...
http://www.christian...l/page__st__150
PS - I just found this also -> http://www.shee-eire.com/magic&mythology/myths/Dinnshenchas/Temhair%28Tara%29/Page1.htm