Edwin Pace was first an armour officer, and then a career intelligence officer. These skills enabled him to rigorously evaluate the earliest sources for Post-Roman Britain--and find that all were recording the same events. First reported in numerous peer-reviewed articles in scholarly journals, he now combines these into a riveting account of 300 years of "lost" British history. His most startling find was that there is only one flaw in all the evidence. And once we recognize this, we discover that all the early witnesses were telling nothing but the truth. It is only their limited perspectives that skew each account.