Around 10,000 B.C., highly skilled Andites from a brilliant tribe migrated to Crete, being driven off the mainland by their larger and inferior fellows, they were masters of weaving, among other crafts. [1] The sudden appearance of the Sumerians in Mesopotamia, marked by their advanced culture including weaving, remains a mystery to investigators. [2] Caligastia 100 taught weaving, well digging, spring control, and irrigation to advance the material welfare of humans. [3] Jesus, an expert weaver by age ten, befriended a potter in Nazareth as a child. [4] Weaving was a cultural achievement practiced in Eden, the second garden where Adam and Eve were invested with kingly robes. [5]