Book of Clyde
The Book of Clyde is a collection of religious texts espoused by Clyde Homobro (referred to by followers as the Clyde) and written down by Clydeian Priests. The Book of Clyde was originally written in Guugu Yimidhirr, an Aboriginal language and the traditional language of the Braapers. These texts contain the teachings of the Clyde and are generally considered to be the most accurate representation of the religious beliefs of homobros.
History
The Book of Clyde is not a single book; it is a collection of books whose complex development is not completely understood. Many of the texts are known to have been orally transmitted between generations, and scholars are still exploring the history of these texts. The historical consensus is that the texts originated from the priests who followed the Clyde when he espoused his teachings and continued to improve upon them with the development of homobroism after his death.
The Book was initially written and copied on hand in the form of hieroglyphs on stones. Using these stones, the oldest written form of the Book of Clyde can be dated roughly to 800 BCE. The Gooma Stone was discovered in the Australian desert in 1892 by British archaeologists and identified in 1930 as having to do with the homobros. It has since been translated into an early form of the Book of Clyde, and has been compared with modern day texts in their most popular form with several notable differences in their language.