The ET bloodline of the mysterious Templar kings
The ET bloodline of the mysterious Templar kings
The Templars' legacy lives today in many forms
To many, the Templars are alive and well today, but under other names like Masons, Rosicrusians, and the Priory of Sion. Legends of the Templars connect these blue bloods with the knowledge of the true purposes of Solomon's Temple and its connection to the Egypt-ET myth. Secrets always include the protection of the Royal blood line, which needs protection at some deeper esoteric level, as if shielding some hybrid project from a higher intelligence.
To understand the Templars, we must understand their deeper origins and purposes. Hugh d'Payens worked for Godfroi de Boullion, the King of France, who initiated the First Crusade. Godfroi was a direct descendant of the royal and mysterious Merovingian kings, who ruled between 400 and 700 A.D. Up until recently, little was known about the Merovingian kings, as they inhabited that historical epoch derided as the "Dark Ages." Yet, according to anthropologist Steven Mizrach, the Merovingians' most unusual chronicler is Gerard de Sede, who claims the "fabulous race" descends from extraterrestrials from Sirius. Mirvech also points out that in the ET stronghold in Stenay (also known as Satanicum), frogs frequently fall from the sky.
The founder of the royal line Merovech was said to be of two fathers. His mother, already pregnant by King Chlodio, was seduced while swimming in the ocean by a "Quinotaur" (literally, "five horn") and Merovech was formed, somehow, by the commingling of Frankish blood and that of the mysterious aquatic creature. Like the Nazoreans of old, the Merovingian monarchs never cut their hair, and bore a distinctive birthmark -- said to be a red cross -- over their shoulder blades. Their robes were fringed with tassels, which were said to carry magical curative powers. Merovingians were known as occult adepts, and in one of their tombs, items such as a golden bull's head, a crystal ball, and several golden miniature bees were found. Strangely, many skulls of these monarchs appear to have been ritually incised -- i.e. "trephanned."
The Sicambrians, ancestors of the Franks, were known as the "people of the bear." The plains Indians of America were also known to be from the constellation of the bear, and were visited by beings from there. The word Arcadia comes from Arkas, patron god of that area of Greece, the son of the nymph Callisto, sister of the huntress Artemis. Callisto's constellation is also known to many as Ursa Major, the Great Bear. The name "Arthur" comes from the Celtic "arth," related to "Ursus" (as in "Prince"), namely, "bear."
In legend, the Merovingians were said to be descended from the Trojans; and poet Homer writes that Troy was founded by a colony of Arcadians. The "Prieure documents" claim that the Arcadians were descended from Benjamites driven out of Palestine by their fellow Israelites for idolatry. "Arcadia" was also known as the source of the River Alphaeus, the "underground stream" that figures so prominently in Coleridge's poetry and in esoteric literature.
The Merovingians were "sacred kings" who reigned but did not rule, leaving the secular governing function to chancellors known as the Mayors of the Palace. As an example, Clovis, one of the great Merovingian kings, struck a "deal" with the newly nascent Roman church: He would subdue their enemies, the Arian Visigoths and the pagan Lombards, in return for baptism into the faith and recognition of his right to rule a new Roman empire as "Novus Constantinus."
Yet one of Clovis's descendants, Dagobert II, was murdered by a lance pierced through his eye (or poison poured in the ear - accounts vary) at the orders of Pepin. The church endorsed the assassination, flatly betrayed its pact with Clovis, and in turn recognized the family of usurpers as legitimate, culminating with the crowning of Charlemagne as Holy Roman Emperor. It was thought that the Merovingian lineage was extinguished; in any case, it was excised from the history books. But there is some evidence that Dagobert's son, Siegebert IV, survived, and that a Merovingian principality continued to be ruled in Septimania by Guillem de Gellone, a descendant -- and ancestor of Godfroi de Bouillon.
If the Prieure documents are to be believed, the Merovingian lineage persists to this day, largely due to efforts to preserve it through intermarriage. The significance of such alliances are key -- Dagobert married the daughter of the Visigothic Count of Razes, giving his descendants hereditary title to the lands surrounding Rennes-le-Chateau, in Southwestern France. The Templars and Rennes Le Chateau are always entwined and connected.
The Quinotaur: an extraterrestrial?
One of the secrets of the Templars is that Mary Magdalene's heirs married into the Visigoth families of the time, and gave birth to the sacred Merovingian ruling family. The Visigoths of the area might have been descended from the House of Benjamin, which had fled to the Arcadia region of Greece, and thence north into France, a thousand years earlier. The Merovingians were not wiped out by the Carolingian usurpers, and their lineage survives in some of the other royal families of Europe; apparently the goal of the secret society known as the Prieure du Sion is a Merovingian restoration in France.
The code in the parchments is only decipherable through the use of the knight's tour -- a logic puzzle wherein one "jumps" a knight to every square on a chess board, once and only once. It is a puzzle that has only one solution -- as does the code, clearly. But the use of chessboard imagery at Rennes-le-Chateau is striking. Elizabeth van Buren, a "cottage industry" writer in the area, asserts that Rennes-le-Chateau is the site for a Manichean chess-like struggle between the cosmic forces of good (the Merovingians) and darkness (which would seem to be the Church). Van Buren feels that the "Quinotaur" (literally, "five-horn"), which mated with King Merovech's mother in the sea, giving King Merovech "double parentage," may have been an extraterrestrial.
Many writers are connected with the mystery of the Templars and Rennes-le-Chateau. It might be productive to reexamine their works with a new eye for such hidden codes. One, novelist Victor Hugo, and another, playwright Jean Cocteau, are said to have presided over the Prieure. But other writers appear to be strongly connected to the mystery. Three in particular are the so-called "Inklings": fantasy writer J.R.R. Tolkien, "Screwtape" writer C.S. Lewis, and Charles Williams. Lionel Fanthorpe also suspects that Isaac Asimov, Jules Verne, George McDonald, and Umberto Eco may somehow have provided clues to the mystery in their books. Sir Walter Raleigh, who is now thought to have been involved in an esoteric body known as "the School of Night" (whose motto was that "inspiration comes to the philosopher at night, when nature and the rest of humanity sleeps"), may have also been part of the Order of Sion.
The theme of "Arcadia" was prominent in Elizabethan literature, and it appears in the works of writers such as Edmund Spenser, Sir Phillip Sidney, and even Shakespeare, for whom the word was synonymous with the Golden Age. Through the historical detective work of Frances Yates, we now know that this era was a time when many "Rosicrucian" ideas were moving to the Continent, and esoteric thinkers were congregating around Frederick, Elector of the Palatinate of Bohemia, as the figure who would usher in the reforms of Church and State many expected.
The Arch-Cabal
The Prieure du Notre Dame du Sion, or Priory of Zion, is said to be the cabal behind many of the events attributed to the Templars. According to the Prieure's own documents, its history is long and convoluted. Its earliest roots are in some sort of Hermetic or Gnostic society led by a man named Ormus. This individual is said to have reconciled paganism and Christianity.
The story of Sion only comes into focus in the Middle Ages. In 1070, a group of monks from Calabria, Italy, led by one Prince Ursus, founded the Abbey of Orval in France, near Stenay, in the Ardennes. These monks are said to have formed the basis for the Order de Sion, into which they were "folded" in 1099 by Godfroi de Bouillion. For about one hundred years, the Order of the Temple (Knights Templar) and Sion were apparently unified under one leadership, though they are said to have separated at the "cutting of the elm" at Gisors in 1188. It appears that there are vast connections between Sion and numerous sociocultural strata in European thought -- Roscicrucianism, Freemasonry, Arthurian and Grail legends, "Arcadianism," Catharism.
It is not clear who runs the organization at this time. But whoever he is, he has had illustrious predecessors -- Jacques DeMolay, Leonardo de Vinci, Isaac Newton, and Claude Debussy, among others. Plantard, in any case, seems to have enjoyed the ear of many influential persons in contemporary French politics - deGaulle, Marcel Lefebvre, Francois Ducaud-Bourget, Andre Malraux, and Alain Poher, among others -- many of whom appear to know him from his efforts with the Resistance during the Vichy occupation. Despite its registry, however, the organization remains untraceable, its given address and number leading to dead ends, which might lead one to wonder why the government never bothered to verify the information.
These are all fascinating speculations, to say the least. The Visigothic kingdom of Rhedae was in the area, and they are known to have seized at least some portion of the treasure of the Temple (taken by the Romans during the Jewish Revolt of 70 CE) when they sacked Rome in the 5th century CE. Could that treasure have been the Ark of the Covenant, concealed at Rennes?
Alternatively, the Copper Scroll of the Dead Sea sect (the Qumran Essenes) suggested some of the Temple treasure was hidden before the Roman invasion. Could the "Nestorian" Christians of the area have concealed the Ark, and given it to the Templars for safekeeping? Or could it have been hidden in Solomon's Stables underneath the Mosque of Omar, where the Templars are known to have excavated? Might the Ark have been the item "smuggled" out by two Cathars under highly dangerous circumstances, right before their brethren fell at Montsegur? The Ark may have been an alien or extraterrestrial "power source," as some authors have claimed, but if it is the possession of Sion, it is an explosive secret, to say the least.
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