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General: RENNES LE CHATEAU-MARY MAGDALENE-FRANCE
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De: BARILOCHENSE6999  (Mensaje original) Enviado: 01/02/2015 18:38
 

THE ROCK OF THE MAGDALENE

By CORJAN DE RAAF & ANDREW GOUGH

February 2007

The 600 Lb Gorilla

The legend of Rennes-le-Chteau is fraught with mystery, mistakes and misdirection. The simplest explanation is often the path least chosen, if selected at all. This flies in the face of Occam’s Razor, which stipulates – according to the online encyclopedia Wikipedia – that "one should always choose the simplest explanation of a phenomenon, the one that requires the fewest leaps of logic". In layman’s terms, this translates as always look for the 600 pound gorilla in front of you first before charging into the jungle.

So where is the 600 lb gorilla in the mystery of Rennes-le-Chteau? Actually there might be several, but for a start, how about a tower designed by a priest; father Saunière, called the Tour Magdala, or the Tower of the Magdalene. This spectacular structure defines the village of Rennes-le-Chteau and exhibits several 600 lb gorilla like qualities, such as the following:

  • 22 steps lead to a platform that connects the Tour Magdela with the adjoining orangery.

  • 22 steps ascend a spiral stair case to the top of the Tour Magdela.

  • 22 degrees offset from the window in the Tour Magdela, one’s line of sight is fixed

  • 22 is the Feast Day of Saint Mary Magdalene.

  • The Tour Magdal window points unambiguously at a grotto in the distance whose ancient place name is ‘Grotte du Fournet – dite de la Magdeleine’, which translates as ‘The Burial Site of the Mary Magdalene‘ or the Grotto of Mary as we will call it.

  • Magdala refers to Magdalene.  Magdala near Gallilee, according to the gospels, was the birthplace of Mary Magdalene. Magdala also means tower in Hebrew (Migdal in Aramic). Hence, a triple meaning.

  • In the Grotto of Mary can be found the remains of what appears to be two ancient burials.

22 steps lead to the platform connecting the Tour Magdela and the Orangery © Andrew Gough

 

The Tour Magdela: Tower of the Magdalene
Magdala refers to Magdalene.  Magdala near Gallilee, according to the gospels, was the birthplace of Mary Magdalene. Magdala also means tower in Hebrew (Migdal in Aramic); hence the Magdela’s triple meaning © Andrew Gough

 

22 Steps Lead to The Tour Magdela Window which is fixed on the Grotto of Mary © Andrew Gough

 

The Grotto of Mary – looking back at the Tower of the Magdalene © Andrew Gough


Supporting these gorilla like pillars are other facts and peculiarities, such as:

  • Fixed on the Grotto of Mary is a very distinctive and curious stone platform. This enigmatic structure will be the foundation of much of our analysis in this paper, as it appears to have been portrayed in various works of classical art.

  • The village Priest, Berenger Saunière, built his own Grotto, dedicated to Mary Magdalene, from stones collected near the region pointed to by the Tour Magdela. His grotto, before it was vandalized, pointed directly at the Tour Magdela.

  • Elsewhere, the village church is dedicated to Mary Magdalene.

  • The Church’s statues are repositioned so that the first letter of each spells ‘GRAAL’, French for Grail, when connected in the shape of an ‘M’.

  • The hand of Berenger Saunière is observed within the church in several places, including most notably the Altar Painting that he personally designed. It depicts a grotto with Mary Magdalene staring at an ‘X’ or cross (a sign of concealed esoteric knowledge according to Margaret Starbird, and others).

  • In the Altar Painting Mary Magdalene’s hands are folded in a peculiar, almost swastika like manner. In this instance, they form three X’s; a sign of significant, concealed esoteric knowledge.

  • The Altar Painting seems to depict buildings present in Rennes-le-Chteau in the background.

These gorilla like pillars that seem to shout ‘look here! And so we shall, all the while conscious of the fact that their apparent significance may merely be a product of our over active imagination. The purpose of this essay, whose core arguments have been undergone peer review on both public and private Rennes-le-Chteau Forums, is an attempt to examine a subset of these anomalies in considerable detail and to apply Occams Razor where possible, and to look beyond it where necessary.

In particular, we will explore one strangely overlooked facet of the mystery; the large stone platform that is fixed on the Grotto of Mary. This distinctive, curious and largely ignored stone platform, which we call the Rock of The Magdalene, seems in need of considerable analysis, given its possible significance in the mystery and its apparent representation in classical works of art. Before reviewing each of the classical painters whose works appear to have commemorated this enigmatic structure, let’s take a look at what we call, The Rock of the Magdalene.

The Rock of Magdalene in the foreground: from the Grotto of Mary
with the Tour of the Magdalene in the distance © Andrew Gough

 

The Rock of the Magdalene; a Profile © Andrew Gough

 

Magdalene’s Streaming Tears

We start with a review of the area surrounding the Grotto of Mary and the Rock of The Magdalene, which is called the Vallée des Couleurs. Studying the map below we can see that a small stream crosses the valley called Ruisseau de Couleurs.

IGN Map and Aerial photo of the location of the Grotto and the Rock of the Magdalene
 Split by thé Ruisseau de Couleurs. © Corjan De Raaf

 

Corjan, a keen linguist, had historically translated the streams name as Stream of Colours, but has recently begun to consider other alternative translations. Basically, the French have an expression: un RUISSEAU de larmes COULAIT le long de ses joues, meaning the tears streamed down her cheeks. Couleurs, in that respect, could mean ‘the things that run in the sense of tears down your cheeks’. It doesn’t translate particularly well into English but we hope you get the idea: Ruisseau de Couleurs could perhaps have been intended as Stream of Tears a long time ago!

This is relevant because there is a well-known phrase in the whole enigma that speaks of the Magdalena and her tears that wash away our sins. It was once inscribed below the bas relief of Saunière’s altar and it is displayed at the bottom of what we know as the ‘2nd parchment’.  The phrase states: JESU MEDELA VULNERUM SPES UNA POENITENTIUM PER MAGDALENAE LACRYMAS PECCATA NOSTRA DILUAS.

Noel Corbu pointing at Mary Magdalene’s strangely crossed fingers.
Below the Bas Relief is the inscription that is identical to the last phrase of the ‘big’ parchment
Saunière allegedly found in his church in July 1887. © Corjan De Raaf

 

The above phrase is Latin for Jesus, you remedy against our pains and only hope for our repentance, it is thanks to Magdalene’s tears that you wash our sins away. This sentence is pure heresy and must have raised many an eyebrow when it was first put on display. The power to wash away our sins is directly linked to the Magdalene’s tears, rather than to the blood of Jesus or his death on the cross. Peculiar to say the least.

There are more similarities between the bottom of the second parchment and the bas relief. Have a close look at the NOIS sign and the strange scribbling in the middle. When you mirror the image it says SION and displays the cross with a branch below an inversed ‘N’. We believe that the inversed ‘N’ means: attention, there’s a secret here. One of the members on the Back to the Source Forum brought to our attention a similarly inversed ‘N’ in a tree in a famous painting that is often related to Rennes-le-Chateau: Les Bergers d’Arcadie. Over that reversed ‘N’, in the same tree, Poussin painted the same cross, represented with a branch. Would there also be references in art to Mary Magdalene and the big square rock?

Remarkable resemblances between the inversed Priory-of-Sion logo at the bottom of the ‘large parchment’, the tree on the left side of Poussin’s Les Bergers d’Arcadie and the tree-cross (X), admired by Mary Magdalene on Saunière’s altar. © Corjan De Raaf

 

The Rock of the Magdalene

It has often been hypothesized that there were artists who possessed the secret of Rennes-le-Chateau and preserved this heretical knowledge in their paintings. However, this has never been satisfactorily proved. This discussion is an attempt to review the regions depicted by these artists and examine the possibilities. For instance, whether or not Nicolas Poussin had Rennes-le-Chteau in mind when he painted his ‘Bergers d’Arcadie’ is completely up for speculation. Louis XIV apparently went out of his way to find and purchase the original in 1685, when he bought the painting from C.A. Herault, a well-known art dealer. The painting adorned his private quarters for the rest of his life.

When dealing with matters related to Rennes-le-Chteau, one must pay special attention to the few actual facts in the story, because so much of the mystery is simply hearsay from Les Dossiers Secrets. There is no record whatsoever that Saunière purchased or ever possessed a copy of the painting or any of the other paintings he allegedly bought from the Louvre (which, according to legend included Poussins 2nd version of Les Bergers d’Arcadie, a portrait of Pope Celestine V and one of David Tenier’s painting of St. Anthony). In fact, there is not a shred of evidence that Saunière was ever in Paris. Sure, there was a little glass Eiffel Tower found in Marie Dénarnaud’s (the priests house keeper) possessions after she died but that tourist souvenir could have come from everyone.

So at the end of the day it is difficult to prove that the mystery of Rennes-le-Chteau has been commemorated in classical art. That said there are remarkable similarities in some of their works; images and landscapes that appear to be related to the enigma. The relationship between the Magdalene and a large square rock platform is one such similarity that we have found featured over and over in the work of a numerous classical painters. So let’s cautiously explore these apparent similarities a little further.

The shape of the Rock of the Magdalene is unmistakable. Its square construction and proximity to the Grotto of Mary could even lead one to believe that the setting may have been communicated and reproduced on canvas, without having viewed it in person. The shape of the rock itself is insignificant; however when combined with its position near the Grotto of Mary, we can’t help but feel we have seen this image before. The great painters were often initiated in religion and esoterica. Many resided in Rome and were supervisor of the Papal art collections in the Belvedere. It can be argued that the Vatican is not the ideal place to uncover heretical secrets. It’s perhaps less implausible than you think when you realize that the church was always an obsessive and immaculate keeper of records and many a Pope, Cardinal or Bishop was more interested in politics than eclectics.

Returning to the issue at hand, in the following section we have identified a number of paintings that appear to have made the link between the Rock and the Magdalene and the Grotto of Mary. Ever so cautiously, let’s have a look at some of those now.

Commemorating the Magdalene: Pietro Perugino (1495 – 1562)

Italian master Perugino began painting at the age of nine. He was one of the first artists in Italy who used oil paint, in the style of Jan van Eyck. For a number of years Pietro was an apprentice in the studio of Andrea del Verrocchio. One of his companion apprentices during that period was Leonardo da Vinci. The two men therefore must have known each other well. In 1480 Pope Sixtus IV called Perugino to Rome to work on the Sistine Chapel. He produced two large frescoes by the names of ‘The Baptism of Christ‘ and ‘The Delivery of the Keys‘. The first was later removed to make room for the work of Michelangelo. After 1506 he worked in Vatican City, summoned there by Pope Julius II. He was later succeeded by his best known pupil, Rafael (who became especially famous for his fresco ‘the School of Athens’ in the Stanza della Segnatura, the private library of the Pope).

Pietro Perugino and his famous work: the Galtzin Triptych which he produced for the church San Domenico in San Gimignano. © Corjan De Raaf

 

Perugino’s work is beautifully detailed and geometric in nature. In his so called Galtzin Triptych, which he produced for the church of San Domenico in San Gimignano, he exercised a startling realism for the landscape. The three panels together depict the ‘V’, perhaps the vessel that bore Christ’s fruit while he was being crucified. Mary Magdalene stands discretely on the right, identified by her anointment jar, but has the same pose as Mary, mother of Christ. The landscape on her top-right looks remarkably like the Rock of the Magdalene. There’s a lot more to say about these three panels, (like for example the hands of Mary that are folded in the three X’s like the Mary Magdalene on the bas relief on the altar in Rennes-le-Chteau), but we’ll leave that to the side for now.

 


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Commemorating the Magdalene: Jan van Scorel (1495 – 1562)

Jan Van Scorel was a Dutch master who travelled extensively across Europe, and beyond. He worked under Albrecht Dürer in Germany around 1518, and is understood to have made a pilgrimage to the Holy Land and Jerusalem. He was an erudite man. In 1521, Van Scorel was called to Rome by the Utrecht born Dutch Pope Adrian VI. The Pope appointed him painter to the Vatican and welcomed him into the Papal apartments. Van Scorel soon succeeded Raphael as the keeper of the Papal Art Collections in the Belvedere. After the death of Adrian VI in 1523 he returned to his home country the Netherlands. There he spent some very productive decades until his death in 1562. Most remarkable was his restoration of the renowned Ghent Altarpiece (by the brothers Jan and Hubert van Eyck) in 1550. Van Scorel allegedly added the Utrecht church tower to this masterpiece, which has become shrouded in mystery and conspiracies. For instance, the Nazis believed it to be a treasure map and linked it to Rennes-le-Chteau, as described in the excellent book ‘Satan’s Song’ by Karl Hammer.

Dutch Master Jan van Scorel appears to have hidden a number of secrets in his painting of ‘Mary Magdalene‘. Notice the three figures beneath the Rock: a man, woman and child. At the bottom is a detail of the fresco over the confessional in Saunière’s church. © Corjan De Raaf

 

One of Van Scorel’s most enigmatic works is a portrait of Mary Magdalene from 1528. The dramatic rock on her left is only one of many remarkable features. There’s an old bearded man walking, reminding us of the old bearded man / woman walking across the west wall fresco over the confessional in the church of Rennes-le-Chteau. A man, woman and child are sitting calmly at the foot of the Rock. Mary Magdalene has Hebrew characters embroidered on the collar of her dress. Jordan Stratford and Avielah Barclay have preformed extensive research into this Hebrew text and suggested that it refers to a secret maternity. 

PART 2

Commemorating the Magdalene: Nicolas Poussin (1594 – 1665)

Allegedly, Nicolas Poussin’s personal motto was ‘tenet confidentiam‘ or ‘keeper of secrets’. In 1862, Historian Anatole de Montaiglon published a series of seven letters concerning Poussin, one of them written by Abbé Louis Fouquet, brother of Louis Fouquet, treasurer to Louis XIV. Louis wrote about an encounter his brother had with Poussin in a most lucid manner:

‘He and I discussed certain things, which I shall with ease be able to explain to you in detail – things which will give you, through Monsieur Poussin, advantages which even kings would have great pains to draw from him, and which, according to him, it is possible that nobody else will ever rediscover in the centuries to come. And what is more, these are things so difficult to discover that nothing now on earth can prove of better fortune nor be their equal’.

What exactly did Poussin know? If he did in fact conceal a secret, what clues did he leave behind in his work?

Poussin died in Rome in 1665 and was buried in the Basilica San Lorenzo in Lucina. Chteaubriand, French Ambassador in Rome, raised a monument to Poussin above the artist’s mausoleum in 1820. It carries a dedication and a bas-relief displaying his most famous painting The Shepherds of Arcadia. Below the plaque there’s an inscription that might well answer our question of weather Poussin preserved esoteric clues in his work. It states:

‘PARCE PIIS LACRIMIS VIVIT PUSSINUS IN URNA VIVERE QUI DEDERAT NESCIUS IPSE MORI HIC TAMEN IPSE SILET SI VIS AUDIRE LOQUENTEM MIRUM EST TABULIS VIVIT ET ELOQUITUR’.

This curious expression speaks about how Poussin has given his life without really dying. He is silent now but when you’re prepared to listen, however, he has spoken volumes in his paintings.

Poussin is linked to the enigma of Rennes-le-Chteau like no other artist. According to Gérard de Sède in his book ‘le Trésor Maudit de Rennes-le-Chteau (1967), Bérenger Saunière bought a copy of Poussin’s ‘Les Bergers d’Arcadie’ in Paris some time around March 1892. De Sède however was prompted by Pierre Plantard and ‘Les Dossiers Secrets’, the authenticity of each being potentially rather dubious.

Nicolas Poussin and one of his Four Seasons: Autumn or Grapes from the Promised Land. © Corjan De Raaf

 

It is not clear if Poussin ever visited the region. If he did, it would have most likely been a diversion from the standard route used by travellers from Paris to Italy. Nevertheless, Poussin did produce several works that appear to be linked to the history of Rennes-le-Chteau. His work ‘Autumn or Grapes from the Promised Land’ from 1662 paints an odd scene, indeed. In an age before genetically manipulated food, two men carry a bunch of giant grapes (pommes bleues, of blue apples fame?) to a Rock in a landscape that closely resembles the small valley we are examining near the stream of the Ruisseau des Couleurs.

The mountain in the background resembles those painted by Poussin in the Shepherds of Arcadia and the Baptism of Jesus. It is thought by some researchers to be the mountain of Blanchefort, others believe it to be the mountain of Cardou. The scene depicted is from the Old Testament, Book of Numbers 13, 23-24. It speaks of Caleb and Joshua scouting the Promised Land and cutting a branch from the vine to take back to Moses to illustrate the fruitfulness of the land, i.e. “flowing with milk and honey”. We noticed that ‘the Vine’ is pronounced ‘Divine’. Could this scene depict two initiates carrying divine fruits, Pommes Bleues perhaps, from the Promised Land to the Rock of The Magdalene?

Arcane Shepherds

Les Bergers d’Arcadie or The Shepherds of Arcadia, more specifically the second version of it, is probably the best known painting by Poussin. It was commissioned as part of two works by Cardinal Camillo Massimi; the twin-tableau being Midas Washing his Face in the River Pactolus. Endless speculations, measurements and interpretations have been made of the second, more classical version of The Shepherds,or Et In Arcadia Ego as it is sometimes called, referring to the inscription on the tomb. The painter, Guercino, is believed to be the source of that phrase, inspired by Virgil’s Eclogues V in which a tomb with an inscription (to Daphnis) is described to be in the ideal landscape of Arcadia in ancient Greece. Today, many believe the inscription to be an anagram due to the fact that the sentence has no verb. The most tantalizing alternative being I Tego Arcana Dei or Begone, or I Conceal the Secrets of God. If you compare the first and the second version of The Shepherds you can see that on the latter one of the men has kneeled as if he or the painter has now realized what the true significance of the phrase on the tomb might be.

Poussin: the twin-tableau of Midas Washing his Face in the River Pactolus and Les Bergers d’Arcadie I, Les Bergers d’Arcadie. © Corjan De Raaf

 

Heaps of research has been conducted on the mountainous landscape immediately behind and to the right of the tomb. Although the mountain peaks can be closely mapped to the Rennes-le-Chteau area, it is next to impossible to say this is Poussin’s landscape with certainty. Poussin however, appears to have used the same mountains on more than one occasion, in work that is traditionally linked to the area. The plot thickens if you see the likeness to the mountains on Van Scorel’s painting, Mary Magdalene.

Did Poussin and Van Scorel paint Cardou, Blanchefort, Bugarach? From left to right: Grapes from the Promised Land, Les Bergers d’Arcadie, Mary Magdalene (Van Scorel), the Baptism of Jesus. © Corjan De Raaf

 

What the Shepherds said to one another… (Luke 2:15)

Let’s look at the second version of the Poussin painting in some more detail. The woman on the right is standing in the classical pose of a pregnant woman, slightly bended backwards with a hand to support the back of her hip. This tableau could very well be depicting a pregnant woman watching a group of shepherds. The shepherds seem to have discovered a tomb and are struggling to decipher its inscription. They appear to be looking to her for guidance. The kneeled man points at the letters RC from aRCadia, the initials of Rennes-le-Chateau and Ruisseau de Couleurs, the small stream that runs between the Grotto of Mary and the Rock of the Magealene.

Shepherd examining the letters RC, observed by the pregnant shepherdess © Corjan De Raaf

 

The Grotte of Marry is marked by the big square Rock, placed opposite its entrance. Some 20 yards to the right there is a second grotto with a peculiar triangular entrance. In the grotto, enforcing the effect, there’s a pyramid shaped niche.

The triangular shaped entrance to the smaller grotto, nearby the Grotto of Mary © Andrew Gough

 

Pyramid shaped nice inside the smaller grotto, close by The Grotto of Mary
This grotto is almost constantly flooded. Could this be the tears of the Magdalene? © Andrew Gough


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On Poussin’s painting there is a triangular shape in the tomb that resembles the entrance of this smaller, triangular shaped grotto. Also there is a familiarly shaped rock serving as a foot rest for the shepherd on the right. If you turn the painting 135° (3 * 45°) counter clockwise, the two arms of the men pointing at the tomb form an ‘M’. The stick of the first shepherd has an angle of 45° as if to mark out the triangular hole in the tomb. Are they pointing at a location near Rennes-le-Chteau marked by the rock and the triangle? The M lies near Rennes-le-Chteau, opposite the rock, left of the triangle. Et In Arcadia Ego: And in Arcadia I, Mary Magdalene, watch the shepherds discover my Burial Site: Le Grotte du Fournet dite de la Magdeleine (the Grotto of Mary).

Similarities between the Vallee de Couleurs and Les Bergers d’Arcadie © Corjan De Raaf

 

Commemorating the Magdalene: Abbé Henri Gasq (attributed to) (1806 – 1882)

In the church of Rennes-les-Bains there’s a painting called Le Christ et le Lièvre or The Christ and the Hare. The painting is named after a hare because in Christ’s right knee, the painter created a trompe d’oeuil of a hare. The Holy Blood and Holy Grail first brought the painting to the attention of the general public some 25 years ago. However, the painting seems to garnish attention for all the wrong reasons. Neither the apparent hare in Christ’s right knee nor the bear like claw in the right hand corner, nor the alleged spider on the ceiling are especially believable. Nevertheless countless articles have been written about each.

From the church in Rennes-les-Bains: the Crucifixion and Le Christ et le Lièvre
Below are details of the originals by Van Dyck and Paulus Pontius
Note Mary is looking at an X on the ceiling, as in Saunière’s Alter Painting © Corjan De Raaf

 

What is of particular interest is the fact that Mary is once again in a grotto, staring at an X! This time the ‘X’ is on the ceiling; once again it is symbolising concealed esoteric knowledge. But what knowledge?

Interestingly, there are other, more ancient associations of ‘X’s in the region of Vallée des Couleurs. An ancient megalith, which is now on display near the Mayors office in Rennes-le-Chteau, was found nearby the Rock of the Magdalene and the Grotto of Mary and contains many, clearly carved ‘X”s. When were they carved? What do they mean? Are they related to the apparent mystery at hand?

An ancient megalith found in the Vallée des Couleurs depicting ‘X”s © Andrew Gough

 

Are the carvings part of an ancient tradition? © Andrew Gough

 

Furthermore, outside the grotto is a stone platform that bears more than passing resemblance to the Rock of the Magdalene. As we delve deeper, the circumstances surrounding the painting become even more intriguing. A certain Paul Urbain de Fleury, husband of Gabrielle Hautpoul and Lord of Rennes, is said to have dedicated the painting to the church in Rennes-les-Bains, where it remains to this day. For reasons that are unclear, Paul Urbain de Fleury, who died in 1836, is buried in the cemetery at Rennes-les-Bains in two graves. But there is more.

The painting is a copy of an engraving by Paulus Pontius, who in turn, copied it from La Lamentation by Van Dyck. The copyist that created the painting in Rennes-les-Bains made some adjustments to the scene. There is for example a similarity between the left side of this painting and the Mary Magdalene bas relief on the altar of Saunière’s church. The position of Christ’s right arm implies that he is not dead. In both the Van Dyck original and Paulus Pontius’ version the hand is supported by Mary Magdalene. Where is she in this picture? For the full story about this painting and its origins please refer to the excellent research done by Franck Daffos and Jean-Pierre Garcia.

In the same church there’s also a painting called The Crucifixion which looks as if it was painted by the same artist. The true author of these works has long been disputed. Daffos and Garcia make a good case for it being Abbé Henri Gasq, once the chaplain of the church of Notre Dame de Marceille near Limoux. Henri Gasq gave the painting to his colleague Abbé Jean Vié in 1842 (Vié was Henri Boudet’s predecessor as curé of the church in Rennes-les-Bains). Notre Dame de Marceille and Gasq appear to play a key-role in several mysteries surrounding Rennes-le-Chteau. During the research of Gasq’s paintings it was noticed that a rock was sitting prominently at the edges of both tableaus. When the crucifixion was superimposed over the Christ and the Hare the two rocks became one; a rock like the Rock of the Magdalene, visible from within the Grotto.

The Crucifixion superimposed over Le Christ et le Lièvre, the coloring has been adapted slighty © Corjan De Raaf

 

View from the Grotto of Mary – notice the Tour Magdela in the distance © Andrew Gough

 

Remnants of an apparent grave in the Grotto of Mary © Andrew Gough

 

Closing Remarks

Upon detailed inspection, the gorilla-like pillars of Rennes-le-Chteau prove to be quite curious in deed. The Rock of the Magdalene in particular, which to our knowledge is yet to receive its just attention, raises a number of interesting possibilities.

Every Rennes-le-Chteau enthusiasts is aware of the apparent bond between father Boudet in Rennes-le-Bains and father Saunière in Rennes-le-Chteau. They lived side by side, in adjoining villages. If father Boudet inherited a tradition of knowledge from Paul Urbain de Fleury, who had it commissioned in art, or from others, would he not have passed it on to those he trusted, such as Saunière? This raises the question of whether father Boudet himself was a 600 lb gorilla in the mystery, what with his sizable and rather inexplicable donations to father Saunière (via Marie Dénarnaud) and the peculiar books he authored. But that’s another question for another time.

The fact remains that the landscape of the Vallée des Couleurs is especially curious; the Rock of The Magdalene, The Grotto of Mary, with it’s ancient graves, the nearby grotto whose triangular shape is reminiscent of aspects of Saunières Altar Painting and possibly even the work of Nicolas Poussin; they all seem to be echoed in classical works of art. Is this our collective unconscious playing tricks or is the vicinity of the Grotto of Mary and the Rock of the Magdalene being commemorated by initiates who are aware of its esoteric significance? Just what that esoteric significance may be, well, we shall reserve comment. Perhaps the evidence – the gorilla-like pillars, are suggestive enough.

Not surprisingly, however, when we apply Occams Razor we are left with nothing but coincidence:

  • The number 22 is insignificant or perhaps an innocent homage to the saint who the villagers have dedicated the church too; Mary Magdalene.

  • The Rock of the Magdalene is set naturally in its environment and is completely ordinary in shape, hence its apparent likeness to other stone platforms depicted in classical art.

  • The apparent similarity of the landscape in and around the Grotto of Mary with scenes depicted in classical works of art is again nothing but a passing similarity.

Is this conclusion satisfactory? In our analysis we attempted to employ Occams Razor, yet look beyond it where necessary and interject some lateral thinking to the process, for the evidence seemed to warrant this. We then must ask ourselves, has this produced a more satisfactory result? To that end, what with our affinity for the evidence presented we could not objectively say, and thus we invite you to decide.

Postscript

Many of the arguments put forward in this article presuppose that the reader is familiar with the reasons why Mary Magdalene is believed to have traveled to the South of France, and why she has become associated with Rennes-le-Chteau in particular. In Part II of this essay, we will explore new and fascinating evidence that appears to validate these claims, including more evidence for the significance of the number 22, as well as brand new research that confirms that the Alabaster jar of Mary Magdalene was restored in the South of France in a way that for the first time builds a logical bridge between many of the popular hypotheses. So, as they say, the story will be continued . . . by Corjan de Raaf and Andrew Gough

 

 

Credits

Many thanks to:

Franck Daffos, much more can be read in his book Rennes-le-Chteau, le secret dérobé

Jean-Pierre Garcia

Jan Bakker

www.rennes-le-chateau-archive.com

www.geoportail.fr

www.terugnaardebron.com

 

Respuesta  Mensaje 4 de 12 en el tema 
De: BARILOCHENSE6999 Enviado: 01/02/2015 18:46

Rennes-le-Chteau: El Misterio De La Tumba

 

n oscuro monumento situado en las cercanías de Rennes-le-Chteau sirvió de modelo para un cuadro pintado en Italia y expuesto actualmente en el Louvre. Éste y otros enigmas vinculan al abate Saunière con historias de tesoros ocultos y órdenes militares.

   

El arco de triunfo de Tito, en el foro de Roma, muestra la gran menorah (candelabro de seis brazos), las trompetas de plata y lo que podría ser el Arca de la Alianza, todo ello tesoros del templo de Salomón.

Cuando Béranger Saunière pasó varias noches en el cementerio de Rennes-le-Cháteau borrando las inscripciones de las dos lápidas de la tumba de Marie de Negri d'Albes, no sabía que ya habían sido copiadas: una vez por el Bulletin de la Société des études scientifiques de l'Aude, y otra en un libro de Eugène Stublein, Pierres gravées du Languedoc.

La primera lápida se ha perdido. En la transcripción, llaman la atención los errores que contiene. Al parecer, fue encargada por el que era entonces abate de Rennes-le-Cháteau, Antoine Bigou.

La segunda piedra subsiste, sin ninguna inscripción, como tapa de un osario, en el rincón noroeste del cementerio. Tenía grabadas una serie de frases enigmáticas, entre ellas un lema monogramático que también aparece en uno de los manuscritos que descubrió Saunière. Una de las frases es el conocido dicho latino Et in Arcadia Ego, cuya traducción es «Yo también estoy en Arcadia». Significa que aun en el legendario paraíso de los pastores griegos, la muerte estaba presente.

Saunière trajo consigo de París una reproducción del cuadro «Los pastores de Arcadia» de Nicolás Poussin, pintado entre 1635 y 1650. Representa a tres pastores y una pastora clásicos ante una gran tumba, en la que se lee una inscripción: «Et in Arcadia Ego». Y a 10 kilómetros de Rennes-le-Cháteau, en una colina rocosa, está esa misma tumba. Ha sido recubierta con cemento, de modo que no se aprecia ninguna inscripción, pero su forma es inconfundible y hasta ciertos picos montañosos del horizonte pueden ser identificados.

Marie de Negri estaba emparentada con la familia de Hautpoul, descendiente de Bertrand de Blanchefort (primer Gran Maestre templario), y con los Fleury, que recibieron la herencia familiar. En 1644, François-Pierre de Hautpoul, barón de Rennes, hizo testamento y le agregó documentos que apoyaban el derecho al título de la familia durante más de 600 años. El testamento y los documentos se extraviaron durante más de 130 años. Cuando fueron recuperados en el despacho de un notario y un Hautpoul quiso verlos, recibió la siguiente respuesta: «No sería prudente por mi parte hacer público un testamento tan importante...» Los papeles volvieron a desvanecerse.

En 1792, Bigou rehusó jurar fidelidad a la nueva República Francesa y cruzó la frontera en dirección a España, donde murió. La familia Fleury también se exilió.

Al parecer, éste es el modelo de la tumba que pintó Poussin en su cuadro, aunque un recubrimiento de cemento impide apreciar si en ella ha habido inscripciones. Este enigmático monumento se halla en una colina cercana a Rennes-le-Chteau, en la parroquia de Arques.

Pero en la decoración de la iglesia, Saunière hizo una alusión directa a las tierras de los Fleury. Sobre el confesionario hay un gran relieve que representa a Cristo en el monte de los Olivos, hecho de madera y yeso. El empinado montecillo está lleno de flores (fleuri, en francés) y el paisaje del fondo tiene rasgos del de los alrededores de Rennes.

Se ha especulado con el significado del texto que hay debajo de este cuadro: «Venid a mí, los que estáis abrumados, y yo os daré el descanso». En francés, «los que estáis abrumados» se dice «vous qui êtes accablés», y es fácil descubrir las palabras été (verano), sac à cable (saco con cuerda) y blé (trigo, pero también tesoro, en lenguaje coloquial).

Se han descubierto acertijos del mismo tipo en la inscripción de una imagen de la Magdalena que el mismo Saunière pintó en el panel delantero del altar. El ingenuo relieve muestra a María Magdalena arrodillada en una gruta. Existen muchas grutas y cuevas alrededor de Rennes. En su juventud, Saunière debió de conocer a un viejo ermitaño que vivía no muy lejos, en la garganta de Galamus, en una gruta o aven aislada y dedicada a San Antonio, parecidísima a aquella en que se arrodilla la Magdalena, y que también coincide con la descripción del abismo en el cual el pastor Paris descubrió sus monedas.

Por otra parte, existe un vínculo significativo entre San Antonio y María Magdalena. San Antonio está considerado como la primera persona que organizó la vida monástica. Algunas de sus reliquias fueron trasladadas a Francia, y en el siglo XI se construyó una gran catedral para custodiarlas. Quienes habían recuperado las reliquias fundaron la Orden de San Antonio, que finalmente se fusionó con una de las grandes órdenes militares, los Hospitalarios de San Juan.

Losa de la tumba de Marie de Negri d'Albes, con el lema «Et in Arcadia Ego» grabado en caracteres latinos y griegos.

Se dice que los antoninos introdujeron el culto de Santa María Egipcíaca. Ésta, que vivió a fines del siglo IV, había sido prostituta en Alejandría. Pero inspirándose en la historia de San Antonio se arrepintió, y pasó el resto de su vida sola en un lugar desierto. Se la confundió con María Magdalena en la oscura leyenda de las tres Marías, evangelizadoras de la Provenza, con lo cual enlaza también con los cultos de las vírgenes negras que había sobrevivido en toda Francia en grutas subterráneas, dedicadas a la antigua diosa madre.

Por otra parte, después de la ascensión de la masonería en Francia, no pasó mucho tiempo antes de que se afirmara que existía una conexión legendaria entre los antiguos secretos de los constructores del templo de Salomón, los caballeros templarios y la masonería escocesa.

Cuando Béranger Saunière llegó a París en enero de 1893, se encontró en medio de una disputa entre la Ordre Kabbalistique en la Rose-Croix y la Ordre de la Rose-Croix Catholique du Temple et du Graal. El Rosacrucianismo y la Rose-Croix no eran nuevos en Francia. Ya en 1623 se dijo que el filósofo Descartes era rosacruz. Y en la Francmasonería, el grado 18 del rito «escocés» es el Caballero del Pelícano y del Águila y Príncipe Soberano Rosacruz de Heredom.

Pero la Francmasonería fue prohibida en tiempos de la Revolución Francesa. Aunque Napoleón revivió el interés por el movimiento, hubo que esperar a la restauración de la monarquía para que volviera a florecer, combinado con un creciente interés por el ocultismo.

El hilo está enredado, y hay pocas o ninguna prueba de que las extravagantes afirmaciones que se han hecho sean ciertas. Pero si los templarios o los antoninos hubiesen poseído información secreta, ésta podría haber pasado a los hospitalarios, que se hicieron cargo de gran parte de las propiedades de los templarios, o podría haber pasado de generación en generación a través de las familias supervivientes. Quizá sea cierto que los Rosacruces poseían un secreto, como pretendían ellos; quizá la Francmasonería tiene realmente la clave del enigma Rosacruz; quizá algún ocultista de París reconoció en los papeles que traía Saunière la clave de algo perdido y muy preciado.

Esto sugiere que dichos errores fueron voluntarios y, que estaban destinadoa a proporcionar una clave para el misterio de Rennes-le-Chteau. Sauniere, al borrar estas inscripciones, no sabía que ya habían sido copiadas dos veces.

Lápida de la tumba de Marie deNegri d'Albes. En ella hay un considerable número de errores.

Junto a la entrada de la iglesia de Rennes puede verse una figura de Asmodeo, «demonio y guardián» que custodiaba el tesoro de Salomón. Encima de él hay cuatro ángeles. A primera vista, éstos parecen hacer la señal de la cruz, pero el ángel de arriba tiene la mano izquierda en el pecho y la mano derecha encima de la cabeza: éste es el gesto de Asmodeo, el signo que rodeaba la cabeza de macho cabrío de Baphomet en los ritos de los templarios.

Y así están las cosas, por el momento. Todavía no sabemos -y probablemente no sabremos nunca- qué fue lo que encontró Saunière. El misterio empieza con el descubrimiento de los manuscritos y su conexión con la tumba de Marie de Negri d'Albes. Sólo dos de los cuatro manuscritos han sido fotografiados y publicados; quizá fueran los menos importantes, y los otros proporcionen detalles más explícitos acerca de la ubicación del tesoro, cuya leyenda había ido pasando, de generación en generación, por la familia Blanchefort.

Pero la pieza que faltaba tenía que ser, o un documento, o el mismo tesoro y, presumiblemente, la tumba que pintó Poussin contenía alguna clave, razón por la cual fue cubierta de cemento. También la gruta puede haber contenido un tesoro escondido -de los visigodos, de los cátaros, de los templarios- cuya recuperación puede haber sido confiada a Saunière con la debida supervisión. Quizá éste, como muestra de agradecimiento, restauró su iglesia con motivos que hacían una enigmática referencia al origen de su riqueza.

El papel desempeñado por el Prieuré de Sion, la conexión con los Habsburgo y todas las ramificaciones de esta organización casi desconocida... son otra historia.

 

El Secreto De La Tumba

Hay dos versiones del cuadro de Poussin, donde en una ha desaparecido el cráneo y algunos personajes han sido sustituidos por otros.

El cuadro de Poussin «Los pastores de Arcadia» del que existen dos versiones, plantea algunos problemas fascinantes. La primera versión, que pertenece en la actualidad a la colección de Chatsworth House, en Derbyshire (Inglaterra), se inspiró en un cuadro del Guercino, ejecutado en 1620, y parece probable que el Guercino o sus mecenas, Giulio Rospigliosi, que después fue el papa Clemente IX, compusieran la famosa frase «Et in Arcadia Ego».

En el cuadro del Guercino, dos pastores han encontrado un cráneo humano apoyado en un bloque de piedra en el que está grabada la inscripción; en la primera versión de Poussin, dos pastores y una pastora leen la inscripción en una tumba ornamentada al estilo clásico. El cráneo, que forma parte de la decoración de la tumba, es apenas visible, y la cuarta figura es una personificación del río Alfeo.

La segunda versión del cuadro, la que se halla ahora en el Louvre, es visiblemente distinta. El cráneo ha desaparecido, Alfeo ha sido sustituido por un tercer pastor, y las posiciones de las figuras han cambiado. En cuanto a la tumba, ha perdido toda su elegancia y su decoración; ahora constituye un bloque casi cúbico de piedras toscamente talladas, y la parte superior tiene la característica inclinación de la tumba solitaria de las afueras de Arques. Parece imposible que Poussin eligiera como modelo semejante monumento a menos que el original le resultara familiar. Y, ¿qué razones pudo tener para realizar una segunda versión de un tema no muy corriente? En efecto, este tema parece haber tenido un significado especial en la vida de Poussin: cuando su tumba, en Roma, fue restaurada por Chateaubriand en 1829, le agregó un relieve con los pastores de Arcadia.

http://www.mundoparanormal.com/docs/enigmas/rennes_le_chateau_el_misterio_tumba.html

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Respuesta  Mensaje 5 de 12 en el tema 
De: BARILOCHENSE6999 Enviado: 01/02/2015 18:51
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Respuesta  Mensaje 6 de 12 en el tema 
De: BARILOCHENSE6999 Enviado: 10/02/2015 21:18
Image

It seems the statue of Saint Philomena has similar hands as Magdalene at Rennes Chateau
Image

As the Magdalene at Our Lady of Knock
the hands have been vandalized

Image

Image

Philomena is the patron saint of the Children of Mary...

Philomena means loving on Greek

Saint Philomena is connected to Pauline Marie Jaricot

_________________
Everything is Connected and there are no
coincidences
 

Respuesta  Mensaje 7 de 12 en el tema 
De: BARILOCHENSE6999 Enviado: 16/02/2015 19:10

Tour magdala

Tour Magdala à Rennes le chteau

— Document personnel — pas de copyright — Juin 2006 —

 

Magdala (Angl. Magdalene) = "une tour"
1) nom donné à Marie-Madeleine, l'identifiant comme venant de Magdala

Le nom Saunière du conservateur du Louvre n'est pas fortuit, on s'en doute.

Au 19e siècle, l'abbé B. Saunière chargé de la paroisse de Rennes le Chteau, devenu subitement immensément riche, avait fait construire une tour dite "tour de Magdala" sur le flanc de la colline sur laquelle le village se tient. Ce lieu fait l'objet de nombreux ouvrages ésotériques et de quêtes de tous genres, comme la recherche du trésor de Salomon. A ce lieu s'attache aussi une tradition du Grand Monarque, un "roi attendu" à la fin des temps, prétendument descendant de Jésus-Christ qui aurait été secrètement marié à Marie de Magdala comme le narrent des "évangiles apocryphes" et donc plus récemment le "Da Vinci code".

La venue du faux messie s'annonce comme étant de plus en plus imminente, appuyée par la sortie de nombreux ouvrages assimilés à des "révélations" qui relèguent ainsi la Bible au rang des croyances "dépassées", mensongères et "obsolètes". Mais pour ceux qui en connaissent les trésors, ces signes ne font que valider les prophéties qui y sont consignées et peu à peu descellées.

A la suite de son "Deception point", le prochain roman "la clé de Salomon" de Monsieur Dan Brown ne devrait point nous "décevoir" sur ce point précis!

 http://www.bibleetnombres.online.fr/da_vinci_code_2.htm

 
 
Reply Hide message Delete message  Message 39 of 140 on the subject 
From: BARILOCHENSE6999 Sent: 07/07/2012 23:24

Eglise Saint-Sulpice à Paris

Eglise Saint-Sulpice à Paris (Avril 2006)

— Document personnel — pas de copyright — Paris — Avril 2006 —

 

Avec la parution du Da Vinci code en Mars 2003, l'église Saint-Sulpice à Paris a pris une importance soudaine parmi d'autres monuments. A cause des connections ésotériques établies entre Rennes le chteau et cet édifice par les exégètes, j'y avais effectué ma première visite au cours des années 70, visite renouvelée de façon plus appuyée au début des années 80 puis 90.

A cette époque, en dehors des heures de culte, il y avait peu de visiteurs...

Ce sont à présent des milliers de visiteurs qui s'y pressent chaque semaine et c'est tout simplement déconcertant de voir des Chinois, des Japonais, des Coréens, des Américains... étudier et photographier les lieux avec le Da Vinci code en main pour suivre les divagations de Monsieur Dan Brown.

 

Eglise Saint-Sulpice à Paris

Pour obtenir une vue détaillée de la plaque, cliquer sur ce lien: Détail

Eglise Saint-Sulpice à Paris (Avril 2006)

— Document personnel — pas de copyright — Paris — Avril 2006 —

 
 
 
Reply Hide message Delete message  Message 40 of 140 on the subject 
From: BARILOCHENSE6999 Sent: 07/07/2012 23:48

Tour magdala

Tour Magdala à Rennes-le-Chteau

Cliquer sur l'image pour obtenir un agrandissement

— Document personnel — pas de copyright — Juin 2006 —

 

Respuesta  Mensaje 8 de 12 en el tema 
De: BARILOCHENSE6999 Enviado: 16/02/2015 19:23
C.W. Leadbeater claimed that he had met the Count de Saint Germain the supposed immortal German alchemist. He developed the concept of the Great White Brotherhood (The Ascended Masters) started by Helena Blavatsky. He met Jiddu Krishnamurti the Indian Mystic. Leadbeater gave him the interesting name of Alcyone after a star in the Pleiades where Joseph Franklin Rutherford of the Jehovah's Witnesses (Watchtower Society to give them their proper name) once wrote in their journal Zion's Watchtower that God lives there. Leadbeater knew and later inspired Max Heindel and Augusta Foss and Heindel started a Rosicrucian movement based in Rennes le Chateau (or so some have hinted at). Harvey Spencer Lewis, S. ·. I. '., 33 ° 66 ° 95 °, Ph.D. founder of AMORC was initiated into a Rosicrucian movement based around Toulouse around 1909.

Just a word on the name Zion's Watchtower.

The hebrew Migdal -eder is thought to have been corrupted into Magdalene. The name is not Mary Magdalene but Mary THE MAGDALENE.

This stems from Micah 4:8 where it says:

And thou, O tower of the flock, the strong hold of the daughter of Zion (Sion), unto thee shall it come, even the first dominion; the kingdom shall come to the daughter of Jerusalem. (KJV)

Migdal-eder means Tower of the Flock in Hebrew.

It was an astronomical observatory just like Saunière's was. But had eight observation windows at the top like the Tour d'Alchemie. Corresponding to the four Quarter days and four Cross Quarter days

Image

Alcyone (Al Syon) is the central star of the Pleiades.
 
 
Reply Hide message Delete message  Message 67 of 140 on the subject 
From: BARILOCHENSE6999 Sent: 30/08/2012 02:19
here is the picture Renne
Image

Notice the Rose MArble Slab and then the sarchophagus
the body is in the position of Veneration
this was in the 1500's

the women don't have halos except for one

The Rose marble has a history of healing properties and called the Love Stone

Blanche of Castile whose heraldry boasted the Towers of the castle ....Magdalene ...Migdal (Tower)
was regent of France for many years during Saint Louis's childhood and during the Crusades
She was educated and strong willed and a great strategist
if things would have ended differently she could have ended Queen of England as well as France






Wonder why she named one of her sons
Philippe Dagobert (20 February 1222–1232).

She obviously wanted the Merovingian name with her son

_________________
Everything is Connected and there are no
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http://andrewgough.co.uk/forum/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=3450&start=375

Respuesta  Mensaje 9 de 12 en el tema 
De: BARILOCHENSE6999 Enviado: 16/02/2015 19:52
: BARILOCHENSE6999 Sent: 07/02/2013 16:54
Polemico
 
Fecha de Ingreso: 22-febrero-2012
Mensajes: 852
Gracias: 460
1.718 Agradecimientos de 663 mensajes
 
Ignorar usuario para siempre
El 22, es el codigo Skull and Bones, 2 x 11 = 1111, 3 = Pi-scis - vesica
Los 2 cisnes enfrentados forman tambien el corazon del espiral

En la torre Magdala de Rennes le Chateau, el codigo 1111 esta distribuido en 22 peldaños distrubidos en 2 sectores de 11, la escalera es en espiral, arriba una chimenea - codigo fuego con un triangulo equilatero, codigo 60 grados.


Click para ampliar



500, seguramente refiera al 5 ciclo pentagonal de Venus, 00 coordenadas standard del centro de la galaxia, James Bond 00-7, etc.

El 9 el espiral de la mujer, Diosa, Virgen que viene hacia nosotros.

La hipótesis de Knight y Lomas plantea que William Saint Clair, conocedor de que los manuscritos supuestamente recuperados por los templarios en el Templo de Salomón habían sido guardados en Escocia, construyó Rosslyn para custodiarlos y establecer una Nueva Jerusalén. Esto, naturalmente, supone admitir que los templarios no viajaron a Tierra Santa para defender a los peregrinos sino con un propósito más bien arqueológico. Por esa razón, nueve hombres (como los que hallaron el cuerpo de Hiram) permanecieron nueve años encerrados entre sus muros. Muchos expertos han reparado en la persistencia de esta clave numérica: el 9. Resulta que la novena letra del alfabeto hebreo es la Tav (la Tau griega). Esta letra, representada por el noveno sefiroth cabalístico (Yesod o Fundación) se relaciona con la serpiente y el secreto de la sabiduría. Pero es que, además, la marca de la tau era la que los cainitas llevaban sobre la frente cuando Moisés se encontró con ellos. En la capilla de Rosslyn, curiosamente, los catorce pilares han sido dispuestos de tal manera que los ocho del lado este trazan la forma de una triple Tau. Sospecho que Hugues de Payns y sus ocho freires fundadores ignoraban los códigos y el significado de lo hallado en el Templo y, por ello, tuvieron que recurrir a la ayuda de cabalistas judíos y sabios islámicos, a través de su protector san Bernardo de Claraval, el reformador del Císter.

Última edición por IndigoMerovingio; 09-may-2012 a las 23:50
 
 
Reply Hide message Delete message  Message 113 of 140 on the subject 
From: BARILOCHENSE6999 Sent: 08/02/2013 05:01
Polemico
 
Fecha de Ingreso: 22-febrero-2012
Mensajes: 852
Gracias: 460
1.718 Agradecimientos de 663 mensajes
 
Ignorar usuario para siempre
Click para ampliar




Lluvia purpura - rayos gama - la bestia
Rosa cruz
Espirales 96 =15=1111
Pilares de Geminis en la O de OF, pequeño punto hace la monada, llave del mono.
La Torre - Tarot
Caos parabolico en los arcos del puente
Runa sig en el beso de la muerte de Satan - las cabezas rodaran



Click para ampliar



Santa Maria/Isis/Egipcio SS no tiene vocales


K - I - SS
11 - 9 - ISIS

ISIS/SIRIUS RETROGRADO HORARIO 9 BOTON MUJER - ESTRELLA DEL PERRO

11 PILARES DE GEMINIS/JACHIN Y BOAZ/TORRES GEMELAS

17 SUMATORIA = 153 VESICA PISCIS/ LA GRAN MADRE/ EL VIENTRE/ISIS

Estamos en CR-ISIS
CRISTO- ISIS


Click para ampliar

Última edición por IndigoMerovingio; 29-ene-2013 a las 02:54
 

Respuesta  Mensaje 10 de 12 en el tema 
De: BARILOCHENSE6999 Enviado: 16/02/2015 19:54

St. Mark's Tower

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 
Jump to: navigation, search
St Marks Tower or Qalet Marku

Coordinates: 35°56′47″N 14°27′11″E / 35.94639°N 14.45306°E / 35.94639; 14.45306

St. Mark's Tower or Qalet Marku is a fortification on the island of Malta built by the Knights of Malta. It is a small watchtower that stands on Qrejten Point on the north shore of Malta. St. Mark's Tower has sight of Għallis Tower to the west, and Madliena tower to the east. The tower still stands and appears to be in reasonable condition.

It was one of the thirteen de Redin towers constructed during the reign of Grand Master Martin de Redin.

Għallis Tower with St Mark's tower and Madliena tower in the far distance
 
 
Reply Hide message Delete message  Message 118 of 140 on the subject 
From: BARILOCHENSE6999 Sent: 11/03/2013 23:55
Image


It seems that a RLC church type daemon even made its way into 19th century promotional graphics.

thanks for the this interesting advertisement Indigo

Bovril
The first part of the product's name comes from Latin bos meaning "ox" or "cow." Johnston took the -vril suffix from Bulwer-Lytton's then-popular "lost race" novel The Coming Race (1870), whose plot revolves around a superior race of people, the Vril-ya, who derive their powers from an electromagnetic substance named "Vril."[2][3]

Bovril holds the unusual position of having been advertised with a Pope. An advertising campaign of the early 20th century in Britain depicted Pope Leo XIII seated on his throne, bearing a mug of Bovril. The campaign slogan read: The Two Infallible Powers - The Pope & Bovril.

the Tower on top of the demon
Magdalene Tour and the demon resembles Rennes Chateau which even has Leo XIII heraldry

Two pieces on a chess board
Rook and Bishop ......

In general, rooks are stronger than bishops or knights (which are called minor pieces) and are considered greater in value
Rooks and Queens
Rooks and queens are called heavy pieces or major pieces, as opposed to bishops and knights, the minor pieces.


Rooks are most powerful towards the end of a game
Checkmate

Formerly the piece was called the castle, tower, marquess, rector,
Image




Beef tea
Napoleon used it

Magdala Tour


but really its a rook from a chess piece ...a Tower ...Migdal....a watch tower...

Magdala (Aramaic: מגדלא / Magdala, meaning "elegant", "great", or "tower" (viz. "great place"); Hebrew: מגדל / Migdal, meaning "tower"
The Magdala Stone

Image



_________________
Everything is Connected and there are no
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http://andrewgough.co.uk/forum/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=3996&start=150
 
 
 
Reply Hide message Delete message  Message 119 of 140 on the subject 
From: BARILOCHENSE6999 Sent: 12/03/2013 00:41
Image

Saint Malachy calls Pope Benedict the XVI the "gloria olive"
the name Benedict is connected to
Proponents of the prophecies generally try to draw a connection between Benedict and the Olivetan order to explain this motto: Benedict's choice of papal name is after Saint Benedict of Nursia, founder of the Benedictine Order, of which the Olivetans are one branch

the Tarot Tower card is number sixteen ....Benedict Sixteen

and above is a round gold crown of a Pope

what a coincidence

_________________
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http://andrewgough.co.uk/forum/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=3996&start=125
 
 
 
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From: BARILOCHENSE6999 Sent: 12/03/2013 00:47
jlockest wrote:
Can I ask what distinguishes that as specifically a Papal Crown?


It does have a connection with the French Crown of Louis the XVI
who was guillotined and the Bastille was stormed

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the French King's crown is more rounder
and we all know King Louis the SIXTEEN was beheaded

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_________________
Everything is Connected and there are no
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http://andrewgough.co.uk/forum/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=3996&start=125
 
 
 
Reply Hide message Delete message  Message 121 of 140 on the subject 
From: BARILOCHENSE6999 Sent: 12/03/2013 01:53
Louvian,

Should we remember "coincidences"

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Sauniere Magdala Tower Asmodeus doomsday fire code - Cain arms

Spiraled stairs symbol of the spiral of time W axis of the hipercube, the 8 pointed star hypercube symbol can be found on the tiling, the stairs has 22 steps disposed in two sectors of 11, clear 1111 = 15 symbol
Above the chimney a symbol of fire we find and equilateral triangle, the 60 degrees magnetic component of the rhombic dodecaedron pomegranate Da Vinci's hypercube code.
The equilateral triangle sight points towards Pech Cardou were a shaft with and 8 pointed star was found 15 =1111 meters below.
Uranus seventh planet mon-key 1-7 mirror, component already confirmed by Voyager outside our solar system


indigomerovingian wrote:
TCJ wrote:
Very weird and right after the shameless half time show. :shock:

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3 RD Time - Trinity - Shamrock end of the cube of time / 3-22 Skull and bones
13 - Serpent Ophiuchus
22
2 x 11 = 1111

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Gold pectoral cross worn by John XXIII with 'eye and triangle'.

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Pope Paul VI - wearing the Judaic "Kohen Breastplate," and the yarmulke


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Priestly_breastplate

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Respuesta  Mensaje 11 de 12 en el tema 
De: BARILOCHENSE6999 Enviado: 16/02/2015 19:56
 
10 Km from Esperaza. Rennes le Chateau is one of the most visited places in the Aude region. Legend has it that a large amount of treasure was buried here by the Visigoths and, due to a priest, Francois Beranger Saunière, becoming suddenly wealthy,many believe the secret to finding it lies in the area. A huge and intriguing subject that I can't possibly do justice to. Here are some links to people who specialise in the subject.

 An excellent Rennes le Chateau source by Marcus Williamson.




Opening times : Rennes le Chateau is a small village, only about 100 people live there, so out of season not too much is open. In season there are 2 restaurants open, Le pomme bleu and La Table De L'Abbe. There is also a bookstore with probably the best collection on Rennes le Chateau. L'Espace Beringer Sauniere, the main attraction, includes the Presbytery, the Villa Bethania and gardens, the Tower of Magdala and a video all about the legend of Rennes le Chateau. It is open all year long from 10am-7pm peak season and 10am-6pm off season. Admission 4 Euros for adults and 3 Euros under 18. Closed Christmas day and New Years day.

Rennes-le-Chateau
Rennes-le-Chateau
Rennes-le-Chateau
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Respuesta  Mensaje 12 de 12 en el tema 
De: gemmalyly Enviado: 21/06/2024 08:02
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