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Message 1 of 38 on the subject |
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Archivo:Catedral de Santo Tomás Apóstol (Paraguarí)..jpg
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El centurión Longino entre las cruces de Cristo y los dos ladrones, 1539
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Message 24 of 38 on the subject |
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Reply |
Message 25 of 38 on the subject |
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Enviado: 20/12/2024 00:10 |
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Primer Anterior 2 a 2 de 2 Siguiente Último |
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Message 26 of 38 on the subject |
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Reply |
Message 27 of 38 on the subject |
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11/9/1941-1/1/1942=111 DAYS (PENTAGON FUNDATION SEPTEMBER 11TH 1941)
1/1/1942-21/4/1942=111 DAYS (ROME FUNDATION)
1/1/1942-10/8/1942=222 DAYS (SAINT LAWRENCE)
1/1/1941-10/8/1942=333 DAYS (SAINT LAWRENCE-911)
11/9/1941-16/2/1944= 888 DAYS
11/9/1941-28/10/1943=777 DAYS (PHILADELPHIA EXPERIMENT)
11/9/1941-6/6/1944 (DAY D)=999 DAYS (DAY D)
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Reply |
Message 28 of 38 on the subject |
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Reply |
Message 29 of 38 on the subject |
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Franklin D. Roosevelt at the White House, delivering radio address, 11 September 1941. Note his black armband for his mother’s death four days before (US National Archives: 197058)
https://www.sarahsundin.com/today-in-world-war-ii-history-sept-11-1941/ |
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Message 30 of 38 on the subject |
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Robert Zemeckis to direct Disney's long-developing live-action Pinocchio remake
Published on January 24, 2020 07:37PM EST
PHOTO: MICHAEL KOVAC/GETTY IMAGES; EVERETT COLLECTION
Robert Zemeckis wished upon the right star.
The Back to the Future filmmaker has closed a deal to direct Disney's live-action remake of Pinocchio, EW has confirmed. Zemeckis will also co-write a new draft of the screenplay with Chris Weitz (the writer of 2015's Cinderella), who is producing the film as well.
This comes on the heels of the news that Disney has a photorealistic Bambi remake in the works. Taken together, these developments suggest that the Mouse House is making a substantial effort to emotionally scar a new generation of kids: 1940's Pinocchio, after all, is known as one of the most demented Disney films in the canon. (Between the kids turning into donkeys, its hero getting locked in a cage, and a few of the studio's most grotesque villains, the movie has been giving kids a flood of nightmares for almost 80 years now.)
The Pinocchio remake has taken a relatively long and bumpy road to the screen. The project was first announced in 2015, and has seen both 1917's Sam Mendes and Paddington's Paul King join and then depart as director. Tom Hanks was reportedly in talks to play Pinocchio's "father" Geppetto in 2018; it's unclear if he is still attached to the film.
Zemeckis is currently directing a new adaptation of Roald Dahl's The Witches, starring Anne Hathaway and Octavia Spencer, for Warner Bros. That film will hit theaters Oct. 9. Pinocchio does not yet have a release date.
Related content:
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Reply |
Message 31 of 38 on the subject |
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Reply |
Message 32 of 38 on the subject |
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Reply |
Message 33 of 38 on the subject |
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milky way in Simple Gematria Equals: 119 |
( |
m 13 |
i9 |
l 12 |
k 11 |
y 25 |
0 |
w 23 |
a1 |
y 25 |
) |
queen mary in Simple Gematria Equals: 119 |
( |
q 17 |
u 21 |
e5 |
e5 |
n 14 |
0 |
m 13 |
a1 |
r 18 |
y 25 |
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hebrew calendar in Simple Gematria Equals: 119 |
( |
h8 |
e5 |
b2 |
r 18 |
e5 |
w 23 |
0 |
c3 |
a1 |
l 12 |
e5 |
n 14 |
d4 |
a1 |
r 18 |
mary magdalene in Simple Gematria Equals: 119 |
( |
m 13 |
a1 |
r 18 |
y 25 |
0 |
m 13 |
a1 |
g7 |
d4 |
a1 |
l 12 |
e5 |
n 14 |
e5 |
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Reply |
Message 34 of 38 on the subject |
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Reply |
Message 35 of 38 on the subject |
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-
- On 19 September 2015 Pope Francis departed aboard an Alitalia Airbus A330 (Shepherd One) from Rome's Fiumicino International Airport, to Havana's José Martí International Airport where he arrived to an official Welcoming Ceremony. The next day, he was the principal celebrant at a Papal Mass at the Plaza de la Revolución in Havana at 9:00, before he paid a courtesy visit to the President of the Council of State and of the Council of Ministers of the Republic at Palacio de la Revolución in Havana. His day ended with celebrations of Vespers with priests, men and women religious, and seminarians, at the Cathedral of Havana, and a greeting to the young people of the "Centro Cultural Padre Félix Varela" in Havana during the early evening.[48]
- On 21 September, he departed by plane from Havana for Holguín, to preside at a Papal Mass at Plaza de la Revolución. Before departing for Santiago de Cuba, he gave a blessing to the city, from Loma de la Cruz, in Holguín. Having arrived in Santiago, he met with the Bishops of Cuba at St Basil the Great Seminary, and say a prayer to the Virgen de la Caridad, with the Bishops and the Papal Entourage, at the Minor Basilica of the Shrine "Virgen de la Caridad del Cobre" in Santiago.
- On 22 September, he celebrated a Papal Mass at the Minor Basilica of the Shrine "Virgen de la Caridad del Cobre" in Santiago in the morning and later had a meeting with families at Our Lady of the Assumption Cathedral in Santiago. After a blessing of the city of Santiago from the square in front of the Cathedral of Santiago, he left with a farewell ceremony from Santiago Airport, en route to Washington, D.C., where he arrived at Joint Base Andrews during the evening of 22 September 2015.
- On Wednesday, 23 September, the pope met with President Barack Obama at the White House. It was the third visit by a pope to the White House, following meetings between Jimmy Carter and Pope John Paul II in October 1979 and George W. Bush and Pope Benedict XVI in April 2008.[49]
- Also that day, Francis took part in a prayer with bishops from the United States at the Cathedral of St. Matthew the Apostle, the seat of Cardinal Donald Wuerl, the archbishop of Washington. Later that day, he celebrated Mass at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, near the Catholic University of America. During the Mass, he canonized (declared to be a Saint) Junípero Serra, a Spanish Franciscan friar who founded a mission in Baja California, and the first nine of 21 Spanish missions in California.
- On Thursday, 24 September, Pope Francis gave an address to a Joint session of the United States Congress, the first Supreme Pontiff to do so. He followed that with a visit to St. Patrick's Church, the oldest parish church in Washington. The church was founded in 1794.[50] He also visited the Washington, D.C. local Catholic Charities office. He then flew from Washington, to New York City. After arriving at New York City's John F. Kennedy International Airport, he took part with New York's Cardinal Timothy Dolan in Evening Vespers (part of the Liturgy of the Hours), at St. Patrick's Cathedral.
- On Friday, 25 September, Pope Francis addressed the United Nations General Assembly. It was the fifth address by a Pope to the U.N. General Assembly, following appearances by Pope Paul VI in October 1965, Pope John Paul II in October 1979 and October 1995, and Pope Benedict XVI in April 2008. Following the address to the U.N., he participated in an ecumenical service at the National September 11 Memorial & Museum, at the former World Trade Center site. In the afternoon, he visited a school in East Harlem, then celebrated a Papal Mass at Madison Square Garden.
- On Saturday, 26 September, Pope Francis traveled from New York to Philadelphia, where he was welcomed by city and state leaders and Philadelphia's Archbishop Charles J. Chaput, O.F.M. Cap. He celebrated a Papal Mass at the Cathedral Basilica of Saints Peter and Paul. He visited Independence Mall in the afternoon, and the Festival of Families of the 2015 World Meeting of Families[51] in the early evening. The Pope's visit concluded on Sunday, 27 September, with a Papal Mass in the afternoon. After a departure ceremony, he departed on a jet for Rome and the Vatican from Philadelphia International Airport.
- In honor of the visit, the Museum of the Bible will sponsor a special exhibition entitled "Verbum Domini II" at the Philadelphia Convention Center, adjacent to the World Meeting.[52] The official schedule of his visit was announced at the end of June.[53]
11/9/1941-1/1/1942=111 DAYS (PENTAGON FUNDATION SEPTEMBER 11TH 1941)
1/1/1942-21/4/1942=111 DAYS (ROME FUNDATION)
1/1/1942-10/8/1942=222 DAYS (SAINT LAWRENCE)
1/1/1941-10/8/1942=333 DAYS (SAINT LAWRENCE-911)
11/9/1941-9/7/1943=666 DAYS (ARGENTINE INDEPENDENCE)
11/9/1941-16/2/1944= 888 DAYS
11/9/1941-28/10/1943=777 DAYS (PHILADELPHIA EXPERIMENT)
11/9/1941-6/6/1944 (DAY D)=999 DAYS (DAY D)

1/1-15/3=74=37*2 LONGINUS
15/3.15/8 (NAPOLEON S BIRTH)=153 DAYS
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Message 36 of 38 on the subject |
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Dates of Moon Phases in 2033 Year
Below you can find dates and hours of all Moon Phases in 2033. All dates and times are given both in Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) and America/Argentina/Tucuman time. Times are shown in Daylight Savings Time when necessary and in Standard Time in the other cases. Additionally, the Lunation number (Brown Lunation Number, BLN) is included for convenience.
2033 Lunar Phases — San Miguel de Tucumán (America/Argentina/Tucuman) Time |
New Moon |
First Quarter |
Full Moon |
Third Quarter | Lunation |
Jan. 1, Sat 07:17 |
Jan. 8, Sat 00:35 |
Jan. 15, Sat 10:07 |
Jan. 23, Sun 14:48 |
1361 |
Jan. 30, Sun 19:00 |
Feb. 6, Sun 10:35 |
Feb. 14, Mon 04:04 |
Feb. 22, Tue 08:54 |
1362 |
Mar. 1, Tue 05:25 |
Mar. 7, Mon 22:27 |
Mar. 15, Tue 22:37 |
Mar. 23, Wed 22:50 |
1363 |
Mar. 30, Wed 14:53 |
Apr. 6, Wed 12:14 |
Apr. 14, Thu 16:18 |
Apr. 22, Fri 08:42 |
1364 |
Apr. 28, Thu 23:48 |
May 6, Fri 03:46 |
May 14, Sat 07:44 |
May 21, Sat 15:29 |
1365 |
May 28, Sat 08:38 |
June 4, Sat 20:40 |
June 12, Sun 20:21 |
June 19, Sun 20:30 |
1366 |
June 26, Sun 18:08 |
July 4, Mon 14:13 |
July 12, Tue 06:31 |
July 19, Tue 01:09 |
1367 |
July 26, Tue 05:13 |
Aug. 3, Wed 07:26 |
Aug. 10, Wed 15:10 |
Aug. 17, Wed 06:45 |
1368 |
Aug. 24, Wed 18:40 |
Sept. 1, Thu 23:24 |
Sept. 8, Thu 23:22 |
Sept. 15, Thu 14:36 |
1369 |
Sept. 23, Fri 10:40 |
Oct. 1, Sat 13:33 |
Oct. 8, Sat 07:59 |
Oct. 15, Sat 01:49 |
1370 |
Oct. 23, Sun 04:29 |
Oct. 31, Mon 01:47 |
Nov. 6, Sun 17:33 |
Nov. 13, Sun 17:10 |
1371 |
Nov. 21, Mon 22:40 |
Nov. 29, Tue 12:16 |
Dec. 6, Tue 04:23 |
Dec. 13, Tue 12:30 |
1372 |
Dec. 21, Wed 15:47 |
Dec. 28, Wed 21:21 |
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1373 |
<< 2032 Moon Phases2034 Moon Phases >>
For your convenience we have prepared another list, this time with both local and UTC times of each phase. A date of nearest phase is marked in red, dates of the Full Moons are in bold font.
Lunar Phase | Local Date & Time — San Miguel de Tucumán (America/Argentina/Tucuman) | UTC Date & Time |
New Moon |
January 1, Sat |
07:17 |
January 1, Sat |
10:17 |
First Quarter |
January 8, Sat |
00:35 |
January 8, Sat |
03:35 |
Full Moon |
January 15, Sat |
10:07 |
January 15, Sat |
13:07 |
Last Quarter |
January 23, Sun |
14:48 |
January 23, Sun |
17:48 |
New Moon |
January 30, Sun |
19:00 |
January 30, Sun |
22:00 |
First Quarter |
February 6, Sun |
10:35 |
February 6, Sun |
13:35 |
Full Moon |
February 14, Mon |
04:04 |
February 14, Mon |
07:04 |
Last Quarter |
February 22, Tue |
08:54 |
February 22, Tue |
11:54 |
New Moon |
March 1, Tue |
05:25 |
March 1, Tue |
08:25 |
First Quarter |
March 7, Mon |
22:27 |
March 8, Tue |
01:27 |
Full Moon |
March 15, Tue |
22:37 |
March 16, Wed |
01:37 |
Last Quarter |
March 23, Wed |
22:50 |
March 24, Thu |
01:50 |
New Moon |
March 30, Wed |
14:53 |
March 30, Wed |
17:53 |
First Quarter |
April 6, Wed |
12:14 |
April 6, Wed |
15:14 |
Full Moon |
April 14, Thu |
16:18 |
April 14, Thu |
19:18 |
Last Quarter |
April 22, Fri |
08:42 |
April 22, Fri |
11:42 |
New Moon |
April 28, Thu |
23:48 |
April 29, Fri |
02:48 |
First Quarter |
May 6, Fri |
03:46 |
May 6, Fri |
06:46 |
Full Moon |
May 14, Sat |
07:44 |
May 14, Sat |
10:44 |
Last Quarter |
May 21, Sat |
15:29 |
May 21, Sat |
18:29 |
New Moon |
May 28, Sat |
08:38 |
May 28, Sat |
11:38 |
First Quarter |
June 4, Sat |
20:40 |
June 4, Sat |
23:40 |
Full Moon |
June 12, Sun |
20:21 |
June 12, Sun |
23:21 |
Last Quarter |
June 19, Sun |
20:30 |
June 19, Sun |
23:30 |
New Moon |
June 26, Sun |
18:08 |
June 26, Sun |
21:08 |
First Quarter |
July 4, Mon |
14:13 |
July 4, Mon |
17:13 |
Full Moon |
July 12, Tue |
06:31 |
July 12, Tue |
09:31 |
Last Quarter |
July 19, Tue |
01:09 |
July 19, Tue |
04:09 |
New Moon |
July 26, Tue |
05:13 |
July 26, Tue |
08:13 |
First Quarter |
August 3, Wed |
07:26 |
August 3, Wed |
10:26 |
Full Moon |
August 10, Wed |
15:10 |
August 10, Wed |
18:10 |
Last Quarter |
August 17, Wed |
06:45 |
August 17, Wed |
09:45 |
New Moon |
August 24, Wed |
18:40 |
August 24, Wed |
21:40 |
First Quarter |
September 1, Thu |
23:24 |
September 2, Fri |
02:24 |
Full Moon |
September 8, Thu |
23:22 |
September 9, Fri |
02:22 |
Last Quarter |
September 15, Thu |
14:36 |
September 15, Thu |
17:36 |
New Moon |
September 23, Fri |
10:40 |
September 23, Fri |
13:40 |
First Quarter |
October 1, Sat |
13:33 |
October 1, Sat |
16:33 |
Full Moon |
October 8, Sat |
07:59 |
October 8, Sat |
10:59 |
Last Quarter |
October 15, Sat |
01:49 |
October 15, Sat |
04:49 |
New Moon |
October 23, Sun |
04:29 |
October 23, Sun |
07:29 |
First Quarter |
October 31, Mon |
01:47 |
October 31, Mon |
04:47 |
Full Moon |
November 6, Sun |
17:33 |
November 6, Sun |
20:33 |
Last Quarter |
November 13, Sun |
17:10 |
November 13, Sun |
20:10 |
New Moon |
November 21, Mon |
22:40 |
November 22, Tue |
01:40 |
First Quarter |
November 29, Tue |
12:16 |
November 29, Tue |
15:16 |
Full Moon |
December 6, Tue |
04:23 |
December 6, Tue |
07:23 |
Last Quarter |
December 13, Tue |
12:30 |
December 13, Tue |
15:30 |
New Moon |
December 21, Wed |
15:47 |
December 21, Wed |
18:47 |
First Quarter |
December 28, Wed |
21:21 |
December 29, Thu |
00:21
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Reply |
Message 37 of 38 on the subject |
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Reply |
Message 38 of 38 on the subject |
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Mary Magdalen and the Merovingian Kings of France
The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail and Dan Brown’s Da Vinci Code both drew from pseudohistory linking France’s Merovingian dynasty to the bloodline of Jesus Christ.
Pietà (Lamentation), St. John and Mary Magdalene mourn with the Virgin Mary over the crucified Jesus Christ. French, c. 16th century. Metropolitan Museum of Art. Public Domain.
The Da Vinci Code, millions of people who have read Dan Brown’s novel or seen the film know – or at least think they do – who this ‘Dark Age’ dynasty was. And they ‘know’ that Mary Magdalen apparently married Jesus, and bore his child, their descendants marrying into the French royal line and, after several generations, engendering the Merovingian dynasty. (In the 7th century, according to Brown’s book, the Vatican attempted to eradicate the dynasty by murdering Dagobert II, but his son Sigisbert II survived, as did his bloodline down through history, ending up with Sophie – Sophia, Greek for wisdom, and Mary Magdalen’s alter ego in the Pistis Sophia, a Gnostic text – heroine of the novel.) The ‘historical’ aspects of this tale were first told in The Holy Blood and The Holy Grail (1982), by Michael Baigent, Richard Leigh and Henry Lincoln.
According to Luke’s Gospel (8:2), Mary of Magdala was the leader of the group of Jesus’s women followers, and had been healed; she was present at the crucifixion and, according to John and Mark, was the first to witness the risen Christ. In the commentaries of the Early Church Fathers her gospel figure became conflated with a nameless sinner in Luke, who wept on Christ’s feet, wiping them with her hair and anointing them with spikenard (7:37-50), and Mary, sister of Martha and Lazarus of Bethany (John, 11-12). This composite identification was disputed by Protestants from the 16th century, but it was only in 1969 that the Church of Rome distinguished the three separate figures. Baigent et al retain the link between Mary of Magdala and Mary of Bethany with specious and unhistorical arguments regarding the possible wife of Jesus. She was not however a whore.
The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail uses the Gnostic texts of the Gospel of Mary, where Mary Magdalen is described as being loved by Jesus more than the other women and disciples, and the Gospel of Philip, which contains the symbolic imagery of the bridal chamber, to reinforce its hypothesis of a marriage between Christ and Mary Magdalen; The Da Vinci Code does the same.
The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail suggests that Jesus may have survived the crucifixion, and that Mary Magdalen, pregnant at that event, may have fled to France where she was protected by a Jewish kingdom at Narbonne. It continues:
According to other accounts, the Grail was brought by the Magdalene to France. As early as the 4th century legends describe the Magdalene fleeing the Holy Land and being set ashore near Marseilles – where for that matter, her purported relics are still venerated.
Further, ‘according to medieval legends, she carried with her to Marseilles the Holy Grail. But the early legends say that the Magdalene brought the Grail into France, not a cup. In other words, the simple association of Grail and cup was a relatively late development’. We are then tantalized by another suggestion: that ‘If our hypothesis is correct’, the Holy Grail would have been both ‘Jesus’s bloodline and descendants – the ‘Sang Raal’ ... of which the Templars, were ...[the] guardians; and the receptacle or vessel containing Jesus’s blood, the womb of Mary Magdalen’. The Da Vinci Code is of the same view.
The veracity of these hypotheses should be taken with a large dose of salt. There are no accounts or medieval legends of the Grail being brought by Mary Magdalen to France. The earliest legend of her fleeing the Holy Land is of the 13th century. The earliest account of Mary Magdalen’s post-Ascension life appears in an Anglo-Saxon martyrology of c. 850, in which she retires as a hermit, hidden away in sorrow and love of Christ in a desert cave, a story that derives from the legend of the 5th-century penitent harlot St Mary of Egypt, who went into the desert to repent of her sins, naked to reject her worldly life, her hair growing down to cover her. As Mary Magdalen dies, a priest gives her the last rites and buries her. By the 11th century, this legend, known later as the Vita eremitica beatae Mariae Magdalenae (‘Eremitical life’) had become widespread, and Mary Magdalen’s legend became one of the best-known saints’ vitae, after the abbey of Vézelay in Burgundy claimed to possess her relics in 1050.
Monsignor Victor Saxer (b.1918), doyen of Magdalenian scholarship, has traced the development of the legends. To the question of how her body had arrived in Gaul, the faithful were informed that it had been through the love of all-powerful God. Before long, however, Vézelay had to come up with something more concrete to explain its possession of the relics: this was the classic holy theft whereby various versions told of how a monk from Vézelay had been sent to near Aix to retrieve her body where it had been buried, before the Saracens invaded, and brought it back to the abbey for safe-keeping. The next step of the story related how the body had actually come to Provence. This was the vita apostolica, or apostolic life of Mary Magdalen, elements of which have been used in The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail. Here Mary Magdalen and various companions, including one Maximinus, landed at Marseille, where they preached the gospel. Mary Magdalen converted the local prince and his wife to Christianity, and performed miracles such as helping the previously childless couple to conceive (thus becoming a patron saint of childbearing), and restoring the princess to life after being shipwrecked. In a later version, what The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail refers to as ‘according to tradition, as well as certain early Church writers’ and appears to treat as fact, she is accompanied by Martha and Lazarus, having been put to flight by the Jews in a leaky and rudderless vessel, which guided by God, also, arrives at Marseille – Martha goes to Tarascon to kill the wicked dragon, while Lazarus stays to become bishop of Marseille.
The story is resumed in the compilation known as the Golden Legend by Jacobus de Voragine of 1276. All hagiographical material issued by one small Burgundian abbey, which prompted, as intended, a massive pilgrimage industry, particularly after the invention or discovery in 1259, of heaps of feminine hair (something that would to the medieval mentalité confirm that the body was indeed that of Mary Magdalen). Then, in 1279, through the intervention of Mary Magdalen herself in a dream, the monks at St Maximin in Provence ‘discovered’ her relics in their church, turning the steps of the credulous faithful southwards. The instigator of the discovery of the Magdalen’s relics at St Maximin was Charles of Anjou and Salerno, count of Provence.
So where do the Merovingians come in? Nowhere. In The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail we learn that:
‘If our hypothesis is correct, … after fleeing the Holy Land, Jesus’s wife and offspring found a refuge in the south of France, and in a Jewish community they preserved their lineage. During the 5th century this lineage appears to have intermarried with the royal line of the Franks, thus engendering the Merovingian dynasty.’
There is no footnote to this amazing leap in historical speculation, although the occasional fact is referred to such as the assassination of Dagobert II in 679, and that ‘despite all efforts to eradicate it, Jesus’s bloodline – or at any rate, the Merovingian bloodline – survived ... in part through the Carolingians, … who sought to legitimise themselves by dynastic alliance with Merovingian princesses’. Hard on the heels of The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail, Dan Brown follows.
Nor is there any link between Mary Magdalen and the French bloodline, as hypothesized by the authors of The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail when they state that Louis XI (r.1461-83) regarded ‘the Magdalene as a source of the French royal line’, citing Sainte-Marie Madeleine (1860) by the Dominican H.D. Lacordaire, an apologist for the claims of St Maximin and the veracity of Mary Magdalen’s sojourn in Provence. Either their French is bad or it is yet another instance of imagination running riot, for Lacordaire merely noted that the king was an ‘example of limitless veneration’ for Mary Magdalen, ‘treating her as a daughter of France’, and endowing his descendants ‘with a pilgrimage proper to the French monarchy’. While it is true that the French monarchy, from Louis IX (r.1226-70), who attended the inventions both at Vézelay and St Maximin, to Francis I (r.1515-47), in particular, down to the 18th century, first supported and endowed Vézelay and then did the same for the convent at St Maximin and pilgrimage site at La Ste-Baume, it was not only the French royal house that did so.
Royalty and nobility, as well as humbler pilgrims, from all over Europe came to the shrine of the most popular saint of Christendom after the Virgin Mary: among them Francis I, the emperor Charles V, his daughter-in-law Beatrice of Savoy, and princes such as Isabella d’Este, while several females of dynastic descent had themselves portrayed as the penitent in her grotto, such as the Archduchess Maria Magdalena of Tuscany in 1621.
Finally, it is interesting to note that after the loss to France of the duchy of Burgundy in 1477, the Burgundian Hapsburgs used the legendary apostolic life of Mary Magdalen to claim their prior right to the duchy. A manuscript of c.1486 now in the British Library, purporting to be a history of the house of Burgundy, states that Mary Magdalen converted their forebears, the king and queen of Burgundy (altering what in the legend had been the prince and princess ‘of the province’, or Provence), to Christianity. With the addition at the beginning of two apocryphal names, Trophime and Etienne (the king and his son), is a genealogical list that would have done The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail proud: Chilperic I and Sigismond IV of Burgundy, Clovis I, king of the Franks, converted by his wife Clothilde (of the Burgundian house which, according to the partisan historiographer was Christian ‘long before there was a Christian king in France’), and Theuderic II, ending with the Archduke (later Holy Roman Emperor) Maximilian I (r.1477-82), and his son Philip the Handsome (r.1482-1506), father of Charles V.
Baigent and Leigh’s recent case in the High Court against Dan Brown failed since using material both factual and in the public domain is not plagiarism. Had they claimed the stuff of their book to have been the authors’ own invention, they might have got somewhere. That the central pivot to both The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail and The Da Vinci Code was a fiction could well have been established by the lack of connection between Mary Magdalen, Marseilles and the Merovingians.
https://www.historytoday.com/archive/mary-magdalen-and-kings-france |
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