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 Post subject: Re: ALCOR, marking the Treasure of the Kings of France
PostPosted: 16 Jan 2012 8:17 pm 
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Yes Sheila thats a very good point. How did he do it?
Unleavened bread maybe. :)

Seriously though. How was one man able to encode so much so perfectly?

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 Post subject: Re: ALCOR, marking the Treasure of the Kings of France
PostPosted: 17 Jan 2012 6:36 am 
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Today is POMMES BLEUES day

Quote:
Seules deux églises en France possèdent une particularité liée au soleil. Saint Sulpice à Paris et la Cathédrale de Chartres.

Toutes deux possèdent un vitrail dans lequel un trou aménagé par lequel le soleil projette une marque lumineuse au sol.

A Saint Sulpice, au solstice d’été cette trace matérialise le méridien du lieu, qu’il ne faut pas confondre avec le méridien de Paris situé à 200 mètres à son Est.
Nous pouvons affirmer qu’un phénomène lumineux lié au soleil existe aussi à Rennes le Château. Nous l’avons observé le 17 janvier 2002.

Voici les Photos:

Image
Le phénomène des pommes bleues
Image
Le phénomène des pommes bleues

Le 17 janvier 1781 à Rennes le Château s’éteignait Marie de Negri d’Ablès dame d’hautpoul Blanchefort.

Le 17 janvier 461 s’éteignait Saint Antoine à l’âge de 105 ans.

Ce que les membres de l’A.I.C.T ont pu constater ce 17 janvier 2002 en l’église de Rennes le Château, c’est que le rayon dit des pommes bleues était projeté sur le pilier à l’endroit exact de la Rosace, entre la station numéro 1 du chemin de croix et la station numéro 2, celle de Saint Antoine Ermite et ceci à 11 heures GMT, et non à midi solaire comme il est dit dans la plupart des ouvrages.

Ceci s’explique puisque la déclinaison magnétique est de 0,07° ou de 0,04 gr Est par an, donc si nous faisions le calcul de 1891 époque des travaux, fait dans l’église par Saunière, cela fait donc 111 ans, que multiplie 0,07° soit 7,7° de déclinaison Est, sur une longueur de 8 mètres environ; c’est à dire du vitrail laissant passer la lumière dite des pommes bleues au mur lui faisant face.

Il y a donc 111 ans, le phénomène lumineux était environ à 1 Mètre 10 plus à l’Ouest donc en dessous de la première station du chemin de croix.
Faites vos calculs et tirez en les conclusions qui vous conviennent, elles nous intéressent!


TODAY!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Image
ORDO DE CARCASSONNE 1863 - RENNES = 17th January

Image
ORDO DE CARCASSONNE 1875

Switched to June 22 - MIDSUMMERS DAY

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 Post subject: Re: ALCOR, marking the Treasure of the Kings of France
PostPosted: 17 Jan 2012 11:50 am 
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Since the article in the Daily Express a paper with a circulation of 3,000,000, nobody in Britain is unaware of the demand for the recognition of Merovingian rights made in 1955 and 1956 by Sir Alexander Aikman and Sir John Montague Brocklebank.


Can anyone show that 'Aikman' or 'Montague Brocklebank' wrote an article demanding 'recognition of Merovingian rights' in the Daily Express? And perhaps explain the relationship between Baron Beaverbrook and Alexander Aikman, and William Montagu and John Montague Brocklebank?

Edited to add:

Perhaps these questions might also be perfect for the 'English Connection' thread! I'll ask it there too.

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 Post subject: Re: ALCOR, marking the Treasure of the Kings of France
PostPosted: 17 Jan 2012 5:00 pm 
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Quote:
seules deux eglises en France


Vraiment? Really? Who can make such a claim with so much aplomb?
Vous me faites rigoler, les enfants!


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 Post subject: Re: ALCOR, marking the Treasure of the Kings of France
PostPosted: 17 Jan 2012 6:23 pm 
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Spartacus Paraclete wrote:
Quote:
Since the article in the Daily Express a paper with a circulation of 3,000,000, nobody in Britain is unaware of the demand for the recognition of Merovingian rights made in 1955 and 1956 by Sir Alexander Aikman and Sir John Montague Brocklebank.


Can anyone show that 'Aikman' or 'Montague Brocklebank' wrote an article demanding 'recognition of Merovingian rights' in the Daily Express? And perhaps explain the relationship between Baron Beaverbrook and Alexander Aikman, and William Montagu and John Montague Brocklebank?

Edited to add:

Perhaps these questions might also be perfect for the 'English Connection' thread! I'll ask it there too.

wasn't the Montague's the family in Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet

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 Post subject: Blue Apples Day
PostPosted: 18 Jan 2012 12:45 am 
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There are also blue apples at Lincoln Cathedral.
Happy Blue Apples Day.

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 Post subject: Re: ALCOR, marking the Treasure of the Kings of France
PostPosted: 18 Jan 2012 11:01 am 
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roscoe wrote:
Sheila wrote:
Poussin and Teniers hold the key.


So long as you use Shepherdess NO Temptation i.e. The Teniers painting where St Anthony is NOT being tempted by the devil i.e. This one (also with shepherd and sheep in the distance):

Image

Summer Triangle.

Image

Yes use the Teniers painting that is also has a copy at Shugborough. Where Elizabeth Anson (nee Yorke) copied Les Bergere d'Arcadie (1)

Not forgetting the hand gestures.
ImageImageImage

Image
Raising of Lazarus

Love the way you all ignored this:

Quote:
THE FRENCH ZERO MERIDIAN

God bless the fall from a horse that was suffered by Father de la Caille (1713-1762) during his journey to Rennes-les-Bains! Was this happy accident not well worth it, given that it gave us a chance to get to know this learned man who was honoured throughout France, this zealous Christian who should really have lost his sight (and some would say his life) through his habit of always looking through his spectacles simultaneously at his notebook with his right eye and the sky with his left eye. Other countries envied us for having such a person among us. The adjustments that he made to the zero meridian described by Piccard, and more particularly to the Dunkirk-Paris section, earned him the admiration of Frederick the Great, who should have given him the task of constructing Unter den Linden (under the Lime trees), the zero meridian of all German territories. Our country could not however do without him. The Church then took him on as a collaborator on its ‘Art de vérifier les dates’ [The Art of Verifying dates], the fundamental work of Dom Lobineau to which our descendants owe the existence of a history of France and, therefore, a history of Europe as well.

The fact is that a knowledge of history and geography are indissolubly linked with a knowledge of the stars. One could therefore say that an astronomy that does not tend towards astrology is but the ruin of the soul.

To the notes that follow, which I owe entirely to Father de la Caille, I have added some comments provided by Fouillée and by the memoirs of Abbé Delmas drawn up in 1709, but my gratitude towards the former is only increased by the light that he has shed on works whose significance I would never have seen if left to my own efforts.

François-Pierre Cauneille
Curé of Rennes-les-Bains


Abbe Cauneille fled with the Abbe Bigou in early September 1792. He died in Sabadell near Barcelona. In 1792 the English moved NewYears Day from Lady Day 25 March (day of the Annuciation) to January 1st.


The Rue Lobineau divides the St Germain des Pres from the Church of St Sulpice. Two churches on the Rose Line. Named after Guy Alexis Lobineau.

Guy Alexis Lobineau (Benedictine monk) concluded that the Kings and Queens of Brittany did not belong to France but to Britain. It went down like a lead balloon.

Not forgetting the Lobineau Document in the Dossiers Secret.

It's great isn't it, everyone likes the Poussin and Teniers paintings but nobody likes the Priory of Sion history that led you to them nor the characters therein.

So why are the French currently marking the PARIS meridian with Lime Trees? As Cauneille hinted at in the 18th century

Or doesn't this fit in with IBJ's machinations and so is therefore totally ignored?


Not to be confused with this one:

Image

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 Post subject: Re: ALCOR, marking the Treasure of the Kings of France
PostPosted: 18 Jan 2012 12:18 pm 
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Pas.... Mouvement des jambes pour marcher qui consiste à mettre un pied devant l'autre....a step.

Pas de tentation
Pas de Calais
Pas de danse
Pas de la Roque
Pas de deux

None of the above mean NO or NONE...they mean STEP.

Bergère pas de tentation = Bergère au pas de tentation


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 Post subject: Re: ALCOR, marking the Treasure of the Kings of France
PostPosted: 18 Jan 2012 5:43 pm 
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in fact, the next thing the Shepherdess should do is turn her head away :roll:


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 Post subject: Re: ALCOR, marking the Treasure of the Kings of France
PostPosted: 18 Jan 2012 6:17 pm 
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.

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Last edited by crimson_dove on 18 Jan 2012 10:30 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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 Post subject: Re: ALCOR, marking the Treasure of the Kings of France
PostPosted: 18 Jan 2012 7:18 pm 
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Uploaded with ImageShack.us

IG, in gradus


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 Post subject: Re: Blue Apples Day
PostPosted: 18 Jan 2012 9:40 pm 
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Renne wrote:
Image

There are also blue apples at Lincoln Cathedral.
Happy Blue Apples Day.

I would also hazard a guess that the "blue apples" can me seen in loads of churches that have stained glass windows but I suppose no-one goes to look at others on the 17th January. I don't buy into the idea that "pommes bleues" has anything to do with these light patterns. That being said, I don't have a valid explanation for the phrase either. I know PdC said it was a masonic in-joke, does anyone know what the joke is meant to be? I think it's Chaumeil who brought this to light in Pierre et papier? Sorry for being off-topic.
Regards
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 Post subject: Grapes?
PostPosted: 19 Jan 2012 1:38 am 
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Aren`t blue apples grapes? Maybe it means "blue fruit" which

would be grapes. Hi Crimson Dove, how are you?

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 Post subject: Re: Grapes?
PostPosted: 19 Jan 2012 2:15 am 
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Renne wrote:
Aren`t blue apples grapes? Maybe it means "blue fruit" which

would be grapes. Hi Crimson Dove, how are you?



No! it means Vinland, IMHO.---Bill

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 Post subject: BLUE
PostPosted: 19 Jan 2012 2:37 am 
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Vinland as in Oak Island?

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 Post subject: Re: ALCOR, marking the Treasure of the Kings of France
PostPosted: 19 Jan 2012 6:31 am 
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Sheila wrote:
Pas.... Mouvement des jambes pour marcher qui consiste à mettre un pied devant l'autre....a step.

Pas de tentation
Pas de Calais
Pas de danse
Pas de la Roque
Pas de deux

None of the above mean NO or NONE...they mean STEP.

Bergère pas de tentation = Bergère au pas de tentation


How about Pas de o'Reilly

Cue Irish jig.

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 Post subject: Re: ALCOR, marking the Treasure of the Kings of France
PostPosted: 19 Jan 2012 9:10 am 
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How about, you're floundering.


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 Post subject: Re: ALCOR, marking the Treasure of the Kings of France
PostPosted: 19 Jan 2012 9:36 am 
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Sheila wrote:
How about, you're floundering.


I have to ask, is he ever any other way? Ever?

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 Post subject: Re: ALCOR, marking the Treasure of the Kings of France
PostPosted: 19 Jan 2012 9:58 am 
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Sheila wrote:
How about, you're floundering.


Flounder?

How about Red Herring?

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 Post subject: Re: ALCOR, marking the Treasure of the Kings of France
PostPosted: 19 Jan 2012 10:03 am 
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http://www.redherring.com.au

Nice restaurant :D

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 Post subject: Re: BLUE
PostPosted: 19 Jan 2012 11:04 am 
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Renne wrote:
Image

Vinland as in Oak Island?



Yeah, its part of it, but evidence seems to show that the Vikings called most of what became known as Acadia, "Vinland".
During the period of Viking settlements the climate was much warmer then now, and wild grapes were everywhere. The Sagas tell us that their livestock had grazed through the winters.

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 Post subject: Re: BLUE
PostPosted: 19 Jan 2012 12:40 pm 
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Renne wrote:
Image

Vinland as in Oak Island?



btw Renne, I was wrong in the way I answered you last night. IMHO, "blue apples" does refer to grapes, and that looks like an awesome bunch of grapes you have there.

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 Post subject: Re: ALCOR, marking the Treasure of the Kings of France
PostPosted: 19 Jan 2012 12:51 pm 
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Quote:
A kind of unleavened bread that the Hebrew priests allow to go off and it forms a mould (fungus) (they don't use yeast). They then eat this and it gives them visions. They may have added Frankincense to the baking process. It may well have been an early form of LSD.


you mean rye bread and the ergot fungus? LSD was originally synthesised from ergotamine. It's been theorised that the Salem Witch trials happened because ergot infected bread was eaten causing some young women to have terrifying trips and hence accusations of witchcraft.

Quote:
Seriously though. How was one man able to encode so much so perfectly?


maybe he didn't...maybe merely looking for codes (observation) creates them.... :mrgreen:

Quote:
but documents do indeed exist in a Lloyds Bank vault, though not the Lloyds Bank Europe Limited.


you know this as fact?


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 Post subject: Oak Island orb
PostPosted: 20 Jan 2012 12:41 am 
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Oak Island orb.

Unleavened bread and blue grapes wine. I`m sure they used some powerful

substances back then, the preists could have had control of the water supply through the tunnel

for Siloam. So the Vinland climate was warmer back then! I know that the Indians up there are lighter

of skin and can dance the Scottish jig with the best of them. What do you make of Oak Island?

Is it Viking or Templar?

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 Post subject: Re: Oak Island orb
PostPosted: 20 Jan 2012 1:22 am 
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Renne wrote:
So the Vinland climate was warmer back then! I know that the Indians up there are lighter

of skin and can dance the Scottish jig with the best of them. What do you make of Oak Island?

Is it Viking or Templar?



The event known as "the little ice age" began in about 1250 and the average temperatures are still a few degrees cooler then during the period of Viking exploration. If you are asking for my opinion on Oak Island, it would be that both groups were there at one time or another.

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