merovee en merovee_and_txt_som

Merovee txt

back to the home page

version available in : it ru zh es ja de nl pt fr

date of creation : 20241005- date of update : 20241005- generation date : 20241005_011952

A story pieced together from several readings:

  • "The holy blood and the holy grail".
    By Michael Baigent, Richard Leigh, Henry Lincoln.
    Translated into French "L'enigme sacrée"
  • "De mémoire d'Assénien" and "Chemin de ce temps là" by Anne and Daniel Meurois-Givaudan It's a coherent story with a meaning that helps us better understand the history of France..
    For me, this is the most likely hypothesis..
    Only the plot is important, the details can be considered pure fiction. ... or not.

    1.A hidden son of christian history

    The Hill of Bethany was then the residential district of Jerusalem's Jewish nobility, the Beverley Hills of the time..
    Mary of Bethany (Myriam d'Arimatie) was the daughter (adoptive?) a high Jewish dignitary, Joseph of Arimathea, who was a descendant of King David.
    Myriam's brother was called Lazarus, and it was this Lazarus who was the disciple whom Jesus loved, and who after his initiation ( three and a half days in a trance in a tomb, as in the pyramid initiation ) took the name of Jean.
    John the apostle of Jesus, whose symbol is the eagle.
    King David was king of Jerusalem, of the tribe of Judah..
    Judah had not inherited Jerusalem and its region, which was the inheritance of the tribe of Benjamin..
    Judah had reclaimed this territory when the Benjaminites went into exile in Greece after the other tribes of Israel had waged a bitter war against them..
    In fact, when the Benjaminites settled in Jerusalem, they fraternized with the people already living there..
    This same people came into conflict with another tribe of Israel who wanted to wage war against them..
    Judaic law stipulated that if a tribe declared war on a people, all the tribes of Israel had to join that tribe..
    The Benjaminites didn't want to fight those they considered their friends..
    The Benjaminite tribe was therefore anathematized by the other tribes, which meant massacre. (it looks like genocide now) .
    Having fled to Greece to save their skins, the Benjaminites prospered, and we find traces of these Greek Jews in the book of Maccabees..
    Not all the Benjaminites had gone into exile or returned afterwards, and those who had survived were still considered to have rights over Jerusalem..
    Saul of Tarsus was one of these men, a contemporary of Jesus..
    He was ambitious and dreamed of regaining power from the Romans by collaborating with them, making them understand that politically, a king of Jerusalem from a noble Benjaminite family and from the lineage of David would succeed in unifying the country that the Romans had great difficulty managing, so many clans with different interests and views..
    And above all resistance to Roman occupation.
    A king who is also a friend of the Romans.
    This would have been economical for the Romans, who had to contend with fierce and fanatical warriors who would rather die than surrender.: The Zealots.
    The Massada episode that came later is a perfect example..
    Saul's plan involved marrying the daughter of a nobleman from the line of the king of Jerusalem, the line of David who built the famous Temple, having a son by this woman and making him the new king of Jerusalem..
    The original plan was never achieved, but it took an extremely special turn.-being under the influence of Jesus.
    Mary of Bethany, had been initiated into the monastery of Mount Carmel.
    She had become a disciple of Jesus.
    After her marriage and the birth of her son Marcus, she had become aware of the manipulation to which she had been subjected..
    Saul was keen to give his son a Roman first name to complete the third part of his triptych.: Benjamin, David, Rome.
    Mary could not bear this and left her husband and Bethany, retiring to Magdala on the shores of Lake Tiberias, her family's "summer residence"..
    This may seem insignificant, but at the time it was extremely courageous on her part, as she could have been stoned to death for this gesture, she was on probation and shouldn't show off too much..
    Mary of Magdala, whom the manipulated gospels remember as "the sinner" was only so from the point of view of the "machosity" of the time and was a courageous woman of high lineage and great knowledge and erudition through her years spent studying at Mount Carmel..
    She mastered a particular technique that was taught there.-of the Carmelite monastery and combined movements (mudra and dance) with the use of plant essences (aromatherapy) .
    The episode of the perfume of great price poured over Jesus' head is related to this teaching, but the Gospel only retains the criticism of the men of the time, whose male ego was scorned by this rare woman..
    After the crucifixion, 36 disciples of Jesus-Christ knew that they would each have to join forces with two other new disciples, and that 108 of them would be scattered throughout the world..
    It was the first wave of Christ, the most fundamental and secret of our times..
    We could say the esoteric wave.
    The group that left Jerusalem for Gaul included Joseph of Arimathea, his daughter Mary and her daughter's son "Marcus", whom Mary had sought to remove from her father Saul's control..
    It's probably for this reason that Saul began to persecute to the death (see the episode of Saint Stephen's death in the Gospel) Christ's disciples.
    Mad with rage at the idea that his son had been stolen from him by Christ's disciples.
    But his son was no longer in the land of Jerusalem.
    Saul did not continue his persecutions for long, for a vision (which momentarily blinded him) made him understand who Christ was, and he became the apostle Paul..
    The one who replaced Judas, part of Christ's second wave.
    Paul even went as far as Gaul later on in search of his son.
    The Gaul of the time was composite.
    One of the peoples who lived there had emigrated from Greece; Artemis was their venerated goddess, and the bear was her symbol..
    This people were the sicambres, from a place in Greece called Arcadia. (Arkas, the bear) .
    They were the descendants of the exiled Benjaminites.
    Their tradition was very close to that of the Jews of Jerusalem, they had the same books and the same knowledge because they came from the same people of Israel..
    Arriving in Gaul with two boats, at the place known as Les Saintes-Marie, the group dispersed into smaller groups, each with a specific mission..
    One of the men, accompanied by a woman, had been asked to give the sicambres a very precious book in gratitude, later known as the book of the alchemists.: "The book of Solomon the Jew to the Jews scattered in the land of Gaul by the power of God".
    Joseph of Arimathea then went north, probably to Brittany or Great Britain, carrying the cup that had collected the blood and water that had flowed from the wound inflicted on Jesus.-Christ (The wound was actually inflicted by a Roman soldier disciple to prevent him from being asphyxiated.: pneumo thorax) .
    Indeed, everything was perfectly planned for this moment, and Jesus was not alone, but surrounded by many disciples who had their part to play in this cosmic initiation..
    The blood of Christ is the mystery of the Grail, and Joseph is the sorcerer Merlin who taught the harsh warriors of the north to turn their swords over and thrust them into the earth as a sign of peace, but also as a sign of strength. (rootedness, renewed alliance and affection for the land-mother) .
    Myriam de Magdala (from which Marie-Madeleine) did many things in many places, and probably taught her art to many women..
    She perfected her art until she reached the essence of the absolute..
    Marcus was recognized as the natural king of Sicambres, and brought Christ's message of liberation to these men..
    He is known as Mérovée, a supernatural being born of the sea and son of a being of the sea, which is the legend of what has just been said..
    Let's not forget that fish ICTUS is the symbol of Christ.
    Christian history is also set in the Age of Pisces, whose symmetrical complementary sign in the zodiac is ... the virgin! Meroveius had a son named Meroveius, who in turn had a son named Clovis..
    It's the beginning of this line of Priests-King of the Merovingians.
    They were the first to embody Christ's message and spread this knowledge in Gaul..
    Later called Arianism by the makers of dogma and therefore heretics.
    Clovis joined forces with the Bishop of Rome to unify the Christians.
    It was a pact: Clovis recognized the spiritual authority of the bishop of Rome-guaranteed to support his descendants as King of the Franks forever.
    Later, the administrators of the Merovingian kings' palaces plotted against the kings and had them assassinated..
    Kings had less and less power, their spiritual brilliance was diminishing, and they were getting younger and younger, to the point where they were finally transported in chariots. (hence the story of the lazy kings, who were not lazy, but simply very young.) .
    The people remained attached to these priests-kings, so the palace administrators could not simply abolish them.
    To this end, they conspired with the bishop of Rome, who became a perjurer in the process..
    The culmination of this betrayal was the assassinat_de_Dagobert_II a great king who was able to be raised in Scotland after his father died when he was just five years old, and the person in charge of killing him couldn't bring himself to do it..
    As an adult, he returned to Gaul and allied himself with the Visigoths. (wise-goth, goth sages) by marrying a princess from . Rhedea  (Rennes le Châteaux) and had regained his throne.
    This assassination marked the definitive end of the Merovingians, at least officially, since his son Sigebert IV continued his line of descent..
    One of these descendants is said to be . Guilhem de Gellonne  who was a friend of the first king Louis le Bon or le Pieux, son of Charlemagne, Guilhem being himself a cousin of Charlemagne while being Merovingian..
    The Merovingians still retain their original aura.
    When they were no longer in power, the newly powerful in search of legitimacy always sought out women of Merovingian lineage, including Napoleon..
    The mayors of the palaces, the Pepin family, took power and subjugated themselves with the bishop of Rome, who then proclaimed himself "pope" by virtue of the Donation_de_Constantin last Christian Roman emperor, who bequeathed imperial power to the bishop of Rome.
    (It was later recognized that this will was a forgery invented for the occasion.) .
    This testament allowed the new "pope" to crown "emperor". (not king) the son of pippin the short: Charlemagne.

    Charlemagne's son, Louis_le_Pieux was crowned king in the presence of his friend . Guilhem de Gellonne  who gave him his crown, and Louis is said to have told his friend: "By this gesture your family raises mine.
    "(cf Le_Couronnement_de_Louis ) So despite the betrayal they suffered at the hands of the perjured Bishop of Rome (the church has perverted itself with the kings of the earth and become babylon, the famous harlot of apocalypse) Merovingian nobles continued to serve their people loyally.
    The thread then continues with Ireland, where Dagobert II is said to have been raised, and the Lorraine region..
    Saint Malachy, who prophesied the list of Popes past and future, an Irish saint who traveled to Lorraine to Saint Bernard de Clervaux, founder of the Cistercian order and, with Godefroy de Bouillon, the Templar order..
    Godefroy de Bouillon and several knights were commissioned by Saint Bernard to go to Jerusalem..
    He founded the Priory of Sion there (Prioratus Sionis)

    2.Rhedea

    Rhedea became the capital of the Visigoth kingdom when the latter-was reduced by the conquest of Târiq from 711 to 714 in Spain.
    Thereafter, under Charlemagne, the Saracens made only brief incursions into France.
    Provence.
    But in Spain, the Empire of the Umayyads, the Emirate of Cordoba, prospered from 755 to 1031 thanks to gold from Sudan.
    His music (we owe him al-'ûd, the lute) , its literature (who had an influence on the troubadours) its philosophy (it was through Avicenna and Averroes that scholastics learned about Aristotle's thinking which is at the heart of Thomist philosophy, is.
    -à-d.
    Doctor angelicus, Saint Thomas Aquinas) and its sciences, algebra, initiated in Baghdad by the Iranian mathematical genius al-Khwârizmi (env.
    780-env.
    850) author of al-kitâb al-jabr wa al-muqabala (the book on reduction and equation', al-jabr

  • (Rhedea)> algebra) , astronomie (zénith, nadir, etc.
    are Arabic words) have had a profound impact on Western culture..

    Paracelsus' will mentions three treasures in Europe.
    One of these treasures is Rhedea's.

    Alaric, the Visigoth king, is said to have taken the treasure with him after sacking Rome.
    from Solomon's temple, including the seven-branched candelabra.

    This treasure is said to have made a stop under a river from which Alaric diverted the flow long enough to build up the cache..

    The treasure was then hidden in the natural caves of Rennes.-les-Baths at the bottom of the valley dominated by Rennes-le-chateau.

    The mystery of this treasure is said to have been held by Nicolas Poussin, who made the table les_bergers_d_Arcadie

    in numerous copies.
    At the time of Louis XIV, this painting was in the treasure room of the chateau de Versaille.
    He is currently at the Louvre.

    In Rennes le Chateau, it's not one treasure but three that seem to have been hidden..
    The first is Alaric's treasure, a material treasure.

    The second is a historical treasure: A descendant of Sigebert IV signed by Blanche de Castille found by Abée Saunière in the base of the altar at Rennes le Chateau church.
    This document would have been bought by the company Austria.

    The third was a spiritual treasure that the abbot had negotiated with Rome.
    Saunière.
    The Pope's prelate is said to have visited Abbé Saunière several times.

    Abbé Saunière also found jewels in the church that had belonged to the De Blanchefort family..

    3.Guilhem de Gellonne

    Guillaume_de_Gellone

    "Guilhem de Gellone was the son of Thierry d'Autun, who-even shrouded in mystery.
    However, the latter is not the nickname of Makhir, son of the exilarch Natronaï ben Zabinaï, but rather the son of Childéric III, considered the last reigning member of the Merovingian dynasty..
    " (cf les_descendants_de_guilhem_de_gellone_perpetuent_le_cycle_du_roi_arthur ) Alongside the Geste du roi, a cycle of chansons de geste recounting the exploits of Charlemagne and his twelve peers, there are other cycles, such as the cycle of Garin de Monglane, which includes some twenty poems..
    A sub-all those-This forms the Geste de Guillaume, including the Coronation of Louis, the Charroi de Nîmes, the Prise d'Orange, the Chevalerie Vivien, Aliscans, and the Moniage Guillaume..
    He directs Guillaume Fierabras or Guillaume au Court Nez (or Courb Nez) .
    He's a fabulous character of extraordinary strength, capable of killing an opponent with a single prodigious punch..
    He fights the Saracens.
    Historically, Guillaume was the son of Thierry, of Merovingian stock related to the first counts of Autun - Saône-et-Loire, and Aude, daughter of Charles Martel and sister of Pepin le Bref.
    Guillaume was a cousin of Charlemagne, who made him Count of Toulouse..
    The hero's historical prototype can be found in a character mentioned in the Nota Emilianense, the Fragment de La Haye and a Latin poem by Ermold le Noir. (827) .
    William was defeated on the Orbieu near Narbonne in 793.. He is said to have contributed to the capture of Barcelona in 803..
    He retired in 806 to the monastery of Gellone (Saint-Guilhem-le-Desert) founded by him in 804.
    According to an 11th-century obituary, he died there on May 21, 812. (or 813 or 814) Tradition recounts many remarkable facts about William.
    When he retired to the monastery of Gellone, he is said to have brought with him a gift from his cousin Charlemagne.: a piece of the true Cross, which the emperor is said to have received from the hands of the patriarch of Jerusalem.
    The Pilgrims' Guide to Saint-Jacques-de-Compostelle (Twelfth century) recommends that pilgrims make the detour to the abbey of Saint-Guilhem: Those who go to Saint-Jacques by the road to Toulouse to visit the body of the blessed confessor Guillaume.
    The most holy door-Ensign William was a count in King Charlemagne's entourage, and not the least courageous soldier, expert in the ways of war.; it was he who by his courage and valour subdued, says-on, the towns of Nîmes and Orange, and many others, to Christian rule, and brought the wood of the Saviour's Cross to the Gellone valley..
    Valley where he led an eremitical life and where this holy confessor of Christ, after a blessed end, rests surrounded by honor..
    His feast day is celebrated on May 28.
    This brings us to the legend of William's rear end.-small-son of Garin de Monglane, small-son of Hernaut de Beaulande and son of Aymeri de Narbonne, who, having seized this Saracen-occupied town, is said to have expelled his seven sons, including Guillaume, to conquer their own fiefdoms in pagan-occupied territories..
    Proud, tough, passionate, generous, they wear out their lives in pitched battles, in torments, in prisons, on the roads, finding themselves united in the hour of peril, keeping as far away as possible from those in the open air..
    They are the ones who dedicated themselves to the weighty and heroic mission that belonged to the kings of France..
    (Encyclopædia Universalis, 1995) After Charlemagne's death, the kings of France became court kings, weak and effeminate, with no crusading vocation..
    According to the poems recounting his exploits, William became an advisor to King Louis the Debonair. (814-41) son of Charlemagne.
    He becomes his protector, crowns him, saves his life on several occasions, fights a duel for him, gives him his sister... . Blancheflor  in marriage.
    The king, however, proves ungrateful.
    He did not give William a fief as a reward for his services..
    Guillaume must go.
    He conquered Nîmes and Orange, married a beautiful Saracen woman, Orable, for love, and christened her Guibourg..

    4.Blancheflor

    near Blanquefort near Rhedea.
    The tombstone of the last Lady of Blanquefort, buried in the churchyard of Rennes de Chateau, bears the famous motto Et_in_Arcadia_ego