We Are Anonymous - Resistance Legion.///\\*|||.

We Are Anonymous - Resistance Legion.///\\*|||.
No club to join, no leaders to obey!

Sunday, August 30, 2015

WARS OF THE ROSES ~ THE JOLLY ROGER...

WFSCBC:

[ WARRIOR NEWS ].///\\*|||.


WARS OF THE ROSES:

We Are Anonymous - Resistance Legion.///\\.

Maj.Gen.Deadman Walking:1stBadmoon.

G'day viewers.

THE JOLLY ROGER...

The origin of the Jolly Roger begins with the tale of Baldwin, as recounted by Walter Mapp, in the twelfth century AD.

Although the story at this time is not connected with the Templar Knights, at the time of their trials 1307-1314, it was well woven into the Templar legend... In fact it was called upon during the actual trials of the Templars.

According to the legend, this anonymous 'Lord-of-Sidon' was in love with a 'great-lady-of-Maraclea'... Marash in Cilician Armenia.[1]

Baldwin married 'Arda-of-Armenia', from the Rubinian 'Royal-House-of-Armenia', founded by her grandfather, 'Ruben-of-Cilicia'.

Ruben was descended from a daughter of 'I-Buzir-Khagan' of the #Khazars and 'Priset', who married 'Constantin-II' of 'Abkhazia'.[2]


                                                        A Seljuk Turk

Armenia had became vulnerable to the 'Seljuk-Turks', under 'Alp-Arslan', in the latter half of the eleventh century AD... To escape death or servitude 'Gagik-II', King of Armenia, and his son, named 'Ruben-I', with some of his countrymen, went into the gorges of the 'Taurus-Mountains', and then into 'Tarsus-of-Cilicia', where they were given shelter by the local Byzantine governor.

Soon after, the members of the first Crusade appeared in Asia Minor... Baldwin, who along with the rest of the Crusaders, was passing through Asia Minor, bound for Jerusalem, left the army, and was adopted by 'Thoros-of-Edessa', Ruben’s grandson... Being enemies to both the 'Seljuk-Turks', and the 'Byzantines', the 'Armenians' readily accepted the rule of 'Baldwin', who was made ruler of the new crusader County of 'Edessa', when 'Thoros' was assassinated.


It seems that, in general, the Armenians enjoyed the rule of Baldwin, and a number of them fought alongside the crusaders... When Antioch was taken in 1097 AD, Constantine, Thoros’ father, received from the crusaders the title of baron.

According to Walter Mapp, Baldwin’s wife would have died suddenly... On the night of her burial, he supposedly crept to her grave, dug up her body and violated it...


Then a voice from beyond ordered him to return nine months later, when he would find a son...


He returned at the appointed time, opened the grave again, and found a head on the leg bones of the skeleton... a 'skull-and-crossbones'.

The same voice then apparently commanded him to guard it well, for it would be the 'giver-of-all-good-things'.


So he carried it away with him... It became his protecting genius, and he was able to defeat his enemies by merely showing them the magic head... In due course, it passed to the possession of the order.


The inquisitors would have picked up on the fact that the woman of the piece was Armenian by background... This they would have connected with the Armenian Church and its 'Paulician-sects'.

The 'Paulicians' and the 'Bogomils' were practitioners of 'Catharism' which the church had all but wiped out during the 'Albigensian-Crusade'...


Since the church believed the Cathari to be practitioners of the 'Black-Mass' and 'necromancy', the woman’s Armenian background would make the story guilty by association.[3]

In 1113, Baldwin then married 'Adelaide-del-Vasto'... Under the marriage agreement, if Baldwin and Adelaide had no children, the heir to the kingdom of Jerusalem would be 'Roger-II-of-Sicily', Adelaide’s son by her first husband 'Roger-I-Guiscard'.


This Roger was to become the 'Jolly-Roger' of history, having flown the 'skull-and-crossbones' on his ships.[4]

Roger married 'Elvira', daughter of 'Alfonso-VI-of-Castile' and his 'Ismaili' wife, 'Zaida'.

                                                         MELUSINE:


Within a century, the heirs of the Rubenid dynasty were further rewarded by the grant of a kingdom known as 'Cilicia' or 'Lesser-Armenia', to be held as a vassal government of the 'Holy-See' and of 'Germany'.

This kingdom lasted until 1375 AD, when the 'Mamelukes-of-Egypt' destroyed it.[5]

Continuing intermarriage between the aristocracy and the 'Templars' produced the influential 'house-of-Lusignan'.

The 'lords-of-Lusignan' were 'counts-of-La-Marche'... The province of France called 'Marche' was originally a small border district, partly of 'Limousin' and partly of 'Poitou'.

Marche first appeared as a separate fief about the middle of the tenth century when 'William-III', 'duke-of-Aquitaine', gave it to one of his vassals named 'Boso', the great-grandson of 'Bernard-Plantevelue', who had married 'Constance of Arles' and Vienna.[6]

In the twelfth century it passed to the family of Lusignan, in Poitou, at that time a part of the French duchy of Aquitaine, held by 'Queen-Eleanor-of-England', her third son 'Richard', and her husband the 'English-king-Henry-II'.

The Lusignans were among the French nobles who made great careers in the Crusades... The family originated at the 'Château-de-Lusignan', near 'Poitiers', a 'château-fort' that is still the largest castle in France.

According to legend the earliest castle was built by the folklore 'water-spirit-Melusine'... 'Melusine' was 'Melusinde', the daughter of 'Baldwin-II' and 'Morphia-of-Armenia', who married 'Fulk-IV-of-Anjou'.

As recounted by Jean d'Arras, in the 'Roman-de-Mélusine', written in the fourteenth century, the King of Albany, meaning Scotland, went hunting one day and came across a beautiful lady in the forest, named 'Pressyne'... He persuaded her to marry him but she agreed, only on the promise, that he must not enter her chamber when she birthed or bathed her children... She gave birth to triplets... When he violated this taboo, 'Pressyne' left the kingdom, together with her three daughters, and travelled to the 'lost-Isle-of-Avalon'.


On her fifteenth birthday, 'Melusina', the eldest, asked why they had been taken to Avalon... Upon hearing of their father’s broken promise, she sought revenge... She and her sisters captured 'Elynas' and locked him in a mountain... 'Pressyne' became enraged, and 'Melusine' was condemned to take the form of a serpent from the waist down, until she should meet a man who would marry her under the condition of never seeing her on a Saturday.

'Melusina' now went roaming through the world in search of the man who was to deliver her... She passed through the 'Black-Forest', and that of 'Ardennes', and at last she arrived in the forest of 'Poitou'... Just as her mother had done, she laid a condition, that he must never enter her chamber on a Saturday, an allusion to the witches Sabbath.

He broke the promise and saw her in the form of a 'part-woman-part-serpent'... She forgave him... Only when, during a disagreement with her, he called her a 'serpent' in front of his court, did she assume the form of a dragon, provide him with two magic rings and fly off, never to return.[7]

'The-House-of-Lusignan' were descended from 'Herbert-of-Thoüars', who lived from 940 to 988... His great-grandson was 'Hugh-V-of-Lusignan', who married 'Almodie-de-la-Marche'.

Almodie has also been married to 'Pons-III-Taillefer-Count-of-Toulouse', through whom she had two sons, 'Raymond-IV-of-Toulouse', and 'William-IV-of-Toulouse', whose daughter 'Philippa' married 'William-IX' the 'Troubadour-Duke-of-Aquitaine'... Their grandson, 'Hugh-VII-of-Lusignan' married 'Sarazin-of-Armenia'... They had two children, 'Aimee-of-Lusignan' and 'Hugh-VIII'...
A 'Templar-Knight'.[8]


'Hugh-VIII-(le Brun)-Count-of-Lusignan' was succeeded by three sons, 'Hughes', 'Guy' and 'Amalric-of-Lusignan', who arrived in Jerusalem in the 1170's.

Guy became 'King-of-Jerusalem' through his marriage to 'Sybilla', 'Queen-of-Jerusalem', the daughter of 'Amalric-I-King-of-Jerusalem', the son of 'Fulk-V'.

After he had been married to his first wife, through whom he fathered 'Georffrey-Plantagenet', 'Fulk-V' then married 'Milesende', the daughter of 'Baldwin-II-King-of-Jerusalem'.

A Templar, 'Baldwin-II' married 'Morfia-of-Armenia', the sister of 'Toros' and granddaughter of 'Constantine-Rubenid'.

'Baldwin-II' was on the First Crusade, with 'Geoffrey-de-Bouillon', between August 1096 and July 1099... He was named 'count-of-Edessa' by 'Baldwin-I' when the latter became king of Jerusalem in 1100.[9]

Sybilla’s mother was 'Agnes-de-Courtenay', 'Princess-of-Sidon', granddaughter of 'Templar-Joscelin-I-comte-d’Edessa', and 'Beatrice-Rupenid', daughter of 'Constantine-I-Rupenid'.

Guy de Lusignan’s term as king is generally seen as a disaster... He was defeated by 'Saladin' at the 'Battle-of-Hattin' in 1187, and was imprisoned in Damascus as Saladin reconquered almost the entire kingdom.

Upon his release, his claim to the kingship was ignored, and when Sibylla died at the 'Siege-of-Acre' in 1191, he no longer had any legal right to it... 'Richard', now king of England and a leader of the 'Third-Crusade', supported Guy’s claim, but in the aftermath of the crusade 'Conrad-of-Montferrat' had the support of the majority of nobles.

Richard then had Conrad assassinated by a team of 'Ismaili-Assassins'.[10]

The heiress of Jerusalem was then 'Isabella-of-Jerusalem', Queen Sibylla’s 'half-sister'... Isabella was also the daughter of 'Almaric-I-King-of-Jerusalem', but from 'Maria-Komnena', the granddaughter of 'Alexius-I-Byzantine-Emperor'.

Eight days after the death of Conrad, she was married to 'Henry-II-of-Champagne', the son of Richard’s step-daughter, 'Marie-de-France', daughter of 'Eleanor-of-Aquitaine' and 'Louis-VII-King-of-France'.

Instead, Richard sold Guy the island of Cyprus, which he had conquered on his way to Acre... Guy thereby became the first Latin lord of Cyprus... 'Amalric' succeeded Guy in Cyprus, and also became 'King-of-Jerusalem' in 1197.

When 'Henry-II-de-Champagne' died in the same year, when a balcony gave way or he fell out of a window, 'Queen-Isabella' then married 'Almaric'... 'Sybille', the daughter of Isabella and Almaric, then married 'Leo-II', the son of 'Stephen-I-of-Armenia', the nephew of 'Thoros'.[11]

Their union began a series of reciprocal marriages as a result of which the succession of Lesser Armenia actually passes to the Lusignan, which lasted until 1375 AD, when the Mamelukes of Egypt destroyed it.

THE KNIGHT HOSPITALLERS

The male line of the 'Lusignans-in-the-Levant' died out in 1267 with 'Hugh-II' of Cyprus, 'Amalric’s-great-grandson', though the male line 'continued-in-France' until 1307... At that point, 'Hugh-of-Antioch', whose maternal grandfather had been 'Almaric’s-son', 'Hugh-I-of-Cyprus', took the name 'Lusignan', thus founding the second 'House-of-Lusignan', and managed to succeed his deceased cousin as 'Hugh-III-King-of-Cyprus'.


Hugh III’s mother was the granddaughter of Amalric, and his father was 'Henry-I-of-Antioch'... Henry was the grandson of 'Bohemund-III-of-Antioch', whose father was 'Raymond-I-of-Poitiers', the son of 'William-IX-the-Troubadour-of-Aquitaine', and whose mother was 'Constance-of-Antioch', daughter of 'Bohemond-II-Guiscard-prince-of-Antioch', and 'Alix-de-Rethel', another daughter of 'Baldwin-II' and 'Morphia-of-Armenia'.

These new Lusignans remained in control of Cyprus until 1489... They were rulers of Jerusalem, or more accurately, 'Acre', from 1268 until the fall of the city in 1291... Also after 1291 the Lusignans continued to claim the lost Jerusalem, and occasionally attempted to organise crusades to recapture territory on the mainland... The Lusignans also intermarried with the royal families of the 'Principality-of-Antioch' and the 'Armenian-Kingdom-of-Cilicia'.

Hugh III’s second son, 'Henri-II' recovered possession of Acre, and in 1286 was crowned king of Jerusalem at Tyre.

The stronghold of Acre from the time of its capture by Richard, to its final conquest by the Muslims, formed for two hundred years, the base of the crusading empire in Palestine.

Head-quartered there were both the orders of the 'Templars' and the 'Hospitallers'... In 1291, the Muslims attacked Acre with an army of 200,000 men... Of the Templars, including their 'Grand-Master', only ten escaped out of five hundred knights... 'Henry-II', the patriarch, and the Grand Master of the 'Hospitallers', along with the few survivors, escaped back to Cyprus.

However, on their return to Cyprus, the Templars conspired to place Henry II’s brother 'Almaric-Prince-of-Tyre', on the throne... Henry II was sent into confinement in Armenia... But, it was at this time, in 1306, under pressure from 'Phillip-IV-king-of-France', that the 'Pope' summoned 'Jacques-de-Molay', the 'Grand-Master', from Cyprus to answer the charges of heresy.

In 1308, Almaric received letters from the Pope directing him to arrest all the Templars in Cyprus... Their property was handed over to the Hospitallers, and after the assassination of Almaric, they supported Henri II’s return to the throne of Cyprus.

Therefore, the arrest of the 'Templars' seems merely to have been a pretext to transfer their property to the 'Hospitallers'.

The nobility of Europe had been calling for a unification of the orders of the Templars and the Hospitallers, but 'Jacques-de-Molay' was resisting the move.

Following the fall of Acre, 'Phillip-IV-of-France' was calling for a renewed Crusade, de Molay again refused participation... 'Phillip-IV' himself shared, not only the lineage of the 'Guilhemids', but that of the various houses 'Aragon', 'Sicily' and 'Castille', that traced their descent to the 'Piasts' and 'Arpads'... 'Phillip-IV' own mother was Isabel, 'Princess-of-Aragon', the daughter of 'James-I-of-Aragon' and 'Iolande-of-Hungary', granddaughter of 'Bela-III'.

Bela III was descended from Vasul, the son of 'Michael-Arpad' and 'Adelaide' the daughter of 'Mieszko' and 'Dubrawka'... 'Vasul' married 'Katun-Kometopoulos', the daughter of 'Samuil', the 'Bogomil-King-of-Bulgaria'.

'Bela-III' married 'Agnes-of-Chatillon', the granddaughter of 'Bohemund-II-Prince-of-Antioch', and 'Alice', daughter of 'Baldwin-II' and 'Morphia-of-Armenia'... Bela III’s granddaughter, 'Yolande-Arpad', married 'James-I-King-of-Aragon'.

When James’ father was slain when he took up arms against the 'Albigensian-crusade' on behalf of the 'Cathars', James had been entrusted to 'Guillen-de-Monredon', head of the 'Templars' in 'Spain' and 'Provence'.[12]

On his father’s side, 'Phillip-IV' was descended from 'Alfonso-VIII-of-Galicia', 'Leon' and 'Castile', and 'Richeza-of-Poland', the daughter of 'Wladislaw-II-of-Poland', a descendant of 'Mieszko-I' and 'Dubrawka'.

'Alfonso-VIII', grandson of 'Alfonso-VII', married 'Eleanor-of-Anjou', daughter of 'Henry-II-of-England' and 'Eleanor-of-Aquitaine'... Their daughter, 'Blanche-of-Castile', married 'Louis-VIII-King-of-France'... Their sons were 'Louis-IX-King-of-France', and 'Charles-I-King-of-Jerusalem-and-Sicily'... A Templar.

'Louis-IX' son, 'Phillip-III', was the father of 'Phillip-IV'.

In 1309, after over two years of campaigning, the 'Hospitallers' captured the island of Rhodes, and were then known as the 'Knights-of-Rhodes'... They were eventually forced from there by the 'Ottoman-Turks', and then settled in 'Malta', after which they were renamed as the 'Knights-of-Malta'.

                                          THE ORDER OF THE GARTER:


                                                      "Edward III of England"

Again, in England, the property of the Templars was also transferred to the Knights Hospitallers, by 'King-Edward-II', the son-in-law of 'Phillip-IV'.

Edward II was married to Phillip IV’s daughter, 'Isabella-of-France'... But Edward II initially refused to implement the papal order enforced by his 'father-in-law'.

Between October 13, 1307 and January 8, 1308 the Templars went unmolested in England.

During this period many fugitive Templars, seeking to escape torture and execution, fled to apparent safety there... Although, after the intercession of 'Pope-Clement-V', King Edward ordered the seizure of members of the order in England on January 8, 1308... Only handfuls of Templars were duly arrested however... Most Templars in England, as well as elsewhere outside France, escaped arrest, torture and execution.[13]

Rather, the traditions of the Templars seems to have taken on a new guise, under the 'Order-of-the-Garter', founded by Edward II’s son, 'Edward-III-King-of-England'.

Edward III himself married 'Philippa-of-Avesne', who was descended from Louis IX’s brother, 'Charles-I-of-Anjou'.

Charles I was the father of 'Charles-II-King-of-Jerusalem' and 'Sicily', who married 'Maria-of-Hungary'.... Their daughter, 'Margaret-of-Sicily', then married Philip IV’s brother, 'Charles-III-of-Valois'... Their daughter, 'Jeanne-de-Valois' was Philipa’s mother.

The inspiration for the order, founded in 1348,
as a 'society', 'fellowship' and 'college-of-knights' was King Arthur and the Round Table... Various legends have been described to explain the origin of the Order... The most popular legend involves the 'Countess-of-Salisbury', possibly Edward’s cousin, 'Joan-of-Kent'.

While the Countess was dancing with or near Edward at Eltham Palace, her garter is said to have slipped from her leg to the floor... When the surrounding courtiers snickered, the king supposedly picked it up and tied it to his own leg, exclaiming 'Honi-soit-qui-mal-y-pense', meaning 'evil-upon-he-who-thinks-it'.

This phrase has become the motto of the Order of the Garter.

As historian Margaret Murray pointed out, the garter is an emblem of witchcraft... Garters are worn in various rituals as magical properties and are also used as badges of rank... The garter is considered the ancient emblem of the high priestess... In some traditions a high priestess who becomes 'Queen-Witch' over more than one coven adds a silver buckle to her garter for each coven under her.

According to Murray, the importance of the lace or string among the witches was very great as it was the insignia of rank... The usual place to carry it on the person was round the leg where it served as a garter... The beliefs of modern France give the clue as to its importance... According to traditions still current, there is a fixed number of witches in each canton, of whom the chief wears the garter in token of his, or her high position, the right of becoming chief is said to go by seniority... In 'Haute-Bretagne' a man who makes a pact with the Devil has a red garter.[14]

Margaret Murray believes that all the 'Plantagenets' were witches... She said Edward III founded two covens... As the story is understood, Edward did not wish to have the people think that the Countess was a witch.

The incident about the Countess of Salisbury’s blue garter is significant since it was a symbol of witchcraft... Edward III's actions were to let 'Lady-Salisbury' know that her secret of her 'witch-hood' was safe with him, because he himself was a priest of a coven.

According to another legend, 'King-Richard-the-Lionhearted' was inspired in the twelfth century by 'St-George-the-Martyr' while fighting in the Crusades to tie garters around the legs of his knights, who subsequently won the battle... King Edward III supposedly recalled the event in the fourteenth century when he founded the Order.

St. George, the patron saint of England, Georgia and Moscow, the origin of the knightly rescuing of a maiden from a dragon... St. George was a soldier of the 'Roman-Empire' who later became a 'Christian-martyr'... The traditional account of his life is considered to have originated in the fourth century... George was a 'Cappadocian', was born in 'Cilicia', and his mother was from 'Lydda', Palestine.

According to the legend, a dragon was threatening a town in Libya, and the people were forced to sacrifice their sheep to appease it.

However, when their sheep ran out, they starting sacrificing their children, chosen by means of a lottery.

Eventually, the kings daughter was chosen... Saint George, then a knight errant, wounds the dragon with his lance... He then instructs the princess to remove her girdle and to use it around the dragon’s neck... The princess then leads the dragon back to the city, and Saint George tells the people he will kill the dragon if the entire town will become Christians... The dragon is killed and the townspeople are all baptised in the name of 'Jesus-Christ'.

The legend of Saint George is not a Christian story at all, but is a Christian adaptation of the typical dual of the Middle Eastern 'dying-god' against the 'Sea-Dragon'.

The Dragon is 'Baal', and the reference to 'child-sacrifices' in the legend is an allusion to the practice that was typical of his cult in ancient times... Historians note that the origin of the saint is 'Cappadocia', and is similar to the ancient god named 'Sabazios'.

The rites of 'Dionysus' were the same as those performed in honour of 'Cybele' in 'Asia-Minor'... Known as the 'Magna-Mater', the 'Great-Mother', 'Cybele', was identified with 'Venus' and worshipped as the 'goddess-of-fertility'.

Her consort was 'Attis', known as 'Adonis'... Attis, named after the 'Phrygian' name for goat,[15], became one with 'Dionysus-Sabazius', or assumed some of his characteristics.[16]

The cult of St. George first reached England when the Templars, who came were introduced to the cult presumably through their contact with the 'Rupenids-of-Armenian-Cilicia', returned from the Holy Land in 1228.

The battle flag of the Templars, known as the 'Beauseant', in some versions had four quarters, black and white, with a red cross 'patee' in the centre... Others, however, say that the red cross had straight arms, like the St. George cross of England.[17]

An account known as the 'Golden-Legend', recounts that St. George appeared during the First Crusade, with such a cross, emblazoned on his white armour, as he led the liberation of Jerusalem from the Muslims.[18]

Edward III’s sister, 'Joanna', married 'David-II-King-of-Scotland', the son of 'Robert-the-Bruce'.

While, in exile in the French court, it was David who created the 'The-Guarde-De-Ecosse', derived from the Templar faction known as 'Scots-Guard' who came to the aid of 'Robert-the-Bruce'... As the Scots Guard continued through the years, two of the prominent families involved in its history were the 'Sinclairs' and the 'Stuarts'... In France, they become the Personal Bodyguard to the French Kings, in perpetuity.[19]

                                             THE WAR OF THE ROSES:

The second chapter of the 'Song-of-Solomon', the most important of ancient 'Kabbalistic' texts, begins with... "I am the rose of Sharon, and the lily of the valleys".

Originally, the 'fleur-de-lis' was a common Jewish symbol... Not only are lilies frequently mentioned in the 'Songs-of-David', but early Jewish coinage also featured similar lilies.[20]

The great Kabbalistic book, the 'Zohar', begins with
an exposition of the mystical significance of the lily,
which it describes as being the symbol of the
'Jewish-congregation'.[21]

The 'fleur-de-lis', a highly stylized depiction of the real flower, which began to be adopted as the heraldic symbol of the 'House-of-Capet' and the kings of France with 'King-Philip-I'.

According to the Zohar, so too is the 'rose', a symbol of the 'Jewish-Congregation, who are in 'continuing-exile, 'longing-for-redemption', like a bride longing to return to her beloved.

The 'Song-of-Songs' is an allegory of the love between the 'dying-god' and the 'goddess'... Often called the 'Mystical-Rose-of-Heaven', it represents the 'Virgin-Mary', who esoterically is understood to represent the 'goddess', or 'Venus'... The rose was composed of 'five-petals', to recall the 'five-pointed-star', or 'pentagram-of-Lucifer'.

The rose then became a symbol of the 'House-of-Plantagenet'... The Plantagenets ruled England from 1154 and Ireland from 1185.

The primary line of the dynasty is considered to have ended with the deposition of 'Richard-II-of-England' in 1399.

Two secondary lines ruled from 1399 to 1485 as the 'House-of-Lancaster' and the 'House-of-York'.

The House of York was a dynasty of English Kings descended from 'Richard-Duke-of-York'.

The symbol of the 'House-of-York' was the 'White-Rose' of York.

The 'House-of-Lancaster', whose symbol was the 'Red-Rose' were opponents of the 'House-of-York' in the 'Wars-of-the-Roses', an 'intermittent-Civil-war' which affected England and Wales during the fifteenth century.

The antagonism between the two houses started with the overthrow of 'King-Richard-II' by his cousin, 'Henry-Bolingbroke-Duke-of-Lancaster', in 1399, who was crowned as 'Henry-IV'.

Henry V’s short reign was challenged by 'Richard-Earl-of-Cambridge', a grandson of 'Edward-III', but he was executed in 1415 for treason.

'Henry-V' died in 1422, and Cambridge’s son, 'Richard-Duke-of-York', grew up to challenge his successor, 'King-Henry-VI'.

Richard’s mother was 'Anne-Mortimer', the daughter of 'Roger-4th-Earl-of-Mortimer', and 'Eleanor-de-Holland', who, according to genealogist David Hughes, could claim 'Davidic-descent' through the 'Exilarchs'.

Eleanor’s 'great-great-grandmother', a descendant of 'Pagano-the-Hebrew-of-Pisa', married 'Richard-Fitzalan-7th-Earl-of-Arundel'.

Richard Duke of York was the great-grandson of 'Edward-III'... He was also a member of the Order of the Garter.

He was created 'Earl-of-March' by 'Henry-VI-King-of-England' in 1425... The 'Earls-of-March' derived their titles from the French 'la-Marche', and represented the combined heritage of the 'House-of-Brittany' and of 'Lusignan'.

The sister of 'Henry-VIII-of-Lusignan', 'Aimée', married 'vicomte-Guillaume-de-Thoüars', whose mother was 'Agnes-of-Poitiers', the daughter of 'William-IX-the-Troubadour'... Their son was 'Guy-de-Thouars', who married 'Constance-Duchess-of-Brittany', daughter of 'Conan-IV-of-Britanny', great-grandson of 'Alain-IV-of-Britanny', thus incorporating the line of 'Fisher-Kings'.

'Alain-IV' himself married 'Ermisende-of-Anjou', the daughter of 'Fulk-IV-of-Anjou', after she had been married to 'William-IX-of-Aquitaine'.

Alain IV’s son, 'Conan-III', married 'Matilda', illegitimate daughter of 'King-Henry-I-of-England'... 'Conan-IV' was his grandson... Conan-IV’s wife, 'Margaret-of-Huntington', was the granddaughter of 'David-I-of-Scotland.

Guy and Aimee’s daughter, 'Alix-de-Thoüars', was the mother of 'Yolande-de-Penthièvre', who married 'Hugues-XI(le Brun)sire-de-Lusignan', 'Comte-de-la-Marche' and 'Angouleme', also a Templar... Their son, 'Hughes-XII-le-Brun', was the father of 'Jeanne-de-Lusignan', who was the mother of 'Joan-of-Geneville.[22]

Joan of Geneville married 'Roger-Mortimer-first-Earl-of-March', regent of England during minority of 'Edward-III', and usurper who had supplanted 'Edward-II'.[23]

Mortimer was also a founding member of the Order of the Garter... Their great-grandson, 'Edmund-de-Mortimer-Third-Earl-of-March', married 'Philippa-Plantagenet', whose father was the second son of 'Edward-III-king-of-England'... Their grandchild, 'Anne-de-Mortimer', married 'Richard-Earl-of-Cambridge'.

Their son was 'Richard-Duke-of-York'.[24]

Richard was the first to use the surname Plantagenet since 'Geoffrey-of-Anjou', and did so to emphasize that his claim to the throne was stronger than that of 'Henry-VI'.

With King Henry VI’s 'insanity-in-1452', Richard was made 'Lord-Protector', but had to give up this position with the King’s recovery and the birth of his heir, 'Edward-of-Westminster'.

Richard gradually gathered together his forces, however, and the civil wars known as the 'Wars-of-the-Roses' eventually broke out in 1455.

The House of York was victorious over the Lancastrians, and though Richard had been unable to seize the throne for himself, Parliament did agree to the compromise of making him heir to the throne, in effect recognising the Yorkist claim to the throne as superior to the Lancastrian one.

Meanwhile, the Lancastrians, led by Henry’s wife, 'Margaret-of-Anjou', continued the war, during which Richard was finally killed in 1460, along with his second son, 'Edmund-Earl-of-Rutland'... Nevertheless, Richard’s eldest son finally succeeded in putting the Yorkist dynasty on the throne in 1461 as 'Edward-IV-of-England'.

'Edward-IV', however, disappointed his allies when he married 'Elizabeth-of-Woodville'... Elizabeth had insisted on marriage, which took place secretly on May 1, 1464, at her family home, with only the bride’s mother and two ladies in attendance... Thus, Elizabeth managed to reintroduce the lost lines of the 'Lusignans' and of 'Britanny' into the 'Rose-lineage'.

These surviving lines of 'Lusignan', stemming from Alix of Thouars’ two children, and the descendants of 'Almaric-of-Lusignan', culminated in the person of 'Pierre-I-Count-of-St-Pol-Jean-I', 'seigneur-de-Beaurevoir-and-de-Richebourg', a descendant of Alix’s son, 'John-of-Brittany', married 'Marguerite-d’Enghien-comtesse-de-Brienne', who was descended from 'Almaric-of-Lusignan'.

Almaric of Lusignan had a son by another woman, before marrying 'Isabeau-Queen-of-Jerusalem', the daughter of 'Almaric-King-of-Jerusalem', grandson of 'Baldwin-II' and 'Morphia-of-Armenia'.

That son was 'Hughes-I-King-of-Cyprus', who married 'Alix-of-Jerusalem', the daughter of 'Isabeau-Queen-of-Jerusalem' by another man, 'Henri-II(le Jeune)comte-Palatin-de-Champagne'... The son of 'Jean-I-Seigneur-de-Beaurevoir-and-Richebourg', and 'Margerite-countess-of-Brienne' was 'Pierre-Count-of-St-Pol', the grandfather of 'Elizabeth-Woodville'.

With Edward’s sudden death in 1483, Elizabeth briefly became 'Queen-Mother', but on June 25, 1483, her marriage was declared null and void by Parliament, and all her children were declared illegitimate.

Edward’s brother, 'Richard-III', accepted the crown.

'Elizabeth-Woodville' was widely believed to have been a witch, and 'Richard-III' tried to show there had never been any valid marriage between 'Edward' and 'Elizabeth', that it was a result of love magic perpetrated by Elizabeth and her mother.

                                                 'Elizabeth-Woodville'

Elizabeth then conspired with 'Lancastrians', promising to marry her eldest daughter, 'Elizabeth-of-York', to the 'Lancastrian' claimant to the throne, Henry Tudor, if he could supplant Richard.

'Henry-Tudor', whose father, 'Edmund-Tudor-1st-Earl-of-Richmond', had been an 'illegitimate-half-brother' of 'Henry-VI'... However, Henry’s claim to the throne was through his mother, 'Margaret-Beaufort', a descendant of 'Edward-III', derived from 'John-Beaufort, a grandson of Edward III’s who was also the 'illegitimate-son-of-John-of-Gaunt'.

Henry Tudor’s forces defeated Richard’s in 1485 and Henry Tudor became 'King-Henry-VII-of-England'.

Elizabeth Woodville’s marriage to 'Edward-IV' was declared to have been valid, and thus their children were once again legitimised.

Henry then strengthened his position by marrying 'Elizabeth-of-York', daughter of 'Edward-IV', the best surviving Yorkist claimant...

Thus, both the 'Red-Rose-of-Lancaster' and the 'White-Rose-of-York' were merged to a single 'ten-petaled' flower, to form 'The-Tudor-Rose', that symbolised the union of the two houses.


GENEALOGICAL CHART

Lineage of Stuarts and Sinclairs: From King David, Joeeph of Arimathea, Mary Magdalene, Odin and Guillame de Gellone, also featuring the House of Lusignan.

FOOTNOTES:

[1] Gary Beaver, “The Legend Of The Skull Of Sidon: A Knights Templar Myth”.

[2] Robert Brian Stewart, “Baudouin I, roi de Jérusalem”. Encyclopædia Britannica 2004 Deluxe Edition CD-ROM (U.S.A.: Encyclopædia Britannica Inc., 1994-2004)
 
[3]The Legend of the Skull of Sidon, crystalinks.com.
 
[4] Childress, David Hatcher. Pirates and the Lost Templar Fleet: The Secret Naval War Between the Knights Templar & the Vatican. p. 60.
 
[5] “History of Armenia”, Wikipedia.
 
[6] James Allen Dow. “Irene of the Khazars”.
 
[7] “Melisende”, Wikipedia.
 
[8] Robert Brian Stewart, “Hugues VI "le Diable", sire de Lusignan”; Anselme de Sainte-Marie (augustin déchaussé), Pere Anselme's Histoire, 3rd Ed., IV:191.
 
[9] Robert Brian Stewart, “Malfia the Armenian”.
 
[10] “Conrad of Monferrt”, Wikipedia.
 
[11] Robert Brian Stewart, “Isabel, Queen of Cilicia”. Anne Elizabeth Redgate, The Armenians, The Peoples of Europe (Malden, Mass.: Blackwell Publishers, 1998), pg. 257.
 
[12] “James I of Aragon”, Wikipedia.

[13] “Templars in England”, Wikipedia.

[14] Murray, Margaret. The God of the Witches. The Priesthood: Chapter III.

[15] Arnobius, The Case Against the Pagans, Book 5.6

[16] Cumont, Oriental Religions in Roman Paganism, p. 48

[17] John Sinclair Quarterman, “Knights Templar”.
 
[18] “Saint George”, Internet Shakespeare Edictions.
 
[19] John Ritchie. Templar History in Scotland.
 
[20]Holy Blood Holy Grail, plate 33.
 
[21] 2: 1-2
 
[22] Robert Brian Stewart, “Hugues XI "le Brun", sire de Lusignan, comte de la March et d'Angoulême”; Généalogie des rois de France.
 
[23] “Roger Mortimer”, Wikipedia.
 
[24] Robert Brian Stewart. “Richard, Duke of York”.

<source>

<see also>ROTHSCHILDS -KHAZARS - ILLUMINATI TIMELINE
The Rothschilds have been in control of the world for a very long time, their tentacles reaching into many aspects of our daily lives:
...

No comments:

Post a Comment