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The
Grail Quest and The Destiny of Man
Part V-f: Rennes-le-chateau and the Accursed Treasure
See
our Travelog Photos!
The
Quantum Future School Goes to Rennes-le-Chateau!
I suppose you are wondering when and how
I am going to get to the "Shepherds of Arcadia?" Well, it's coming
up here.
At some point in the early part of 1992
I had read a number of articles about the book Holy
Blood, Holy Grail, and I did think that the hypothesis presented
by the authors, i.e. that Jesus had been married to Mary Magdalene and
had children, was certainly possible, but not sufficiently interesting
to me to warrant pursuing that particular line of investigation. (Yes,
I know, sometimes I am truly DENSE!)
Not long after the session wherein my
past life in Germany was brought up, Moshe-in-Israel was mentioned, and
I had the vision of "the face" before going to sleep, I was
chatting with the same young woman who had attended that session. She
brought up the book Holy
Blood, Holy Grail and mentioned the Priory of Sion that was
supposed to be the most secret of secret organizations on the planet,
and that their ostensible purpose was to reinstitute the Davidic kingship
at some point in time. Yeah, that sounds pretty hokey, but I began to
wonder if this was not a "cover story" for something else.
As noted, I already had begun to think
in very serious terms about the possible existence of some sort of "most
secret of organizations" on our planet, whose presence could only
be detected by the tracks it left and by no other truly identifiable point
of locus. I had searched in a hundred different directions to find the
fountainhead, but to no avail at that point, so I figured that I might
as well look at these claims about the Priory of Sion for possible clues.
I pulled out one of my books which had
extensive reference articles to the subject of the Rennes-le-Chateau/Priory
of Sion mystery and began to read again. For the sake of the reader who
is unfamiliar with the story, I am going to recapitulate it as well as
I can without going into extensive details. The details ARE interesting
and I highly recommend that the interested reader obtain copies of Holy
Blood, Holy Grail, AND The
Messianic Legacy, as well as The
Temple and The Lodge, and Key
to the Sacred Pattern. Those of you who have read these books
and related ones will know immediately the details to which I allude.
In any event, the article I began to
re-read, authored by Brian
Innes began:
From the Southern French city of Carcassonne
to the Spanish border, the hills rise steadily to the peaks of the Pyrenees...
Well, after all the recent work in studying
Alchemy in general and Fulcanelli in specific, THAT got my attention!
The Pyrenees: the location of the purported enclave of alchemists where
Fulcanelli was supposed to have gone after his transmutation. My earlier
readings of this subject were prior to the Fulcanelli study, so this detail
had flown right by me. But, to continue with Mr. Innes' article:
The area is now sparsely populated,
with small towns and tiny villages, a land of minor vineyards between
the bare stone ridges, of deserted valleys loud with nightingales, of
rushing streams fed from the melting snows, and wild sandy uplands rich
with tyme and myrtle. But once it was extensively settled - by the Southern
Gauls, a Celtic people whose capital of Narbo is now Narbonne, and later
by the Visigoths, whose kingdom of Septimania survived from AD 475 until
it was overrun by the Moors in 715. Ruined watchtowers and tumbledown
castles dominate the hilltops, evidence of the troubled condition of
the region through 10 centuries.
This is sounding like a pretty interesting
place, yes? Well, I thought so. Aside from the fact that it is a location
just dripping with history, I was also primed to be very interested in
the doings of the ancient Celts simply based on the information the Cassiopaeans
had given about them, not to mention what I had read and heard throughout
my many years of research into mysteries.
This is the southern half of the Languedoc,
which from the 1050s came under the rule of the counts of Toulouse,
autonomous vassals of the king of France. It was also the heartland
of the Catharist heresy - often known as the Albigensian heresy from
its prevalence among the inhabitants of the city of Albi - and on the
steep bare rock of Montsegur the Cathars made their last desperate stand
in 1244.
I was fascinated, and the connection
to the Cathars and gnostic heresies really piqued my interest because
I had clearly seen a pattern of gnosticism in the alchemical texts, and
this was certainly a trend in the Cassiopaean communications.
In 1855, at the age of 33, Francois-Berenger
Sauniere was appointed cure of the tiny church of Sainte-Madeleine,
which stood neglected and in poor repair at the top of the village street
[of Rennes-le-Chateau] where once the Visigoths had raised a mighty
fortified palace. A man of humble origins, the eldest of seven children,
Sauniere had no future except in the church. Like many of his fellow
priests, he took into his house a young girl, Marie Denarnaud, as a
housekeeper and settled down to a prospect of lifelong penny-pinching
obscurity. But fate decreed otherwise.
Sauniere learned that one of his predecessors
had left a small legacy for the upkeep of the church, and in 1892 he
decided to restore the church altar. This was made from a solid stone
slab, one end of which was cemented into the wall of the church, while
the other was supported on an ancient carved stone column that had survived
from the time of the Visigoths. When the slab was lifted, the column
was found to be hollow; inside were three wooden tubes, sealed with
wax, which held four parchment manuscripts.
Copies of these parchments have survived.
Right here, I stopped. What do you mean
"copies" have survived? What about the originals? I was not
at ease with this remark. But, let's not get sidetracked here. On with
the story at "face value."
At first glance they seem to be nothing
more than transcriptions of well-known New Testament passages, written
in Latin in a strange archaic-looking script. The first, (John 12:1-12)
describes Christ's visit to Bethany - the house of Lazarus, Martha and
marry Magdalene. The second is the story of the disciples plucking ears
of corn on the sabbath; but it has been put together from three different
versions, those of Matthew (12:1-8), Mark (2:23-28, and Luke (6:1-5).
On closer inspection, however, these
manuscripts reveal a number of unexpected features: there are distinctive
monogrammatic devices, additional letters have been added to the text,
some letters are marked with a dot, others are displaced - in fact,
there are all the signs that these manuscripts are ciphered. [...]
At the beginning of 1893 Sauniere took
the manuscripts to his bishop, Monseigneur Felix-Arsene Billard, in
Carcassonne, and was given permission (and money) to go at once to Paris.
there he laid the documents before Abbe Biel, the director of Saint
Sulpice, who introduced him to his nephew, the religious publisher Ane,
at whose home Sauniere lodged while he was in Paris, and to his grand-nephew
Emile Hoffet, destined to become a famous authority on old manuscripts
and secret societies.
For just three weeks Sauniere remained
in Paris. He spent much of his time in the Louvre, where he bought reproductions
of three apparently unrelated paintings: Nicholas Poussin's "Arcadian
Shepherds," David Teniers's portrayal of Saint Anthony, and a portrait
of Pope St. Celestine V by an unknown hand.
He also became the friend - remarkable
for a humble parish priest from a remote corner of France - of the toast
of Paris, Emma Calve. This beautiful operatic soprano was then at the
height of her career... For many years she remained a close friend of
Sauniere, and visited him regularly until her marriage in 1914.
On his return to Rennes, Sauniere continued
his restoration work on the church. With the assistance of some young
men from the village - one of whom was still alive in 1962 and provided
invaluable details of the cure's activities - he raised another stone
slab, which lay directly in front of the altar. The underside of the
slab was found to be carved in an archaic style identified as dating
from the sixth or seventh century.
There are two scenes on the slab, which
take place either in an arched building or in a crypt. That on the left
represents, as far as it is possible to tell, a mounted knight sounding
a hunting horn while his horse lowers its head to drink at a fountain.
That on the right is of another knight with a staff in one hand and
either a child upon his saddle-bow or a disc or sphere of some sort.
The stone is worn and chipped in places, and it is difficult to identify
the subjects clearly, but there is no doubt as to the great age of the
work.
After the slab had been removed, Sauniere
ordered the youths to dig down for several feet, but when they announced
that they had discovered something in their excavations he sent them
home and locked himself in the church. It is said that they had discovered
two skeletons and a pot full of bright objects, which Sauniere told
them were worthless medallions; and certainly, when a further excavation
was made recently, a skull was found with a characteristic ritual slot
made in the cranium.
After this discovery, work ceased in
the church for some time. Instead, Sauniere, accompanied by his housekeeper
Marie, took to wandering the surrounding countryside, a sack on his
back. Each evening he returned, the sack loaded with stones that he
had selected with care, and when he was asked the purpose of his excursions,
he replied that he had decided to beautify the tiny garden in front
of the church with a stone grotto. Certainly the grotto is still there,
although sadly reduced; it has been ransacked, either by souvenir hunters
or by those who hoped that the stones might reveal Sauniere's secret.
But this was not his only strange pastime.
The cemetery of the church contained two memorial stones marking the
grave of Marie de Negri d'Ables (died 1781), the wife of Francis d'Hautpoul,
the seigneur of Rennes. By night, Sauniere moved these stones from one
end of the cemetery to the other, and patiently erased the inscriptions.
Unknown to him, however, his labours were in vain, for the inscriptions
had already been copied by itinerant archaeologists - and one of the
stones, we now know, bore the same monogrammatic device as appeared
in at least one of the manuscripts.
For the next two years, Berenger Sauniere
spent much of his time traveling. He is known to have opened two bank
accounts in neighbouring cities, one in Perpignan and one in Toulouse,
another in Paris, and a fourth has been traced as far away as Budapest.
From Germany, Spain, Switzerland and Italy, money orders arrived frequently
for Marie Denarnaud, some apparently sent by various religious communities.
Then, from 1896, Sauniere undertook
a major refurbishment of the church, the results of which can be seen
to this day. The overall effect is extraordinary. Fitting diagonally
into the junction of nave and transept he laid a checker-board floor
of 64 alternate black and white square tiles; beside the entrance door
he raised a huge garishly coloured monument, the stoup borne upon the
head of a wildly staring life size figure of the demon Asmodeus, while
above rise small statues of four winged angels, with the motto Par
ce signe tu le vaincras - 'In this sign shalt thou conquer'
- a quotation from the vision that brought about Emperor Constantine's
conversion to Christianity in AD 313.
The walls of the church are covered
with painted relief scenes in popular style - a rather unconventional
series of the Stations of the Cross, and, above the confessional, a
representation of Christ on the Mount. Sauniere himself painted the
picture of Mary Magdalene for the front of the altar. Strangest of all,
carved above the porch of the church are the words of Jacob at Bethel,
spoken the morning after he had seen the vision of the angels ascending
and descending a ladder that led to Heaven: Terribilis est locus
iste, 'This is a fearful place.'
When work on the church was finished,
Sauniere did not give up his lust to rebuild. He purchased the land
that extended between the church and the western edge of the hill. Along
the crest he built a semicircular promenade, and at its southern end
a two storied tower, the Tour Magdala. Within the curve of the raised
walk he created a formal garden, and at the eastern end, separated by
a small courtyard from the church, he built a guesthouse that he named
Bethania.
Sauniere paid for all this work form
his own pocket. And when Bethania was finished, and furnished with valuable
antiques, he entertained his guests royally, with fine wines and rich
food. There were regular visits from Emma Calve, whenever her professional
engagements would allow; and other guests included the secretary of
state for fine arts, the writer Andree Bruguiere, many local notables
- and, now and again, strictly incognito, a man whispered to be the
Habsburg archduke John, a cousin of the Austrian emperor.
When Sauniere died in 1917, it is calculated
that he had spent well over one million francs - and these were francs
d'or, worth about 20 times a present-day franc.
[Laura's note: At the time this was written,
the franc to dollar conversion fluctuates around 7ff=1dollar, so that
amounts to something close to three million dollars in today's values.]
After his death, and for 36 years until
her own death in 1953, Marie Denarnaud wanted for nothing, and in a
letter in 1920 she estimated her own fortune at more than 100,000 francs.
Between 1885 and 1893, then, Berenger Sauniere was transformed from
the poor cure of an impoverished parish into an enormously wealthy man
- one of the most extravagant spendthrifts of the region. The evidence
of his expenditure is there, in Rennes-le-Chateau, for all to see, even
if it has faded somewhat with the years. But, where did Sauniere's riches
come from? [Innes, Mysteries
of Mind, Space and Time, Orbis: 1992]
Well, that is pretty much the story that
grabbed the attention of Henry Lincoln, a television writer, in 1969.
He writes in Holy Blood, Holy Grail:
...En route for a summer holiday in the Cevennes, I made the casual
purchase of a paperback. Le Tresor Maudit by Gerard de
Sede was a mystery story - a lightweight, entertaining blend of historical
fact, genuine mystery, and conjecture. It might have remained consigned
to the postholiday oblivion of all such reading had I not stumbled upon
a curious and glaring omission it its pages.
The "accursed treasure" of the title had apparently been found
in the 1890's by a village priest through the decipherment of certain
cryptic documents unearthed in his church. Although the purported texts
of two of these documents were reproduced, the "secret messages"
said to be encoded within them were not. The implication was that the
deciphered messages had again been lost. And yet, as I found, a cursory
study of the documents reproduced in the book reveals at least one concealed
message. Surely the author had found it. In working on his book he must
have given the documents more than fleeting attention. He was bound,
therefore, to have found what I had found. Moreover, the message was
exactly the kind of titillating snippet of "proof" that helps
to sell a "pop" paperback. Why had M. de Sede not published
it? [Lincoln, Leigh, Baigent, 1982]
Lincoln goes on to say that this little
omission continued to bother him "like an unfinished crossword puzzle,"
so he decided to see if he couldn't get funded to investigate it for a
possible television show, thus satisfying his personal curiosity within
the constraints of his work schedule which did not allow time for the
investigation he would have liked to undertake.
The idea was received favorably by his
employers, the BBC, and he was sent to dig deeper into the mystery so
as to make a short film. Lincoln arranged to meet M. de Sede in Paris
in 1970 and there, asked him the question: "Why didn't you publish
the message hidden in the parchments?"
De Sede's answer astounded Lincoln: "What
message?"
Lincoln writes:
"It seemed inconceivable to me that
he was unaware of this elementary message. Why was he fencing with me?
Suddenly I found myself reluctant to reveal exactly what I had found.
We continued a verbal fencing match for a few minutes and it became
apparent that we were both aware of the message. I repeated my question:
"Why didn't you publish it?" This time de Sede's answer was
calculated. "Because we thought it might interest someone like
you to find it for yourself."
That reply, as cryptic as the priest's mysterious documents, was the
first clear hint that the mystery of Rennes-le Chateau was to prove
much more than a simple tale of lost treasure. [Lincoln, Leigh, Baigent,
1982]
In my opinion, the description of this
encounter with M. de Sede was the first clue that Mr. Lincoln was dealing
with a very clever con artist, but it's not really that simple and, we
will get to that later.
Mr. Lincoln got the okay from his employers
for a 20 minute program and de Sede began to feed more information to
him.
First came the full text of a major encoded message, which spoke of
the painters Poussin and Teniers. This was fascinating. The cipher was
unbelievably complex. We were told it had been broken by experts of
the French Army Cipher Department, using computers. As I studied the
convolutions of the code, I became convinced that this explanation was,
to say the least, suspect. I checked with cipher experts of British
Intelligence. They agreed with me. "The cipher does not present
a valid problem for a computer." The code was unbreakable. Someone,
somewhere, must have the key.
[Laura's note: in other words, whoever
deciphered the documents MUST have also possessed the key either by virtue
of being the author of the documents AND key, or by some other means.]
And then de Sede dropped his second bombshell. A tomb resembling that
in Poussin's famous painting Les Bergers d'Arcadie had
been found. He would send details as soon as he had them. Some days
later the photographs arrived and it was clear that our short film on
a small local mystery had begun to assume unexpected dimensions. [Lincoln,
Leigh, Baigent, 1982]
So, they decide to do more research and
make a longer program. The first screening of The Lost Treasure
of Jerusalem, which was the result of the first stages of research
into the matter, was on February of 1972. Apparently, the public was consumed
with curiosity about this mystery, so a follow-up film was planned with
more research. In 1974, The Priest, the Painter and the Devil
was screened, and it was an unmitigated hit with viewers. More research
was needed and Mr. Lincoln decided that the many complexities of the mystery
were too much for one man, so Richard Leigh, a writer with graduate degrees
and knowledge of history, philosophy, esoterica, etc was brought onboard.
Richard brought in Michael Baigent, a photojournalist and researcher of
Templar history. The three of them began to dig into the problem of Rennes-le-Chateau
in a more thorough way and produced another television special entitled
The Shadow of The Templars in 1979. Mr. Lincoln writes:
The work we did on that film at last brought us face to face with the
underlying foundations upon which the entire mystery of Rennes-le-Chateau
had been built. But the film could only hint at what we were beginning
to discern. Beneath the surface was something more startling, more significant,
and more immediately relevant than we could have believed possible when
we began our work on the "intriguing little mystery" of what
a French priest might have found in a mountain village.
In 1972 I closed my first film with the words, "Something extraordinary
is waiting to be found... and in the not too distant future, it will
be." [Lincoln, Leigh, Baigent, 1982]
What Lincoln, Leigh and Baigent claim
to have found is the secret that Jesus was a king in a long line of Priest
kings, and that he had been married to Mary Magdalene, and produced a
child, born posthumously (after his crucifixion), and that this child
had been spirited away to France to be the progenitor of the kings of
the Franks, the Merovingian, and that this Holy/Royal Bloodline is the
real secret contained in the mysteries of the "Holy Grail" stories.
How in the world did a story about a
possible hidden treasure found by an obscure priest in a remote corner
of rural France transmogrify itself into THAT?! Good question.
Mssrs. Lincoln, Leigh and Baigent write
in the conclusion of Holy
Blood, Holy Grail,
We had not, in the beginning, set out to prove or disprove anything,
least of all the conclusion to which we had been ineluctably led. We
had certainly not set out to challenge some of the most basic tenets
of Christianity. On the contrary, we had begun by investigating a specific
mystery. We were looking for answers to certain perplexing questions,
explanations for certain historical enigmas. In the process, we more
or less stumbled upon something rather greater than we had initially
bargained for. We were led to a startling, controversial, and seemingly
preposterous conclusion. [Lincoln, Leigh, Baigent, 1982]
And THAT is the clue that is most interesting
in this whole matter: "we were led..."
What were they led to?
If our hypothesis is correct, the Holy Grail would have been at least
two things simultaneously. On the one hand, it would have been Jesus'
bloodline and descendants - the "Sang Raal," the "Real"
of "Royal" blood of which the Templars, created by the Prieure
de Sion, were appointed guardians. At the same time the Holy Grail would
have been, quite literally, the receptacle or vessel that received and
contained Jesus' blood. In other words, it would have been the womb
of the Magdalene - and by extension, the Magdalen herself. From this
the cult of the Magdalen, as it was promulgated during the Middle Ages,
would have arisen - and been confused with the cult of the Virgin. It
can be proved, for instance, that many of the famous "Black Virgins"
or "black Madonnas" were early in the Christian era shrines
not to the Virgin but to the Magdalen - and they depict a mother and
child. It has also been argued that the Gothic cathedrals - those majestic
stone replicas of the womb dedicated to "Notre Dame" - were
also, as Le Serpent rouge states, shrines to Jesus' consort
rather than to his mother.
The Holy Grail, then, would have symbolized both Jesus' bloodline and
the Magdalen, from whose womb that bloodline issued. But it may have
been something else as well. In A.D. 70, during the great revolt in
Judaea, Roman legions under Titus sacked the temple of Jerusalem. The
pillaged treasure of the temple is said to have found its way eventually
to the Pyrenees; and M. Plantard, in his conversation with us, stated
that this treasure was in the hands of the Prieure de Sion today. But
the temple of Jerusalem may have contained more than the treasure plundered
by Titus' centurions. In ancient Judaism religion and politics were
inseparable. The Messiah was to be a priest-king whose authority encompassed
spiritual and secular domains alike. It is thus likely, indeed probable,
that the temple housed official records pertaining to Israel's royal
line - the equivalents of the birth certificates, marriage licenses,
and other relevant data concerning any modern royal or aristocratic
family. If Jesus was indeed "King of the Jews," the temple
is almost certain to have contained copious information relating to
him. It may even have contained his body - or at least his tomb, once
his body was removed from the temporary tomb of the Gospels. [Lincoln,
Leigh, Baigent, 1982]
Let's hear that sentence one more time:
"We were led to a startling, controversial, and seemingly preposterous
conclusion."
By WHOM were they led?
A group calling itself Le Prieure
de Sion, The Priory of Sion, and its purported agent, Pierre Plantard.
This, of course, leads to the question:
Did Berenger Sauniere find an ancient hoard of gold and appropriate it
to himself? Or did he uncover some other secret that required his silence
to be bought?
And, I add the corollary questions: Or
was Sauniere, perhaps, the unwitting tool of a different, greater, conspiracy?
And: Did our intrepid writer, Henry Lincoln, then fall into the same trap?
Getting to the bottom line of this story
is difficult; it is rather like the Pit on Oak Island: so many people
have been digging that the ground is no longer amenable to discovering
tracks, and the water is impossibly muddy. But we are here going to attempt
to sort it all out bit by bit.
Who and what is the Priory of Sion?
Continue...
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