On this day, July 1, 2021, I John The Nazarite, restore all the Goddess Worship of the World that was destroyed by Paul and Timothy, and the dark men who backed them. There is no indication that Jesus came to destroy goddess worship – nor did John the Baptist! Jesus claims he descends from Ruth and Boaz who may not have worshipped the Lord. The tribe of Judah worshipped Chemosh.
With the dedication of a statue of Princess Diana, the worship of the goddess and the gods, is restored.
The Spartans claimed they descend from Abraham and are brothers of the Jews.
The Spartans: ‘Children of Abraham, Brothers of the Jews’ – Watch Jerusalem
The Spartans worshipped Artemis-Diana. Men and Women who want to go into battle against China and Russia, may not be Christians or Jews. There is evidence Samson was an Aegean. I suggest his mother was Helen of Troy, and is Heracles. Samson was a Danite who may not have been Jews, but Greek Mercenaries hired by Egypt. Manoah’s wife is not named – or the angel that came to her and bid her to take the Oath of the Nazarite – who admitted men and women as equals. I suspect all the people in Judges took the oath and priests and priestesses connected to a Egyptian religion that Aaron never forsake. He had to have seen God when Moses did. How about Miriam? Elizabeth and Mary were titled ‘The Daughters of Aaron’. Both took the oath and did Queen Helena.
Tribe of Dan: Sons of Israel, or of Greek mercenaries hired by Egypt? – Archaeology – Haaretz.com
I believe Paul was a agent of the King of Anatolia and was hired to stop the Gauls of Galatia from taking the Oath of the Nazarite, and becoming Danite Mercenaries. I suspect they saw themselves as The New Spartans, a role the Frankish Kings took, and thus were known as The Longhair Kings – after Samson the Nazarite. Weakening their women, was a murderous tactic. Paul admits to putting women in prison and torturing them. No enemy of Russia and China would ever subscribe to this false teaching! So be it!
Goddess Worship and the Apostle Paul | by Lurie Kimmerle | Medium
“The Trojans land on a deserted island and discover an abandoned temple to Diana. After performing the appropriate ritual, Brutus falls asleep in front of the goddess’s statue and is given a vision of the land where he is destined to settle, an island in the western ocean inhabited only by a few giants.”
King Henry 11 believed he descended from the Trojans. I believe he worshipped Rosamond Clifford as Helen of Troy whose mother was Aphrodite. Henry made a well where I suspect Fair Rosamond took ritual baths with her maidens. I suspect Bathsheba is Helen of Troy. She is a Hittite. David could have taken part in the siege of Troy – if her was a real. Like Samson, David is a warrior-god who slays Goliath. He plays the lyre and composes confounding riddles. I suspect Troy held a Hellenized Poetry Contest. Consider the Judgement of Paris. Did Henry hold a beauty contest at Woodstock?
In the Opera Rosamond, Henry sees a vision of the future. He see the building of Blenheim Palace where the Spencer and Churchill bloodline found a home. Diana is a Rosamond. Her grandchildren all descend from the Toney family and the Angvians, the House of Anjou, who may have not given up on goddess worship. Eleanor (Helen) went on crusade with a platoon of young women dressed like Amazons. In this troupe, I place the spirit of Victoria Rosemond Bond, and Miriam Starfish Christling, who in spirit have led me to the truth, and are the Spirit of Goddess Restoration all over the world.
So be it!
I am working on a modern version of the opera Rosamond, that might be a movie-musical, a continuation of The Phantom of the Opera. As president of Royal Rosamond Press ‘A Newspaper For The Arts, I am dedicated in preserving and protecting all works of art associated with The Goddess. This in itself is a justification for the restoration of Goddess Worship, as so called Christians are dedicated to protecting statues of Confederate slave owners. I believe my kin, Jessie Benton-Fremont, is supportive of this decree, and welcomes Harry and Meghan to the United States. Harry Windsor is a Samson, a Warrior, a Spartan Brother of the Jews. He is America’s David in all his better attributes. He is the Lion of Albion. He is Lionmundi….The Lion of the World!
Hail Britania!
John ‘The Nazarite’
At 8:00 A.M. after posting the above I put my breakfast on, then looked or an image of Diana’s statue. In this image I see the Unicorn and Lion crest.
Prince Harry, William reunite at Princess Diana statue unveiling (pagesix.com)
Rule Britannia – Last Night of the Proms 2009 – YouTube
Live: Outside Kensington Palace ahead of Diana statue unveiling – YouTube
Eleanor of Aquitaine, (1120-1204) took the cross with her first husband Louis VII of France and scandalized Europe by leading 300 of her women dressed as amazons and a thousand of her knights from her duchy in the armies of the Second Crusade. Even though she insisted that the women went along to “tend the wounded,” Eleanor insisted on taking part in strategy sessions and sided with her uncle Raymond of Antioch instead of her husband Louis on the question of whether to attack Jerusalem. Louis settled the argument by insisting that she accompany him to Jerusalem. The King and Queen of France went home on separate ships, and back in Europe after she gave birth to a daughter, Eleanor insisted on a divorce and married Henry II of England.
Sparta and the Gods (spartareconsidered.com)
The Queen’s Beast | The Royal Mint
The worship of Castor and Polydeukes also tells us something about the Spartan. According to ancient Greek mythology, the Divine Twins, the Dioskouroi, were the brothers of Helen. More precisely, Polydeukes was Helen’s full-brother, likewise fathered by Zeus on her mother Leda, while Castor was her half-brother, the son of Leda by her (mortal) husband Tyndareus, the king of Sparta. Raised at the Spartan court as twin sons of the king, the Dioskouroi lived the ideal lives of aristocratic youth in the age of heroes. They had great adventures, sailing with Jason on the Argo, hunting boar with Herakles, rescuing their sister from the Athenian king Theseus, who had abducted her – and then robbing two sisters from a neighboring kingdom for their own wives
Roman de Rou & Holy Grail
Posted on April 17, 2013 by Royal Rosamond Press
In the Roman de Brut by Wace, Brutus of Troy falls asleep before a statue of the goddess Diana in her abandoned temple and has a dream of the island he is destined to settle. This land is Britian.
On the grounds of Blenhiem Palace there is a temple for the goddess Diana where Winston Churchill proposed to his wife. This temple looks like the one that was built for Princess Diana Spencer who is kin to the Churchills and Dukes of Marlborough. It was on these grounds that King Henry built a Troy-town for Fair Rosamond, who descends from Rollo. Henry claimed he descends from Brutus of Troy. The Sleeping Beauty Princess was named ‘Rosamond’. Princess Diana was named ‘England’s Rose’. There is a rose in the middle of the Round Table that Wace introduced to the Arthurian Legends. Wace brought the sword he called ‘Excalibur’.
Above is a print of Wace delivered ‘The Roman de Rou’ to King Henry. As promised, here is the Grail Line of the Norse. The name Rosamond will forever be associated with the Holy Grail. I will forever be known as a Grail Author and Grail Scholar. I have immortalized my family. I have connected Princess Diana to the Grail Legends. One day, one, or both of her sons, will be the King of England.
Long live the king!
John Presco
Copyright 2013
Both Henry II and his wife, Eleanor of Aquitaine, were descended from Rollo. Henry via Rollo’s son, and successor, William ‘Longsword’. Eleanor via Rollo’s daughter, Gerloc (who married Duke William III of Aquitaine, and was called Adela).
https://rosamondpress.wordpress.com/2013/01/07/rosamond-and-the-earls-of-orkney/
His later work, the Roman de Rou, was, according to Wace, commissioned by King Henry II of England. A large part of the Roman de Rou is devoted to William the Conqueror and the Norman Conquest. Wace’s reference to oral tradition within his own family suggests that his account of the preparations for the Conquest and of the Battle of Hastings may have been reliant not only on documentary evidence but also on eyewitness testimony from close relations—though no eyewitnesses would have been still alive when he began work on the text. The Roman de Rou also includes a mention of the appearance of Halley’s Comet. The relative lack of popularity of the Roman de Rou may reflect the loss of interest in the history of the Duchy of Normandy following the incorporation of continental Normandy into the kingdom of France in 1204.
The Trojans land on a deserted island and discover an abandoned temple to Diana. After performing the appropriate ritual, Brutus falls asleep in front of the goddess’s statue and is given a vision of the land where he is destined to settle, an island in the western ocean inhabited only by a few giants.
“Yea, Rosamond, fair Rosamond,
Her name was called so,
To whom dame Elinor our Queene
Was known a deadly foe,
The King therefore for her defence
Against the furious Queene
At Woodstocke builded such a Bower
The like was never seen.
“Most curiously that Bower was built
Of stone and timber strong.
An hundered and fifty dores
Did to this Bower belong,
And they so cunningly contriv’d
With turnings round about
That none but with a clew of thread
Could enter in or out.”
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blenheim_Palace
Rosamond’s Well, Blenheim Park, Woodstock, Oxfordshire
Os grid reference: SP 4365 1647. At the north-side of the lake in Blenheim Park at Woodstock, Oxfordshire, is Rosamond’s Well, also known as Fair Rosamund’s Well. It takes its name from Lady Rosamond de Clifford who was to become the lover (Mistress), for her sins, of King Henry II, although probably not ‘entirely’ out of her own choosing! Fair Rosamond, it is said, was “supposedly” murdered by a very jealous Queen Eleanor in about 1175, or was she? But back in the 12th century the well was called Everswell, maybe because it was ‘never ever’ known to run dry, even in the driest spells of weather; and in the past the water had some curative properties as pilgrims were wont to come here and partake of it in bottles – in those distant times, but in fact the well has only been named after Rosamond since the 16th century. The village of Woodstock is a quarter of a mile east of the well, while Bladon is half a mile south, and the town of Long Harborough 2 miles south-west on the A4095 road.
Poor Rosamond was buried at Godstow nunnery, a house of Benedictine nuns dedicated to St Mary and St John the Baptist, which is now in ruins beside the river Thames, near Oxford. It was founded by the widow Edith Launceline in 1133, dissolved in 1539, and almost destroyed during the Civil War in 1645 or 46. Today the ruin acts as a pound for local farm animals.
Many turf mazes in England were named Troy Town, Troy-town or variations on that theme (such as Troy, The City of Troy, Troy’s Walls, Troy’s Hoy, or The Walls of Troy) presumably because, in popular legend, the walls of the city of Troy were constructed in such a confusing and complex way that any enemy who entered them would be unable to find his way out. Welsh hilltop turf mazes (none of which now exist) were called “Caerdroia”, which can be translated as “City of Troy” (or perhaps “castle of turns”).
W. H. Matthews, in his Mazes and Labyrinths (1922), gives the name as “Troy-town”. More recent writers (such as Adrian Fisher, in The Art of the Maze, 1990) prefer “Troy Town”.
The name “Troy” has been associated with labyrinths from ancient times. An Etruscan terracotta wine-jar from Tragliatella, Italy, shows a seven-ring labyrinth marked with the word TRUIA (Troy). To its left, two armed soldiers appear to be riding out of the labyrinth on horseback, while on the right two couples are shown copulating. The vase dates from about 630 BC.
Anglo-Norman author of two verse chronicles, the Roman de Brut(1155) and the Roman de Rou (1160–74), named respectively after the reputed founders of the Britons and Normans.
The Rou was commissioned by Henry II of England, who sometime before 1169 secured for Wace a canonry at Bayeux in northwestern France. The Brut may have been dedicated to Henry’s queen, Eleanor of Aquitaine. Written in octosyllabic verse, it is a romanticized paraphrase of Geoffrey of Monmouth’s Historia regum Britanniae, tracing the history of Britain from its founding by the legendary Brutus the Trojan. Its many fanciful additions (including the story of King Arthur’s Round Table) helped increase the popularity of the Arthurian legends. The Rou, written in octosyllabic couplets and monorhyme stanzas of alexandrines, is a history of the Norman dukes from the time of Rollo the Viking (after 911) to that of Robert II Curthose (1106). In 1174, however, Henry II transferred his patronage to one Beneeit, who was writing a rival version, and Wace’s work remained unfinished.
Wace’s artistry in the Brut exerted a stylistic influence on later verse romances (notably on a version of the Tristan story by Thomas, the Anglo-Norman writer), whereas the English poem Brut (c. 1200) by Lawamon was the most notable of many direct imitations. Three devotional works by Wace also survive.
Wace, writing some 300 years after the event in his Roman de Rou, also mentions the two brothers (as Rou and Garin), as does the Orkneyinga Saga.
Rosmond Clifford’s ancestors are the Erl’s of Orkney via Hugh de Calvacamp, thus she is kindred to the Sinclairs. However, this link has long been in question. Rosamond’s lover, King Henry Plantgenet, claims he descends from the Kings of Troy. Helen of Troy was captured, her legendary beauty launching a thousand ships that came to her rescue. Some scholars suggest the name Helen means “captured”. Helen is the Queen Mother of my novel ‘Capturing Beauty. King Henry Plantagenet of Anjou allegedly built a labyrinth around Fair Rosamond. When I posted this information, and more, on a Templar yahoogroup, Ian Sinclair tried to get me banned, and succeeded!
The Sinclairs claim they came to America, even discovered it. However, my ex-wife, Mary Ann Tharaldsen, would beg to differ, she kindred to Erik Tharaldsen, better known as Erik the Red. The Sinclair Clan is trying to capture my beautiful America! Get lost!
If you follow the Toeni ancestors of Rosamond Clifford, you arrive at Woden and the Kings of Troy. I suspect Henry married Rosamond after he divorced Eleanore (Helen) in order to unite the world under the three panthers of Angvian Plantagenet family who are leading members of the Priory de Sion – LEGEND! Some members of the Sinclair family claim their ancestors were as powerful as Henry’s family empire. They spread falsehoods! The Sinclairs claim they are kindred to Knights Templar and Masonic secrets. The Benton family were famous Freemasons, and I disocvered the Rougemont Templars by following my mother’s maiden name – ROSAMOND.
Above are two paintings by Rossetti employing the same model. These beautiful women are Fair Rosamund and Helen of Troy. My beautiful sister was the world famous artist known as Rosamond. Our Muse was Rena Cristiansen whose ancestros came from Sweden. Rena’s three sisters were models their beauty captured by a fashion photographers. Consider the Mona Lisa.
Some Sinclairs died battling the Saracens in Spain around 1300. Rosamond’s ancestor, Roger (Ralph) de Toeni, led Normans against Saracens in 1035.
The battle to restore Christianity to Spain, was on. Fair Rosamond in the Queen of Pan’s Labyrinth because Henry built a Troy Town around Rosamond that are associated with the city of Troy. Did he behold Rosamond’s genealogy and thus know she descended from Woden and the Trojans?
The Sinclairs have languished in the Priory of Troy Town long enough, they allowing Pierre Plantard to take all the heat in their place. But, with the revelation that my dear friend, Virginia Hambley, descends from powerful members of the Vichy – evicts all the Sinclairs from the legend that Dan Bown made famous, and puts my Rose of the World at the epicenter; for Plantard was a real member of the Vichy rebirth that spawned a thusand novels.
It is time for the jewel, and the thorn, in the crown.
I want our legend back!
Jon Presco
Copyright 2013
Roman de Rou is a verse chronicle by Wace in Norman covering the history of the Dukes of Normandy from the time of Rollo of Normandy to the battle of Tinchebray in 1106. It is a national epic of Normandy.
Following the success of his Roman de Brut which recounted the history of the English, Wace was apparently commissioned by Henry II of England to write a similar account of the origins of the Normans and their conquest of England. Wace abandons his tale before bringing it up to date, telling the reader in the final lines of Part III that the king had entrusted the same task to a Maistre Beneeit (believed to be Benoît de Sainte-More).
The ‘Roman de Rou’ (literally: Romance of Rollo) begins:
“One thousand, one hundred and sixty years in time and space had elapsed since God in His grace came down in the Virgin, when a cleric from Caen by the name of Master Wace undertook the story of Rou and his race …”
Wace’s ‘Roman de Rou’ chronicles Norman history, in verse, from the founding duke, Rollo (Rou), to the battle of Tinchebray in 1106. It was apparently commissioned by King Henry II (reigned 1154-89), possibly on the strength of Wace’s earlier work (finished in 1155), a versified adaptation of Geoffrey of Monmouth’s fantastical ‘Historia Regum Britanniae’, the ‘Roman de Brut’ (which seems to have achieved considerable popularity, and in which Wace introduced King Arthur’s round table).
Both Henry II and his wife, Eleanor of Aquitaine, were descended from Rollo. Henry via Rollo’s son, and successor, William ‘Longsword’. Eleanor via Rollo’s daughter, Gerloc (who married Duke William III of Aquitaine, and was called Adela).
Within the ‘Roman de Rou’, Wace writes:
“The history of the Normans is a long one and hard to set down in the vernacular. If one asks who said this, who wrote this history in the vernacular, I say and will say that I am Wace from the Isle of Jersey, which is in the sea towards the west and belongs to the territory of Normandy. I was born on the island of Jersey and taken to Caen as a small child; there I went to school and was then educated for a long time in France. When I returned from France, I stayed in Caen for a long time and set about composing works in the vernacular: I wrote and composed a good many. With the help of God and the king – I must serve no one apart from God – a prebend was given to me in Bayeux (may God reward him for this). I can tell you it was Henry the second, the grandson of Henry and the father of Henry.”
At any rate, for some reason, Henry became dissatisfied with Wace’s work (or with Wace himself), and withdrew his patronage. Wace breaks off from his narrative, and writes:
“Let he whose business it is continue the story. I am referring to Master Beneeit [probably Benoît de Saint-Maure], who has undertaken to tell of this affair, as the king has assigned the task to him; since the king asked him to do it, I must abandon it and fall silent. The king in the past was very good to me. He gave me a great deal and promised me more, and if he had given me everything he promised me things would have gone better for me. I could not have it, it did not please the king; but it is not my fault. I have known three king Henrys and seen them all in Normandy; all three had lordship over Normandy and England. The second Henry, about whom I am talking, was the grandson of the first Henry and born of Matilda, the empress, and the third was the son of the second. Here ends the book of Master Wace; anyone who wishes to do more, let him do it.”
Wace ceased work after 1174 (he mentions the siege of Rouen of that year). A substantial portion of the ‘Roman de Rou’ only exists in a 17th century copy, though the section in which the Norman Conquest of England occurs is also preserved in three medieval manuscripts (one early-13th, one late-13th and one late-14th century). Incidentally, Wace is most likely a personal name, not a surname. For some reason (perhaps based on an erroneous reading) he has sometimes been called Robert Wace.
The entire knowledge we have of Rollo is based on Dodo’s colourful accounts. The title they both adopted was “Count”. in 1015 Richard II was the first to style himself “Duke” and “Patrician”. He asserted his right to control the church and appoint Dukes under it.
http://sinclair.quarterman.org/who/rollo.html
http://sinclair.quarterman.org/ian.html
Both Henry II and his wife, Eleanor of Aquitaine, were descended from Rollo. Henry via Rollo’s son, and successor, William ‘Longsword’. Eleanor via Rollo’s daughter, Gerloc (who married Duke William III of Aquitaine, and was called Adela).
https://rosamondpress.wordpress.com/2013/01/07/rosamond-and-the-earls-of-orkney/
His later work, the Roman de Rou, was, according to Wace, commissioned by King Henry II of England. A large part of the Roman de Rou is devoted to William the Conqueror and the Norman Conquest. Wace’s reference to oral tradition within his own family suggests that his account of the preparations for the Conquest and of the Battle of Hastings may have been reliant not only on documentary evidence but also on eyewitness testimony from close relations—though no eyewitnesses would have been still alive when he began work on the text. The Roman de Rou also includes a mention of the appearance of Halley’s Comet. The relative lack of popularity of the Roman de Rou may reflect the loss of interest in the history of the Duchy of Normandy following the incorporation of continental Normandy into the kingdom of France in 1204.
The Trojans land on a deserted island and discover an abandoned temple to Diana. After performing the appropriate ritual, Brutus falls asleep in front of the goddess’s statue and is given a vision of the land where he is destined to settle, an island in the western ocean inhabited only by a few giants.
“Yea, Rosamond, fair Rosamond,
Her name was called so,
To whom dame Elinor our Queene
Was known a deadly foe,
The King therefore for her defence
Against the furious Queene
At Woodstocke builded such a Bower
The like was never seen.
“Most curiously that Bower was built
Of stone and timber strong.
An hundered and fifty dores
Did to this Bower belong,
And they so cunningly contriv’d
With turnings round about
That none but with a clew of thread
Could enter in or out.”
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blenheim_Palace
To my late friend and compatriot, Ben Toney……..
Your ancestor set sail for England with William the Conqueror. He is depicted in the long Bayeux Tapestry. Like the fleet of Greek ships you came, to Troy in search of the captured Helen. Along the way you brought a strange prophet that was thrown overboard. And, he showed you where the Trojans are, and he showed you where – they will be! For God, loves a story! For man, loves a prophecy! We go to see in the ships. We come home, as other men. Thank you Ben, for sharing with me, the greatest story every told, and you kindred, Fair Rosamond who King Henry put at the epicenter of Labyrinth. Henry claimed he desdended from the Trojan.
A week ago I blogged my conclusion that King Priam was King Solomon, and David, his son, was Paris. Tonight I found the Compendium of History Vol.2 by Herman L. Hoeh who was supposed to be Herbert Armstrong’s Heir. But, he is all but demonized. They claim he got much wrong. He and Herbert speak of the King David Key – which I just provided. What would you call this in doing a lab test? Three prophets, one, who was not known to the other two, sails to another land, born under falling stars, to know the Kingdom of God!All we can do, is keep the prow of our ships, pointed to the horizon: for Jesus said;
“Seek, and thou shall find!”
John Presco
Van Bois Le Duc
Copyright 2019
https://www.bl.uk/collection-items/waces-roman-de-brut
This is why I refused to obey the commands of Belle Burch and her friends who were trying to hijack my novel ‘Capturing Beauty’. The alleged heir to Herbert Armstrong’s teaching traced the Trojan linage to the Frisians, and the Dukes of Brabant. I concur. This is why I have been so interested in Lara Roozemont.
I have concluded that King Solomon was King Priam, and David, Paris, who captured Belle Bathsheba.
I offered The Rose to Rena and Belle, and they betrayed me. Below is a post I made just after Belle agreed to come model for me. She asked for me to set the time. Then, I found out who her compatriots are – Anarchists! The Mayor of Portland has asked the masked ones, and the armed ones not to come to his city and devastate it with acts of violence.
In our last telephone conversation. Belle admitted it was wrong of her not to tell me who she was. I told her I did not like her poem, and asked for a rewrite. She did not hear I left a window open for her. I expected a better poem. Out hearts were broken.
The greatest love stories can not be written by human hand, or the greatest portraits rendered by the cleverest eye. Sometimes our muse grab us by the short hairs, and shake us like a bulldog. Love can be a very dramatic story – and portrait! Such is the tale of Hellen……Hellen of Troy!
With my muse, Belle, I got more than my money’s worth. I only gave her a blue bicycle. She gave me one hair-raising adventure….with fight for my life!
I forgive Belle, for several reasons; Her deceased mother asked me to do so. She has the same mole on her neck that Marilyn has. I fell in love with Belle – at first sight! She gave me such a look of hope, that was so full of expectations. Well, my dear Belle. Here is the Kingdom I promised you. You are………Of The Garden!….. Van Der Tuin.
Bois-le-Duc était une des quatre villes principales du duché de Brabant (les autres étaient Bruxelles, Louvain et Anvers). Elle fut fondée en 1185 par le duc Henri Ier de Brabant, au confluent de l’Aa et du Dommel, qui à partir d’ici forment ensemble la Dieze. La cathédrale Saint-Jean y est érigée en style gothique flamboyant. Elle est le lieu de pèlerinage marial le plus grand des Pays-Bas. L’image miraculeuse de la Sainte-Vierge[réf. nécessaire] s’appelle la Douce Mère (de Zoete Moeder).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duke_of_Brabant
https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bois-le-Duc
https://www.cbcg.org/false-doctrine/three-false-doctrines.html
http://ambassadorwatch.blogspot.com/2007/03/enigma-of-herman-hoeh.html
Capturing Belle in Labyrinth
Posted on April 22, 2014by Royal Rosamond Press
I just discovered Belle’s mother, Catherine Vandertuin, brought Gamelan music to the UofO. My surrogate daughter studied this music, and played it when she attended the UofO. Her uncle, Ron Ramus taught Tai Chi here. Belle’s father, Jeffrey Burch, introduced a Labyrinth Walk that was accompanied by Belle’s mother.
My autobiography is about making my way into the center of Rosamond’s Labyrinth, where I find her, Mon Belle. Belle Burch is at the epicenter. In Friday she will pose for my rendition of Belle Rosamonde in the Labyrinth.
It is uncanny to discover this Labyrinth Walk conducted by Belle’s mother and father whom she talked about briefly. This post shows two painting of Fair Rosamond being found via the clue of the red thread. The Rosamond cote of arms depicts a weaving needle made into a cross with two roses to the side.
Belle’s mother died nine years ago when my muse was fourteen. There is something being reborn here, are awoken. The Descent of Innana (1997) is like Pan’s Labyrinth. (2005). “There will be signs.”
“Catherine brought Javanese gamelan music to Eugene in 1992 with the founding of Gamelan Nuju Laras, well known for accompanying labyrinth walks created by her partner, Jeff Burch.”
Catherine
Jon Presco
Copyright 2014
Compendium of World History – Volume 2
Herman L Hoeh
Chapter XII:
TROJAN MIGRATION TO FRANCE
After Troy fell, in 1181, the populace in the conquered regions fled from the Greeks to various parts of Europe. One of these groups was led by Aeneas and finally reached Italy. But, there were other groups who left Troy after the First Trojan War.
Another group of Trojan refugees was led by Francio the son of the ill-fated Hector, and heir to the line of Samothes in Gaul. These fled to the northern shore of the Black Sea, then returned to Isauria in Asia Minor, from where they migrated to Pannonia and then on to Western Europe. From these Trojans is descended the house of the Dukes of Brabant (an old province embracing parts of modern Belgium and the Netherlands). From this Assyro-Judaic family came Charlemagne, the first emperor of the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation.
A complete list of these Trojan rulers, from Hector down to Charlemagne, is found in the work by Jhr. C. A. Rethaan Macar? entitled “Oude Kronijk van Brabant”, in the “Codex Diplomaticus Neerlandicus,” series 2, part 3, published by Het Historisch Genootschap te Utrecht, Utrecht, Holland in 1855.
The chronology starts with 1181 and continues right down the line without complications till Silvius Brabon II, who begins to reign in 732. The beginning and end of each reign is synchronized with contemporary Biblical history, which, incidentally, is presented in its correct chronology down to a period long after the dividing of the monarchy.
Between Silvius Brabon II and Troylus II (370-331) complications are introduced. The author will state a certain figure for the length of the reign, yet this will completely disagree with the length of reign obtained through his cross references to contemporary Roman history. Silvius Brabon II, for example, is stated to have reigned 60 years. Yet, the cross references of the beginning and end of his reign in terms of Roman history show that he reigned only 32 years. The difficulty is readily overcome when we realize that the Trojan rulers of this period shared the throne jointly with either a successor or a predecessor. The author preserved the correct lengths of individual reigns only in the cross references to contemporary Roman history. Charlemagne, too, it must be remembered, ruled jointly with his brother.
The recording of joint reigns ceases after Troylus II and the chronology again becomes uniform. Troylus II ruled jointly with his successor, Priamus VI. It will be noticed, below, that even in the figures for his sole reign, the last year overlaps with the first year of his successor. This is stated in the author’s cross references to contemporary Roman and Greek history.
Under the Princes and Dukes of Brabant there are two short interregnums which become apparent from the chronology, one in A.D. 456-459 and the other in A.D. 714-715. We must remember that this is the story of Brabant though the individuals concerned had other dominions and offices as well. Charlemagne, for example, was a Duke of Brabant, but he was also King of the Franks and Holy Roman Emperor at the same time. The short interregnums therefore mean nothing more than that the title to the dukedom was vacant for that period of time. The ruler himself was usually alive, but simply did not claim the dukedom. This is only a matter of internal politics and does not affect the chronology of the history as a whole.
TROJANS KINGS OF ISAURIA
Kings Length of Reign Dates 1. Francio, son of Hector, 21 1181-1160 flees from Troy with his brother Turcus to 10 1160-1150 Maeotis, where they rule 21 years. From there they migrate to Isauria, where Francio drives out his brother Turcus and reigns 10 years. 2. Hector II, marries 31 1150-1119 daughter of king of Cilicia. 3. Troylus 56 1119-1063 4. Francio II, whose brother — Priam led a migration of Trojans from Isauria to Pannonia, where they remained till expelled by Gratian.
TROJAN KINGS OF SICAMBRIA AND PANNONIA
Kings Length of Reign Dates 1. Priamus II, son of 27 1063-1036 Francio II, commences his reign on the Danube in the 118th year after the fall of Troy, builds city Sycambria. 2. Eneas, marries his 57 1036- 979 aunt, the daughter of Francio II of Isauria. 3. Priamus III, had a 14 979- 965 Scythian wife. 4. Silvius Brabon, had six 49 965- 916 sons. Wandalus settled among the Vandals, Polex gave his name to Poland, Russo went into Russia, Himus migrated to Maeotis, Frixius went to Frisia, and Brabon Silvius inherited his father's throne. 5. Brabon Silvius I 35 916- 881 6. Hector III, in whose 34 881- 847 days six Sicambrian heroes or rulers, led by one Yber, migrated overland from Sicambria to France with about 4000 men. They built a city and called it Paris, after the son of Priam. Themselves they called Parisii. 7. Francio Brabon, had 76 847- 771 a son Troylus and a daughter Ylia. She became, according to the author, the mother of Romulus and Remus. 8. Troylus I 32 771- 739 9. Brabon II 7 739- 732 10. Silvius Brabon II 32 732- 700 joint (60) (732- 672) 11. Hector Brabon, had 37 700- 663 two sons, Demophon and Palamides. Demophon went to Rome where he married the daughter of Ancus Marcius and had by her a son called Tarquinus, who became king of Rome. 12. Palamides, had three 52 663- 611 sons, Deyphebus, joint (61) (672- 611) Parriis and Brabon. Deyphebus went to Dacia, Parriis to some islands in the Pontus. 13. Brabon III, had two sons, 57 611- 554 Priam and Dyomedeus. The latter went to Africa and built there a mighty city. 14. Priamus IV 32 554- 522 joint (50) (572- 522) 15. Philymeus,had three 30 552- 522 sons, Priam, Archadius and Macedo. From Macedo came the Macedonii, Archadius migrated to Arcadia in Greece and became the first duke of that land. Julius Caesar is descended from him. 16. Priamus V 20 522- 502 17. Brabon IV 50 502- 452 joint with son (11) (452- 441) 18. Laomedon 24 452- 428 19. Pelius, had two 58 428- 370 sons, Troylus and joint (68) (441- 373) Hybertius. The latter sailed with his followers to Hybernia (Ireland). 20. Troylus II 39 370- 331 joint (42) (373- 331) 21. Priamus VI 7 332- 325 22. Francio III 9 325- 316 23. Brabon V 4 316- 312 24. Silvius Brabon III 21 312- 291 25. Brabon Troylus VI 33 291- 258 26. Brabon VII 22 258- 236 27. Brabon VIII 16 236- 220 28. Priamus VII 28 220- 192 29. Hector IV 31 192- 161 30. Brabon IX 4 161- 157 31. Priamus VIII 19 157- 138 32. Francio IV, had 14 20 138- 118 sons and 7 daughters. With him the account of the kings of Sycambria and Pannonia ceases, although the line continued to reign till the time of Gratian.
“Brabon junior,” the youngest son of Francio IV. He entered the services of his relative the duke of Arcadia in Greece, and was rewarded for his distinguished service with a wife of noble birth. Ten years after the death of his father, his wife gave birth to a son who was named Brabon Silvius. At the same time Julius Caesar was born to the duke of Arcadia.
“Brabon Silvius” accompanied Julius Caesar in the Roman conquest of Gaul. Julius Caesar conquered the kingdom of Agrippina (Cologne), killed the king, and sent the king’s sister Silvana to his father the duke of Arcadia.
At that time there stayed with the duke of Arcadia a man named “Karolus.” His father, also called Karolus, was a powerful figure and leader of a military division at Nijmegen. He was born of the old Trojan line, being the son of a certain Pharamunt who had 14 sons. This must be none other than Francio IV (138-118).
“Karolus,” the son of Karolus, received a bad reputation because of his licentious life. So his father sent him away from home to the duke of Arcadia. Here, according to the Chronicle, he married the duke’s daughter “Zwana,” who, upon their return to the Low Countries, gave birth to a son called “Octavianus”. This Octavianus later became Roman Emperor Augustus.
Karolus junior also had two daughters, Octaviana and Zwana. Zwana was given by her uncle Julius Caesar in marriage to Brabon Silvius. After the death of Karolus, Julius Caesar adopted Octavianus. The kingdom of Agrippina he gave to Brabon Silvius.
KINGS OF AGRIPPINA
King Length of Reign Dates 1. Brabon Silvius 2. Karolus I 91 B.C. 53- 39 A.D. 3. Karolus II 41 39- 80 4. Karolus III 65 80- 145 5. Karolus IV 10 145- 155 6. Karolus V 105 155- 260 7. Karolus VI 3 260- 263 8. Karolus VII, conquered 62 263- 325 Sweden, Norway, Denmark and Ireland. 9. Brabon 41 325- 366 10. Karolus VIII 12 366- 378 11. Angisus, during whose reign, in 378 A.D., Gratian drove the Sycambri from Pannonia. They came to the lower Rhine under their leader Priamus. Angisus fought Gratian, but lost 30,000 men and was captured. He spent seven years as a captive of the Romans, being finally liberated by Theodosius upon the latter's accession to the throne. Maximus, a rival emperor, devastated parts of northern Gaul, and then gave these to Brabon, the six-year- old eldest son of Angisus. This Brabon thus became the first prince of Brabant, and his position was subsequently recognized by Emperor Theodosius. Angisus had another son, Karolus, who succeeded him in the kingdom. 12. Karolus IX was succeeded by two other kings who are not named. The last was driven out by Franks, who took over the kingdom of Agrippina and made it part of the Frankish realm.
PRINCES OF BRABANT
Ruler Length of Reign Dates 1. Brabon I, was made 32 424- 456 prince of Brabant in the seventh year of his life. He reigned for 32 years after the death of his father. In his days Clodius, king of the Franks, destroyed the kingdoms of Agrippina and Thuringia, and annexed Brabant. Brabon and his descendants became loyal servants of the Frankish kings. (456- 459) 2. Brabon II 60 459- 519 3. Brabon III 51 519- 570 4. Karolomannus, the last 45 570- 615 prince. After his death Brabant became a dukedom.
DUKES OF BRABANT
Ruler Length of Reign Dates 1. Pippinus of Landen, (35) (612- 647) ruled three years jointly or 32 615- 647 with his father, becomes mayor of the palace to the Frankish king. 2. Grimoaldus, son of Pepin. 13 647- 660 3. Angisus, husband of 25 660- 685 Begga, daughter of Pepin. This Angisus was son of Arnulph, Bishop of Metz, who was the son of Arnold, the son of Anselbert. Anselbert was married to Blitilda, daughter of Lothair I (Clothair), king of Austrasia and Neustria. 4. Pippinus II, of Heristal. 29 685- 714 (714- 715) 5. Karolus Mertellus 26 715- 741 6. Karolomanus, renounced 6 741- 747 his dukedom, entered a monastery in 6th year of reign. 7. Pippinus III "the 21 747- 768 Short," son of joint (27) (741- 768) Karolus Mertellus. By the time Pippinus III came to power, his inheritance included not only Brabant, but also Austrasia, Thuringia, Burgundy, Neustria and Provence. In 752 he was elected King of the Franks, and reigned till his death in 768. 8. Karolomannus, son of 3 768- 771 Pippinus, ruled jointly with his brother Karolus Magnus. 9. Karolus Magnus, 43 771- 814 assumed sole rule joint (46) (768- 814) after his brother's death, became Roman Emperor in 800.
KINGS OF FRISIA
In 321 B.C. a line of princes migrated via India to the area of northern Holland and northwestern Germany under their leader Friso. Friso descended from Ragan or Reu (Gen. 11:19) according to “La Grande Chronique … de Hollande, Zelande” etc., p. 28. Friso was an adventurer in the service of Alexander the Great. After being released from service, he came with a group of settlers from the river Indus to Europe. There he gained power (313) over the local counts by means of intrigue. A descendant, Friso, became king in 287, commencing a secondary line of rulers.
Name of King Length of Reign Dates Friso I 68 313- 245 Adel I (94) 245- 151 Ubbo (80) 151- 71 Asinga Ascon or "Black Adel" (81) B.C. 71- 11 A D. Diocarus Segon, joint during (35) A.D. 11- 46 imprisonment of his cousin by Duke of Brabant. Dibbaldus Segon (39) 46- 85 Tabbo (45) 85- 130
DUKES OF FRISIA
Ruler Length of Reign Dates 1. Asconius 43 130- 173 2. Adelboldus 14 173- 187 3. Titus Boiocalus 53 187- 240 4. Ubbo 59 240- 299 5. Haron Ubbo 36 299- 335 6. Odilbaldus 25 335- 360 7. Udolphus Haron 32 360- 392 After this Frisia again becomes a kingdom.
SECOND GROUP OF KINGS OF FRISIA
Name of King Length of Reign Dates 1. Richardus Uffo 43 392- 435 2. Odilbaldus 35 435- 470 3. Richoldus 63 470- 533 4. Beroaldus 57 533- 590 5. Adgillus I 82 590- 672 6. Radbodus I 51 672- 723 7. Adgillus II 14 723- 737 8. Gondobaldus 12 737- 749 9. Radbodus II 26 749- 775
Frisia, which had already been conquered by the Franks, was made an integral part of the Frankish realm in 775 by Charlemagne. From that time on it was ruled by dukes appointed by the Franks.
King lists are derived from “Hamconius” and “Oera Linda Boek.”
TROJAN KINGS OF THE BELGIANS
While the descendants of Hector fled Troy and migrated to France, Bavo led another group into Western Europe. This is the little known story of the royal family that governed the Celts and the Belgians on the Continent.
Archaeologists have found a vast cultural complex on the Rhine River and its tributaries. The almost unknown account of this area is preserved to us by Jacques de Guyse in his “Histore de Hainaut,” a French translation of his original Latin work of the thirteenth century. (Hainaut is an ancient division of Belgium.)
Archaeologists, of course, admit that the Belgian people came from the steppes of Eastern Europe. But just who the people of Belgium, Holland, Frisia, Luxembourg and Northern France are, archaeology has no answer. Yet we do not have to remain in ignorance. History has the answer — if scholars only had the wit to see. But as with so many records, historians have rejected what they do not want to believe. They have carefully hidden the Jewish-Trojan origin of the royal houses of Western Europe.
The Belgian line commences with Bavo, the son of a sister of Laomedon, king of Troy. Bavo was therefore a cousin of King Priam. Following the fall of Troy a migration into Europe occurred along the Danube. It reached the Rhine by 1179. Bavo, reported Jacques de Guyse, “encountered with pleasure the descendants of the Assyrians who have followed Trebeta, and who had been compatriots of the Trojans and served the same deities” (“Table Generale de l’Histoire de Hainaut,” II, page 388).
Here, in outline form, is Jacques de Guyse’s account of the Belgian rulers after the fall of Troy in 1181. Only the most important details are included from the copious annals of Hainaut.
Priest-kings of the Length of Reign Dates Belgians Bavo 13 1179-1166 Bavo the Belgian (Belginius) 44 1166-1122 Bavo the Lion (Leonius) 20 1122-1102 Bavo the Wolf (Lupinus) 50 1102-1052 Bavo Brunus 35 1052-1017 Brunehuldis 67 1017- 950 Bruno 36 950- 914 Aganippus I 29 914- 885 Aganippus II, husband of 50 885- 835 the British Queen Cordelia. Audengerius 39 835- 796 Herisbrandus 20 796- 776
With Herisbrand ended the rule of the priest-kings over the Belgians. Political upheaval forced a change in form of government and brought a strong-willed, able warrior to the royal estate. In 776 — the year of the first Olympiad in Greece — Ursus, whose name means “bearlike,” obtained the throne and organized much of continental Western Europe under his power. The Annals of Hainaut give the following account of the kings of Belgium from 776-470.
King Length of Reign Dates Ursus 34 776- 742 Ursa, daughter of Ursus 1 and a half 742- 741 Gurguncius (Gurgust in 28 741- 713 British history). Sisillius (was made ruler 10 713- 703 over the Belgians while his father governed the Britons). Friscembaldus I 31 703- 672 Friscembaldus II 32 672- 640 Waringerus 15 640- 625 Leonius 10 625- 615 Leopardus I 5 615- 610 Leopardus II 30 610- 580 Leopardinus 32 580- 548 A political struggle for two years left the Belgians without a king. Camber 20 546- 526 Melbrandus 15 526- 511 Blanduinus 6 511- 505 Suardus 15 505- 490 Leo 7 490- 483 Walacrinus 13 483- 470
There followed a number of dukes, annually elected, none of whose names have come down in history. The last, Missenus, whose son came to the throne in 386, is the only one whose name has been preserved. The actual duration of power of the dukes over the provinces of Belgium is traditionally given as 104 years — evidently from 490 to 386. It therefore appears that they came into prominence with the death of Suardus. The new line of kings which existed until the Roman victory in 52 is as follows:
King Length of Reign Dates Leo I 60 386- 326 Leo II 56 326- 270 Leo III 76 270- 194 Leo IV 96 194- 98 Leo V 20 98- 78 Goomerus 8 78- 70 Taynardus 14 70- 56 Usarius, slain by the Romans 4 56- 52 in Caesar's campaign of 52. Andromadas 6 months 52 Rome crushed all Gaul and Belgium in 52.
KINGS OF THE CELTS IN GAUL
During the period that the priest-kings of the line of Bavo ruled over the Belglans, the Celts in Europe were being governed by another line. This line of kings sprang from Francus, scion of the House of Troy, and last king of the Britons before the coming of Brutus.
Francus, according to the historian Freculphe (see Vol. 19 of “Histoire de Hainaut,” sec. cclxvii), began a line of kings that ultimately ruled in Gaul. He originally turned over the government of Britain to the Druids (until the time of Brutus). He supported the Trojans against the Greeks. After the Greek victory, he continued to govern the remnants of the Celts along the lower reaches of the Danube basin. An outline of these little-known kings of the Celts is given below.
Kings of the Celts Length of Reign Dates Francus, his reign in 47 1216-1169 British records extends over another 20 years of Druidic rule before the coming of Brutus in 1149. Sicamber 51 1169-1118 Priam II 23 1118-1095 Hector. Hector had three 28 1095-1067 sons: Brabon, Polidamus and Troilus. The last- named succeeded him. Troilus 22 1067-1045 Trogotus. Trogotus led (76) (1045- 969) a migration near the beginning of his reign from Pannonia and Hungary into Gaul. Observe how this record accords with the known migrations about 1040 to Denmark and Scotland and Sweden. (The length of reign of Trogotus is missing, but may with great probability be reconstructed as above. The possible proof will be noted later.) Tongres 34 969- 935 Teuto 32 935- 903 Agrippa 28 903- 875 Ambrio 33 875- 842 Thuringus 34 842- 808 Camber 32 808- 776
The length of reign of Trogotus given above is indicated by the following. The only known Agrippa in the history of Western Europe at this period of history is the Trojan king of Alba in Italy. Not uncommonly have the kings of Italy and Alba ruled Celtica in Gaul. Jasius did in 1601-1551. A later Silvius came to the British throne (see Vol. I of “Compendium” on British history). This Agrippa could hardly be other than the Agrippa of Italy. Though sometimes assigned 41 years, Eusebius assigns him 40 years in Alba — 915-875. If Eusebius’ figure is used, the 28-year reign of Agrippa over the Celts may be dated 903-875. Then the reign of Camber would be 808-776. It makes sense. Camber reigned until the very year (776) that Ursus began his rule in Belgium. When Ursus came to power he demanded allegiance of both Celts and Germans.
From this restoration it becomes clear that whoever controlled the ancient city Trier (which was then part of Belgium) was in a favorable position to dominate over the Celts of Gaul. A similar situation occurred over 1500 years later when Charlemagne ruled all Western Europe from Aachen, a city near Trier.