Later, to insure the Royal Bloodline lineage, Charlemagne was married to a Merovingian princess in order to insure the transmission of the Royal Blood through him and, thereby, through intermarriage to all the Royal Blood lines of Europe.
This significant detail may be what gave rise (and some validity) to the concept of "The Divine Right of Kings," by which claim royal lineages ruled Europe uninterrupted until the devastation and destruction of the European system of rule by "monarchies" was brought to an end by the events of WW I. The Bolshevik Revolution in Russian, during WWI marked the end of "divine Right of Kings" in Russia by the near extermination of the Romanov Royal Bloodline upon the murder of the Czar and his family by the Bolsheviks.2
All of these new found powers that the Church now proclaimed were as a result of the destruction of the royal bloodline. Equally important to the continuation and management of the Roman Church was to treat women as second class citizens. Women in the early Christian Churches give sermons and gave witness to Jesus and his teachings. By eliminating the role of the bloodline the Church diminished the importance of women and femininity and could now promote its male only agenda.
Leonardo Da Vinci and the Priory of Sion
It may be just coincidence but there are numerous examples of the feminine in Leonardo Da Vinci's paintings. So it really doesn't matter if Da Vinci really was a grandmaster of the Priory of Sion, because it does seem that he deliberately left clues pointing to the feminine. Other experts find evidence of pregnancy, the womb and the geometric representation of fertility in his works: The Last Supper, Adoration of the Magi and others. Also, very interesting, if not conclusive, is the fact that Leonard painted Templar Knights in some of his paintings. What relevance this has to the story is unknown.
Did you notice the painting in the top right of this article? It is entitled Magdalene with Night Light and was painted by Georges de La Tour, a French artist, approximately 1630-35. Note the apparent pregnancy of the Magdalene, also see the crucifix lying flat across the table. It is another coincidence that La Tour was rumored to a member of Priory of Sion.
The First Man and Priest-King
The first priest king was Adam. His name is derived from Adama which means of the earth. This is the genesis of the royal blood or holy blood. Adam was the first modern man. This is a universally accepted truth by all religious faiths.
"The creative energy was bound to be deeply involved and immersed in blood", states Carlos Suares in The Cipher of Genesis.3
The Qabbalah insists on the significance of the name Adam: "dam" in Hebrew means "blood." Within it is the hidden Aleph.4
All this is easy to understand when one knows that all life is two lives and Adam is Aleph inside the blood."5
The only question now is how did Adam become the first human being on earth? Paleoanthropologists and archaeologists have uncovered evidence of Neanderthal man and he is nothing like us. Are we related directly to Homo erectus and where did he come from?
The biblical story of the Garden of Eden suggests that God made man from the clay of the earth. Qabbalistic interpreted, through the association of "dam" with "blood," "Adam" may also be considered to mean "Man of Red Clay" or "Red Earth." Others believe that the Nephilim of the Bible after mating with human woman created an entirely new species often referred to in history and mythology as demigods or semi gods.
Still others believe that another race called the Anunnaki altered the original DNA of Homo erectus and created modern man.
The Anunnaki believed that by appointing human rulers they could assure mankind's service to them as gods and communicate their teachings and laws. These kings would wear a tiara or crown, hold a scepter and a shepherd's crook. The crook symbolized that the king would Shepard, care for, his subjects.
Roman Church Editors of the Bible
Over the last hundred years many biblical texts, including the Dead Sea scrolls, have been discovered. Many of these books are not included in the Old or New testaments of the bible. These books were known and well read in the centuries following the death of Jesus, including the Gospel of Mary Magdalene, Gospel of Thomas, Gospel of Truth, Gospel of Philip, Gospel of Peter, Gospel of the Egyptians, Gospel of the Hebrews, Gospel of James, Gospel of Judas and the Gospel of Hermes.
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