Godlike Productions - Discussion Forum
Users Online Now: 2,251 (Who's On?)Visitors Today: 783,472
Pageviews Today: 1,382,843Threads Today: 586Posts Today: 10,128
04:04 PM


Back to Forum
Back to Forum
Back to Thread
Back to Thread
REPORT ABUSIVE REPLY
Message Subject Knights Templar's
Poster Handle Anonymous Coward
Post Content
Something else to think about if the Templar's where disbanded in 1307 then how in 1492 and beyond did they finance Columbus on his trip to the West Indies,his ships all flew the Templar cross on the sails also why do the pirates of old fly the jolly roger which being the skull and bones symbol of the Templar's?
 Quoting: Highlander_

Highlander,

from another thread regarding the nature of the relationship between freemasons and native americans

or, rephrased for your consideration, the Templars and native americans

would be most interested in your comment here,

or on the thread here;

 Thread: LOOK AT THE GREAT SEAL OF THE US ON THE BACK OF A DOLLAR BILL. THEN READ THIS! 


this is such a deep conspiracy that a conspiracy forum such as this one cannot even comprehend that it 'is' a conspiracy, let alone define it

patterned after "National Treasure" here is a clue

the Sinclair family has been the hereditary guardians of Scotlands holy relics, giving greater credence to the claim that the Templar treasure was likely spirited to Roslin for temporary storage until it could be secreted away to the New World.

what many have failed to realize is that the chapel itself, a testimony of faith in stone, is above all a testimony to a transatlantic voyage that has remained veiled in secrecy for over six hundred years.

do you folks know that an ear of corn (maize) is depicted in the chapel?

there are carvings of what the authors Robert Lomas and Christopher Knight believe could be ears of new world corn or maize in the chapel. This crop was unknown in Europe at the time of the chapel's construction, and was not cultivated there until several hundred years later. Knight and Lomas view these carvings as evidence supporting the idea that Henry I Sinclair, Earl of Orkney, travelled to the Americas well before Columbus.

"Most intriguing to me are the “Indian corn” (maize) motifs around one window in the south aisle. Maize is an American plant, unknown in 15th-century Britain, so is there truth in the story that Henry, first Prince of Orkney, sailed to Nova Scotia in 1398 with Antonio Zeno, the Venetian navigator, as claimed by Zeno’s great-great-great grandson in 1558? According to the younger Zeno’s book, Prince Henry and his comrades spent a winter with the Micmac Indians before setting sail again and being blown by storms to the Massachusetts shore."
 
Please verify you're human:




Reason for reporting:







GLP