Wikipedia;
* 13th c. Huon of Bordeaux
* ca. 1200 Nibelungenlied
* 1205 Lancelot-Grail
* early 13th c.
o Ancrene Wisse
o Farid al-Din Attar - Mantiqu 't-Tayr (The Conference of the Birds)
o Codex Gigas
o Guido delle Colonne - Historia destructionis Troiae
o Wolfram von Eschenbach: Parzival
* ca. 1215 - Bertrand de Bar-sur-Aube: Girard de Vienne
o Rumi - diwan-e Shams-e Tabrizi, masnavi in Persian
* ca. 1220s - Snorri Sturlusson: Prose Edda
* ca. 1230
o La Mort le roi Artu, French prose romance
o Guillaume de Lorris: First section of Romance of the Rose
* ca. 1230s - Post-Vulgate Cycle
* ca. 1240 - Rudolf von Ems: Alexanderroman
* mid 13th c. - Doön de Mayence
* 1259 - Bonaventure: Itinerarium Mentis ad Deum (Journey of the Mind to God)
* ca. 1260 - Thomas Aquinas: Summa contra Gentiles
o Sa'di - Gulistan, Bustan poets and texts in Persian
* 1263 - Bonaventure: Life of St. Francis of Assisi
* ca. 1270 - Ibn al-Nafis: Theologus Autodidactus
* ca. 1275 - Second section of Romance of the Rose - Jean de Meun
* ca. 1280 - Heinrich der Vogler: Dietrichs Flucht
* ca. 1280s - The Owl and the Nightingale
* 1283 - Ramon Llull: Blanquerna
* 1293 - Dante Alighieri: La Vita Nuova
* ca. 1295 - Mathieu of Boulogne: Liber lamentationum Matheoluli (The Lamentations of Matheolus)
* 1299 - Marco Polo: The Travels of Marco Polo
* ca. 1300 - Gesta Romanorum
[edit] Births
* 1266 (probable) - Duns Scotus, philosopher and theologian (died 1308)
[edit] Deaths
* 1212 : Adam of Dryburgh, Anglo-Scots theologian (born c. 1140)
* 1228 (probable): Gervase of Tilbury, lawyer, statesman and writer (born c. 1150)
* 1251 (probable): Albertanus of Brescia, Latin prose writer (born c. 1195)
* 1252 (probable): Alberic of Trois-Fontaines, Cistercian chronicler
* 1253 : Robert Grosseteste
* 1268 : Henry of Bracton
* 1274
o March 7 : Thomas Aquinas, philosopher and theologian
o July 12 : Bonaventure, philosopher and theologian
* 1285 : Rutebeuf
* 1294 : Roger Bacon
Not forgetting!;
Holy Graal
The, 'Tree', of knowledge ,connection;
Bloodlines of the Holy Grail Pg 179
“In Parzival, it is said of the Grail Queen that ‘she bore…the perfection of earthly paradise, both roots and branches.”
In the Scriptures, in specific the Book of Proverbs, there are two women.
Wisdom & the harlot.
Wisdom is personified by Messiah Yahshua, the Tree of Life.
The harlot is personified by the antichrist, the tree of knowledge of good and evil.
[my note; 'anima', figures, Negative and Positive]
The Stone
The Grail -William Henry
“By strict definition “the Grail” is a Philosopher’s or Alchemist’s Stone,
that can turn one element into another.
The word ‘grail’ is phonetically similar to ‘grael’, old French for stone.
As all Grail knights learn, the Grail is also known as the ‘Stone of God’ that fell from Heaven.”
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Secret Throne of the Illuminati Discovered – William Henry
“In ancient Irish (Iris) religion and mythology Tara was also the sacred home for the Ari (later the Ari-ish or Irish) who ranked below the Illi gods, yet above the people.
Ireland (Ari-Land) takes its name from the Aris (lion / ili-on – in Hebrew) or Arians.
Ireland is considered the Great Motherland of the Aryan race, otherwise known as, Atlantis,Thule,or Tula”
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
John Gill’s commentary on Amos 5:26,
links this,' stone', to the hexagram
Amo 5:26 Yea, you have lifted up the booth of your king, and Kiyyun, your images, the star of your gods which you made for yourselves!
the star of your god, which ye made to yourselves; or the star “your god” (q); meaning the same with Chiun or Saturn; perhaps the same with the star that fell from the air or sky*, mentioned by Sanchoniatho (r); which Astarte, the wife of Chronus or Saturn, is said to take and consecrate in Tyre; this they made for themselves, and worshipped as a deity.
As seen in part 6, this star is in reference to the hexagram.
In the New Testament the term is applied to Diana of Ephesus
Act 19:35 And when the townclerk had appeased the people, he said, Ye men of Ephesus, what man is there that knoweth not how that the city of the Ephesians is a worshipper of the great goddess Diana, and of the image which fell down from Jupiter?
The word image in the above verse is added for the sake of context. The Greek literally says that which fell down from Jupiter/Zeus (diopetes).
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
John Gill commentary
…”of Diopetes”; so the Palladium*, or image of Pallas, was called, because it was supposed to fall down from heaven…
the Syriac version, which reads, “and of her image which fell from heaven”; and so was not made with the hands of men…
The Arabic version, reading these words in connection with the beginning of the next verse, gives a very different sense, “but neither indeed they that fell from heaven contradict the faith of this thing”; as if it was to be understood of the fallen angels…
This image, Pliny says (c), it was doubted of what it was made; some said of the vine tree, others of ebony; but Athenagoras says, the old image of Diana of the Ephesians was made of olive (d). (c) Nat. Hist. l. 16. c. 40. (d) Legatis pro Christianis, p. 17.
Here we see John Gill’s research links this ‘image’ with the fallen angels and is likened to a vine or olive that was made without hands.
In previous studies, it is seen that Diana/Ashterah was likened to the Temple.
This image represents a false temple/false body of Messiah.
Yisrael is likened to both the vine and the olive in the Holy Scriptures.
Contrariwise, the Merovingians who are the ‘bloodline’ that considers itself the ‘guardians of the grail’ have taken upon themselves these same appellations. More on this below.
*Palladium- Palladium was said to be the Greek god of wisdom (false wisdom of the tree of knowledge)
HA HA HA!
so now we see! the Snake [Chthone] in the Grass!
http://littleguyintheeye.wordpress.com/2010/12/18/mark-of-the-beast-10-the-holy-grail/
The Questing Beast, or the Beast Glatisant (Barking Beast), is a monster from Arthurian legend. It is the subject of quests undertaken by famous knights such as King Pellinore, Sir Palamedes, and Sir Percival.
The strange creature has the head and neck of a serpent, the body of a leopard, the haunches of a lion and the feet of a hart.[1] Its name comes from the great noise it emits from its belly, a barking like "thirty couple hounds questing". 'Glatisant' is related to the French word glapissant, 'yelping' or 'barking', especially of small dogs or foxes.
The questing beast is a variant of the mythological giraffe
WHAT ,WE ,ARE,LOOKING ,AT, IN, A, METAPHORICAL, SENSE,IS, THE,
'INSTINCT', OF, SELF-PRESERVATION, OR, WILL TO LIVE.
THE ANIMAL=ANIMA
13th century in literature
Events
- 1211 - Hélinand of Froidmont begins compiling his Chronicon.
- 1240 - Albert of Stade joins the Franciscan order and begins his chronicle.
- 1249 - September 27: Chronicler Guillaume de Puylaurens is present at the death of Raymond VII of Toulouse.
* 13th c. Huon of Bordeaux
* ca. 1200 Nibelungenlied
* 1205 Lancelot-Grail
* early 13th c.
o Ancrene Wisse
o Farid al-Din Attar - Mantiqu 't-Tayr (The Conference of the Birds)
o Codex Gigas
o Guido delle Colonne - Historia destructionis Troiae
o Wolfram von Eschenbach: Parzival
* ca. 1215 - Bertrand de Bar-sur-Aube: Girard de Vienne
o Rumi - diwan-e Shams-e Tabrizi, masnavi in Persian
* ca. 1220s - Snorri Sturlusson: Prose Edda
* ca. 1230
o La Mort le roi Artu, French prose romance
o Guillaume de Lorris: First section of Romance of the Rose
* ca. 1230s - Post-Vulgate Cycle
* ca. 1240 - Rudolf von Ems: Alexanderroman
* mid 13th c. - Doön de Mayence
* 1259 - Bonaventure: Itinerarium Mentis ad Deum (Journey of the Mind to God)
* ca. 1260 - Thomas Aquinas: Summa contra Gentiles
o Sa'di - Gulistan, Bustan poets and texts in Persian
* 1263 - Bonaventure: Life of St. Francis of Assisi
* ca. 1270 - Ibn al-Nafis: Theologus Autodidactus
* ca. 1275 - Second section of Romance of the Rose - Jean de Meun
* ca. 1280 - Heinrich der Vogler: Dietrichs Flucht
* ca. 1280s - The Owl and the Nightingale
* 1283 - Ramon Llull: Blanquerna
* 1293 - Dante Alighieri: La Vita Nuova
* ca. 1295 - Mathieu of Boulogne: Liber lamentationum Matheoluli (The Lamentations of Matheolus)
* 1299 - Marco Polo: The Travels of Marco Polo
* ca. 1300 - Gesta Romanorum
[edit] Births
* 1266 (probable) - Duns Scotus, philosopher and theologian (died 1308)
[edit] Deaths
* 1212 : Adam of Dryburgh, Anglo-Scots theologian (born c. 1140)
* 1228 (probable): Gervase of Tilbury, lawyer, statesman and writer (born c. 1150)
* 1251 (probable): Albertanus of Brescia, Latin prose writer (born c. 1195)
* 1252 (probable): Alberic of Trois-Fontaines, Cistercian chronicler
* 1253 : Robert Grosseteste
* 1268 : Henry of Bracton
* 1274
o March 7 : Thomas Aquinas, philosopher and theologian
o July 12 : Bonaventure, philosopher and theologian
* 1285 : Rutebeuf
* 1294 : Roger Bacon
Not forgetting!;
Holy Graal
The, 'Tree', of knowledge ,connection;
Bloodlines of the Holy Grail Pg 179
“In Parzival, it is said of the Grail Queen that ‘she bore…the perfection of earthly paradise, both roots and branches.”
In the Scriptures, in specific the Book of Proverbs, there are two women.
Wisdom & the harlot.
Wisdom is personified by Messiah Yahshua, the Tree of Life.
The harlot is personified by the antichrist, the tree of knowledge of good and evil.
[my note; 'anima', figures, Negative and Positive]
The Stone
The Grail -William Henry
“By strict definition “the Grail” is a Philosopher’s or Alchemist’s Stone,
that can turn one element into another.
The word ‘grail’ is phonetically similar to ‘grael’, old French for stone.
As all Grail knights learn, the Grail is also known as the ‘Stone of God’ that fell from Heaven.”
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Secret Throne of the Illuminati Discovered – William Henry
“In ancient Irish (Iris) religion and mythology Tara was also the sacred home for the Ari (later the Ari-ish or Irish) who ranked below the Illi gods, yet above the people.
Ireland (Ari-Land) takes its name from the Aris (lion / ili-on – in Hebrew) or Arians.
Ireland is considered the Great Motherland of the Aryan race, otherwise known as, Atlantis,Thule,or Tula”
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
John Gill’s commentary on Amos 5:26,
links this,' stone', to the hexagram
Amo 5:26 Yea, you have lifted up the booth of your king, and Kiyyun, your images, the star of your gods which you made for yourselves!
the star of your god, which ye made to yourselves; or the star “your god” (q); meaning the same with Chiun or Saturn; perhaps the same with the star that fell from the air or sky*, mentioned by Sanchoniatho (r); which Astarte, the wife of Chronus or Saturn, is said to take and consecrate in Tyre; this they made for themselves, and worshipped as a deity.
As seen in part 6, this star is in reference to the hexagram.
In the New Testament the term is applied to Diana of Ephesus
Act 19:35 And when the townclerk had appeased the people, he said, Ye men of Ephesus, what man is there that knoweth not how that the city of the Ephesians is a worshipper of the great goddess Diana, and of the image which fell down from Jupiter?
The word image in the above verse is added for the sake of context. The Greek literally says that which fell down from Jupiter/Zeus (diopetes).
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
John Gill commentary
…”of Diopetes”; so the Palladium*, or image of Pallas, was called, because it was supposed to fall down from heaven…
the Syriac version, which reads, “and of her image which fell from heaven”; and so was not made with the hands of men…
The Arabic version, reading these words in connection with the beginning of the next verse, gives a very different sense, “but neither indeed they that fell from heaven contradict the faith of this thing”; as if it was to be understood of the fallen angels…
This image, Pliny says (c), it was doubted of what it was made; some said of the vine tree, others of ebony; but Athenagoras says, the old image of Diana of the Ephesians was made of olive (d). (c) Nat. Hist. l. 16. c. 40. (d) Legatis pro Christianis, p. 17.
Here we see John Gill’s research links this ‘image’ with the fallen angels and is likened to a vine or olive that was made without hands.
In previous studies, it is seen that Diana/Ashterah was likened to the Temple.
This image represents a false temple/false body of Messiah.
Yisrael is likened to both the vine and the olive in the Holy Scriptures.
Contrariwise, the Merovingians who are the ‘bloodline’ that considers itself the ‘guardians of the grail’ have taken upon themselves these same appellations. More on this below.
*Palladium- Palladium was said to be the Greek god of wisdom (false wisdom of the tree of knowledge)
HA HA HA!
so now we see! the Snake [Chthone] in the Grass!
http://littleguyintheeye.wordpress.com/2010/12/18/mark-of-the-beast-10-the-holy-grail/
The Questing Beast, or the Beast Glatisant (Barking Beast), is a monster from Arthurian legend. It is the subject of quests undertaken by famous knights such as King Pellinore, Sir Palamedes, and Sir Percival.
The strange creature has the head and neck of a serpent, the body of a leopard, the haunches of a lion and the feet of a hart.[1] Its name comes from the great noise it emits from its belly, a barking like "thirty couple hounds questing". 'Glatisant' is related to the French word glapissant, 'yelping' or 'barking', especially of small dogs or foxes.
The questing beast is a variant of the mythological giraffe
WHAT ,WE ,ARE,LOOKING ,AT, IN, A, METAPHORICAL, SENSE,IS, THE,
'INSTINCT', OF, SELF-PRESERVATION, OR, WILL TO LIVE.
THE ANIMAL=ANIMA
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