|
Last
Modified Date :
14.08.2008

Download ebook now for just
$11.97 to donate my
researches. Click on the button below...
|
RENNES LE CHATEAU
MYSTERY REVEALED
"TERRIBILIS
EST LOCUS ISTE"
("This place is terrible, or frightful or dreadful" in English)
inscription is a Latin phrase and it is placed above the entrance to
the Church St. Madeleine.
It is an anagrammatic
code.
Berenger Sauniere used "TERRIBILIS EST LOCUS ISTE" Latin phrase to
keep his secret.
This phrase is an anagram of a French phrase :
"L'ECRIT
III EST SUR SOLE BS T"
in English :
"The
Scroll III is over The Sole BS T"
"BS T" is in French phrase above is sign of Berenger Sauniere :
"B" is the first character of "Berenger"
"S" is the first character of "Sauniere"
"T" points the cross.

Image
courtesy of Ben Hammot
Berenger Sauniere found the third scroll and kept it at the church
of St. Madeleine.
The Sole points Asmodeus's hand. There is a French phrase over
Asmodeus sculpture :
"PARCE SIGNE TULE VAINCRAS"
"TERRIBILIS EST LOCUS ISTE" Latin Phrase has 4 words and 22 letters.
"PARCE SIGNE TULE VAINCRAS" French Phrase has 4 words and 22
letters.
Asmodeus sculpture is under 4 angel sculptures too.
Please visit the
symbolism of Number 4
"PARCE SIGNE TULE
VAINCRAS" is an anagrammatic code of the third scroll.
Solution of "PARCE SIGNE TULE VAINCRAS" is in Latin:
"CELATA
AGNI SUPER ENRICVS"
in English:
"Lamb's secret over
Enricus"
Lamb is the symbol of Jesus. This solution supports my previous
theory about
the Shugborough Code.
Berenger Sauniere knew where is
the Holy Grail hidden. He learned
this information by third scroll.
Please visit the detailed information :
http://www.gradale.com/inscription.htm


Image
courtesy of Ben Hammot
Notes :
Number 22:
22 letters in the Hebrew alphabet
22 steps leading up to the Magdala Tower
22 crenellations on the Magdala Tower
François Bérenger
Saunière was
born on April 11, 1852 in Montazels, in the Arrondissement of Limoux
of the Aude region.
In 1885, the Catholic church assigned Saunière, thirty-three years
old, handsome, well-educated--if provincial--to the parish at
Rennes-le-Château. [Bérenger] Saunière set about restoring the
town's tiny church, which sat atop a sacred site dating back to the
sixth-century Visigoths.
The village parish church had been dedicated to the Magdalene in
1059; during the restoration, he found the mysterious parchment
(supposedly) in a hollow Visigothic pillar underneath the altar
stone.
The find, which occurred in 1886 or 1887, consisted of either a
single paper or four parchments according to differing accounts of
the event. After reading the document(s), Saunière immediately set
about excavating the aisle, nave and transcript. He then moved his
attention to the graveyard outside and found an encrypted
inscription on a tombstone, reputedly that of Marie de Nègre d'Ablès,
Lady of Blanchfort, who had died on 17 January 1781. After
deciphering the inscription, traveled to Carcassonne and talked to
the deputy of the Bishop who resided there. After his visit Saunière
experienced a remarkable turn-around in his fortunes.
Saunière received vast sums of money [an estimated 200,000 gold
francs] to refurbish the local church and also to build many
structures in the area, such as his Tower of the Magdalene (Tour
Magdala). (Saunière was originally so poor that he relied on the
generosity of parishioners to survive in 1885.) He also built many
structures in the area, such as his Tower of the Magdalene (Tour
Magdala).
Saunière decorated the village parish church in the ornate almost
garish style that was popular in the late ninteenth century.
Over the porch lintel is a bizarre inscription, 'THIS PLACE IS
TERRIBLE'. A statue of the demon Asmodeus 'guards' near the door.
The plaques depicting the Stations of the Cross contain bizarre
inconsistencies. One shows a child swathed in Scottish plaid.
Another has Pontius Pilate wearing a veil. Sts. Joseph and Mary are
each depicted holding a Christ child, as if to allude to the old
legend that Christ had a twin. Other statues are of rather esoteric
saints in unusual postures: St. Roch displays his wounded thigh
(like the Grail King Anfortas), St. Anthony the Hermit holds a
closed book, St. Germaine releases a bevy of roses from her apron,
and the Magdalene is shown holding a vase.
Saunière spent a fortune refurbishing the town and developed
extravagant tastes for rare china, antiques, and other pricey
artifacts. Yet how Saunière acquired this apparent windfall remained
a mystery--he stubbornly refused to explain the secret of his
success to the church authorities.
Saunière died in 1917, leaving the 'secret' of where he got his
fabulous wealth to his housekeeper, Marie Dernaud, who promised to
reveal it on her deathbed - but sadly she had a stroke which left
her paralyzed and unable to speak before her death in 1953.
Speculation was rife on the source of the parish priest's money. Was
it the lost treasure of the Templars or the Cathars in the area?
Might it have been buried Visigothic gold? Was he being paid by the
Hapsburgs or some other government for his services? Did he know the
lost goldmaking secrets of alchemy? Or was he blackmailing the
Church with some terrible secret? The evidence that points to the
last possibility is that Saunière's confession before his death was
so shocking that the priest who heard it denied him absolution and
last rites.
The Secret
Codes
A mysterious set of transcripts and photographs entitled Dossiers
Secrets was deposited in the Bibliotheque Nationale in Paris
(although the little book was never authenticated by the library).
The Dossiers Secrets contained two genealogies dating from 1244 C.E.
and 1644 C.E., a quasi-Masonic charter and a sketch of the
inscription on the tomb of the Countess of Blanchfort. Of even
greater interest were two documents which were purported to be of
the parchments found in the pillar at the church at
Rennes-le-Château
They were apparently written by his predecessor, Abbé Antoine Bigou,
confessor to Marie d'Hautpoul [Lady of Blanchfort], in 1781. (The
same cypher appears on her tombstone.)
According to Henry Lincoln and historians Michael Baigent and
Richard Leigh (The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail) these more recent
papers contained a series of ciphers and codes, some of them
'fantastically complex, defying even a computer' to unlock their
secrets.

Saunière took his
discovery to the bishop in nearby Carcassonne, who dispatched the
priest to Paris, where clerical scholars studied the parchments. One
of the simpler ciphers, when translated, read: TO DAGOBERT II KING
AND TO SION BELONGS THIS TREASURE AND HE IS THERE DEAD. (The person
to whom "HE IS THERE DEAD" was not identified.)
The parchments were, on the face of it, Latin transcriptions of
passages from the Gospels; but they contained deeper mysteries.
The first code was easily broken when letters higher than the rest
of the text were identified by Henry Lincoln and arranged in order.
The code in the second parchment was more complex and yielded an
even stranger message.
The code in the parchment is only decipherable through the use of
the knight's tour - a logic puzzle wherein one 'jumps' a knight to
every square on a chess board, once and only once. It is a puzzle
which has only one solution - as does the code, clearly.
BERGÈRE PAS DE TENTATION QUE POUSSIN
TENIERS GARDENT LA CLEF PAX DCLXXXI
PAR LA CROIX ET CE CHEVAL DE DIEU
J'ACHÈVE CE DAEMON DE GARDIEN À MIDI
POMMES BLEUES
(in English)
SHEPHERDESS NO TEMPTATION THAT POUSSIN
TENIERS HOLD THE KEY PEACE 681
BY THE CROSS AND THIS HORSE OF GOD
I COMPLETE (or I DESTROY) THIS DEMON GUARDIAN AT MIDDAY
BLUE APPLES.
Richard Andrews and Paul Schellenberger, authors of the The Tomb of
God, write that many of the words are keys to landmarks in the
Rennes-le-Château area and claim that they have been able to
identify the location of these landmarks. For example LA CROIX is a
cross by the railway line north of Alet-les-Bains. When a person
visits these sites in the order given on the parchment that person
will have traversed a complete square
Saunière also appears to have left certain other 'clues' in the
highly unusual redesign of his church and of the other structures in
the area.
A third cypher that appears, not in the documents, but at
Shugborough Hall's Shepherd Monument, is the curious
'D.O.U.O.S.V.A.V.V.M' which has been translated by Ferhat Kanarya.
Click to Read
Translation

Top of Page
Return to the Previous Page
|