First Philippe removed two Popes until he found one who would take his orders. He sent
one of his heavies to assault and abuse Pope Boniface VIII, who died shortly afterwards.
He then poisoned a second Pope, Benedict XI. This allowed him to install his own choice,
the Archbishop of Bordeax, who became Pope Clement V. He moved the Papacy to
Avignon and produced a split in the Roman Church for 68 years while rival Popes resided
in France and in Rome. Having established his own personal Pope, Philippe turned his
mind to the Knights Templar. He coveted their wealth, hated their power and was a puppet
of the Priory of Sion. The Templars lost much of their influence with the Church after
1291 when the Saracens defeated the Christian Crusaders and ejected them from the Holy
Land. Philippe, in league with his puppet Pope, set out to destroy the Templars. In 1306
he had arrested every Jew in France, banished them from the country and taken all their
property. He then planned a similar operation and secretly arranged for all Templars in
France to be arrested at dawn on Friday, October 13th 1307. Friday the 13th has been
deemed unlucky ever since. Many Templars were seized, including their Grand Master,
Jacques de Molay, and subjected to the unimaginable torture of the Inquisition. But there
is clear evidence that many Templars knew of the plan and escaped.
Documents detailing their rules and rituals were removed or destroyed before the
raids and when the vaults were opened at the Templar headquarters in Paris, the vast
fortune Philippe so coveted was gone. He and his Pope pressured other monarchs to
arrest the Templars, but this wasn’t easy. In the German, later French, region of
Lorraine, the duke supported the Templars and in other parts of Germany the Templars
went unprosecuted. Others changed their name from Knights Templar and continued as
154
before in another guise. Some joined the Order of St John of Jerusalem (Malta) or the
Teutonic Order. The aristocratic bloodlines of Lorraine are some of the ‘purest’ reptilian
crossbreeds and one of them is today one of the biggest players in the global Satanic
ritual network. While officially these three orders were not connected and did not like
each other, they were, at their upper levels, the same organisation.
Edward II, the English king, did his best for years to ignore the papal order to arrest
the Templars and, when pressed further, he was as lenient with them as possible.
Scotland and Ireland did the same. Eventually, however, the Inquisitors arrived and the
Templars either left England or Ireland or met their fate. Scotland was a very different
story. The Templar fleet escaped from France at the time of the purge, particularly from
their main port at La Rochelle, and took their wealth with them. There is, however,
another possibility that Philippe the Fair was duped by the Priory of Sion who had
arranged for the English fleet to intercept the fleeing Templar ships and steal the gold
that way. That’s possible. The Templars headed for Scotland, Portugal, and most likely,
the Americas as they knew that continent existed because they had access to the
underground knowledge of the Aryan Elite and they were well aware that the
Phoenicians had been to the Americas thousands of years before.
The choice of Scotland was obvious for many reasons. The St Clair-Sinclairs were
there and so were the other ancient Brotherhood bloodlines which arrived with the
original Phoenicians or came from Belgium and northern France to settle there much
later. The head of one of these families, Robert the Bruce, was at war with another
branch of the Aryans, the English, for control of Scotland and he was excommunicated
by the Pope. This meant that the papal order to destroy the Templars was not applicable
in the areas controlled by Bruce. It was to here that many Templars headed after the
purge in France. They sailed around the west coast of Ireland to land on the north west
coast of Scotland between Islay, Jura and the Mull of Kintyre. Along this coast many
Templar graves and relics have been found at places like Kilmory and Kilmartin. The
Templars also settled in the region called Dalnada, now Argyll, and they were soon to
play a crucial part in the most famous battle in Scottish history.
one of his heavies to assault and abuse Pope Boniface VIII, who died shortly afterwards.
He then poisoned a second Pope, Benedict XI. This allowed him to install his own choice,
the Archbishop of Bordeax, who became Pope Clement V. He moved the Papacy to
Avignon and produced a split in the Roman Church for 68 years while rival Popes resided
in France and in Rome. Having established his own personal Pope, Philippe turned his
mind to the Knights Templar. He coveted their wealth, hated their power and was a puppet
of the Priory of Sion. The Templars lost much of their influence with the Church after
1291 when the Saracens defeated the Christian Crusaders and ejected them from the Holy
Land. Philippe, in league with his puppet Pope, set out to destroy the Templars. In 1306
he had arrested every Jew in France, banished them from the country and taken all their
property. He then planned a similar operation and secretly arranged for all Templars in
France to be arrested at dawn on Friday, October 13th 1307. Friday the 13th has been
deemed unlucky ever since. Many Templars were seized, including their Grand Master,
Jacques de Molay, and subjected to the unimaginable torture of the Inquisition. But there
is clear evidence that many Templars knew of the plan and escaped.
Documents detailing their rules and rituals were removed or destroyed before the
raids and when the vaults were opened at the Templar headquarters in Paris, the vast
fortune Philippe so coveted was gone. He and his Pope pressured other monarchs to
arrest the Templars, but this wasn’t easy. In the German, later French, region of
Lorraine, the duke supported the Templars and in other parts of Germany the Templars
went unprosecuted. Others changed their name from Knights Templar and continued as
154
before in another guise. Some joined the Order of St John of Jerusalem (Malta) or the
Teutonic Order. The aristocratic bloodlines of Lorraine are some of the ‘purest’ reptilian
crossbreeds and one of them is today one of the biggest players in the global Satanic
ritual network. While officially these three orders were not connected and did not like
each other, they were, at their upper levels, the same organisation.
Edward II, the English king, did his best for years to ignore the papal order to arrest
the Templars and, when pressed further, he was as lenient with them as possible.
Scotland and Ireland did the same. Eventually, however, the Inquisitors arrived and the
Templars either left England or Ireland or met their fate. Scotland was a very different
story. The Templar fleet escaped from France at the time of the purge, particularly from
their main port at La Rochelle, and took their wealth with them. There is, however,
another possibility that Philippe the Fair was duped by the Priory of Sion who had
arranged for the English fleet to intercept the fleeing Templar ships and steal the gold
that way. That’s possible. The Templars headed for Scotland, Portugal, and most likely,
the Americas as they knew that continent existed because they had access to the
underground knowledge of the Aryan Elite and they were well aware that the
Phoenicians had been to the Americas thousands of years before.
The choice of Scotland was obvious for many reasons. The St Clair-Sinclairs were
there and so were the other ancient Brotherhood bloodlines which arrived with the
original Phoenicians or came from Belgium and northern France to settle there much
later. The head of one of these families, Robert the Bruce, was at war with another
branch of the Aryans, the English, for control of Scotland and he was excommunicated
by the Pope. This meant that the papal order to destroy the Templars was not applicable
in the areas controlled by Bruce. It was to here that many Templars headed after the
purge in France. They sailed around the west coast of Ireland to land on the north west
coast of Scotland between Islay, Jura and the Mull of Kintyre. Along this coast many
Templar graves and relics have been found at places like Kilmory and Kilmartin. The
Templars also settled in the region called Dalnada, now Argyll, and they were soon to
play a crucial part in the most famous battle in Scottish history.
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