New and Updated

Recent Comments

Categories

open all | close all

Visitors Online

Newsletter

Subscribe to the newsletter

E-mail:

Subscribe
Unsubscribe

Most read this week

Translator

Colophon

Archive for April, 2009

Gabriel Knight

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

Gabriel Knight, overlooking Rennes-le-ChâteauGabriel Knight is a computer game hero created by Jane Jensen, whose third and last adventure takes place in and around Rennes-le-Château. It is a classic 3D point-and-click adventure. The game was launched in 1999 and looks a little dated now. Still, it is quite a treat to be able to walk around in 3D in the Church of St. Mary Magdalene, the Tour Magdala and the Villa Bethania. Although the village in the game isn’t an exact replica of the real thing, it’s clear the makers did their best to capture some of the feel.

Unfortunately the game is no longer for sale but it can be downloaded here.

Screenshots from the Game

Links

Gabriel Knight 4 Campaign
Gabriel Knight III on Wikipedia

Video Trailer of the Game

Get the Flash Player to see the wordTube Media Player.

,©2007-2009 rlcresearch.com, all rights reserved

Share this post:
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Google Bookmarks
  • email
  • Netvibes

Bruges or New Jerusalem

Thursday, April 16th, 2009

The Holy Blood of Bruges-la-Morte

City of Bruges, Belgium

City of Bruges, Belgium

Perceval visiting the Grail castle (Ferdinand Piloty)The epic poem Perceval, Le Conte du Graal launched the Holy Grail into Western literature. Written by French poet Chrétien de Troyes in the 1180s, the storyline introduces a certain Perceval to us, who is invited to stay in the castle of the Fisher King where he witnesses a mysterious procession. With each course of the meal, young men and women pass before him with magnificent objects: a bleeding lance, candelabras and a beautiful girl with what is described as an elaborately decorated Graal. This object contains a single Mass wafer for the Fisher King to sustain his wounds. As it turns out, the Fisher King is a cousin of Perceval. When the young man wakes up the next morning, he finds himself alone in the woods and the castle disappeared. Later on, he learns that he should have made an inquiry into this Graal as the right question would have healed the Fisher King. He vows to find the Castle of the Grail again one day but it remains unclear from the poem if he ever does.

You mean a Grail….?

Chrétien keeps us in the dark as to what exactly this Grail is. To some it is exactly that which is the appeal of his story: the mystery surrounding the object and the uncertainty of its whereabouts. Some scholars claim the Grail was distilled from Celtic mythology. They recognize a cauldron with the power to restore people or to even raise the dead. They see a Vessel of Plenty, a Magical Platter symbolizing otherworldly powers and sometimes even the power to select Kings.

Most scholars claim that in Perceval the Grail hadn’t yet acquired the holiness it displays in later Grail romances. I don’t agree. Chrétien’s Grail wasn’t a dish or bowl containing a salmon or a mere pike but a single Mass wafer. The mystical fasting of the crippled Fisher King reminds us of the countless saints who were said to have lived on a wafer a day. Chrétien definitely intended the Mass wafer to be a significant part of the ritual. Maybe, being the first modern European novelist, he would have unveiled the true identity and the Secret of the Grail at the end of his story. Unfortunately death overtook him, leaving the poem unfinished.

Grail by Alfred William PollardAround the period the first Grail romances were written, the Church of Rome was beginning to add more mysticism to the Sacrament of the Holy Communion. In that respect, the Grail could have been a purely Christian symbol from the very beginning. Twelfth century wall paintings present images of the Virgin holding a bowl radiating tongues of fire. They might well have been the original inspiration for the Grail legend.

The word “Grail” seems to be an Old French adaptation of the Latin “gradalis”, simply meaning: a dish. later Medieval writers claimed the word to actually being “sangréal” – French for “royal blood” – which became “san graal”, Saint Grail… or Holy Blood. This is called “a false etymology”, but I am not convinced it is that false. French and English authors tend to forget that Chrétien states very clearly that he was working from a source book given to him by Philip of Alsace, son of Thierry…the man who brought a relic holding the Holy Blood from Jerusalem to Bruges.

Enter… the Templars

The Order of the Knights Templar was founded around 1119 by Hugues de Payens, a French noble man from the Champagne. For his order he chose eight knights, the most important of them being Godfrey de Saint-Omer. According to legend, Hugues and Godfrey were so poor that they had only one horse, so the famous image on the Temple seal became that of two men riding a single horse. Godfrey is often portrayed as a French knight because Saint-Omer belongs to modern France. At the time however it was part of Flanders and Godfrey was a vassal to its Count Robert II.

Baldwin II ceeding the Temple of Salomon to Hugues de Payns and Gaudefroy de Saint-Homer (13th Century)The mission of the Templars was to protect the pilgrims who visited the Holy Land, but for nine years little was heard of the them at all. From 1129 onwards however, after the Council of Troyes had officially sanctioned the Order, the Templars gradually became a known and recognized force throughout Europe. The rule of the Poor Fellow-Soldiers of Christ and of the Temple of Solomon (Pauperes commilitones Christi Templique Solomonici in Latin, or shortly: Milites Christi, Soldiers of Christ) was kept in the Abbey of the Dunes in Coxyde, not far from Bruges and Saint-Omer. The rule was written by St. Bernard of Clairvaux. The Templars had to be warrior-monks, soldier-mystics, “a militia of Christ”. The first headquarters of the Temple in Europe, was in Ypres – near Bruges and Saint-Omer again. In fact, the property had been a gift from Godfrey de Saint-Omer to the order.

The history of the Temple was primarily recorded by French and English authors, from their French and English perspectives. They often forget to mention – or don’t know – that the Templars always had a very strong “Flemish Connection”. One of the most (in)famous Grand Masters of the Order was Gerard de Ridefort, who definitely had Flemish roots, even though 19th century writers suggested an Anglo-Norman background. In the Flemish village of Ruddervoorde (“Ridefort”) there still are many legends surrounding the Temple Commandery he once ruled.

Bestseller authors like Lincoln, Baigent & Leigh (Holy Blood, Holy Grail) and Dan Brown (The Da Vinci Code) claim that the Templars discovered “something” in the ruins of the Temple. Hypotheses about that “something” range from the Ark of the Covenant to documents, artefacts or relics proving Jesus survived the Crucifixion or was married to Mary Magdalene. One story claims they found the Holy Grail, which got transported to Scotland in 1307 to be buried beneath Rosslyn Chapel. In actual fact there is not one single piece of documentary evidence for any story in which the “something” is brought from the Holy Land to Europe by the Knights Templar. Any with one exception that is: the Holy Blood of Bruges.

The Relic holding the Holy Blood of Bruges

The Relic holding the Holy Blood of Bruges

From the 1970s Belgian scholars like Paul de Saint Hilaire (La Belgique Mystérieuse, La Flandre Mystérieuse, L’Ardenne Mystérieuse) and Hubert Lampo (De Zwanen van Stonehenge/The Swans of Stonehenge) have been writing articles and books about the one and only Holy Blood (or Holy Grail) of Bruges.

Bruges or the New Jerusalem

Around the same the time that the Order of the Knights Templar was founded, Thierry of Alsace claimed the county of Flanders against William Clito. Thierry was supported by the mighty cities of Bruges, Ghent, Lille and Saint-Omer. He won the battle and in 1128 set up his government in Ghent. In 1139 he married Sybilla of Anjou, daughter of the King of Jerusalem. She was pregnant when Thierry left Flanders for the Second Crusade and got attacked in his absence by Baldwin IV of Hainaut. In an early display of girlpower, the brave Princess launched a counter-attack and pillaged Baldwin’s county by means of reply. In synch with his wife, Thierry participated in the Siege of Damascus, led by his wife’s half-brother Baldwin III, King of Jerusalem. War was truly a family affair in these days.

Thierry d'Alsace arriving in Bruges with the Holy Blood (picture taken during the yearly Holy Blood procession in Bruges)A legend says that on Christmas Day 1148, some Templars found a stone jar in the Holy Grave. Thierry and Sybilla are claimed to have been present which is impossible because we know she was chasing Baldwin of Hainaut at the time, an enormous journey away from Jerusalem. According to the legend, the Templar were convinced the jar contained the Holy Blood of Christ. The Holy Blood was respectfully poured from the jar into an octogonal bottle and the ends were sealed with two golden roses. Now Sybilla of Anjou was a leper who suffered from terrible attacks of fever. After the sealing of the bottle, she held the precious Relic in her hands for just a moment, triggering in her a vision of “a New Jerusalem of the West”: the city of Bruges. In the same moment Sybilla and all lepers surrounding here had been miraculously cured.

Entrance to the Basilica of the Holy Blood, BrugesSybilla made a solemn pledge to turn Bruges into a Holy City. In 1150 Sybilla, her husband Thierry, the abbot of Saint Bertin and the Flemish crusaders arrived in Bruges, where masons had just finished the basilica of Saint-Basilius on the Burg Square. The Holy Blood is kept there to this day and has been called upon for an enormous variety of reasons.

The oldest document concerning this Sanguis Christi or Blood of Christ dates from 1256. The legend is very precise about a much earlier date, namely April 7, 1150. Whether or not the relic really holds the Blood of the Saviour can never be established for fact. What is certain is that the Templars who gave the Relic to the Count of Flanders believed it and wanted it to be.

the Guardian of the Holy Blood, putting the Relic on display for venerationWhen Thierry left for the Holy Land for the third time Sybilla came with him. On her arrival in Jerusalem, she separated from Thierry and joined the Convent of St. Lazarus in Bethany to devote the rest of her life to the Lord. During her time in the monastery, she supported the election of Amalric as Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem. She died some years later in Bethany. Thierry of Alsace died in 1168 and was buried in the abbey of Watten, near Saint-Omer.

Thierry of Alsace and Sybilla of Anjou had a son named Philip who married to Elisabeth of Vermandois. It is this Philip who became the patron of Chrétien de Troyes. The marriage remained childless, and when Philip discovered Elisabeth had an affair, he had her lover beaten to death. In 1177, Philip joined the Second Crusade and ended up being offered the Kingdom of Jerusalem, because he was the closest male relative to King Baldwin IV the leper who was childless like himself. Philip refused claiming he was there only as a pilgrim. Philip of Alsace died in 1191 and was buried in the Abbey of Clairvaux.

Chrétien dedicated Perceval, the Story of the Grail to his patron, because he sowed the seed of the tale in such good soil that its greatness was ensured. There is something of a prediction in this claim, or better: the hint of a plan, a strategy. The poet states that his labours will not be in vain, he is merely fullfilling the count’s wishes. And so, from a book given to him by his patron, he will put into verse “the best story ever told in a Royal Court”. The only known story in Philip’s famliy that qualifies as such in is of course the Story of the Holy Blood brought to Bruges by Philip’s father Thierry. We could only have been sure if Chrétien hadn’t died before he could finish his poem.

The Glastonbury Connection

Saint DunstanSaint Dunstan was once the Abbot of the famous Abbey of Glastonbury in England. As a young lad, while studying under Irish monks who lived in the ruins of the Abbey, Dunstan had had a vision of the Abbey being restored to its original splendour. In 943 he built a small cell adjacent to the old church of St. Mary. It was there that he went to study, do his handicrafts or play the harp. In the scriptorium he worked as a silversmith.

After he had become Abbot of Glastonbury, Dunstan started the reconstruction of the Abbey. He also established the Benedictine monasticism. Then in 995, when King Edwy had climbed the throne of England, he found the young monarch fornicating with a young girl and her mother. Dunstan forced the King to renounce the girl, and then realized he had provoked Edwy. With the King on his heels, he fled to his Abbey. Edwy looted the Abbey but Dunstan somehow managed to escape, fled England and crossed the channel to Flanders. There he was received by Count Arnulf and lodged in the Abbey of Mont Blandin near Ghent. The exile of Dunstan ended in 957, when Edwy himself had to flee for his brother.

Alleged tomb of Arthur in GlastonburyIn his book In Search of England, the English writer Michael Wood suggests that the legends associated with Glastonbury like those of King Arthur and the Holy Grail had their origins with St. Dunstan. His leadership of the monastery, which eventually propelled Glastonbury into first rank among England’s great Abbeys, along with his Benedictine emphasis on learning, planted the seeds of belief in its unique importance as a spiritual centre of the nation. In the following centuries the Abbey got rich and powerful. At the time of Chrétien de Troyes’ death, Glastonbury monks discovered a hollowed-out log in the cemetery containing two skeletons. Behind the covering stone he found a leaden cross with an inscription reading: Here, on the Isle of Avalon, was interred King Arthur. The other skeleton had to be Guinevere, of course.

You could speculate that the book Philip had given to Chrétien to base his epic poem on, was brought to Ghent by St. Dunstan. Glastonbury was on the verge of becoming the center of Arthurian lore and Grail legend, while the one and only real Grail was held in Bruges. The Holy Blood of Christ, or maybe the “something” containing the secret of the bloodline, were brought there by the Templars, perhaps in two steps. The first in 1150 (perhaps as a document) and secondly, a century later, as the Relic holding the Holy Blood. The Grail castle was the ‘Burg’, (Dutch for ‘Castle’), the building that houses the Chapel of the Holy Blood.

In his article Bruges: the Grail City? Philip Coppens argues that Chrétien de Troyes wrote about a royal tradition concerning a precious Relic, carried in a procession, as has been done with the Holy Blood of Bruges for centuries. It is not unlikely that Chrétien’s patron asked the poet to write a romance to emphasize his personal relationship to the Holy Blood or the Holy Grail of Bruges.

Yearly Procession of the Holy Blood, Bruges

Yearly Procession of the Holy Blood, Bruges

Bruges-la-Morte

Church of Jerusalem, BrugesIn his poem Brugge (Bruges) the Flemish priest-poet Guido Gezelle (1830) described the city as a copy of the Holy Land, with its great Gothic churches called Jerusalem, Nazareth and Bethlehem. Being a citizen of Bruges himself, he didn’t forget to mention the Holy Blood that was brought there during the Crusades. The Jerusalem Church in the quiet St. Anna Quarter is arguably the most remarkable of the many churches dominating the Bruges skyline. It was built in the 15th century as a scale model of the Holy Sepulchre by Anselmus Adornes and his wife. It houses a rather morbid fake tomb of Christ. The Jerusalem Church is still there and is privately owned by the descendants of the Adorni family who were merchants from Genoa. In the 15th century, when the Jerusalem Church was built and Jan van Eyck painted his Mystic Lamb, the noble Brotherhood of the Holy Blood was founded. Is this only an alternative name for the famous Grail Brotherhood?

The Holy Blood of Christ indeed seems to have turned medieval Bruges into a Holy City. It also kick started tourism to the city from the 19th century onwards. But maybe this Holy City is not as holy as it seems, just because of this Precious Holy Blood that… well, could be pretty unholy. As I described in my article Visiting Bruges-la-Morte, a medieval ghost city, the Holy Blood of Bruges was the reason why “the Powers of Good & Evil” had to fight eachother more fiercely here than anywhere else in the world. If Bruges was chosen and designed to be a Holy City, then Satan perhaps had to unleash all his forces here to turn Bruges into a truly Unholy City.

Tomb of Georges Rodenbach on Père-Lachaise, ParisThe connection of Joseph of Arimathea with the Grail – being the cup used by Jesus at the Last Supper – dates from the late 12th century. Robert de Boron describes how Joseph receives the Grail from Jesus and brings it to Great Britain. Later writers recount how Joseph used the Grail to catch the Saviour’s blood.

The Grail legends became a potent mix of Christian lore and Celtic mythology, some parts interwoven with the legends of the Holy Chalice. All these themes got even Bruges La Morte, by Georges Rodenbachfurther mixed up during the 19th century when “decadent” writers like Georges Rodenbach and Joris-Karl Huysmans turned Bruges into “Bruges-la-Morte”, a Very Unholy City indeed.

In Bruges-la-Morte or The Dead City of Bruges, Georges Rodenbach tells the story of a widower who, overcome with grief, takes refuge in Bruges. There he becomes obsessed with a dancer in the opera by name of Robert le Diable who bears an exact resemblance to his dead wife. The novel was notable for its poetic evocation of the decaying city and raised some scandal because of the “decadent” and “morbid” atmosphere. The meeting (or mating) of Eros and Thanatos didn’t go down very well at the time either.

The Damned, Down There…

Joris-Karl HuysmansThe decadents only caused a minor storm compared to the scandal raised by a certain Joris-Karl Huysmans. Born in Paris from a Dutch father, Huysmans published a novel Là-Bas (The Damned) in 1891, attracting considerable attention for his depiction of French Satanism. The novel introduced the character of Durtal, a thinly disguised alter ego of the writer, who would return in his later work to trace Huysmans’ conversion to Roman Catholicism. Là-Bas has a particularly vivid scene depicting a Black Mass:
“And thou, thou whom, in my quality of priest, I force, whether thou wilt or no, to descend into this host, to incarnate thyself in this bread, Jesus, Artisan of Hoaxes, Bandit of Homage, Robber of Affection, hear!… (…) Profaner of ample vices, Abstractor of stupid purities, cursed Nazarene, do-nothing King, coward God!”
“Yet the ultimate abomination of the nineteenth century must be that, disguised as fiction and yet widely recognized at the time as fact, reported by Joris-Karl Huysmans in his notorious novel LA-BAS,” says Aubrey Melech in Missa Niger: La Messe Noire (Sint Anubis Books). “Indeed, so close to the abominable truth is this work that the Canon Docre, Huysmans’ Satanic celebrant, can be identified as the Belgian-born priest Louis Van Haecke, who died, if not in the odour of sanctity, at least at the advanced age of 84 in 1912.” This Louis Van Haecke happened to be the Chaplain of the Holy Blood Chapel.

T.J. Hale, the translator of Là-Bas, states in his foreword that Huysmans was close friends with Berthe Courrière, an attractive woman who fed consecrated hosts to stray dogs and busied herself luring inexperienced confessors into sin by inventing all sort of erotic tales. She had a wide network of contacts in occultist and spiritualist circles. About a year after Huysmans first met her, Berthe got herself in serious trouble with the Belgian authorities. She had been found hiding in the bushes, clad only in her underwear. The police of Bruges was skeptical of the story she told them about a narrow escape from a satanic priest named Van Haecke and interned her in a mental asylum. It took the involvement of Remy de Gourmont, another friend of Berthe and Huysmans, to obtain her release.

The Damned, Joris-Karl Huysmans“The question of whether or not the author of The Damned ever attended a Black Mass is one which has been much debated by biographers and scholars. Hale says. “If he did, it was probably in the company of this same Abbé Louis Van Haecke, Chaplain of the Holy Blood at Bruges, who, like Canon Docre in the novel, was reputed to have a cross tattooed on the soles of his feet, so that he may have the pleasure of continually walking upon the symbol of the Saviour. Huysmans certainly cultivated the claim that he had attended such a ceremony (though he was also known to categorically deny it) and that it was there that he had first seen Van Haecke, who was not officiating but standing aside from the rest of the congregation. “I discovered many curious facts concerning this man,” Huysmans declared. “He has paid three visits to Paris, where he moves in Satanist and occultist circles. On his second visit he stayed at the Hôtel Saint-Jean-de-Latran, in the rue des Saints-Pères, an establishment of doubtful repute which is known chiefly for its clientèle of renegade priests.”

Rennes-le-Château… a Déjà Lu

Louis Vanhaecke, 1897Huysmans came to believe that the guardian of the Holy Blood of Bruges was the most evil man in Europe. Van Haecke surely displayed an appetite for “comparative religion” but there exists no solid evidence that he indeed was the real demonic Canon Docre. Perhaps ironically, when Là-Bas was published and the story got around that Canon Docre was in reality the Chaplain of the Holy Blood, the Blood Chapel in Bruges attracted so many visitors that Van Haecke had to be replaced.

The story of Louis Van Haecke reads like a déjà lu in comparison to the life and times of Bérenger Saunière, parish priest of Rennes-le-Château, who, in the same timeframe, allegedly got involved with the trendy occultist and maybe even satanist circles in Paris. The stories feature the same usual suspects like composer Claude Debussy and the Belgian symbolist playwright Maurice Maeterlinck, author of the “Merovingian Play” Pelleas and Melisande.

One question remains in the dark shades of Bruges’ silhouet. How could the keeper of the Holy Blood of Bruges, perhaps even of the Holy Grail, lose faith to the extent that Louis Vanhaecke appears to have done, attending a gathering where the Man whose Blood he guarded was called “Jesus, Artisan of Hoaxes”.

Patrick Bernauw
edited by Corjan de Raaf

Patrick BernauwPatrick Bernauw is living in the Dutch speaking part of Brave Little Belgium. He is a full time writer of historical mysteries and faction thrillers, performer and mystery game producer.

Some Bernauw links:
The Lost Dutchman’s Historical Mysteries
Patrick Bernauw’s Haunted World

,©2007-2009 rlcresearch.com, all rights reserved. Original photos and image Louis Vanhaecke copyright Corjan de Raaf. Bruges panorama by G. Batistini. Image of Bruges-La-Mort copyright Patrick Bernauw. All are reproduced here with kind permission

Share this post:
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Google Bookmarks
  • email
  • Netvibes

Orval, the Valley of Gold

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009
Abbey of Orval, Belgium

Abbey of Orval, Belgium

Abbay of Orval, Monks onlyThe Abbey of Orval, in Belgium’s Ardennes Forest, is truly a place of mystery. The name “Orval” means “Valley of Gold”.

Nostradamus was said to have written a number of his prophecies here. Possibly, there were once no less than two treasures hidden in this wonderful place: the Treasure of the Knights Templar and the War Chest of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette.

In the book, Holy Blood and the Holy Grail (Michael Baigent, Richard Leigh & Henry Lincoln) we are told that in 1070, 29 years before the First Crusade, some monks from Calabria, southern Italy, arrived in the Ardennes Forest that belonged to Geoffrey of Bouillon. The monks were led by and individual named Ursus, who – according to the so-called Priory Documents – was consistently associated with the Merovingian bloodline, or in other words: with the descendants of Jesus Christ.

the well at Orval AbbeyThe monks were welcomed by Count Arnould of Chiny and by Geoffrey’s aunt and foster-mother Mathilde of Tuscany, Duchess of Lorraine. From Mathilde they received the land that is now known as Orval, not far from Stenay, where once King Dagobert II was assassinated. Before these monks settled in Orval, there wasn’t any human habitation, although there were some Merovingian tombs discovered near a well. A well-known legend says that the monastery was born out of gratitude. Mathilde, a widow, had lost her golden wedding ring, which had accidentally fallen into the fountain. She prayed to the Lord and suddenly a trout rose out of the water with the precious ring in its mouth. “Truly,” Mathilde exclaimed, “this place is a Val d’Or, a Valley of Gold!”

You still can visit the well, where she established a monastery.

A Merovingian Play

The Trout and the Ring, logo of the Abbey's Orval BeerInterestingly, the theme of the wedding ring falling into the water also shows up in the play Pelléas and Mélisande (1892) by the Belgian Nobel Prize Winner (1911) Maurice Maeterlinck. His work, characterized by fatalism and mysticism, forms an important part of the Symbolist Movement. The play was first performed in 1893 and several composers made music for it. Claude Debussy’s impressionist opera is perhaps the best known adaptation.

The Dossiers Secrets mention Debussy was Grand Master of the Priory of Sion, the keepers of the Bloodline Secret according to Holy Blood Holy Grail. Perhaps coincidentally, it was under his ‘reign’ that the parish priest of Rennes-le-Château, Bérénger Saunière, found some parchments in his church. According to Gérard de Sède in his book the Accursed Treasure of Rennes-le-Château Saunière discovered and solved the puzzle coded in their texts. The solution allegedly led him to the occultist and even satanist circles of Paris. These secret societies included other renegade priests such as Louis Van Haecke, Chaplain of the Holy Blood Chapel of Bruges, the famous opera singer Emma Calvé, and writers like as Oscar Wilde, André Gide, W.B. Yeats or… Maurice Maeterlinck.

Pelléas and Mélisande was called a fairy tale and “a Merovingian play”. Prince Golaud finds Mélisande by a river in the woods, weeping because she has lost her crown in the water. She does not wish to retrieve it, marries Golaud in a hurry and wins the favour of the old King Arkel, who is very ill. But then she falls in love with Pelléas. They meet at a fountain and Mélisande now loses her wedding ring in the water.

The main theme of the work however is the cycle of creation and destruction. The prologue in which servants can’t wash the dirt from the steps of the castle and which introduces the illness of Arkel, the famine in his kingdom and the foul-smelling waters under his slowly disintegrating castle remind us of the Grail romances, the Fisher King and the Waste Land.

An Abbey in Ruins

Peter the Hermit, leading the first CrusadeOne of the monks who lived in Orval was Peter the Hermit, Geoffrey of Bouillon’s tutor. Peter became famous by tirelessly travelling around France to preach to the masses about the occupation of the Holy Sepulchre and the Holy Land. His journey brought him from Berry (central France) across Champagne and down the Meuse valley to Cologne, leading his enthusiastic followers across Europe to Constantinople in May 1096. By that time Pope Urban II had proclaimed the First Crusade during the Council of Clermont (November 1095).

In 1108 the monks had mysteriously disappeared from Orval. There is no record of their destination, but it may well have been Jerusalem. Peter the Hermit arrived in Jerusalem with his pupil Geoffrey in the spring of 1099. De Orval Abbey, archesBouillon was offered the throne of the Crusader Kingdom by an anonymous conclave, led by a monk from Calabria.

By 1131 Orval became one of the fiefs owned by Bernard of Clairvaux, writer of the rule of the Knights Templar. He entrusted the re-establishment of Orval to the Abbey of Trois-Fontaines in the Champagne region and for five centuries, the Cistercians of Orval led a quiet life. Nevertheless, the abbey prospered.

In 1605 Bernard de Montgaillard, born in southern France, managed to get himself appointed an Abbot by Archduke Albert and his wife Isabelle. He restored the buildings, reformed the constitutions of the community and put the monastery back on its feet economically. Bernard died in 1628. His last wish was kindly granted: he was buried at the foot of the stairs of the dormitory to the church. His brothers would walk all over him, both on their way up or down, so they would be constantly reminded to pray for him.

During the French Revolution the Abbey survived many a serious alert. However on June 23 of the year 1793, revolutionary troops led by General Loison sacked and burned the monastery down to the ground. The community withdrew to its refuge in Luxembourg. For more than a century the charred walls of Orval were at the mercy of the weather and treasure hunters…

You still can visit the impressive ruins of the old abbey today.

Nostradamus and the Bourbon War Chest

Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette with their Children at Versailles

Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette with their Children at Versailles (Gyula Benczur 1789)

The fervour of General Loison and assorted treasure hunters, was caused by rumours of a Royalist War Chest, hidden somewhere on the Orval domain.

In the spring of 1791, the French King Louis XVI had become a prisoner in his own country. His wife, Marie Antoinette, was begging her brother the Austrian Emperor to help them. Unfortunately for her the messages of her couriers were intercepted and the codes broken. The royalist General de Bouillé turned the fortress town of Montmédy, in the northeast of France, into a safe place for the Royals. In case of an emergency, the Royals could cross the border with the Austrian Netherlands to find refuge in the nearby Abbey of Orval.

NostradamusMichel de Nostradame, better known as the prophet Nostradamus is assumed to have foreseen the flight of the French King and his Queen in one of his dark verses. In Quatrain 20 of the Ninth Century (Q20, C9):
The night falls, trough the forest of Reims they come
In two parts to Orval, Herne, the white stone.
Now that the monk is in Varennes, in black and grey,
will the choice of Capet be the cause of storm, fire, blood, axe…

General de Bouillé realized 20 and 9 would make up a perfect code for him and his fellow conspirators and one that could not be broken. King Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette could indeed take the route through the forest of Reims, to Montmédy and Orval. In Varennes, a descendant of Hugh Capet, would bring storm and fire upon these bloody republicans!

The Royal Treasure of the Bourbons, packed in a War Chest was entrusted to Leonard, the royal hairdresser. It was his job to bring the Chest to the Abbey of Orval for safekeeping. What General de Bouillé couldn’t imagine, was that Louis XVI would be arrested in Varennes and that the King of France and his wife Marie Antoinette would lose their heads to the axe of the guillotine. While King and Queen never made it as far as Orval, the royal hairdresser did. Together with Leonard, the Bourbon Royal Treasure was hidden never to resurface again.

Nostradamus and the Knights Templar

Rudy CambierSome years a go Rudy Cambier, a retired Belgian professor published his book Nostradamus and the Lost Templar Legacy. In his book he claimed that the French language used by Nostradamus was in fact 14th century Picard the dialect spoken in a region of Flanders between the Dendre and the Escaut. Reading the Centuries the way they had really been intended, they turned out to have been written by a Cistercian monk by name of Yves de Lessines. He was the Prior of the Cistercian Abbey of Cambron, the place where the Knights Templar deposited certain documents regarding their secrets and their treasure at the time of their suppression. De Lessines, not wanting to take the secret into his grave, penned the story down in dark verses, describing the location of the Templar Treasure. Cambier located the spot described in the quatrains. Groundscans have demonstrated that some barrels appear to be buried in the exact location but since the Belgian authorities deny permission, an excavation hasn’t taken place to this day.

Even though an army of researchers has been looking for them for centuries, to this day no original edition of Nostradamus’ prophecies was ever found. Cambuur concludes Nostradamus simply destroyed the original manuscripts of the Centuries. It was obvious to him why Nostradamus did this: to destroy the evidence of his plagiarism.

In his book The Secret of Nostradamus (1927) occultist P.V. Piobb stated that the prophecies of Nostradamus had actually been written by the Templars. The true nature of the Quatrains was that of instructions, given to future individuals. The Centuries were, in other words, a coded manual.

Cover of Nostradamus Centuries VIII, IX and XThere are certainly a bunch of quatrains speaking of a Temple and a Treasure. In Q1, C5 we hear about a celtic ruin and two people who argue in the Temple – the great one, mounted on a steed, is murdered and buried without making noises. Q7, C9 tells us of a curse, or a booby trap: evil will come to the person who opens the tomb. Q81, C11 speaks of a treasure in the secret place of a Temple and Q9, C6 says that in Sacred Temples scandals will be perpetrated, but they will be seen as honours. In Q13, C10 soldiers are hidden – their arms are making noises – beneath the food of ruminating animals (hay, for example). The animals lead the soldiers to a subterranean place or a city with a name that has “grass”, “herb” or “weed” in it.

On Friday 13 October 1307, immediately after the arrests of the Templars in their Paris headquarters, the agents of the French King discovered that the Templar treasure had vanished and so had almost the entire Templar fleet. A Templar sergeant confessed that the Order was tipped off about the arrests. A small group of knights had managed to sneak the treasure out of Paris in three carts covered with hay. They fled to La Rochelle, a port on the Atlantic coast, destination unknown.

Nostradamus in Orval

Hotel du Grand Monarque, VarennesIt is a known fact Nostradamus spent some time in the castle of Fain, one hour’s walk from Orval. He spent some time in the Abbey. The French writer Patrick Ferté believes Nostradamus was the Solitaire d’Orval, a prophet who predicted the coming of the Great Monarch. Coincidentally or not that is the name of the hotel in Varennes where Louis XVI got arrested.

Both Lincoln, Baigent & Leigh and Gerard de Sède stated that, in Orval, Nostradamus was exposed to secret teachings linked to the Priory of Sion. He is said to have been shown an ancient and arcane book, on which he based all his subsequent work. This book was given to him at the Abbey of Orval to which it was donated by Mathilde, foster-mother of Geoffrey of Bouillon.

There are three Quatrains that could easily be interpreted to be talking about a Treasure in Orval.
Q27, C1 is about a treasure that for many centuries has been gathered and was hidden beneath an oak tree that got struck by lightning. When the treasure is found, a man must die, his eye pierced by a spring. A legend says that Nostradamus often was sitting under an old oak tree, near the botanical garden of the monastery. The tree got struck by lightning but you can take a seat now on the wooden bench under another oak tree and look at the herbs in the garden…

Stones marking the grave of Bernard de Montgaillard, Abbey of OrvalQ66, C8 mentions an “inscription D.M. that is to be found in an ancient cave, revealed by a lamp”.
Q27, C2 tells us about a divine word, struck from the sky, and when you can’t proceed any further, you will see the secret that is locked away with the revelation, as if one will march over it and ahead. Well, under the oak tree, near the herb garden, you are only a few steps away from the inscription D.M., and there, where the Secret is locked away with the revelation, you can walk over and ahead it.
I’m talking about the grave of Bernard De Montgaillard. Some stones are all that is left, but they do mark the place where the Abbot was buried.

Nostradamus in Orval by Patrick Bernauw (in Dutch)Patrick Bernauw is living in the Dutch speaking part of Brave Little Belgium. He is a full time writer of historical mysteries and faction thrillers, performer and mystery game producer.

Check out:
The Lost Dutchman’s Historical Mysteries
Patrick Bernauw’s Haunted World

,©2007-2009 rlcresearch.com, all rights reserved. Orval Panorama by Gr0uch0. Original photos copyright Patrick Bernauw

Share this post:
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Google Bookmarks
  • email
  • Netvibes

Bas Relief

Wednesday, April 1st, 2009

Two Sermons on the MountOn 20th November 1896, Abbé Saunière signed a contract with Giscard, manufacturer of religious statues and plasterwork in Toulouse. As part of this contract the priest ordered the big Bas Relief that you can still see today over the confessional in the church of Rennes-le-Château. Many believe that it is in this particular work of art, that Saunière hid clues to a possible treasure he had found or to whatever his secret was.
Saunière's contract with Giscard
In the contract Saunière specified the materials to be used, that the ensemble had to be very colorful, its size and that the title would be “Venez à moi etc.” (come to me etc.) At the end of the entry, Saunière added: “eleven or twelve figures”.

It has long been unclear where Saunière and Giscard got the inspiration for this bas relief. Some years ago, researcher Marion Boskemper solved the puzzle but never published her discovery until today.

Saunière and Giscard could have been inspired by the book “Life of Christ” by Dean Frederic Farrar from 1875. A 1908 German edition contains a picture by a certain A. Dietrich, depicting a scene that closely resembles the bas relief and even carries the same title.
Image from 'Life of Christ' by A. Dietric, 1908
Compare the two Sermons on the Mount

The various poses of the figures on the Bas Relief leave little doubt that this picture was indeed Saunière’s inspiration. The woman with child on the left, the two lovers kneeling on the right, the boy with the stick, the weeping woman:

Click the picture to check for yourself.


,©2007-2009 rlcresearch.com, all rights reserved, many thanks to Marion Boskemper for sharing her discovery

Share this post:
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Google Bookmarks
  • email
  • Netvibes