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Mary Magdalene map

Friday, February 1st, 2008

Map drawn by Jacques RivièreFrench researcher Jacques Rivière, who unfortunately passed away in 2006, left us some of the most serious books on the mystery of Rennes-le-Château as well as a great many things to ponder. On of his most intriguing claims was that, if the points of all the summits of the hills in the Aude are joined up, they reproduce the figure of Mary Magdalene as she appears on the bas-relief of Saunière’s altar, her bas relief on the altar of the Eglise Marie Madeleine in Rennes-le-Châteauhead being the ramparts of Carcassonne.

Another leading Rennes researcher, Pierre Jarnac, has repeated this exercise and confirms that this does appear to work.

If this was indeed meant to be a map, then at the intersection of the cross on which the Magdalene’s gaze is fixed lies the villagestained glass window of Mary-Magdalene in Puichéric by André Goudonnet of Puichéric. That’s an amazing coinicidence, since in Puichéric, the church used to have a stained-glass window with exactly the same scene. Rivière believed that the secret is the locations of some very rich mines.

©2007-2008 rlcresearch.com, all rights reserved

Altar

Sunday, November 25th, 2007

altar, rennes-le-châteauOne of the first renovations Saunière undertook was the replacement of the old altar. The altar he installed and that we can still see in the Eglise Madeleine today was produced by Maison Monna of Toulouse and cost 770FF. The altar was paid for by Madame Cavailhé de Coursan. The old altar was transported to the presbytery. It would later serve in his personal chapel at Villa Bethania after his suspension by Mgr. Beauséjour. The old altar was already devoted to Mary Magdalene, as can be seen on an early picture of it in the Abbé’s private chapel in the winter garden.

On his new altar, Saunière had a bas relief sculpted of Mary Magdalene in a stained glass window of Mary-Magdalene in Puichéric by André Goudonnetgrotto with the usual props. Until halfway the 1980s, the church of Puichéric had a stained glass window almost identical to the scene on Saunière’s altar as you can see from the great photo by André Goudonnet of that window in 1982.

There are however a number of diversions on the bas relief from the stained glass window and the other similar known depictions of Mary-Magdalene that were added by Saunière.

Altar in the early 1960s with the inscription still on itOriginally, at the base of the altar, a phrase was inscribed:

JESU MEDELA VULNERUM SPES UNA POENITENTIUM PER MAGDALENAE LACRYMAS PECCATA NOSTRA DILUAS.

It is bad Latin for Jesus, you remedy against our pains and only hope for our repentance, it is thanks to Magdalene’s tears that you wash our sins away. bas relief on the altar of the Eglise Marie Madeleine in Rennes-le-ChâteauThis sentence is pure heresy and must have raised many an eyebrow when it was first put on display. The power to wash away our sins is directly linked to Magdalene’s tears here rather than to the blood of Jesus or his death on the cross. The scene was painted by Saunière himself, with the help of his good friend Abbé Eugène Grassaud. Today, the inscription is no longer there. An exact copy of this sentence however, features at the bottom of what is Detail of the altar and the ruins of the Château de Coustaussaknown as the Grand Parchment.

At the left side of the scene, what appears to be two buildings are painted. People have concluded they are the Tour Magdala and the Chateâu Hautpoul, but that is far from certain. You might as well say that they are the letters J and M for Jesus and Mary or the ruines of the Château de Coustaussa as is claimed by others. If they have been indeed been meant to show the silhouet of the Rennes-le-Château hilltop in the distance, there would be a remarkable similarity with the view from the Grotte du Fournet, dite the La Magdeleine, the grotto in the Vallée des Couleurs that is known in folklore as the burial site of the Magdalene.

the crossed fingers of Mary-Magdalene, Jean Cocteau lying in state, Christ (Carvaggio), Mary-Magdalene (Perugino)Another oddity is the way Mary Magdalene has crossed her fingers in the esoteric symbol of the XXX, indicating that she knows of a great secret (in the masonic meaning of the symbol). There are a couple of other Mary Magdalene statues that have crossed fingers like that. One is in the Provence near St. Maximin La Saint-Baume and the other one close to Rennes-le-Château in the church of Belpech. The strangely crossed fingers are also found in some enigmatic paintings of great artists that are sometimes associated with the enigma. The most bizar story is without a doubt the story of Jean Cocteau’s death. Jean Cocteau, painter, writer, performer and according to Les Dossiers Secrets alleged Grandmaster of the Priory of Sion. He died an unsuspicious death from a heart attack in 1963. Being a national celebrity, he was placed on the bier and an army of photographers was allowed to shoot him one last time. Jean Brunelin, a well-known French photograper with a great interest in the enigma noticed the peculiar way Cocteau’s fingers were crossed and photographed them. Much to his surprise, when he compared his photos with those of his colleagues shot earlier, he discovered that the hands were folded ‘the normal way’. In other word: someone had purposely forced the deceased’ fingers into this unnatural shape, damaging the corpse. What was so important about the position of a dead man’s fingers that someone violated his deathbed?

The information about Jean Cocteau in this paragraph is based on an article that appeared in Les Carnets Secrets Magazine no.5, 2006. More about the Altar and its possible relic is described in this article from 18th January 2008.

©2007-2008 rlcresearch.com, all rights reserved

Stone Visigoth Pillar

Saturday, November 10th, 2007

Visigoth PillarThe pillar was on of two that supported the original altar in the church. The second pillar has disappeared, but it is know that it had no inscriptions (Jean-Luc Robin, Rennes-le-Château - Saunière’s secret). It is said that in this pillar, Saunière found four parchments. The first containing Latin text fragments of Luke VI, 1-5 and Matthew XII, 1-8, Mark II, 23-28, the second containing the story in which Jesus visits Lazarus in Bethania from the Gospel of John and two genealogies of Dagobert II, dating from resp. 1244 and 1644. It is sometimes claimed there was a fifth document: the will of Henri d’Hautpoul dated 1695.

On the 21st of June 1891, 24 children of the village received first communion. Since this was a major event for the small village a ‘Mission’ was organized. A statue of Notre Dame de Lourdes was carried around the whole village by four men in a procession that included most of the villagers and their children. At the end of the procession, the statue was placed on a piedestal, consisting of the decorated pillar that once supported the original altar of the Eglise Madeleine. Oddly enough he placed the pillar upside-down and had it engraved ‘Pénitence, pénitense, Mission 1891′.

The placement of the pillar has led to a much speculation. It was a Visigoth custom to bury their kings below an upside-down cross. It is today believed by some researchers that the pillar marks the outer wall of the crypt of the Eglise Madeleine.

Abbé Saunière used a number of inversions while decorating his domain, church and particularly this pillar as attested by this article on Société Perillos.

©2007-2008 rlcresearch.com, all rights reserved