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**Babylon the Great – The Crown** Let's examine how the City of London became the financial capital of the world, and the connections between the banks in England with Roman Catholicism. To do this we’ll need to understand the Reformation in England, the nature of the Catholic veneration of Mary, the origins of the True Cross, and the relationship between the Great Mother and Sun. Those contemporary authors who have kindled interest in ley lines and sacred geometry have established Glastonbury as the capital of the New Age. This is partly due to their understanding of the geomantic grid, and partly to the fact that King Arthur, that “once and future king,” is supposedly buried at Glastonbury Tor. The legend of King Arthur and the prophecy of his return to rule is a blatant transportation of the Osiris cult in the British Isles. It was invented by monks from Glastonbury as the Avalon of the medieval Arthurian legends. Glastonbury Abbey is supposedly the oldest church in the world, having been founded by Mary’s uncle Joseph of Arimathea who brought the Holy Grail to Britain. Several kings were buried here prior to the Norman conquest, and at the time of the Dissolution of the Monasteries it was the second wealthiest abbey in England next to Westminster. The Dissolution was the result of the Reformation of the Church of England led by Henry VIII and his daughter Elizabeth I. Henry only made one pilgrimage in his whole life, which was with his wife Catherine of Aragon, to Walsingham. Catherine is buried here, and so was Mary, Queen of Scots, before her interment at Westminster. Considering Peterborough’s relative obscurity, there is only one possible explanation for this. Both of these women were devoutly Catholic, and both were icons of Rome at the height of the English Reformation. The cathedral in Peterborough is the nearest one to Walsingham, where Catherine devoted herself to Mary. After failing to produce a male heir, Henry sought a divorce from Catherine and then an annulment. Catherine was deeply religious, a daughter of Ferdinand and Isabella and aunt of the Holy Roman Emperor. The Church had no interest in granting Henry’s request. Henry went ahead with the annulment anyway, alienating England from the entire Catholic world. He was recognized as the supreme governor of the Church of England by an act of Parliament in 1534, and the Dissolution of the Monasteries began in 1536. Church possessions were confiscated by the Crown, and Henry created the Court of Augmentation (a precursor to HM Revenue) to administer them. The annual wealth gained by the Crown from the confiscated land had the value of over £60 million. Many of these lands were sold off, and the great monasteries fell into disrepair. Contrary to popular belief, as in the case of the Federal Reserve and the Internal Revenue Service in America, HM Revenue and Customs is endorsed by, but is not actually a department of the British government. It is a law enforcement agency of the Crown. Its logo is St. Edward’s Crown, which replaced the Tudor Crown in 1953. It carries on the executive orders of the legal district of the City of London known as the Temple (so named because it was the headquarters of the Knights Templar in England). The Society of Jesus was created in 1534 to combat the Protestant heretics, particularly in Britain. The reconquest of Britain was accomplished by the Jesuit William Laud who became Bishop of Bath and Wells (Glastonbury), Bishop of London, and Chancellor at the universities at Oxford and Dublin. Laud’s influence as Archbishop of Canterbury led to the settlement of Puritans seeking religious freedom in America. Despite his beheading for his treason, his liturgy is still used by the Churches of Scotland and England. Despite his influence, the Mary cult was suppressed. Elizabeth styled herself ‘the Virgin’ to replace Mary in the minds of the mob. Pilgrimages to Walsingham finally resumed in 1897 when Slipper Chapel was reconsecrated to Catholic use. Pope Leo XIII sent a statue of Mary from Rome and it was enshrined at King’s Lynn in Norfolk (the parish of Walsingham). Anyone who doesn’t know that Catholics worship Mary hasn’t paid any attention to what’s going on all around them. Any Catholic who denies it is a liar and an antichrist. > Father, you have given us the mother of your Son to be our queen and mother. — Collect, August 22 > Thy birth O Virgin Mother of God, heralded joy to all the world. For from thou hast risen the Sun of justice, Christ our God. — *The Divine Office*: Matins, September 8 These and many other words spoken at masses throughout the year, with their exact equivalents in ancient languages, have very deliberate meanings dating back to Nimrod. As the Roman Catholic Artemis/Circe/Persephone, Mary is associated with the month of May, which is named after and dedicated to her. > The mood of springtime informs the church’s interior; nature’s blossoming, the warm air of May evenings, human gladness in a world that is renewing itself—all these things enter in. Veneration of Mary has its place in this very particular atmosphere, for she, the Virgin, shows us faith under its youthful aspect, as God’s new beginning in a world that has grown old. — Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger (Pope Benedict XVI), *Seek That Which is Above*, pp. 95-96 Mother’s Day is celebrated on the second Sunday of May. The Feast of the Visitation is May 31 (Memorial Day in the United States). The Feast of the Cross (Crouchmas, or Roodmas) is May 3 (Constantine’s mother supposedly discovered the True Cross in Jerusalem on May 3, 355 AD). Catholics are encouraged to recite “May Devotions” to Mary both in May and October. The first apparition of Our Lady of Fatima occurred on May 13, 1917. Every year crowds of up to a million Catholic pilgrims gather in Fatima to pray to Mary on May 13 and October 13. Pope Pius XII issued the *Ausipica Quaedam*, requesting worldwide prayers to the Virgin, as well as the consecration of all Catholics to the Immaculate Heart, on May 1, 1948. His encyclical *Ad Caeli Reginam* officially established Mary as the Queen of Heaven, contrary to the claim of many Catholic apologists. Several popes have made pilgrimages to Fatima. John Paul II credited Our Lady of Fatima for saving his life on the Feast of Our Lady, May 13, 1981. The following year he brought the image of Our Lady of Walsingham to England, effectively rededicating Great Britain to the Catholic worship for the first time since Henry VIII had visited Walsingham Abbey. May Day is now celebrated on the first of the month in Ireland, and the first Monday in the United Kingdom. It is a bank holiday in the UK. When the Bank Holidays Act was passed in 1871 there were only four bank holidays: Easter (Ishtar/Isis) Monday, Whit Monday (first Monday in May), the first Monday in August (a pan-European holiday) and Christmas (winter solstice). Other bank holidays include the last Monday in August and the last Monday in October. Monday is essentially Mary’s day, as Diana is the Roman moon goddess. In 2010, 6 out of 10 bank holidays fell on a Monday. The Act of Union which formally united the kingdoms of England and Scotland was passed on May 1, 1707. The Illuminati recognize May 1, 1776 as the date of the establishment of their order. #May #Mary #virgin #Elizabeth #queen #immaculate #rosary #catholic #Tudor #crown #Jesuit #Monday #pagan #UK #UnitedKingdom #Britain #Diana #abbey #hmrevenue #IRS #Fatima #ourlady #BabylontheGreat #Easter #England #Scotland #Reformation

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