02-22-2018, 12:32 PM
The Gnostic, Hypatia (350-415AD), was the mathematician and philosopher who ran the Royal Library of Alexandria (widely known the Great Library) in Roman-controlled Egypt. Connected with the library was Erastosthenes, who accurately measured the size of the Earth, and Aristarchus who revealed the sun-centred nature of the solar system nearly 2,000 years before Copernicus.
What a different world we would live in today if this knowledge stream had been allowed to continue, flourish and expand. Hypatia was born in Athens and was steeped in the ancient Greek knowledge and philosophy of Aristotle, Plato (who wrote about the demise of Atlantis) and Socrates who is credited with the brilliant observation that ‘wisdom is knowing how little we know’.
Hypatia was a Gnostic in the widest sense and the Great Library was a treasure trove of ancient esoteric knowledge that the Roman Church itself was founded upon because it was merely the Church of Babylon relocated to Rome.
What the Church of Rome (Babylon) claims to publically believe is just a cover story to hide its true nature and true intent. The last thing the Control System and its centrally-important Roman Church wanted was for the general population to know any truth about reality –that was only for the inner circle of the Church.
The Great Library was therefore sacked and burned and its contents destroyed. Hypatia was murdered by a mob, an act instigated by Cyril, Patriarch of Alexandria, who was later made a ‘saint’ by the Church. Hypatia was pulled from her chariot and her body hacked into pieces before being set on fire.
This was justified by accusations of witchcraft, godlessness and causing religious turmoil (telling people what the Church did not want them to know). Hacking a woman to pieces and burning the remains is ‘godly’, is it? These people are insane and they still exist in shocking numbers today.
The Great Library of Alexandria was home to some half a million scrolls, texts and documents from the ancient world containing deep esoteric understandings and a version of human history that the Control System is desperate for people not to know!
.... What wasn’t directly destroyed ended up in the vaults of the Vatican where it will still be today. Another example of the Church’s hatred of the Gnostics was the slaughter of the Cathars in southern France. The Cathars flourished in the Languedoc region, as well as in other parts of Europe, between the 11th and 13th centuries until those that controlled the Church said enough was enough.
The far more expanded awareness of the Cathars was threatening the omnipotence of Papal lies and something had to be done.
Enter the Inquisition and the means through which anyone who was even questioning Christian orthodoxy was horrifically killed. Once the Inquisition turned its evil sights on the Cathars the outcome was assured. The end came at the siege in 1244 at Montsegur, a castle in the foothills of the Pyrenees.
It is estimated that up to 200 Cathars were burned alive for refusing to denounce their beliefs. There have been rumours ever since that some escaped with the Cathar ‘treasure’. This is speculated to have been either wealth or, far more likely, knowledge (real wealth).
The common theme through the centuries has been that Gnostics = send the boys in and destroy them and any record of what they knew or believed. The Gnostics knew more than enough for the Church to greatly fear them –and certainly more than mainstream religion or science knows still today.
What a different world we would live in today if this knowledge stream had been allowed to continue, flourish and expand. Hypatia was born in Athens and was steeped in the ancient Greek knowledge and philosophy of Aristotle, Plato (who wrote about the demise of Atlantis) and Socrates who is credited with the brilliant observation that ‘wisdom is knowing how little we know’.
Hypatia was a Gnostic in the widest sense and the Great Library was a treasure trove of ancient esoteric knowledge that the Roman Church itself was founded upon because it was merely the Church of Babylon relocated to Rome.
What the Church of Rome (Babylon) claims to publically believe is just a cover story to hide its true nature and true intent. The last thing the Control System and its centrally-important Roman Church wanted was for the general population to know any truth about reality –that was only for the inner circle of the Church.
The Great Library was therefore sacked and burned and its contents destroyed. Hypatia was murdered by a mob, an act instigated by Cyril, Patriarch of Alexandria, who was later made a ‘saint’ by the Church. Hypatia was pulled from her chariot and her body hacked into pieces before being set on fire.
This was justified by accusations of witchcraft, godlessness and causing religious turmoil (telling people what the Church did not want them to know). Hacking a woman to pieces and burning the remains is ‘godly’, is it? These people are insane and they still exist in shocking numbers today.
The Great Library of Alexandria was home to some half a million scrolls, texts and documents from the ancient world containing deep esoteric understandings and a version of human history that the Control System is desperate for people not to know!
.... What wasn’t directly destroyed ended up in the vaults of the Vatican where it will still be today. Another example of the Church’s hatred of the Gnostics was the slaughter of the Cathars in southern France. The Cathars flourished in the Languedoc region, as well as in other parts of Europe, between the 11th and 13th centuries until those that controlled the Church said enough was enough.
The far more expanded awareness of the Cathars was threatening the omnipotence of Papal lies and something had to be done.
Enter the Inquisition and the means through which anyone who was even questioning Christian orthodoxy was horrifically killed. Once the Inquisition turned its evil sights on the Cathars the outcome was assured. The end came at the siege in 1244 at Montsegur, a castle in the foothills of the Pyrenees.
It is estimated that up to 200 Cathars were burned alive for refusing to denounce their beliefs. There have been rumours ever since that some escaped with the Cathar ‘treasure’. This is speculated to have been either wealth or, far more likely, knowledge (real wealth).
The common theme through the centuries has been that Gnostics = send the boys in and destroy them and any record of what they knew or believed. The Gnostics knew more than enough for the Church to greatly fear them –and certainly more than mainstream religion or science knows still today.