Columbus had his own Brotherhood connections. His father was a member of the Brotherhood branch, The Order of the Christ. He himself was involved with a group which followed the beliefs of the poet Dante, who was a member of the Cathar Church and an initiate of the Knights Templar. Columbus was often seen wearing the garb of what was believed to be the Franciscan Order.
Columbus’s son said his father had died in such attire and priests at the ancient Egyptian Brotherhood Temple at El-Amarna wore a similar habit, as did a Brotherhood group called the Fraternités at the time of Columbus. These are only some of his Brotherhood connections.
Columbus’s father-in-law was a member of the Knights of Christ, the undercover name for the Knights Templar. When the Templars were purged across Europe, they survived in Portugal by changing their name to the Knights of Christ. They devoted themselves to maritime activity. The explorer, Vasco de Gama, was a Knight of Christ, as was Prince Henry the Navigator, a Grand Master of the Order. Columbus’s father-in-law was one of Prince Henry’s captains, and inherited maps and charts from him which Columbus used to ‘find’ the Americas.
The red cross on a white background was the Templars symbol. It was outlawed by the Pope at the time of the purge. Columbus’s ships sailed with the red cross on a white background! His historic journey was funded by King Ferdinand of Aragon, Spain and Queen Isabella of Castile, Spain, whose marriage helped to unify Spain.
These were ‘Catholic’ monarchs funding a trip by a man flying the flag of the Knights Templar. More than that, other support came from Leonardo da Vinci and Lorenzo de Medici, both high initiates of Brotherhood secret societies. Given this background to Columbus and Caboto, it is hardly stretching the bounds of credibility to suggest that their ‘discovery’ of different parts of the Americas within four or five years of each other was no coincidence. Many of the early explorers and colonisers were known to be members of Brotherhood societies. They knew what they were looking for because they had the maps and charts of the world passed down over thousands of years by the Brotherhood, perhaps since Atlantis.
Columbus’s son said his father had died in such attire and priests at the ancient Egyptian Brotherhood Temple at El-Amarna wore a similar habit, as did a Brotherhood group called the Fraternités at the time of Columbus. These are only some of his Brotherhood connections.
Columbus’s father-in-law was a member of the Knights of Christ, the undercover name for the Knights Templar. When the Templars were purged across Europe, they survived in Portugal by changing their name to the Knights of Christ. They devoted themselves to maritime activity. The explorer, Vasco de Gama, was a Knight of Christ, as was Prince Henry the Navigator, a Grand Master of the Order. Columbus’s father-in-law was one of Prince Henry’s captains, and inherited maps and charts from him which Columbus used to ‘find’ the Americas.
The red cross on a white background was the Templars symbol. It was outlawed by the Pope at the time of the purge. Columbus’s ships sailed with the red cross on a white background! His historic journey was funded by King Ferdinand of Aragon, Spain and Queen Isabella of Castile, Spain, whose marriage helped to unify Spain.
These were ‘Catholic’ monarchs funding a trip by a man flying the flag of the Knights Templar. More than that, other support came from Leonardo da Vinci and Lorenzo de Medici, both high initiates of Brotherhood secret societies. Given this background to Columbus and Caboto, it is hardly stretching the bounds of credibility to suggest that their ‘discovery’ of different parts of the Americas within four or five years of each other was no coincidence. Many of the early explorers and colonisers were known to be members of Brotherhood societies. They knew what they were looking for because they had the maps and charts of the world passed down over thousands of years by the Brotherhood, perhaps since Atlantis.