02-07-2023, 09:10 PM
(This post was last modified: 02-07-2023, 09:13 PM by Firestarter.)
(12-09-2019, 03:28 PM)Firestarter Wrote: The leading aristocratic families of Europe all descend from the grandchildren of Charles “Carolus” Martel – Ida Redburga and Guillaume de Gellone (a.k.a. William of Orange) – founder of the Carolingian “bloodline” in the 8th century.How did the Carolingians depose the Merovingians as kings of the Franks?
Anybody that writes or talks about the elite “reptilian” bloodlines and doesn’t mention the Carolingians is either intentionally lying or doesn’t know what he’s talking about.
They made a deal with the papacy, which gave the pope the power to then annoint King Pepin the short (a.k.a. Pippin) in 754.
The papacy, at the time was nominally subject to the Byzantine emperor in Constantinople, but was plagued by attacks from the Germanic Lombard tribe. A tribe friendly with the Carolingians...
Pope Stephen II (or III) turned for protection to Pepin the short, who held the position of Mayor of the Palace (for the Frankish Merovingian king).
On 28 July 754, Pope Stephen annointed Pepin and his 2 sons Charles and Carloman (giving them the title Patricius Romanorum) and depose the Merovingian kings.
In return Pope Stephen got the Donation of Constantine (Donatio Constantini) in which the 4th-century Roman emperor Constantine supposedly transferred authority over Rome and the Western part of the Roman Empire to Pope Sylvester I (if so, why would he give the Frankish Empire to a King?).
See a painting of Constantine donating to Sylvester...
In 756, King Pepin quickly defeated the Lombards and then gave the land, through the Donation of Pepin, to the papacy.
The Donation of Pepin was confirmed by Pepin’s successors, King Charlemagne and Louis the Pious in 778 and 817 respectively.
See a painting of Charlemagne (note the eagle and lion).
The Donation of Pepin was often used by the papacy in the 13th century.
It took until 1440 that Lorenzo Vallo proved that the Donation of Constantine was written several centuries after Constantine had been emperor.
There couldn’t have been a King Pepin, let alone a Donation of Pepin, without it. But they didn’t “change” the history that was all based on this forgery...
From 756 to 1929, ended by Mussolini, the Catholic Church had an empire and the Carolingian dynasty, united in the Order of the Garter, is still the most powerful in the world: http://web.archive.org/web/2019021215370...g/6/4/2018
Roman Emperor Constantine - Mithras, Sun worshipper - is effectively the founder of Christianity.
That he never converted to Christianity is ever more likely as the story in the 8th century was that he converted after he was cured from leprosy (see the Donation of Constantine!), but it’s now admitted he never suffered from leprosy and claimed that he converted on the eve of a battle...
Here’s an English translation of the Donation of Constantine: https://sourcebooks.fordham.edu/source/donatconst.asp
The Order of the Garter rules the world: https://www.lawfulpath.com/forum/viewtop...5549#p5549