The Spear of Longinus

10-01-2022

The main promoter of Julius Caesar’s assassination was married to Brutus, but I suspect that he was less interested in restoring power in the Senate (and to some extent in the people of Italy) than in his own power. The movie Spartacus does see it the way I see it. His character was played by Sir Laurence Olivier. Cassius, who is later called Longinus, is killed by his own hand after a defeat in Alexander’s homeland in a city named after his father or another member of Alexander’s family.

“The Spear of Destiny, also known as the Spear of Longinus and Heilige Lance – Holy Lance – is one of the most important Christian relics of the Passion of Jesus Christ. As first described in John 19: 31-37, the Spear was used by a Roman soldier (Gaius Cassius, later called Longinus) to pierce the side of Christ while hanging on the cross. The spear, bathed in the blood of the Lamb and which plays an important role in the fulfillment of Old Testament prophecy , en It is believed that he acquired tremendous mystical power.The first sign of that power was the supposed healing of Gaius Cassius’s defective eyesight by the blood from the wound.

The centurion later became one of the first to convert to Christianity. Subsequently, the spear passed through a multitude of hands and reached the hands of many of the most important political and military leaders in Europe, including Constantine I, Alaric (the Visigothic king who sacked Rome in 410), the Frankish general Carlos Martel, Charlemagne, Federico de Barbarroja and Federico II. A leader who possessed the Spear was said to be invincible; Charlemagne and Frederick of Barbarossa remained undefeated in battle until they dropped the spear from their hands. The legend arose that whoever claimed the Lance ‘has the fate of the world in his hands for better or for worse’.

As a young man, Adolf Hitler was fascinated by the Spear of Destiny, which he first saw displayed in the Hofsburg museum in Vienna, Austria, in 1909. Hitler was familiar with the legend of the holy Spear. His interest in the relic was further amplified by his role in the 1882 opera Parsifal, by Hitler’s favorite composer Richard Wagner, which was about a group of ninth-century knights and their search for the Holy Grail. Hitler’s fascination with the Spear was instrumental in awakening his interest in the occult, which gave rise to his ideas about the origins and purpose of the Germanic race and contributed to his belief in the fate of Hitler itself. him as conqueror of the world.

{This is the spearhead of the Sacred Spear of Habsburg and they spend millions trying to authenticate these things, but they always end up discovering that they are not as the myths tell us. History will have to answer forensics soon, I hope.}

On October 12, 1938, shortly after the German annexation of Austria, Hitler ordered the SS to confiscate the spear and other artifacts from Vienna. They were taken by train to Nuremberg, where they were stored in St. Katherine’s Church. The Lance remained at St. Katherine’s until 1944, when it was moved to a specially constructed vault beneath the church, built in secret and at great cost, with the intention of protecting it and the other stolen relics from the Allied bombs. Nuremberg was captured by Allied troops in April of the following year. The vault was later discovered by US Army officers. The Lance was confiscated by US forces on the afternoon of April 30, 1945, less than two hours before Hitler’s suicide in his underground bunker in Berlin. Like the previous owners of the Spear, Hitler died after the relic was taken from him.

Like most holy relics, the history of the Spear of Destiny is complex and difficult to authenticate. The first reports of the Lance date from around AD 570. C., when it was said that it was on display in the basilica of Mount Zion in Jerusalem next to the Crown of Thorns. Apparently the tip of the spear blade broke after the Persian conquest of Jerusalem in AD 615. The tip, embedded in an icon, reached the church of Santa Sofia in Constantinople and then to France, where it remained in the Sainte Chapelle. until the 18th century. It briefly moved to the Bibliotheque Nationale in Paris during the French Revolution, but subsequently disappeared. Meanwhile, the rest of the spearhead was moved from Jerusalem to Constantinople sometime in the 8th century. It was taken by the Turks in the 14th century and sent by Sultan Bajazet as a gift to Pope Innocent VIII in 1492. Innocent ordered to place the relic in Saint Peter’s in Rome, where it remains today, although the Catholic Church does not make big claims as to his authenticity.

There are several other relics that compete in different locations. One of those “Holy Spears” was supposedly unearthed by the crusader Pedro Bartholomew in Antioch in 1098. That spear is now found at Etschmiadzin in Armenia; scholars believe that it is not actually a Roman spear but the head of a banner, although it may have an interesting story of its own, separate from the legend of the Spear. Another claimant has rested in Krakow for some eight hundred years.

Hitler’s spear was the fourth spear, called the Saint Maurice Spear and the Sacred Spear of Habsburg, which is part of the Reichkleinodien (Imperial Insignia) of the House of Habsburg. This spearhead is tied with gold, copper and silver threads to a nail, supposedly one of the nails of the Crucifixion. The earliest verifiable account of this spear was its use in a coronation ceremony in 1273. It rested in Nuremberg during the Middle Ages, but in the early 20th century it was displayed in the Treasury House of the Hofsburg museum in Vienna, where Hitler saw it. in 1909.

This spear has no greater claim to authenticity than any of the others, although Hitler, who conducted his own less than rigorous investigation into its history, was firmly convinced that it was the genuine item, leading to its confiscation by of the SS in 1938. In 1946 the Lance and the rest of the Imperial Regalia were returned to Austria. Today they are once again on public display in the Hofsburg museum. “(2)

The people mentioned as possessing the spear are all Merovingians (Family of Jesus) and had built a ritual energy construct around the spear, regardless of whether it was authentic or not. I can’t expect academics to understand that and I’m not going to address it in this book. I will have to make a book called The conspiracy of Jesus. I have explained these things in other books regarding the ritual acts of these Merovingians.

I wonder why this Spear is called the Spear of Longinus in so many places. Maybe I missed something, but if Joseph of Arimathea is the Roman minister of mines (slavery), as well as a member of the Sanhedrin who was bought by Rome like Herod was, what is going on? When you know that Paul / Saul is a Roman from Tarsis and that he was stoning Saint Stephen and that he worked for the Sanhedrin priests of the Sadducee Temple, you start to see that things fit together. Joseph carries the body of Jesus to his family’s crypt where Jesus had raised Lazarus from the dead (or from an almost drug-induced coma as Jesus had been given when he was on the cross to appear dead). Joseph had to be related to Jesus. or Pilate (perhaps from Scotland according to current archaeological excavations there) could not have delivered the body to him despite the fact that Pilate would be from the area. José’s tin mines had been instrumental in a huge money-making machine for his Benjamite family. It is Roman law that the body can only go to the family and that would include Mary Magdalene / Bethany’s father (the same person – he owned houses in both cities plus in Egypt where Mary and Jesus had studied growing up).

Do you think Gaius Cassius was stupid when he refused to do what other senators wanted while fighting to defend Rome? Do you think he was involved in the supposed death of Jesus or what really happened there? There are many points worth connecting here. I think there were powerful people who wanted to build the kind of empire that Rome soon became. His purpose or plan was an Empire with fewer and fewer actual participants in decision-making. It continues long after the so-called fall of Rome. Cassius knew that the Senate was a paper tiger or a mere facade.

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