Sunday, April 9, 2017

Bloodline of The Holy Grail (Hunt Connection)

Joseph RAMA-THEO  MY  56th Great Grandfather     
Below are all my ancestors and Grandfathers:
This is the British monarchs’ family tree,  from Yeshu, son of Mary ‘Holy Mother’ (Bloodline of The Holy Grail)…
01. Mary `Holy Mother’
02. Eesho 
 (Isa/Yeshu) Jesus (m. Mary MAGDALENE) 57th GGF
03. Joseph RAMA-THEO   56th GGF

 The following is based on Gardner, The Bloodline of the Holy Grail:

According to Gardner, Joshua and Miriam had three children: Tamar (b. 33), Joshua (37), and Joseph (44). In 53, Joshua Jr. was proclaimed Crown Prince at the synagogue in Corinth and received the Davidic Crown Prince's title 'the Righteous'. He also gained entitlement to the black robe of the Chief Nazarite as worn by the priests of Isis. Meanwhile, Joseph had finished education at a druidic college and settled in Gaul with Miriam.

On the purposeful eradication of Messianic documentation, Africanus describes the royal inheritors as the Desposyni (belonging to the Lord).

Mary Magdaelene died in 63 in St. Baume in southern France. The existence of their son Joseph was concealed in the West, and he was portrayed as a son or nephew of his uncle.

When Joshua the eldest became the David, Joseph became the designated Crown Prince ha Rama Theo. 

The firstborn son of Joshua was Alain. The legacy of the Davidic kingship and Lordship of the Grail was promised to Alain, but Alain became a committed celibate  and had no descendents. Hence the Grail heritage reverted to Joseph's line and was inherited by his son Josue from whom the Fisher Kings of Gaul descended.

04. Josue (Bishop) the GRAIL-KING   55th GGF
05. Aminadab the GRAIL-KING   54th GGF
06. Cathaloys (Catheloys Carcelois) the GRAIL-KING   53rd Great Grandfather
blood1
07. Manael (Manuel Emanuel) the GRAIL-KING   52nd GGF
08. Titurel (Titure) the GRAIL-KING   51st GGF
09. Boaz (Anfortas Enfertez)   50th GGF
10. Frotmund (Frimutel) the GRAIL-KING (FISHER-KING)  49th GGF
11. Faramund (of the Grail Myth)  48th GGF
Pharamond[1] or Faramund (c. 370–427) is a legendary early king of the Franks, first referred to in the anonymous 8th century Carolingian text Liber Historiae Francorum, also known as the Gesta regnum Francorum. In this work, which is customarily dated to 727, the anonymous author begins by writing of a mythical Trojan origin for the Franks. The emphasis of the Liber was upon "construct[ing] a specific past for a particular group of people."[2]
The story is told of the election of the first Frankish king.[3] It says that after the death of Sunno, his brother Marcomer, leader of the Ampsivarii and Chatti, proposed to the Franks that they should have one single king, contrary to their tradition. The Liber adds that Pharamond, named as Marcomer's son, was chosen as this first king (thus beginning the tradition of long-haired kings of the Franks), and then states that when he died, his son Chlodio was raised up as the next king. The work says no more of him.
Because there is no reference in any source prior to this work[4] to this figure named Pharamond, who is placed prior to Chlodio (that is, before ca. 428), scholars consider him a legendary rather than historical figure.[5] As a matter of fact in several sources, for example Gregory of Tours, multiple kings are attested to rule simultaneously in later times.[citation needed] It is thus a dubious matter to assume that, even if Pharamond existed, he was ever recognized as sole king. The first king of the Franks who may have been close to this position was Clovis I, but after his death his empire was divided again amongst his sons, who ruled again simultaneously.
The myth of Pharamond has led to new legends and romances in later times. In past times this has led to attempts to falsely write Pharamond into Prosper Tiro.[6] Martin Bouquet at a much later date invented an entire history of Pharamond.[1]
Historical sources
Gregory of Tours, in his Annales Francici notes in 420 "Pharamond reigns in France" ("Pharamundus regnat in Francia" - Annales Francici, page 151)
Sigebert of Gembloux names him as King of the Franks between Marcomer and Chlodio ("Post Marcomirum filius ejus Faramundus fuit, rex crinitus, a quo Franci crinitos reges habere coeperunt. Post quem Clodius filius ejus regnans Francis a Thoringia advectis Gallias invasit, et capta urbe Tornaco Cameracum usque progressus multos Romanorum in Galliis peremit" [2]). He keeps the mythical origin for Marcomer.
Saint Gregory's writes about a group of Trojans that escaped to the Maeotian marshes, then into Pannonia, becoming the Sicambri (a subdivision of the Franks), who inhabited the region along with the Alans. The Alan presence in Pannonia is historical around 370, as part of their migrations to Gaul, and later to Hispania, where they ruled until the arrival of the Visigoths. He says that later, the Franks migrated to Germania led by Marcomer, and established themselves along the Rhine. After Marcomer's death, Pharemundus, or Faramundus succeeded him as chieftain.
In Gesta Francorum (c.1100), chapter 8 describes how the Franks changed their laws under Pharamond . ([3] page 229)
Pharamond in later culture
A Pharamond appears as the king of France in the Prose Tristan and later Arthurian works.
Pharamond is mentioned in William Shakespeare's Henry V, Act I, Scene 2, as the originator of the Salic law banning women from succession to the throne of France.
He appears as the title character in the opera Faramondo by George Frideric Handel.
A character named Pharamond appears in the Sandman and Lucifer comics series.
Alluded to in Victor Hugo's The Hunchback of Notre-Dame after Jehan Frollo's arrow pierces the left arm of Quasimodo the hunchback. "This no more disturbed Quasimodo than a scratch would have bothered King Pharamond." Cobb translation.

12. Clodius V (King) of WESTPHALIA    47th GGF
13. Merovech (I; King) of (Salic) FRANKS    46th GGF

Merovech (French: Mérovée, Latin: Meroveus or Merovius, reconstructed Frankish: *Mariwig;[1] died 453/457) is the semi-legendary founder of the Merovingian dynasty of the Salian Franks (although either Childeric I, his supposed son, or Clovis I, his supposed grandson, may in fact be the founder), which later became the dominant Frankish tribe. He is said to be one of several barbarian warlords and kings that joined forces with the Roman general Aetius against the Huns under Attila on the Catalaunian fields in Gaul. The first Frankish royal dynasty called themselves Merovingians ("descendants of Meroveus") after him, although no other historical evidence exists that Merovech ever lived.
Name
It has been suggested that Merovech refers to the Dutch river Merwede,[2] once called Merwe or Merowe. Although this river was historically a main subsidiary of the Rhine, in modern times it is a tributary of the Rhine-Meuse-Scheldt delta; the area where, according to Roman historians, the Salian Franks once dwelled.
His name is also close to Marwig, lit. "famed fight" (compare modern Dutch mare "news, rumour"/vermaard "famous" as well as (ge)vecht "fight" with -vech).[3]
Evidence for existence
There is little information about him in the later histories of the Franks. Gregory of Tours only names him once as the father of Childeric I while putting doubt on his descent from Chlodio.[4] Many admit today that this formulation finds its explanation in a legend reported by Fredegar.[5] The Chronicle of Fredegar interpolated on this reference by Gregory by adding Merovech was the son of the queen, Chlodio's wife; but his father was a sea-god, bestea Neptuni.[6] Some researchers have noted that Merovech, the Frankish chieftain, may have been the namesake of a certain god or demigod honored by the Franks prior to their conversion to Christianity.
Clodio, the sometime putative father of Merovech, is said to have been defeated by Flavius Aëtius at Vicus Helena in Artois in 448. Ian S. Wood would therefore place his son somewhere in the second half of the fifth century.[7]
Another theory[8] considers this legend to be the creation of a mythological past needed to back up the fast-rising Frankish rule in Western Europe.
Reference in popular culture
The legend about Merovech's conception was adapted in 1982 by Michael Baigent, Richard Leigh and Henry Lincoln in their book The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail, as the seed of a new idea. They hypothesized that this "descended from a fish" legend was actually referring to the concept that the Merovingian line had married into the bloodline of Jesus Christ, since the symbol for early Christians had also been a fish. This theory, with no other basis than the authors' hypothesis, was further popularized in 2003 via Dan Brown's bestselling novel, The Da Vinci Code.[9][10]

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