Seems there’s a ‘perfect storm’ developing in the tiny village of Pech de Thauze in France, known as Bugarach. In an attempt to counter the storm the mayor has threatened to call in the military in December of 2012 due to the increasing number of UFO enthusiasts, end of the world in 2012 believers and various mystics and their followers have begun to descend upon on the tiny village in the past few years. Equally intriguing, the ties to the famed French science fiction writer Jules Verne and the nearby village of Rennes-Le-Chateau. The more than rumors Jules Verne may have encryptd ‘important Masonic and Rosicrucian secrets and sacred symbolism’ in his books to solve the ‘ages’ old mysteries surrounding Bugarach Mountain and the village of Rennes-le-Chateau.
UFO Enthusiasts Swarm Small French Village: Mysteries of Bugarach Mountain and Jules Verne
French science fiction author Jules Verne: Less than six degrees to secret societies and UFO's?
Seems there’s a ‘perfect storm’ developing in the tiny village of Pech de Thauze in France, known as Bugarach. In an attempt to counter the storm the mayor has threatened to call in the military in December of 2012 due to the increasing number of UFO enthusiasts, end of the world in 2012 believers and various mystics and their followers have begun to descend upon on the tiny village in the past few years. Equally intriguing, the ties to the famed French science fiction writer Jules Verne and the nearby village of Rennes-Le-Chateau. The more than rumors Jules Verne may have encryptd ‘important Masonic and Rosicrucian secrets and sacred symbolism’ in his books to solve the ‘ages’ old mysteries surrounding Bugarach Mountain and the village of Rennes-le-Chateau.
Verne’s ‘Clovis Dardentor’ was published in 1896, twenty seven years after Verne’s classic, ‘Journey to the Center of The Earth’.
An exploration of how Jules Verne used his writings to encrypt important Masonic and Rosicrucian secrets and sacred symbolism – Investigates Verne’s connections to the prominent secret societies of his time: Freemasons, Golden Dawn, Angelic Society, and Rosicrucians – Reveals how certain of Verne’s works hold the key to deciphering the Rennes-le-Chateau mystery – Explores Verne’s relations with other authors whose works reveal similar esoteric influence: George Sand, Gaston Leroux, Bram Stoker, and Maurice Leblanc Prolific author and pioneer of the science fiction novel, Jules Verne also possessed a hidden side that was encrypted into all his works–his active participation in the occult milieu of late-nineteenth-century France. Among the many esoteric secrets to be found are significant clues to the Rennes-le-Chateau mystery, including the location of a great treasure in the former Cathar region of France and the survival of the heirs to the Merovingian dynasty. Verne’s books also reveal Rosicrucian secrets of immortality, and some are constructed, like Mozart’s The Magic Flute, in accordance with Masonic initiation. The passe-partout to Verne’s work (the skeleton key that is also the name of Phileas Fogg’s servant in Around the World in Eighty Days) lies in the initiatory language he employed to inscribe a second or even third layer of meaning beneath the main narrative, which is revealed in his skilled use of word play, homonyms, anagrams, and numerical combinations. The surface story itself is often a guide that tells the reader outright what he or she should be looking for. Far from innocuous stories for children, Verne’s work reveals itself to be rich with teachings on symbolism, esoteric traditions, sacred geography, and the secret history of humanity.
Over at the Daily Mail, the report the mayor of the tiny French village Bugarash is threatening to call in the army in December of 2012 after ‘UFO enthusiasts’ have begun to ‘swarm’ the village.
The mayor of a tiny French village has called for the army to seal it off from a swathe of UFO hunters and rapture believers who believe it is one of the few places on Earth that will survive Armageddon.
Picturesque Bugarach is located in the Aude region of southwest France and is home to just 189 people.
But in the last few months it has been inundated by ET enthusiasts who believe the Pic de Bugarach, a 4,000ft mountain at whose base the village sits, is an ‘alien garage’. According to some, aliens have been biding their time beneath the mountain waiting for end of the world, when they will leave taking some lucky humans with them.
The end date of the ancient Mayan calendar, December 21, 2012, is taken by many to refer to the date of Armageddon when human civilisation will cease to exist. People who have flocked to the French village believe Bugarach is one of several ‘sacred mountains’ which will be spared from destruction.
According to the Mayor, UFO enthusiasts began to show up in Bugarash ten years after a man reported seeing a UFO and the sound of humming coming from the mountain. Websites in the US have been selling tickets for trips to the village. The appearance of mystical workshops and prayer meditation.
Over at the website Phantoms and Monsters, a report of a UFO encounter at Bugarach in 2009. The report of a couple who encountered an ‘alien’ who informed them there would be a devastating earthquake in Chile.
Over at the website Societe Perillos, more details about Burgash Mountain dubbed the ‘Magic Mountain’ and the report of mysterious underground caverns.
The entire region is limestone, and hence there are numerous caves. Bugarach has its fair share of underground caverns, some of which are unknown to the general public, some of which are known to certain “initiates” and some which have perhaps never been discovered. It is an area with large underground salt deposits, specifically in the neighbouring Rennes-les-Bains, whereas Rennes-le-Château is often said to have a large underground water tank, which might go as deep as several hundreds of metres. The underground network is complex, largely unexplored, and runs for miles. It is known that an underground river near Bugarach is connected as far west as Salses… no doubt before entering into the Mediterranean basin. The river does not appear on any maps, but underneath the surface, it runs its course.
And,
Verne drew the reader’s attention towards Bugarach, using many of the toponyms in the area in his novels. There is the reference to a “Clovis Dardentor”, which has been explained as being of interest to the mystery of Rennes-le-Château. In this novel, the hero seeks a fabulous treasure which he can find only by using geographical data and a select few documents. Alas, the deposit is impossible to locate – very much like Saunière’s.
Rennes-le-Chateau, a village located near Bugarach. Included in the article about Magic Mountain, the legend of Daniel Bettex, a Swiss man who, in 1960, allegedly died during an exploration of Bugarach Mountain. Bettex’s belief, Bugarach Mountain contained one of the secret entrances to a ‘mythical underground world’.
The death of the Daniel Bettex, in, on or under Bugarach, has become a local legend. Outside of France, it is known of, but details of the events are often scant or missing from the accounts. As such, it is largely unreported. Bettex was one of those who, since 1960, were attracted to the mountain and carried out curious investigations. Various prospections of the area were carried out, often discreetly. Often, these expeditions led to rumours, sometimes to entire fabrications. In some cases, a written report was produced, but that did not mean there was no room for amazement or further questions. Some left behind sufficient evidence that opened up even more questions, though in all these cases, a clear revelation was never on the cards.
Rumors Bettex may have been discovered the Lost Ark of the Covenant:
A rumour circulates all the quicker if it is known as a secret. Thus, one statement went that Mr. Bettex was searching for the Ark of the Covenant, that he had located it, as evidenced by his photographs: it was under Bugarach! It was also stated that Bettex was a member of the Rosicrucian order. This assertion is not easily verifiable, but it seems that he was indeed a member of a secret organisation – which was more discrete than the Rosicrucian movement. But the question remains whether his membership had any bearing at all on his research that he carried out in Bugarach… How he came to research Bugarach is known: Roché pointed it out to him…
Another rumour stated that General Moshe Dayan had become personally interested in Bettex’s research. With such notorious Israel officials now apparently interested in him, Bettex’s public profile went up with several points… and the rumour of the Ark of the Covenant became more and better known. It is even stated that the General had contacted Bettex personally, warning him, advising him, to stop everything if he discovered the artefact, and especially not to touch anything… Bettex must surely have been familiar with his Bible, which clearly spells out the dangers of touching the Ark… it did not require the general to point this out.
Back to Rennes-le-Chateau, a village whose history is as ‘strange’ as Bugarach with claims of ties to the Knights of Templar, Freemasons, and a mysterious secret society called Prieure du Notre Dame du Sion, or Priory of Zion, and the equally mysterious priest, Berenger Sauniere.
From Mysteries of Rennes-le-Chateau and the Prieure du Sion:
Here are the basic outlines of the mystery of Rennes-le-Château. It was clear that Berenger Sauniere, the parish priest of the small village during the late 19th and early 20th century, had been receiving vast sums of money to refurbish the local church and also to build many structures in the area, such as his Tower of the Magdalene (Tour Magdala). Sauniere died in 1917, leaving the secret of where he got his fabulous wealth to his housekeeper, Marie Dernaud, who promised to reveal it on her deathbed — but sadly she had a stroke which left her paralyzed and unable to speak before her death in 1953. Speculation was rife on the source of the parish priest’s money. Was it the lost treasure of the Templars or the Cathars in the area? Might it have been buried Visigothic gold? Or was he blackmailing the Church with some terrible secret? The evidence that points to the last possibility is that Sauniere’s confession before his death was so shocking that the priest who heard it denied him absolution and last rites.
The mystery is rendered greater by a series of parchments found by the cleric in 1891, which contained an easily discovered cipher. They were apparently written by his predecessor, Abbe Antoine Bigou, confessor to Marie d’Hautpoul, in 1781. (The same cipher appears on her tombstone.) The parchments were, on the face of it, Latin transcriptions of passages from the Gospels, but they contained deeper mysteries. Sauniere also appears to have left certain other “clues” in the highly unusual redesign of his church and of the other structures in the area. Hidden within those Latin parchments was a message in French:
“THIS TREASURE BELONGS TO DAGOBERT II KING AND TO SION AND HE IS THERE DEAD.”
Within the second parchment was an even stranger message:
SHEPHERDESS NO TEMPTATION THAT POUSSIN TENIERS HOLD THE KEY PEACE 681 BY THE CROSS AND THIS HORSE OF GOD I COMPLETE THIS DAEMON GUARDIAN AT MIDDAY BLUE APPLES.
A third cipher that appears, not in the documents, but at Shugborough Hall’s Shepherd Monument, is the curious “D.O.U.O.S.V.A.V.V.M” which has never been translated.
And,
Read more at deathby1000papercuts.com
The Prieure du Notre Dame du Sion, or Priory of Zion, is said to be the cabal behind many of the events that occurred at Rennes-le-Château. According to the Prieure’s own documents, its history is long and convoluted. Its earliest roots are in some sort of Hermetic or Gnostic society led by a man named Ormus. This individual is said to have reconciled paganism and Christianity. The story of Sion only comes into focus in the Middle Ages. In 1070, a group of monks from Calabria, Italy, led by one Prince Ursus, founded the Abbey of Orval in France near Stenay, in the Ardennes. These monks are said to have formed the basis for the Order de Sion, into which they were “folded” in 1099 by Godfroi de Bouillion. For about one hundred years, the Order of the Temple (Knights Templar) and Sion were apparently unified under one leadership, though they are said to have separated at the “cutting of the elm” at Gisors in 1188. (The Templar order was then destroyed by King Phillipe Le Bel of France, in 1307.) Sion appears to have been at the nexus of two French antimonarchical movements, the Compagnie du St.-Sacrament of the 17th century (acting on behalf on the Guise-Lorraine families) and the Fronde of the 18th, as well as behind an attempt to make the Hapsburgs emperors of all Europe in the 19th — the Hieron du Val d’Or. It appears that there are vast connections between Sion and numerous sociocultural strata in European thought — Roscicrucianism, Freemasonry, Arthurian and Grail legends, “Arcadianism,” Catharism, chivalry, etc.
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