Homepage, Store & More
Ancient Psychedelia: Alien Gods & Mushroom Goddesses
Online Book - Chapter 17, Page 330
Back to Online Book Mainpage
/ Next Page (Chapter 17, Page 331)

    Blanche I of Navarre (6 July 1387 – 1 April 1441) married Martin the Younger, King of Sicily and Prince of Aragon. They were married by proxy on May 21, 1402 in Catania. He later died on July 25, 1409 and she remarried John II of Aragon (29 June 1398 – 20 January 1479), duke of Peñafiel, the second son of Ferdinand I of Aragon and Eleanor of Alburquerque. Blanche I and John II had four children together, one of which was Blanche II of Navarre.

    Blanche II of Navarre (9 June 1424 – 2 December 1464) married Henry IV of Castile in 1440.

    John II of Aragon remarried to Juana Enríquez, of the House of Trastámara. They had a child named Ferdinand II.

    Ferdinand II of Aragon (10 March 1452 – 23 January 1516), called “the Catholic,” was married to Isabella I, in 1469, who became the Queen of Castile.

    On the monarchy of Spain, from wiki we read: “The marriage between Isabella I of Castile and Ferdinand II of Aragon, both members of the House of Trastámara, known as the Catholic Monarchs, united two important kingdoms of the Iberian Peninsula. Each kingdom retained its basic structure. In 1492 the Catholic Monarchs conquered the Kingdom of Granada in southern Spain, the last Muslim territory in the Iberian Peninsula. This date marks the unification of Spain.” (63)

    Ferdinand and Isabella were the financiers of the voyage of Christopher Columbus to explore and conquer the New World, attempting to establish a Catholic monarchy in the Americas by first invading South America, Central America and North America. (Mexico). The only force that stopped this was the establishment of the colonists, originally Christian pilgrims, whose descendants were the first revolutionaries which included Washington, Jefferson and Adams. Of the fifty-six signers of the Declaration of Independence, Manly P. Hall, claims, nearly fifty were Masons. America was set to become a slave nation to the Catholic Church, bound under religious laws which would forever keep people like “witches” and “mushroom consumers” or anyone who wanted to explore the potential of their soul in the free and safe space of their own home, locked away or murdered instead. This is serious, and I’m being very serious right now. There is a very good chance we would never have the world we have today, if it weren’t for Thomas Jefferson and George Washington, John Adams, Benjamin Franklin and the whole rest of the crew from the Green Dragon Tavern. This was the “Headquarters of the Revolution” and the home of “The Sons of Liberty.” Don’t ever forget that! Long live the revolutionaries!

    Next, we will venture into another topic of dire seriousness and importance, Melusine, the fairy serpent goddess mermaid.







 

(56e) Libertas Americana Medals, Liberty Cap (1781)



French Freemason Declaration of Rights 1789



Liberty pole of the Mainz Republic of 1793




(63) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monarchy_of_Spain)


Go Back to Page 329