Does Queen Elizabeth have an Ancient Jewish tie? The answer to this question can be analysed through understanding the way she was crowned. The very coronation of the British monarch reveals the true background to the Windsors and their predecessors. When the Queen was crowned Elizabeth II on June 2nd 1953, all the regalia of the ceremony, the crowns, sceptres, gowns, orb and bracelets, were taken from the Tower of London and kept overnight in the Jerusalem Chamber at Westminster Abbey.
This chamber is where the scholars met to translate the King James ‘authorised version’ of the Bible under the overall supervision of Sir Francis Bacon and Robert Fludd, the Grand Master of the Priory of Sion. The British Royal family still holds the copyright for this! The Jerusalem Chamber is panelled with cedar wood brought from Lebanon because that was the wood said to be used to build Solomon’s Temple. The tapestry in the chamber depicts the Judgement of Solomon. Westminster Abbey, the ‘Christian cathedral’, is in fact a Pagan temple. Even the floor is made of black and white squares like a Freemasonic temple.
At the start of the ceremony in 1953, the Queen sat on the Coronation Chair and under her bum was the Stone of Destiny which Edward I had stolen from Scone (pronounced ‘scoon’) Abbey in Scotland in 1246. The Stone was brought to Ireland from Israel via Egypt and is also known as Jacob’s Pillar or Pillow. I think the basic theme of that is correct, but there is a great deal more to know about the detail and its true significance. The Archbishop of Canterbury turned to the north, south, east, and west (the four points of the Pagan cross) and the congregation shouted “God save the Queen”. This was symbolic of the story in the Old Testament describing the crowning of ‘Saul’ as King of Israel when people shouted “God save the King”.
This cry can be found eight times in the Old Testament when the Kings of Israel are crowned. The Queen sat in the Coronation Chair holding the Egyptian symbols, a sceptre and a rod. On the top of the sceptre is the Maltese Cross and on the rod is a dove. She also later holds an orb with a Maltese Cross on the top, the same as those used by the Dutch wing.
Queen Elizabeth is seen as a symbolic successor to the legendary founder of Babylon, Queen Semiramis, who was symbolised as a ‘dove’. The Queen was also anointed with oil at her Coronation, the ancient Aryan tradition, which goes back thousands of years. The word ‘Christ’ means the ‘anointed one’ and also “The King”. The oil at the Queen’s coronation was the same mixture as that used in the ancient Middle East. It was carried in a gold vessel called the Ampulla made in the form of a dove.
This is symbolic of the messeh fat used in Egypt by the Royal Court of the Dragon. The anointing at the Coronation is supposed to elevate the monarch to the rank of High Priest, in this case, appropriately, High Priestess of the Church of England as well as head of state.
While this was happening, the Archbishop of Canterbury said:
“As kings, priests, and prophets were anointed: and as Solomon was anointed by Zadok the priest and Nathan the prophet, so be thou anointed, blessed and consecrated Queen over the peoples, whom the Lord thy God hath given thee to rule and govern...
The crown used in the ceremony goes back to the time of Edward the Confessor. He was the King of England who built the original Westminster Abbey in 1065 and later the present one was begun by the Templar controlled, Henry III. Edward died in 1066, the very year that William the Conqueror and his St Clair supporters invaded England and won the Battle of Hastings under instructions from the Black Nobility of Venice.
The Coronation Crown is set with 12 jewels along with two depictions of the Maltese Cross. In the Levite-authored Exodus we hear of the Breastplate of Aaron which is set with 12 stones. The same stones, in the same order, appear in the British crown. The Archbishop placed his hands between the Queen’s to pay homage to the new head of his Church and he kissed her right hand. Then he said:
“The Lord Almighty... establishes your throne in righteousness that it may stand for evermore, like as the sun before him and as a faithful witness in Heaven.”
This is almost a repeat of the words used in God’s covenant with David in the Old Testament. The ‘Lord Almighty’ was formerly El Shaddai or Ishkur, the son of Marduk, who is claimed to have been the son of the Anunnaki Assembly, Enki, who, according to the Sumerian Texts as translated by Zecharia Sitchin, was the one who created the human-Anunnaki hybrids with Ninkharsag.
This chamber is where the scholars met to translate the King James ‘authorised version’ of the Bible under the overall supervision of Sir Francis Bacon and Robert Fludd, the Grand Master of the Priory of Sion. The British Royal family still holds the copyright for this! The Jerusalem Chamber is panelled with cedar wood brought from Lebanon because that was the wood said to be used to build Solomon’s Temple. The tapestry in the chamber depicts the Judgement of Solomon. Westminster Abbey, the ‘Christian cathedral’, is in fact a Pagan temple. Even the floor is made of black and white squares like a Freemasonic temple.
At the start of the ceremony in 1953, the Queen sat on the Coronation Chair and under her bum was the Stone of Destiny which Edward I had stolen from Scone (pronounced ‘scoon’) Abbey in Scotland in 1246. The Stone was brought to Ireland from Israel via Egypt and is also known as Jacob’s Pillar or Pillow. I think the basic theme of that is correct, but there is a great deal more to know about the detail and its true significance. The Archbishop of Canterbury turned to the north, south, east, and west (the four points of the Pagan cross) and the congregation shouted “God save the Queen”. This was symbolic of the story in the Old Testament describing the crowning of ‘Saul’ as King of Israel when people shouted “God save the King”.
This cry can be found eight times in the Old Testament when the Kings of Israel are crowned. The Queen sat in the Coronation Chair holding the Egyptian symbols, a sceptre and a rod. On the top of the sceptre is the Maltese Cross and on the rod is a dove. She also later holds an orb with a Maltese Cross on the top, the same as those used by the Dutch wing.
Queen Elizabeth is seen as a symbolic successor to the legendary founder of Babylon, Queen Semiramis, who was symbolised as a ‘dove’. The Queen was also anointed with oil at her Coronation, the ancient Aryan tradition, which goes back thousands of years. The word ‘Christ’ means the ‘anointed one’ and also “The King”. The oil at the Queen’s coronation was the same mixture as that used in the ancient Middle East. It was carried in a gold vessel called the Ampulla made in the form of a dove.
This is symbolic of the messeh fat used in Egypt by the Royal Court of the Dragon. The anointing at the Coronation is supposed to elevate the monarch to the rank of High Priest, in this case, appropriately, High Priestess of the Church of England as well as head of state.
While this was happening, the Archbishop of Canterbury said:
“As kings, priests, and prophets were anointed: and as Solomon was anointed by Zadok the priest and Nathan the prophet, so be thou anointed, blessed and consecrated Queen over the peoples, whom the Lord thy God hath given thee to rule and govern...
The crown used in the ceremony goes back to the time of Edward the Confessor. He was the King of England who built the original Westminster Abbey in 1065 and later the present one was begun by the Templar controlled, Henry III. Edward died in 1066, the very year that William the Conqueror and his St Clair supporters invaded England and won the Battle of Hastings under instructions from the Black Nobility of Venice.
The Coronation Crown is set with 12 jewels along with two depictions of the Maltese Cross. In the Levite-authored Exodus we hear of the Breastplate of Aaron which is set with 12 stones. The same stones, in the same order, appear in the British crown. The Archbishop placed his hands between the Queen’s to pay homage to the new head of his Church and he kissed her right hand. Then he said:
“The Lord Almighty... establishes your throne in righteousness that it may stand for evermore, like as the sun before him and as a faithful witness in Heaven.”
This is almost a repeat of the words used in God’s covenant with David in the Old Testament. The ‘Lord Almighty’ was formerly El Shaddai or Ishkur, the son of Marduk, who is claimed to have been the son of the Anunnaki Assembly, Enki, who, according to the Sumerian Texts as translated by Zecharia Sitchin, was the one who created the human-Anunnaki hybrids with Ninkharsag.
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