Brief History of Belgium

The land which eventually became the state of Belgium has mainly been a battleground between Catholic and Liberal-Protestant interests. Over the centuries and decades, this land subsequently belonged to the Spanish and Austrian Hapsburgs, Napoleon’s France and since 1815, the Netherlands. In 1830, mainly the Catholic middle and upper class living in the southern provinces of the United Netherlands had become so fed up with their lack of self-determination that they staged a revolution. It succeeded and the state of Belgium was born. Families like de Merode and De Ligne were initially offered the throne, but they refused and the Saxe-Coburg-Gothas came in.

The Literary History of the Adelphi and it’s Neighbourhood

A great insight into an area of London with a rich history becoming a royal home with the introduction of the Hanoverians. Today the Adelphi building houses a myriad of huge global companies as their HQ, companies operating in the field of all things destructive to sovereignty while in full support of monopolising all trade, industry, the introduction of the smart city agenda, in society and in the schools, and in the issuance of currencies as we enter the New World Order.

History of Freemasonry, Albert Gallatin Mackey, Vol II, The Prussian Knight, 21st Degree

Albert Gallatin Mackey was a 33rd Degree Freemason who served as Grand Lecturer and Grand Secretary of The Grand Lodge of South Carolina, as well as Secretary General of the Supreme Council of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite for the Southern Jurisdiction of the United States.
As a Christian, the original obligation of Masonry coming out of Britain, Mackey was very concerned how Masonry had been undermined by a cult transfixed on Noah and a system they claimed was set forth for Mankind,  to which all must submit if they are to enter this world to come.

In Profile : Why St George? Has England’s history been faked pre-14th century?

Ever sought the connection between ST George and England? The Lombards and Constantine, yes, but to remove a thousand years of history….Born and bred in the North West of England I have wondered since learning the fact, our patron saint is in fact a character from Cappadocia in what is today Turkey, how this could be? A difficult endeavour in the construction of the bridge between Turkey and England, we have the Lombards and we have Constantine himself, but I never envisaged such a possible tale as that suggested by Fomenko.