DEAD SEA SCROLLS, DRUID SUB-PAGE
RESEARCH AND COMMENTS
DRUIDS OF ELD A Site for exploration and restoration of Ancient Myth and Legend Launched in the Lunation of Lughnasadh, 7 August 2024 This is the forest primeval. The murmuring pines and the hemlocks, Bearded with moss, and in garments green, indistinct in the twilight, Stand like Druids of Eld, with voices sad and prophetic . . . 'Evangeline' -Henry Wadsworth Longfellow 1807-1882 Exploring the forgotten Lore of Ancient Times and of our ancient Ancestors, and through the mists and shadows of successive Ages, beyond the reach of latter-day censors and corruptors, requires the deepest Druidry our minds can muster. Especially true is this for the long-suppressed wisdom and traditions of the Nors...
Some background from "The Dead Sea Scrolls Deception" -Baigent & Leigh
ReplyDeleteL’abbaye de la fontaine vive,
Avec sa chapelle lucide
Ou Nostres Dames nous genent
D’y habiter dans la cave
Voutée.
Les rouleaux de foins
Sous un linceul de sel,
Et la cloche au ficelle
Ou se trouve un seul moin
Maussade.
Mais autour du chastel
L’héraut proclame
La sorcellerie
De la druidesse-dame
Et sa chat séduit le soleil.
—Jehan l’Ascuiz
DeleteThe abbey of the living fountain,
With its lucid chapel
Where Our Ladies bother us
To live there in the cellar
Vaulted.
Hay rolls
Under a shroud of salt,
And the bell on the string
Where is a single minus
Moody.
But around the castle
The herald proclaims
Witchcraft
From the Lady Druid
And her cat seduces the sun.
—Jehan l’Ascuiz
R. Bardmont's profile photo
DeleteR. Bardmont
Dec 20, 2001, 2:37:03 PM
to
Jehan l'Ascuiz was an Occitain (southern French) poet who lived during
the 15th century, roughly contemporary with François Villon. He was
born somewhere around 1420 and is last heard of around 1480 or
thereabouts. The world's leading authority on Jehan l'Ascuiz, and the
man who's just completed the definitive biography and critical study
of the poet, is Professor Hugh Payne, formerly lecturer in medieval
French literature at Rutgers University in New Jersey. Professor Payne
can be contacted at Payn...@aol.com
Here is some more information of the mysterious 'Jehan l'Ascuiz', from the webpage https://groups.google.com/g/nl.spiritueel/c/UpI0z08C_BM :
DeletetsuuJ's profile photo
tsuuJ
Dec 20, 2001, 5:12:45 PM
to
"R. Bardmont" wrote in message
news:d6bba66b.01122...@posting.google.com...
Please notify us once he has translated it into Dutch,
kind regards,
Juust Out
who is also quite medieval at times
Robin Waterfield's profile photo
Robin Waterfield
Dec 24, 2001, 5:24:39 AM
to
As a long-time devotee of the extant works of Jehan l'Ascuiz, who
ranks as one of the most important poets of the Middle Ages, I was
delighted (a) to find this newsgroup, and (b) to hear that a biography
has been written. I must say I always hoped I would be the first to
write this book, but I appreciate that it must take someone with a
salaried basis to do so - i.e. an academic, most likely. However, I
have been unable to find details of this book on amazon.com. Can
someone enlighten me? Perhaps someone would care to post a review of
this book on this site. Most important of all, does Professor Payne
make the all-important comparison with Dolorus the Strange - because
if not, there is still room for me to make a contribution to this
field of studies.
Phillipe Gaston's profile photo
Phillipe Gaston
Dec 28, 2001, 11:45:23 AM
to
Does anyone know where Jehan is buried?
P. Gaston
Virgil Frost's profile photo
Virgil Frost
Dec 28, 2001, 8:47:00 PM
to
rol...@cs.com (Phillipe Gaston) wrote in message news:...
> Does anyone know where Jehan is buried?
> P. Gaston
Location of grave, and even date of death, are indeterminate.
According to one legend, Jehan is supposed to have seen an apparition
-- a nymphlike woman in front of a cave beside a waterfall in the
Languedoc -- combing her tresses with a comb of gold. He's alleged to
have followed her into the cave and never been seen again. This would
seem to be a dubious variation of the Venus and Tannhäuser story.
According to other, possibly more reliable accounts, Jehan migrated
eastwards around 1478-80 and is said to have participated in a
Minnesinger festival at one of the preceptories of the Teutonic
Knights in the Ordensland, and no record exists of his return from
there.
lor...@gmail.com's profile photo
lor...@gmail.com
Dec 3, 2015, 12:48:03 PM
to
http://www.henrylincoln.co.uk/blog.php?e=249 and scroll down to #Jehan l'Acuiz - another fantastical nonsense.
jorgemi...@gmail.com's profile photo
jorgemi...@gmail.com
More controversy, from one Conor MacDori, on Ancient Irish authorship of Bible content:
ReplyDeletehttps://books.google.com/books?id=Zni3S1NZ-H4C&pg=PA2&source=kp_read_button&hl=en&newbks=1&newbks_redir=0#v=onepage&q&f=false
macdori bio:
Deletehttps://atlantipedia.ie/samples/macdari-conor-n/
https://en.everybodywiki.com/Conor_MacDari
see online ref.: https://ia601201.us.archive.org/2/items/TheDeadSeaScrollsDeception/The_dead_sea_scrolls_deception_-_baigent_Leigh.pdf
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