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KEYS OF ANTIQUITY

AND THE ANCIENT CIPHER

Time Line

  March 1972  First and second viewing of  ‘Temple Treasure’, Chronicle Programme on  BBC-2.

  July 1972 Aerial photography  interpretation suggests possible treasure site north of Rennes-le-Château  due to identifying an area on the Poussin painting ‘Les Bergers d’Arcadie’ that closely  mimics the landscape in the vicinity.

  12th October 1973 Temple Treasure Part II filming. Bill Kersey discovers further link with the Poussin painting after clearing bushes at site. No tools or excavation team on site so archaeological dig postponed indefinitely.  Possibly  Visigothic Sacred Treasure site designed to contain the the Temple treasure from sacked Jerusalempilaged from Rome.

  June 1984 Breakthrough on cipher in Poussin and Teniers paintings enabled a partial understanding of the cipher.

  June 2004 Research results to that time were published in ‘Still Spins the Spider of Rennes-le-Château’.

Research is ongoing in several areas of particular interest as follows:

   The Ancient Cipher, its history, ancient origins, Greco-Roman applications in Pompeii, Visigothic applications, 17th Century , Templar Cross and modern day cult use.  Research is active on the cipher usage on the terrain about 500AD.

  April 2006 Research conducted in co-operation with Ben Hammott and Sandy Hamblett led to further discoveries in the area.  A GPR site survey using RAMAC 250 Mhz. gave confirmation but due to the rugged terrain and lack of skill the survey will be repeated later using two different machines conducted by an expert yielding results fit for publication.

    The most significant discovery being that a document  unearthed by Ben Hammott’s team confirmed that the location of one of the hoards was marked by the same two markers and cipher identically as already defined in ‘Still Spins the Spider...’. The author of the document is most likely to have been the Priest Bérenger Saunière.  Moreover, he names the cipher and names the treasure as the Royal Treasure and so it is not the ‘Sacred Treasure’ of the Jerusalem Temple.

Concurrent cipher exploration has led to work on another hoard. Possibly this is the Sacred or Temple Treasure.  

   October 2007 Research in the field continued on analysing the methodology the ancients employed in utilising the cipher on the Royal Treasure.  Further field work has yielded positive results also applicable on the Sacred Treasure site.

  19th September 2008 First visit to site of Sacred Treasure of the Visigoths in pouring rain.  External site investigation confirms location exactly where ancient cipher alignments specify.  Has the site been pillaged in the past?  Who knows?

  14th August 2009  Having received a gracious letter of approval from the Maire of Rennes-le-Château to proceed with the first excavation, the formal application to the DRAC is now well under way .  The DRAC have proposed a date in 2010 on satisfactory completion of their  ‘DOSSIERDE DEMANDE D’OPERATION ARCHAEOLOGIQUE .

  30th August 2009  Verification of  Saunière’s use of  ‘Quadrivium’ in coded document when he names the cipher .  This is due to the discovery  of musical annotations linked to the cipher key  at Stirling Castle. (see Music page.)

  Exploration is centred around sites near Aeredae, the ancient Visigoth stronghold in the Razes and Rennes-les-Bains.  Research relates to two hoards.  These two locations have been meticulously marked out by the Ancients using a complex cipher.  Distinct applications of the cunning cipher have been utilised to define the separate locations.  There were no banks to store wealth at the beginning of the sixth century A.D! (In hindsight perhaps they were fortunate.)  

   So far a survey using Ground Penetrating Radar techniques has been carried out on the Royal Treasure site.