Eternal Life With Grail Bloodline

This was written around 1998 by Steve Mizrack. “How interesting, then, to discover, as I have recently, that the name of several places in France – Rhedae/Rennes, Rouen/Rhodom, Rodez/Rhodes, are derived from the Greek Island of Rhodes, whose name itself comes from the rose-goddess Rhoda. Contemporary texts say that the red-haired Celtic “Redones” or “rose people” (Rutheni/Rhodanim) setlled both Rennes in the Midi and Rennes in Brittany – the name derives from the ethnic group. It is said that the resident goddess of Mount Sion-Vaudemont, the “other Sion” of the “priory of Sion” in Switzerland, is Rosemertha – the Rose mother. Interestingly, one interpretation of the King Arthur legends is that “Arthur” or “Ursus” was really Riothamus, a Dark Age Celt ruler of a “thalassocracy” that spanned Brittany in France and Cornwall in England. Many of the places near Breton Rennes are associated with Arthur and the Grail legends, and many of the Breton kings had Judaic names. And some derive Riothamus’ name from… Joseph of Arimathea, the supposed bearer of the Grail to Glastonbury.”

Royal Rosamond Press's avatarRosamond Press

In May of 2000 I went to Sonoma California to stay with my daughter and her mother at a bed and breakfast run by Scientol0gists. I brought Laurence Gardener’s Bloodline of the Holy Grail that someone lay on me for free in order to give Patrice Hanson a clue as to what I was working on in my novel about a “Rose Line”. Laurence Gardener says he never intended to write his story, that it wrote itself. So has my story.

Jon Presco

Copyright 2012

I did not decide to write the book Bloodline of the Holy Grail. The book happened by accident, not by design. It happened by virtue of the fact that for about the last ten years I have been the appointed historian and sovereign genealogist to thirty-three royal families. It happened because during those early periods I was documenting evidence on the history of those royal…

View original post 3,203 more words

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.