![]() |
| |
The Magdalene Legacy: Revelations By
Laurence Ten years ago, in Bloodline of the Holy Grail, I first discussed the suppressed archives of Jesus, Mary Magdalene and the significance of the hidden lineage of their descendants. These themes have now achieved a new prominence in the world of fiction with Dan Brown’s The Da Vinci Code – an explosive and controversial novel which has brought the mysterious life of Mary Magdalene under a new spotlight. During the past ten years, however, a wealth of additional information has been extracted from Templar and monastic archives, expanding the previously published revelations to extraordinary new levels. Mary Magdalene is one of the most painted and sculpted of all classical figures. Artists and romantics have adored her, but she has been constantly vilified by the religious establishment. In the New Testament she is given as Jesus’ sponsor, a woman that he loved, a close companion of his mother, and the first person to speak with Jesus after his resurrection. Church doctrine, however, claims her to have been a sinful harlot, albeit a repentant sinner who was finally admitted to the sainthood as late as 1969.
Mary’s position is unique in the Christian story.
Despite her apparent supportive role in the Gospels,
she appears in other texts as one of its primary figures.
In fact, she is apparent as Christianity’s most important
figure, far outweighing the presumed status of Peter
and Paul. The drama that emerges from
It is pertinent to note that although there are many
early Christian wall-paintings in the catacombs beneath
the streets of
The canonical Gospels do not discuss Mary Magdalene’s
parents, but other historical texts do, and the significance
of their heritage is of primary importance to Mary’s
marital status. In gospels that were strategically
excluded from the New Testament when the selection
was made in CE 397 at the Council of Carthage, Mary
is classified as the spouse and consort of the Messiah.
Even Cathar documents from
Certain narrative information which made this clear
was edited from the New Testament before its publication,
but a good deal else was left intact in the Gospels
and other books of the canon. Not least in this respect
are the detailed accounts of their marriage ceremony.
This is not the wedding at
Dan Brown’s novel, The Da Vinci Code suggests
that Mary was of the family line of Benjamin, but
this was not the case. Her heritage was far more substantial,
tracing back to the same Davidic stock as Jesus, with
a sovereign lineage through the Hasmonaean Priest-kings
of
It is further cited in The Da Vinci Code that
Jesus and Mary Magdalene had a daughter named Sarah.
But Sarah was not a name in those 1st-century
times; it was an Israelite title which meant Princess.
The daughter’s name was Tamar (born CE 33). She was
Tamar the Sarah. The name means Palm-tree, and was
the same as the Old Testament’s matriarchal progenitor
of the Royal House of Judah; the same as given to
the sister of King David. Additionally, however, Jesus
and Mary Magdalene had two sons, as confirmed 15 years
ago by the investigations of Dr. Barbara Thiering
of the Board of Studies in Divinity at the From where does this information emanate? Surprisingly, much of it is found in sections of the New Testament which are commonly ignored in establishment teaching. And there are some remarkable references dating back to the 1st century (clarified by early Fathers of the Christian movement), which tell of the brutal persecution that befell the family line. Subsequent to the crucifixion, resurrection and ascension of Jesus, and beginning with Emperor Vespasian (CE 69–79), a succession of Roman Emperors (including Titus and Domitian) issued proclamations to their generals in the field that the descendant heirs of Jesus and his family should be hunted down and put to the sword. It was chronicled by eminent historians such as Hegesippus, Africanus and Eusebius that the continuation of the Messianic royal house must be terminated. The Imperial edict in CE 70 (some 40 years after the crucifixion) ordered “the family of David to be sought, that no one might be left among the Jews who was of the royal stock.” It was subsequently reported, however, that although many were seized, some were released and “on their release they became leaders of the churches in a strict dynastic progression, because they had borne testimony and because they were of the Lord’s family.” These persecuted descendants were called the Desposyni (Heirs of the Lord). The Vatican Archive reveals that in CE 318 a delegation of Messianic descendants confronted Sylvester, the Bishop of Rome. They insisted that the Nazarene Church of Jesus was being corrupted, and that it should rightly be led by the family heirs – not by a despotic Imperial regime. They were advised, however, that the power of salvation did not rest with Jesus, but with Emperor Constantine, for whom the right of Messianic inheritance had been personally “reserved since the beginning of time”!
This was the plight and ultimate misfortune of the
heirs of Jesus and Mary Magdalene. Despite the historical
records, it led to their being sidelined by the orthodox
‘churchianity’ of
In this regard, it is interesting to note that, while
the Church went to great lengths to denounce Mary
Magdalene’s status, the cardinals and bishops commissioned
an extraordinary number of Magdalene portraits for
the churches of
A commission was received by the studio to decorate
a chapel dedicated to Mary Magdalene in the
Notwithstanding the celibacy rule that applied within
the Church, a sexually extravagant lifestyle prevailed
among the It is now clear from the annals that the 591 denouncement was a strategic manoeuvre by the Roman establishment. Mary was a scapegoat. She was subsequently vilified by the Church but, by inventing the concept of her repenting for sins she did not commit, the bishops contrived their own perpetual source of vindication. They were completely absolved from breaking the celibacy rule so long as they kept commissioning paintings of the penitent Mary Magdalene.
Throughout the early centuries of the Church of Rome,
Jesus was sidelined as a figure of much significance.
From the 4th-century era of Constantine the Great,
the Emperors were the ultimate godheads of the movement
– a role eventually taken over by the Popes after
the
The key monarchies of Without revealing his source, Zachary produced a previously unknown document that was seemingly 400 years old and carried the signature of Emperor Constantine. It proclaimed that the Pope was Christ’s personally elected representative on Earth, with a palace that ranked above all the palaces in the world. His divinely granted dignity was said to be above that of any earthly ruler and only he, the Pope, had the power and authority to ‘create’ kings and queens as his subordinates.
The document became known as the Donation of Constantine,
and its provisions were immediately put into force.
By virtue of this, the whole nature and structure
of monarchy changed from being an office of community
guardianship to one of absolute rule. Henceforth,
European monarchs were crowned by the Pope, becoming
servants of the Church instead of being servants to
the people. The defunct Roman Empire was a relic of
history, but Zachary had a new concept – a Holy Roman
Empire controlled from the
Pope Zachary’s first initiative was to depose the
most influential of all royal houses – the Merovingian
Kings of Gaul (France). Boasting a genealogical descent
from King David of
In all the 236 years of Carolingian monarchy, their
only king of any significance was the legendary Charlemagne.
Nevertheless, a new tradition had been born, and the
The Donation of Constantine is now listed in
encyclopedias as “the world’s most famous forgery.”
Proof of this emerged over 500 years ago. Its New
Testament references relate to the Latin Vulgate
Bible – an edition translated and compiled by The Donation was first declared to be fraudulent by the Saxon Emperor Otto III in 1001, but the matter was ignored until its authenticity was fiercely attacked by the Italian linguist Lorenzo Valla in the 15th century. He was employed by Pope Nicholas V to work at the Vatican Library, where he discovered the Donation and denounced it as an 8th-century hoax.
Yet it was this very document which facilitated a
whole new style of papal kingship. It was the device
by which the Roman Church reverted political power
to itself and eclipsed the Desposyni inheritors
of Jesus and Mary Magdalene after the collapse of
the
Much is made in The Da Vinci Code of how Leonardo
da Vinci surreptitiously introduced Mary Magdalene
into his mural of The Last Supper at the monastery
of It is stated in The Da Vinci Code that, in this 1954 restoration, The Last Supper was “cleaned down to Da Vinci’s original layer of paint” – but this is completely untrue. At that time it was reckoned that only one-fifth of Leonardo’s original was left intact, but it was all obliterated beneath the overpainting of numerous successive restoration attempts. All Pelliccoli did was to clean the surface and treat the work against mildew. Not until 1978 was a proper restoration commissioned to be undertaken by the renowned conservator of masterworks, Dr. Pinin Brambilla Barcilon. This renovation took a full twenty years, during which the mural was not on view to the public. It was finally unveiled in 1999, but the source reference for Dan Brown’s novel in this regard was written five years earlier, and was not based on The Last Supper painting as it exists today.
From 1999 the mural has indeed been stripped down
to Leonardo’s original paint, and the items cited
in The Da Vinci Code to denote a woman in place
of the apostle John do not exist. The neck-chain,
for example, turned out to be a crack in the wall.
The supposed formation of breasts on the figure was
caused by black stucco marks from an early attempt
at adhering the plaster. In addition to this, Leonardo’s
preparatory drawing for the figure in question is
at the Biblioteca Ambrosiana in If Leonardo had wanted to include Mary Magdalene in his Last Supper depiction, he could have done so with impunity. Other artists, such as Fra Angelico, certainly did this by introducing Magdalene as a 13th apostle. There was no need for any artist commissioned by a Dominican establishment to be in any way surreptitious in the inclusion of Mary Magdalene. As Mother Protectress of the Order, she was the paramount figure in Dominican artwork from the 13th century onwards. Another aspect of The Da Vinci Code suggests that the Priory of Sion was a secret underground order of Magdalene adherents with a long-standing history back to the Crusades. This is largely incorrect because there has not been a continuous organisation of that name. There have been four unrelated societies with similar names at different times in history, and only one of these had any direct Magdalene association.
In fact, the account of this association from the
Renaissance records of the Prieuré Notre Dame de Sion
is very revealing. Led by René d’Anjou, King of Naples,
it details various European kings and queens, and
the art circles of Giotto di Bondone, Jan Van Eyck,
Leonardo da Vinci and others, as being avid proponents
of the Magdalene legacy. It was from their related
activities that the hermitage Irrespective of anything stated by Dan Brown, Mary Magdalene has been a favourite of artists through the centuries, from Giotto di Bondone to Salvador Dali. Depictions of Mary are often far from biblical in their representation, but they are never deviously portrayed.
Whether at the Last Supper, the Marriage at Laurence Gardner’s latest book, The Magdalene Legacy: The Jesus and Mary Bloodline Conspiracy – Revelations Beyond The Da Vinci Code (HarperCollins/Thorsons–Element, February 2005) is available from New Dawn Book Service for AUD$32.95 (postpaid). _________________________________________________________________________________
|
||||||||