THE Internet is a finicky place for research. I know how that probably sounds, given that I have offered this report to you the reader in the Internet of all places. But if you read my recent 1000 Years of Missing Time investigation, which is presently undecided and still ongoing, then you will understand where I am coming from. You’ve got to get out of the library and muddy your boots. Over the last several weeks, I have been visiting dozens of cathedrals across Spain, Portugal, and Britain, among other old-world places of interest, with many more countries to come. Look high and low is my policy, retracing the path when possible. There are clues to be found around every corner which the Internet never thinks of mentioning, and you never know where they’ll crop up.
Case in point, Salisbury Cathedral. After covering my visit to Temple Church in London in Friday XIII, which has to do with the Knight Templar and their potential part in the Millennial Kingdom narrative, I read somewhere that Salisbury held the best preserved of only four surviving Magna Carta documents from 1215, and wanted a glimpse. It is being held in Salisbury Cathedral’s Chapter House, an octagonal shaped building (like so many of the baptistries) which is said to have been completed between 1270 and 1279. Photography was not permitted of the document but that’s not why I’m giving you an UPDATE.
You can read of my discovery in the latest UPDATE to my Vesica Piscis: The Sacred Divine and Millennial Kingdom Architecture paper.