Scott Wolter
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Well, if you've got... And here's the other thing that we talked about at lunch, and I'm going to bring it up now.
That keystone that's not centered in the archway.
No self-respecting medieval stonemason would do that.
So why did they do it?
There's a reason.
On the outside of that same archway, back to back with that egg-shaped keystone is a notched keystone.
And I wasn't a Mason when I first recognized that in 2007, but I knew it was Masonic because I had read about it.
And the honor of placing the final keystone in a structure for a practical stonemason was given to the master Mason.
And what he would do is create an angled stone, which structurally holds up the arch, but he would put a notch at the top of the keystones.
That was his mark.
And then put it in the structure.
Well, these two are back to back.
And when I was there in 2007 and documented that illumination event, and later before we left,
I looked at that Notch Keystone, and I had just read a book written by Henry Lincoln and Erland Haugesund, a Danish researcher and Knights Templar, brother Templar.
And it was about long range alignments on the island of Bornholm and round churches that were used to calculate the circumference of the earth.
The Templars also had extreme knowledge about navigation using the heavens.
And you can do it with these churches in Bornholm.
And I had read that book about that and about long-range alignments that go to a small island called KristansΓΈ, which is part of Denmark.
that has another round church there.
And the center of this geometry goes right through the steeple of that church.