Politically in Jerusalem

1- Within two years of the crucifixion Pilate was recalled to Rome after spending ten years as Governor of the Eastern Province to account for his participation in the crucifixion. One of the records suggests that Tiberius beheaded him and the other said that he committed suicide. There was a shocking event recorded in the Pretoria of Tiberius Caesar when Pilate was taken before Tiberius Caesar. It is reported that their was an earthquake-like event which destroyed statues in the hall. Tiberius obviously wasn't in favor of what happened.
2- Claudia Procula, the wife of Pilate, was a fledgling follower of Y’Shua and kept her grandfather, Tiberius Caesar, informed of these events. Tiberius knew Joseph of Arimathea personally. (Great Uncle of Y’Shua) He had appointed him to the Roman post of Noblis Decurio, or noble provider of metal. Some suggest that Joseph was also a provincial Roman Senator, which made Y’Shua a Roman Citizen too.
3- Annas's dead body was dragged through the streets by dogs. Certainly Annas was not attacked by some wild band of dogs. Rome had either killed him or allowed him to be killed. Annas had been a civil servant of Rome through Herod and owned the concessions at the Temple of Herod, sharing revenue with Herod and Rome. The donations to the temple were huge at this moment in history. He was also in charge of the civil police and other civic functions. For him to have been allowed to be dragged through the streets is strange.
4- Caiaphas has been found in recent years buried outside the walls of Jerusalem, an insult to Jews, especially ones who worked for Rome.
5- Joseph of Arimathea was expelled with a long list of famous personalities in 36 AD into the Mediterranean on a boat with no oars of sails. Certainly the remaining Sadducees who were bitter opponents of Y’Shua accomplished this. Joseph rigs a sail and passes first through Egypt, where he was born and eventually takes the Virgin Miriam back to the homeland of her mother, St Anna, for protection in Brittany. He is compelled by Phillip to move on to Glastonbury where he is received as a hero and given almost two thousand acres of ground on the island by the rich king Arviragus who becomes Christian along with his whole family.
6- Within thirty years Rome finished routing out all the remaining Jews from Jerusalem. Some have suggested that the Jewish wars were a rebellion against Rome. That is silly when we know that the Jews didn't have a standing army and knew that they couldn't possibly win such an uprising. Rome had some other reason for picking a fight with the very people who were making Caesar a fortune through his spectacular new seaport at Caesarea very near Jerusalem and next to Nazareth (a new bedroom community for Caesarea. The traffic to the East was the goose that laid the golden egg. To kill these people was strange indeed.
7- By 70 AD Rome dismantled the temple of Herod entirely and deposed the Dynasty of Herod. Rome send the enormous treasure from that temple to the Pyrenees in Western Europe following the trail of Joseph of Arimathea, rather than taking the treasure back to Rome. Why would any Caesar send such a treasure to the so called barbarian tribes?
8- In 60 AD Bodicea, the queen of the Iceni Tribe in London and relative of Arviragus, Caractacus (Cardoc) and Claudia, burns London to the ground and kills 40,000 Roman Soldiers holding the Spear of Destiny in her hands. That is the same year Nero burnt Rome to the ground and blamed it on Christians. Few historians have understood that Nero was seeking revenge for the loss of his garrisons in the West rather than blaming some obscure sect in Jerusalem.
9- Bodicea dies in battle in 62 AD holding the spear and in that battle Caesar sues for peace immediately, restoring the treaties of Julius Caesar with Britain in 52 BC. Seneca is reprimanded and forced to restore his ill-gotten loot that he plundered from the tribes in Britain.
10- By this time Bibles were going in all four directions. The Bee Bible went to the Far East into China and emerges in our day in the Eastern Church. The Kebra Nagast appears in Africa. The Gospel of the Twelve Apostles, used by the earliest Christians appears in Persia and India and later is protected today by the Dahlia Lama. The Kolbrin is begun in Britain and later appears with the exiles in New Zealand. The Nag Hammadi is buried for safe keeping in Egypt. The Dead Sea Scrolls is buried in Qumran.
11- By 100 AD Titus requires all Christians being sent to the Lions to confess three times before they were candidates for execution. That is one of the strangest of all genocide events in history.
12- Rome completely dismantled the temple including those caves beneath the temple mound. There is no possibility that the Templars were looking for the Arc of the Covenant in Jerusalem by the twelfth century. All of the artifacts were gone. The Templars were looking for something very different. The Templars were responsible as well for connecting the churches in the East with those from the West. The riches of the Templars aren’t a mystery once we acknowledge what really happened.
13- By 280 AD St Morris, a black African Roman General, is sent to the west to control the "barbarians" once again and returns to Rome refusing to kill fellow Christians. His name appears on the Silver covering beneath the Golden sheath on the Spear of Destiny currently in the Hapsburg Museum. However, Robert Feather proves in his recent documentary on the discovery channel that the Spear of Destiny in Austria that had once been confiscated by Hitler is a forgery from the 7th century. Charlemagne was responsible for this replica and the real Spear is somewhere else. St. Morris writes the first codes of Chivalry used by the first nights (King Arthur) in the sixth century.
14- Rumors of the Arc in Britain are firmly established by the time of the death of Y’Shua. Again the Templars could not possibly have been looking for the Arc in the twelfth century in Jerusalem. The rumors of the real location of the Arc surface by the time of King Arthur and his Avalon to the West.
15- The most important building in the Christian world is the Palace of the Britains which stands today across the street from the Vatican. It was the palatial home of Rufus Pudens the brother of Paul the apostle and the head Roman General under Claudius Caesar. It becomes the home of Peter, Paul, and a milieu of famous names.

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