Introduction
One Wish, Wish A Thousand Wishes
The mysterious dragons of Merlin dark side still lives after Arthur’s templar’s fraught with him to tell the tales that has never been told.
Indeed, much popular awareness and a significant part of the public image of the Templars in the middle ages was shaped and promoted by the Arthurian tales. The literary portrayals of “knights in shining armor” fighting to champion noble causes, and always pursuing deeply spiritual Quests, seeking profound esoteric wisdom by pursuing or protecting the Holy Grail, were all an artistic expression of the genuine traditional values and religious beliefs of the Templars.
The Arthurian legends have their own historical value as symbolic esoteric teachings, and an expression of medieval culture. Separate from this, however, there is the independent topic of the identity and factual history of a historical figure, who was later transformed into the legendary King Arthur of Camelot.
This work identified Arthur as a “Prince”, who was the “son of King Aidan” (King of the Scots from 574 AD). It recorded that Arthur and his father King Aidan led a coalition of “Briton” (modern UK region) kings who fought the invading Picts and Saxons, and that Arthur never became “King”, as he was “slain… in the battle of the Miathi”.
The Excalibur…