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Morten St George Theory - Printable Version +- The Voynich Ninja (https://www.voynich.ninja) +-- Forum: Voynich Research (https://www.voynich.ninja/forum-27.html) +--- Forum: Voynich Talk (https://www.voynich.ninja/forum-6.html) +--- Thread: Morten St George Theory (/thread-2263.html) Pages:
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RE: Morten St George Theory - Linda - 03-03-2019 (03-03-2019, 07:26 PM)Morten St. George Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view. Except for Montséqur, the Cathars did not build castles, but when regions converted to their religion, they acquired the older castles that were there. Montségur was rebuilt and expanded by Cathars in the early 13th century, then destroyed in That seems fair enough. Quote:Here is a real medieval depiction of the Cathar Montségur: I see two towers and no swallowtail merlons. So all you can be going by is the one tower, if that is the only depiction you have. Given the shape of the current chateau, i doubt anything shaped like the vms fortification would have fit in its place. Also, none of that explains all the raised walls that seem to extend from it in various directions. You said they didnt need them, due to the steepness of the location, so why are they in the vms? RE: Morten St George Theory - Morten St. George - 03-03-2019 (03-03-2019, 07:34 PM)Linda Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Wiki states variously Thanks, Linda. It's nice to see that there is at least one person around here who likes to check things out before jumping to conclusions! RE: Morten St George Theory - Linda - 03-03-2019 (03-03-2019, 07:47 PM)Morten St. George Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.(03-03-2019, 07:34 PM)Linda Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Wiki states variously Well we all want to get to the truth of the matter, right? Insofar as jumping to conclusions, i am sure we all have our own various initial reactions to new information, and I am sure i hold some preconceived notions through which i view subsequent data, myself. That is why evidence is needed. I still think it is a stretch to place the vms castle at this location, with this meaning. In the vms the castle appears to lead to somewhere else, and is not necessarily a destination in and of itself, but an indication of transition of culture, i think. In your interpretation the story seems to end there, with the bonfire. If that rosette were a standalone image you might be able to pin the story on it as you have, but how does the rest of it fit into your narrative? RE: Morten St George Theory - Morten St. George - 03-03-2019 (03-03-2019, 07:30 PM)-JKP- Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Many people have commented on this looking steep. It has always looked steep to me too, but I try to be careful not to assume too much too soon. Montségur mountain didn't just look steep. It was steep: ![]() It was no doubt common to build castles on mountain tops because that made them easier to defend, but perhaps nowhere else were the vertical slopes so pronounced as at Montségur. Moreover, the Cathar fortress is the most likely for another reason: it was completely dismantled and hence cannot be matched with the VMS depiction, whereas we know for certain that the other mountaintop castles, still extant, do not produce a match. RE: Morten St George Theory - Morten St. George - 03-03-2019 (03-03-2019, 07:45 PM)Linda Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.I see two towers and no swallowtail merlons. So all you can be going by is the one tower, if that is the only depiction you have. Unfortunately, the mountain itself hides view of the merlons in this depiction as well as the lower windows of the tower. Also, I think it highly unlikely that the current château is of the same size and shape, or occupies the same position, as the original fortress. I said they didn't find it necessary to put a wall around the village, but this doesn't apply to the fortress itself which was on the side of the only pathway up to the top. In the end, the attacking army reached to top on the side of the village. I suspect that the skinny tower you see (not in the VMS depiction) might have been built by the attackers as a lookout pole for guiding their catapult. RE: Morten St George Theory - Linda - 03-03-2019 (03-03-2019, 08:26 PM)Morten St. George Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.(03-03-2019, 07:30 PM)-JKP- Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Many people have commented on this looking steep. It has always looked steep to me too, but I try to be careful not to assume too much too soon. So because we dont know what it looked like, it makes it a better match than anything still in existence that doesnt look like it? Only because your imagination is set free by the lack of constraint. What about all the other castles that no longer exist? They are discounted because it would not add to your theory. However i cannot see anything resembling the vms castle fitting on your hill. It would need all the unexplained steep walls to be built to keep it from toppling off the back end of the mountain. ![]() ![]() RE: Morten St George Theory - Linda - 03-03-2019 (03-03-2019, 08:53 PM)Morten St. George Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Unfortunately, the mountain itself hides view of the merlons in this depiction as well as the lower windows of the tower. Also, I think it highly unlikely that the current château is of the same size and shape, or occupies the same position, as the original fortress. Did you ever consider that the mountain could also hide the lack of merlons? It could be hiding elephant statues for all we know, it hides everything but the two towers. Then, you explain away the second one as being something built by the attackers, since it is not depicted in the vms. Why in the world would they build something on top of the mountain to guide their catapult when they obviously would have had to win the mountain to be able to build anything there, not to mention the time and effort that would take for no reason whatsoever, and it certainly wouldnt be done before the bonfire, which appears to be the point of the drawing. Or are you suggesting this second tower was built in the valley but just happens to be higher than the castle tower? Maybe they made it out of the walls that are no longer there? The simpler answer is that this is not what the vms depicts at all. RE: Morten St George Theory - VViews - 03-03-2019 (03-03-2019, 09:29 PM)Linda Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.However i cannot see anything resembling the vms castle fitting on your hill. It would need all the unexplained steep walls to be built to keep it from toppling off the back end of the mountain. Exactly. The topography severely limits what could be built. There have been archaeological excavations done and the old 13thC castle plan is known. It is pretty much the same as the new one, except for an additional row of walls. An illustration can be found on page 119 at the link below: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view. By the way Morten, the article explains that the water storage was not up in a tower as you presume but in a cistern on one of the artificial terraces where housing was built below the castle. None of these inhabited terraces are visible in the VMS description: the "cliffs" are bare. This premise of yours that "it is not known, therefore I'm right" is a logical fallacy. Especially when things are known. RE: Morten St George Theory - Morten St. George - 03-03-2019 (03-03-2019, 08:04 PM)Linda Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.If that rosette were a standalone image you might be able to pin the story on it as you have, but how does the rest of it fit into your narrative? From the bonfire of Montségur (in the top right-hand corner of the rosettes page), the Cathar martyrs ascend to the spiritual world (note the streams and funnel pointing away from the field to other parts of the rosettes page). That's my best guess: most of the rosettes folio is intended to depict the spiritual world (or call it paradise or heaven). Note circulating energies and movement from one real to another, note the serenity of the celestial blue color, note the pipes that might reflect organ music. Do you have a better idea on how to depict the spiritual world? Per Cathar beliefs, martyrdom shortly after receiving the sacrament of consolamentum guaranteed them eternal life in the spiritual world, a permanent escape from repeated reincarnations in the material world. That's why two hundred Cathars voluntarily walked onto the wood of the bonfire. They didn't even have to be tied down. RE: Morten St George Theory - Linda - 03-03-2019 (03-03-2019, 09:49 PM)VViews Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.(03-03-2019, 09:29 PM)Linda Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.However i cannot see anything resembling the vms castle fitting on your hill. It would need all the unexplained steep walls to be built to keep it from toppling off the back end of the mountain. Thats funny, i was looking at the pics and that is how it seemed to me too, not that i trusted myself to know better than what is written, but now that you mention it, looks like they used broken bits to build it up, then added another storey at a later time. I also doubted anyone would completely destroy something at the top of a mountain, you would get it down to safe, so it wouldnt topple, then build onto it, which is what appears to have happened. To do otherwise would be a waste of resources. ![]() I also agree with your identification of the logical fallacy. It is super convenient if we can't prove otherwise, but i think there are enough problems here that we can feel confident that this solution is not the correct one. |