(Please read from the start)
It’s very obvious that Pike had the McLeod syndrome. I am also suspecting many British kings had it, mostly the Plantagenet dynasty; as well as Louis XIV, Louis XV and of course Louis XVI to have had the illness as well = the Bourbon dynasty. In fact, when we look at how the royalty in Europe married from one another, you will see how the ladies transferred the illness from one royal family to another.
I’m not putting these candidates out of nothing. Let’s check out Louis XIV; he used to think he was the sun god – I bet he is referring to the Evil One and how (((they))) thought he was the sun, but the truth is he is the lesser sun. This is how you know since when the Bloodlines know there is an association between the Evil One and the sun (lesser sun). The French monarch’s name was Louis meaning Light = as the Evil One was the carrier of the Lamp; I bet (((they))) thought he was the carrier of the Light- which is not true. Louis XIV is also known for his mood swings.
Let me show you a couple of things quickly about Louis XIV: https://www.biography.com/news/louis-xiv-biography-facts
“[…]
The princess Louis XIV married was his first cousin
The king’s first true love was Mazarin’s niece, Marie Mancini, but both the queen and the cardinal frowned upon their relationship. Louis XIV was ultimately directed into a marriage that was a political, rather than a romantic, union by wedding the daughter of Spain’s King Philip IV, Marie-Thérèse, in 1660. The marriage between the two first cousins ensured ratification of the peace treaty that Mazarin had sought to establish with Hapsburg Spain.
One of Louis XIV’s mistresses bore more of his children than his wife
Marie-Thérèse gave birth to six of the king’s children, but only one, Louis, survived past the age of five. Louis XIV, however, had a healthy libido and fathered more than a dozen illegitimate children with a number of mistresses. Mistress Louise de La Vallière bore five of the king’s children, only two of which survived infancy, while her rival Madame de Montespan, who eventually became the king’s chief mistress, gave birth to seven of the monarch’s children. Louis XIV eventually legitimized most of his children born to mistresses in the years following their births.
[…]”
>> Just from 3 women = his legal wife and 2 mistresses, Louis XIV had 18 children. From the queen Marie-Thérèse he had 6 children whom 5 died and one made it pass his fifth birthday. While from his mistress de La Vallière he had 5 children which only 2 survived and 3 died. It’s not clear in this text how many of the 7 children he had from Madame de Montespan survived their childhood.
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