Anonymous ID: ade54a April 9, 2020, 3:51 p.m. No.8738828   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8906 >>8932 >>8978 >>9108

>>8738695 (lb)

There are four colors; brown, green, red, and blue

Jesus wears two colors suggesting two dimensions of good and two opposing dimensions

Jesus is in the shape of stacked triangles. A pyramid built on an inverted pyramid, balance.

Bars on the floor, ceiling and walls, the prison like nature of the world

An arch over the center window, unneeded, loosh.

True beauty is beyond the window, beyond the ability of man to create

The table is resting on 4 triangles, reflective of the 4 colors

 

The power of one.

Anonymous ID: ade54a April 9, 2020, 4:24 p.m. No.8739276   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9355 >>9404

>>8739111

This is a chess match between royal families. She seems to be the Queen of "the free folk" of the North, the norse, the vikings. She has dozens of "bannermen". If Trump's line is related, von Trompe of Pomerania, swore fealty to her in 1743.

 

The Crown of Norway has reigned for 1000 years. Norway is not part of the EU.

 

Today, Norway has approximately 10-15 families who were formerly recognised as noble by Norwegian kings. These include Anker, Aubert, Falsen, Galtung, Huitfeldt, Knagenhjelm, Løvenskiold, Munthe af Morgenstierne, Treschow, Werenskiold, and the Counts of Wedel-Jarlsberg. In addition, there are nonnoble families who descend patrilineally from individuals who once had personal (nonhereditary) noble status, for example the Paus family and several families of the void ab initio office nobility. There is even foreign nobility in Norway, mainly Norwegian families originating in other countries and who have or had noble status there.

 

Medieval terms

The medieval aristocracy called themselves hird and later ‘free men’ likewise as commoners were called ‘unfree’. Knights were gathered in a particular class known as the Knighthood (Norwegian: Ridderskapet), which stood above what was called ‘ordinary nobility’ (Norwegian: menig adel). The aristocracy did not adopt and use the term ‘nobility’ (Norwegian: adel) until the late 15th and the early 16th century; this originally German word arrived at the same time as the German Oldenburg Kings of Norway. However, the entity was completely the same before and after the introduction of this term.

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aristocracy_of_Norway