Anonymous ID: 267c54 Aug. 17, 2020, 5:48 a.m. No.10316785   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8586

>>10306012

 

(Please read from the start)

 

“Aztec history and international scholarship

 

English aristocrat Lord Kingsborough spent considerable energy in their pursuit of understanding of ancient Mexico. Kingsborough answered Humboldt's call for the publication of all known Mexican codices, publishing nine volumes of Antiquities of Mexico (1831–1846) that were richly illustrated, bankrupting him. He was not directly interested in the Aztecs, but rather in proving that Mexico had been colonized by Jews. However, his publication of these valuable primary sources gave others access to them.”

 

>> If we replace the word JEWS by CABAL or BLOODLINE FAMILIES then it all makes sense doesn’t it anons? Why (((they))) accepted and welcomed the Aztec nobility so easily? Anons shouldn’t forget that the Spanish nobles and monarchy are a branch of the Bourbons of France, as in a branch of French nobility and royalty.

 

In modern days, some tent to say that the Spanish conquerors exaggerated about the scale of human sacrifice… But archaeological evidence shows that they were correct:

 

https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2018/06/feeding-gods-hundreds-skulls-reveal-massive-scale-human-sacrifice-aztec-capital

 

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

 

This was found in ONE City-State, one temple. So just image the same thing in all other City-States, not just with the Aztecs, but every single civilization in Central America that practiced human sacrifice. No wonder Spanish Cabal welcomed the Aztec nobility into their ranks.

 

Also the Coyolxauhqui Stone caught my attention not because of the dismemberment action but the symbolism in it:

 

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

 

“The Coyolxāuhqui Stone is a carved, circular Aztec stone, depicting the mythical being Coyolxāuhqui ("Bells-Her-Cheeks"), in a state of dismemberment and decapitation by her brother, the patron deity of the Aztecs, Huitzilopochtli. It was rediscovered in 1978 at the site of the Templo Mayor of Tenochtitlan, now in Mexico City.[2] This relief is one of the best known Aztec monuments and one of the few great Aztec monuments have been found fully in situ.”

 

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