Excalibur The Sword That Changed The Lives Of Camelot
Now that I have written about living, working, the Hierarchy
of the Land of Camelot and the relationship to Jesus and Rome it is now time
for you to learn about what brought it to a start. That would be the sword that Arthur removed
from the stone that started his rightful Kingship.
Since there was lots of Tin in that area that was mined by
Joseph of Arimathea +http://www.bubblews.com/news/2276836-joseph-of-arimathea-jesus-and-king-arthur-the-connection-to-camelot it would have had to be made of tin.
Tin and was
used by the ancients as early as 3,500 B.C.
The purest form was not used until about 600 B.C and it was mainly used
because of its hardening effect on copper which was more widespread than that
of tin in the earth. Today tin is very
useful in these applications and remains a very lucrative business: it
is used as a protective
coating, it can also be used as an alloy with other metals, mainly lead or
zinc, used in coatings for steel containers, in solders for joining pipes or
electrical/electronic circuits, and in glass-making.
For this reason I am surmising that the sword that Merlin
stuck in the rock was made from tin.
It is said that Merlin trained Arthur in taking metals form
stone or rock up until the big day when he took Excalibur out of that stone
that fateful day. Excalibur has shown up
in various stories and time. The sword
was used in the 12 battles and was also used to gain control of part of the
island that we now today as Ireland.
Later in the 12th century it showed up again in
Jerusalem. It was given by King Richard
Coeur de Lion to a Tancred (Tancred of Leece, King Of Sicily) as a gift of
heroism. At this time there was so much
political unrest that Merlin had devised.
Scotland was where some of these politics had ensued but England tried
to lay claim to all after the death of Arthur.
We do know that the ransom of King Richard was paid by items and
Excalibur from the treasures of Britain.
In the days of Arthur the land that we know where not the names or
boundaries that are today. There were
three main areas that divided Britain:
Logria (England), Cambria (Wales) and Albania (Scotland). There were three islands and they were:
Inisgueith (Isle of Wight), Eubonia or Manau (Isle of Man) and Orc (Orkneys).
After King Arthur’s death it was thrown into the lake. Vivienne,
The Lady of the Lake, brought King Arthur’s body to Avalon. She also held Arthur’s sword Excalibur there
as well and protected it on the Isle of Avalon.
Who knows where it is today….
Resources: “King Arthur”, by Norma Lorre Goodrich