A Multitude of Holy Grails - Part II
By Mark Amaru Pinkham
© 2005
Since the publication of the DaVinci Code the debate
rages as to what and where the true Holy Grail exists. In Part
I of this article it is revealed that the Cup of Christ, illeged
to have been taken to England by Joseph of Arimathea, may in fact
have been two vials or cruets filled with the blood and sweat
of Jesus. In Part II, it is revealed that there were other vials
and containers of Jesus’ blood taken out of Palestine, any
one of which could currently claim distinction as THE Holy
Grail.
Besides Joseph’s two cruets that are reputed to have been
deposited in Glastonbury, England, there was another famous pair
of cruets filled with the blood and sweat of Christ that were taken
out of the Middle East following the Messiah’s death. The
owner of these vials was Nicodemus, who, like his close friend Joseph,
similarly gathered up the blood and sweat that rolled off the Messiah’s
body while assisting in the preparation of Jesus’ body before
its internment. In order to hide his precious cruets, Nicodemus
is said to have secreted them inside an image of the crucified Christ
that he carved himself. Many scholars today claim it is still in
existence as the Volto Santo, a wooden crucifix that currently
hangs in Saint Martin’s Cathedral in Lucca, Italy. Identified
as a legitimate Holy Grail manifestation in the mediaeval Grail
legend known as the First Continuation, the Volto Santo
arrived in Italy after being hidden for many years in Palestine,
during which time it was in the care of the descendants of one Isaac
or Isaachar, a member of the early Church whom Nicodemus hand picked
to guard the Volto Santo just before he died. Following their arrival
in Italy, the two cruets of blood were quickly discovered within
the image’s head by the bishops of Luni and Lucca, each of
whom took one and placed it within his respective cathedral.
Complicating the identity of the true Holy Grail even further
is the third person who assisted Joseph and Nicodemus in wiping
down the crucified body of Jesus. This was Mary Magdalene, who used
a white alabaster jar to collect the blood and sweat of Jesus. According
to the Golden Legend written by the French Archbishop Jacobus de
Voragine, Mary transported her jar to France in a boat crewed by
her sister Martha and her brother Lazarus. Mary was also accompanied
on her journey west by Jesus’ aunts, Mary Jacobi and Mary
Salome, and one of Jesus’ seventy-two disciples, St. Maximim.
The Golden Legend states that Mary and her companions originally
set sail against their will right after the Ascension, when “heathens”
sent them aimlessly adrift on the turbulent Mediterranean Sea “without
any tackle or rudder…for to be drowned.” Fortunately,
states the legend, “by the purveyance of Almighty God”
they eventually landed safely in the French coastal city of Marseilles.
The accepted French legend has it that Mary Magdalene died around
75 A.D. after spending the last forty years of her life as a hermit
in a cave in the French hill region of Saint Baume. After her transition,
Mary’s body was interred by her brother disciple, St. Maximim,
in the chapel he administered in the village of Villalata, later
renamed St. Maximim in his honor. Between the 3rd and 4th centuries,
Mary’s body was placed in an ornate white marble coffin, where
it remained until 710 A.D., when Saracens invading southern France
compelled Cassian monks to move Mary’s remains into a less
ostentatious coffin, and then secretly bury it. Finally, in 1279,
Mary’s tomb was re-discovered by Charles, a nephew of King
Louis IX of France. Her bones and accompanying sacred objects were
dug up and became part of her Sacred Relics, which were subsequently
interred in the Basilique Sainte Madeleine. Today, Mary’s
Relics reside within in the French village of Vezelay, and her skull
is the centerpiece of an annual procession through the streets of
St. Maximim.
Unfortunately, the whereabouts of Mary’s alabaster jar currently
remains a mystery. One legend suggests that it eventually became
one of the prized possessions of the Cathars, a group of Gnostics
who were exterminated in 1244 by a crusade organized by Pope Innocent
and his Inquisition. According to this legend, leading up to their
final decimation on March 1, the Cathars took their most sacred
books and artifacts, which included both the Holy Shroud and a version
of the Holy Grail – possibly Mary’s alabaster jar –
and then sought refuge in their nearly impenetrable mountain-top
fortress of Montsegur, the principal seat of the Cathar Church since
the year 1230. While their fortress was under siege by soldiers
of the Inquisition, two or more Cathars are believed to have clandestinely
escaped down the side of the mountain with many of the Cathar treasures,
including both the Shroud and Mary’s Holy Grail, and then
to have hid them in the surrounding countryside. The recovery of
the Cathar relics in southern France has been an obsession of treasure
hunters ever since.
Could Mary’s Holy Grail still exist somewhere in the south
of France? As strange as it sounds, Mary’s Grail may have
been discovered and moved to another location by Hitler’s
Nazis. In 1931, Otto Rahn, a German who believed himself to have
been a Cathar in a previous incarnation, was sent to Montsegur by
Hienrich Himmler to search for the lost Cathar treasures. Rahn discovered
tunnels and caverns beneath Montsegur, but he died mysteriously
before he was able to extract any of the treasure interred within
them. Another SS officer, Otto Skorzeny, was then dispatched by
Himmler to complete the job, and according to one eye-witness account
he was later seen leaving Montsegur with a plane load of relics
headed for Himmler’s secret mountain fortress of Berchtesgaden.
Then, states an additional eye witness account from the end of World
War II, a German Heinkel 277 V-1 left Salzburg, Austria, bound for
the East, possibly Nepal or Tibet, with a plane load of cargo believed
to include the ancient Cathar relics. According to Howard Buechner,
a retired U.S. Army Colonel, on board the German plane were also
“twelve stone tablets of the Germanic Grail, which contained
the key to ultimate knowledge.”
Mary’s Holy Grail could, therefore, currently either reside
in either southern France or in the Far East. But one alternate
ending of its odyssey asserts that the Nazis eventually transported
Mary’s Holy Grail from Berchtesgaden to Antarctica by a clandestine
submarine and it now resides within a stone obelisk marking a cave
in the Muhlig-Hoffman Mountains. This mysterious cave, known as
the Emerald Cave, is supposedly linked by tunnels to caverns inside
the Earth, where legends imply a subterranean civilization may exist.
Interestingly, the Antarctic cave’s association with an emerald
links Mary’s Holy Grail with the Stone of Heaven, a large
emerald referred to by Wolfram Eschenbach in Parzival as being the
true Holy Grail.
Mary Magadalene is also associated with a chalice that may, instead
of her jar, be the real Holy Grail of legend. Some scholars contend
that Mary’s chalice was part of the Arma Christi, the
“Weapons of Christ,” a name for the relics of the Passion
that were discovered in Jerusalem where Jesus was supposedly crucified.
According to the 5th century historian Olympiodorous, Mary’s
Grail, referred to as the Marian Chalice, was discovered
by excavators working for the Empress Helena, the mother of King
Constantine, as they sifted through the earth in the area of Golgotha,
the reputed location of the Crucifixion. After its retrieval the
cup was first taken to Constantinople and then to Rome, where it
resided until the city was sacked by the Visigoths, at which point
it was transferred to a secret location in England, possibly Glastonbury.
According to Graham Philips, British author of The Search for the
Grail, the Marian Chalice was taken to the English Midlands, where
for centuries, as a stone cup made of onyx, it was carefully preserved
by the Peverel family of Whittington Castle. Sometime in the mid
19th century, a Peverel descendent transferred the cup to a hidden
stone grotto, where it was later found by Walter Langham in the
early 20th century and kept by his family. When Philips discovered
the location of the Langham family nearly one hundred years later,
he also found the onyx vessel. Since then, the jar has been dated
by the British Museum and found to be a spice jar used during the
first century after Christ.
But Philips’ conclusion that the Peverel cup is the Marian
Chalice has not gained wide acceptance. Many Grail scholars maintain
that after reaching England the Marian Chalice became known as the
Nanteos Cup, which is a vessel made of olive wood and therefore
a better candidate for being a household drinking cup used in Jerusalem
during the time of Jesus than one made out of metal or stone. Supposedly
the Nanteos Cup, currently owned by the Powel family of Wales, was
hidden within one of the walls of Glastonbury Abbey for many years
after arriving in England from Rome, where it had previously resided
for hundreds of years following its sequester in Palestine. When
Glastonbury Abbey was threatened with complete destruction at the
hands of the iconoclastic King Henry VIII, the wooden cup was taken
by the Abbey’s monks to the Nanteos Manor in Wales and kept
there by them for safekeeping. When the last guardian monk was near
death he asked the Lord of Nanteos Manor to safeguard the wooden
cup “until the church claims her own.”11 Later, in 1878,
the Powels of Nanteos Manor put the Nanteos Cup on public display
and it has since become a national treasure.
Another chalice that may be Mary Magdalene’s cup is the
Great Chalice of Antioch. This chalice, which was discovered
in Antioch during the last century along with a smaller chalice
and a cross, has been dated from the first to the fourth centuries
and now resides in the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art. The
Antioch Chalice has been set into an ornate silver reliquary and
decorated with images of Jesus and the Apostles. Some antiquarians
maintain that the Chalice of Antioch arrived in the city of Antioch
via the Crusaders, who were returning a sacred chalice, perhaps
Joseph’s Cup of Christ, to its rightful place in the Holy
Land. Although the cup is very old, most experts have concluded
that the Chalice of Antioch is too large and not antiquated enough
to be the original Cup of Christ.
Sacred Earth Journeys specializes in travel to sacred places
around the world including Egypt, England & Scotland, France,
India, Ireland, Peru, Sedona and Tibet. Please visit www.sacredearthjourneys.ca.
Ste 220 – 133 E. 8th Ave, Vancouver, B.C. V5T 1R8
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Mark Amaru Pinkham has just released his fourth book, Guardians
of the Holy Grail: The Knights Templar, John the Baptist and the
Water of Life. Mark is a Templar Knight of the Scottish Knight
Templar tradition and co-Director of the North American branch of
the International Order of Gnostic Templars. Mark leads spiritual
pilgrimages to France, England and Scotland to explore the Knights
Templar and Grail Mysteries.
Mark will be leading two tours to explore the Knights Templar and
Grail Mysteries:
Holy
Grail & Black Madonna Pilgrimage to France, May 12-21,
2005
Mystical
Templar Pilgrimage to England & Scotland, July 12-27, 2005
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