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TH E G LIPH O YO G H

M agioncalda Fam ily of D onetta and Scottish Tem plars Tradition


Starting from an ancient grave walled in the Saint Honorat Parish of Torriglia dated 1512, in which glyph YOGH is used two times to appoint a Massaro belonging to Maxocalida Family:

Dnu3 La3arinu (Dominus Lazarinu)

We reasonably can make such considerations: Magioncalda Family is certainly of Templar origin and is lodged in Donetta Village since seven Centuries. Donetta fortress aged 12th century controlled Medieval Chamino of Lombardia from Genoa to Pavia and the North Europe. This ancient path from Bobium to Ligurian sea was well known by Scots Monks.

Saint Columban died and was buried in Bobium Abbey and the pilgrimage from Ireland and Scotland was frequent in the Middle Ages. You know that Robert Bruce defeated English Army at the Battle of Bannockburn. He was considered the spiritual founder of the Scottish Rite of Free Masonry and was Earl of Elgin, County with many Templar properties. Regius Manuscript is the oldest version of English Masonic Regulations, the poem was written before the advent of printing press, it was written in a Middle English Script (Scottish Rite) about 1390/1450.

Fyftene artyculus pey per sow3to, and fyftene poyntys per pey wro3ton
In this document the use of Yogh is continue. The Scottish retained the YOGH in personal and place names, likewise the Scottish proper names listed below: Macken3ie or Men3ies (Sir Alexander Men3ies fought at Bannockburn in 1314), Scottish Clans with Norman origin such as Bruce, Murray, Sinclair. The Glyph YOGH 3 survives silently today in such words as KNIGHTS (KNIGH3) Donettas Magioncalda parentella or Clan were freemasons of Scottish Rite up to nineteen century.

Scottish Masonic Rite

The Glyph Yogh

English Army at Bannockburn was commanded by Edward II Plantagenet, husband of Isabel daughter of the King of France Philip. A serious theory y about the end of Edward the Second, King of England after his defeat and abdication, reveal his retreat to monastic life. Indeed after a long wandering in France ad Italy the monk Edward of Caernarvon fled in heremitorio diocesis Papiensis near Cecima Castle where he died. For his burial was chosen Saint Albert of Butrio Abbey where you can see the sarcophagus. A few years later his son Edward III carried the corpse in England where in Abbey of Gloucester he finally found rest. From Donetta village in a days journey on foot we can reach Staffora Valley and Saint Alberto.

Saint Alberto di Butrio Abbey , Edward II Plantagenet burial

In fourteen century Donetta was held by Fieschi, a very important family that counts two Popes and more than sixty Bishops. In 1336 Cardinal Luca Fieschi housed in his court at Avignon two priests and many servants from Donetta village, may be Magioncalda. Luca Fieschi was well known in England as from 1310 and 1317 he was Papal Nuncio to negotiate a peace between Edward II and Robert Bruce.

Currently is considered the god father of Edward preservation in Italy also because of the famous letter that Manuele Fieschi (his second cousin, Pope Notary and then Bishop of Vercelli) still based in Avignon, wrote to Edward III revealing the whereabouts of his father preservation in Italy.1 We must consider that during the war of Scottish Independence many Genoese families provided ships and provisions to the contenders, Pessagno, Doria and Usodimare supported Edward while Simone Dentuto and Manuel Maniavacca supported Robert Bruce. Mules packed with merchandise, armed knights, merchants and monks travelled Antola Path to the North. Templar Maxiocalida Family and Doneta were actors in that period, each step was controlled by them. Glyph YOGH, Templar Knights, Maxiocalida Family and Scotland Deserters are linked. Karl Gottlieb Eques a penna rubra; Count of Cagliostro Arcana Arcanorum; Johannes Marcus Larmenius Scotos Templarios Ordinis Desertores Anathemate.

Templar Knight Eques a penna rubra

Particular

E veryone Player and Spectator at the universal Free M asonry great m ystery
1

The Perfect King - The Life of Edward III - Jan Mortimer

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