Who else is getting tired of hearing about the Templars

Singlestack Wonder; said:
Others have posted this same image...yet none have provided any documented facts to prove any of the fictional theories....

You have not shown that any of the theories are fictional, all you have claimed is that it is a hoax, all of it!

Cheers, Loki
 

No it wasn't, in the 12th to 15th century it was only used by those with access to it. Either traders from the Indian Ocean region or from the Eastern Mediterranean.
Cheers, Loki

Rather Eurocentric to state that it had to be the templars who brought this coconut fiber (if that's what it even is) to Oak Island. If the fiber has to be of Indian Ocean origin, then why could it not have been the Chinese? Or Indians? Or Polynesians, even. I mean, there's as much evidence for Chinese in NS as evidence for Templars here. I'm sure that there's even some terra cotta statue somewhere pointing in the general direction of Oak Island...
 

Rather Eurocentric to state that it had to be the templars who brought this coconut fiber (if that's what it even is) to Oak Island. If the fiber has to be of Indian Ocean origin, then why could it not have been the Chinese? Or Indians? Or Polynesians, even. I mean, there's as much evidence for Chinese in NS as evidence for Templars here. I'm sure that there's even some terra cotta statue somewhere pointing in the general direction of Oak Island...

The Chinese, Indians or Polynesians? Do you know where they are located on the globe? We finally, in 1960 had proof that the Norse, located at least in the same end of the world made the trip to North America.

The Knights Templar were in the right place at the right time, had capable ships and were capable themselves. They constantly sailed the length of the Mediterranean the distance being close to the distance across the Atlantic. They sailed the Atlantic from Spain to England in their wine trade from La Rochelle. And they disappeared from La Rochelle at the right time, 1307, having just recently (that spring) left the Eastern Med., where they would have had the coconut fibre that is dated correctly (having arrived overland through Arab trading with India), landing temporarily in La Rochelle with a definitive reason to soon leave Europe far behind!

Btw, good to see you are still around!

Cheers, Loki
 

Last edited:
The Chinese, Indians or Polynesians? Do you know where they are located on the globe?

Yes I do! In fact, my fifth grade teacher, Sr. Canavan, noted on my report card that she was impressed by my knowledge of world geography. The benefit of growing up with no TV, but with a complete collection of the Encyclopedia Britannica.

We finally, in 1960 had proof that the Norse, located at least in the same end of the world made the trip to North America.

Yes, we have concrete and verifiable evidence that the Norse were in Newfoundland... but then, the Templars are not Norse.

The Knights Templar were in the right place at the right time, had capable ships and were capable themselves.

... so were the Chinese. Some people have also suggested that the Chinese sailed the globe in the mid to late 1400's. There are others who even claim that there is evidence of a Chinese villa in Cape Breton. It's nonsense, of course, but the argument has been made.

... with a definitive reason to soon leave Europe far behind!

Did they really? Many found peace in Scotland or Portugal, in addition to other nations. Some as citizens, and some with other religious orders. Seems like the persecution faced by these former Templars has been overstated.

Btw, good to see you are still around!

Work has been nuts, but I missed you, too, Loki!
 

Last edited:
Oak Island is the most popular/only treasure hunting show on TV.
Treasurenet the most popular treasure hunting site on the Net.
It only make sense that some of the guys from the show would be on here .....after all they are treasure hunters and can hide behind user names.
Marty i see you and it ain`t pretty!
 

Last edited:
Oak Island is the most popular/only treasure hunting show on TV.
Treasurenet the most popular treasure hunting site on the Net.
It only make sense that some of the guys from the show would be on here .....after all they are treasure hunters and can hide behind user names.
Marty i see you and it ain`t pretty!

Do you have proof or evidence of this ?
:laughing7:
 

Ah yes....the internet. So you do not have any verifiable proof to show us? If so, please post so that we all can learn.

If I had something to do with tv show or I had to take care of you, I would post everything for you to read. But the Mystery of Oak Island has been solved. Acadia or Gloucester Island whatever you want to call it. Whether the treasure has been removed or not now that is another story. Large amounts of non-ferrous metal has been located. At least it was there about three years ago and it should still be there? But we will see if they come up with it.
 

Find it on the Internet like I did. Not hard to find.

Not hard to post, either. You made the claim. Can you back it up or not?

T
The Knights Templar were in the right place at the right time, had capable ships and were capable themselves. They constantly sailed the length of the Mediterranean the distance being close to the distance across the Atlantic. They sailed the Atlantic from Spain to England in their wine trade from La Rochelle.

How do those routes differ from the alleged journey to the New World?

Do you have proof or evidence of this ?

It's Oak Island. Don't ask for more proof or evidence. There's precious enough of either to go around as it is.
 

Not hard to post, either. You made the claim. Can you back it up or not?



How do those routes differ from the alleged journey to the New World?



It's Oak Island. Don't ask for more proof or evidence. There's precious enough of either to go around as it is.

Go check out the three episodes on Youtube by Petter Amundsen and be amazed. If you want to get in depth, Petter also has four documentaries of about two hours each and again be amazed. The Mystery of Oak Island is no longer a mystery. It is only to dig at #7 at MERCY Francis Bacon and Shakespeare tells all but in code.
 

How do those routes differ from the alleged journey to the New World?

Not as much as one would think. Navigation is navigation, it works anywhere in the world exactly the same. Being both an experienced pilot and sailor I know something about this. You might think sailing the Mediterranean would be much easier than the Atlantic, that they could pull into port whenever they wished. But, sailing the Viking routes across the Atlantic no leg would be much longer than 250 miles. I had a friend that sailed on the viking replica that made the journey in 2016 and she told me the sailors were surprised by the fury of the Great Lakes as compared to the Ocean. That vessel left Norway in April, I think (without looking it up) that they took about two months to get to Quebec, with extended stops in the Shetlands, the Faroes (for repairs), Iceland and Geenland. I followed the whole trip online finding it extremely interesting.
So there is no confusion, my friend got on the ship in Quebec and sailed with the crew to Bay City, Michigan.

Cheers, Loki
 

Last edited:
Go check out the three episodes on Youtube by Petter Amundsen and be amazed. If you want to get in depth, Petter also has four documentaries of about two hours each and again be amazed. The Mystery of Oak Island is no longer a mystery. It is only to dig at #7 at MERCY Francis Bacon and Shakespeare tells all but in code.

I'm not an Amundsen expert, but from what writings of his that I've seen so far, I suspect that he's insane. Perhaps his documentaries will convince me otherwise. I'll take a look at them as time becomes available, but I'll warn you up front that it won't be a priority of mine. Again, his writings (the ones that I've seen) appear to be the work of a madman.

Navigation is navigation, it works anywhere in the world exactly the same. Being both an experienced pilot and sailor I know something about this.

Being both an experienced pilot and a sailor, you would also know that that statement is not perfectly accurate, but it's close enough for government work. More importantly, I'm quite sure that you're aware of the differences between coastal and transatlantic sailing, and I'm not just talking about the weather.

In other words, I'm not convinced that the Templars had the capability, as they'd never actually demonstrated it. Don't take it for granted that they could cross the Atlantic. There's no proof that they had the skills, and I'm not sure that the ships were even up to the task in the first place.
 

Being both an experienced pilot and a sailor, you would also know that that statement is not perfectly accurate, but it's close enough for government work. More importantly, I'm quite sure that you're aware of the differences between coastal and transatlantic sailing, and I'm not just talking about the weather.

In other words, I'm not convinced that the Templars had the capability, as they'd never actually demonstrated it. Don't take it for granted that they could cross the Atlantic. There's no proof that they had the skills, and I'm not sure that the ships were even up to the task in the first place.

C'mon Dave, I'm sure you know the Templars that went to Portugal under the new order of the Knights of Christ founded the famous navigation school there, and that Prince Henry the Navigator was of the Knights of Christ. Also it is well known that the Templars brought The Arab secrets of Navigation to Europe.
My mentioning of the respect the Norse sailors developed for the Great Lakes was to inform you that the Great Lakes are as serious to sail as the Ocean
and that the Mediterranean deserves the same respect. There is no doubt the Templar sailors had the ability to sail the ocean blue, perhaps not straight across following a latitude (of course as we all know straight across is not the shortest route, right?), but certainly following the well established (after 300 years) Norse routes.

Cheers, Loki
 

Last edited:
Who Says...People are tired of the ...Knights Templar!

Knights-Templar-17.jpg

Not...4.41 Million Viewers!

“The Curse of Oak Island” ranks first in viewers with 4.41 million after adding just under 1.1 million viewers in three days.

Two of cable’s most reliable performers, “The Real Housewives of Atlanta” and “The Curse of Oak Island,” snagged the top spots in the Live +3 charts for the week of Feb. 5."
 

I thought the templars were knights that figured out how to earn huge sums of income by protecting travelers to/from the Holy Land.

When did they learn to be exceptional sailors?

On another note, after reading many of the absurd postings about oak island attempting to keep it relevant, it looks like the laginas may be posting here in an effort to keep their fans hooked until curse of civil war gold gets started.
 

Last edited:
C'mon Dave, I'm sure you know the Templars that went to Portugal under the new order of the Knights of Christ founded the famous navigation school there, and that Prince Henry the Navigator was of the Knights of Christ.

For this to mean anything you would have to show that the Templars had such knowledge (navigation, etc) prior to being taken in by the Knights of Christ.
 

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top