This text critiques the historical narrative of John Knox, suggesting that his life and influence have been fabricated or exaggerated by powerful groups, possibly for political or financial reasons. The author claims that Knox was a Jewish agent of the Stuarts and Hamiltons, and later the Stanleys, used to advance their agendas, particularly the move against Catholicism. The text delves into Knox’s supposed lineage, his religious affiliations, his involvement in historical events like the murder of Cardinal Beaton and the Scottish Reformation, and his writings. The author argues that many accounts of Knox’s life, including his ordination, his education, his conversion to Protestantism, his exile, and even his death and burial, are fabricated. The text also makes extensive connections to various noble families, royal lineages, and historical figures, suggesting a hidden web of influence and deception. The author’s personal religious history is presented as evidence of their unbiased approach to the topic.
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This text critiques the historical narrative of John Knox, suggesting that his life and influence have been fabricated or exaggerated by powerful groups, possibly for political or financial reasons. The author claims that John Knox was a Jewish agent of the Stuarts and Hamiltons, and later the Stanleys, used to advance their agendas, particularly the move against Catholicism. The text delves into Knox’s supposed lineage, his religious affiliations, his involvement in historical events like the murder of Cardinal Beaton and the Scottish Reformation, and his writings. The author argues that many accounts of Knox’s life, including his ordination, his education, his conversion to Protestantism, his exile, and even his death and burial, are fabricated. The text also makes extensive connections to various noble families, royal lineages, and historical figures, suggesting a hidden web of influence and deception. The author’s personal religious history, including affiliations with Methodist and Presbyterian churches in Lubbock, TX, is presented as evidence of their unbiased approach to the topic. Key figures and families mentioned include Leonardo, Newton, Margaret Stewart, Lord Stewart of Ochiltree, Agnes Cuninghame, Earls of Glencairn, Hamilton of the Earls of Arran, Drummond, Lindsay of the Earls of Crawford, Murrays, John Knox, b. 1505, John Knox, b. 1514, Wikipedia, Margaret Knox, Earl of Arran, Mary, Queen of Scots, James VI, James I of England, Stuarts, Jewish authors, Geni, Erica the Disconnectrix Howton, Sir Andrew Ker, Lord Ruthven, Rizzio, James V, Darnley, Bishop of Dunblane, St. Andrews, Glasgow, Douglas of Longniddry, Cockburn of Ormiston, Patrick Hamilton, George Wishart, Alexander Stewart, Duke of Albany, King James II of Scotland, Fearn Abbey, University of Paris, Leuven, Erasmus, University of St. Andrews, James Beaton, Archbishop of St Andrews, David Beaton, the Abbot of Arbroath, King James V, Katherine Hamilton, Berwick-upon-Tweed, Philippe Petain, Ile de Yeu, Learmonth, Barclays of Barclays Bank, Douglases, Earls of Angus, Grahams, Forbes, Lyons, Campbells, Sir James Learmonth, 1st of Balcomie, Balfour, Bruce, Stewart of Rosyth, Thomas Cromwell, Thomas Cranmer, Corpus Christi College, Oxford, Edward VI, Cardinal of St. Andrews, Henry II of France, Mary of Guise, William Kirkcaldy, Henry Balnaves, Douglas, Lord Bothwell, French Navy, Seine, Loire, Rouen, Nantes, Virgin Mary, Church of England, Margery Bowes, Bowes-Lyon, Queen of England, Durham, Sir George Bowes, Huttons, Usshers, Darcys, Balls, George Washington, Worshipful Company of Turners, Fitzhughs, Willoughbys, Nevilles, Montagus, Greys, St. Nicholas Church in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, Duke of Northumberland, John Dudley, Duke of Somerset, Mary Tudor, Geneva, John Calvin, Charles V, Frankfurt, Holy Roman Emperor, Queen Mary, Switzerland, Phoenician Navy, Rome, usury, Mary Guise, first blast of the trumpet against the monstruous regiment of women, Queen Mary I of England, Elizabeth Tudor, Rome, Lord Argyll, Archibald Campbell, Earl of Argyll, Lord Moray, James Stewart, 1st Earl of Moray, William Maitland, Jimmy Stewart, James Maitland Stewart, England, Mary Guise, Bourbons, Tudors, Francis, Charlotte of Bourbon, King Janus of Cyprus, Maria Comnena, Amalric I, John II Komnenos, Emperor of Byzantium, Counts of Savoy, Catherine of Bourbon, Lorraines, Habsburg, Valois, Medicis, Catherine de’ Medicis, Darnley, Margaret Tudor, Isaac II Angelos, Blanche of Artois, John of Gaunt, Carolingians, Alice of Normandy, Counts of Anjou, Capetians, Ruriks, Rollo of Normandy, William the Conqueror, Henry VII, Edmund Tudor, Margaret Beaufort, Thomas Stanley, 1st Earl of Derby, King of Mann, Duke of Suffolk, John, Lord Stafford, Duke of Buckingham, Bosworth Field, Princes in the Tower, Edward V, Duke of York, Richard III, Stanley, Royal Arms of England, Plantagenets, Order of the Garter, Dieu et Mon Droit, Baronetcys, Stanley, Isle of Mann, triskeles, Greek coins, Achilles, Hermes, Syracuse, Mycenaeans, Thoth, Hermes Trismegistus, El, Uranus, Edinburgh Castle, Scottish Parliament, Pope, Mass, kirks, Paris, Elizabeth, Francis II, Duke of Guise, Cardinal of Lorraine, la tyrannie Guisienne, Catherine de’ Medicis, Medicis, France, Scotland, Jenny Wormald, Catholic, Protestantism, Reformation, Crown Matrimonial, Bothwell, James, August 11, aces and eights, Chai, Walsingham, Elizabeth, Earls of Shrewsbury and Kent, Sir George Talbot, Manners, Hardwicke, Hastings, Neville, Henry Grey, Percys, Spencers, Peterborough, England, Westminster Abbey, King James I of England, Scotland, France, Mary Stuart, St. Giles Cathedral, 1633, Charles I, Kirk, Lord Morton, General Assembly, Margaret, Stewart, Hamilton, Royal Family, Baron Andrew Stewart, Gentleman of the Bedchamber, Kennedy of Blairquhan Castle, Galloway, Strathclyde, Western Isles, John Knox, Calvin, Luther, Lindemann, Jewish, Germany, Switzerland, Monty Python, The Adventures of Martin Luther, Graham Chapman, Towers, Douglases, Lindsays, John Cleese, John Cheese, Grey, Montagu, Ford, Villiers, Booth, Terry Jones, Terence Graham Parry Jones, Parrys, Herberts (Earls of Pembroke), Fynes-Clintons, Grahams, Dukes of Montrose, Michael Palin, Moreton, Lockhart, Ripley, Watson, Indian Army, Earls of Ducie, Carnarvon, Dutton, Lockharts, Wishart, Wittenburg, Mamie Mayer, Hymie.