Arndt | The Charlemagne Hoax | E-Book | www2.sack.de
E-Book

E-Book, Englisch, 216 Seiten

Arndt The Charlemagne Hoax

Unmasking the Father of Europe
1. Auflage 2025
ISBN: 978-3-6951-5344-2
Verlag: BoD - Books on Demand
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 6 - ePub Watermark

Unmasking the Father of Europe

E-Book, Englisch, 216 Seiten

ISBN: 978-3-6951-5344-2
Verlag: BoD - Books on Demand
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 6 - ePub Watermark



He is revered as the Father of Europe, but what if Charlemagne never existed? In "The Charlemagne Hoax," Mario Arndt, author of "History's Hidden Blueprint" and "History by Design", reveals the legendary emperor to be a deliberate fabrication of the late Middle Ages. He is a "Phantom-Reflection," engineered from the lives of two later, real-life rulers: Charles I of Anjou and Charles I of Valois. The evidence is compelling: - The 300-Year Silence: Why did the name "Charles" vanish without a trace from all European royal houses for over 300 years after 929? - The Biblical Copy: The early Carolingian era (Pippin, Charles, Louis) is an exact copy of the biblical kings Saul, David, and Solomon. - Missing Traces: No coins minted by Charlemagne have ever been found in his supposed capital of Aachen, and contemporary Arabic sources fail to mention him even once. This book is the explosive exposé of one of history's greatest forgeries and a radical reassessment of the Middle Ages. www.HistoryHacking.net

History analyst and author Mario Arndt writes about topics you won't find in traditional history books. He's from Germany (* 1963) and now lives in Thailand. His analyses of official history reveal how the Middle Ages, the ancient world, and the associated chronologies were fabricated and forged. His professional background in IT as a software developer enables him to develop a completely new understanding of the official version of history and to discover what really happened in the past. He has published eight books since 2012. Website: www.HistoryHacking.net
Arndt The Charlemagne Hoax jetzt bestellen!

Autoren/Hrsg.


Weitere Infos & Material


Clear parallels with the same time interval


Louis of Bavaria twice as king and the coins


The Roman-German King Ludwig IV of Bavaria (1314-1347) minted coins that were duplicates of French coins. This happened more than 400 years after the two empires were officially separated, according to official history.

The coins of Louis IV (and other kings of his time, as well as the popes in Avignon) also look like a direct continuation of coins attributed to the Carolingians, only of better quality.

French coins dating from the period between the 10th and 13th centuries are rare.

The first papal coins from Avignon in the 14th century are also in typical Carolingian style. It is said that the popes in Rome had already minted coins from around 790 to 980, but then abandoned this practice for unknown reasons (just as unknown as the reasons why the popes did not have spectacular cathedrals built like other bishops of the Middle Ages).

Fig. 10: Coin attributed to the French king Louis IX (1226-1270). The reverse side depicts a castle/palace (Turonus Civis = Tours) in the same place on the coin where other coins bear the monogram KRLS. Tours was also the bishopric of Saint Martin (also known as a Roman officer), the patron saint of France. Nearby (between Tours and Poitiers), Charles Martel allegedly saved France and the Western world. More on that later.

Fig. 11: Identical coin of the Roman-German King and Emperor Louis IV of Bavaria (1314-1347)

Fig. 12: Coin attributed to the West Frankish king Charles II the Bald (843-877). On the reverse side is the monogram KRLS.

After the division of the Frankish Empire in 843, a Bavarian named Louis ruled as East Frankish king for 33 years (known as Louis II the German), with Charles as his successor. And from 1314, a Bavarian named Louis ruled as Roman-German king for 33 years, with Charles as his successor.

This leads one to suspect that the two Bavarian kings named Ludwig may be one and the same person (there are other important parallels, which will be discussed below), who may also be identical to the Bavarian king Ludwig IV (900-911).

The similarity between the portraits is unmistakable. The front and side views match. Note also Ludwig's characteristic curly hair – pp. 26/27.

The division of a common empire may then not have taken place in 843, but only in 1314, or even later.

This is also supported by the fact that in the 13th century there were Roman kings (Rex Romanorum) who came from all over Western Europe, in stark contrast to the centuries before and after. Before that, these were probably fakes, after that, the reality of the new Roman-German Empire.

After the extinction of the Staufer dynasty in the mid-13th century, the kings no longer came from the areas belonging to the German tribal duchies of Saxony, Franconia, Bavaria, and Alemannia.

Around 1300, the well-structured Middle Ages also came to an end in several northern and eastern European countries, accompanied by war and/ or an interregnum (Hungary, Poland, Denmark, Scotland). The same period also saw the beginning of the Hundred Years' War between France and England. In Russia, from 1328 onwards, Ivan I, Prince of Moscow, gained supremacy over the Russian principalities, making Moscow the center of power for the next few centuries.

The entire period from 843 (the Treaty of Verdun) to the 14th century is obviously uniformly structured, with a strange but well- structured period between 911/929 and 1313/1322, during which completely different royal names were given than before and after. Only Lothair is the king of the middle both before and within this period.

Fig. 13: Seal of the East Frankish king Louis II the German

Fig. 14: Tomb slab of the Roman-German King Louis IV of Bavaria from 1468

King's name Structuring of space Structuring of time
Louis 1) Louis II receives the East Frankish Kingdom in the division of the Frankish Empire in 843 2 x Louis IV in the Holy Roman Empire before and after 911-1313, but not within
2) King Louis, the Child (18 years old), 11 years as king of East Francia (403 years = 31 kings with 13 different names, crowned: 3 x 113 years [+64])
3) 2 x Louis IV as king of the East Frankish Empire / Holy Roman Empire
Charles 1) Charles II receives the West Frankish Empire during the division of the Frankish Empire in 843 Charles III/IV in France before and after 929-1322, but not during (3 x 131 years)
2) King Charles, the Child, (18 years old), 11 years as king in the West Frankish Empire
3) Charles III/IV as King of West Francia / France
Lothair (also spelled "Luther") Lothar I receives the Middle Kingdom with Rome in the division of the Frankish Empire in 843 Lothar III in the middle of the system of royal names from 911-1313 in the Holy Roman Empire
Conrad and Henry 15 times in the Holy Roman Empire, but with the exception of Henry I (1031-1060) not in France Only in the period from 911 to 1313, but neither before nor after

Table 1: The structuring of space and time in the history of the Frankish Empire and its successor empires

Let's return briefly to the coins in Rome:

The first coins after the first minting period in the 8th/9th century, with the inscriptions "Roma Caput Mundi" (Rome, the capital of the world) and "S.P.Q.R" (abbreviation for "Senatus Populusque Romanus," English: Senate and People of Rome), i.e., without any reference to a pope.

There are therefore no papal coins from the period when the popes supposedly had the height of their power (e.g., from the time of the Walk to Canossa in 1076/1077 and from the time of the Crusades).

The doubled Charles


If we look at the periods before Louis the German and Louis the Bavarian, we see striking similarities in the same and similar time intervals to 843/1314 (471 years):

1.)
King Charles I of Franconia, also known as "the Great," dies in 814,

and

King Charles I of Anjou, also known as "the Great," also regent of France, died in 1285.

  • Interval 471 years

2.)
King Charles I of Franconia, also known as "the Great," is crowned by the Pope in Rome on Christmas Day 800.

and

King Charles I of Anjou, also known as "the Great," also regent of France, is crowned by the Pope in Rome on (Orthodox) Christmas Day 1266.

  • Interval of 466 years

Fig. 15: The coronation of Charles I of Franconia, also known as "the Great"

Fig. 16: The coronation of Charles I of Anjou, also known as "the Great"

What makes the 466-year interval in connection with the Pope in Rome particularly interesting is the following coincidence among the popes [see also Arndt 2012b]:

1.)
First Gothic Pope Boniface II in 530,
First German pope Gregory V 996

  • Interval of 466 years

2.)
Second Gothic Pope Pelagius II, 579
Second German pope Clement II 1046

  • Interval 467 years

Figure 5: Parallels at intervals of 466/471 years in the 8th-10th and 13th-14th centuries. Top: Rome/Italy and the Frankish Empire; bottom: Rome/Italy and the Holy Roman Empire

These parallels end in the Frankish Empire in 929, when the West Frankish king Charles III dies. It is precisely at this point that the French system of royal names with the 3 x 131 years, which has already been discussed on pages 16/17, begins.

Exactly 471 years later, in 1400, the Roman-German King Wenceslaus was deposed. He was a namesake of his predecessor Charles IV, whose birth name was also Wenceslaus.

Interestingly, King Charles III, who lived 471 years earlier, was also deposed six years before his death.

One year before Louis IV became king, in 1313, the Roman-German system of royal names, which began in 911 (see pages 18/19), came to an end. The king who ruled before him was also a Louis from Bavaria, also numbered IV.

In addition, there are other striking similarities in the similar time interval [Arndt 2012, p. 145 ff.], also in Ethiopian history. O. Neugebauer had already noted that in Ethiopian history, ruler dates repeat themselves at intervals of 456 years.

[Neugebauer, p. 55]

If one considers a different year for the creation of the world than has been assumed in previous calculations, the Ethiopian chronological error also results in an interval of 471 years. More on this in a moment.

The construction of calendars as the cause of duplication


In my book I showed that the most important...



Ihre Fragen, Wünsche oder Anmerkungen
Vorname*
Nachname*
Ihre E-Mail-Adresse*
Kundennr.
Ihre Nachricht*
Lediglich mit * gekennzeichnete Felder sind Pflichtfelder.
Wenn Sie die im Kontaktformular eingegebenen Daten durch Klick auf den nachfolgenden Button übersenden, erklären Sie sich damit einverstanden, dass wir Ihr Angaben für die Beantwortung Ihrer Anfrage verwenden. Selbstverständlich werden Ihre Daten vertraulich behandelt und nicht an Dritte weitergegeben. Sie können der Verwendung Ihrer Daten jederzeit widersprechen. Das Datenhandling bei Sack Fachmedien erklären wir Ihnen in unserer Datenschutzerklärung.