2015-10-19

Britain's Queen Elizabeth II not Real Heir to the Throne Full Documentary in search of the Rightful Heir

Vatic Note:   This below explains a lot.  So pay close attention to the geneology of this Queen.  Let me point out that Queen Victoria was married to Prince Albert who was an avowed gay man and would NOT perform his fatherly duties to sire a son or daughter, so the Queen had Rothschild perform the honors and that is the khazar line.  Only a few people knew this and its been around for quite a while and explains the close relationship Rothschilds have with the British Monarchy.

While this presentation deals with Edward the 4th,  notice not a word about Albert being gay, so who impregnated Victoria?  That rabbithole needs to be explored since the Khazars clearly control Britain under the royal house of Windsor. Here is a link to some info about this possibility.  http://www.henrymakow.com/_what_makow_claims_as.html

This presentation on Edward the fourth was totally new to me, so I found this very interesting.

FUND RAISING TIME AGAIN.  Its one day past our normal time due to the internet being down here in my town for almost 2 days now.   We could not do our blogs or fund raising campaign.  Now we are back up and asking for donations toward our $340 deficit this month.  If you can afford it, we appeal to you to donate to our cause to keep truth exposed and lies distroyed so we can prepare based on reality.... so help us do that so we can stay on the net to over come the treason being done by our MSM, both left and right.

Thank you for all your support over these many years.  I am still trying to find a way to fund this deficit without fund raising.  So far, no luck, but I am not giving up, so hang with us until we do.  Thank you again and God bless you and your family.


Britain's Queen Elizabeth II not Real Heir to the Throne Full Documentary 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z5fIwLo1Trs
Published on May 24, 2012

Tony Robinsons' documentary tracing the family history of our royals has established that our queen is NOT the rightful heir to the throne of England - nor is ANYONE within her family.

Tony Robinson goes in search of Britain's Real Monarch. The result is a detective story that takes him from the Tower of London, via Debretts Peerage, to the other side of the planet... 




Is She German? Shocking New Video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=blbqn...
Published on Sep 21, 2015
100 years ago the Royal Family changed there name to Windsor to hide there German name/heritage.



Britain's Queen Elizabeth II 63 years, the longest-ruling monarchy with German Blood DNA

Queen Victoria, daughter of Prince Edward, Duke of Kent and Strathearn son of George III ( who was grandson of George II born on 1 February 1707 in Hanover, Germany). 

Queen Victoria married to Prince Albert of (German) Saxon duchy of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld

ALL GERMAN due to the act of settlement

A recent discovery in August 2012, of King Richard III dead body, was found under a car park in Leicester. The search for Truth was initiated by the Looking for Richard project with the support of the Richard III Society.

He was the last English king of the House of York and the last of the Plantagenet dynasty, who was killed in battle of the Wars of the Roses in 1485.

Preliminary DNA analysis showed that mitochondrial DNA extracted from the bones matched that of two matrilineal descendants, one 17th-generation and the other 19th-generation, of Richard's sister Anne of York.

The DNA confirmed that the current royal Dynasty does not have a British royal bloodline, and that Queen Elizabeth II did not descended from previous Tudor or Plantagenet kings and queens.

So where did the current British queen come from?

She was born in London, served as a mechanic in the war and prefers dogs to humans. How much more British could Her Majesty be?

The obvious place to start is the family tree, although unfolding it is enough to make even the most seasoned genealogist reach for a stiff drink. Yet what comes across very clearly — and very quickly — is that there is a lot of German in it.
There is no real starting point, but we may as well begin with 1714. At the age of 54, after the death of Queen Anne died, and her direct Stuart line came to an end. 

Although over fifty Roman Catholics bore closer blood relationships to Anne, the Act of Settlement 1701 prohibited Catholics from inheriting the British throne; George was Anne's closest living Protestant relative.

They were passed over, and in the end Georg Ludwig, the Protestant Prince Elector of Hanover, our royal house changed from Stuart to Brunswick-Luneburg-Hanover, bringing with it a wealth of connections to the ancient royal houses of Welf and Este.

Until recently, members of the Royal Family had no surname. They customarily used first names and the name of their house, which was inherited from the father (Richard the Lionheart was a Plantagenet, Henry VIII was a Tudor, George I was a Hanover).

Accordingly, the House of Hanover ended with Queen Victoria, and her descendants took the dynastic name of her husband, Prince Albert, which was also German: Saxe-Coburg-Gotha.

How German is the Queen?
House of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha is a German dynasty, the line of the Saxon House of Wettin that ruled the Ernestine duchies including the duchy of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha.

Later, as a result of the First World War (1914–18), the empires of his first cousins Tsar Nicholas II of Russia and Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany fell while the British Empire expanded to its greatest effective extent.

In 1917, the House of Windsor, was founded by King George V by royal proclamation. George became the first monarch of the House of Windsor, when he renamed the British Royal Family from the House of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha as a result of anti-German public sentiment in the British Empire during World War I.

After the war, Philip was granted permission by George VI to marry Elizabeth in 1947. Prince Philip of Greece and Denmark, took British citizenship and became a naturalised British subject, adopting the surname Mountbatten from his maternal grandparents.

This "hidden surname" derives from the German town of Battenberg, in Hesse. Prince Louis of Battenberg Anglicised his surname to Mountbatten (its literal English translation) during the First World War at the request of King George V.
Just before the wedding, the King granted him the style of "His Royal Highness" and the title Duke of Edinburgh. His wife made him a prince of the United Kingdom in 1957.

Through a British Order in Council issued in 1960, descendants of Philip Duke of Edinburgh and Queen Elizabeth II can use the surname of Mountbatten-Windsor, and is the personal surname of some of their descendants.

The word “English” is derived from the Angles, of Anglo-Saxon fame. In AD 410, a range of German, Danish, and Dutch tribes that we sloppily call the Anglo-Saxons moved in from across the Whale Road. Not forgetting the Vikings either, who brought Danish, Norwegian, and Swedish blood to swathes of Britain. So, to be honest, is to acknowledge that this country has had the most profound and close genetic and cultural ties with the people of Germany and Scandinavia for over 1,500 years.

The First Georgians - The German Kings Who Made Britain
http://documentaryvideosworld.com/The...
  
Shocking new video of a Dead King has exposed the truth of the Queens Rightful Heir to the Throne

Although the Queen is descended from the Hanoverian kings, imported 300 years ago

Been kept quiet but the secret of the Monarchy is it's been German for 300yrs. http://documentaryvideosworld.com/The...


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