The so called Armillary Sphere was a celestial globe consisting of metal hoops, used by early astronomers to determine the positions of stars, and was hence also an important instrument for early navigators.
It was however also,  besides the eight pointed even legged cross, an emblem of the Knight Templars, who were dominating ship owners, bankers, pirates, traders and grave robbers, rather than  protectors  of pilgrims and the Holy Sepulcher.
Their aim was to achieve an absolute  control of the world, and they were indeed very close to achieving that goal before the Pope and the French King put a terrible blow and a temporariy end to their venture on Friday 13th October 1306.The organization did not die on "Friday the 13th" however, and neither did their goal.  In Portugal the organization lived on in the open under a new name, The Order of Christ,  and their German branch, The Teutonic Order, built out their strongholds in on Gotland and around the south shores of the Baltic Sea, where they slowly emerged as the Hanseatic Organization, and later also as Freemason Lodges.  And not to be forgotten, their founding fathers, are indeed still very much alive; The Cistercians, which are very much present in the USA. Besides, who has not heard of the "Skull and Bones"?
Anyway, the globe appearing on numerous pillars and buildings around in Portugal and on the scepters in the hands of the royal families in Europe, is  not the  Armillary Sphere as such, but a symbol for the ultimate rule.       
Neither is it by chance that the creation of the US fiat currency in 1913 was designed with a number of Freemason symbols and badges in addition to the text "Novo Ordo Seclorum". The goal, "A new World Order" never died. The drive for an absolute and total control of the world is very much a reality, although no longer with Portugal playing any vital role anymore, like it did back in time when the world belonged to Spain and Portugal.  Had they not expelled their Jewish (mainly Kashars) money lenders and advisors more than 500 years ago, things might have turned out different for Portugal, and also Spain?



It has been said that there are three types of people:  1. Those who make things happen. 2. Those who watch things happen, and 3.
Those who wonder what happened and why.  Hmmm... well, Portugal is a great place to ponder over just that.
The Municipal Square
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