Did you see that strange "head dress" Camilla was wearing? Not the hat that she wore to the marriage ceremony, but the thing that looked like wheat? Has Camilla decided to skip the Princess part completely and go directly to Goddess?
What was that hat all about? Was it some kind of message to those in the know? Was she telling the ELITE that she is NOW the ruling Goddess... NOT Diana??? If you haven't read my book, Diana, Queen of Heaven, you may not know about the Goddess Diana.
While you are reading this,
PLEASE keep in mind that
The name Camilla means:
Attendant at a sacrifice
I grew up near Modesto, California where a little town named Ceres was made famous by Gary Condit.
When I was in grade school we studied California history from books that were probably printed in the late 1800s... (this is a GOOD thing... because they had accurate information back then... not the politically correct drool we have now!!)
At that time, I learned that Ceres was named after the Roman Goddess of wheat.
I have since learned that Ceres was MORE than just a Wheat Goddess...
Ceres was the Latin form of the Great Goddess, also identified with Demeter as Mother Earth.
As the earth ruling aspect the of Goddess trinity, Ceres combined with Juno as queen of heavens and Proserpine as queen of the underworld.
She was called Ceres Legifera, "Ceres the Lawgiver".
Ceres ruled ROME through her sacred matronae, during that lost period of four centuries before 200 B.C., a period whose written records were destroyed by later patriarchal historians, leaving only a residue of myths and religious customs that were only vaguelsy explained.
Farmers viewed her as the source of all food and kep her rite sfaithfully, for fear of crop failure.
This was true not only of Roman farmers but even of Christian farmers. Cere's great annual festival, the Cerealia, was celebrated in the British Isles almost to the present day. An account of the Shire of Murray in the late 9th century said, "In the middle of June, farmers go round their corn with burning torches, in memory of the Cerealia."
Can you ever eat Cereal again without thinking of Camilla?
Is Camilla now Ceres the Goddess?
Some believe Diana was sacrificed in a pagan ritual in an ancient Temple of the Goddess Diana.
Camilla means attendant to a sacrifice.
Has the attendant at the sacrifice moved beyond the Princess and is now the Goddess?
It will be interesting to see what develops in the near future. If I were Prince William, I would be very careful. Prince William is the biggest threat to Camilla ever becoming Queen.
Prince Willam and Prince Harry
April 9, 2005
The Day Their Father Wed Camilla!
I am not sure, but I think that the original Ceres has been "re-written" in the past 50 years to fit some kind of new plan of the NWO.
I haven't yet put the pieces together, but to prove that I am NOT the ONLY one who believes that Ceres is the Goddess of Wheat... here are a few pages I found on Google.
Here's an interesting site that also associate Ceres with Wheat.
http://home.tiscali.be/mauk.haemers/collegium_religionis/tavogn.htm
I am Ceres
Goddess of wheat
the fruits of my labor
make up what we eat.
http://ablemedia.com/ctcweb/showcase/dipillopoemceres.html
I looked up and saw a large statue on top of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange Building. I thought it was Mary, but the priests told me it was actually Ceres, the Roman Goddess of Wheat.
http://www.ourladyofthemillennium.com/history.html
Ceres Hall was the first women's dormitory on the North Dakota Agricultural College campus. In 1909 the State Legislature approved the construction of a women's building on campus, allocating over $85,000 between 1908-10 for the construction of Ceres Hall. The dormitory accommodated 115 women and contained a cafeteria. The postcard above is dated 1915.
The building was originally to be named after Jesse Slaughter from Bismarck, ND, who was the first female student at NDAC. Fearing that students would nickname the building 'the Slaughter House' it was decided to call it Ceres Hall after the Goddess of Wheat.
Today Ceres Hall houses a variety of administrative offices
http://www.fargo-history.com/ndac/ndac-ceres.htm