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Our History: Part IV - Rome & The Theft of Resonance

Updated: Oct 5

Rome rose upon the spoils of countless lands, carrying away treasures of earth. Among all that was seized, the obelisks of Egypt held the deepest weight. Each was carved from a single body of granite rich with quartz, lifted with impossible craft, and placed upon the Nile’s living veins where sunlight and stone joined in harmony. When these pillars were torn from their temples and hauled across the sea, an ancient current was severed and bound into the service of empire.


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When Rome expanded into Egypt, the Caesars carried away instruments of power that reached beyond wealth or territory. They seized the obelisks, pillars of granite carved from living stone, bodies of quartz that had stood upon the Nile for centuries. These were devices, tuned to the field of the Earth, aligned with the heavens, amplifying the flow of resonance into the grid, and our DNA. Each one was a key, raised upon a vein of energy where sky and ground met in harmony.


The Caesars uprooted them from their sacred alignments and transported them across the sea. In Rome they were raised in forums, circuses, and squares where the empire gathered its people. Their purpose was rewritten. The obelisks no longer joined Earth to sky. They became conduits of empire, their hum folded into the rhythm of the state. Crowds moved through their field, unaware that the resonance shaping their breath and heartbeat now served another design.


Rome’s architects built more than roads and walls. They mapped the land like a circuit, paving stone upon ley lines, raising temples where currents converged, embedding the empire into the Earth’s body. Tribute flowed into the city not only through coin and caravan but through resonance itself. The capital was crowned with pillars tuned to sustain dominion, a grid of stone and sky designed to hold the empire together by unseen force.


The Pharaohs had used these pillars to preserve memory and initiation. Rome used them to encode command. The stones held the same power, yet the field was bent to a new intention. The resonance of empire did not fade with its armies. The obelisks endured when legions fell and emperors turned to dust. Their hum lingered across centuries, shaping the ground long after the banners were gone.


Later powers recognized what Rome had set in motion. The Vatican claimed the Egyptian obelisk and raised it at the center of Saint Peter’s Square, aligning its shadow with the basilica, binding the field of faith to stone brought from the Nile. Paris placed its obelisk in the Place de la Concorde, at the axis of the city where royal and revolutionary blood had stained the ground, turning resonance into a pillar of modern statehood. London installed its pair along the Thames, their quartz still alive beneath the fog, pulsing into the heart of empire. Washington raised its monument on the Mall, a vast white obelisk that mirrored Rome’s design, connecting its capital to the same inheritance of power.


Across continents the same blueprint was repeated. Capitals aligned to obelisks, plazas turned into circuits, the hum of empire encoded into stone. These were not isolated monuments. They were nodes in a global grid, each one linking the capital to the legacy of Rome, each one carrying the field of dominion forward through time.


The resonance of these pillars still shapes the cities that hold them. Crowds move within their hum. Leaders speak within their shadow. Decisions of war and wealth unfold beneath their alignment. The obelisks bind the heart of empire across ages, their vibration unchanged, their intention preserved.


This is the survival of Rome. Not through armies or banners, but through resonance itself. The stones remain alive. They carry the inheritance of conquest, the theft of Egypt’s alignment, and the encoding of dominion into the very grid of Earth. As we continue this series, you will begin to understand that our history is not segmented across time, it is simply a continuation from the fall of Atlantis. The question of our time is… will we make the same mistake our ancestors did over and over again?


Part I here.

Part II here.

Part III here.

Part IV here.

Part V here.

Part VI here.


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The obelisks are living instruments, still shaping the field of empire across the capitals of the world.

 
 
 

1 Comment


Excellent! Thank you!!

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