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Old 07-28-2005, 02:26 PM   #28
Manhunter71
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Lancaster, England
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Quote:
Originally Posted by natalia
"Holy Blood, Holy Grail" isn't without its critics either. I haven't read the book, but there was a Salon.com book review of "The Da Vinci Code" that also goes into HBHG. It's pretty interesting how intertwined the two books are -- how they are both best served by the notion that the books describe events that are part of the historical record when it comes to convincing the public about the "facts" in their tales, but how this complicates HBHG's author's attempts to go after Dan Brown for cribbing their ideas.

Here's a little excerpt from Laura Miller's review (You may have to click through an advertisement before reading the full article if you aren't a member:

"Baigent, Leigh and Lincoln are the Moriartys of pseudohistory, and "Holy Blood, Holy Grail" is their great triumph. Their techniques include burying their readers in chin-high drifts of factoids -- some valid but irrelevant, some uncheckable (the untranslated diaries of obscure 17th century clerics, and so on), others, like the labyrinthine family trees of various medieval French noblemen, simply numbing, and if you trouble to figure them out, pretty inconclusive. A preposterous idea will first be floated as a guess (it is "not inconceivable" that the Knights Templar found documentation of Jesus and Mary Magdalene's marriage in Jerusalem), then later presented as a tentative hypothesis, then still later treated as a fact that must be accounted for (the knights had to take those documents somewhere, so it must have been the south of France!)."

http://archive.salon.com/books/featu...de/index1.html

In the recent tv documentary about the "Da Vinci Code" and how much of it is actually fact-based, a lot of time was spent discussing the authenticity of "The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail".
After interviews with historians, archaeologists and other experts, it appears that the facts reported in "The Holy Blood..." were not all that they appeared to be!
Especially the documents about the "Priory of Scion"
The producers of this programme actually found people who admitted to sending false documentation to the authors of "The Holy Blood...", and further research showed that the reason Sauniere received so much money from the Catholic church was that he was billing them for more Masses than he actually performed.
After his death, his personal notebooks were discovered which actually proved this point
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