The lost treasure of the knights templar

This page was created to exchange ideas and comments on the related mysteries of the Templar treasure fleet and the discovery of the Oak Island Money Pit. If you have ordered your copy of Lost Treasure, I thank you. If you haven't this site can link you to the online booksellers that carry it. The final chapter on Oak Island of course will not be complete until modern technology can overcome the secrets of what 15th century technology put in place.

The money pit has defied man since 1795. The search for the treasure has consumed fortunes and has cost six lives to date, and yet has stubbornly given only clues. A piece of gold chain, a fragment of parchment, mysterious inscribed stones and old tools and eating utensils are the only items the pit had yielded.

Lost Treasure covers the numerous theories that searchers and historians have put forth: Spanish treasure, French and British pay ships, the crown jewels of Marie Antoinette, and the ever present treasure of Captain Kidd. Arguments have been advanced for the Pit being a bank for Huguenots, Acadians, Vikings and even a communal pirate bank.

The real secret hidden in the Nova Scotia vault is even more startling historically and more valuable financially than any of the above. Lost Treasure is the culmination of years of research. It compiles the evidence that the Knights Templar not only had a massive treasure, but they had the motive and means to hide it on Oak Island. The Templars also held secrets that threatened their only authority, the Church.

A secret anagram concealed on a brush covered tombstone warns: I tego arcana Dei! (Begone! I conceal the secrets of God). If you are not warned off - please proceed to the next topics by clicking on the links to the right.