The Templar Secret Science 

While most of the Templar treasure was in the currency of the day, gold, silver and jewels, the greatest secret was the knowledge uncovered by the order. From the oldest days man from the Orkneys to Egypt built monuments in stone that were aligned to the Sun and Moon and the important events in the sky. The Templars incorporated this knowledge in their monuments great and small. From the labyrinth at the Cathedral of Chartres, to the small baptisteries, the evidence was in plain sight if one knew what to look for. Days like the solstice and the equinox, and other lesser known dates such as January 17th, the feast of St. Sulpice were marked in these structures in remarkably coordinated effects.

Just as the sunlight penetrated the center of Ireland’s New Grange on the Solstice, the sun carved a path through a stained-glass window to the Roseline on the church floor and a carefully placed obelisk in St. Sulpice in Paris.

After Verrazano’s discoverey, another secret society, modeled on the original Templars, is founded. It planted a colony in the New World and name it for the Templar stronghold of Montreal. There the group would build a two-storied round tower at the new St. Sulpice which stands today.