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Sion Revelation

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Lynn Picknett and Clive Prince have long been fascinated by the conspiracies surrounding secret knowledge of Jesus, Mary Magdalene and John the Baptist, much of which centred on the activities of the Priory of Sion. In this work, they look closely at this controversial organisation and the secrets it allegedly protects.

544 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2006

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Lynn Picknett

64 books122 followers

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5 stars
21 (12%)
4 stars
57 (35%)
3 stars
52 (32%)
2 stars
23 (14%)
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9 (5%)
Displaying 1 - 17 of 17 reviews
Profile Image for Susan Brown.
231 reviews1 follower
October 9, 2022
I appreciate this book, and Lynn Picknett and Clive Prince as authors, who bring a dedicated, meticulous research to everything they do. Thank you authors for always showing the facts and keeping ancient history true, instead of questionable teachings we've all been exposed to since birth.
Profile Image for Roger Buck.
Author 6 books73 followers
June 12, 2014
There is much fascinating information in this book. Such that I have read it twice. Alas, the interpretation of that information leaves much to be desired!

What can I say? When I was a naive New Ager I visited Rennes-le-Chateau in vain. But it was only many years later, after I read Meditations on the Tarot and visited Rennes numerous times more, that I could see what the authors cannot see, but which is plainly under their noses ...

Link for my review of Meditations on the Tarot here: http://corjesusacratissimum.org/2009/...
35 reviews3 followers
March 25, 2019
Incredible true story of the hoax behind the Priory of Sion mess. Well-researched and fascinating expose.

I've puzzled over the Sacred Bloodline / Holy Grail thing for years, and this book explains a *lot*.
119 reviews10 followers
June 21, 2018
This is a good book, it makes one wonder that's for sure. When reading the book you may come to agree that plantard was a fake but on the other hand so much of history of Jesus is shrouded in mystery. It is said many Jewish rabbis were married and expected to be so, so if Jesus was indeed a Rabbi as he is called then he may very well have been married and thus had children and after his crucifixion they would want to protect his family especially any child of his. This leaves one wondering if indeed a true Scion did or does exist but is hidden behind all kinds of smoke and mirrors in other words misdirection. On the other hand Jesus being the son of god or at least considered so may have never married but instead just pursued his teaching so one I would say could speculate either way. Plantard could be fake and put out there to misdirect attention away from the real people cause if your focused on him then you aren't looking elsewhere. For me the question of Jesus bloodline is still up in the air as said it could be either or neither.
Profile Image for Kate.
Author 12 books4 followers
January 9, 2020
This was the last of my Picknett and Prince books still left in my TBR pile. I have enjoyed their previous investigations into Da Vinci and Mary Magdalene / The Sacred Feminine, and whilst I've never really been interested in the Priory of Sion or Freemasonry, I thought I might at least find this book as intriguing as all their others. Unfortunately it fell a bit flat with me: possibly because I'm really not that interested in the subject, but whilst this book is heavy with information (the research they must have done is mind-blowing), I soon became bogged down with it all and couldn't make sense of who was connected with who or which group. The book also seemed to lurch from topic to topic: Templars to Freemasonry to Dan Brown to The First and Second world wars to French politics.... and all in the end to conclude that a rich elite have been colluding for decades, if not centuries, to create what we now know as the European Union. If you're into conspiracy or European politicial history then you'll probably enjoy this book, but sadly this wasn't for me.
Profile Image for Erik Graff.
5,167 reviews1,453 followers
October 2, 2024
This book appears to be a critical, level-headed expose of the whole Priory of Sion mythos as presented popularly through 'Holy Blood, Holy Grail' and the books and movies based on Dan Brown's fictions (including parts of The Matrix films). The conclusion is that the Priory is one of several fronts for a right-wing pan-European movement originating in France.

I found much of this book hard going, mostly because of vast cast of characters. Many of them would be familiar to the French and to people well versed in French politics from the nineteenth century to the present, but I'm not and, so, found myself having to look back in my reading to keep track of the detail. What I did appreciate, however, was their representation of Vichy politics, not as it appears retrospectively, but as it was to people of that time.
Profile Image for Antonio Meridda.
Author 22 books7 followers
September 14, 2018
In questo libro si esplora il famigerato "ordine segreto di Sion", reso celebre dal Codice da Vinci e, come rivelato nel libro, che molto poco ha a che fare con esso.
Profile Image for Sheree.
8 reviews
October 14, 2024
Anyone whom is interested in alternative history and unbiased facts. I highly recommend this
Profile Image for Codex.
140 reviews30 followers
June 7, 2009
This is mostly a rehash of Holy Blood, Holy Grail (by Michael Baigent, Richard Leigh, and Henry Lincoln), with a mind-numbing additional exploration into selected 20th-century French politics.

The book investigates the secretive Priory of Sion (or Prieuré de Sion) as well as Pierre Plantard, who played a central role in this reportedly modern organisation. The investigation shows much overlap with most issues delved into by Holy Blood, Holy Grail, although it does not share the final conclusions of the latter work with regard to the bloodline theory. Rather, it identifies synarchy as the ideology underlying the Priory of Sion, and attempts to show the same driving motive behind other significant European developments over time.

This work adds little to what has already been revealed by Holy Blood, Holy Grail. At most it affords a closer look at the (modern) Priory of Sion and introduces synarchy as a possible motive. Along the way, unfortunately, it labours the historical details of selected French politicians beyond the point of diminishing returns.

The gist of what the authors were trying to say could have been covered by a book half the size, if not less. This is alluded to by their concluding Postscript, which was almost like a lifesaver.
Profile Image for Michael Roop.
48 reviews5 followers
August 24, 2011
This book is bunk. The Sion is fake, it's not real. Never has been, never was. The myth has become so big and shrouded in mystery like any true secret society it has taken on a life of it's own. People will buy into anything as long as it is shrouded in that mystique. Pass on this one. If you know your secret societies you already know all you need to know on the Sion, this has nothing new are anything really all that relevant.
533 reviews
February 4, 2017
OMG what a drag. Bounces around everywhere without really completing a train of thought. Dan Brown would love it.
Profile Image for J.C. Paulk.
Author 4 books62 followers
March 31, 2008
The "Templar Revelation" revisited, reworded, and regurgitated.
Author 20 books37 followers
April 20, 2008
Selevel deh sama Holy Blood Holy Grail. Claimnya sih lebih akurat. But who knows?
Profile Image for Howard.
57 reviews5 followers
May 24, 2012
This is the authentic "Parson's Egg." Parts of it are really good, and for those parts it is worth reading. It's just a pity about the rest.
Displaying 1 - 17 of 17 reviews

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