By Allan Cornford

Copyright © 2022 Allan Cornford. (Standard Copyright License.) All rights reserved. Independently Published through KDP. The images which are included for informative purposes only, are Screenshots, courtesy of Ewaranon’s YouTube documentary; ‘The Lost History of the Flat Earth’. All external links to images in the public domain, are courtesy from Wikimedia Commons and where possible, credits are given to each source. This I believe, comes under the term of Fair Use.


Spy cartoon, 1874 71.1 KB View full-size Download

Baron Mayer Amschel de Rothschild (29 June 1818 – 6 February 1874) was an English businessman and politician of the English branch of the Rothschild family. He was the fourth and youngest son of Hannah (Barent-Cohen) and Nathan Mayer Rothschild (1777–1836). He was named Mayer Amschel Rothschild, for his grandfather, the patriarch of the Rothschild family.

Miles Williams Mathis: Who are the Rothschilds? – Library of Rickandria

In 1852, and whilst the relocated Crystal Palace was still under construction, Paxton we’re told, was commissioned by Baron Mayer de Rothschild, to design and build the luxurious, Jacobean style, 3 story country mansion, known as Mentmore Towers in the county of Buckinghamshire.

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Mentmore Towers, historically known simply as “Mentmore”, is a 19th-century English country house built between 1852 and 1854 for the Rothschild family in the village of Mentmore in Buckinghamshire. Sir Joseph Paxton and his son-in-law, George Henry Stokes, designed the building in the 19th-century revival of late 16th and early 17th-century Elizabethan and Jacobean styles called Jacobethan. The house was designed for the banker and collector of fine art Baron Mayer de Rothschild as a country home, and as a display case for his collection of fine art. The mansion has been described as one of the greatest houses of the Victorian era. Mentmore was inherited by Hannah Primrose, Countess of Rosebery, née Rothschild, and owned by her descendants, the Earls of Rosebery.

Described as

”one of the greatest Victorian houses”

in the UK, this beautiful old world structure has a tower on each corner, each topped with antennae.

Construction began on the 60-room building in 1852, and the work we’re told, was completed, including the:

  • servants quarters
  • stables
  • outhouses

by 1854.

Another impossible task!

For once again, this is a fabricated story of a stunning old world building, inherited by the Rothschild family, and credited to Joseph Paxton.

Earlier remarkable structures attributed to Joseph Paxton, include the ‘Emperor Fountain’ and the ‘Great Conservatory’, built we’re told in the mid-nineteenth century in the grounds of Chatsworth House, a stately home set in the picturesque Derbyshire dales, England.

History records how in 1843, William Cavendish, the 6th Duke of Devonshire, decided to construct the world’s highest water fountain, and set Joseph Paxton to work to build it.

The Duke of Devonshire by Sir Thomas Lawrence, c. 1824 5.19 MB View full-size Download

William George Spencer Cavendish, 6th Duke of Devonshire (21 May 1790 – 18 January 1858), styled Marquess of Hartington until 1811, was an English peer, courtier and Whig politician. Known as the “Bachelor Duke”, he served as Lord Chamberlain from 1827 to 1828 and again from 1830 to 1834. The Cavendish banana is named after him.

An eight-acre (348,480 square feet) lake, the Emperor Lake, was dug on the moors 350 feet (110 m) above the house to supply the natural water pressure.

The resulting water jet is on record as reaching a height of 296 feet (90 m) or twice the height of ‘Nelson’s Column’. (Derby Mercury – Wednesday 28 August 1844.)

This mammoth project, which necessitated the excavation of over 100,000 cubic yards of earth (approx. 150,000 tons) was completed in just six months.

(The Works of Sir Joseph Paxton 1803–1865, George F. Chadwick, 1961, Architectural Press.)

25,000 tons of soil excavated manually each month for six months straight?

Does that even sound feasible to you?

Designed to create a tropical climate for an array of:

  • palm trees
  • water features
  • aquatic and exotic plants

the Great Conservatory was 275 feet (84m long) 121 feet (37m wide and 62 feet (19m) high, the largest glass building in England at the time.

Inside there was room for two carriages to pass on the main thoroughfare, and a flight of stairs, hidden by ascending rocks, led to a gallery from which one could inspect the highest branches of the exotic palms and other trees flourishing there.

Here Paxton grew bananas and pineapples, and giant tropical lily pads, sturdy enough to support a young child.

To create this climate there were eight underground boilers fueled by coal, which arrived by underground rail wagons.

The boilers fed a seven-mile maze of 6-inch hot water pipes.

Allegedly completed in 1840, the Great Conservatory was quite a remarkable achievement for a time before the birth of the first modern power tool, wouldn’t you say?

Yet again there are obvious and major flaws, both in the official narrative and the given timeline.

Do you think it possible there’s something the ‘controllers’ of history don’t want us to know?

Or do they really think we’re that gullible?

The magnificent Great Conservatory was demolished in 1920, leaving only the supporting walls as a lasting memorial to this extraordinary building.

Another act of wanton destruction. In one of his brilliant documentaries, Ewaranon records how in 2018 there was a heatwave in England, and viewed from the air, the former glory of the Chatsworth estate started appearing in the grounds themselves.

The faint footprints of old buildings that no longer exist, and visual evidence that the entire estate was once a massive farm.

The Chatsworth Estate and the River Derwent that flows through it was once a vast area of farmland, and the main building most likely used to accommodate the workers.

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Chatsworth House is a stately home in the Derbyshire Dales, 4 miles (6.4 km) north-east of Bakewell and 9 miles (14 km) west of Chesterfield, England. The seat of the Duke of Devonshire, it has belonged to the Cavendish family since 1549. It stands on the east bank of the River Derwent, across from hills between the Derwent and Wye valleys, amid parkland backed by wooded hills that rise to heather moorland.

With its tumbling:

  • water features
  • fountains
  • streams

and cascades, the Chatsworth Estate it seems, was originally part of the worldwide electromagnetic energy grid serving the British Isles.

Palaces, stately homes and mansions, were never constructed to house the elite, they were originally the central hub of the massive farms of old.

The farms themselves were likely cultivated with sound, vibrational frequencies and energized water, which was used to encourage growth and to cultivate the farm produce.

Even contemporary scientists acknowledge that sound waves, frequencies and electro-magnetic ionized particles in the atmosphere strongly influence the growth of fruit and vegetables.

In 1902, Karl Selim Lemström, a Finnish geophysicist, discovered that the trees under the Aurora Borealis grew faster than the same trees under different conditions.

Portrait of Selim Lemström by Elsa Fohström, unknown date 19 MB View full-size Download

Karl Selim Lemström (17 November 1838 in Ingå – 2 October 1904 in Helsinki), was a Finnish geophysicist. Lemström is best known on his research of aurora borealis. He had several expeditions in Finnish Lapland and even tried to create an artificial northern lights in the laboratory. In 1870 Lemström studied the metric system in Paris and introduced the system to Finland. Since 1872 he was a professor in the University of Helsinki. Lemström has been described as the “forgotten pioneer of northern light studies,” and some of his experiments have been compared with the ones made by Nikola Tesla.

Most of the earlier electro-magnetic experiments failed however, as the experimental conditions varied from one location to another.

Any variation in the wide range of the natural elements could lead to a very different outcome.

The huge outbuilding at Chatsworth which in all likelihood once housed the generator, has since been repurposed as luxurious stables.

Atop of the hill next to the Emperor Lake stands a large quadruple capacitor, or water storage tower, which was repurposed as a hunting tower.

The central engine which has since been removed, was likely set in the octagonal stone structure located in the grounds.

This has been repurposed as a larder, to store the hunted game.

Who was this super achiever, and did he even exist?

Or was Paxton hand-picked by the controllers to play the leading role in a partially fictitious story, to explain away impossible structures that shouldn’t exist at the time?

In 1951 the Peak District was designated as a National Park.

There are:

  • reservoirs
  • rivers
  • waterways

and various old world structures everywhere, many of which are mansions or stately homes etc.

But the inhabitants of the Peak District did not build all this glorious infrastructure in the nineteenth century, they inherited it.

The abundance of stately:

  • homes
  • mansions
  • manors

all point to the massive farming practices of the old world.

Like Chatsworth and the Crystal Palace, the controllers of the narrative had to ensure these building could never be used again for their original, intended purposes, nor for any of the inheritors to discover their true function.

The Peak District is home to two large towns, Matlock, which is renowned for its historical baths, and Buxton is famed for its bottled water.

Both towns boast quite a collection of old world structures.

In the 1850’s, Matlock began its spectacular growth as a Spa Town, and in 1856, local businessman John Smedley, established Smedley’s Hydro and its water tower, which is now a government council building.

Smedley’s Hydro was the first hydropathic hotel, and in its heyday, was the largest of the 20 or so hydropathy’s that opened in the region.

With the use of natural, or spa water, the hydropathy’s were able to handle hundreds of patients, and at the time were tremendously successful in curing a whole range of illnesses and complaints, as well as having a therapeutic impact on mental health patients.

Electric bells were installed throughout the building, and natural or spa water was used for curing disease, along with:

  • sound
  • frequency
  • vibration

and electricity.

Such treatments included:

  • electric therapy
  • ultraviolet rays
  • diathermy

Rather than a heat source, diathermy uses energy sources like sound and electricity, which are converted into heat by the human body.

Smedley was able to heat the entire building with a water heating system built into its walls, which maintained a constant temperature of 65 degrees, even when the establishment was filled with a crowd of 200 or more visitors.

How did they have the ability to do this in the nineteenth century?

It seems that Smedley used energized water to achieve this remarkable feat.

Over the years, Smedley had many run-ins with local and national newspaper reporters and the medical establishment, who invariably portrayed the practice of hydropathy as being pseudoscience.

In the late twentieth century, a number of hydro-pathic institutions wholly transferred their operations away from therapeutic purposes to become tourist hotels, whilst still retaining the name ‘Hydro’.

All of its health benefits through the use of sound, frequency and vibration have been eradicated.

Hydropathy today is seen as little more than a relaxing bath venture, and all of its original use of vibrational energy and electricity are a thing of the past.

Most folk now associate a ‘spa break’ with a weekend of relaxation, a massage or two, a dip in the pool, and cosmetic or beauty treatment.

Smedley’s mission, it would seem, was to carefully control the introduction of Hydropathy, for a limited time, for the end purpose of declaring it fraudulent and quackery, and completely dismiss it is as a serious practice.

Much like Nikola Tesla, Smedley introduced and demonstrated the science of the old world for a limited time, only to have it debunked, side-lined, and banished forever.

The history books were now able to justify the entire waterway system of the Peak District, successfully preventing subsequent generations from questioning its presence.

Yet, when one becomes aware of what they’re actually looking at, the remains of the former energy grid and water system are evident all across the UK.

CONTINUE

BOOK: EXCERPT: Tartarian Rule? Or Millennial Kingdom? – War of the Currents – Library of Rickandria


BOOK: Tartarian Rule? Or Millennial Kingdom? – Library of Rickandria


BOOK: EXCERPT: Tartarian Rule? Or Millennial Kingdom? – Water Therapy