The Dragon Legacy
(formerly known as From Transylvania to Tunbridge Wells) is a new collection of
essays on the "Deresthai Culture" with a hip introduction by Tracy
Twyman of Dagobert’s Revenge.
This 377-page tome with
numerous appendices, written by HRH Prince Nicholas de Vere, Sovereign Grand
Master of the Imperial and Royal Dragon Court, purports to be an "Official
History of the Dragon Peoples."

Far from being the
characters of fable, de Vere explains, the Elven race, including Fairies,
Dragons, Witches, Picts (Pixies) and Vampires, were very real beings whose
blood rituals sustained their superconsciousness and transcendent vision, and
maintained their positions as overlords of mankind.
The author claims,
these gods of flesh and blood were the only gods that ever actually existed;
myth transformed them into ethereal deities. Flesh and blood they were, he
claims, and their bloodlines descend to the present day through the Siddhe of
India and the Druids of Britain. In fact, de Vere claims to be part of this
lineage.
The Scythians, a.k.a.
the Danaan (d’Anu), were descendents of the Anunnaki, who, de Vere claims, were
not extraterrestrials. In Scandinavia, the Danaan became the Danes or Vikings,
and produced a cousin lineage, the Swedes and the Ruotsi clan that founded
Russia. In Denmark the castes were called the Jarl, Carl, Thrall.
In India the castes
were the Brahmins, Ksatriyas and Sudras. But the Scythian Danaan who migrated
to Eire (Ireland) and the rest of Europe were a "race apart." They
were a ruling caste, claims de Vere. They are the Merovingians.
The Scythians
originated in the Balkans, Transylvania, Carpathia and Ukraine. In general, the
Scythians ("people of the powers") were tall, pale-skinned, with
golden red hair (the red heads) and green eyes. The Celtic lineage were stocky,
squat with dark hair. The Royal Dragon family of the Jews - the House of David
- made the Israelites an early Aryan nation.
In fact, Jesus and his
mother Mary are often depicted with red hair. The Scythians and Aryan
Scythian-Gaels had settlements in Israel and Judea. The Aryans were a horse
culture.
The Scythian caste
system consisted of three closely interknit cooperating races. From this
encounter, de Vere explains, arose the eastern branch of the Aryan, Vedic
"Hindu" religion, with its own Druids or magi, the Brahmins.
The Vedic religion,
claims de Vere, stemmed from this contact with the Elven gods and goddesses who
migrated after the flood from the Balkans and Transylvania to Sumeria. He
claims, the Tantra and the Qabalah are descended from ancient Ubaid Druidic
philosophy, and Sumeria is not the cradle of civilization, but is perhaps the
high chair. The first Sumerians, he writes, were Ubaid Overlords from Central
Eurasia.
De Vere laments that
democracy has done away with the caste system. He explains that the caste
system was not an arbitrary set of divisions or inequalities established
through force or oppression. The system reflected the fact that people had
varying capabilities, gifts and talents. Each group had its function in
society.
This is the way it
should have stayed, according to de Vere, but the Roman Church, containing
mostly peasants, clawed its way to the top and upturned the caste system on a
false document called the Donation of Constantine. Following this, a
Thousand-Year Holocaust massacred the Elven Race.
Today, complains de
Vere, the world is run by peasant tinkers who have put a price tag on
everything. The true Overlords are now on the bottom,
"while the
increasingly acquisitive Peasants and Merchants are at the top, having wrested
their positions from the block-headed Warriors."
He writes:
"The end product
of this fiasco over the last millennium and a half can be smelled in the air,
tasted in the water supply and seen in the eyes of diseased, starving third
world children. Its results can be heard in the screams of animals gratuitously
tortured in experiments aimed at testing the toxicity of vanity products…"
And in the current
system, our leaders have no accountability, as they would have had in dynasties
past. The usurper Tinker Kings, the current Monarchy of England, asserts de
Vere, are,
"false monarchies
based not on service or transcendent wisdom, but on worldly greed, tyranny,
trade and usury."
There is much to learn
from this alternate history of the world, for instance, that the influence
Vampires have had on European culture should not be underestimated.
Who knew Vampires
inspired modern wheeled transport, invented large-scale tourism, and lent their
images and their kilts to the lids of shortbread tins? The Vampire, de Vere
explains, was a "Witch" in the distinct royal caste of
Scythian-Celtic society.
Vampires were
individuals and families who used the practice of drinking blood to achieve
specific aims and fulfill social obligations of their rank and position. In
fact the etymology of the word Vampire is "Overlord." The author
warns against Poseur Vampirism. If one inflicts fear in the victim before
obtaining blood, the blood will contain ingredients not worth imbibing. It must
be freely given.
De Vere also discusses
Tolkien’s "Middle Earth," which he claims "plots the fortunes of
the Elven families" and corresponds to about the year 10,000 BC. In fact,
he asserts, Tolkien’s "Third Age" could be comfortably situated
pre-flood at about 22,000 BC if we disregard our simplistic caveman
indoctrination. Other points of interest you’ll learn from de Vere are that the
"reptilian" scales of the gods and goddesses of Sumeria were actually
traditional metal armor.
The mermaids of the
mere pools wore scaled armor as well. The tall tales told by David Icke
regarding shapeshifting reptilians of yore are just that: tall tales. For a
hint of what Prince Nicholas de Vere thinks of Icke’s wild talk, see his
interview with Tracy Twyman.
Is de Vere a Satanist?
He states in his
interview with Tracy Twyman,
"originally the
Satans in Biblical terms were nothing more than Circuit Prosecutors within the
Jewish Theocratic system. Who in their right mind would worship lawyers?"
He also asserts:
"Religions happen
when people don’t get the point of the message and blindly worship the message
and the messenger, instead of grasping the gnosis inherent within the words
that the message conveys."
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