First published at 21:32 UTC on November 3rd, 2019.
Sorry for the lack of uploads lately, (I'll get back to it soon, I promise), been a bit black-pilled recently, so I've tuned out of all news, and instead I've been studying my family tree, learning about our European culture and herita...
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Sorry for the lack of uploads lately, (I'll get back to it soon, I promise), been a bit black-pilled recently, so I've tuned out of all news, and instead I've been studying my family tree, learning about our European culture and heritage, and studying the spiritual side of our ancestors. (No, I've not turned in to a bible thumper). I recently came across this documentary by a German broadcaster on JewTube, and it's pretty interesting, so thought I'd share it here. It offers a glimpse in to the renaissance period in Europe, mainly Italy. Our people have had a lot of highs and lows throughout the millennia, but this has to be one of our greatest periods.
Leonardo's lifetime, (the Jew media try to paint him as an effeminate faggot, but for better or worse, he was actually designing intricate weapons of war), coincided with the discovery of America by Columbus. When our people were creating beautiful structures, painting masterpieces and making scientific breakthroughs, the rest of the world must have been a very dark place to live. No matter your views on Christianity, if this documentary doesn't make you want to fight to preserve our people and our culture, then I doubt anything will.
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Leonardo's famous painting "The Last Supper" hides a secret: only 20 percent of the original work is still visible.
In the style of a thriller, the documentary attempts to reconstruct what it originally looked like. Leonardo da Vinci was the epitome of the Renaissance Man. May 2019 marks the 500th anniversary of his death. The artist created world-famous works such as the fresco "The Last Supper" - perhaps the most famous. It is still in its original setting, on the wall of the dining room of the former Dominican convent of Santa Maria delle Grazie in Milan. The painting, which is 4.60 meters high and 8.80 meters wide, has been undergoing restoration for the last 19 years. But the restorers now know that only 20 percent of the original is visible today. So what did something that is the focus of so many legends originally look like? Our investigation also takes us to the small Belgian abbey of Tongerlo, where a mysterious copy of da Vinci's work has been discovered. It is a painting on canvas that could have been commissioned from da Vinci’s workshop by the French King Louis XII. It has perhaps brought the researchers a step closer to the truth.
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Original video here..... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2pJD5HtlKwg
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