Reunite
not trying to highjack the thread..but a side note ..i will be going back to hear it all this afternoon when the house is a bit emptier
i heard the first 3 minutes and had to go look something up..you know i'm a bit into codes and when he said the three things to read
my brain jumped to an article i just read about a garden code they can't break that they think may be connected to the templars
here's the article that caught my eye and then some research and a pictue of the writtings
which would have the geometric shape and a tone since they are in stone and color may or may not be there but i felt it had been originally..and i wonder if this says anything at all or is a wild goose chase...
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/staffordshire/3703191.stmNew puzzle for war code breakers
Experts from Bletchley Park are trying to crack a 250-year-old code rumoured to point the way to the Holy Grail.
Specialists from the Buckinghamshire code-breaking centre hope to decipher words etched on a garden ornament at Shugborough in Staffordshire.
The Shepherd's Monument in the grounds of the stately home displays an inscription that has never been solved.
Second World War veterans using the celebrated Enigma machine are joining Bletchley's current team of experts.
'Unusual challenge'
The code breakers are at Shugborough, the ancestral home of the Earls of Lichfield, on Tuesday.
Christine Large, Bletchley Park's director, said: "This is such an unusual challenge that my colleagues and collaborators, who include veteran code breakers and modern day decoding experts from Bletchley Park's 'offspring' GCHQ, cannot resist."
Shugborough's general manager, Richard Kemp, said: "The Anson family, who built the estate, commissioned the monument but it had unproven connections with the Knights Templars.
"The inscription is rumoured to indicate the location of the Holy Grail, which must rank as one of the world's great mysteries."
It is estimated that work carried out at The National Codes Centre at Bletchley Park in Milton Keynes helped to shorten the Second World War by two years.
The site is now a popular tourist attraction
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this one has the pic of the code..and i will need more practice in getting it here..for now..sorry you have to use the link to see it.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2004/may/12/arts.artsnews2Enigma code solvers try to unravel 1748 inscription on estate's shepherd monument
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and a bit about one of the researchers
http://www.parksandgardens.ac.uk/index2.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=335&pop=1&page=2&Itemid=275Mavis Batey: from codebreaker to campaigner for historic parks and gardens