Canonum De Ius Rex
Canons of Sovereign Law

one heaven iconII.   Sovereign

2.10 Anglo-Saxon Law Form

Article 96 - Latin Rite

Canon 6138 (link)

Latin Rite is a phrase first created by Charles Martel during 738 CE to summarize a series of false claims that the Carolingian Empire is a direct continuation of the “first and true” founders of Christianity in Rome under St. Peter and not Antioch (Constantinople) under the Byzantine Empire. The phrase “Latin Rite” is therefore synonymous with the creation of the Catholicus Ecclesia (Catholic Church).

Canon 6139 (link)

The phrase Latin Rite is Latin and means literally “Proper Latin formality, ritual, ceremony and custom” or simply the false 8th Century claim that “Roman (Christian) formality, ritual, ceremony and custom” preceded all other Christian ceremony.

Canon 6140 (link)

The core claims that have underpinned the Latin Rite since it was first promulgated in 738 CE are:

(i) Christianity was founded in Rome by 45 CE, not Antioch (Constantinople) with St. Peter “the Apostle” the first Vicarius Christi; and

(ii) The proper rites and sacraments of Christianity were defined first and “always” in Latin by the succession of Vicarius Christi in Rome as the “sacred language” of Christianity, not Ancient Greek; and

(iii) Antioch (Constantinople) was always subservient to Rome as “evidenced” by the Donatio Constantinus (“Donation of Constantine”) who recognized the supremecy of Rome as the capital of Christianity; and

(iv) There exists an unbroken chain and succession of Vicarius Christi since St. Peter in the 1st Century to Zacharias (Carloman) in the 8th Century; and

(v) There has only even been one (1), true catholic (“universal”) and apostolic church being the Romanum Catholicus Ecclesia (Catholic Church) of Rome.

Canon 6141 (link)

As under the claims of the Latin Rite, the language of Latin became the highest “sacred” language of Christianity as opposed to Ancient Greek, all offices, key instruments and texts of an ecclesiastical nature from the 8th Century in Europe were written in Latin, while all secular and general information was written in the new language of Anglaise.

Canon 6142 (link)

To support the promotion of the Latin Rite, the Bibliographe of the Holly Roman Empire was banned and all texts in Ancient Greek were forbidden or to be burned, while a “translation” of the Bibliographe was promulgated from 738 CE called the Biblia Sacra (Holy Bible) in Latin, allegedly written by Jerome.

Canon 6143 (link)

The claim that the first Bible written in Latin was called the “Vulgate” is a terrible slur and curse inflicted upon the Christian faithful of the Roman Cult and their fraudulent re-write of the Bible from the 15th Century, as the word “vulgate” literally in Latin from vulgo means “to prostitute, to water down, to belittle, to damage”.

Canon 6144 (link)

To support the claims of the Latin Rite, the Carolingians commissioned in the 8th Century a series of terrible frauds to be created including the Chair of St. Peter, the Letter of St. Peter, the Donation of Constantine, the Lives of the Vicars of Rome.

Canon 6145 (link)

The fraud of the Donation of Constantine was first created by the Carolingians to support their Latin Rite claim for the Catholicus Ecclesia (Catholic Church). It was later embellished by the Roman Cult to support their claim as the absolute authority over all Christian sects.

Canon 6146 (link)

The fraud of the Letter of St. Peter was first created by the Carolingians in the 8th Century to support their Latin Rite claim for the Catholic Church that St Peter was the first Vicar.  The letter, written on the finest treated vellum – a particular writing medium not available until the 7th Century – is the basis of the claim of “Peter’s Pence”, or the introduction of taxes from the 10th Century under the German “Otto” Popes, and all subsequent claims of tax.

Canon 6147 (link)

The fraud of the Chair of St. Peter was first created by the Carolingians in the 8th Century to support St. Peter possessing a position and seat of authority. It is the basis of all subsequent claims of “seats” of office and thrones.

Canon 6148 (link)

The fraud of the Lives of the Vicars of Rome (Liber Vicarius Romanus) later corrupted to Liber Pontificalis in the 13th Century is the 8th Century fraud which claims an unbroken chain of Vicars from St. Peter to Carolingians as the founders of Christianity, despite the fact that for nearly four hundred (400) of those seven hundred (700) years the evidence of a Vicar would have been impossible.

Canon 6149 (link)

Given the Chair of St. Peter, the Letter of St. Peter, the Donation of Constantine, the Lives of the Vicars of Rome are frauds, all subsequent claims of authority and law based upon them are hereby null and void, having no force of law.