Once in front of the chapel Don Primo noticed immediately the images that represented four Templars holding four special items. Don Primo said to Leale that those objects represent four important relics kept in the Valle Benedetta, but he did not know exactly where. The four relics were represented by four items: a heart (the remains of Maria Maddalena), a cup (the Santo Graal), a cross (the cross of Christ and the scale used to put it on), a body (the body of Christ). Don Primo had never seen this sacellum, but was aware of the four relics also represented on a cross, called the cross of the Templar (still present), located in a strategic location of the Valle Benedetta. [...] Inside this box he found a manuscript which was written that the four relics were kept in the four monasteries of Valle Benedetta: the church, villa Huygens, the Conventaccio and the hermitage of Sambuca...
I would like to start specifying that I don't want to say nothing about where the crosses are.
I would only kindly ask to Little Doctor to try to reply to my questions (I would be grateful if you wuold reply this time), if he want.
Little Doctor wrote that the Templar Cross represents four important relics, in particular:
Maria Maddalena’s heart
Santo Graal
Cross of Chirst plus the related staircase
The body of Christ
Looking to the Templar cross I have noticed that there are a cup, the staircase and obviously the cross but not the body of Christ and the Maria Maddalena’s heart? Which is the reason? Maybe this relics where never found or never exist as a relics... and… if Maria Maddalena is the woman arrived in Livorno with Saint Jacob and a child, how can it be that her heart has been transported in the Middle Ages by the Knights Templar fleeing from Egypt?
Maybe she never died in Egypt? Or the woman arrived with Saint Jacob wasn’t Maddalena?
Please Little Doctor, tell us something more.
Who did build this cross? It looks like a “croce passionista”, a kind of cross built by a monks congregation called “passionisti” (word related with the passion of Christ). There are a lot of cross similar to the one described by Little Doctor built by “passionisti” around Italy. Usually these cross have a hearth in the middle, because the Christ’s hearth is the symbol of “passionisti”.
Therefore, who did it build this cross? Little Doctor could you tell us something more?
And now, the other crosses.
Four, as I told before
1) The Templar Cross already described by Little Doctor and about which I have just written.
2) There is another cross very similar to the Templar Cross (always an iron cross with the two spears). Some objects depicted on the cross are different (just a little bit, some particulars)
3) A simpler cross, but with a little woman’s effigy, maybe the Madonna, or maybe Our Lady… Magdalena?
4) The last cross is made of marble (I think is marble, I’m not a stone expert…) or some kind of pale (something like white-gray) stone. It is
Every cross doesn’t start from the earth but has a base (more or less cubic).
Little Doctor, I would really appreciate some more information (what you prefer) about the four crosses. Are the crosses related to the brotherhood?
Could you add some more information about the crosses?
As you can see I’m not joking and I’m very serious. I have analysed a lot all your story and I have searched information about Bianco de l’Anciolina, other Hermits, Romitone, Padre Colombino, Huygens, the Armens, the three mills (very important)... and I posted what I found. Therefore you can see how serious am I.
If you would like to reply I would be grateful.