In the write up to this dream I have referred to a Maltese cross. However, the sketch is of a Cross Pattée Gules or Templar cross.
I am flying above the earth soaring over landscapes. I am above Erice in Sicily and fly over the landscape there. I can see the bays and mountains. In the distance I can see a cross superimposed on the mountains. I can see the cross above Rio De Janeiro. I fly over to it and see the statue of Christ the Redeemer. I can see the details of its construction.
I continue flying and come to a rocky outcrop at the top of a mountain. I stand there at the top of a cliff and look down to the sea below. It is a long way down. I sense vertigo.
Again and again, I fly to this place, embossed in the stone is a Maltese {actually Templar} cross.
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I see the image both in stone and coloured red. The flight to this place and the cross repeats multiple times.
There is an inscription in Latin around the cross. I stand beside, view and contemplate.
A coloured tunnel opens in the dreamscape and I am taken through it from the scene direct to my bed.
Dream ends
I have / had tremendous déjà vu at both Erice and Malta. I felt instantly at home in either place.
My hypothesis is that this stems from two lifetimes ago when I was a Christian priest / warrior.
“Contrary to popular belief, when Hugues de Payns and his eight companions founded the Order of the Temple in 1118, they were not wearing this cross. They wore only a white cloak, a symbol of purity and light. This distinguished them from the other Crusader knights, all of whom wore a cloth cross sewn onto their clothing, in a different colour depending on their origin. The French wore a red cross, the English a white one, the Flemish and Germans a green (or later a black) one, the Italians a yellow one and the Angevins a light green one.
It was not until 1147, eleven years after the death of Hugues de Payns, that Pope Eugene III granted the Knights Templar the privilege of wearing the Cross of Gules (red) on their clothing, the colour of which recalled the blood they had shed in defence of the Holy Land. The colour red was also a reminder of the Order’s French origins, since the red cross was, as we have seen, the mark of the French Crusaders.”
Excerpted from:
https://www.nos-colonnes.com/en/blogs/our-items/significance-and-origin-of-the-templar-cross
