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Posted: Sun Sep 14, 2025 1:43 pm
by Alexandr Korol
Chapter 18. Globus Cruciger and Worlds

I have already previously mentioned the royal orb, but I want once again, since the angle of perception changes, I grow, the reader also, from receiving new information, now perceives everything that was previously read in a completely different way. Here once again. This is precisely from the English- language Wikipedia. There is such a globus cruciger, it is also called that, if to translate literally into Russian language — such a sphere and a cross. “It was a Christian symbol of authority since the Middle Ages. Used on coins...” — and I am just now making my own golden coin — “used on coins, in iconography, together with the scepter as royal regalia. Royal regalia are a certain attribute that is used in certain ceremonies, and one of the main of them is the scepter and the royal orb.” The scepter is also often highlighted for me, this is again all to do with magic, with magic wands, this truly is all connected with this. But the royal orb, it is very curious that it was already there back in the 3rd, 4th, 5th centuries. This understanding of the royal orb, somewhere there it was encountered, precisely, in the kingdom of the English. Well, and further it is described that “the cross, placed above the globe, that is, above this sphere, represents the dominion of Christ over the world. Literally ‘held in the hand of a worthy earthly ruler.’ In the iconography of Western art, when Christ himself holds the globe, it is called ‘Salvator Mundi,’ in Latin Savior of the World.” Well, this is something, that is, there is the famous icon-painting which was sold for some insane 400 million dollars to some sheikh. I even asked employees to send him my book to read. Well, if he so desires, let us say, no matter how loudly it sounds, if he shows such interest in me that he bought the image of the Savior with the royal orb in hand, then probably it would be interesting for him to read the book about all this. I don’t know if he will read it, but the interest he had, let’s say, was not modest, if he paid such money for such a painting. The most expensive painting in the world — this is precisely the “Savior of the World,” where Jesus, the Son of God, holds in his hand a sphere. What is most interesting is that there is not even a cross there, but there is a sphere, and depicted on the sphere are such three dots. I don’t know, perhaps it is a flaw. Already once pieces had chipped off,