Peter Duke interviews Mrs. Heritage History — and examines how ancient maritime powers shaped modern systems of control. Mrs. Heritage History recounts her journey from a Silicon Valley engineer to a homeschooling mother and historian who built Heritage-History.com, a digital library of public-domain history books written before 1923. She describes her discovery that older texts carried narrative clarity and moral vision missing from modern education, inspiring her to collect and digitize works by authors such as Jacob Abbott and Charles Coffin for homeschoolers seeking primary historical storytelling.
Mrs. Heritage History’s historical focus turned toward civilizations preceding Greece and Rome. She describes the Phoenicians as the transmitters of writing, shipbuilding, and metallurgy who linked the ancient Mediterranean through trade from Tyre and Sidon to Carthage and Spain. She argues that their commercial and religious systems persisted after the fall of their ports, forming an invisible maritime hierarchy that resurfaced through later empires. Her research proposes that the Phoenicians established the first global trade network and embedded their influence within the noble families of Europe through intermarriage and economic alliances.
In the nineteenth century, she found repeated signs of continuity between ancient Phoenician symbology and the Freemasonic orders that dominated British and continental politics. She describes the Freemasons as a “meta secret society,” coordinating smaller guilds and chivalric fraternities, mirroring ancient command structures. When she observed the prevalence of Freemasonry among leaders of the French Revolution and British Empire, she concluded that secret societies had functioned as instruments of a modern thalassocracy—rule by sea power and finance. Her Catholic perspective sharpened her concern that the Church’s own historians had avoided exposing these connections.
Her turning point came in 2016, when the release of the Podesta emails through WikiLeaks led her to connect contemporary elite behavior with the ritual conditioning she associated with ancient Phoenicia. She interpreted historical accounts of child sacrifice and sexual exploitation as systems of psychological control designed to ensure loyalty within a cult hierarchy. The recognition, she says, forced her to reinterpret three millennia of history as the unbroken story of a hidden maritime order that merged religion, commerce, and mind control.
During the interview, Duke displays maps of Bronze Age trade routes and later Mediterranean empires. Mrs. Heritage History explains that Phoenician cities functioned less as a single nation than as nodes in a network—each port autonomous yet bound by shared cult practices and trade monopolies. She defines Phoenicianism as both economic and initiatory: a culture of merchants who preserved secret knowledge from an earlier age. The discussion turns to her belief that the pre-Socratic philosophers inherited this knowledge, including principles of energy, geometry, and the body’s electrical field.
Mrs. Heritage History recounts an email from a self-identified Phoenician descendant objecting to her description of ancient depravity. She regards the criticism as evidence of active sensitivity surrounding the topic, emphasizing that her Heritage History summaries remain suitable for young readers while her deeper research addresses hidden continuities of power.
In closing, she and Duke trace a lineage from Phoenicia through Carthage, Venice, the Dutch Republic, the British Empire, and the Anglo-American financial world. They define this sequence as a persistent maritime command structure linking trade, secrecy, and governance. Mrs. Heritage History concludes that the Phoenicians did not disappear—they transformed their cult and commerce into the enduring infrastructure of Western civilization.

No comments:
Post a Comment