Holy Blood, Holy Grail
DELL, 496 PAGES, $7.99
ADMIT IT: You’ve read The Da Vinci Code.
There’s no denying it. I saw you with it last week on the subway, your finger
stuck in the spine to keep your place. You were plainly pissed off that you had to put the book down
just as you were about to learn the secret connection between the Knights Templar and the murdered
museum curator, but there were no seats on the train, and trying to read under the watchful gaze of
Dr. Zizmor while hanging on to that lurching center pole feels kind of like trying to ride the Coney
Island Cyclone after drinking half a bottle of tequila.
Look, I’m not here to judge you. You don’t have to defend yourself to me.
I believe you when you say you usually only read serious literature. I’m sure you bought the new David
Sedaris the day it came out. Still, if you’re going to subject your gray matter to Dan Brown’s unholy
union of Tom Clancy and Indiana Jones, you should at least get some background on the source material
he lifted his plot from: Michael Baigent, Richard Leigh and Henry Lincoln’s 1982 bestseller Holy
Blood, Holy Grail, which has been recently revived in the wake of Brown’s success. (I
didn’t say that you should actually read the book: For me to require you to do that goes beyond
the level of torture even Donald Rumsfeld would feel comfortable with.)
If the names of the authors of HBHG seem somewhat familiar,
there’s a reason for it. The name of Brown’s character, Leigh Teabing, the crippled English aristocrat
who’s also an expert on the legend of the Holy Grail, is a combination of “Leigh” and an anagram for
“Baigent.” Likewise, Brown’s other character, Jacques Saunière, the art historian who
sets the plot of The Da Vinci Code into motion by getting whacked by an albino monk in the first
chapter, is named after Bérenger Saunière.
Bérenger Saunière is also as good a point as any to begin
to try to explain Baigent, Leigh and Lincoln’s long, strange trip. Saunière, according
to HBHG, was a poor village priest in late-19th-century southern France who suddenly came
into fantastic and mysterious wealth and began hanging out with the crème of Parisian society
after discovering mysterious documents hidden inside a church he was restoring. The south of France,
as it turns out, was where Alaric and his Visigoths stopped after sacking Rome in 410 A.D. to hide
their swag—which included the loot from the Temple of Solomon in Jerusalem that the emperor
Titus had carried back to Italy from the big fire sale that had followed the Jewish revolt against
Roman rule in 70 A.D. The Visigoth’s secret stash, whatever it might have been, also somehow inspired
the Cathars, the medieval heretics whom the Catholic Church so hated that it not only created the
office of the Inquisition to crush them, but Pope Innocent III even declared a crusade against them
in 1209—the first instance of Christians declaring holy war against other Christians in
Europe.
Irregardless of the fact that the Cathars and the Knights Templar were
ostensibly on opposite sides, the heretics somehow passed the ball off to the jocks in chainmail
before they all got killed, and when Philip IV of France had all of the Templars in his realm arrested
and executed for heresy in 1307, they, in turn, shipped their secret off to Scotland, where the Sinclair
family, the hereditary heads of Scottish freemasonry, kept the secret safe, and even built Rosslyn
Chapel outside Edinburgh to hold it—where (if we’re to believe the Scottish tourist board)
it remains today.
By this point in the book, you expect the tinny synthesizer theme to “In
Search Of” to start playing and Leonard Nimoy to pop out at any moment, but Baigent, Leigh and Lincoln
still have yet to drop the real bomb. First, they bring up an old medieval myth that the Merovingians,
the royal family that ruled France from about 447 to 751, were the direct descendents of Jesus, who
(as the story goes) didn’t die on the cross after all, but instead, in the Frank Capra version of The
Passion of the Christ, married Mary Magdalene and lived happily ever after. (If you’re wondering
why the villain in the Matrix movies was named “the Merovingian,” it’s because HBHG
was on the Wachowski Brothers’ reading list. Draw your own conclusions.) The real treasure, the
authors deduce by interpreting several sources (of various levels of reliability), is that Jesus’
bloodline is still existent today. Thus the book’s title: “Holy Grail” in Old French is san gral,
which should actually be sang real—or “holy blood.”
This is all, of course, proven by Saunière’s documents—which
no one has ever seen—and secret records kept in the Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris—which,
as it turns out, are impossible to check out on interlibrary loan because of surly Gallic librarians
employed by the Priory of Sion, the secret force behind the Knights Templar, which has been charged
with preserving the holy seed of Jesus. In their defense, the Priory’s RIAA-like clampdown on the
free flow of information is somewhat out of character for them, since not only did they kickstart
the Renaissance, but they also counted such intellectual luminaries as Isaac Newton, Victor Hugo
and—here it comes—Leonardo Da Vinci amongst their leaders.
Don’t be hard on yourself if you don’t remember this from Western Civ.
Even though they’re an all-powerful organization that’s been guiding human society for the past
millennium, the Priory members still tiptoe around the stage of history, since the Catholic Church
has been trying to wipe them out for centuries. After all, having countless Christspawn running
about the modern world would threaten the Church’s legitimacy more than even pedophiliac priests
and pro-choice politicians.
Having come up with such a fascinating conspiracy theory, it’s a shame
how many details Baigent, Leigh and Lincoln get completely wrong. To begin with, they work
just about every Christian heresy that has cropped up since the Virgin Mary got knocked up into their
alternative history—never mind that the Cathars, who denied that anything in the material
world could ever be good, were completely different from the Aryan heresy the Visigoths adhered
to, and whose insistence that Jesus was wholly human was the theological equivalent of sex, drugs
and rock ‘n’ roll. Likewise, they imply that the Visigoths and the Merovingian Franks were somehow
on the same side, even though the two nations were actually deadly enemies. If simply being against
the Church means that you’re somehow “in” on the conspiracy, then the song “Catholic Girls” from
Joe’s Garage makes Frank Zappa one of the Illuminati. (As everyone knows, it’s Apostrophe/Overnight
Sensation that clearly links Zappa to the shadowy puppet masters who control human destiny.)
The idea of keeping the family tree pruned to bonsai-like proportions
is also completely fallacious. Infant mortality in pre-modern times was ridiculously high, and
you’d only need one childhood accident or disease in 2000 years to wipe out the bloodline; if, however,
even one extra sibling per generation survived to reproduce, the numbers of descendents would
increase at an exponential rate; keep the children of Christ marrying each other, on the other hand,
and eventually they’d be so inbred that the sons of God would have flippers for feet.
Likewise, there’s an entire cottage industry devoted to disseminating
crazy conspiracy theories about the Knights Templar, from Richard Metzger’s Disinfo.com (which
seems to be more interested in the believers than the belief) to Dagobert’s Revenge, the
New Jersey-based conspiracy zine to which industrial musician Boyd Rice is a prominent contributor
(it’s named for a murdered Merovingian king). I’ve heard everything from the Templars having hidden
the Ark of the Covenant in Ethiopia to their having built a supposed medieval tower in Connecticut
a hundred years before Columbus sailed the ocean blue. The sad truth is that, while remnants survived
in such groups as the Knights of Christ in Portugal, the Templars have about as much effect on the
modern world as does the Empire of Trebezonia. Rosslyn Chapel is just an ordinary, albeit ornate,
church built by the Sinclair family in the 15th century. True, they spent so much on it that they had
to sell the Orkney islands—but if there was more to the place than that, some art history grad
student or restoration team would have found it by now.
As for all the clues supposedly hidden in great art (for Brown, the works
of Leonardo; for Holy Blood, Holy Grail, Poussin’s Et in Arcadia Ego)—sure,
early modern art is full of symbolism, but it was all easily decipherable by any educated contemporary.
Renaissance artists did work out the “ideal proportions” for the human figure (Albrecht Dürer
even wrote down the rules for everyone from classically proportioned übermenchen to stout
peasants), but if people were really designed according to the “Golden Mean Ratio,” we’d be walking
around like Marty Feldman in Young Frankenstein. Likewise, you can learn the basic principles
and mystical significance of “sacred geometry” in any Art History 101 course—it’s all based
on very sound and very orthodox ideas that have been common knowledge since the Roman Empire.
It’s amazing how far you get, though, by mixing some medieval history
gleaned from the Society for Creative Anachronism’s membership manual with highfalutin talk
of the Dead Sea Scrolls and mystic traditions that “transcend Christianity itself.” After all,
how can you disprove that history, as it’s commonly accepted, isn’t all one big cover-up?
It’s impossible to argue with pristine logic like, “we were confronted with a dazzling array of
coincidences—coincidences too numerous to be truly coincidental.” Mention something
outrageous, insinuate something else, put two completely irrelevant pieces of common knowledge
next to each other, and—bam!—you’ve discovered the truth that’s been hiding in plain
sight for centuries. As a rhetorical style it leaves much to be desired.
Believing in conspiracies, whether the big secret is an antigravity
generator built by a rogue Russian scientist or the fact that the Royal Family are really intergalactic
shape-shifting lizards, is more fun than using Occam’s razor to cut them to shreds. It’s a natural
human tendency to look for patterns and connect disparate sources, and books like Holy Blood,
Holy Grail suggest that if you’re just clever enough to figure out the riddle, you can find the
buried treasure and get invited into the secret club—kind of like Mensa, but instead of just
playing Dungeons & Dragons, you get to fight for control of human destiny. Nevertheless, if
you want to read something like this done right, then I recommend Umberto Eco’s Foucault’s Pendulum
or Arturo Perez-Reverte’s The Club Dumas. At least Eco and Perez-Reverte didn’t pretend
they’re not writing fiction.


