Note that these four drops together list 165 banks.
(135 + 136 + 137 + 138) = 546
(165 + 546) = 711
Official date of Evelyn de Rothschild's death: [7th November or 7/11].(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evelyn_de_Rothschild)
Official date of Jacob Rothschild's death: 26th February 2024.
(26th February 2024 minus 546 months) = 26th August 1978
Official date of David Mayer de Rothschild's birth: 25th August 1978 (1 day prior to the date above)
Is it plausible that Jacob Rothschild had in fact died on the 25th (as speculated to have been marked by the horse ceremony) and this date differential would therefore be in perfect alignment?
David Mayer de Rothschild is son of Victoria Lou Schott and Sir Evelyn de Rothschild. Mum died in Jan 2021, dad died in 2022.
Three days before his mum died, another Rothschild - Benjamin Rothschild died as well.
Something makes me think that all the loose ends of this family is being taken out. Is David Mayer next? Or is he the young kid of the family who turned against the rest?
Kinda makes sense considering the 546 months for the death of Jacob Rothschild is for David's birth!
Serious question, last name mayer.. but just like any last name. German or such. Could be changed coming to America?Mayer, Meyer? Cavanaugh, kavanugh? Just examples of things I've come to find of interest.
Yeah, very possible. Makes it very hard to trace the real lineages.
Khazarians = name changers.
Ikr! Mind very blown!
Also makes you wonder what the significance of these numbers are.
If not from personal experience, I wouldn't ask. Different spellings exist!
Following that train of thought...I've always wondered if "Rothschild" was a bastardized version of "de Rochefoucauld". Would explain a lot of the arrogance.
Interesting thought, I had never noticed before how similar the names are.
Rothschild is actually German ("roter schild", red shield). The story I remember is that the family took their name from the red coat-of-arms on their house/estate in Frankfurt back in the 1600s. It was known as the red shield house. Prior to that, the family name was something more pedestrian. Bauer, I think...? ("farmer" in German).