At the top of one of those, you know... appropriately named streets (just by chance you understand) is this guy, outside Sydney Hospital on Maquarie Street, which is named after the Freemason Governor of the New South Wales in the early days of colonisation, Lachlan Macquarie. Macquarie installed the name 'Australia' upon the landmass after naval explorer, Captain Matthew Flinders, an unconfirmed Freemason, had championed it - well, that's how the story goes anyway. Macquarie is another major player in global events with mysterious parentage. He was born on the island of Ulva - which means 'wolf' - Lachlan MacQuarie
Anyway, back to the piggy...He was given to the City of Sydney by the Marchesa Fiaschi Torrigiani of Florence (Italy) on 16th December 1968 (a 16 day and date numerologically Sagitarrius [centaur and arrows] astrologically) in memory of her masonically suggestive named father 'Thomas' (meaning 'twin') and her brother 'Peiro' (meaning 'rock'), who were both surgeons in Sydney. The bronze statue is a replica of one that stands in Florence and bears the same name, Il Porcellino (pig sick?). The appropriately named thoroughfare is called Martin Place - the heart of corporate Australia, supposedly named after another probable Mason, Sir James Martin, thrice the frontman of NSW politics. But Martin is a Masonic term and means brother and the place is riddled with them and their signs and symbols; the black boar among them. It is associated with the brother of Osiris, Isis and Nephtys - the evil Set, who was held responsible for devouring or blinding the sun - Osiris (Ausar) and Horus, depending on the tale - the curly one. Just coincidentally too the cenotaph is here too, where ceremonies to remind the living that their loved ones were sacrificed (not that they notice the words through their tears).
These services (service), as you know, are held on 11th November - St Martin's Day - handy that.
Martin Place is a long pedestrian way (read processional way) incorporates 3 X-roads, several steps, arches, fountains, pools, stonework and sculptures. (Scenes from Matrix and Superman films were shot here too - good choice!.) It rises from the underworld of Wynyard (underground) Railway Station all the way to the bronze black boar with the shiny gold snout that lounges at the entrance to Sydney Hospital - which itself fronts 'the Domain' area - where huge numbers of people gather for concerts, royal visits and such. There's even a black pyramid nearby, like Perth's - see Hell's Bells (Like Perth too, the post office in George Street, Sydney has a Masonically charged Kangaroo on it too). The area 'the Domain' is part of was a significant Native Australian ceremonial place where initiation rites were held and the "Kangaroo and Dog Dance" was performed here (according to goverment literature). In the original 'Domain' is 'Mrs Macquaries Chair', a seat that was thoughtfully cut from the rocks so that Lachlan Macquarie's very handily named wife - Elizabeth, could watch (note the 'eye' clue) the ships coming in and out of the harbour. The son of the widow: Mac- Quarry doesn't seem to have mentioned that the 'chair' is actually a throne shape which symbolises the Egyptian Goddess and Masonic favourite Isis (her heiroglyph), especially as the name Elizabeth is also a code for Isis. The name refers to John the Baptist (Horus) mother. The Goddess Isis was acknowledged as the protectress of both harbours and ships.
An 8-shaped road was completed during the month of the Goddess Wadjet (whose eye became the 'Eye of Horus') on 13th June (1816), a day when rites to Isis' son Horus were performed in ancient Egypt - The Ceremony of Heru the Beloved . Elizabeth Street forms one of the x-roads with Martin Place and 'Mrs Macquarie's Point' is where Queen Elizabeth II first stepped ashore in Australia.
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