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Arti070
post Jul 17 2020, 12:38 PM
Post #1





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Hello, I am trying to break into undertstanding HTML and webpage design (away from WordPress)

I am restoring multiple websites (from years old archives).

Why the HTML Page I am including here will not post or show the content, even though it is in the body, or within the HTML page itself?

The website, when you browser through it, the address bar is always the same. Thus sitemap.xml cannot be produced, as an example.




QUOTE
<html>
<head>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8"/>
<title>Dagobert's Revenge - Baphomet: The Severed Head That Wouldn't Die</title>
<script language="JavaScript"><!--
if (parent.location.href == self.location.href)
window.location.href = 'http://www.dagobertsrevenge.com/index.html?baphomet';
//--></script>
</head>
<body bgcolor="black" text="white" link="6699FF" vlink="AA0000">
<center>
<h5><font color="red">Dagobert's Revenge</font></h5>
<p>
<font size="5" color="white"><b>Baphomet: The Severed Head That Wouldn't Die</b></font><br>
<img >
<p>
</center>
<hr>
<p>
<font color="white" size="3">
<img align="right" >Friday the 13th, October, 1307 - a dreadful day. Especially if
you happened to be a Templar Knight. For on that dreadful day,
just as the sun was rising, King Philip IV's seneschals descended
upon all of the order's French holdings, arresting the members and
seizing their property. He had owed them a lot of money and he
had hoped to get his hands on the rumored Templar treasure that
had made them fabulously rich. But they had been forewarned,
and had moved the treasure, along perhaps, with some mystical
artifacts, to their preceptories in Scotland, where the atmosphere
was much more pleasant. With the assistance of Pope Clement V,
his so-called "puppet", King Philip had the knights tortured and
executed by the Inquisition. They were accused, among other
things, of heresy, necromancy, homosexual practices, and
conducting a bizarre ritual that involved spitting on, defecating on,
or in some way desecrating the cross (which, if true, is perhaps
evidence that they did not believe in the crucifixion). Under
extreme physical duress, most confessed. In fact, many of their
confessions were remarkably similar in detail. By far the most
popular theme, however, is the worship of an idol called
"Baphomet". Sometimes described as a cat or a goat that gets its
anus ritually kissed, Baphomet was most often referred to as a
severed head. A list of charges drawn up by the Inquisition on
August 12th, 1308 reads:<p>
<ol>
Item, that in each province they had idols, namely heads.<br>
Item, that they adored these idols.<br>
Item, that they said that the head could save them.<br>
Item, that it could make riches.<br>
Item, that it could make the trees flower.<br>
Item, that it made the land germinate.<br>
Item, that they surrounded or touched each head of the
aforesaid idol with small cords, which they wore around
themselves next to the shirt or the flesh.<p>
</ol>
In light of the probability that these charges were true, it would bid
us well to examine the possible origins and meanings of the famous
Dread Head. <p>
<h2>Where did it come from?</h2>
<img align="left" >The Templar legends regarding this are numerous and
confusing. Some said it was a man's head, or a woman's head,
that it was bearded, or unbearded, that it was made of glass or
crystal, and that it had two faces. A popular tale held that it was
the head of the Templar's first Grand Master, Hughes de Payens.
Others said that it was made of gold and called "Caput LVIIIc",
meaning "Head 58" One story that kept popping up in several
confessions says that a Templar called "The Lord of Sidon" was in
love with a young woman named Yse (possibly derived from
"Isis") who died suddenly, so on the night of her burial, he dug up
her body and copulated with it. 9 months later a voice "from the
Void" told him to go back to the grave, where he would find his
son. There he discovered a head resting on a pair of legbones
(perhaps the origin of the Templar's famous "skull & crossbones"
symbol). The voice told him that if he was careful to guard the
head, it would be "the giver of all
things". He took it with him and for the rest of his days, it
protected him. Later on the Templar order got a hold of it and
incorporated it into their rituals. <p>
<h2>Islamic Origins</h2>
<img align="right" >A common claim by historians is that the name "Baphomet"
was derived from "Mahomet" an Old French corruption of the
name of the prophet Muhammad. Others have said it comes from
the Arabic word "abufihamet", meaning "Father of
Understanding". Whatever the specific derivation, the idea that the
Baphomet legend was influenced by Islam is quite logical. The
Templars were known to have cavorted with Sufis and other
unorthodox Muslims while stationed in the Middle East, as well as
in Spain and perhaps even Jerusalem, where they were supposed to
be fighting the "infidel" during the Crusades. This would have
given them ample opportunity to pass on the legend of Baphomet,
if not the actual item. In his book The Sufis, Idries Shah argues
that Baphomet was actually the head of a mystic revered by a
number of Sufi sects called Hallaj, who was executed for testifying
about his spiritual experiences. After he got decapitated, the
Caliph's Queen Mother had the head embalmed, and it later came
into the possession of certain Sufi masters, who revered it for its
magical powers. Shah claims that Hallaj, a "son of a widow" was
not only Baphomet but also the model for the Masonic rites of
Hiram Abiff. He, of course, was the architect of Solomon's
Temple who was killed by his underlings with three ceremonious
blows to the head for not revealing the secret words, grips and
signs of a Master Mason.
<h2>Wisdom</h2>
In Holy Blood, Holy Grail the authors point out that when run
through a certain qabbalistic cipher known as Atbash, the word
"Baphomet" renders "Sophia", the name of the Greek Goddess of
Wisdom. This makes sense, for the Templars were known to be
the keepers of an ancient "wisdom tradition", and a logical
representation of wisdom is the human head. Interestingly, Aliester
Crowley, who adopted the name "Baphomet" upon joining the
Ordo Templi Orientis, believed the name to derive from two Greek
words put together meaning "baptism of wisdom" or "absorption
into wisdom". Indeed, the experience of "absorption into wisdom"
could be considered an ego death, and the skull & crossbones
became a well-known symbol for death.<p>
<h2>Bran the Blessed</h2>
<img align="right" >Elements of the Baphomet story are quite obviously Celtic in
origin. The Celts believed that the soul resided in the head, and
therefore they would sever the heads of their enemies and preserve
them as magical talismans. The most well-known severed head
among the Celts is that of the legendary giant Bran the Blessed,
which is said to be buried outside London, facing France. It was
put there to ward off the plague, ensure fertility and protect the city
from foreign invasion. Similar powers are also attributed to the
head of the Green Man, the Celtic fertility God discussed in the
article <a href="scotcrap.html">"If it isn't Scottish, it's Crap"</a>.<p>
<h2>Levi's Baphomet</h2>
<img align="left" >Baphomet was sometimes described by the tortured Templars
as having a human form with wings, cloven feet, and the head of a
goat. From this came the 19th century occultist Eliphas Levi's
well-known depiction of Baphomet, now incorporated into the
Waite tarot deck as "The Devil". This popular image, sometimes
referred to as "The Sabbatic Goat", was made to embody symbols
of conflicting dualities. Thus the beast bears the breasts of a
woman and the organs of a man, and is poised between the waxing
and waning moon symbols with his right and left hands pointing up
and down, respectively. Levi, who was obsessed with dualities, was
the first occultist to come up with the idea of "good"
(upward-pointing) and "evil"(downward pointing) pentagrams, and
his version of the "evil" pentagram included Baphomet's goat face
super-imposed onto it, from whence came the "Sign of Baphomet"
used by Satanist Anton LeVey. Levi believed Baphomet to be the
symbolic form of the absolute supreme being, and claimed that all
occultists, including Templars and Freemasons, actually worshipped
the Baphomet. He even believed that the name "Baphomet" was a
code for Solomon's Temple, because if you spell it backwards you
get the letters: "TEM - OH - AB", which he said stood for: "Templi
omnivm hominum pacis abbas", meaning "The Father of the
Temple of Peace of All Men". Despite this, Levi's characterization
of the Baphomet led to the popular conception of the Devil as we
know him today, and gave fodder to the theories that Freemasonry
is Satanic.<p>
<hr>
<a href="index1.html">Home</a> | <a href="articles.html">Back to the Articles Page</a>
<p>
</font>
</body>
<html>


Any help would be appreciated; a hint here and there will give me a better idea on how to break into understanding the coding of websites.

Thanx


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Christian J
post Jul 17 2020, 01:10 PM
Post #2


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QUOTE
Why the HTML Page I am including here will not post or show the content, even though it is in the body, or within the HTML page itself?

This part of the page above:

CODE
<script language="JavaScript"><!--
if (parent.location.href == self.location.href)
window.location.href = 'http://www.dagobertsrevenge.com/index.html?baphomet';
//--></script>

redirects the browser to http://www.dagobertsrevenge.com/index.html?baphomet (the redirect script is an old way to check if a page is loaded in a frameset or not). So you'll never actually see the contents of the HTML you posted (unless you disable javascript and/or redirects in your browser). The redirected URL loads another page with javascript, that in turn creates a frameset that tries to load https://www.dagobertsrevenge.com/baphomet.html (which seems to be missing).

A very convoluted (and outdated) way to make web pages. I suggest you simply remove the script above.

QUOTE
The website, when you browser through it, the address bar is always the same.

That's because it's a frameset, see https://htmlhelp.com/faq/html/frames.html#framestoc
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Arti070
post Jul 17 2020, 01:27 PM
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@Christian J

Yes, website I believe was built in 1999 and lasted to the early 2000's; backup from 2001.

The only module or tool that was able to list the URLs was at:

https://xsitemap.com/



And I thank you very much for your guidance and your very detailed educating answer. This helps in understanding, at least for me, the HTML and how I can tap into webpage codings [trying to learn Hugo]. Thank you for the link; I will begin digesting what you did write, and the materials in the link.

Thanx

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