Monday, June 17, 2013 -
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The Da Vinci Code
It is a 2003 mystery-detective novel written by Dan Brown. It
follows symbologist Robert Langdon and cryptologist Sophie Neveu as they
investigate a murder in Paris 's Louvre Museum
and discover a battle between the Priory of Sion and Opus Dei over the
possibility of Jesus having been married to Mary Magdalene. The title of the
novel refers to, among other things, the fact that the murder victim is found
in the Grand Gallery of the Louvre, naked and posed like Leonardo da Vinci's
famous drawing, the Vitruvian Man, with a cryptic message written beside his
body and a pentacle drawn on his chest in his own blood.
The
novel is part of the exploration of alternative religious history, the central
plot point of which is that the Merovingian kings of France were descended from the
bloodline of Jesus Christ and Mary Magdalene, ideas derived from Clive Prince's
The Templar Revelation (1997) and books by Margaret Starbird. The book also
refers to The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail (1982) though Dan Brown has stated
that it was not used as research material.
The
book has provoked a popular interest in speculation concerning the Holy Grail
legend and Magdalene's role in the history of Christianity. The book has been
extensively denounced by many Christian denominations as an attack on the Roman
Catholic Church. It has also been consistently criticized for its historical
and scientific inaccuracies. The novel nonetheless became a worldwide
bestseller[1] that sold 80 million copies as of 2009[2] and has been translated
into 44 languages. Combining the detective, thriller and conspiracy fiction
genres, it is Brown's second novel to include the character Robert Langdon, the
first being his 2000 novel Angels & Demons. In November 2004, Random House
published a Special Illustrated Edition with 160 illustrations. In 2006, a film
adaptation was released by Sony's Columbia Pictures. The novel received fierce
criticism in the West, while it was not banned from being sold in the West, but
the opposite took place in the Middle East, for which many Arab Muslim
countries including Jordan , Egypt and Lebanon have banned the novel, upon
the request of the Christian communities living there from the authorities.
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