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1 Illuminati of Bavaria 



Introduction 

In 1789, the Marquis de Luchet wrote in Essai sur la 
secte des Illumines (Paris) at v and xii. 

In the bosom of the deepest darkness a society 
has been formed, a society of new beings, who 
know one another though they have never seen 
one another, who understand one another 
without explanation, who serve one another 
without friendship... From thejesuit rulethis 
society [the Illuminati] adopts blind obedience; 
from the Masons it takes the rituals and the 
ceremonies. 

This chapter will examine the forgotten Illuminati of 
Bavaria. The Illuminati were widely believed in the 1792- 
1805 period as the primary agent of the French Revolutions 
of 1789 and 1792. 

In that era, the question was whether the Brissotin-led 
Jacobin Societies who clearly and openly engineered the rev- 
olution in France in 1792 had anything to do with the Illumi- 
nati? Part of the answer depends on whether the Illuminati 
were strong only in Bavaria. If they thrived outside Bavaria, 
then we can ask whether the Illuminati could be easily killed 
by Bavarian decrees suppressing the Order from 1785 to 
1790, as many historians suppose. 



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Illuminati of Bavaria 

Who Were The Illuminati? 

In 1878, the French historian Henri Martin summa- 
rized the goals of the Illuminati as "the abolition of property, 
of social authority, of nationality, and the return of the human 
race to the happy state where all would be formed into one 
family, without artificial needs, without useless sciences, 
with every father a priest and magistrate." 

R.M. Johnston in 1901 in the American Historical 
Review summarized the Illuminati' s teachings as "the equal- 
ity of men, of the falsity of religion, and the foundation of a 
universal republic...."" 

The Illuminati were founded in 1776 in Bavaria at 
Ingoldstadt. Thereafter, the Illuminati recruited members 
throughout Europe. By 1782, they had spread to France, Italy, 
Sweden, Holland, and most places in Germany. The Illumi- 
nati cloaked their members in secrecy. They used secret 
handshakes and hand-signs like those used in Freemasonry. 
However, they also developed a cipher to write messages to 
one another. 

Also, to conceal their identities, each member was 
identified by a code-name from antiquity. Thus, Weishaupt, 
the founder, was alias Spartacus; Massenhausen was Ajax; 
and Meuy was called Tiberius. To cloak their communica- 
tions even further, the Illuminati identified countries and cit- 
ies by other geographical code names borrowed from place 
names used in antiquity. For example, France was called 
Illyria. 



1. Henri Martin, Histoire de France Depuis Les Temps Les Plus Recules 
Jusqu'en 1789 (Paris: Frune, JouvetetCie, 1878), Vol. 16 at 533. You 
will find the English translation at Henri Martin, History of France 
from the Most Remote Period to 1789 (Trans. Mary Booth) (Boston: 
Walker, Fuller & Co., 1866) Vol. 16 at 482. 

2. R. M. Johnston, "Mirabeau's Secret Mission to Berlin," The American 
Historical Review (Oct. 1900-July 1901) Vol. VI at 235, 240. 

Illuminati of Bavaria 2 



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Who Were The llluminati? 

The llluminati recruited by 1783 many famous men 
such as Goethe, Nicolai, and Herder. Also the reigning Dukes 
of Weimar (Karl August) and of Saxe-Gotha (Ernest II) 
enlisted as members. These members made the order appear 
very attractive. 

The turning point for the Bavarian llluminati took 
place in 1782. Thirty-five leaders of various sects of conti- 
nental Templar lodges of Europe met at Wilhemsbad, Ger- 
many. Some Freemason systems were also represented. The 
primary participants were the Templar sects known as the 
Strict Observance, both in Germany and the independent- 
minded branch at Lyons. Masonic historians call this event 
the Wilhemsbad Congress. None of the mainline Freemasons 
Orders participated, such as the Grand Lodge of England or 
the Grand Orient of France. Nevertheless, at this conference, 
the Templar leaders and some small masonic sects repre- 
sented at the Congress reportedly agreed with the llluminati 
plan to overthrow France. Four of the thirty-five representa- 
tives left memoirs or communications behind that reflect their 
exposure to such a secret revealed at Wilhemsbad. Yet, most 
historians ignore the Wilhemsbad Congress. 

The fact Wilhemsbad is overlooked is one of the pri- 
mary reasons why there is an undue lack of importance given 
to the llluminati in the French Revolution by so many. 

After the llluminati' s favorable reception at the 1782 
Wilhemsbad Congress, the llluminati quickly spread through- 
out Europe. We will examine also later whether the llluminati 
then exerted significant influence over groups later signifi- 
cantly involved in the French Revolution. 

During this successful expansion, Bavaria became 
alerted to some of the llluminati' s plans. The government 
took testimony from many members over the course of four 
years (1783-1787). Eventually, Bavarian police seized papers 
from the llluminati' s headquarters and from other main 



3. For a discussion of Wilhemsbad, see "The Wilhemsbad Conference of 
1782" on page 1 et seq. 



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Illuminati of Bavaria 

archives. After these discoveries, Bavaria issued several 
decrees from 1785 to 1794 to suppress the Illuminati. Most 
historians regard the year 1790 as the end of the Illuminati, 
thereby ruling out they could cause the French Revolution of 
1792. We are going to examine whether such a view is short- 
sighted. 

The truth is that these historians have not taken into 
consideration what happened at Wilhemsbad in 1782 which 
linked the Illuminati as a highly influential entity within con- 
tinental Templarism sufficiently prior to the French revolu- 
tions of 1789 and 1792 to have effectuated those events. 
Certainly the modified sects clearly survived 1790. These his- 
torians also ignore the post- 1790 decrees in Bavaria. Instead, 
these historians gave undue importance to the Bavarian 
decrees predating 1790. We shall ask whether we can prove 
the Illuminati operated in the upper echelons of other surviv- 
ing sects of politicized secret societies, and thus whether the 
Illuminati both organically and in spirit survived past 1790. 

The best starting place to understand the Illuminati is 
to start where they did: Bavaria. 



Bavaria of the Eighteenth Century 

Bavaria's people and history provide some explana- 
tion for how and why others viewed the Bavarians as friendly 
affable people whose ideas were worth adopting. Bavarians 
had a great reputation in Europe as a fun-loving stimulating 
people. As of the 1770's, Bavaria also had long adopted 
enlightened liberal reform although it was not a democratic 
society. 4 Many other Europeans were exposed to this happy 
land because Bavaria was a huge travel destination for tour- 
ists from other European nations. 



4. In 1777, this classic liberalism was threatened to come to an end by the 
death of the reforming elector Maximilian, replaced by a more retro- 
gressive elector, Karl Theodore. 

Illuminati of Bavaria 4 



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Bavaria of the Eighteenth Century 

Let's start with the people. Bavaria of the 18th Cen- 
tury, as is still true today, was regarded as having some of the 
most jolly and affable people. 5 Unlike the Prussians of Ber- 
lin, who were very "serious," the Bavarians, then as now, 
were typically seen as "jolly [and] jovial" people. A traveler 
in 1922 still met the same "kind, jolly Bavarians" of earlier 
days who might "grumble against political oppression" and 
spill out "dreams of communistic heavens," but who had 
none of the characteristics of serious-minded "anarchists." 7 
They were fun loving dreamers who inspired others to good- 
natured hope in a better future for all. 

Bavaria itself could inspire dreams of Utopia because 
in many ways it was a fairy-tale land. 

First let's look at Bavaria's capital, Munich. It was 
founded by monks in the 12th Century, hence its German 
name — Munchen. During the Illuminati era, Munich was 
one of the finest looking cities in all of Europe. Its rulers had 
hired the most renown architects of Europe to build the finest 
Gothic-style churches as well as Renaissance- style theaters, 
museums, palaces and music houses. They used the unique 
Bavarian style-white- washed exterior walls with visible 
Tyrolean-brown wood crossbeams. In each city, cobblestone 
streets made crooked paths toward the central plaza of the cit- 
ies. Along the way, rose flower pots decorated window sills 
on neat half-timbered gabled houses. 



5. Foreigners who have lived long periods with Germans, and in particu- 
lar those exposed to "boisterous Bavaria," regard the people as "quite 
affable and jolly." http://www.qype.co.uk/place/282433-Deutsche- 
Bahn-UK-London (accessed 12/28/08). If you have ever met a true 
Bavarian (and many other Germans), you know they have this infec- 
tious quality. 

6. The Contemporary Review (July-Dec. 1897) at 3 12. 

7. Otto Manthey-Zorn, Germany in Travail (1922) at 121. 

Illuminati of Bavaria 5 



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Illuminati of Bavaria 

Munich reflected the buoyant happy nature of the 
Bavarian people. It was a fun city. In Munich, at 1 1:00 am 
each day, the clock at the neo-Gothic City Hall re-enacted the 
chivalrous past of Bavaria. 

As the clock struck each daylight hour, two life-like 
knights appeared with their lances drawn to engage in a mock 
battle. Along the wide street of Munich known as Maximil- 
ianstrasse — equivalent to the Champs d'Elysee of Paris — 
shoppers found all varieties of vegetables and fruits. As one 
strolled down the side-walks, one could enjoy attractive cafes 
and shops. At night, citizens savored fine dinners at the 
world-famous restaurants of Munich. Every Saturday night, 
one could walk up to Nymphenburg Palace, past its moat 
where white-winged geese swam, and enjoy a grand ball 
inside. In town, one could share a stein of ale with a friend in 
a boisterous tavern. This playfulness reached its peak each 
year during Oktoberfest for which Munich is still internation- 
ally famous. 

Other major cities of Bavaria also reflected the jovial 
spirit of the people. Nuremberg, for example, was founded 
near the year 1080. It became renown for a community-wide 
skill of toy making and woodcarving. Its nickname became 
"Toy Box Town." Here was the first Disneyland. 

Tourists would take their children to Nuremberg to 
see the museums of toys and miniatures. Children of all ages 
(adults too) were delighted and amused. In fact, our modern 
spirit of Christmas largely emanates from the customs of this 
fabled city. 

In 1639, Nuremberg began the annual tradition of the 
Christ Child Mart. From the end of November to Christmas 
eve, the main square of the city was dressed up in Christmas 
lights, trees, wreaths, and colorful stalls, making it a fairy-tale 
land for children. Christkindlesmarkt, as Bavarians called it, 
could melt every child's heart and bring out even a smile 
from the most crusty adult. Everywhere the smells of resin 
from brilliantly decorated fir trees mixed with the smell from 
roasting chestnuts, baking gingerbread, and browning sau- 

Illuminati of Bavaria 6 



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Bavaria of the Eighteenth Century 

sages. On one special evening during the Yuletide season at 
Nuremberg, children would be given a homemade lantern, 
and walk at night in procession slowly from the square to the 
Imperial Castle. The lights from hundreds of little lanterns 
moving up the mountain in the cool night enchanted any 
spectator with a sense of awe. From Nuremberg, these Christ- 
mas traditions passed into European countries and to Amer- 
ica. 

The government of Bavaria was a mirror reflection of 
the gentle and warm people who lived there. It had for centu- 
ries exercised a mild and benevolent rule. The government 
encouraged religious instruction, yet there was no official 
state- sponsored religion. While the majority of citizens were 
Catholics, there was no significant religious strife among 
Catholics, Jews, and Protestants. Bavarians also lived peace- 
ably with their neighboring countries for six centuries. 

In the eighteenth century, the political head of 
Bavaria was called an Elector. This position transferred on 
his death to his oldest male heir. Maximilian Joseph, the 
Elector of Bavaria from 1745 to 1777, was a liberal reformer. 
He issued a progressive civil and criminal code. He also insti- 
tuted compulsory education of children. His policies encour- 
aged agriculture and manufacturing. He founded an Academy 
of Sciences. The Elector, regarded by some as "Father Max, 
the Much Beloved," also ended most vestiges of feudalism. 8 

Under Maximilian Joseph, Bavaria became a pan- 
European cultural center. During his rule, Munich became the 
Paris of Germany. Each weekend huge sums were won and 
lost at card parties while crowds roared to the French opera. 
Thus, Bavaria in general enjoyed all the benefits of a temper- 
ate, tolerant and progressive government. 



8. Adam Weishaupt, the founder of the Illuminati, had much praise for 
these programs of Max Joseph III. See Adam Weishaupt, VollstAndige 
Geschichte der Yerfolgung dcr Illuinhuucn in Bavcrn I (Frankfurt & 
Leipzig: 1786) at 49 

Illuminati of Bavaria 7 



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Illuminati of Bavaria 

This partly explains why Weishaupt was not particu- 
larly concerned about overthrowing Bavaria. It also explains 
why he focused on France, which still lacked any of the 
progress made by Bavaria toward a more liberal society in the 
classic sence (i.e., liberty, freedom-of-religion, and equal 
rights). 



The Jesuits of Bavaria Align Against 
Weishaupt 

While these changes took place, the Jesuit University 
of Ingoldstadt was also undergoing a change of a different 
kind. It stood as a stalwart on matters of religion in the 
largely Catholic country of Bavaria. The university was 
established in 1472. It had been under the control of the Jesu- 
its since the Sixteenth Century. In 1745, the Elector asserted 
control over Ingolstadt University. He named as curator of 
the university Baron Johann Adam Ickstatt. Ickstatt became 
known for his dislike of the influence of these old time reli- 
gionists. Baron Ickstatt created new chairs for those who 
shared his notions. To succeed at remaking the university, he 
opened old department chairs to non- Jesuits and non-priests 
for the first time in centuries. 

One of Ickstatt' s recruits included his close friend, 
George Weishaupt (pronounced Visaupt). Ickstatt appointed 
George Weishaupt to be Professor of Imperial Institutions 
and of Criminal Law. George died in 1755 and his son Adam, 
then seven, was put under the care of his godfather, the same 
Baron Ickstatt. 



Illuminati of Bavaria 



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Weishaupt's Early Education 

Weishaupt's Early Education 

Adam Weishaupt, the future founder of the Illuminati, 
enjoyed the library of Ickstatt. It contained the works of the 
French philosophers such as Rousseau. Like his godfather, 
Adam grew to dislike the influence of the Jesuits. In 1772, 
Adam Weishaupt joined the faculty of Ingoldstadt as Profes- 
sor Extraordinary of Law. In 1773, when the Pope disbanded 
the Jesuits, Weishaupt was appointed to the Chair of Canon 
Law. He was now teaching the Catholic Church's ecclesiasti- 
cal laws. Jesuits had held this chair for the previous ninety 
years. They had to hold their tongue as their church's legal 
system was being described by one who clearly disliked it. In 
time, the Jesuits at the University treated Weishaupt as their 
enemy, and intrigued against him. Out of this mutual animos- 
ity arose the Illuminati. 



Adam Weishaupt and the Founding of the 
Illuminati 

In 1775, Adam Weishaupt was appointed Dean of the 
Faculty of Law. From this lofty post, he became the leader of 
any faculty who were opposed to the influence of the Catho- 
lic church in Bavaria. Weishaupt regularly attacked the Jesuit 
professors in reports to Ickstatt' s successor, Lori. He claimed 
their philosophy was dangerous. The Jesuits (who were for- 
mally disbanded by the pope in 1773) acted in unison, and 
counter-attacked by protesting against Weishaupt's salary. 
They tried to prove his lectures were against true religion. In 
Weishaupt's version, the Jesuits were relentlessly against 
him: "For 13 years, I was exposed incessantly to their 
intrigues and slander." 

(Had the Jesuits excercised love, not hate, for their 
enemies, as Jesus commanded, one wonders what a different 
outcome on world history this would have caused.) 



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Illuminati of Bavaria 

These Jesuit attacks fired Weishaupt's determination 
to battle his Jesuit enemies. He finally announced a devastat- 
ing plan of counter-attack. Those listening were a group of 
friends and some law school faculty. He told them about the 
strength they could derive from a secret association modeled 
after the Jesuits' system of strict discipline, even adopting 
their method of spying on lower ranks to ensure the cohesion 
of the group. Yet, this would primarily use the cloak of a 
Freemason- style fraternity, employing rituals of secrecy. 
Weishaupt said such a group could vanquish their Jesuit 
opponents at Ingoldstadt and in Bavaria. They could also 
spread such a system to other cities, enlisting influential per- 
sons who shared their ambitions. 

For two years Weishaupt struggled with his notion. 
On May 1, 1776, he founded his society, the Order of the Illu- 
minati, or, in German, Illuminatenordens. 9 

The Illuminati began with a modest five members. 
They were: 

• Weishaupt alias Spartacus 

• Massenhausen alias Ajax 

• Meuy called Tiberius 

• Hertel alias Marius, a magistrate of Eichstadt, and 

• Lang, an old student of Weishaupt. 

They met at house no. 23 in Theresien Street. 
Weishaupt adorned the ceiling with occult symbols, a like- 
ness of which was first published in 1900. ' 



9. Weishaupt in his explanation of the founding says he first called his 
order the Perfectibilisten. However, shortly thereafter he used the 
name Illuminatenordens. See Daniel Jacoby, "Der Stifter des Illumi- 
natenordens und eine Briefstelle Schillers an Korner," Euphorion (Jan- 
uary: Leipzig & Vienna, 1903) Vol. X, at 93. 

10. See Altbayrische Monatsschrift ("Old-Bavarian Periodical") (1900) at 
81, cited in Jacoby, Euphorion, supra, at 93. 

Illuminati of Bavaria 10 



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Ardashir, The llluminati's Hero, Linked To The "True Cross" of Christ Ftecov- 

The Illuminati trained their members by graduating 
them up a ladder of classes. When founded in 1776, there 
were only three grades: Novice, Minerval (later known as 
Illuminatus Major), and Illuminatus Minerval. The ruling 
group, eventually made up of twelve, were called the 
Areopagites. 1 1 

In correspondence, the Illuminati used a secret cipher. 
They reduced the alphabet to a code with M as number 1, and 
working backwards to A. Even the year, month and day were 
concealed by adopting a new calendar. The Illuminati took 
the names of the months with Hebrew- sounding names. 
November was Abenmeh; January Dimeh, and so on. 12 The 
year began the 21st of March. 



Ardashir, The llluminati's Hero, Linked To 
The "True Cross" of Christ Recovered By 
The French Templars 

The Illuminati also dated their correspondence to 
mark the death of a Persian figure named Ardashir who died 
in 630 A.D. 

Thus, in Illuminati correspondence, the year 1776 
A.D. instead would be identified as year 1146. This meant 
year one was 630 A.D. 

Barruel explained why. In 1798, he said the Illuminati 
papers revealed they marked time off by "the era of the Per- 
sian Jezdegert, commencing the year 630 A.D." 13 



1 1. From ancient times up to the time of Christ, the Court of the Areopag- 
ites met on Mars hill in Athens. It was charged with questions of mor- 
als and the rights of teachers who lectured in public. 

12. The complete calendar was: Pharavardim (April - 41 days), Adarphah- 
ascht (May), Chardad (June), Tirmeh (July), Merdedmeh (August), 
Schaharimeh (September), Meharmeh (October), Abenmeh (Novem- 
ber), Adarmeh (December), Dimeh (January), Benmeh (February), 
Asphandar (March - 20 days). 

Illuminati of Bavaria 11 



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Illuminati of Bavaria 

Yet Barruel never identifies Jezdegert. Barruel evi- 
dently did not realize that Jezdegert is the Hebrew word 
transliterated for a Persian named Ardashir. As a result, 
Barruel never saw the significance why the Illuminati mea- 
sured all time from the death of this figure in 630 A.D. 

The story of Ardashir is rather simple. Years prior to 
his assassination in 630 A.D., Ardashir was just a boy of 
seven when the leaders of Persia made him ruler. Meanwhile, 
the Persians had earlier captured from Jerusalem the "True 
Cross" — a relic regarded by Christendom to be the remnants 
of the Cross of Christ. Then "[djuring Ardashir' s reign the 
cross [of Christ]" was returned to Byzantium. The Byzantine 
emperor Heraclius re-set it up at Jerusalem on September 14, 
629 A.D. in a solemn ceremony. 15 



13. Barruel, Memoires pour servir a I'histoire du Jacobinisme (Hambourg: 

Fauche, 1798) Vol. Ill at 70. 
14. In Hebrew, the name of the Persian king Ardashir of 630 is rendered as 

Jezdegert. See Die hebraeiselien Uebersetzungen ties Mine/alters unci 

die Juden als Dolmetscher (Berlin: 1893) at 45 ([Hebrew word] = 

"Ardschir, fur Jezdegert"). 
15.Henry Smith Williams, The Historians' History of the World (1909) at 

95. 

Illuminati of Bavaria 12 



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Ardashir, The llluminati's Hero, Linked To The "True Cross" of Christ Ftecov- 

Thus, in Weishaupt's day, it was Ardashir who was 
believed to have returned the "True Cross" of Christ to Hera- 
clius. (Only in modern times is this story questioned by 
some.) 16 Then, this ruler Ardashir was slain on April 27, 630 
A.D. 17 

Nothing other explains the llluminati's focus on 
Ardashir than that they kindly returned the True Cross of 
Christ to Byzantium. 

Then why was Ardashir' s life so important to the Illu- 
minati that they changed the measuring stick of time from 
Christ to Ardashir? 

Well the "True Cross" which Ardashir returned was 
thereafter temporarily lost but later recovered by the Knights 
Templars. Who were they? 

The Knights Templar was a chivalric order approved 
by the Roman Catholic Church in 1 129 A.D. They wore a 
"red cross" on their white surcoat. 

According to serious historians, the Templars are 
regarded as being the last possessors of the "True Cross" 
which, unless they still exist, has now been lost to the ages. 
This was the same cross returned by Ardashir to Byzantium's 
ruler in 629 A.D. According to Wikipedia: 



16. Some sources today claim it was a successor to Ardashir who recov- 
ered and returned the "True Cross." Yet, this mismatches some facts. 
Because Ardashir died in 630 A.D., and the ceremony of its return to 
Jerusalem took place in 629 A.D., it must have been Ardashir, not a 
successor, who returned the "True Cross" of Christ. To reconcile the 
conflicting accounts, some say his successor was ruling in parts of Per- 
sian prior to deposing the king, and this explains the discrepancies. 
(Michael H. Dodgeon, The Roman Eastern Frontier and the Persian 
Wars (1991) at 227-28.) However, Weishaupt did not have the benefit 
of this fine later scholarship. He must have depended upon the opinion 
of his day which attributed to Ardashir the recovery and return of this 
relic. 

17. Henry Smith Williams, The Historians' History of the World (1909) at 
96. 

18. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knights_Templar (accessed 12/29/08). 



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Illuminati of Bavaria 

Many of the Templar legends are connected 
with the Order's early occupation of the Tem- 
ple Mount injerusalem, and speculation about 
what relics theTemplars may havefound 
there, such as the Holy Grail or the Ark of the 
Covenant. That the Templars were in posses- 
sion of some relics is certain. M any churches 
still display relics such as the bones of a saint, 
a scrap of cloth once worn by a holy man, or 
the skull of a martyr: theTemplars did the 
same. They were documented as having a 
piece of the True Cross, which the Bishop of 
Acre carried into battle at the disastrous Horns 
of Hattin. When the battle was lost, Saladin 
captured the relic, which was then ransomed 
back to the Crusaders when the M uslims sur- 
rendered the city of Acre in 1191. 19 

A "cult of the True Cross" was then formed at Acre in 
the 12th Century. The presence of the cross was soon verified 
by the king of France in a trip to Acre. He determined it was 
indeed a valid reliquary of the True Cross. At that time, it was 
preserved in the "commandery of the Hospital of St. John" at 
Acre. The relic inside was tagged with a metal label saying it 
was the "holy cross" taken from Bethany (near Jerusalem). 

The "True Cross" later seems to have become lost. 
Thus, to the world of the secret societies, here was a tantaliz- 
ing missing talisman used for victory against foes that could 
be used by the societies for victory. 



19. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knights_Templar (accessed 12/29/08). 
For the ransom account, this cites Piers Paul Read, The Templars 
(2000) at 159-160, 171. Read is a little more ambiguous about who 
gained the Cross. He relates that on July 12, 1 191, the "main Templar 
force remained with the crusading army" at Acre, and with their help, 
the Muslim force in the City of Acre was forced to release Christian 
prisoners and "return the relic of the Cross." (Read, id., at 171.) Pre- 
sumably, the Cross did go to the Templars. 

20Jaroslav Folda, Crusader Art in the Holy Land (N.Y.: Cambridge Uni- 
versity Press, 2005) at 48. 

Illuminati of Bavaria 14 



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Classical References Used By The llluminati 

This is why Ardashir was the focus of the llluminati' s 
calendar. The "True Cross," now supposedly in Templar 
hands, was preserved initially by Ardashir generously return- 
ing it to Byzantium's emperor. Perhaps the llluminati claimed 
they were now the true possessors of this talisman. 

One can readily see that the Templar myth was being 
incorporated into the llluminati by a very obscure means. It 
obviously was to be revealed only at a very high level. This is 
why Barruel never identified it. Weishaupt had cloaked the 
Templar myth he would utilize by a Hebrew word Jezdegert 
in place of the more familiar Ardashir. However, once that 
dissassociation is discovered, the meaning of the llluminati 
calendar is unlocked. And from that, one can unlock that the 
llluminati claimed to have knowledge of the last talisman of 
the Templars. 



Classical References Used By The 
llluminati 

The llluminati also wished to revive the respect for 
the classical age — not uncommon since Renaissance times. 
Thus, they renamed cities with classical names. For example, 
Munich, the later headquarters of the Order, was known as 
Athens; Ingoldstadt was Ephesus; Heidelberg became Utica, 
and so on. 

The llluminati gave new names to nations too. 
Bavaria became Achaia or Greece; Suabia was Pannonia; 
France was Illyria, and so on. 

Each member adopted classical names to conceal 
their identity in their correspondence. Weishaupt was Sparta- 
cus, Zwack was Cato, and so on. 

This is not without significance in the French Revolu- 
tion, as this pattern would repeat itself. 



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Illuminati of Bavaria 



Illuminati Ritual 



The Illuminati constantly improved their ritual either 
to better conform to Freemasonry or to add interesting new 
titles and grades. The Illuminati soon after 1776 used the 
same three grades of Freemasonry: Apprentice, Fellow, and 
Master. The Illuminati also added a fourth grade on top called 
the Scotch or Ecossais grade. The Illuminati soon invented 
additional unique grades. If one completed the first three 
grades in the Illuminati, he was now in the Novice class. The 
Illuminati called the supervisor of Novices the Dirigeants 
(Directors). These Dirigeants could only come from the Ecos- 
sais (Scotch) class. The Dirigeant alone would pick the candi- 
dates for admission into the higher degrees. The Illuminati 
chose this structure to permit them to use Freemason lodges 
as their nursery. 



First Step To Gain Over Freemasons 

In 1777, Weishaupt personally embarked on a mission 
to take over Freemason lodges. First, in February he joined 
the Strict Observance (Templars) lodge Zur Behutsamkeit 
(Prudence) at Munich. He rapidly received the Templar Rite 
grades. Here Weishaupt met Zwack who would become his 
favorite aid. 22 



21. The Geographical Codes were as follows: (i). Nations: Italy = Arca- 
dia; Palatinate = Paphlagonia; France = Illyria; Bavaria = Achaia or 
Grecia; and Austria = Egypt, (ii). Cities: Vienna = Rome; Leipzig = 
Rome; Munich = Athens; Wurzburgh = Carthage; Wilhemsbad = 
Avaris; Neuweid = Claudiopolis in Thessaly; Augsbourg = Nicomedia; 
Freysingue = Thebes; Ratisbonne = Corinth; Landsberg = Megare; 
Eichstadt = Erzerum; Carlsruhe = Delphes; Deux-Ponts = Sodome; 
Kassel = Pisaure; Frankental = Parmaribo; Achenbourg = Pinna or 
Picinum; Heidelberg = Utica; and Ingoldstadt = Ephesus. See Rene 
Alleau, Hitler et les societes secretes, supra, at 111. 

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Mirabeau Even Mentions Lodge Theodore in His 1788 Work 

Next and far more important, he gained influence over 
a French-patented Templar lodge at Munich. When it 
accepted this patent, it changed its name from Lodge St. The- 
odore of Good Counsel to a French version — Loge St. 
Theodore au Bon Conseil. This patent came from the Cheva- 
lier Bienfaissance (CB) of Lyons. 23 The CB were Templars 
(Strict Observance) headquartered at Lyons, France. Willer- 
moz and Comte Vireau were its leaders in France. 

In 1777, the Illuminati recruited Anton von Thorring, 
at the time the Grand Master of this Munich Lodge. By 1780, 
now known as the Loge St. Theodore au Bon Conseil, this 
Munich lodge had come so far under the influence of the Illu- 
minati that the Illuminati regarded it as their headquarters. 
The Illuminati' s leaders besides Weishaupt who belonged to 
this lodge were Costanza, Falgera, Montgelas and Savioli. 24 
By such infiltration, the historian Mathiez commented in 
1916 that Weishaupt thereby became "master of the Munich 
Lodge of Theodore of Good Counsel." 25 



Mirabeau Even Mentions Lodge Theodore 
in His 1788 Work 

Mirabeau, the future French revolutionary of 1789, 
inl788 wrote about this lodge in his work On the Prussian 
Monarchy. After noting the Illuminati were men truly "virtu- 
ous, zealous for the good of humanity [who] arose in 
Bavaria," he says 

the Lodge Theodore du Bon Conseil at 
Munich [is] where wefind these men [of virtue 



22. "Illumines de Baviere," Ligou, Ed., Dictionnaire de la Franc-Macon- 

nerie, supra, at 603. 
_ Rene 1 Foi tier. I lllu tin k' Ben . I la 1 unc-Magonnerie 

allemande (Paris: 1915) at 198, 392. 

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Illuminati of Bavaria 



and zeal] at its head and heart... Their chiefs 
[i.e., the Chevaliers Bienfaissance of Lyons, in 
context, who controlled Lodge Theodore] 
resolved to enter their branch with another 
association, the Order of the Illuminati. 26 



24. LeForestier provides the following list of the members of this lodge 
Theodore besides Weishaupt, with their Illuminati aliases if available: 
(1) Bader or Baader, Director of Philosophy Classes of Academy of 
Science, Master in the Chair; (2) Berger, Master Elu, Knight Kadosh, 
First Inspector; (3) Satzenhofen, Lieutenant-Colonel of the Guard, 
Master Elu, and Second Inspector; (4) Marquis Costanzo alias 
Diomedes, Scotch Master, Representative; (5) Falgera, musician of 
the court. Master of Ceremonies, Scotch Master; (6) Canon Hertel, 
alias Marius, Scotch Master and Treasurer; (7) Radl, valet of the cham- 
ber of the Elector and Dentist, alias Cadmus Knight of the Orient, 
former Master in the Chair; (8) Count Savioli, alias Brutus. Eastern 
Knight, First Speaker; (9) Fronhofer alias Raymond Lulle, School 
Director at Munich. Landlord. Second Speaker; (10) Dufrene alias 
Maenius. Landlord. Secretary; (11) Count Seefeld the young alias 
Tetemaque, Master Elu, Director of Decorations; (12) Scmoeger alias 
Enee. Counsellor of the Chamber of Rentes, Landlord. Visitor of Sick; 
(13) Werner alias Menelas, Counsellor to the Court of Appeal, known 
as "Frere Terrible;" (14) Count Montgelas, alias Museus, Aulic Coun- 
sellor, Landlord. Correspondant; (15) Rudorfer alias Tite Live, Deputy 
of the Provincial Government. Lodge Companion, Major Domo of the 
Lodge; (16) Woszycki, Musician at the Court, Lodge Companion; (17) 
Baron de Herding, Guard of Jewels [apparently lodge office], Lodge 
Companion; (18) Troponegro alias Coriolan, Counsellor of Com- 
merce, Lodge Companion, Economist of the Lodge; (19) Baron de 
Erdt, Lodge Companion; (20) Berr alias Durer, Painter of Portraits, 
Lodge Companion; (21) Baron de Gumpenberg, Counsellor to the 
Aulic Tribunal, Lodge Companion; (22) Baron de Benzl, Counsellor of 
Provincial Government, Landlord; (23) de Offner alias Moron, parson 
at Munich, Lodge Companion; (24) De Full alias Philoctete, member 
of the Horse Guard of the Elector, Lodge Companion; (25) Canon Ber- 
nat alias Antisthene, Landlord; (26) Baron de Hornstein alias Vaspa- 
sian, Landlord; (27) Comte de Toerring-Seefeld alias Ulysses, 
President of the Aulic Tribunal, Knight of the Orient; and (28) Riedl 
alias Euclide, Counsellor to the Aulic Tribunal, First Decorator [Lodge 
Office]. In 1784, the lodge had 49 members. ( Le Forestier, Les Illu- 
mines, supra, at 392-93 n.5.) I highlight "Master Elu" above because 
that is one of the carryover grades due to their origin from the Lyons 
Templars. 

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Did Weishaupt Export Structure To Lyons As Early As 1777? 

Mirabeau does not date the first alliance between the 
Chevaliers Bienfaissance and the Illuminati of Munich. It 
likely took place in 1777 — the same year Weishaupt joined 
at the Pogner Inn — what later became known as the Lodge 
St. Theodore of Munich. 



Did Weishaupt Export Structure To Lyons 
As Early As 1777? 

The papers of the CB leaders, according to masonic 
scholars, talked about the Illuminati in 1777. Then the CB 
Templars soon adopted some of the Illuminati format. The 
changes probably came through Baron Turkheim (or 
Durkheim) of Alsace, France. 

In 1777, Turkheim was made head of the Chevaliers 
Bienfaissance (French Templars) and the head of the 7th and 
8th provinces in Germany. These German provinces probably 
encompassed Munich. In 1777, he wrote to CB leaders of a 
chance to unite the German lodges with the French Grand 
Orient. To move this project forward, in February 1777, 
Turkheim set up a conference. Those who came were the 
Duke of Brunswick, the Duke of Saxe-Gotha, and twenty- 
five other brothers. Turkheim said the conference would dis- 
cuss issues of great importance, including resolving whether 
the "Illuminati of Sweden" should be united into the new 



25. See A. Mathiez, "Bibliographie...Le Forestier, Les Illlumines, etc.," 
Annales Revolutionnaires VIII, at 433 (1916). 

26. Comte de Mirabeau, De La Monarchic Prussienne, sous Frederic Le 
Grand Avec Un Appendice (London: 1788), Vol. V, at 96-98 (empha- 
sis added). 

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Illuminati of Bavaria 

Templar Freemasonry. Perhaps to create a better cover and 
more mystery, Weishaupt told them the Illuminati at Munich 
were primarily from Sweden. 

Thus, the first contact between the Illuminati and the 
CB leaders of France may have taken place in 1777 soon after 
the Illuminati were recruiting at this lodge at Munich. 
Turkheim explained to the French brethren that the Illuminati 
had developed a secret that was attracting recruits away from 
the main Freemason systems. Soon, Willermoz, a CB Tem- 
plar leader at Lyons, advocated their order should tell mem- 
bers an important secret could be found in the higher degrees. 
He explained this would help attract and keep members. 28 

In January 1778, the CB worked out a new system. 
This system used forms that the Illuminati of Germany had 
uniquely created. The CB lodges began to use four degrees 
instead of three. These were Apprentice, Fellow, Maitre, and 
Ecossais (Scotch). (These degrees precisely matched the Illu- 
minati which we detailed above.) Also, and most revealing, 
these leaders in the CB lodges were then called Dirigeants 
(Directors) who only could be taken from the Ecossais class. 
They alone would pick the candidates for admission who 
were called Novices. 30 

This again was identical to the 1776 practice of the 
Illuminati of Bavaria. Since the genesis of this change in 
1777-1778 was the CB's effort to copy the mysterious quality 
of the Illuminati (of Sweden), it seems likely Weishaupt had 
won over important French Templars to his system at a very 



27. Alice Joly, Un Mystique Lyonnais et les secrets de la Franc- 

maconnerie 1730-1824 (Macon, France: Protat Brothers, 1938) 
at 81 and note. 

28. Alice Joly, supra, at 82. 

29. The Scottish rite was only three lodges in the world a few years later. 

30. Alice Joly, supra, at 83, 84. Joly shows no appreciation for how 
important it is that these grades were identical to those in the Illumi- 
nati' s earliest system. 

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1779 Patent From Frankfort Lodge Leads To Knigge 

early juncture. He did this through the Lodge St. Theodore of 
Munich which was at some point interlocked with the Tem- 
plars of Lyons under Willermoz. 

Having such satisfactory results from this Munich 
lodge of the French Templars, the Illuminati continually 
recruited Templars. By doing this, the Illuminati gained 
access and eventually control over many other lodges. 



7779 Patent From Frankfort Lodge Leads 
To Knigge 

In particular, the Illuminati used the Templar lodge at 
Munich and its prestige to their advantage. First, in 1779, the 
lodge began contact with the Lodge Union at Frankfort, to 
obtain a patent from the Grand Provincial Lodge. As a result, 
Weishaupt's friend, Costanza went to Frankfurt in 1779 and 
recruited a celebrated Freemason named Franz Knigge into 
the Illuminati. 31 Knigge was a major acquisition, and his role 
is discussed next. 



Entry of Knigge into the Illuminati. 

In 1779, Costanza successfully obtained for the Lodge 
Theodore a patent of approval from the powerful Royal York 
Lodge at Berlin. This gave Lodge Theodore the right to send 
its members to Royal York lodges. And this patent also gave 
the Illuminati power to found lodges in the name of the Royal 
York elsewhere and direct them. The Illuminati also 
exploited their affiliation with the French Templars in other 
ways. 



. "Illumines de Baviere," Ligou, Ed., Die 
Muconnerie, supra, at 602. 



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Illuminati of Bavaria 

Next, in 1781, the St. Theodore Lodge received from 
the Chevaliers Bienfaissants (Strict Observance) at Lyons, 
France a directorial right to manage their lodges in 
Bavaria, Italy, and Switzerland. This right included the priv- 
ilege to found new lodges in those territories in the name of 
the Chevaliers des Bienfaissants. 32 

Now the Illuminati sect, using the guise of both the 
Berlin Royal York lodges and the French Templars, soon 
spread their order further. The Illuminati penetrated all of 
Bavaria as well as founded lodges in Suabia (to the north), 
Franconia, Tyrol (a district in northern Italy) and Italy. 



Knigge 

As noted earlier, in 1779 Adolphe Franz Knigge 
(1752-1796) joined the Illuminati of Weishaupt. He was only 
age 27. Knigge joined as alias Philo. 

According to Masonic historians, Knigge "was at one 
time the most distinguished Freemason of Germany." 

However, some conservative historians like the Ger- 
man historian Menzel says Knigge was an "Hanoverian 
adventurer noted for talent and depravity." 34 

Who was Knigge? 

Knigge was born on his family estate of Bredenbeck 
near Hanover in northern Germany. After studying law at 
Gottingen, he was attached successfully to the courts of 
Hesse-Cassel and Saxe- Weimar as a gentleman-in- waiting. In 



32. Rene Alleau, Hitler et les societes secretes. Enquete sur les sources 
occultes du nazisme (Paris: Editions Bernard Grasset, 1969) at 109. 

in ii tauffei i nglcmd i nd tin Bin ian Illnmin (Reissued 
1967) (N.Y.: Russell & Russell, 1918) at 168-9 and n.5. On the life of 
Knigge, see Karl Godeke, Adolph Freiherr Knigge (Hanover: 1844). 

34. Wolfgang Menzel, Germany from the Earliest Period (trans. Mrs. 
George Horrocks) (N.Y.: Peter Fenelon Collier, 1899), Vol. Ill, at 
1330. 

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Knigge 

1777, he moved to Frankfort-am-Main. He then retired from 
court life and lived a private life for many years. He later 
moved to Hanau, and then Heidelberg. In 1791, he once more 
took public office at Bremen. 35 

In the mid- 1770s, Knigge had actively led the German 
Templars known as the Strict Observance. As a leader of Ger- 
man Templars, he became friends with other prominent Euro- 
pean orders. While Philo-Knigge was only in the Minerval 
class of the Illuminati, he enrolled many new members for the 
Illuminati. "Philo," Weishaupt wrote, "is the master from 
whom to take lessons." 

In 1779, Knigge began to feel that he should reshape 
the Illuminati to better accomplish their aims. In July, 1780, a 
major turning point occurred. An Illuminatus of Munich 
named Marquis di Costanza — alias Diomedes — met 
Knigge at Frankfurt where Knigge lived. In this meeting, 
Knigge insisted on being told the entire secret of the Order if 
he were to render further aid. A meeting was then set up in 
October, 1780 between Weishaupt and Knigge. In this meet- 
ing, Weishaupt painted the objects and character of the Illu- 
minati to Knigge in bold colors. 

Knigge was impressed and took on the projects of the 
Order with full enthusiasm. He immediately proposed clever 
ways to organize the Illuminati system, particularly so it was 
more compatible with Freemasonry. He proposed: 

• The twelve Areopagites who ran the order should each be 
given a Province to control. 

• Recruiting should focus on the young. 

• They should aim to influence all of Europe and eventually, if 
it took centuries, the entire world. 



35. "Knigge," Encyclopedia Britannica (N.Y.: University Press, 1911) 
(11th ed.), Vols. 15-16, at 859. 



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Illuminati of Bavaria 

• The degrees and rituals should be revised to enable the Illu- 
minati to take over Freemasonry. 

• Illuminism must strictly be a fourth grade superimposed on 
top of the standard three degrees of Freemasonry. 

The papers of the Illuminati seized by Bavarian police 
reveal that all these proposals were adopted by the Areopag- 
ite Council. 36 

Knigge now redoubled his efforts. By his influence, 
through 1781 as many as 500 new members were added to 
the Illuminati. Knigge 's impact in time grew to be quite 
important. He could then report, "Of all the legitimate [Free- 
mason] lodges in Germany, there is only one that has not coa- 
lesced with our superiors, and this lodge has been obliged to 
suspend its labours." 37 

A main headquarters of the Order was established in 
his hometown, Frankfurt-am-Main, a large city-state outside 
Bavaria. 38 In recognition of Knigge's growing importance, 
Weishaupt wrote: "Philo does more than we all expected and 
he is the man who alone will carry it all through." 39 

Knigge then appointed national superiors (Nation- 
alobere) who reported directly to Weishaupt. These were: 
Count Johann Martin zu Stolberg-Rossla for most of Ger- 
many; Prince Karl von Hesse-Cassel (who was serving as 
Danish governor of Holstein) for the northern part of Ger- 



36. Encyclopedia of Freemasonry (Ed. Mackey) (revised ed. Hawkins) 
(Masonic History Co., 1912) Vol. Ill, at 384 (hereinafter "Mackey"). 

37. Hon. Robert Clifford, Application ofBarruel's Memoirs (1798), 
supra, "Preliminary Observations." 

3&.Einige Originalschriften, supra, Vol. II., letter of Philo to Cato dis- 
cussed in Barruel, Memoires pour Servir (1803), supra, Vol. IV, at 
163. 

39. Nesta Webster, Secret Societies and Subversive Movements (N.Y.: 
Dutton & Co., 1924) at 210. 

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Goethe In The llluminati 

many and Scandinavian countries; and Count Leopold 
Kolowrat, Supreme Chancellor in Vienna, for the Austrian- 
Hungarian kingdom. 40 

The llluminati' s number of lodges increased rapidly. 
Lodges were soon in formation in Ratisbonne, Friesing, 
Regensberg, and Landsberg (cities within Bavaria); Stras- 
bourg (in Alsace-France); and in the district of Franconia as 
well as in Holland. Membership throughout Germany, Lep- 
per says, "ran into the thousands" by this time. As already 
noted, prominent figures such as Goethe, Nicolai, and Herder 
joined by at least January 1783. 42 



Goethe In The llluminati 

Goethe showed an initial enthusiasm for the lllumi- 
nati. Goethe's very first literary effort after joining was the 
poetical work entitled The Mysteries [Die Geheimnisse]. This 
was during 1784-86. 43 The protagonist, Marc, rises up within 



40. Klaus Epstein, The Genesis of German Conservatism (Princeton, N.J. : 
Princeton University Press, 1966) at 92. 

41. John Heron Lepper, Famous Secret Societies (St. Louis: Marston & 
Co., 1932) at 115. 

42. Lepper, id. at 115; Hermann & Georg Schreiber, Mysten, Maurer 
und Mormonen Geheimbunde in vier Jahrtausenden (Berlin: Paul 
Neff, 1956) at 233. On Goethe's interest in the llluminati, see R. 
Friedenthal, Goethe-sein Leben und seine Zeit (Munich: 1963) at 
28. Nicolai in his defense of the llluminati in 1788 admitted that 
Goethe and Herder were members, but claimed they eventually 
left "because they did not want to waste their time on fads." See, 
Daniel Jacoby, "Der Stifter des Illuminatenordens und eine Briefs- 
telle Schillers an Korner," Euphorion (January: Leipzig & Vienna, 
1903) Vol. X, at 93, quoting Friedrich Nicolai's defense of his 
membership: Friedrich Nicolai, Offentiche Erkldrung tiber seine 
geheime Verbindung mit dem Illuminaten-orden (Berlin: 
1788)(available books.google.com). 

43. Boyle, Goethe-The Poet, supra, at 274. 



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Illuminati of Bavaria 

a secret society that is reminiscent of a masonic lodge, even 
the Illuminati. There are twelve seekers who look to the thir- 
teenth for the fruit of his higher knowledge. Marc makes all 
kinds of wonderful discoveries in that lodge. 44 

However, by 1790, Goethe revealed disillusionment 
with the Order in his work The Grand Kophta. 45 

Goethe & Evolutionary Theory 

Also, of note, Goethe ventured outside literature into 
science. In doing so, he had enormous impact on modern sci- 
entific thought even though he is rarely given credit today. 
Goethe was the first modern to make the case that homolo- 
gies in life forms suggested evolutionary descent, inventing 
the term morphology even to explain the concept. 

In fact, Goethe was the first (1784) to advocate 
humans evolved from apes, by arguing there was proof of the 
traces of the intermaxillary bone in the fetus stage of man 
even as in apes, and thus inferring that man evolved from 
apes. 47 Goethe spoke of a "ceaseless progressive transforma- 
tion" of life-forms. 48 



44. This is summarized as "a relatively unknown poem mysteries frag- 
ment alluding to esoteric secrets, where he speaks of a pilgrim called 
Mark who comes across an isolated house with twelve seekers with a 
thirteenth who has passed through numerous obstacles, has spiritually 
progressed and is now dying and is giving a great gift to the twelve. 
Goethe refers to the thirteenth through: "Man needs to overcome and 
free himself Of the great power building all creation." http:// 
www.onlinehumanities.com/symbolism.html (accessed 5/23/09). This 
quotation is understood as meaning one becomes a higher human being 
as a result of the initiation. 

45. See our discussion of the Affair of the Necklace. 

46. Goethe's Versuch die Metamorphose der Pflanzen zu Erklaren (Gotha: 
1790) which studied the homology in plant forms, arguing it proved a 
relatedness. In the course of this work, Goethe coined the term mor- 



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Importance of Recruiting Nicolai 

Nevertheless, Goethe is never acknowledged to be the 
"inspired prophet" of the doctrine of descent. Darwin is kept 
on his pedestal despite it being self-evident Darwin did not 
invent the doctrine in the modern sense for which he is inces- 
santly given credit. 49 



Importance of Recruiting Nicolai 

The Illuminati also influenced German literature by 
recruiting Nicolai. Friedrich Nicolai took over from his fam- 
ily the editorship of the what Epstein calls the "most influen- 
tial German review of its day, the Allgemein Deutsche 
Bibliothek." From 1765 to 1805, it issued 268 volumes of lit- 
erary review and social commentaries. Nicolai in a confident 
manner delighted attacking traditional groups by applying 
reason to every situation. He had a virtual "pathological 
obsession" in attacking Jesuits. Nicolai scourged what he 
called intolerant orthodox religious opinions, pietism, and 
anything that did not appear "enlightened." He did so with 
such strength of language that Epstein ironically states that 
Nicolai was both engaged in "fanatical rationalism" and 
"intolerant championing of intolerance." 50 



47. Robert J. Richards, The Meaning of Evolution (University of Chicago 
Press: 1992) at 31; Richard Olson, Science and Scientism in Nine- 
teenth-century Europe (2008) at 98 ("Goethe. ..felt that there should be 
evidence of the transition from ape to man in the form of some residual 
evidence of an intermaxillary bone in the human upper jaw.") 

48. Oscar Schmidt, The Doctrine of Descent and Darwinism (N.Y.: 1896) 
at 113. 

49. Schmidt argues that Goethe did not have the same view as Darwin, 
only finding "adaptation" rather than transformation. Id., at 1 16. In my 
view, this is hyper-technical, solely designed to keep one's favorite 
hero — Darwin — always on a pedestal. 

50. Klaus Epstein. The (ienesis ofClcnnaii Conservatism (Princeton. N.J. 
Princeton University Press, 1966) at 40-41. 

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Illuminati of Bavaria 

While Nicolai is admirable in so many ways, his ideas 
do reflect what can be called 'liberals against liberalism.' He 
so wanted reason to dominate everything, he attacked intoler- 
antly and illiberally anything that did not match his strict 
view. This even put him many times at odds with Goethe, 
who wrote with emotionalism in his fiction works. Nicolai 
thought Goethe's writings were not 'rational' enough. 

But was Nicolai important historically? Very much 
so. Although Nicolai' s journal sold only 2,500 copies a year, 
all fashionable reading societies in Germany subscribed to it. 
This meant Nicolai subtly influenced public opinion. Epstein 
concludes that based on this influence, Nicolai "suceeded for 
many years in having the predominant voice of German pub- 
lic opinion." 5 

Thus, the Illuminati in Nicolai and Goethe held in 
their hand the leading edge of literature and science in Ger- 
many, and through them popularized an Illuminized-world- 



Expansion of Illuminati 

By approximately late 1782, new members of the Illu- 
minati also included the reigning Duke of Weimar, Karl 
August, and the Duke of Saxe-Gotha, Ernest II. 52 

Cato-Zwack in a memorandum drawn up about 1779 
notes the progress. Through the intrigues of the Illuminati 
brethren, he relates that all the Jesuits had been dismissed 
from professorships at Ingoldstadt University "and our 
friends prevail." A dowager duchess in Neuweid was per- 
suaded to set up an institute for military cadets on plans 
drawn up by the Order. Five Illuminati got highly paid posts 



51. .Epstein, id., at 40. 

52.Lepper, supra, at 1 15; Epstein, Genesis ofGer 
supra, at 93. 

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Expansion of llluminati 

as professors on her bounty. Zwack also noted in the memo- 
randum that llluminati obtained appointments in the Catholic 
church. "We have got Pylades," Cato-Zwack writes, "put at 
the head of the Fisc [that is, Treasury], and he has the 
church-money at his disposal." The brethren "have been 
very fortunate this last year, for we have procured for them 
several good benefices, parishes, tutorships, etc." The Ger- 
man schools "are at last under our direction." 

For example, the Order finally controlled the Bartho- 
lomew Seminary, according to Cato's report. The llluminati 
were implementing Weishaupt's dictate: "We must acquire 
the direction of education — of church management — of the 
professorial chair, and of the pulpit." 54 

The llluminati hid their purposes quite successfully. 
Cato-Zwack further relates in his 1779 letter, "[a]t Munich, 
we have bought a house, and by clever measures have 
brought things so far, that the citizens take no notice of it, and 
even speak of us with esteem. We can openly go to the house 
every day, and carry on the business of the Lodge." Zwack 
also boasted that they had sown seeds against the govern- 
ment, making way for their influence. "We get all the literary 
journals. We take care, by well-timed pieces, to make the cit- 
izens and the Princes a little more noticed for certain little 
slips." 55 

This infiltration of the press satisfied the wishes of 
Weishaupt. He had instructed the leaders of the Order: 

We must bring our opinions into fashion by 
every act- spread them among the people by the 
help of young writers. We must preach the 
warmest concern for humanity, and make 
people indifferent to all other relations.... If a 
writer publishes any thing that attracts notice, 



53. Robison, Proofs (1798) at 114. 

54. Robison, supra, at 109 (Instruction in Regent's Degree). 

55. Robison, supra, at 111, 113. 

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Illuminati of Bavaria 

and is in itself just, but does not accord with 
our pi an, we must endeavor to win him over, 
or decry him. A chief object of our care must 
be to keep down that slavish veneration for 
princes which so much disgraces all nations... 
We must assiduously collect anecdotes, [of] the 
honorable and mean actions..., 56 

The Illuminati thus directed their agents in the press 
to sometimes profess humanitarian goals to sap the support of 
their enemies. Meanwhile, the directive was to collect and 
magnify the sins of any one they viewed as enemies. 



The Jesuit Scare Promoted By The 
Illuminati Backfires 

The Illuminati had another tactic of propaganda 
which they directed at the well-meaning Freemasons. The 
Illuminati repeatedly stirred a conspiracy hysteria that the 
Jesuits were taking over Freemasonry. 

In 1781, Knigge, a fresh recruit of the Illuminati, 
wrote On the Jesuits, Freemasons and Rosicrucians in which 
he adopted this thesis. He wrote that evidence clearly proved 
Jesuits infiltrated Freemasonry. He said Freemasons were 
obliged to use every effort to weed out this influence. But 
Knigge also said the Illuminati had decided to use Jesuit 
methods (subversion, strict discipline, etc.) to combat Jesuit 
objectives. He described the Illuminati Order as a counter- 
conspiracy of enlightened men. 57 



56. Robison, supra, at 1 1 1-12. (emphasis added). 

57. See H. Grassl, "Der 'Jesuitismus' als personliches Ordensprinzip 

ishaupi / i m deutschen 

Geistegeschichte 1765-1785 (Munich: 1968) at 184-87, discussing 

i iin ; ' uiicn. 1 urn . un l ' in R< i ii 

(Leipzig: 1781). 

Illuminati of Bavaria 30 



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Spread of llluminati After Wilhemsbad 

This rhetoric backfired. It opened the door in 1786 for 
an Illuminatus named Ernst August of Gochhausen (1740- 
1824) to argue that the llluminati themselves were infiltrated 
by Jesuits. 

In 1788, Bonneville and Bode addressed this problem 
by denouncing even more loudly that the Jesuits influenced 
Freemasonry in a book entitled Jesuits Chased from Freema- 
sonry. The implication was that these two — well-known as 
llluminati — were too aware to let the llluminati suffer from 
the same disease. 



Spread of llluminati After Wilhemsbad 

After the Wilhemsbad Congress of 1782, the Order of 
llluminati spread its membership throughout Europe. Accord- 
ing to several reputable sources not prone to exaggerate, this 
spread included Upper and Lower Germany; Prussia; Hun- 
gary; Austria; the Austrian Netherlands (bordering northern 
France); Bohemia; Switzerland; Austrian Italy (Tyrol and 
Milan); Italy including the Venetian Republic and Lom- 
bardi. However, sources more prone to exaggerate said they 
spread to Russia, Poland, Denmark, and France. 59 



58. "Illumines deBaviere," Die tionnaire tie hi F rtinc-M ticunncrw (Daniel 
Ligou, Ed.) (Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 1987) at 603 
(Rhine, Hesse-Cassel, Frankfort, Vienna, Innsbruck, Milan, Saxe- 
Weimar, Saxe-Gotha, Prague, Hungary, Tyrol, Switzerland, Mul- 
house); Carlo Francovich, "Gli llluminati di Weishaupt e l'idea eguali- 
taria in alcune societa segrete del Risorgimento," Movimento Operaio 
(July-August 1952) (Milan) at 569 (Lodges in Rhine, Saxony, Weimar, 
Gotha, Prussia, Bohemia, Austria, Hungary, Switzerland, Tyrol, bor- 
ders of Venetian Republic and Lombardy). 

59. "llluminati," Catholic Encyclopedia (1913) VII, 662; "Illuminados," 
Enciclopedia Universal Illustrada (Bilbao: Espasa-Calpe, S.A., 1930), 
Vol. 28. 



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Illuminati of Bavaria 

A detailed study below will show precisely where 
truth and fiction intersect. Regardless, the Illuminati at one 
point were one of the most powerful and influential European 
secret societies of the day. How did it spread? 

The Illuminati spread itself by each member agreeing 
once or twice in their lives, under penalty of not advancing to 
a new degree, to serve on a mission to another town or coun- 
try to start a new lodge. 60 

Let us review how this growth took place. 

Bavaria and Germany 

The Illuminati were early on strongest in Germany. 
Germany was then comprised of thirty-two independent 
states-mostly city-states. Bavaria and Austria were large 
nations in southern Germany surrounded by such indepen- 
dent city-states. The Illuminati had multiple lodges in the 
Bavarian cities of Munich, Erfurt, Regensburg, and Ingolds- 
tadt. In 1777, Weishaupt became influential within a Masonic 
lodge at Munich called Lodge Prudence and founded another 
at Mannheim. 61 

By 1778, the Illuminati had ten lodges alone operating 
in Munich. By 1783, according to a witness sent by the Illu- 
minati to the Bavarian Court of Inquiry, the Illuminati had 
600 lodges under its control in Europe. 62 This seems an exag- 
geration, but it tells you of the possibility. 

Outside Bavaria but inside German- speaking areas, 
the Illuminati had lodges in central Germany in such city- 
states as Kassell, Weimar, Gotha, Hannover, Hambourg and 
Dresden. These lodges were mostly under the supervision of 



60. "Illuminati," Supplement to the Encyclopedia [Britannica], or 
Dictionary of the Arts & Sciences (Thomas Dobson, ed.) (Phil- 
adelphia: Budd & Bartram, 1803) at 203. 

61. Forestier, Les Illumines, supra, at 198-99. 

62. Thomas Frost, The Secret Societies of The European Revolution 1776- 
1876 (Strand: Tinseley Brothers, 1876) Vol. I, at 47. 

Illuminati of Bavaria 32 



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Spread of llluminati After Wilhemsbad 

Count Johann Martin zu Stolberg-Rossla. The branches in the 
most northern German territories as well as Sweden, Norway, 
and Prussia were under the supervision of Prince Karl von 
Hesse of Kassel. He was governor for the Dutch over Hol- 
stein. Other members in these territories were the Duke of 
Weimar, Karl August; the writers Goethe and Herder at 
Weimar; the merchant prince Sieverking of Hambourg whose 
home in 1790 was the site of a famous celebration of the 
attack on the Bastille; and Karl von Hardenberg of Hannover, 
a later Prussian reformer. 

The llluminati' s two most important recruits in this 
region were: 

• Duke Ferdinand of Brunswick, living at Braunsch- 
weig; and 

• Jacob Mauvillon (1743-1794) at Kassell, an engi- 
neer and military officer who later became a liason to Mira- 
beau at Paris. 63 

Mauvillon, alias Archesilaus, was a Frenchman who 
met Mirabeau at Berlin in late 1786. They soon became close 
friends. Mirabeau' s bond with Mauvillon was broken only by 
Mirabeau' s death in April 1791. Mauvillon' s estate published 
Mirabeau' s extensive correspondence with Mauvillon from 
1786 to 179 1. 64 It revealed they were writing books together 
even though the books appeared under Mirabeau' s name. 

Mauvillon earlier had been an important recruit of 
Knigge's. Knigge wrote Weishaupt in about 1783: 

63. Klaus Epstein, The Genesis of German Conservatism, supra, at 93. 
See also, Adolf Rossberg, Fn i undPolh ' 
der franzosischen Revolution (Berlin: 1942), pt.l. Epstein says 
Rossberg's book is the best analysis of the llluminati membership. 
but it has Nazi prejudices. 

64. These include the following listings in the National Union Catalog 
and the Biblioteque Nationale at Paris: Gabriel Mirabeau, Lettres ami- 
cales dii comte de Mirabeau a AT. Mauri/Ion a Brunswic (1794) and 
Lettres du comte de Mirabeau a un de ses amis en Allemagne [Jacob 
von Wauvillon] < . li intl anees 1786, 1787, 1788, T789 et 
1790 (1792). 



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Illuminati of Bavaria 

I have now found in Kassel the best man, on 
whom I cannot congratulate ourselves enough: 
heisMauvillon, Grand Master of one of the 
Royal York lodges. So with him we have the 
wholelodgein our hands. He has also got from 
them all their miserable degrees. 65 

This passage also reveals how the Order sought out 
Masonic leaders. By capturing one such man, they obtained 
an entire lodge. 

Now that we know a bit more about Mauvillon, is it 
any surprise that Mirabeau in 1789 would be the most signifi- 
cant agitator of the revolution at Paris, as we later demon- 
strate? 

The Illuminati also created irregular Freemason 
lodges under their control to draw in Freemasons. At Frank- 
fort, the Illuminati created the Grand Eclectic Lodge of 
Frankfort. LeForestier, the premier professional yet neutral 
historian on the Illuminati, explained that "it was a ruse to 
dominate Freemasonry and to propagate Illuminism by an 
efficacious and rapidly moving faction." 

The Rhineland: Relatively Recent Discoveries 

A partial list of Illuminati in the Rhine for 1784 was 
found by the archivist Josef Hansen in the 1920' s. The list 
was drawn up by Karl Kraber, the Hofmeister to the sons of 
Count Stolberg, the national superior of the Illuminati Order 
in Germany. The list includes 120 names. There were 50 
members at Mainz, including Dalberg, later head of Napo- 
leon' s Confederation of the Rhine; 29 at Neuwied headed by 
Stolberg; Aachen, 18; Bonn, 11, headed by Court organist 



65. Einige Originalschriften (1787), supra, at 361. 

66. Dictionnaire de la Franc-Magonnerie (Daniel Ligou, Ed.) (Paris: 
Presses Universitaires de France, 1987) at 603 (quoting LeForestier, 
Les Illumines de Baviere). The Illuminati tried to bond with another 
group in 1783 called the Eclectic Alliance but without success. 

Illuminati of Bavaria 3 



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Spread of llluminati After Wilhemsbad 

Christian Neefe, the teacher of Beethoven; Cologne, 4; and 
Koblenz, 2, including the father of Metternich, the future 
Prime Minister of Austria who later criticized the lllumi- 
nati. 67 Among them also was De Martens, a renown professor 
of law at the University of Gottingen. 68 

Austria 

Turning southeast, to the tranquil lakes and green 
peaks of Austria, the llluminati had several lodges at Vienna, 
the capital. The Viennese members included Count Kolowrat, 
the Supreme Chancellor to the king; Joseph von Sonnenfels, 
an eminent professor at Vienna University; Gottfried von 
Swieten, president of the Commission for Education; Count 
Johann Cobenzl, later foreign minister of Austria; and the 
poet Alxinger. 69 The Order also had lodges sprinkled about 
many smaller Austrian towns, including Innsbruck as well as 
Italian cities under Austrian sovereignty such as Milan. 7 

Hungary: Recent Discoveries 

In Hungary, the llluminati branch was very active. 
Scholars in communist Hungary in the 1970's revealed a dis- 
covery in their history of an active llluminati lodge linked to 
Weishaupt. This is important in Hungarian history because 
the llluminati activists by 1795 became the focal point of rev- 
olutionary activity in Austro-Hungary. 



67. Klaus Epstein, The Genesis of German Conservatism, supra, at 93. 
For Hansen's discussion, see Joseph Hansen, Ed., Quellen zur 
Geschichte des i i '< i frail hen Revolution 
(4 vols.) (Bonn: 1933-38), Vol. I, at 41-74. 

68. Ernest Nys, Idees modernes: Droit International et Franc-maconnerie 
(Brussels: M. Weissenbruch, Editeur, 1908) at 62. 

69. Klaus Epstein, The Genesis of German Conservatism, supra, at 92-93. 
70. "Illumines de Baviere." Dictioimaire de la Franc-Muconiwr'w (Daniel 

Ligou, Ed.) (Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 1987) at 603. 

llluminati of Bavaria 35 



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Illuminati of Bavaria 



Bohemia/Czechoslovakia: Recent Discoveries 



In what then was known as Bohemia (now Czechoslo- 
vakia), scholar Mikulas Teich similarly came across the sig- 
nificant records of the Illuminati in Bohemia. He published a 
synopsis in 1998 under his history of Bohemia published by 
the Cambridge University Press. 7 Teich discovered that their 
main lodge was at Brno — the second largest city in the mod- 
ern Czech Republic. The was called Zu wahren vereinigten 
freunden. 1 Unbeknownst to Teich, the term vereinigten fre- 
unden is the German translation of "Amis Reunis" — the 
name of the Paris lodge system at which numerous Illuminati 



71. From within what was then Communist Hungary, we find M. Katjai, 
"German Illuminati in Hungary," Studies in Eighteenth Century Liter- 
ature (L. Miklos and F. Szenczi, eds.,)(Budapest: 1974), 325-46, viz., 
333. Katjai says the Hungarian authorities discovered the Illuminati of 
Hungary were tied to Weishaupt's Order. The Hungarian Illuminati 
strategically intertwined themselves with the Hungarian Freemason 
lodges. 

Of note, Ignatius Martinovics, a Physics Professor, was sent by the Haps- 
burg police as a spy into the Illuminati at Budapest. He fell in with the 
Illuminati. He became alias Democratus. Soon, he turned his back on 
his spy mission. 

Contemporaneous with the French Revolution of 1792-1794, Martinovics 
created a radical secret society in May 1794 with the same hierarchical 
structure as the Illuminati. One ring was the Association of Reformers. 
It was open to the public. The secret inner group was called Associa- 
tion of Liberty and Equality. The primary mission of the Reformers 
was to bring about a political revolution for national independence 
from Austria. The secret Liberty and Equality circle aimed at organiz- 
ing a revolt for social change. On Martinovics, see G. Barany, Stephen 
Szechenyi and the Awakening of Hungarian Nationalism, 1791-1841 
(Princeton: 1968), at 20 et seq. Martinovics was executed for his rev- 
olutionary activity in May, 1795. See Benda, "Die ungarischen 
Jakobiner," Maximilien Robespierre, 1750-1794 (W. Markow, 
ed.)(1958) at 441-72; E. Wangermann, From Joseph 11 to the Jacobin 
Trials (1969) at 170 n. 6; C. Kerscksemeti, "Les Jacobins hongrois 
(1794-1795)," Annales Historiques (April-June 1973) at 224-26, 232- 
33; Billington, Fire in the Minds of Men, supra, at 118, 549. 

Illuminati of Bavaria 36 



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Spread of llluminati After Wilhemsbad 

had visited. 74 This means the Illuminati-controlled lodge of 
Brno, Chechoslavakia was actually patented as an Amis Reu- 
nis lodge. 

Teich relates how the llluminati dominated this Amis 
Reunis lodge founded in 1783 at Brno: 

In 1783, a division of the Brno masons founded 
a new lodge, TheTrue United Friends (Zu 
wahren vereinigten freunden) [i.e., Amis Reu- 
nis]. The lodge became the refuge for the 
Secret Order of the llluminati. The associa- 
tion of the llluminati with Freemasonry was in 
fact part of the ex pan si on strategy of thi s secret 
society, which remains of great interest to his- 
torians, especially in Germany, ,.,[T]he circle of 
Brno llluminati had about forty members and 
exerted authority over two smaller circles in 
Opava and Prague. 75 

How did this merger of the Amis Reunis and the lllu- 
minati come about all the way in Bohemia? 

Leopold Kolowrat (1727-1809), an Illuminatus since 
early 1782, was also Grand Chancellor of Bohemia. In the 
1780' s, Kolowrat made several trips to Paris, particularly to 



72.Mikulas Teich, Bohemia in History (Cambridge University Press, 
1998). He explains this is based upon his original research: "Sources 
dealing with the Brno llluminati will be published in a special study of 
mine." Id., at 179 fn. 17. The study, however, never has yet arrived. 

73. Teich, id, at 170. 

74. In a serious German 1852 historical work, it speaks of the "Loge des 
Amis Reunis" founded in 1771, and then speaks in German several 
times that it is the Lodge "vereinigten Freunde." Georg Franz 
Burkhard Kloss, Geschichte der Freimaurerei in Frankreich, 1725- 
1830 (Darmstadt: Jonghaus,1852) I at 263, 264, 265. See also the 
Mainz Freemason page mentioning that in 1803 "wurde wahrend der 
napoleonischen Zeit die Loge "Les amis reunis" ("Die vereinigten 
Freunde"). http://www.freimaurer-mainz.de/lm0030gesch. htm 
(accessed 12/26/08). 

75. Teich, Bohemia in History (Cambridge University Press, 1998) at 170. 



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Illuminati of Bavaria 

the Amis Reunis lodge. He also frequented lodges at Vienna 
and Prague in Czechoslovakia where he also no doubt 
advanced the Illuminati. 76 

Thus, indubitably, what Teich stumbled across in 
Bohemia were the fruits of Kolowrat setting up international 
branches of the Amis Reunis lodge system. He then intro- 
duced the Illuminati as its rightful hidden superiors. 

Holland, Belgium, and Poland 

The Illuminati papers show that the Illuminati also 
sent emissaries to Holland, Poland, and Livonia. 77 

Cagliostro also gave the Illuminati an entree to Bel- 
gium. Prior to joining the Illuminati, he had founded lodges 
under his control in 1778 at Liege, known as La Parfaite 
Egalite, and the same year at the Hague. The latter was a 
lodge of adoption (for women). His wife was the Grand Mis- 
tress. 78 Also, in 1778, Cagliostro founded a lodge at War- 
saw, Poland. Members were Adam Poninsky, the count 
Mosynski, and Thoux de Salverte. 79 

Italy 

The Illuminati were very active in Italy. We know that 
Baron Bassus, alias Hannibal, passed through Italy to recruit 
on behalf of the Illuminati. At Milan, he gained the Imperial 



76. "Kolowrat," Ligou, Ed., Dictionnaire de la Franc-Maconnerie, 
supra, at 663. 

77. This was admitted as well by Knigge in his book Philo's endliche Erk- 
lArung und Antwort aufverschiedene Anforderungen undFragen 
(Hanover: 1788), as cited in Barruel, Memoirs pour servir (1803), 
supra, IV at 223 (citing Philo's Bericht, a mispoken reference to 
Philo's enliche). 

78. Dictionnaire de la Franc-Maconnerie (ed. Daniel Ligou) (Presses 
Universitaires de France, 1987) at 178. 

79. Id., at 178. 

Illuminati of Bavaria 38 



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Spread of llluminati After Wilhemsbad 

Minister at Pavie, His Excellence "Count de W....," as well 
as one of the professors at the University, according to the 
papers of the Bavarian llluminati. 80 

Many years later, Freemasons and scholars discov- 
ered a ciphered one-hundred page notebook of a German Illu- 
minatus Friedrich Munter. Using the llluminati code, it was 
deciphered and printed by the Lodge of Copenhagen's cura- 
tor. 81 The notebook showed this Illuminatus visited each 
major Freemason lodge on the Italian peninsula in the 1780' s. 
He persistently sought to recruit leaders of Italian lodges into 
the llluminati. In particular, the notebook details trips to 
lodges at Florence as well as at Milan, Naples, Venice, etc. In 
each city, he was recruiting leaders of the Freemason lodges. 

The llluminati papers also reveal they set up their own 
lodge at Milan. 83 

Also, in Memoires of the Secret Societies of the South 
of Italy, translated into English and published in 1821, the 
author notes matter-of-factly some of the llluminati' s success 



80. Barruel, Memoires pour servir (1803), supra, IV at61, quoting E'niigc 
Originalschriften, supra, Vol. II, section IV, letter 1 & 2. 

81. Ojvind Andreasen, Aus den Tagebiichern Friedrich Munters (Copen- 
hagen & Leipzig: 1937). However, Miinter's masonic activities were 
mostly omitted, and are instead "exclusively the topic of another book, 
partly in cipher, guarded at the Lodge of Copenhagen and entitled 
Geheimes Tagebuch. Excerpta ad usumfratris Frederici ab itinere 
(1784-1791)...." (Jose Mum '1 i < iiiscpp \lban . lihero muratore e 
martire della Repubblica Napoletana del 1799 (P. Lacaita, 1999) at 
41.) 

82. "Friedrich Munter was nothing other than an agent of the llluminati in 
[his] mission on the Italian peninsula.. .alias Syrianus." (Jose Mottola, 
Giuseppe Albanese : lihero muratore e ma Hire della Repubblica Napo- 
letana del 1799 (P. Lacaita, 1999) at 33.) "Thus, with great pleasure, 
the well-educated young man departed toward the end of 1784 on a trip 
to Italy...." (Id., at 34.) "His principal objective consisted of making, 
on behalf of the llluminati of Bavaria, profitable contacts, toward the 
goal of proselytism...." (Id.) 

83 .Dictionnaire de la Franc-Maeoiw.erie (Daniel Ligou, Ed.) (Paris: 
Presses Universitaires de France, 1987) at 603. 

llluminati of Bavaria 39 



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Illuminati of Bavaria 

in Italy. It says, "The Freemasons were established in Italy 
among all ranks. The Illuminati of Weishaupt reckoned 
among their initiated some of the Knights of Malta, with the 
celebrated Dolomieu at their Head. . . ," 84 

Moreover, Savioli and Costanza, after Bavaria exiled 
them around 1786, spent several years together in Italy. There 
they founded new lodges in Tirol, Venice and Lombardy. 85 

Also, Dolce and Wit report that the police of Naples 
in the 1790' s discovered that their Jacobin societies, formerly 
Freemason lodges, had been penetrated by the Illuminati of 
Bavaria. The police discovered the Freemason Lodges of 
Naples had previously fallen under supervision of the Ger- 
man Illuminati. After the French Revolution of 1792, they 
report the same lodges at Naples changed themselves into 
Jacobin societies. 86 

This is confirmed by the Freemason historian, Ligou, 
in Dictionnaire de la Franc-Magonnerie (1987) who agrees 
that the "Grand Lodge of Naples founded between 1773 and 
1774... [adopted] the Scottish Rite... It is this lodge that 
belonged to the Illuminati of the eighteenth century and then 



84. Memoires of the Secret Societies of the South of Italy, Particularly the 
Carbonari. (Translated from the Original) (London: John Murray, 
1821) at 10. 

85. R. Soriga, La Societa segrete, I 'emigrazione politic a e in primi mod 
per I'indipendenza (Modena 1947) at 37; R. R. Palmer, The Age of 
Democratic Revolution: A Political History of Europe and America, 
1760-1800 (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1964) at Vol. 
II at 570. 

86. Carlo Francovich, "Gli Illuminati di Weishaupt e l'idea egualitaria in 
alcune societa segrete del Risorgimento," Movimento Operaio, supra, 
No. 4, July-August 1952, at 576, citing Memorie sulle societa segrete 
dell' Italia mendionale e specialnieme sni Carbonari (Rome/Milan. 
1904) at 20 ("The Freemasons were sparse throughout all classes in 
Italy. The Illuminati of Weishaupt counted (atNapoli) amongst their 
initiated some Knights of Malta.") A primary source for this 1904 
work cited by Francovich was Wit van Doerring's Denkwiir digkeiten 

1 < < '/ i i i r i i i i :',! del e der Car- 

bonari (Weimar: 1822). 

Illuminati of Bavaria 40 



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Spread of llluminati After Wilhemsbad 

the Jacobins." He reports the members were: Filangeri, Gen- 
ovesi, Giannone, Tommaso Natale, di Biasi, the prince of 
Caramanique, Francesco d' Aquino, the Abbe Campanella 
and Giovanni Meli. They founded the Academy of Orotei, 
and became activists in support of Charles III. When the 
French army landed at Naples in 1793, these lodges greeted 
them with enthusiastic revelry. The lodge organizers were 
Freemasons such as Mario Pagano and Domenico Cirillo. 87 
These same men were largely part of the llluminati lodge 
founded at Naples in 1785 by Munter. 88 They led the Revolu- 
tion of 1799 at Naples, but were ruthlessly suppressed. 

Interestingly, in 1797 at Sienna an llluminati lodge 
was founded. It survived until 1816. 90 

Furthermore, we know that Cagliostro, the Illumina- 
tes, founded lodges in Italy in 1789, particularly at Rome. 91 

France 

The llluminati also made France a matter of special 
focus. Dr. Anton Mesmer was an Austrian doctor who in 
1779 began a several month stay at Ingolstadt, Bavaria where 
Weishaupt lived. In late 1779, he left for Paris, France. There 
he announced to the Frenchmen he was a Bavarian Illumina- 



87. "Italie," Ligou, Ed., Dictionnaire de la Franc-Maconnerie, supra, at 
627. 

88. Mottola identifies the Lodge Philanthropia at Naples as an llluminati 
lodge. He explains "Giuseppe Albanese, Mario Pagano, Ignazio Stile 
and Donato Tommasi [were] dignitaries of the Loggia 'Philan- 
thropy'...." (Mottola, supra, at 41.) This lodge "applied for direct adhe- 
sion to the Order of llluminati...." (Id., at 41 n.) 

89. See, Gutteridge, Nelson & the Neopolitan Jacobins - The Supression of 
1799 (1903). 

90. "Italie," Ligou, Ed., Dictionnaire de la Franc-Maconnerie, supra, 
at 627 col. 2. 

91. See Indices. On Cagliostro, see "Cagliostro's Exposure" on page 1 et 
seq. 



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Illuminati of Bavaria 

tus. Over the next several years, Mesmer founded about 20 
lodges of Harmony throughout France. His order's headquar- 
ters remained at Paris. 

Then the Illuminati sent Cagliostro into France to start 
up a new rite designed to meld with Freemasonry. Between 
1780 and 1786, Cagliostro founded and operated lodges in 
Strasbourg, Lyons, Bordeaux, and Paris. They were identified 
as Egyptian Rite Freemason lodges. They nominally looked 
like a Freemason lodge (although unaffiliated to any) but to 
which Cagliostro had added into its higher grades the myster- 
ies of the Egyptian Rite. In this new rite, Cagliostro passed on 
the lessons of the Illuminati. 93 

Also, in 1787, Bode, the new head of the Illuminati, 
visited Paris and recruited Savalette de Langes (head of the 
Paris Amis Reunis lodge) and Nicolas Bonneville into the 
Illuminati. The members of this Amis Reunis lodge were all 
singularly the leaders of all movements in the Revolutions of 
1789 and 1792. 94 

Later, around 1789, Bonneville founded at Paris a 
masonic-style lodge called the Cercle Social. During the 
1789-1794 period, the Cercle Social lodge was attached to a 
publishing house by the same name. The Cercle Social spread 
revolutionary tracts and books throughout France, Germany, 
and other European nations. Prominent members were Bris- 
sot, Condorcet, Sieyes, Varlet, Babeuf, etc. 95 

The Illuminati' s correspondence reveals some of this 
activity in France. In January 1783, Weishaupt wrote letters 
to Illuminati members at the French city of Strasbourg and to 
places in the Alsace-Lorraine region of France. 



92. See "Secret Societies in France As of 1782 — The Level of Illuminati 

Penetration Prior to Wilhemsbad" on page 1 et seq. 
93. See "Cagliostro's Exposure" on page 1 et seq. 
94. See chapter entitled "Illuminati Visits To French Lodges" on page 1 et 

seq. 
95. See Indices in this series on Social Cercle. 



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Spread of llluminati After Wilhemsbad 

Weishaupt also had written to Zwack that he wanted 
to translate the Illuminatus Minor degree into French at Aix- 
la-Chappelle (known also as Aachen) to recruit in the Lor- 
raine and the Pays-Bas [Low Countries] of France. 97 Wit- 
nesses testified before the Bavarian Court of Inquiry 
(discussed later) that Costanza in fact translated the llluminati 
ritual into French. 

Also, in 1785 the llluminati moved several of its Ber- 
lin members to Avignon, France. Their Avignon lodge 
openly operated under the name llluminati. They soon 
founded a lodge at Paris. The French llluminati are discussed 
elsewhere. And between 1787-1792, the llluminati founded 
lodges at Paris under the name of their sister organization, the 
Asiatic Brethren. This is discussed later in this chapter. 

Russia 

There was a very active Amis Reunis lodge at St. 
Petersbourg that continued on for decades — since the early 
1800' s. According to Rjeoutskia, a reputable Russian histo- 
rian installed as Associate at the University of Paris, there 
was llluminati activity in this same period by one of its mem- 
bers. He reports that in 1812, an Amis Reunis — Maurice- 
Gerard Allan (1779-1847), a resident of Moscow, was 
arrested for belonging to a "sect of llluminati ," 98 



96. Barruel, Memoires pour servir (1803), supra, IV at 223 (Letter 23 of 
Weishaupt to Cato, January 28, 1783, from Einige Originalschriften, 
supra, Vol. II, Letter 23). 

97. Le Forestier, Les Illumines, supra, at 658 n. 3, citing Spartacus to 
Cato, 2 letters undated. 

98. Vladislav Rjeoutski, "Les Francais dans la franc-maconnerie russe au 
siecle des lumieres: hypotheses et pistes de recherche," Slavica Occita- 
nia (Toulouse, 2007) no 24 at 91-136, available online at http://clas- 
siques.uqac.ca/contemporains/rjeoutski_vladislav/ 
francais_franc_macon_russe/ francais_franc_macon_russe_texte.html 
(accessed 3/7/09). 



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Illuminati of Bavaria 

Bavaria's Diplomatic Disclosure in 1791 
Of The French Illuminati 

Moreover, among the Illuminati papers which the 
police seized in raids, Bavaria found the names of several 
French members. In 1791, these names were culled out, and 
transmitted in a diplomatic letter from Bavaria to Austria. 
This letter is now known as the Lehrbachs Illuminaten-Liste. 
This letter was only noticed about ninety years ago in the 
Archives of Vienna while Sebastien Brunner was investigat- 
ing the Constantinople Collection of the correspondence of 
Joseph II. 

The names listed in the letter came from the papers 
taken from the Lodge St. Theodore at Munich. This lodge 
was connected via Lyons-Willermoz to the Paris Amis Reu- 
nis. Historians did not have access earlier to these papers 
because the stash of Illuminati papers seized from the Lodge 
St. Theodore were never published." And what was publised 
by the Bavarian Court of Inquiry generally suppressed any 
names other than Bavarians. From the published papers 
themselves, historians made a list of over 500 members. 
However, Bavaria had made a conscious decision not to 
reveal names of any foreigners. Their names were blanked 
out in the publication. 

In 1869, Brunner was the first to reveal this dispatch 
with the Illuminati list sent to Austria by Bavaria from the 
Vienna archives. 

Brunner's Serious Scholarship 

There is no doubt about the serious nature of Brun- 
ner' s research work at this juncture. In the year prior, 1868, 
Brunner had published another well-accepted book based 



99. See Robison, Proofs (1798), supra, at 116 (stash never published). 
100. S. Brunner, Die Mysteries der Aufklaerung in Oesterreich 1770-1800 
(Mainz: 1869) at 35. 

Illuminati of Bavaria 44 



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Bavaria's Diplomatic Disclosure in 1791 Of The French llluminati 

upon the "archives of Vienna." In a work of 1868, Brunner 
established that that the French had deliberately forged six 
letters as being from Joseph II for political reasons. These let- 
ters are now known as the Constantinople collection. Schol- 
ars have continued to agree with Brunner' s research 
conclusions of 1868. In 2005, a scholar on this period tried to 
remind historians of Brunner' s correction which is sometimes 
overlooked in their loose analysis of Joseph II. 

Thus, the 1869 investigation by Brunner also included 
discovery of the Bavarian dispatch found in the archives of 
Vienna. It was the product of serious scholarly work that oth- 
erwise has been highly regarded. The Bavarian dispatch 
appears on page 35 of Brunner' s 1869 book. Anyone can now 
validate the list by using books.google.com to find his 1869 
book. 

LeForestier's Comments 

Le Forestier notes this Bavarian dispatch letter in his 
work of 1915. He describes the letter as a "a list of 
llluminati. . . by the minister [of Bavaria] Count Matthaus 
Vieregg (1719-1802) [child-hood friend to Elector Karl The- 
odore] to Count Lehrbach, Imperial Ambassador at Munich, 
and sent by the court of Vienna." 102 

Weiss indicates this was given in response to Count 
Lehrbach in July 1791 "repeatedly inquiring after the lllumi- 
nati on behalf of Emperor Leopold II...." to Count Vier- 



101. Derek Beales, Derek Edward Dawson, Enlightenment and Reform in 
18th-century Europe (N.Y.: Palgrave MacMillan, 2005) at 121-23. 

102. Le Forestier, Les Illumines, supra, at 652. This letter is also 
excerpted at length in Sebastian Brunner, Die Mysterien der 
Aufklaerung in Oesterreich 1770-1800 (Mainz: 1869) at 35, which Le 
Forestier cites. This list can be found at the books.google.com copy of 
Brunner's book at this link: http://www. google. com/books?dq=brun- 
ner&pg=PA35&id=TPEBAAAAMAAJ. 

This list is also known as Graf Lehrbachs Illuminaten-Liste. 

llluminati of Bavaria 45 



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Illuminati of Bavaria 

Brunner says this list is "a register of Illuminati in 
elevated positions, whose names were forwarded to Vienna 
by the Imperial Delegate Count Lehrbach, as desired by the 
Imperial government through the offices of the Bavarian 
Minister Count Vieregg." 104 Yet, he also indicates it is 
"mixed" with the names of Masons. 105 

Weis points out the fact this list is mixed, and he 
implies that an identification as an Illuminatus from this list 
should require confirmation from independent sources. Weis, 
the biographer of Montgelas, explains: 

It mixes in the list quite harmless masons. The 
list does also contain actual Illuminati such 
as the Duke Ernst of Saxe-Coburg Gotha and 
Karl August of Saxe-Weimar, Counsellor 
Wieland, Dalberg, Graf Kolowrat, Minister for 
Bohemia, and the imperial envoy in London, 
Philip Graf Stadion, as well as his brother 
Friedrich, and the canon Wurzburg. It also 
names such persona whose membership is not 
confirmed by other sources, such as the 
Crown Prince (Friedrich Wilhelm III) of Prus- 
sia, the former minister Hertzberg, and the 
Minister for Hungary Count Palffy. From 
France, [it identifies] the Duke of Orleans, 
Necker, Lafayette, Barnave, Brissot and 
Mirabeau, and from England, Thomas 
Paine.... 106 



103.Eberhard Weis, Montgelas: Zwischen Revolution und Reform 

(Munich: Munich University, 1988) Vol. I at 74. 
104. Brunner, supra, at 35, quoted by Le Forestier, Les Illumines, supra, a 

652. 
105. Brunner, supra, at 35. 
106.Eberhard Weis, Montgelas: Zwischen Revolution und Reform 

(Munich: Munich University, 1988) Vol. I at 75. 

Illuminati of Bavaria A 



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Bavaria's Diplomatic Disclosure in 1791 Of The French llluminati 

Of the list from France, those that can be confirmed 
independently to be linked / closely connected with the lllu- 
minati of Bavaria are Mirabeau, Brissot, Paine, Fauchet and 
Lafayette. Thus, this list stands as a significant confirmation 
of these as llluminati, given Bavaria is disclosing what names 
appeared in the llluminati papers. 

There are other validating aspects about this Bavarian 
dispatch of 1791. 

First, when it was written in 1791, no one had yet 
publicly voiced any concern that the llluminati were involved 
in the French Revolution that had just taken place in 1789. 
Hoffman would be the first to do so, but his alarm did not 
take place until years later — in 1793. Hence, the names 
of the French llluminati on the list were not likely made up to 
fit a preconceived notion that had been circulating anywhere. 
As far as anyone generally knew, there was no connection of 
the Revolution to the llluminati. 

Second, as you read through this list, you will see its 
scope is broadly covering several nations at once, with no 
focus on French members. The French names are smattered at 
different points. It has all the appearance of one nation — 
Bavaria — letting another country — Austria — be informed 
in its foreign relations who are the llluminati members with 
whom they may have contact. It names a few masons who 
evidently are mentioned in the llluminati papers as having 
some relations, but this should not detract from its implica- 
tion of their link to the llluminati. Overall, it is self-evident 
this dispatch was not intended to feed any histeria in Austria 
about suspicions of an llluminati revolution in France, as no 
such histeria yet existed. It was given to Austria solely to 
assist its self-defense. 



107. Hoffman never attacked the French Revolution of 1789. Nettl, no 
friend of Hoffman, himself notes Hoffman's criticisms began only in 
1792. (Paul Nettl, Mozart and Masonry (N.Y.: Philosophical Library, 
1957) at 83.) 



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Illuminati of Bavaria 

Third, while Sebastien Brunner (1814-1893) was a 
Catholic writer, 108 there is nothing to suggest he fabricated 
such a document. He had no prior or subsequent books, 
among his many works, on the secret societies. Moreover, if 
he was trying to feed a conspiracy theory by a fabricated 
account, he did not do a good job. No conspiracy book from 
anyone ever mentions the Bavarian dispatch of 1791 despite 
its obvious importance. The only mention of it until Weis 
mentioned it in 1968 as part of Montgelas' biography was by 
Le Forestier in 1915. Thus, had Brunner ever intended this 
discovery to help raise questions about the Illuminati, he 
never apparently shared it with anyone, and thus the discov- 
ery for all practical purposes died until now. 

Nevertheless, Le Forestier, a serious historian on the 
Illuminati, quotes and translates it, even as he gives it cre- 
dence. The Bavarian dispatch letter identifies the Illuminati 
members as follows, with the French names bolded: 

Henry, Crown Prince of Prussia;... the Duke of 
Saxe-Weimar; Duke of Saxe-Gotha; Duke 
d'Orleans; Baron von Dal berg, Coadjutor of 
Mainz; Dal berg, City Keeper in Erfurt; Count 
Herzberg, former Prussian M inister; Count 
Kolowrat, the High Chancellor of Bohemia; 
Count Balffy [or Palsv], Chancellor of Hungary; 
Count Banfy [or Panfy], Governor of Transylva- 
nia [LeForestier's trans, of Zeibenburgen]: 
Count Brigido, Governor of Lemberg; Count 
Stadion, Royal Imperial Ambassador in Lon- 
don [for Austria]; Baron Kressel, Vice-Chancel- 
lor of Bohemia; Baron Swieten, former Studien 
President ("Studienpraesident") in Vienna; 
Baron Jacobe, Prussian envoy in Vienna; Herr 
von Thorn, Prussian envoy in Aachen; Minister 
of Finance Necker; 109 Court Counsellor Son- 
nenfels in Vienna; Count Nicolas Forgach, 



108 . bastien Kmim i U H ip h 

Illuminati of Bavaria 



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Bavaria's Diplomatic Disclosure in 1791 Of The French llluminati 

"Obergespann" in Neutra; Count Stadion, 
Canon in Mainz; Baron Hompesch, Canon in 
Spire; Baron Hompesch, brother to the former, 
Adventurer; Count Kobenzel, Canon in Eichs- 
tadt; Baron Podmanizkv (or Bodmanizty), Gov- 
ernment counsellor at Ofen; Peter von Balogh, 
Justice Minister in Ofen; Court counsellor von 
Schoitznigg, former Secretary of the Cabinet 
and M entor of M archduke Franz; General 
Lafayette. Bar nave, Member of National 
Assembly; Brissot, Rochefaucault and Bishop 
Fauchet, members of the present National 
Assembly; Paine, writer and state-representa- 
tive at Paris; Fabri, Town Mayor of Luettich; 
Van der Not (in Brussels); Mirabeau (the 
deceased); Sheridan, Member of the Post Office 
in Baden; Captain von Archenholz; First Lieu- 
tenant von Mauvillon of Braunschweig; Court 
Counsellor Wieland of Weimar; Privy counsel- 
lor Schlosser of Karlsruhe (honorably 
resigned); Spittler, Meinersand Feder, Profes- 
sors at Gottingen; Campe and Trapp, School 
Teachers in Braunschweig; Shun [or Chun], 
former librarian in Kassel; Biester, librarian in 
Berlin; Plattner, Professor in Leipzig; Professor 
Engel in Berlin; Professor Meisner of Prag[ue]; 
Professor Schutz in Jena; Professor Krei I in 
Pesth[?]; Professor Zeiller in Vienna; Justice 
Councillor Klein in Berlin; Bohe, Publisher for 
the German M useum; Professor Reinbold in 
Jena; Alringer in Vienna; Blumauer in Vienna; 
Weyer (Netzer) in Vienna; Professor Koefel in 
Lembert; Weishaupt and Comp [?]. 110 

The full list is quoted above rather than just the 
French names so that the context will make clear that Bavaria 
was not trying just to identify French Illumines. Rather, 

109. LeForestier reads this old German font as "Neckar." However, to my 
eye, it appears to be "Finance Minister Reder." 



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Illuminati of Bavaria 

Bavaria was trying to convey the most reliable information 
possible to an ally about Bavaria's police investigation. These 
names figured prominently in the international politics of the 
time. The Bavarian government never made this list public, 
and kept the names as a diplomatic secret. So too Austria. 

What further corroborates this list was genuine inso- 
far as the French names are concerned is that other evidence 
would have led us independently to believe these French men 
were Illuminati. The French who were listed are a bit broader 
than Weis mentioned before. The following bolded names 
among the French activists can be linked to the Illuminati 
directly by other independent means: Brissot, Barnave, 
D 'Orleans, Mirabeau, Paine, Fauchet, Lafayette, LaRoch- 
efaucault, and Necker. 

With the two exceptions of Necker & Barnave, the 
identifications make perfect sense. For example, Mirabeau, 
La Rochefaucault, and Lafayette were members of the Amis 
Reunis Lodge of Paris where the Illuminati visited from 1782 
to 1787. According to Schiller's and Bode's memoirs, its 
Grand Master, Savalette de Langes, was recruited by a Bavar- 
ian Illuminati leader, Bode, during Bode's visit to Paris in 
1787. 111 Mirabeau' s memoirs as well as other independent 
sources confirm Mirabeau joined the Bavarian Illuminati. 

Further, Lafayette was both active in Cagliostro's 
Illuminati-Egyptian Rite lodge at Paris as well as the Har- 
mony lodge of Dr. Mesmer (Illuminatus). 

Of course, Brissot, Paine and Fauchet belonged to the 
lodge of the self-avowed Illuminatus Bonneville. This lodge 
at Paris was called the Cercle Social. 113 



110. Sebastian Brunner, Die Mysterien der Auflklaerung in Oesterreich 
1770-1800 (Mainz: Berlag von Franz Kirchheim, 1869) at 35-36, as 
rendered by Le Forestier, Les Illumines, supra, at 652. This can be ver- 
ified by examining Brunner's book available through books. goo- 
gle. com. 

111. See "Illuminati Visits To French Lodges" on page 1 et seq. 

11 2. See Index. 

Illuminati of Bavaria 50 



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Talleyrand & The llluminati 

As to Necker, however, we do not find Necker him- 
self was a member of the secret society underworld. Yet, we 
do find his wife's name on a roster from 1784 on a masonic- 
like patriotic society at Rennes, in Brittany that apparently 
had been Illuminized. 1 14 

Hence, Bavaria's identification of these French mem- 
bers to Austria, perhaps even of Necker, appears quite well- 
corroborated by what we independently know of them. 



Talleyrand & The llluminati 

Responsible historians also agree that another mem- 
ber of the llluminati at Paris was Talleyrand. He becomes a 
prominent figure in the agitation of 1789 and the rise of 
Napoleon in 1797-99. Many say Mirabeau probably initiated 
him upon his return to Paris in June 1786. Marcel Dunan, a 
specialist on Napoleonic Germany, says this is a fact. Dunan 
explains that the "persistent importance of the llluminati can 
be judged by the career of the primate Dalberg and by that of 
the Duke, his nephew, intimate of such as Talleyrand in 
which they united the highest circles of Masonry and the 
Bavarian llluminati, for through Mirabeau, the young Abbe 
de Perigord [Talleyrand] had been one of the first French 
adepts [of the llluminati]." 115 

Heckethorn, a specialist on secret societies, also 
agrees on Talleyrand being an Illuminatus. "On his [that is, 
Mirabeau] return to France [1786] he initiated the Abbe Tall- 
eyrand de Perigord." 1 16 

R.M. Johnston says that whether Mirabeau in June 
1786 initiated Talleyrand upon his return is no longer capable 
of strict proof "but there is nothing inherently improbable 
about it...." 117 



113. See Indices to later books in this series. 
llluminati of Bavaria 



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Illuminati of Bavaria 

Illuminati In England 

The Illuminati spread into England as well, founding 
several lodges there. This is revealed in the Illuminati's 
papers seized by Bavaria. In addition, the Illuminati's emis- 
sary, Cagliostro, went to London in 1786 and founded a lodge 
on November 3rd. 118 Cagliostro also joined reading societies 
there, in particular the London Theosophical Society. He 
used the assumed name of Count Sutkowski doing so. 
Cagliostro told them he was an accredited member of a simi- 
lar society at Avignon, France (perhaps the Illumines of Avi- 
gnon). 119 

Also the Illuminatus Francis Xavier Von Baader 
(1765-1841) left Munich around 1787 for England. Before 
1787, he had been a leading officer of the headquarter lodge 



114.This society had been founded by 1780 at Rennes. Around 1784, it 
began a custom of calling each other Citizen-a common form of 
address during 1789-1794 within the Jacobins. Certain speakers were 
called "Tribunes of the People," which Bonneville popularized later at 
Paris. The Society maintained Committees of Correspondence, as the 
Jacobins later did. It started to use secret society nomenclature, calling 
its meeting place the "Temple of the Nation," and its leader "Grand 
Pontiff." By 1787, this lodge had adopted a revolutionary mission. 
Cochin summarizes that a speaker in February of that year maintained 
"the first object of social organization is to form the public patriot, iso- 
lated from the masses,...; Second, is to form patriot writers, who will- 
apply the necessary cure to logic spewed forth by teachers. The third, 
at last, is the... invasion of the world by the few, by the democratic 
principle: the triumph of the societies themselves, by their doctrine and 
their men in the outside world... They declared a war on prejudices, 
superstition, despotism...." The society divided itself up into three 
ranks, and masonified what once had been only a reading society. 
Cochin describes the new structure: the "first order of the societies is 
destined to form public opinion, the second to form the writers, a third 
to form its agents... becoming a Machine behind the society, and uses 
the two others as a facade-and the third order becomes secret, by its 
own definition." There is thus a progression within this society that 
parallels the first three symbolic degrees of Freemasonry: 1. Literary 
Society; 2. Patriotic Society; and 3. Freemason Secret Society. See 
Augustin Cochin, Les Societes de Pensee et la Revolution en Bretagne 
(1788-1789) (Paris: Librairie Plon, 1926), at 25, 30, 31 & n. 2, 36. 

Illuminati of Bavaria 52 



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Illuminati In England 

of the Illuminati, the Lodge St. Theodore of Munich. After 
the suppression of the Illuminati began in 1785-1787 in 
Bavaria, Baader went to England. He became a prominent 
political figure in England until he left in 1792. At London, 
he became a Mining and Mint consultant and a well-known 
philosophical writer. After arriving in England, Baader soon 
became regarded as an outspoken opponent of Catholicism 
and papal power. 

Baader published works advocating a "philosophic 
rationale on Catholicism." In addition, he advocated the "lib- 
erty and equality" of France should spread everywhere. 
Thus, Baader was spreading Illuminism in England. 

Baader' s later life also shows this was so. After 
returning to Bavaria from England, he became a Professor of 
Speculative Dogmatics in 1826 at the University of Munich. 
He soon published a work entitled God and the World. In 
this, he developed what some say is the modern concept of 
sociology. He said, "The only criterion of truth is the intimate 
of what we feel." Because his teachings also challenged the 
authority of the Bible, he was barred from lecturing on phi- 



115. Marcel Dunan, Napoleon et I'Allemagne. Le systeme continental et 
les debuts du royaume de Baviere, 1806-1810 (Paris: 1942) at 445. 
Dunan cites in turn Georges Lacour-Gayet, Talleyrand (1934) I, 83, 
371, and Emile Dard, Napoleon et Talleyrand (1937) 84 n.3. 

1 16. See Charles W. Heckethorn, The Secret Societies of All Ages and 
Countries (original edition: 1875) (New Hyde Park: University Books, 
1966) Vol. 1, at 3 12. 

117. See R.M. Johnston, "Mirabeau's Secret Mission to Berlin," American 
Historical Review, supra, VI (Oct. 1990-July 1901) at 235, 247. For 
further discussion on Talleyrand's Illuminati circle of friends, like Dal- 
berg, see Index. 

II " >i ion n ch a I in <j a, i 1 I Mm I Ligou) (Presses 

Universitaires de France, 1987) at 178. 

119. "Notes on the Rainsford Papers," A.Q.C. (London), Vol. XXVI, at 
111. The A.Q.C. is a respected Masonic periodical of a lodge in Lon- 
don devoted to the study of the history of Freemasonry. 



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Illuminati of Bavaria 

losophy or on religion and was forced to teach anthropol- 
ogy. Thus, Baader was likely spreading Illuminism when 
he was earlier in England. 

Also, Xavier Zwack alias Cato, the number two per- 
son in the Illuminati, left for Oxford, England in 1785. He 
stayed there a couple of years until he moved to Zweibrucken 
(bordering southern France) where he became a state-minis- 
ter. 121 



Switzerland: Spread of Illuminati 

The Illuminati also penetrated Switzerland. Among 
their members was the famous Swiss teacher, Johann Hein- 
rich Pestolozzi (1746-1827). He reputedly founded the mod- 
ern system of education of children. His ideology on 
children's education is discussed later in this chapter. 

Another Swiss Illuminatus was Johann Georg 
Friedrich List of Basel, one time Councillor to the Exchequer. 
He was a business executive at Basel. After the French 



120. Treasury of Philosophy (DagobertD. Runes, Ed.) (New York: 
Philosophical Library, 1955) at 99-100. 

121. See Indices to later volumes in this series. 

122. Le Forestier comments that Pestalozzi "the famous teacher... figured 
among the members of a Minerval group at Lautern [Switzerland]." Le 
Forestier, Les Illumines, supra, at 349. The encyclopedia says of Pesta- 
lozzi: "In time, his ideas and his work influenced the elementary- 
school systems of most countries of Western Europe and the New 
World. Among the effects of his influence are the introduction of such 
subjects of geography, and drawing into the curricula of public 
schools, radical changes in the method of teaching languages and arith- 
metic, and the modern attitude that the basic pedagogical justification 
is an ability to teach scientifically. Today, teacher training is conducted 
largely in accordance with Pestalozzian principles." See "Pestalozzi," 
Funk & Wagnalls Encyclopedia, supra, Vol. 19 at 6984. 

Illuminati of Bavaria 54 



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Switzerland: Spread of llluminati 

Jacobin government had invaded Switzerland, List became an 
agent of France. Another Illuminatus at Basel was Ochs. 
He later headed the Swiss Jacobins. 124 

The llluminati set up lodges in Switzerland through 
Cagliostro whom they initiated in 1780. He founded at Bale 
on May 2, 1787 a Mother Lodge of Egyptian Freemasonry for 
Switzerland. His banker friend, Sarasin, helped him set up 
this lodge. 125 

In 1794, interest in the llluminati arose in Switzerland 
when Swiss police discovered more original llluminati 
papers. During arrests of political agitators they found the 
masonic lodges at Berne and Geneva had been patented origi- 
nally by the llluminati. This llluminati influence persisted 
after 1794 in Swiss Freemasonry. In 1822, the Lodge of 
Losanna called its president Uomo-re just like the llluminati 
Man-King rite that is mentioned elsewhere. The Uomo-re' s 
companions in Switzerland were called magi just as the lllu- 
minati had called them Magus} 11 



I 23. Hansen, Quellen, supra, III, at 586, n. 3, cited in Biron, German Pol- 
icy, supra, at 119. 

124. Klaus Epstein, The Genesis of German Conservatism, supra, at 93. 

125. Dictionnaire de la Franc-Maconnerie (ed. Daniel Ligou) (Presses 
Universitaires de France, 1987) at 179. 

126. Thomas Frost, The Secret Societies of the European Revolution, 
1776-1876 (London: 1876) Vol. I, at 52. 

127. See Has-Hof-und Staatsarchiv, Wien, Politzei Correspondenz, 1821- 
1822, N47 (report of January 29, 1823) quoted in Carlo Francovich, 
"Gli llluminati di Weishaupt e l'idea egualitaria in alcune societa seg- 
rete del Risorgimento," Movimenw Operaio (Milano: Biblioteca G.G. 
Feltinelli, 1952), No. 4, July-August 1952, at 575 n. 42. 

llluminati of Bavaria 55 



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Illuminati of Bavaria 



The Asiatic Brethren 



To penetrate not only Europe, but also Middle-eastern 
lands, in 1780 the Illuminati apparently started another com- 
panion organization called the Asiatic Brethren. Its full title 
was Order of the Knights and Brethren of St. John the Evan- 
gelist from Asia in Europe} 2 ^ Its headquarters were at Ham- 
burg. 129 It was designed to open membership beyond Europe 
to Asia and the Mid-east. It dropped the Illuminati ban on 
Jews as members. It recruited as well Turks, Persians, and 
Armenians. It used a hybrid of Christian- Jewish symbols to 
appeal to men who grew up in both traditions. 

The Asiatic Brethren structure also reflected symbols 
and names from both faiths. The masters of the Asiatic Breth- 
ren had the Christian-sounding title of the "Chiefs of the 
Seven Churches of Asia." Yet, borrowing from the Hebrew 
Bible and mixing with the Christian tradition, the Asiatic 
Brethren called their meeting halls both "Lodges St. Jean de 
Jerusalem" and "Melchisedeck lodges." 131 

However, because the Asiatic Brethren were trying to 
recruit in the East, it also adopted Hindu doctrine and sym- 
bols. The Dictionnaire de la Franc-Magonnerie (1987) — 
written by a dedicated Freemason — said the Asiatic Breth- 
ren promoted a "doctrine of reincarnation which it called 
'rotation of spirits.'" Further, the Dictionnaire de la Franc- 
Magonnerie by Ligou — a highly respectable masonic histo- 
rians — reports the startling fact that: 



128. In German, this was Die Bruder St. Johannes des Evangelisten aus 

Asien. In France, they were known as the Freres Inities d'Asia. 
129. Lombard de Langres, Des societes secretes en Allemagne et dans 

d'autres contrees de la Secte des Illumines, du Tribunal Secret, de 

I'assassinat de Kotzebue (1819) at 81-82. 
130. Marquis de Luchet, Essai sur la secte des Illumines (Paris: 178 L ) I ( last 

reprint of 1789 with 256 pages) at 212, 214. 
13 1 .Marquis de Luchet, Essai sur la secte des Illumines (Paris: 1789) (last 

reprint of 1789 with 256 pages) at 213. 

Illuminati of Bavaria 56 



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The Asiatic Brethren 

their sign of recognition was the swastika, the 
symbol thatwefind in theThird Reich. 
Besides this symbol, it shared some theories 
with theThuleSociety, a germ of Hitlerism, 
/.e.,theThuleGesellschaft. 132 

Thus, the first use of a swastika in the occult of Ger- 
many and Europe were the lodges of the Asiatic Brethren — 
an Illuminati offshoot. How the occult Thule secret society of 
Munich founded the National Socialist party in 1919 is 
beyond the scope of this work. 

Each member of the Asiatic Brethren at the lodge 
meetings wore a black hat (with black feathers), black cloak, 
black slash, and white gloves. He also wore a sword with 
black tassels and a black ribbon from which two masonic tri- 
angles dangled. 133 The Asiatic Brethren required all mem- 
bers (even Jewish ones) to eat pork and milk. Jews thus had to 
violate their religious customs to belong to these lodges. 134 
The Asiatic Brethren thus overtly sought to make Jews reject 
Judaism to belong to these lodges. 

(What later occult order wore black, used the Swas- 
tika as its symbol, and sought to repress the Jewish religion?) 

Incidentally, the antagonism by such masonic- style 
organizations as the Asiatic Brethren toward Jewish custom 
and values caused numerous rabbis in the nineteenth century 
to condemn the entire Freemason organization. As a result, 
Jews rarely joined Freemason lodges of any type. Due to 
consistent rabbinic teachings against masonry, this remained 
true at least up to the early half of this century. 



132. Daniel Ligou, ed. Dictionnaire de la Francmagonerie (Paris: Presses 
Universitaires de France, 1987) at 605. 

133. Frost, The Secret Societies of'tlie European Revolution 1776- 
1876, supra, Vol. I, at 231-32. 

134. Rabbi Marvin S. Antelman, To Eliminate the Opiate Vol. I (New 
York-Tel Aviv: Zahavia Ltd., 1974) at 124 (citing Jacob Katz, Jews 
and Freemasonry in Europe 1723-1939 (trans. Leonard Oschry) 
(Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1970) at 35). 

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Illuminati of Bavaria 

Incidentally, the Rothschild banking house's head 
clerk, Sigmund Geisenheimer, belonged to the Illuminati 
lodge at Mainz. 136 He then founded at Frankfurt the Juden- 
lodge. The local head Rabbi, Tzvi Hirsch Horowitz, excom- 
municated him from the city's synagogue for setting up this 
lodge. Solomon Mayer Rothschild (1774-1855) joined this 
lodge for a short time before he moved to Vienna. 137 Thus, 
one cannot make too much of this fleeting association, 
despite the name Rothschild. 

These are the only known Jewish members of the Illu- 
minist societies. To repeat, this is mostly due in part to the 
Illuminati rules which prohibited initiating Jews as Illumi- 
nati. Thus, contrary to what wild suspicion might suggest, 
the Illuminati prohibition and the consistent rabbinic opposi- 
tion to Freemasonry since the eighteenth century persistently 
kept Jews out of the secret societies. 

Moving on, one founder of the Asiatic Brethren was a 
Bavarian named Hans Heinrich von Ecker, alias Abraham 
Saladin. (The A.B. used code-names like the Illuminati had 
done.) The other founder was Hans Carl von Ecker of 
Vienna, alias Israel. Together the Ecker s founded the first 
lodge at Vienna in 1780. Baron Thomas von Schoenfeld 
joined this system and became one of its leaders. He was alias 
Scharia. During the French Revolution and the Terror, 
Schoenfeld was in Paris. Bischoff, another member, was 
alias Justus and later spent years in the East and Jerusalem. 



135. See Bruno Bertuccioli, The Level Club (Owing Mills, Md.: Water- 
mark Press, 1991) at 56 n. 
136.Antelman, supra, at 126 (citing Katz, supra, at 158). 

137. Antelman, supra, Vol. I at 60, 61, 93. 

138. Supplement to the Encyclopedia (1803), supra, at 204. 

139. Katz, Jews and Freemasonry, supra, at 26. 

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Link to llluminati 



Link to llluminati 



In 1782, Ecker obtained the cooperation of Karl von 
Hesse to support the Asiatic Brethren. By no later than 1783, 
Karl von Hesse was an active member of Weishaupt's lllumi- 
nati. By 1786, Hesse was the Grand Master of the Asiatic 
Brethren. From 1786-1787, Karl von Hesse gave special pro- 
tection of the Asiatic Brethren in Schleswig. Up until 
1790, he remained the Grand Master of the order. 141 A librar- 
ian to the Hesse family, De Luchet, exposed the Asiatic 
Brethren as an llluminati front in his 1789 work, Essai sur la 
secte des Illumines. His source was likely Karl von Hesse. 

De Luchet explained the Asiatic Brethren's structure 
{e.g., the Sanhedrin, the membership dues, the grades, etc.). 
He also set forth how each initiate had to promise "a perfect 
submission and a veritable and inalienable obedience to the 
laws of the Order" and to bind all other Freemason systems to 
their own. 143 De Luchet revealed that its secret goal was to 
unite Europe into one political union. "This Order's goal is 
that Europe is destined to form one grand union ." 1 44 



140. Katz, Jews and Freemasonry, supra, at 40. 

141. Daniel Ligou, Ed. Dictionnaire de la Francmagonerie I 1 987 1, supra, 
at 605. Ligou says he was as of 1790 Grand Master of the order. 

142. Marquis De Luchet, Essai sur la Secte des I! linn hies ( London: 1 789 > 
(third reprinting of 1789, with 176 pages) at 147-150; see also Marquis 
De Luchet, Essai sur la Secte des Illumines ( Paris: 1789) (last reprint- 
ing of 1789 with 256 pages) at 212-18. He cites as some of his sources 
two books that Freemasons published: (1) Nouvelles authentiques des 
Chevaliers & Fee res Iniiities de I'Asie pour I'examen des Frame 
Macons and (2) Nouvelles authentiques de I'Asie by Frederic Bas- 
champ, named Lazapoloki. 

143. De Luchet, Essai (London: 1789)(third reprinting with 176 pages), 
supra, at 149, 150. 

144. Marquis de Luchet, Essai sur la secte des Illumines (Paris: 1789) (last 
reprint of 1789 with 256 pages) at 214. ("Cet ordre est pour toute 
l'Europe destinee au grand but de l'union"). 

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Illuminati of Bavaria 

By 1787, Duke Ferdinand of Brunswick also became 
an active supporter of the Asiatic Brethren. He invited Ecker, 
the founder and leader of the Asiatic Brethren, to leave Ham- 
bourg and become a member of the Duke's court. Ecker 
accepted and joined the duke. 145 Ferdinand had joined the 
Bavarian Illuminati by 1783. 146 Duke Ferdinand proved a 
zealot of the Asiatic Brethren. He sent Ephraim Hirschfeld 
(1755-1820), a leader of the order, on missions at the Duke's 
expense. Hirschfeld spread the Asiatic Brethren to Frankfort, 
Nuremburg, Regensburg, Prague and Vienna. Hirschfeld, on 
these missionary journeys, preached an ideology befitting an 
Illuminatus. He claimed that one could transcend Christian, 
Jewish, or Muslim beliefs and find "the one and only true, 
pure and overall religion." 147 

Up through 1792, Duke Ferdinand (alias Aaron in the 
Illuminati) spread the Asiatic Brethren lodges. Under his 
influence, Asiatic Brethren lodges were formed around 1787 
at Innsbruck, Berlin, Frankfort, Hambourg, Wetzlar, Nurem- 
burg, Augsburg, and Marburg. Later, he had lodges estab- 
lished further away: London; Paris; Gibraltar (Spain); 
Venice; Naples; Malta; Lisbon; Bergen-op-Zoom and Prague 
of Czechoslovakia; Ispaham; the Polish cities of Cracow and 
Warsaw; Basle and Zurich in Switzerland; Russia; Sweden; 
Scotland; and Turkey (Smyrna). 148 

The Asiatic Brethren's apparent connection to the 
Illuminati never caused any suppression of the Asiatic Breth- 
ren. Apparently no one recognized the Illuminati-affiliation at 
the time. The Asiatic Brethren were thus never persecuted. 



145. Katz, Jews and Freemasonry, supra, at 40-43. 

146. E. Linder, Die koiir. lit he '• unsi im Bild Betrdge zur Ikonographie 
der Fremaurerie (Graz: 1976) at 200 (cited in Billington). 

147. Antelman, supra, Vol. I, at 124 (citing Katz, Jews and Freemasonry, 
supra, at 49). 

148. Frost, supra, Vol. I at 235. 

149. Antelman, supra, Vol. I, at 125-26. 

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Link to llluminati 

The Asiatic Brethren particularly wielded influence in 
Prussia. The prominent state-ministers of Prussia were all 
members of the Asiatic Brethren. These included at Berlin, 
Bischoffswerder; Wollner; and the Crown Prince of Prussia 
who became in 1786 the king, Frederick William II of Prus- 
sia. 150 

So, by 1783, unless someone exposed the llluminati, 
one could see no end to their increasing power. Beginning in 
1783, many men stepped forward to reveal the llluminati' s 
secrets. Their efforts help preserve a record of the llluminati' s 
goals and system. 



150. Katz, Jews and Freemasonry, supra, at 34, 43, 243. 
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