Napoleon

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However vast the darkness, we must supply our own light.

8 thoughts on “Napoleon

  1. 1801 and 1844. The Prieure de Sion also conspired against Napoleon
    at this time. According to a Prieure de Sion document, the number of
    members was 1093, divided into a hierarchy with nine degrees, as
    well as eight or nine thousand novices.

    Charles Nordier later wrote: “There are a great many secret societies
    in operation. But there is one that takes precedence over all others. This
    supreme secret society is called the Philadelphes.” He wrote of “the
    oath, which binds me to the Philalephes and which forbids me to
    make them known under their social name this society by its true
    name” (Charles Nordier, “A History of Secret Societies in the Army
    under Napoleon”, p. 105).

    […]

    36

    Larmenius, who was initiated into the secrets of the order by de
    Molay while the grand master was in prison. Larmenius, who came
    from “the Holy Land”, saved himself by leaving France. In 1324,
    Thomas Theobald was chosen as the new underground grand master.
    The last grand master known to us was Bernard Raymond FabrePalaprat (1804-1838), who was also a freemason of the Scottish Rite.
    All this is according to a secret document, “Larmenius Charta”, which
    became available in 1804 (Michael Baigent, Richard Leigh, “The
    Temple and the Lodge”, London, 1998, p 114). In this year, Napoleon
    legalized the Order of the Knights Templar.
    The freemasons themselves have actually admitted that de Molay
    had time to pass on his secrets to his successor before he was burned
    and that the successor managed to found secret lodges in Paris and
    Stockholm (Peter Partner, “The Murdered Magicians: The Templars
    and their Myth”, Oxford, 1982, pp. 110-114)

    Nostradamus hinted that future rulers would originate from
    Languedoc (from the Order of the Knights Templar). He happened to
    see a book on magic in a monastery in Orval, in present-day Belgium.
    Godfroi de Bouillons stepmother had donated the book. It was in
    Orval, where the Priory of Sion had begun their activities. It was also
    in Orval that Nostradamus’ books were published during the masonic
    coup in 1789 and under Napoleon.
    According to the Italian historian Pier Carpi, Nostradamus was an
    active member of the Priory of Sion. But he was much more than
    that.
    Pierre Plantard de Saint-Clair (Merovingian) was elected grand
    master in Blois in the Loire valley on 17 January 1981. Two days
    later, he met Licio Gelli, the grand master of P2, at Cafe La Tipia on
    rue de Rome in Paris. Plantard was a friend of Charles de Gaulle
    (Michael Baigent, Richard Leigh, Henry Lincoln, “Holy Blood, Holy
    Grail”, New York, 1983, p. 222). In a letter, de Gaulle thanked Plantard for his services by means of which he was elected president.
    During the Second World War, the Gestapo had imprisoned Plantard
    from October 1943 up to the end of 1944.
    In 1983, Pierre Plantard de Saint-Clair, grand master of the Prieure
    de Sion during the years 1981-1984, published an article, where he
    wrote the following: “It was in Turin, in 1556, that Nostradamus was
    initiated into the great secret of the future… But it was not until 1557,
    when he became the grand master of the Order that he was allowed to
    partake of the great secret… Here is the message of the wise poet from
    Salon-de-Provence, who in his writings has made the secrets of the
    hermetics immortal through the centuries up to our time.”
    53

    [..]

    The use of magically charged blood brings the magician much
    closer to evil. This is why the masonic initiate’s head is covered with
    a bloody cloth during a formal ceremony.
    The masonic leaders (especially within the Grand Orient) marked
    their blood sacrifices to increase their power by erecting obelisks in
    large cities, where they had total control. By these means, the invisible illuminist powers have created an enormous, negative force
    field, which accumulates energy with the aid of obelisks. Obelisks
    generate the energy they accumulate.
    Napoleon was encouraged to invade Egypt in 1798 to plunder sites,
    where there were remains of ancient magic knowledge and magically
    charged items. The freemasons needed these for their rituals. They
    demanded that Napoleon, upon completing his campaign, should
    bring a large Egyptian obelisk home to Paris as a spoil of war.
    122
    [..]

    The historian Richard Boesen disclosed that the freemason Nathan
    Rothschild (1777-1836), who in 1806 had founded his bank in
    London and who partly financed the Napoleonic wars trough the
    Bank of England, subsequently issued an ultimatum – either the
    contract be renewed or there would be war. Jackson called the
    masonic bankers a bunch of thieves and promised to exterminate
    them. Rothschild gave his own orders: “Teach these insolent Americans a lesson. Force them back to a colonial status.”
    The British government began to limit the American sea trade and
    checked the American expansion in Canada. President James Madison
    in 1812 had no other choice but to let Congress declare war on
    England. The intention of the leader of the freemasons, Rothschild,
    was to lay waste the country to such an extent that the Americans
    would be forced to seek financial aid. Great Britain, however, failed
    to regain the lost colonies, and the United States failed to occupy
    Canada. The war was actually fought in 1814.
    Nathan Rothschild, progenitor of the London branch of the family.
    He became a freemason in 1802 in the Lodge of Emulation in London.
    147

    […]

    hen our statutes proscribed that freemasonry should not concern itself
    with political and religious matters. Was that really the case? I should not
    say so. Only due to the law and the police were we compelled to hide that
    which was our sole aim.” (Alexander Selyaninov, “The Secret Power of
    Freemasonry”, Moscow, 1999, p. 105)
    The coup d’etat of the freemason Napoleon Bonaparte 9-10 November 1799 (under the Sign of Scorpio) was organized together with the
    Grand Orient. He was initiated into the Philadelphia lodge in Paris in
    1798. Also his brothers Joseph, Lucien, Louis and Jerome were freemasons. Joseph Bonaparte was even grand master of the Grand Orient
    of France. Napoleon’s personal council had six members of which five
    were freemasons.
    Napoleon was initially sympathetic to the Jews, but later changed
    his mind due to certain events. In 1806 he summoned the Sanhedrin
    (the Jewish World Council), which consisted of leading Jews from all
    over the world. Instead of giving them political and economical
    power, he put restrictions on them. Adolf Hitler used a similar tactic.
    The Zionists and masonic leaders were furious and threatened to
    destroy the emperor.
    At the head of a conspiracy towards Napoleon was general of the
    army, and masonic master Jean Victor Moreau (Henry Wilson Goil,
    “Goil’s masonic Encyclopaedia”, Richmond, Virginia, 1995, p. 274).
    On 13 October 1809, the student Friedrich Staps tried to kill Napoleon at Schonbrunn outside Vienna. The French emperor called him
    an illuminatus (Johannes Rogalla von Bieberstein, “Die These von der
    Verschworung 1776-1945” / “The Annals of Conspiracy 1776-1945,
    Flensburg, 1992, p. 90).
    The coup d’etat of Charles Louis Napoleon Bonaparte (nephew of
    Napoleon I) on 2 December 1851 was also a work of the freemasons
    within the military. He had been elected president of France on 10
    December 1848, but he wanted to be emperor. The day after the coup
    his cousin Lucien Murat was appointed grand master of the Grand
    Orient.
    181

    [..]

    In 1886, the masonic brother Gonnoud stated: “There was a time
    when our statutes proscribed that freemasonry should not concern itself
    with political and religious matters. Was that really the case? I should not
    say so. Only due to the law and the police were we compelled to hide that
    which was our sole aim.” (Alexander Selyaninov, “The Secret Power of
    Freemasonry”, Moscow, 1999, p. 105)
    The coup d’etat of the freemason Napoleon Bonaparte 9-10 November 1799 (under the Sign of Scorpio) was organized together with the
    Grand Orient. He was initiated into the Philadelphia lodge in Paris in
    1798. Also his brothers Joseph, Lucien, Louis and Jerome were freemasons. Joseph Bonaparte was even grand master of the Grand Orient
    of France. Napoleon’s personal council had six members of which five
    were freemasons.
    Napoleon was initially sympathetic to the Jews, but later changed
    his mind due to certain events. In 1806 he summoned the Sanhedrin
    (the Jewish World Council), which consisted of leading Jews from all
    over the world. Instead of giving them political and economical
    power, he put restrictions on them. Adolf Hitler used a similar tactic.
    The Zionists and masonic leaders were furious and threatened to
    destroy the emperor.
    At the head of a conspiracy towards Napoleon was general of the
    army, and masonic master Jean Victor Moreau (Henry Wilson Goil,
    “Goil’s masonic Encyclopaedia”, Richmond, Virginia, 1995, p. 274).
    On 13 October 1809, the student Friedrich Staps tried to kill Napoleon at Schonbrunn outside Vienna. The French emperor called him
    an illuminatus (Johannes Rogalla von Bieberstein, “Die These von der
    Verschworung 1776-1945” / “The Annals of Conspiracy 1776-1945,
    Flensburg, 1992, p. 90).
    The coup d’etat of Charles Louis Napoleon Bonaparte (nephew of
    Napoleon I) on 2 December 1851 was also a work of the freemasons
    within the military. He had been elected president of France on 10
    December 1848, but he wanted to be emperor. The day after the coup
    his cousin Lucien Murat was appointed grand master of the Grand
    Orient.
    181

  2. In 1886, the masonic brother Gonnoud stated: “There was a time
    when our statutes proscribed that freemasonry should not concern itself
    with political and religious matters. Was that really the case? I should not
    say so. Only due to the law and the police were we compelled to hide that
    which was our sole aim.” (Alexander Selyaninov, “The Secret Power of
    Freemasonry”, Moscow, 1999, p. 105)
    The coup d’etat of the freemason Napoleon Bonaparte 9-10 November 1799 (under the Sign of Scorpio) was organized together with the
    Grand Orient. He was initiated into the Philadelphia lodge in Paris in
    1798. Also his brothers Joseph, Lucien, Louis and Jerome were freemasons. Joseph Bonaparte was even grand master of the Grand Orient
    of France. Napoleon’s personal council had six members of which five
    were freemasons.
    Napoleon was initially sympathetic to the Jews, but later changed
    his mind due to certain events. In 1806 he summoned the Sanhedrin
    (the Jewish World Council), which consisted of leading Jews from all
    over the world. Instead of giving them political and economical
    power, he put restrictions on them. Adolf Hitler used a similar tactic.
    The Zionists and masonic leaders were furious and threatened to
    destroy the emperor.
    At the head of a conspiracy towards Napoleon was general of the
    army, and masonic master Jean Victor Moreau (Henry Wilson Goil,
    “Goil’s masonic Encyclopaedia”, Richmond, Virginia, 1995, p. 274).
    On 13 October 1809, the student Friedrich Staps tried to kill Napoleon at Schonbrunn outside Vienna. The French emperor called him
    an illuminatus (Johannes Rogalla von Bieberstein, “Die These von der
    Verschworung 1776-1945” / “The Annals of Conspiracy 1776-1945,
    Flensburg, 1992, p. 90).
    The coup d’etat of Charles Louis Napoleon Bonaparte (nephew of
    Napoleon I) on 2 December 1851 was also a work of the freemasons
    within the military. He had been elected president of France on 10
    December 1848, but he wanted to be emperor. The day after the coup
    his cousin Lucien Murat was appointed grand master of the Grand
    Orient.
    181

    [..]

    There is a letter extant sent from the Grand Orient to Charles Louis
    Napoleon. In the letter dated 15 October 1852, it is mentioned that
    Charles Louis was illuminated by the light of freemasonry. The
    freemasons liked to be portrayed as the soldiers of humanity under
    the leadership of Charles Louis Napoleon. The letter was concluded
    with the salute “Long live the Emperor!” On 2 December 1857, he was
    proclaimed Emperor of France under the name Napoleon III.
    The freemasons acted at will. When called for, they founded a
    republic – when an empire served their interests, they proclaimed
    one. So when Napoleon III decided to pursue a more independent
    course, a decision was made by the Grand Orient of France: the
    emperor must be deposed! The difficulties had begun in 1861. The
    freemasons wanted war with Prussia. The emperor tried to avoid that,
    since he thought France was ill prepared. This made no difference to
    the freemasons. They had to prevail and they wanted war. That’s
    what their so-called “friendship between nations” really looked like
    (Oleg Platonov, “Russia’s Crown of Thorns: The Secret History of Freemasonry 1731-1996”, Moscow, 2000, Volume II, p. 60). On 19 July
    1870, the Franco-Prussian War broke out. Prussia was given all
    possible aid in order to crush Napoleon III. The freemasons replaced
    the French commander-in-chief Patrice de MacMahon (1808-1893) in
    August of 1870 with Marshal of France Francois Achille Bazaine
    (1811-1888), who was a high-ranking freemason. His task was to lose
    the war.
    When the Germans had captured the French emperor at Sedan on 2
    September 1870, he was overthrown in France two days later through
    a “revolution”, where the freemasons had used the Internationale as
    their willing instrument. Napoleon III was vilified in a wild frenzy of
    accusations (Paul Copin-Albancelli, “Pouvoir occulte contre la
    France”, 1908). Thus on 4 September 1870, a masonic government
    came to power by means of yet another coup. Nine of eleven members of the cabinet were freemasons, of which three were highranking ones and Jewish extremists – Isaac Adolph Cremieux, Alexandre Glais-Bizoin and Leon Gambetta.
    182

    [..]

    The Carbonari appeared in France about 1820. Two years later there
    were 60 000 members, who had been recruited among naive military
    officers, students and common workers. Marquis de Lafayette became
    grand master of the militant conspiracy movement and organized a
    plot against Louis XVIII.
    The Carbonari made sure that Louis Napoleon Bonaparte, nephew
    of Napoleon I, was elected president of the Second Republic of
    France. During the Second Empire, when the authorities began to
    work against this masonic movement, the Carbonari committed
    several terrorist attacks. Their goal was to overthrow the Bourbon
    dynasty for good.
    In 1860, Mazzini had formed an organization called the Oblonica, a
    name derived from the Latin word ‘obelus’, which means “a spit or
    dagger”. Within this group, he established an inner circle, a modern
    band of criminals, called the Mafia, which was an acronym for
    Mazzini, autorizza, furti, incendi, awelenamenti (Mazzini, authorizes, thefts, arson, poisoning).
    Excerpt from the permanent instruction of the Alta Vendita: “Crush
    the enemy whoever he may be; crush the powerful by means of lies and
    calumnies; but especially crush him in the egg. It is to the youth we must
    251

    [..]

    During the same year, his hard work to destroy the old world order
    gained him the 33rd degree and thereafter he became grand master of
    the Scottish Rite in Palermo, and in 1864 the Naples Constituent
    Assembly elected Garibaldi honorary grand master of the Grand
    Orient of Italy. He became the “First Italian Freemason”.
    The Grand Orient of Italy was founded by Napoleon Bonaparte in
    Milan in 1805. Garibaldi was also grand master of l’Ordre du rite
    Memphis-Misraim. Together with the crime syndicates, he planned
    atrocious crimes against politically uncomfortable people.
    In 1867, Garibaldi founded the Supreme Council of Freemasons in
    Italy and the Association for Peace and Freedom, which began to
    propagate for the United States of Europe. This union would put an
    end to national states, after which the freemasons hoped to found a
    global superstate. The masonic dream about the United States of
    Europe would become a reality, whatever the cost, even if it was
    necessary to use both fire and sword. Instead the cunning step-bystep method was chosen, which involves countless political
    293

    The freemasons’ foremost task is to stop correct information and to
    provoke economic and spiritual stagnation in society, which then no
    longer can escape the thrall of the masonic bankers.
    Michel Reyt, who attained the 33 rd degree within the Grand Orient
    founded Sages, the aim of which is to provide the Socialist Party with
    money (Ghislaine Ottenheimer and Renaud Lecadre, “Les freres invisibles”, Paris, 2001, p. 25).
    The hidden influence of the freemasons has been and still is
    enormous. Eighteen of Napoleons marshals were freemasons, including Bernadotte, Brune, Jourdan, Kellermann, Massena, Mortier,
    Murat, Ney, Oudinot, Poniatowski, and Serurier (the French periodical
    Historia, No. 48, July-August 1997).
    If one observes a company president, a board chairman or a
    minister who is a freemason, one will discover a significant number
    of masonic brothers hovering around him: accountants, secretaries,

    [..]

    295
    lawyers, PR-consultants, bankers, etc. As the freemasons become
    more powerful, they push non-masons away from positions of power.
    “When one of my co-workers, freemasons, insist that we employ a man
    of fifty years, whom I have never heard of before, I immediately know
    what is going on,” said the chairman of the board of France Television
    Marc Tessier, who himself is presumed to belong to the Spartacus
    lodge, which attracts heads of radio and TV-stations (Ghislaine
    Ottenheimer and Renaud Lecadre, “Les freres invisibles”, Paris, 2001,
    p. 33).
    More than a third of the members of the Economic and Social
    Council, the third chamber of the French National Assembly, are freemasons. The Entry hall to the Council’s building is covered with
    masonic symbols: two columns with pictures of Horus and Isis. Horus
    holds a globe and a mitre in his hands. Isis holds a right angle in the
    crook of her arm. Other symbols are the moon, the sun, the starry
    sky, the pyramid, the carved stone, and the chain with three links.
    296

  3. Napoléon Bonaparte Quotes

    “Never interrupt your enemy when he is making a mistake.”
    ― Napoleon Bonaparte

    “Courage isn’t having the strength to go on – it is going on when you don’t have strength.”
    ― Napoleon Bonaparte

    “In politics, stupidity is not a handicap.”
    ― Napoleon Bonaparte

    “Religion is excellent stuff for keeping common people quiet. Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich.”
    ― Napoleon Bonaparte

    “Show me a family of readers, and I will show you the people who move the world.”
    ― Napoleon Bonaparte

    “History is a set of lies agreed upon.”
    ― Napoleon Bonaparte

    “Imagination governs the world.”
    ― Napoleon Bonaparte

    “If you want a thing done well, do it yourself.”
    ― Napoleon Bonaparte

    “Nothing is more difficult, and therefore more precious, than to be able to decide.”
    ― Napoleon Bonaparte

    “History is written by the winners.”
    ― Napoleon Bonaparte

    “Take time to deliberate, but when the time for action comes, stop thinking and go in.”
    ― Napoleon Bonaparte

    “Impossible is a word to be found only in the dictionary of fools.”
    ― Napoleon Bonaparte

    “A leader is a dealer in hope.”
    ― Napoleon Bonaparte

    “If I had to choose a religion, the sun as the universal giver of life would be my god.”
    ― Napoleon Bonaparte

    “Alexander, Caesar, Charlemagne, and I have founded empires. But on what did we rest the creations of our genius? Upon force. Jesus Christ founded his empire upon love; and at this hour millions of men would die for him.”
    ― Napoleon Bonaparte

    “This soldier, I realized, must have had friends at home and in his regiment; yet he lay there deserted by all except his dog. I looked on, unmoved, at battles which decided the future of nations. Tearless, I had given orders which brought death to thousands. Yet here I was stirred, profoundly stirred, stirred to tears. And by what? By the grief of one dog.’

    Napoleon Bonaparte, on finding a dog beside the body of his dead master, licking his face and howling, on a moonlit field after a battle. Napoleon was haunted by this scene until his own death.”
    ― Napoleon Bonaparte

    “The only victories which leave no regret are those which are gained over ignorance.”
    ― Napoleon Bonaparte

    “A woman laughing is a woman conquered.”
    ― Napoleon Bonaparte, In the Words of Napoleon: A Collection of Quotations of Napoleon Bonaparte

    “You don’t reason with intellectuals. You shoot them.”
    ― Napoleon Bonaparte, Napoleon’s Memoirs

    “Men are Moved by two levers only: fear and self interest.”
    ― Napoleon Bonaparte

    “The best way to keep one’s word is not to give it.”
    ― Napoleon Bonaparte

    “Conquests will come and go but Delambre’s work will endure.”
    ― Napoleon Bonaparte

    “There are but two powers in the world, the sword and the mind. In the long run the sword is always beaten by the mind”
    ― Napoleon Bonaparte

    “The world suffers a lot. Not because the violence of bad people. But because of the silence of the good people.”
    ― Napoleon

    “China is a sleeping giant; let him sleep, for if he wakes, he will shake the World.”
    ― Napoleon

    “He who fears being conquered is sure of defeat.”
    ― Napoleon Bonaparte

    “The reason most people fail instead of succeed is they trade what they want most for what they want at the moment.”
    ― Napoleon Bonaparte

    “A picture is worth a thousand words.”
    ― Napoleon Bonaparte

    “Death is nothing, but to live defeated and inglorious is to die daily.”
    ― Napoleon Bonaparte

    “Ten people who speak make more noise than ten thousand who are silent.”
    ― Napoleon Bonaparte

  4. “When a government is dependent upon bankers for money, they and not the leaders of the government control the situation, since the hand that gives is above the hand that takes. Money has no motherland; financiers are without patriotism and without decency; their sole object is gain.”
    ~ Napoleon Bonaparte

    (1769-1821) French emperor

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