Minggu, 01 Januari 2017

BLACK MAGIC WHITE SOLDIER PART 6

BLACK MAGIC WHITE SOLDIER ( RENASSAINCE & REFORMATION PART 2 )



  Luther’s Catholic enemies accused him of being a crypto-Jew trying to destroy the papacy.12 As in other parts of Europe, violent persecution had been growing in  Spain and   Portugal, where in 1391, hundreds of thousands of Jews had been forced to convert to Catholicism. Publicly, the Jewish converts known as  Marranos, and also as   Conversos, were Christians but secretly they continued to practice  Judaism. While many Jews of course conceded to forced conversion to avoid persecution, others seem to have used to the opportunity to carry out subversive activities against the Christian Church, often marked by the assimilation of  Kabbalistic ideas into  Christianity and the creation of Christian heresies. While secret conversion of Jews to another religion during the Spanish inquisition is the most known example, as Rabbi Joachim Prinz explained in The Secret Jews, “Jewish existence in disguise predates the Inquisition by more than a thousand years.”13 There were also the examples  of the            first  Gnostic sects, which comprised of Merkabah mystics who entered Christianity. Likewise, in the seventh century, the Quranadvised the early Muslim community, “And a faction of the People of the Scripture say [to each other], “Believe in that which was revealed to the believers at the beginning of the day and reject it at its end that perhaps they will abandon their religion.”14

  As demonstrated by Louis I. Newman in Jewish Infl uences on Christian Reform Movements, a similar tendency can be attributed to the advent of Catharism and eventually to Protestantism and other Christian heresies. As reproduced in 1608  in La Silva Curiosaby Julio-Inigues de Medrano in 1492, Chemor, chief Rabbi of Spain, wrote to the Grand Sanhedrin, which had its seat in Constantinople, for advice, when a Spanish law threatened expulsion. This was the reply:

  Well-beloved brothers in Moses, if the king of   France forces you to become Christian, do so, because you cannot do otherwise, but preserve the law of Moses in your hearts. If they strip you of your possessions, raise your sons to be merchants, so that eventually they can strip Christians of their possessions. If they threaten your lives, raise your sons to be physicians and pharmacists, so that they can take the lives of Christians. If they destroy your synagogues, raise your sons, to be canons and clerics, so that they can destroy the churches of the  Christians. If they inflict other tribulations on you, raise your sons to be lawyers and notaries and have them mingle in the business of every  state, so that putting the Christians under your yoke, you will rule the  world and can then take your revenge.15

  After 1540, many  Marranos fled to  England,Holland,  France, the  Ottoman Empire , Brazil and other places in South and Central America. In places like England and Germany,   Marranos began their existence as nominal Catholics and secret  Jews before the  Reformation. They continued in this secret guise long after those areas had broken with Catholicism, since the  Protestant authorities  did        not grant official acknowledgment to the Jews. At  first,   Luther’s challenge to Roman Catholicism was welcomed by  Jews who had been victimized by the Inquisition, and who hoped that breaking the power of the Church would lead to greater tolerance of other forms of worship. There were even some, like Abraham Farissol, who regarded   Luther as a Crypto-Jew, a reformer bent on upholding  religious truth and justice, and whose iconoclastic reforms were directed toward a return to  Judaism.16  Some scholars, particularly of the Sephardi diaspora, such as Joseph        ha-Kohen (1496     – c. 1575), were strongly            pro- Reformation.17

  About 1524,  Jews coming from Europe described with joy to the  Kabbalist Abraham ben Eliezer ha-Levi in  Jerusalem the anti-clerical tendencies of the Protestant reformers. On the basis of this report, the Kabbalists regarded Luther as a kind of crypto-Jew who would educate Christians away from the bad elements of their faith.18 Abraham ben Eliezer related that a great astrologer  in  Spain, named R.     Joseph, wrote in a forecast on the significance of the         sun’s  eclipse in the year 1478, as prophesying a man who would reform religion and rebuild  Jerusalem.        Abraham b.        Eliezer adds  that “at first glance we believed            that the man foreshadowed by the stars was  Messiah b. Joseph [ Messiah]. But now it is evident that he is none other than the man mentioned [by all; i.e., Luther], who is exceedingly noble in all his undertakings and all these forecasts  are realized in his person.” 19

  Marranos were also involved in the creation of the order of the  Jesuits. It was supposedly        in response       to the growing influence  of Protestantism that  Ignatius of   Loyola founded the  Jesuits in 1534, who spearheaded the CounterReformation.  Loyola had been a member of a heretical sect known as the  Alumbrados, meaning “Illuminated,” who are thought to be a precursor to the Bavarian  Illuminati of the eighteenth century. The  Alumbrados claimed that the human soul could reach such a degree of perfection whereby it could contemplate the essence of God and comprehend the mystery of the Trinity. In this state of complete union with God, much like the  Sufis, the   Alumbrados  believed all external worship was superfluous and            sin impossible. Persons           in this state could therefore indulge in sexual license and commit other sinful acts freely without harming their souls. The  Alumbrados consisted of mainly crypto- Jews known as  Marranos. As Ezer Kahanoff notes in “On  Marranos and  Sabbateans,” speaking of groups like the  Alumbrados:

  More significant for inquisitors, perhaps, was the fact that nearly every person implicated in those groups was a Converso: the beata Isabel de la Cruz, Pedro Ruiz de Alcaraz, Maria de Cazalla and her Franciscan brother Juan, and auxiliary Bishop of Avila, Bernardino Tovar, the beata Francisca Hernandez, the Franciscan preacher Francisco Ortiz, and many others.20

  Marranos joined not only the  Jesuits, but also the Carmelites, Dominicans and Franciscans. Many rose to positions as Bishops and Cardinals. Although there is no direct evidence that   Loyola himself was a Marrano, according to “Lo  Judeo  Conversos en Espna Y America” (Jewish  Conversos in   Spain and America),  Loyola is a typical Converso name. 21 Although accounts that   Loyola himself  was a Jew are unconfirmed,  as revealed by Robert Maryk, in The Jesuit Order as a Synagogue of  Jews,  Loyola’s successor Diego Laynez was a Marrano as were many  Jesuit leaders who came after him. 22 In fact,  Marranos increased in numbers to the point where the papacy imposed “purity of blood” laws, placing restrictions  on the entrance of New Christians to institutions like the  Jesuits.

  The  Renaissance tradition of prisca theologia had an important influence    in the emergence of the  Rosicrucian movement of the early seventeenth century, which was closely tied to the advent of the  Freemasons and the legend of the Templars. It is believed that  Freemasonry derived from “operative” masonry, or craft guilds of masons, and then evolved into “speculative” masonry or a secret society based on the mystical interpretation of rebuilding the  Temple of Solomon. In 1598, William          Schaw (c. 1550 – 1602), Master of Works     to James VI of Scotland for building castles and palaces, issued a code of statutes regulating the organization and conduct of masons. In 1588 Schaw was amongst a group of Catholics ordered to appear before the Edinburgh Presbytery, and English agents reported him as being a suspected Jesuit and holding anti-English views  during the 1590s.  In 1599, two lodges, Aitchison’s Haven and Edinburgh were  incepted and the Lodge of Haddington appears on records. In the same year,  a second code of statues by Schaw was issued partly addressed to Kilwinning  Lodge  and mentioning      also the  lodges  of  Edinburgh and  Stirling.  A fifth lodge was at Dunfermline. In 1600 or 1601, Schaw and representatives of the  five lodges confirmed the position of William Sinclair of Roslin as hereditary  patron of the craft. After presiding over the order for many years, William Saint Clair went to Ireland, and in 1630 a second Charter was issued granting to his son, Sir William Saint Clair, the same power with which his father had been invested. According to David Stevenson, the tradition of patronage of Freemasonry by the  Sinclairs of Roslin was likely connected to the famous church of  Rosslyn built by  William Sinclair, earl of Caithness and   Orkney.24

  The birth of  Freemasonry was closely associated with the Order of the Rosy Cross, also known as the  Rosicrucians. The  Rosicrucians derived their name from the red [rose] cross of the  Templar s . Though the  Templars were officially  disbanded  in 1314, their  traditions  seem  to  have  taken  on  a   new guise under the  Order of the Garter. The inspiration of the order, founded  in 1348 by Edward III King of England as “a society, fellowship and college  of knights,” was   King Arthur and the   Round Table. The most popular legend involves the “Countess of Salisbury,” who while dancing her garter is said to have         slipped to the floor. When the   surrounding courtiers snickered, the king supposedly picked it up and tied it to his own leg, exclaiming Honi soit qui mal y pense, meaning “Evil upon he who thinks it.” This phrase has since become the motto of the Order. As historian Margaret Murray pointed out, the garter is  an emblem of witchcraft. Garters are worn in various rituals and are also used  as badges of rank. The garter is considered the ancient emblem of the high  priestess. In some traditions, a high priestess who becomes Queen  Witch over  more than one coven adds a silver buckle to her garter for each coven under  her. According to Murray:

  The importance of the lace or string among the  witches was very great as it was the insignia of rank. The usual place to carry it on the person was round the leg where it served as a garter. The beliefs of modern France give the clue as to its importance. According to traditions still current,            there  is a fixed number of  witches in each canton, of whom the chief wears the garter in token of his (or her) high position; the right of becoming chief is said to go by seniority. In Haute Bretagne a man who  makes a pact with the Devil has a red garter.25

  Members of the   Order of the Garter wear a uniform bearing the red cross of  Saint George upon a white shield, recalling the emblem of the  Templars. According to one legend, King Richard the Lionheart was inspired in the twelfth century by Saint George    the Martyr while fighting in the Crusades, to tie garters around the legs of his knights, who subsequently won the battle. Saint George, the patron saint of England, Georgia and Moscow, is also the origin of the knightly tale of rescuing a maiden from a dragon, symbolizing the ageold motif of the dying-god’s struggle with the Dragon of the Sea. The cult of Saint George first          reached Englan  when the  templars were introduced to the  cult presumably through their contact with the  Rubenids of   Armenian Cilicia,  returned from the Holy Land in 1228.

  The   Cross  of St.  George, now the flag of   England, is a red cross on  a white background, which had been the emblem of the  Templar s . The “red cross” of the  Templars is also a “rose cross.” The rose was already a popular occult symbol. While the lily came to represent the royal house of  France, the rose became the heraldic symbol of the two competing houses involved in the War of the      Roses. A red five-petal rose became the symbol of the House     of Lancaster, and a white rose that of the House of York. The antagonism between the two houses erupted when Henry of Bolingbroke established the House of Lancaster on the throne in 1399, when he deposed his cousin Richard II and was crowned as Henry IV. The short reign of Henry IV’s successor, Henry V, was challenged by Richard, Earl of Cambridge, who was executed in 1415 for treason. Henry V died in 1422 and Cambridge’s son, Richard, Duke of York, grew up to challenge his successor King Henry VI.

  Richard Duke of York was the great-grandson of Edward III, and also a member of the  Order of the Garter. Through his mother Anne de Mortimer, Richard Duke of York received the combined   Grail heritage of House of Brittany and of   Lusignan. 26 Richard           was the first to use the surname       Plantagenet  since Geoffrey of Anjou, as though it had been a hereditary surname for the  whole dynasty, to emphasize that his claim to the throne was stronger than that of Henry VI. With King Henry’ VI’s insanity in 1452, Richard was made Lord Protector, but had to give up this position with the King’s recovery and the birth  of his heir, Edward of Westminster. Richard gradually gathered together his  forces, however, and the civil wars known as the Wars of the Roses eventually  broke out in 1455. The House of York was victorious over the Lancastrians, but  Richard had been unable to seize the throne for himself, though Parliament   did agree to the compromise of making him heir to the throne. Meanwhile,  the Lancastrians, led by Henry’s wife, Margaret of Anjou, continued the war,  during which Richard was finally killed in 1460. Nevertheless, Richard’s    eldest son finally  succeeded in putting the Yorkist dynasty on   the throne in 1461 as Edward IV of England.

  Edward IV, however, disappointed his allies when he married Elizabeth Woodville. Elizabeth had insisted on marriage, which took place secretly on May 1, 1464, at her family home, with only the bride’s mother and two ladies in attendance. Thus, Elizabeth managed to reintroduce the lost lines of the Lusignans and of Brittany, Elizabeth being a distant relative of   Alain IV of the  Grail lineage of Brittany, and Almaric of   Lusignan, the son of  Melusinde, daughter of  Baldwin II and Morphia of  Armenia. Elizabeth Woodville was widely believed to have been a  witch and Edward’s brother Richard III tried to show there had never been any valid marriage between Edward and Elizabeth, that it was result of love  magic perpetrated by Elizabeth and her mother. With  Edward’s sudden            death in 1483, Elizabeth  briefly became Queen Mother, but in 1483 her marriage was declared void by Parliament, and all her children illegitimate. Richard III accepted the crown. Elizabeth then conspired with Lancastrians, promising to marry her eldest daughter Elizabeth of York to the Lancastrian claimant to the throne, Henry Tudor, if he could supplant Richard. Henry Tudor’s forces defeated Richard’s in 1485 and Henry Tudor became King Henry VII of England. Henry then strengthened his position by marrying Elizabeth of York. Thus, both the Red Rose of Lancaster and the White Rose of York were merged           to a single     ten-petal flower, to form the Tudor Rose that symbolized the union of the two houses.

  In England, the most significant consequence of the  Protestant Reformation had been the establishment of the independent church by King Henry the VIII, followed in due course by the establishment of the Church of England under Queen  Elizabeth I. When Queen  Elizabeth I succeeded to the throne after her father Henry VIII, the son of Henry VII and Elizabeth York, there had been a great revival of the  Order of the Garter, including its ceremonies, processions and ethos, which Elizabeth regarded as a means of drawing the nobles together  in common service to the Crown. 28 Queen  Elizabeth I’s court was steeped in  esoteric thought. It began           to flourish          atatime          when,            on       the continent, the reaction against  Renaissance occultism was growing in intensity as part of the Counter- Reformation effort spearheaded by the   Jesuits.  Edmund Spenser’s  magical poem The Faerie Queeneand his Neoplatonic hymns in Elizabeth’s honor, published in the 1590’s, were a direct challenge to that Counter- Reformation and their attitude to  Renaissance philosophy. The poem, inspired by the  Order of the Garter, follows several knights, like the Redcrosse Knight, the hero of Book One who bears the emblem of  Saint George. Additionally, Christopher Marlowe wrote Doctor Faustus, a play developed from the Faust legend in which a man sells his soul to the devil for power and knowledge. Likewise, explains Dame Frances Yates, in The  Rosicrucian  Enlightenment, “Shakespeare’s preoccupation with the occult, with ghosts,  witches, fairies, is understood as deriving less from popular tradition than from deep-rooted affinity with the learned occult philosophy and its religious implications.”29

  Sir  Francis  Bacon (1561 – 1626) was  chancellor of England in the reign of King James, and was suspected as the true author of Shakespeare’s plays as well as to have supervised the translation of the King James  Bible. There are also theories that he was the illegitimate son of  Elizabeth I and the Earl of Leicester.30 He is considered the father of modern science, having emphasized the importance of experimentation in his landmark work, The Advancement of Learning. However, recent scholarship has shown that he was committed to the  Renaissance occult tradition, and his survey of science included a review of  magic,  astrology, and a reformed version of  alchemy. 31 In 1618,   Francis Bacon decided to secure a lease for York House, where he would host banquets that were attended by the leading men of the time, including poets, scholars, authors, scientists, lawyers, diplomats, and foreign dignitaries.

  The esotericism of Elizabeth’s reign was also coupled with imperial ambitions.  John  Bale,  writing            in  the  1540s,  had  identified the Protestant Church of England as an actor in the historical struggle with the “false church” of Catholicism, supported by his interpretations of the  Book of Revelation. The views of John Foxe, author of what is popularly known as Foxe’s Book of Martyrs, became widely accepted within the Church of England for a generation and more. According to Foxe, a war against the Antichrist was being waged by the English people, but led by the Christian Emperor (echoing  Constantine I) who was identified with  Elizabeth I. Foxe, referring to it as “this my-country church of England,” characterized England’s destiny as the “elect nation” of God. 32

  Like Spenser’s Faerie Queene, the British accepted the prophecy of  Merlin, which proclaimed that the  Saxons would rule over the  Britons until   King Arthur again restored them to their rightful place as rulers. The prophecy was related by Geoffrey of  Monmouth (1100  – 1155),   a cleric and      one of the major    figures in the development of British historiography and the popularity of tales of   King Arthur. He is best known for his chronicle, Historia Regum Britanniae, which relates           the purported history of  Britain, from its first settlement by Brutus, a descendant of the Trojan hero Aeneas. The prophecy was adopted by the British people and eventually used by the Tudors who through their ancestor Owen  Tudor claimed to be descendants of Arthur and rightful rulers of Britain. 33

  An important source of these tendencies was sorcerer  John Dee. Dee believed that he found the secret of conjuring angels by numerical configurations in the tradition of the  Kabbalah. He claimed to have gained contact with “good angels,” from whom he learned an angelic language composed of non-English  letters he called Enochian. In 1588, in his capacity as royal astrologer, Dee was asked to choose the most favorable date for the coronation of  Elizabeth I, and subsequently tutored the new queen in the understanding of his mystical writings. It has been suggested that Dee used Enochian as a code to transmit messages from overseas to Queen Elizabeth in his alleged capacity as a founding member  of the    English secret service. Dee was thus among the first          to merge his career as a sorcerer with that of a spy, a tendency that would then come characterize  almost all leading occultists ever since. As such, Dee was the inspiration for  Ian Fleming’s “James Bond” character. John Dee would sign his letters to Elizabeth I with 00 and an elongated 7, to signify they were for her eyes only.

  Dee has been credited with the coining of the term “British Empire.”  Believing himself to be of ancient British royal descent as  well,  Dee identified completely with the British imperial myth around  Elizabeth I.34 In his 1576 General and rare memorials pertayning to the Perfect Arte of Navigation, Dee advocated  a policy of political and economic strengthening of England and imperial expansion through colonization and maritime supremacy into the New World.  Elizabeth might lay claim to these lands, Dee believed, through her mythical  descent from  King Arthur.35 In the frontispiece of the book Dee included a  figure of Britannia kneeling by the shore beseeching  Elizabeth I to protect her  empire by strengthening her navy. 36 Britannia is an ancient term for Great Britain  and also a female personification  of the island. In the second century, Roman Britannia came  to be personified         as a goddess            armed with  a trident and shield            and wearing, like the Greek  Athena, a helmet. Britannia is later depicted with a  lion at her feet,   the heraldic  symbol the Tribe of Judah. She is the personification of the goddess of the occult, represented in the  Kabbalah as the  Shekhinah. In France she is known as Lady  Liberty, in Switzerland as Helvetia, in Germany as Germania, in Poland as Polonia, and in Ireland as Hibernia.

  One of Dee’s staunchest supporters at court was Sir Christopher Hatton who was the main backer for Sir  Francis Drake’s world voyage. Sir  Francis Drake (1540-1596) was knighted by Elizabeth in 1581. His exploits were legendary, making him a hero to the English, but a pirate to the Spaniards to whom he was known as El Draco, “the Dragon.” He also carried out the second circum navigation of the world, from 1577 to 1580. Dee wrote the proposal for the circumnavigation that went before the Privy Council, with the aim of seeking the best homeward passage by   way of the Pacific. Drake was Vice-Admiral  of the English fleet against           Spanish Armada in 1588.    When Elizabeth had consulted  John Dee on how to best counter the advancing Spanish ships, he
advised her and Sir  Francis Drake to refrain from pursuit because the Spanish  fleet would         be broken up by storm.         When a storm did   destroy the  Armada and aided the English victory many courtiers were convinced that Dee had conjured it. Thus Dee became the model for the character of the sorcerer Prospero in Shakespeare’s The Tempest. But it was also believed Drake was a wizard and sold his soul to the Devil in exchange for success over the Spanish. It is claimed that he also organized several covens of  witches to work magically to raise the storm and prevent the invasion. 37

  Dee was a close friend of the spy and explorer Sir  Walter Raleigh (1554-1618). Raleigh rose rapidly in Queen  Elizabeth I’s favor and was knighted in 1585. Instrumental in the English colonization of North America, Raleigh was granted a royal patent to explore Virginia, which paved the way for future English settlements. In 1594, Raleigh heard of a “City of Gold” in South America and sailed to find           it, publishing an exaggerated account of his  experiences  in a book that contributed to the “El Dorado” legend. In his History of the World, Raleigh explains that for the most part the reputation of  magic was unfairly maligned, and quotes Pico   della Mirandola who called it an “art” that “few  understand and many reprehend, …as dogs bark at those they know not.” 38 Because, according to Raleigh “…as  Plato affirmeth, the          art of  magic is the art of worshipping God.” 39 He explains that in former times magicians were known as wisemen: to the Persians as  Magi, to the Babylonians as  Chaldeans, to Greeks as philosophers, and to  Jews Kabbalists. It was Abraham himself, claims Raleigh, who taught the Egyptians astrology which he learned from the Chaldeans. Most noble is the aspect of  magic he believes is the philosophy of nature, in other words science: “that which bringeth to light the inmost virtues,  and draweth them out of nature’s hidden bosom to human use.” In this camp  he lists alchemists like Albertus Magnus, Arnaldus de Villa Nova, Raymond  Lully and  Francis  Bacon, and ancients like  Zoroaster and  Apollonius of Tyana,  “who better understood the power of nature, and how to apply things that  work to things that suffer.”40

  Elizabeth did not marry, had no direct heir, and was therefore succeeded by  King James IV of Scotland, who became King  James I of England, the first Stuart monarch to preside over England. James did not share Elizabeth’s sympathies for  Dee, and when he appealed to the king for help in clearing his reputation      from   charges of conjuring devils, the King    ignored  him. Dee finally            died disgraced and in abject poverty in 1608. However, prior to his death, Dee had found his way to Prague, where he seems to have been the leader of not only an  alchemical movement, but one for religious reform. The objective of  Dee’s mission was referred to by a contemporary observer:

  A learned and renowned Englishman whose name was Doctor Dee came    to Prague  to see  the            Emperor  Rudolf    II  and  was  at first well   received by him; he predicted that a miraculous reformation would presently come about in the Christian world and would prove the ruin not only of the city of Constantinople but of Rome also. These predictions he did not cease to spread among the populace.41


  Rudolph II, the  Hapsburg ruler of the  Holy Roman Empire, had moved the capital from Vienna to Prague in  Bohemia, which became an occult oriented court, the center of  alchemical, astrological, and magical studies of all kind. Prague became a haven for those interested in seeking to study esoteric sciences, coming from all over Europe. There arrived   John Dee and his associate Edward Kelly, Johannes Kepler, and Giordano Bruno, the famous Renaissance heretic and occultist. Rudolph devoted vast sums of money to the building of his library, which comprised of the standard corpus of Hermetic works as well as the notorious  Picatrix.

  The emperor’s fascination with  Hermeticism was matched by his interest in the Jewish  Kabbalah. The reign of Rudolph was a golden age of Jewry in Prague. The anti-Jewish offensive of the papacy in the early thirteenth century little affected the conditions of  Bohemia’s Jewish community. In the sixteenth century, many Jewish refugees who were expelled from Moravia, Germany, Austria and   Spain came to Prague, where they studied  Kabbalah undisturbed. One of the most famous Jewish scholars of the time was Rabbi Judah Loew ben Bezalel, also known as Maharal, who had positive relations with Rudolf II. Rabbi            Loew  published more than fifty religious and philosophical books and became the focus of legends, as the mystical miracle worker who created the  Golem. This      was an artificial man made of clay brought to life    through magical combination of the sacred letters of the Hebrew alphabet, which acted as a  guardian over the  Jews.

  Through these influences, the  pursuit of alchemy reached its peak at the end of the sixteenth century and beginning of the seventeenth. Allusions to alchemy were found already in the  Zoharand it was certainly an important component of the  Kabbalah of medieval times. Astrology and  alchemy were two aspects of what is known as practical  Kabbalah, which according to Gershom  Scholem was understood to refer to all magical practices that developed in  Judaism from Talmudic times through to the Middle Ages. 42 As  a result, as David Stevenson describes:

  … alchemy has been described as the greatest passion of the age in Central Europe. The search for the philosopher’s stone was not, in the hands of the true alchemist, merely a materialistic search for ways of turning base metals into gold, but an attempt to achieve ‘the moral and  spiritual rebirth of mankind.’ 43

  The popularity of  alchemy was associated with the proliferation of witchcraft in general. And with the  Protestant  Reformation, Catholic authorities became much more ready to suspect heresy in any new ideas, including those of  Renaissance  humanism. Among the Catholics, Protestants, and secular leadership of the European Late Medieval to Early Modern period, fears about witchcraft rose to fever pitch, and sometimes led to large-scale  witch-hunts. The medieval  witch-hunt was instigated through the publication in 1484 of the Malleus Malefi carum, or “Hammer of the Witches,” written by two Dominican monks who were members of the Inquisition. Until then the medieval Church had dismissed the   witches as ignorant peasants suffering from delusions and  worshipping    pagan  gods, but  this  document significantly altered  that perception. According to it, witchcraft was a diabolical heresy which conspired to overthrow the Church and establish the kingdom of  Satan on Earth. Pope Innocent VIII agreed with the diagnosis and in 1486 issued a papal bull condemning witchcraft. The peak years of  witch-hunts in southwest Germany were from 1561 to 1630. During this period, the biggest  witch trials were held  in Europe,      notably in Trier (1581–1593), Fulda    (1603 –1606), Würzburg (1626            –1631) and    Bamberg (1626 – 1631).

  These German  witch-trials coincided with the rise of the  Rosicrucian movement, headquartered nearby in Heidelberg. Crisis had come upon the Protestant movement when  Rudolph II died in 1612, threatening the immunity enjoyed by esoteric circles among the Protestants of Germany. It was at this point that the German prince  Frederick V, Elector of the  Palatinate of the Rhine, began to be seen as the ideal incumbent to take the place of leader of the Protestant resistance against the Catholic  Hapsburgs. Frederick had powerful connections with French Protestants. Most importantly, in 1613, Frederick had married  Elizabeth  Stuart, daughter of King James of England, representing an important dynastic alliance, forged primarily through the efforts of  John Dee, to bolster the  Protestant movement.

  The movement was organized by the secret occult society of the  Rosicrucians, also known as the Order of the Rosy Cross, whose primary objective was the destruction of the Church of Rome, and its  Hapsburg supporters. A year after Frederick’s marriage to Elizabeth, and            largely as a result of Dee’s influence  in Germany, the notorious  Rosicrucian Manifestosmade their appearance. They were written, purportedly, by Johann Valentin  Andreae  (1586 –1654). The first of these was the Fama Frateritatis, an allegorical history of the  Rosicrucians, which appeared in 1614, and followed by a second tract a year later. The Manifestosclaimed to represent a combination of “Magia, Cabala, and Alchymia,”and purported to issue from a secret, “invisible” fraternity of “initiates” in Germany and  France. The Fama was part of a larger   Protestant treatise titled, The Universal and General  Reformation of the Whole Wide World; together with the Fama Fraternatis of the Laudable Fraternity of the Rosy Cross, Written to All the Learned and the Rulers of  Europe.Following the Fama Fraternatis, several lodges of the Order were founded whose members claimed that the  Rosicrucians had been active in the events that  surrounded the  Reformation, and the rise of the Lutheran movement in Germany  and Switzerland. It has been noted that  Luther used as his personal seal the  symbol of a rose and a cross.

  The origin of the  Kabbalistic notions of the  Rosicrucians in the  Middle East are acknowledged in the Manifestos. As recounted in the Fama Fraternitatis, a mystic known as Christian  Rosenkreutz supposedly founded the Rosy Cross brotherhood as early as the 1300s after studying in the  Middle East under various masters. Rosenkreuz was said to have traveled to Egypt , and upon his return to Europe, to have established a secret “House of the Holy  Spirit,” modeled on the  Ismaili “House of Wisdom” in Cairo. 44 A hundred and twenty years after  Rosenkreutz’ burial, the text relates, his vault was discovered by one of the brethren, which they took as a signal for them to declare themselves and invite the learned of Europe to join. As Christopher McIntosh explained, the image of the vault occurs in a book called the Aim of the Sage, which was circulated among the  Brethren of Sincerity , who would have been active around the time that Christian  Rosenkreutz was supposed to have made his journey to that region. 45

  According to occult historians, the  Rosicrucians acquired their symbol of the rose from the  Sufis .  Idries Shah, secretary and companion to   Gerald Gardner, the founder of the modern religion of witchcraft known as  Wicca, and close associate of the godfather of twentieth century  Satanism, Aleister Crowley, claimed the  Rosicrucians derived from the influence of the           Qadiriyya  Sufi order, to which       Ibn Taymiyyah belonged. Christian   Rosenkreutz would  have supposedly come into contact with the  Qadiriyya during his travels in the  Middle East.Jilani, the founder of the  Qadiriyya, was known as the “Rose of Baghdad.” The rose became the symbol of his order and a rose of green and white cloth with a six-pointed star in the middle is traditionally worn in the cap  of   Qadiriyya dervishes. According to  Idries Shah:

  Ignorance of this background is responsible for much useless speculation about such entities as the  Rosicrucians who merely repeated in their claims the possession of the ancient teaching which is contained in the parallel development called  alchemy, and which was also announced by Friar  Bacon [ Francis  Bacon], himself claimed as a  Rosicrucian and alchemist and illuminate. The origins of all these societies in  Sufism is the answer to the question as to which of them did  Bacon belong, and what the secret doctrine really was. Much other  Rosicrucian         symbolism is Sufic. 46

  Yates also suggests that the Manifestoes could have derived their influence from Isaac  Luria, the foremost rabbi and Jewish mystic in the community of Safed in  Ottoman  Palestine, in the sixteenth century. Isaac  Luria (1534 –            1572)            is  considered  the father  of the  New Kabbalah , his teachings being referred to as  Lurianic  Kabbalah.  Luria, who attained knowledge of esoteric matters through a “revelation of  Elijah,” expounded on the  Zohar, offering an important development in the  anthropomorphic doctrine of the  Kabbalah. Luria developed a notion of historical progress which became the basis of Western conceptions of history when it was inherited by the philosophers of the  Enlightenment. According to  Luria’s  Kabbalah, history represents the evolution of God coming to know himself through man. Mirroring a tradition found in  Islam,  Luria characterized God as having initially been an unknown treasure, and, wanting to be known, He created man. But where in  Islam it is understood that God created man to worship Him, according to  Luria, in creating man God created an “other” of Himself. At the outset, this “other,” or man, was unaware that he was God. Therefore, history is the progress of God, or man, coming to know himself. Initially, man would worship God as something outside of himself, but as he progressed intellectually, he would eventually arrive at the discovery that he himself is God.

  Tied  to this            idea   is the  notion of Redemption where history   is fulfilled with the coming of the  Messiah. Also crucial to  Luria’s conception of history is the exercise of  magic, which is considered to be a practice that demonstrates man’s “divine” potential. Ultimately, the Kabbalists secretly interpret the  Biblein reverse. Like the ancient Gnostics, it is  Lucifer who offers “ Liberty” to man by showing him to the   Tree of Knowledge, which represents the forbidden knowledge of   magic that he himself might become like a “god.” Therefore, the Kabbalist is to assist in the progress of history and the arrival of the   Messiah through the use of  magic.          Ultimately,   this            messiah will be the first man to come to the realization that he is God, and therefore worshipped as such.

  Luria’s ideas were transmitted to the  Rosicrucians and to European philosophy in general by way of Jacob  Boehme. Born in  Bohemia in 1575, Boehme came to articulate his version of the  Kabbalah for the Christian mystics of Europe. The man responsible for communicating  Lurianic            influence to  Boehme was his mentor, Balthasar  Walther.           In       1598–1599,           Walther had undertaken a pilgrimage to the Holy Land in order to learn about the intricacies  of the  Kabbalah from groups in Safed and elsewhere, including amongst the  followers of Isaac  Luria.

  The perceived importance of the marriage of Frederick and  Elizabeth Stuart was enshrined in occult and  alchemical symbolism in a  Rosicrucian tract called The  Chymical Wedding of Christian  Rosenkreutz. Frederick derived from the also important  House of Guelph (or Welf ), the older branch of the House of Este, a dynasty whose oldest known members lived in Lombardy in the ninth century AD. For this reason, it is sometimes also called Welf-Este. The Guelphs represented the lineage of the   Ottonian dynasty who intermarried with the Piasts of Poland, the Arpads of Hungary, the Tsars of Bulgaria and the  Hohenstaufen  dynasty.  Conrad III, the first          of the Hohenstaufens, was succeeded by his nephew Frederick I  Barbarossa.          It was Barbarossa            who first called       the Empire “holy,” and introduced the idea of its “Romanness,” as an attempt to justify its power independently of the Pope.  Barbarossa made several unsuccessful attempts to regain Italy. The supporters of Frederick became known as  Ghibellines. While campaigning in Italy to expand imperial power there, the Lombard League and  its supporters became known as Guelphs, “Guelph” being most probably an  Italian language form of Welf.

  Henry the Black,   duke   of Bavaria from 1120–1126, was the first of the three dukes of the  Guelph dynasty.  Henry the Proud was then the favored candidate in the imperial election against  Conrad III of the  Hohenstaufen. But Henry lost the election, as the other princes feared his power and temperament, and was dispossessed of his duchies by  Conrad III.   Henry the Lion then recovered his father’s two duchies: Saxony in 1142 and Bavaria in 1156. In 1168, he married Matilda, the daughter of Henry II of England and Eleanor of Aquitaine.

  In Carolingian times, the count palatine was merely the representative of the king in the high court of justice. In 937 AD, Otto the Great appointed a count palatine for Bavaria and several other duchies, with the Elector of Lorraine later  foremost in rank. In 1155 AD, after the death of its Elector, Frederick   Barbarossa  transferred the office to his half-brother Conrad, who united the lands       to his own possessions on the central Rhine, and made his residence at Heidelberg.   Thus the palatinate of Lorraine became the palatinate “of the Rhine.” Conrad’s  daughter, Agnes of  Hohenstaufen, married Henry I of Saxony and Bavaria, the  son of  Henry the Lion and Matilda, and their son Henry II became Elector of  the Palatinate of the Rhine in 1195 AD.

  Thus, the marriage of Frederick and Elizabeth united two important dynastic families that had been estranged from each other for centuries. Elizabeth Stuart, like her brother later King Charles I of England, belonged to the genetic haplogroup T, through their mother Anna of Denmark. The marker entered the family with  Barbara of Celje, Slovenia.   Barbara of Celje (1392-1451) married Sigismund, King of Hungary and later Holy Roman Emperor, from whom were descended the kings of Bohemia, making Elizabeth Stuart a distant relative of Rudolph II.

 Thus, the marriage of Frederick and Elizabeth united two important dynastic families that had been estranged from each other for centuries. Elizabeth  Stuart, like her brother later King  Charles I of England, belonged to the genetic haplogroup T, through their mother Anna of Denmark. The marker entered the family with  Barbara of Celje, Slovenia.   Barbara of Celje           (1392 –1451) married Sigismund, King of Hungary and later Holy Roman Emperor, from  whom were descended the kings of  Bohemia, making   Elizabeth  Stuart a distant  relative of  Rudolph II.

  Haplogroup T again suggests likely secret Jewish ancestry. T includes  slightly fewer than 10% of modern Europeans, and is currently found in high concentrations around the eastern Baltic Sea, Ireland and the west of Britain. It is also present as far east as the Indus Valley bordering  India and   Pakistan,  and as far south as the Arabian peninsula. It is also common in eastern and northern Europe.  Barbara of Celje belonged      specifically   to subclade  T2, whose distribution varies greatly with the ratio of subhaplogroup T2e to T2b, from a low in Britain and Ireland, to a high in  Saudi Arabia. Within subhaplogroup  T2e,  a very  rare  motif  is  identifed  among z Sephardic   Jews of Turkey and Bulgaria and suspected  Conversos from the New World. 48

  Barbara of Celje was instrumental in creating the   Order of the Dragon, founded by her husband Sigismund in 1431, to protect the royal family and of fight          the      “perfidious Enemy, and of the      followers of the ancient   Dragon,” being a reference to heretics and other anti-Christians, but primarily the Muslim Empire of the Ottomans. The creation of the  Order of the Dragon was part of a trend of founding chivalric orders during the fourteenth and early fifteenth centuries, often  dedicated to “crusades,” especially after the disaster of the battle of Nicopolis (1396). The battle had resulted in the rout of an allied  army of Hungarian, Wallachian, French, Burgundian, German and assorted
troops at the hands of an   Ottoman force, raising of the siege of the Danubian fortress of Nicopolis and leading to the end of the Second Bulgarian Empire.


  The  Order of the Dragon was modeled after the earlier Order of   St. George, a Hungarian monarchical order founded by King Carol Robert of Anjou in 1318. It adopted   Saint George as its patron saint, whose legendary defeat of a  dragon was used as a symbol for the military and religious ethos  of the order. The  Order of the Dragon adopted the red cross and the  Gnostic symbol of the ourobouros, or serpent—in this case a  dragon—biting its own tail. Included in the Order were a number of important vassals and nobles, like Vlad II Dracul (c. 1393-1447), father of Vlad III Dracul of Transylvania. The name  Dracula means “Son of Dracul,” and was a reference to being invested with the  Order of the Dragon. In the Romanian language, the word dracul can mean either “the  dragon” or, especially in the present day, “the devil.”

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