Minggu, 01 Januari 2017

BLACK MAGIC WHITE SOLDIER PART 7

BLACK MAGIC WHITE SOLDIER ( RENASSAINCE & REFORMATION PART 3 )



   The Draculs were descended from the House of Basarab, a family which had an important role in the establishing of the Principality of Wallachia. The name “Basarab” likely originates from the Cumans or Pechenegs, a semi nomadic Turkic people of the  Central Asia, who gained control of Wallachia through the tenth and eleventh century, until defeated around 1091, when the Cumans of southern  Russia took control of the lands of Moldavia and  Wallachia.49  Vlad III Dracul was a Voivode of Wallachia, ruling mainly from 1456 to 1462, the period of the incipient   Ottoman conquest of the Balkans, and inspired the name of the vampire “Count  Dracula” in Bram  Stoker’s 1897 novel  Dracula. During his lifetime, Vlad III’s reputation for excessive and sadistic cruelty spread abroad, to Germany and elsewhere in Europe. The total estimated number of his victims range from 40,000 to 100,000. He acquired the name “The Impaler” for his preferred method of torture and execution of his enemies by impalement. Several German woodcuts show Vlad feasting in a forest of bodies on stakes, while a nearby executioner cuts apart other victims. It was reported that an invading   Ottoman army turned back in horror when it encountered thousands of rotting corpses on the banks of the Danube. It has also been said that in 1462 the Ottoman Sultan Mehmed II “the Conqueror” returned to Constantinople after being sickened by the sight of 20,000 impaled corpses outside Vlad’s capital in Wallachia.

  Following Sigismund’s death in 1437, the Order lost prominence. However, the prestigious emblem of the Order was retained on the coat of arms of several Hungarian noble families, the most prominent being Bathory, Bocskai and Rakoczi. The Bathory family produced one King of Poland, and began the rule Transylvania        as princes under     the Ottomans in 1571, and briefly under  Habsburg suzerainty until 1600. The Calvinist magnate of Bihar county, Stephen Bocskai, managed to obtain through the Treaty of Vienna (1606) religious liberty and recognition as independent sovereign prince of an enlarged Transylvania. Under Bocskai’s successors, most notably Gabriel Bethlen and  George I Rakoczi, Transylvania passed through a golden age. George II  Rakoczi then married Sophia Bathory, uniting the two families. However,  George II Rakoczi’s defeat in Poland, combined with the subsequent invasions  of Transylvania by the Turks, led to Transylvania becoming a powerless vassal of the  Ottoman Empire.

  The most infamous member of the Bathory family was Countess  Elizabeth Bathory (1560-1614), who is regarded as the worst female serial killer in history, who was said to bathe in the blood of virgins to retain her youth. She is therefore remembered as the “Blood Countess,” and compared with  Vlad III the Impaler. After her husband’s death, she and four collaborators were accused of torturing and killing hundreds of girls, with one witness attributing to them over 650 victims, though they were convicted for only 80. Elizabeth herself was neither tried nor convicted but, in 1610, she was imprisoned in Slovakia where she remained until her death four years later.

  Frederick was personally invested with the  Order of the Garter at Windsorby his future father-in-law King James, a week before the wedding. The king presented him with a jewel-studded pendant of  St. George and the Dragon. Thus Frederick was to accept to fight          the Dragon  of Wrong and the defense of the Monarch. 50 In arranging the marriage of  Frederick to  Elizabeth  Stuart it was hoped that her father, King James of England, who appeared to support the  Protestant cause, would come to the assistance of his son-in-law in the case of an uprising against the Catholic Church and its   Hapsburg supporters. In 1618 the largely  Protestant estates of  Bohemia rebelled against their Catholic King Ferdinand, triggering the outbreak of the Thirty Years’ War. Expecting that King James would come to their aid, in 1619, the  Rosicrucians granted the throne of  Bohemia to Frederick in direct opposition to the Catholic  Habsburg rulers. Frederick accepted the offer and was crowned on 4 November of that year. However, James opposed the takeover of  Bohemia from the Habsburgs, and Frederick’s allies in the  Protestant Union failed to support him militarily by signing the Treaty of Ulm in 1620. Frederick’s brief reign as King of  Bohemia ended with his defeat at the Battle of White Mountain in the same year. Imperial forces invaded the  Palatinate and Frederic had       to flee to Holland in 1622, where he lived the rest of his life in exile with Elizabeth and their children, mostly at The Hague, and died in Mainz in 1632. For his short reign of a single winter, Frederick is often nicknamed the “Winter King.”

  The last to be heard of the  Rosicrucian brotherhood was a brief scare in  France when, in 1623, a notice declared: “We, deputies of the principal College of the Brethren of the Rosy Cross, are staying visibly and invisibly in this town by the Grace of the Most High, to whom the heart of the Just turns.” Another placard offered membership “to all those who wish to enter our Society and Congregation.” 51 The posters though gave no further instruction as to how or where prospective members might apply to the Rosy Cross brotherhood, but they suggested indirectly that those worthy would be recognized and contacted in due course.

  An anonymous work also published in 1623, titled Horrible Pacts made between the Devil and the Pretended Invisible Ones, claims that thirty-six “deputies” of the Rosy Cross had convened in Lyons where they celebrated a grand  Sabbath. There the members prostrated themselves before an emissary of the devil, and swore they would renounce all the rites and sacraments of the Christian Church. In return,  Satan’s representative bestowed upon them magical powers, including the ability to transport themselves wherever they pleased, to speak with such eloquence and apparent wisdom that people would always be drawn to listen, to disguise themselves so cleverly that they would always appear to be natives of whatever place they found themselves, and to keep them forever supplied with  gold. Finally, the manifestos confirmed that six            missionaries had instantaneously been posted to Paris, where they went into hiding in a quarter of the city favored by Protestants. No more posters appeared, no applicants for membership made themselves known, and the  Rosicrucians apparently vanished from Paris.

  The legend inspired the chief exponents of Rosicrucianism, Robert  Fludd (1574-1637) and the German Jew Michel  Maier.  Fludd travelled for six years in  France, Germany,  Italy and  Spain, where he studied with Jewish Kabbalists and was visited by  Maier, Rudolf II’s personal physician. By his own account, Fludd also spent a winter in the Pyrenees studying theurgy with the  Jesuits. 52Fludd’s Apologiaopens with an invocation of the traditions of the prisca theologia, particularly “Mercurius Trismegistus,” or  Hermes Trismegistus, as the reputed  author Corpus Hermeticumand the supposed   Emerald Tablet, a work highly prized by the Arab alchemists.   Fludd defended the  Rosicrucians from charges of “detestable  magic and diabolical superstition.” The  Rosicrucian brothers, explains  Fludd, only used good kinds of  magic—Magia,  Kabbalah and Astrologia—that were mathematical and mechanical. The  magic of the  Kabbalah was holy, he argued, teaching how to invoke the sacred names of angels.

 In the  Rosicrucian  Enlightenment, Frances Yates argues that, in addition to the influence of  John Dee,  Bacon’s movement for the advancement of learning was also closely connected with the German  Rosicrucian movement, while Bacon’s  New  Atlantisportrays a land ruled by   Rosicrucians. 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. On 22 January 1621, in honour of Sir Francis Bacon’s sixtieth birthday, a select group of men assembled in the large banquet hall in York House without fanfare for what  has been described as a  Masonic banquet.53 Only those of the Rosicrosse  (Rosicrucians) and the Masons who were already aware of Bacon’s leadership role were invited. 54 On that day, a long-time friend of Bacon, the poet Ben  Jonson, best known for his satirical plays, Volpone, The Alchemist, and Bartholomew Fair, gave a  Masonic ode to Bacon.

  According to Robert  Fludd, following the collapse of the  Rosicrucian  movement in the  Palatinate, “those who were formerly called Brothers of the
Rosy Cross are today called the Wise, the name (of Rose Cross) being so odious to contemporaries that it is already buried away from the memory of man.” 55 During the Thirty Years War, Andrea had created a network of secret societies known as the Christian Unions. Their original purpose was to preserve what was  deemed threatened       knowledge,  especially the recent scientific advances, many     of which the Church deemed heretical. They also functioned as a refuge for  persons formerly associated with the defeated  Rosicrucians in Germany. Once in  England, these men, both English and European, formed the  Invisible College  in obvious allusion to  Bacon’s college of initiates suggested in his  New  Atlantis.

  Masonic tradition holds that  Bacon’s The  New  Atlantisprovided the original vision for the political development of America. The  Atlantis myth was first mentioned by  Plato, referring to a lost continent that had supposedly existed in  the Atlantic Ocean. Medieval European writers, receiving the tale from Arab geographers, believed the mythical island to have actually existed and later writers tried to identify it with an actual country. When America was discovered,  the Spanish historian Francesco Lopez de Gomara, in his General History of the  Indes, suggested that  Plato’s  Atlantis and the new continents were the same.  The theory was repeated by  Francis  Bacon, in his utopian romance, The  New Atlantis.   The     work  signifi cantly resembles     Johann Valentin  Andreae’s Description of the Republic of Christianopolis. In The  New  Atlantis, published in 1627, after the foundation of the English colonies in the Americas,  Bacon suggests that the continent of America was the former  Atlantis where there existed an advanced race during the Golden Age of civilization.  Bacon tells the story of a country ruled by philosopher-scientists in their great college called Solomon’s House. They possess a superior knowledge which was imparted to them by heavenly beings,  and have flying machines and ships which travel underthe sea.   

  Solomon’s House was modeled on the lines of the   Invisible College advocated in  Rosicrucian writings, and  Bacon’s books often featured title pages with what became  Masonic symbols, including the compass and the square, the two pillars of Solomon’s temple and the blazing triangle, and the eye of god. In a speech to Parliament,  Bacon alluded to the establishment of Solomon’s House in the American colonies as the blueprint for the country, and has been acknowledged as such by  Freemasons, who regard America as imparted with  an  important  destiny  in  fulfilling  Plato’s vision for a universal state.  Bacon played a leading role in creating the British colonies, especially in Virginia, the Carolinas, and Newfoundland in northeastern Canada. Francis expressed his views on this subject several times, claiming that the New Kingdom on Earth  which was Virginia exemplified the Kingdom of Heaven.

  The  Invisible College later became the  Royal Society, a learned society devoted to the study of the natural sciences, founded in 1660. They were influenced by  the   scientific method   of  the  “new  science,” as promoted by Francis Bacon in his New Atlantis. Therefore, paradoxically, the Western scientific tradition of empiricism, which today is understood as having been opposed to superstition and the belief in the supernatural, was wrought from the superstitions of the occult. The only “superstition” it opposed was traditional religion. Magicians,            as Pliny the   Elder            pointed out  in the first century AD,     have often adopted the pretense of science to justify their false teachings. Astrology became astronomy; alchemy became chemistry. In The Scientifi c Revolution and the Origins of Modern Science, John Henry remarked that, “a number of historians of science have refused to accept that something which they see as so irrational could have had any impact whatsoever upon the supremely rational pursuit of science. Their arguments seem to be based on mere prejudice, or on a failure to understand the richness and complexity of the magical tradition.” 56 Western science has its origin in what was known as Natural Philosophy, a branch of magic that sought to study the universe in order to discover, and later  manipulate, its occult properties.

  Virtually all the founding members of the  Royal Society were  Freemasons. It is not known exactly at what date  Freemasonry was created, as it is difficult to separate fact from legend. Following the establishment of the Scottish lodges, The first initiation into  Freemasonry on record is that of Elias   Ashmole, to have taken place in 1646.  Ashmole, an antiquarian and astrologer also interested in  alchemy, was a founding member of the  Royal Society.  Ashmole was also deeply interested in Rosicrucianism, having written a letter admiring the aims of the order and requesting admittance.

  Speculative masonry gradually dissociated from operative masonry with the rise in interest in classical architecture. Early  Masonic writings identify building and architecture with geometry, or “sacred geometry,” actually referring to the art of divination known as geomancy. In sacred geometry, symbolic and sacred meanings are ascribed to certain geometric shapes and certain geometric proportions. According to the Constitutions of  Freemasons, published by James Anderson in 1725, in “ignorant times” it was “condemn’d for conjuration.”  Masonic legend maintains that geometry was discovered before the Flood, and was taught to the Egyptians by Abraham. The invention of geometry is also attributed to  Hermes       Trismegistus,          who   is            identified with  Euclid. As Frances Yates explained:

  Thus the origins of geometry, or masonry, and therefore of  Freemasonry, recede into the most distant Hebraic or Egyptian past, and are surrounded by mystiques which clearly relate to the  Renaissance conception of ‘ancient wisdom’, of the prisci theologi, or pristine theologians, whence all true wisdom is derived. In the masonic mythology, the true ancient  wisdom was enshrined in the geometry of the Temple, built by Solomon  with the aid of Hiram Abif, King of Tyre.57

  As Marsha Keith Schuchard pointed out, by appropriating the  Kabbalistic speculations of the Jewish mason-guilds, the God of   Freemasonry became the Great Architect of the Universe, and the true ancient wisdom was enshrined in the geometry, the craft employed in the rebuilding of the  Temple of Solomon. 59 The original Temple was built with the aid of Hiram Abiff, whose martyrdom  forms the basis of the  Gnostic  dying-god ritual, whose imitation is designed to  represent the death and rebirth of the initiate.




THE YEAR 1666


  Members of the Invisible College were responsible in fanning millenarian ideas  among the English Puritans about the approach of the Messianic time that  became popular in the seventeenth century. Cromwell had led the forces of  Parliament against Charles I, son of King James I Stuart, in the English Civil Wars, which challenged his attempts to negate parliamentary authority, while simultaneously using his position as head of the English Church to pursue religious policies which generated the animosity of reformed groups such as  The Puritans. Charles was defeated in        the First Civil War          (1642 –45),  after which Parliament expected him to accept its demands for a constitutional  monarchy. Charles        I had   remained defiant by attempting to forge an alliance with Scotland and escaping to the Isle of Wight. Cromwell then ordered Colonel Pryde in 1648 to purge Parliament of those members who had voted in favor of a settlement with the King, known as “Pryde’s purge.” The remaining members were known as the “Rump Parliament.”

  The Cromwellian government was commonly regarded as a Rosicrucian circle. Samuel Butler (1612–1680), in     his satire of  the Restoration, Characters, tells of “the Brethren of the Rosy-Cross” as having attempted a misguided reformation of “their government.” A character in Butler’s other work Hudibras explains: “The Fraternity of the Rosy-Crucians is very like the Sect of the antient Gnostici who called themselves so, from the excellent Learning they pretend to,  although they were really the most ridiculous Sots of all Mankind.” 1 According  to Paul Benbridge, Cromwellians also referred to themselves as Rosicrucians,  such as Andrew Marvell  (1621– 1678),        a metaphysical poet          who sat in theHouse of Commons. The other prominent Rosicrucian-Cromwelllian was Marvell’s close friend, John Milton, who had a strong interest in Hermeticism.2

  Millenarian thinkers tended to show a very high regard for the Jewish religion and its causes, such that they are often referred to as “philo-Semitic.” Given that the era was one of much religious persecution against the Jews, who continued to be forbidden entry into England, and taking into account their tendency to follow interpretations that followed more closely to Kabbalistic ideas,    while  often  openly flaunting Christian orthodoxy, we should suppose that these millenarians were for the most part secret Jews, as their affiliations with leading      Jewish philosophers and   activists at the time would further confirm.

  Millenarian ideas included the redemption of the  Jews and their return to the land of  Israel from where they would rule the world. As Christopher Hill has indicated, in Millenarianism and Messianism in English Literature and Thought, 1650-1800,calculations of the precise date of the end of the world, based on the Book of Danieland Revelation, occupied some of the best mathematicians, from Napier in the late sixteenth century, to  Newton at the end of the seventeenth.  Consensus agreed that 1260 years should be added to the date the Antichrist established his power, which Protestants took to be the Pope. Various  calculations therefore settled on the years 1650-1656 for his destruction, the  gathering of the Gentiles, the conversion of the  Jews and their return to  Palestine. Other estimates offered the year 1666. 3

  The conversion of the  Jews and the spreading of  Christianity to the rest of the world were deemed necessary conditions for the millennium to occur. Another condition was the destruction of the  Ottoman Empire which controlled Palestine and under whose rule most  Jews lived. The conversion of the  Jews and the            “gathering  of the   Gentiles” also provided    justification  for British colonialism, as it could supposedly be furthered by conquests in the New World. The same  anticipation was found among the  Jews, especially in the Near East. The  Zohar was said to have predicted a return of the  Jews to  Palestine for 1648. 4

  The millenarians were also connected to the  Fifth Monarchy Men, who expected the imminent end of the fourth empire, and a new age, based on the traditional interpretation of the prophecies of the four kingdoms described in the  Book of Daniel. They supported  Cromwell’s Republic in the expectation that  it  was   a  preparation  for            the  “fifth monarchy”  that  would  succeed  the Babylonian, the Persian, the Greek, and Roman world empires. The last empire,  they concluded, would be established by the return of  Jesus as King of Kings and Lord of Lords to reign with his saints on earth for a thousand years. They also referred to the year 1666 and its relationship to the number 666, Number  of the Beast in the  Book of Revelation, identified with   the ultimate human despot to rule the world, indicating the end of earthly rule by carnal human beings,  but who would be replaced by the second coming of the  Messiah.

  A desire to better comprehend prophesies of the end times resulted in widespread interest in Jewish ideas on the subject. Most sought after was the knowledge of  Menasseh Ben  Israel, a  Kabbalist rabbi living in Amsterdam, who was devoted to the messianism of Isaac  Luria. 5 Unlike the persecution they suffered elsewhere,  Jews were allowed to keep their Jewish identity openly  in Amsterdam, where they achieved important commercial status.  Marranos began arriving in Amsterdam in 1590, eleven years after the Union of Utrecht (1579) and the creation of the United Provinces of the  Netherlands as a Protestant state. Here, too,  Jews would have to wait until 1615 before their settlement was officially authorized. As a result, Amsterdam became one of the greatest Jewish centers in the world in the seventeenth century, becoming  known as “the Dutch  Jerusalem.” The city was also a haven for persecuted  Jews from places other than  Spain and   Portugal, including   France in 1615 and  Eastern Europe after the Chmielnicki massacres in 1648.

  Jewish involvement in banking proper really begins with the activities of those  Conversos  who, fleeing the  Inquisition  in  Portugal and  Spain, settled in Antwerp, Hamburg, and Amsterdam, some remaining nominally Christian and some openly returning to  Judaism. In Antwerp, Jewish families of merchant bankers had commercial relations extending as far as the East Indies and Brazil. While they remained Catholics, those who emigrated to Hamburg and Amsterdam formed Sephardi communities. In Hamburg, which was destined to become one of the wealthiest and most productive Marrano centers, the settlement of  Jews  was not officially  authorized until  1612  and Jewish public worship not until 1650. In Hamburg they participated in the founding of the bank in 1619. Local  Jews were among its first shareholders, and   some  of them         were            financial agents for various North European courts, especially those of Denmark and Schleswig-Holstein. Most famous in Antwerp were Diego Teixeira de Sampaio, consul and paymaster general for  the Spanish government, and        his son Manuel who succeeded him as financial agent of Christina of Sweden. Manuel Teixeira was an outstanding member  of the Hamburg exchange and participated actively in the transfer of Western European subsidies to the German or Scandinavian courts.

  Millenarian beliefs were so prevalent that Manasseh, in his letter to Oliver Cromwell and the Rump Parliament, appealed to them as a reason to readmit Jews to England, saying, “[T]he opinions of many Christians and mine do concur  herein, that we both believe that the restoring time of our Nation into their native  country is very near at hand.” 6 Menasseh believed that the  Messianic age needed  as its certain precondition the settlement of  Jews in all parts of the known world.  Fired by this idea, he turned his attention to England where the  Jews had been  expelled since 1290. The Puritans were inclined to support the readmittance of  the  Jews whom they saw as victims of the persecution of their hated enemy, the  Catholic Church. Manasseh attracted the notice of many Puritan theologians  who also became convinced of the immanent arrival of the  Messiah.

  But it was especially several of the more mystically-minded of the Puritans  in England who had become interested in the question and Manasseh entered  into correspondence with several of them, including John  Dury. Dury, together with  Comenius, Bishop of the Bohemian Brethren, and Samuel  Hartlib, another acquaintance of  Menasseh, formed the core of a correspondence network called the  Hartlib Circle. The  Hartlib Circle devoted themselves to the cultivation of the “new philosophy,” referring euphemistically to their interest mainly in  alchemy. Like the  Invisible College, the  Hartlib Circle was modeled as a research institute described by Sir  Francis  Bacon as “Salomon’s House” in his New  Atlantis. Not known in his own day for his published writings,   Hartlib was virtually forgotten by historians, until the rediscovery of an archive of his personal papers. The plan for  Andreae’s Societas Christianawas already set forth in two works that were believed to have been lost until they were discovered  recently among the  Hartlib papers.

  Hartlib had come to England in 1628, after the Catholic conquest of Elbing in Polish Prussia, as part of the disruptions of the Thirty Years War.

  Hartlib had been the head of a mystical group like   Andreae’s Christian Unions, pursuing  Rosicrucian ideals. When he arrived in England, he collected around him refugees from Poland,  Bohemia and the  Palatinate.  Elizabeth  Stuart, widow of   Frederick V, Elector Palatine and sister of King  Charles I, was the chief patron of  Hartlib, Dury and  Comenius. Dury, who was an enthusiastic supporter of  Hartlib’s projects, was also closely associated with  Elizabeth Stuart and with her adviser Sir Thomas Roe, and took an active interest, as did  Hartlib, in the restoration of her son, Charles Louis to the  Palatinate.  Theodore Haak who was  Comenius’ agent in England was also a refugee of  the  Palatinate. 7

  Comenius met with the defeated  Frederick V in The Hague to share with him prophecies outlined in a work called Lux in Tenebris (“Light in Darkness”). It contained the pronouncements of three prophets, one of whom named Christopher Kotter who promised the future restoration of Frederick to the Kingdom of  Bohemia. Kotter’s visions were apparently brought to him by “angels” who would suddenly make themselves visible, show him a vision and then disappear.   Comenius named  Andreae as one of those who inspired him towards the reform of education. Considered the father of modern education, Comenius was one of the earliest champions of universal education, a concept eventually set forth in his book Didactica Magna. 8 The  Comenius Medal, a  UNESCO award, honors outstanding achievements  in the fields      of education research and innovation.

   Johann Valentin  Andreae recognized   Comenius as his heir and encouraged him to carry on his reforming   Rosicrucian ideas.  Comenius was concerned with founding an “ Invisible College,” which he envisioned as a network and intellectual meeting-ground for people of science and learning all over the world. Hans Schick said of   Comenius:

  We have in him not only the middleman between the father of  Rosicrucian thought, J. V.  Andreae, and those who stood as godparents at the birth of English  Freemasonry, such as  Hartlib, Dury and others, but also the bridge from  Rosicrucian ideology to organized  Freemasonry in general. He received the torch from  Andreae and carried it to the British Isles.9

  The  Hartlib papers revealed his personal correspondence to have been extensive. It ranged from Eastern and Central as well as Western Europe, Great Britain and Ireland and New England. Among the extensive network of the Hartlib Circle were  John Milton, author of Paradise Lost, and   John Winthrop, one of the leading       figures in the founding of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, The first major settlement in New England after Plymouth Colony. Winthrop was also an alchemist and follower of   John Dee. 10 Comenius would later turn down an invitation from Winthrop to become president of Harvard University, which had been founded in 1636.

  John Dury introduced Manasseh to the views of Antonio de Montesinos, the Portuguese traveler who brought back reports that some of the  Lost Tribes were living among the natives of the Andes in South America. In response to this,  Menasseh wrote on 23 December 1649: “…I think that the Ten Tribes live not only there… but also in other lands scattered everywhere; these never did come back to the Second Temple and they keep till this day still the Jewish Religion…” 11 Manasseh therefore wrote a treatise on the  Lost Tribes, and in support of the readmission of the  Jews into England published  his Esperança de  Israel(“Hope of  Israel”).

  The  millenarian prophecies had been mostly illegal and regarded as subversive until they began to be deliberately promoted by  Cromwell’s parliament. Popkins describes their publishing of scholarly works discussing the coming of the millennium as “shrewd policy,” in their struggle against the notion of the divine right of kings. By regarding   Charles I and his advisors as supporters   of the Pope, they justified that   good  Christians ought to fight for their overthrow. The excitement fanned by the Parliamentarian publicists grew as millenarians became more involved in politics. A pamphlet of 1648 had referred critically to “all these Cabbalistical Millenarians and Jew restorers.” 12

  Cromwell was also closely acquainted with the sizeable number of Marrano merchants settled in London, who formed there a secret congregation, at the head of which was Antonio Fernandez Carvajal. When their group at Rouen was denounced to the authorities as secret  Jews,    many of them eventually fled to London. All were living nominally as Catholics, attending mass regularly in the Chapel of the French or  Savoy Ambassador. They conducted extensive business with the Levant, East and West Indies, Canary Islands, and Brazil, but particularly with the  Netherlands,  Spain, and   Portugal. By forming an important link in the network of trade spread throughout the Spanish and Portuguese territories by the  Marranos, their position enabled them to provide Cromwell important information as to the plans both of Charles  Stuart in Holland and of the Spanish in the New World.

  Lord Alfred Douglas, who edited Plain English, in an article of September 3, 1921, explained how his friend, Mr. L.D. Van Valckert of Amsterdam had come into possession of a missing volume of records of the Synagogue of Muljeim, which contained records of letters written to, and answered by the Directors of the Synagogue. A letter written to the Directors of the Synagogue of Muljeim, dated June 16, 1647, had stated: “From O.C. [Olivier  Cromwell]  to Ebenezer Pratt:          In return for financial support will advocate       admission of Jews to England. This however impossible while Charles living. Charles cannot be executed without trial, adequate grounds for which do not at present exist. Therefore advise that Charles be assassinated, but will have nothing to do with arrangements for procuring an assassin, though willing to help in his escape.”  On July 12, 1647,            Ebenezer Pratt replied,    “Will   grant  financial aid as soon as Charles removed, and  Jews admitted. Assassination too dangerous. Charles should be given an opportunity to escape. His recapture will then make trial and execution possible. The support will be liberal, but useless to discuss terms until trial commences.” 13 Eventually King Charles surrendered          and finally,  in 1649, he was tried and beheaded. With no king to consider, Parliament established an interim period of Commonwealth. In 1653, Oliver  Cromwell terminated both his Parliament and the Commonwealth and, appointing himself Lord Protector, ruled by military force alone.

  In 1954,  Menasseh Ben  Israel met in  Belgium with  millenarian Isaac  La Peyrère and  Queen Christina of Sweden, an avid student of the occult. Michel Le Bion, her Amsterdam-based art consultant, was rumored to be a  Rosicrucian. 14 Christina had established numerous important relationships with  Jews, also hoping to open Sweden to Jewish immigration. Her doctor was a Jew, Benedict de Castro, who combined  Kabbalah with physiological research. Her collection included  John Dee’s Monas Hieroglyphica, parts of a   Picatrixand a Latin version of the Sefer-ha-Raziel, a book of angelic  magic. Susanna Akerman argues that the Sefer-ha-Razielwas the De Magia Cabalistica of   Menasseh and that it was the alleged source book of the  Rosicrucian movement. 15

  La Peyrère  (1596 –1676) was  a  Kabbalistic messianist born into a Huguenot  family       in Bordeaux,     and possibly of Marrano Jewish descent. He was influenced by Thomas  Hobbes, a friend of  Francis  Bacon and  Ben  Jonson, and was an influence on     Baruch Spinoza. The abdicated  Queen Christina of Sweden paid for the publication of his Praeadamitae in 1655. In Prae-Adamitae,  La Peyrère argued that Paul’s words in his Epistle to the Romansshould be interpreted such  that “if Adam sinned in a morally meaningful sense there must have been an Adamic law according to which he sinned. If law began with Adam, there must have been a lawless world before Adam, containing people.” 16 Thus, according to  La Peyrère there must  have been  two  creations:          first the        creation of the Gentiles and then that of Adam who was father of the  Hebrews. The existence of  pre-Adamites,  La Peyrère argued, explained Cain’s life after Abel’s murder, which according to Genesisinvolved the taking of a wife and the building of a city. But Prae-adamitaewas banned and burned everywhere for its heretical claims that Adam was     not the first  man, that the Bible is not the history of mankind, but only the history of the  Jews, that the Flood was a local event, that Moses did not write the Pentateuchand that no accurate copy of the  Bible exists.

  La Peyrère also served as secretary to the Prince of Condé. It has since emerged that, in fact: “Condé,  Cromwell and Christina were negotiating to create a theological-political world state, involving overthrowing the Catholic king of   France, among other things.” 17 La Peyrère, who is sometimes regarded as the father of  Zionism, argued that the  Jews are about to be recalled, that the Messiah is coming for them, that they should join the Christians, and with the king of  France rebuild Zion. 18 After reading  La Peyrère’s Du Rappel des Juifs, Menasseh rushed back to Amsterdam where he excitedly told a gathering of millenarians at the home of John Dury’s schoolmate and friend, Peter  Serrarius, that the coming of the Jewish   Messiah was imminent. La Peyrère also argued that the  Messiah would join with the king of  France, meaning the Prince of Condé, not Louis XIV, to liberate the Holy Land, rebuild the Temple and set up a world government of the  Messiah with the king of  France acting as regent.  Then the  Jews will rule the world from  Jerusalem.

  Menasseh departed for England to present a petition to  Cromwell. In England, where he stayed between 1655 and 1657, he met often with leading English thinkers, including two founding members of the   Royal Society, Robert Boyle and John Dury’s son-in-law Henry  Oldenburg, as well as Ralph Cudworth, and  Henry More of the Cambridge Platonists, to discuss theological and philosophical topics. The  Hartlib papers show that both   Hartlib and Dury were very much involved in the translation of  Menasseh’s books, and in the events which culminated in his trip to England to negotiate with   Cromwell. Dury had been managing the discussions and helped  Menasseh explain that It was necessary to fulfill all the prophecies before the messianic age would            begin. 19 Cromwell summoned the most notable statesmen, lawyers, and theologians of the day to the Whitehall Conference in December of 1655. The chief result was the declaration that “there was no law which forbade the  Jews’ return to England.” Though nothing was done to regularize the position of the  Jews, the door was opened to their gradual return.

  Cromwell  had  been  moved    to  sympathy  with the  Jewish cause   chiefly because he foresaw the importance for English commerce of the presence of the Jewish merchant princes, some of whom had already found their way to London. As Richard Christopher Hill explained:

  The  Jews’ potential usefulness to the development of a forward colonial and commercial foreign policy was an additional reason for English interest in them. As early as 1643  Jews in the  Netherlands were said to be financing Parliament. Their  command of bullion was enormous;            they controlled the Spanish and Portuguese trades; the Levant trade was largely in their hands; they were interested in developing commerce with the East and West Indies. To governments they were useful as contractors and as spies. If the ambitious scheme for Anglo-Dutch union put forward by the Commonwealth in 1661 had come off, then the  Jews in the  Netherlands would have been taken together with the  Dutch colonial empire and its trade. When the Dutch refused to be incorporated into the British Empire, Dutch merchants were to ally  excluded from all British possessions by the Navigation Act of 1651.  This development made many  Jews in the  Netherlands—especially those trading with the West Indies—anxious to transfer to London: and it redoubled the interest of the English government in attracting them there. The policy paid off: Jewish intelligence helped the preparations  for  Cromwell’s Western Design of 1655. 20

  The Western  Design was  a  part of   the Anglo-Spanish  War,   a conflict between the English Protectorate of Oliver  Cromwell and  Spain, between 1654  and 1660. It involved an attack on the Spanish West Indies that was intended to secure a base of operations in the Caribbean from which to threaten trade and treasure routes in the Spanish         Main, thus weakening Catholic influence in the New World. In 1655,  Cromwell sent an expedition led by Sir  William Penn, and General Robert Venables, who invaded Spanish territory in the West Indies with the objective of capturing Hispaniola. However, the assault failed because the Spanish had improved their defenses in the face of Dutch attacks earlier in the century. Despite various subsequent successes, such as an established presence in Jamaica,  Cromwell saw the operation as a general failure, and Venables and Penn were imprisoned therefore in the Tower of London on their arrival on England.

  When  Cromwell died in 1658, his despotic legacy fell to his son Richard who did not possess his father’s ruthlessness, with the result that it was not long before Charles II the late king’s son was invited back to rule as King of England. The “Restoration” of   Charles II   Stuart to the throne thus occurred in 1660. In that same year, the  Royal Society was established and  Charles II became its patron. The foundation of the  Royal Society was the contacts and correspondents of the  Hartlib Circle. Theodor Haak of the  Palatinate is credited with having started the meetings which led to the foundation of the  Royal Society. He was joined by John Wilkins, an author of a book based on ideas of  John Dee and alchemist Robert  Fludd, and later chaplain to Prince Elector of the  Palatinate in London. 21 Another founding member was Henry  Oldenburg, who was also  a close friend of fellow  Royal Society and  Hartlib Circle member, Robert Boyle. Both had met with  Menasseh on his visit to London. In a dedication, Comenius addressed the members of the  Royal Society as “ Illuminati,” thus identifying  them as a realization of the intellectual college he envisions in his book, the Way of Light. Deliberately excluded from the Society’s areas of study were typical university disciplines of metaphysic, divinity, morals, grammar, logic and rhetoric. Instead, studies were strictly secular, focusing on manufacture, machines and inventions and also the recovery of ancient skills and secrets. “It seems likely,” explains Christopher McIntosh, “that the  Royal Society, founded in 1660, was an attempt to realize in practical terms the  Rosicrucian ideals of a brotherhood of learning and enlightenment which would help usher in the  kind of Utopia visualized by  Bacon,  Andreae,   Comenius, and others.” 22

  As a result of their  millenarian expectations, several members of the Royal Society were much concerned with the advent of the notorious false messiah,  Sabbatai Zevi. On his visit to   Cromwell in 1655,  Menasseh had been accompanied by Raphael Supino, a leading member of the Jewish community of Livorno,  Italy, who would also become a follower of  Sabbatai Zevi. 23 Sabbatai Zevi was born in Smyrna, in  Ottoman  Greece, in 1626. Although as a  child Zevi was enrolled in a Yeshiva to study the Talmud, he was fascinated by mysticism and the  Kabbalah ,    as influenced by Rabbi Isaac Luria. When he was about twenty years of age, Sabbatai would sink alternately into deep depression or become filled with ecstasy during which he would break Judaic laws, like eating non-kosher food, speak the forbidden name of God and commit other  “holy sins.” At age 22, in 1648, Sabbatai started declaring to his followers in Smyrna that he was the  Messiah. In order to prove this claim he started to pronounce the Tetragrammaton in Hebrew, an act which  Judaism emphatically prohibited to all but the Jewish high priest in the Temple in  Jerusalem on the Day of Atonement.


  Sabbatai Zevi’s   Messianic pretensions  finally led the Rabbis  to  place          him and his followers under a ban of cherem, a type of excommunication in  Judaism. Sabbatai claimed that since he as messiah arrived, the laws of the Torah were no longer applicable. His new prayer was, “Praised be He who permits the forbidden.” Sabbatai abolished the laws concerning sexual relationships, and eventually declared that all of the thirty-six major biblical sins were now permitted and, much like the Gnostics before him, instructed some of his followers that it was  their duty to perform such sins in order to hasten the Redemption.

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