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The quote attributed to Albert Pike, describing three world wars allegedly predicted in a letter dated August 15, 1871, is widely regarded as a hoax and not supported by any credible historical evidence.
Key Points: No original letter or manuscript has ever been produced or verified. The supposed letter to Giuseppe Mazzini has never been found in archives or mentioned in legitimate historical scholarship.
The earliest known references to this "Three World Wars" letter appear decades after Pikeโs death, notably in the writings of William Guy Carr, a Canadian conspiracy theorist, in his 1958 book "Pawns in the Game."
Carr admitted he never saw the original letter, and based his version on a secondary account from Cardinal Josรฉ Marรญa Caro Rodrรญguez in the 1920s and 1930s, and an alleged mention of it in the British Museum Library, which the British Museum has explicitly denied.
The language used in the quote (e.g., โNazism,โ โZionism,โ โIsraelโ) would have been anachronistic in 1871, as these concepts did not exist or were not widely used in those terms at that time.
Conclusion: There is no historical source for this quote. It is a modern fabrication circulated in conspiracy literature and falsely attributed to Albert Pike.
If you're researching Albert Pike's legitimate writings, such as "Morals and Dogma of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry" (1871), that book is publicly available and does not contain this letter or any mention of World War predictions.