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7/9/2025, 12:05:46 AM
>>509868340
>The contemporary “Grande Loge Francaise de Misraim” states that it is almost certain that the Bedarride brothers, being Jewish themselves, were also attracted to these Jewish lodges. The French Military Lodges in the occupied territories of Italy are said to have attracted a lot of Italian Jews. One such lodge was LES AMIS DE L’UNION PARFAITE, founded by officers of the French garrison at Livorno. Many Jews were members of this lodge. It is possible that the Bedarrides used to frequent this Italian Jewish Cabalistic circle and found there an excellent source on which they based their vision towards certain mystic higher degrees
>The “Ordre Maçonnique de Misraim” recruited eminent aristocratic personages as well as republicans and Bonapartists, and even the revolutionary Carbonari. Among them such men as Pierre Joseph Briot, member of a republican society which was commonly referred to as “Philadelphes” (1), or Charles Teste, the younger brother of the Baron Franqois Teste, lieutenant Philippe Buonarroti, the founder of the “Sublimes Maitres Parfaits” (the first, what can be termed, international political secret society. The S.M.P. only admitted Freemasons) and co-author, with Babeuf, of the “Manifesto of the Equals”. Briot was a proponent of a united and independent Italy. It is stated that he was involved in the establishment of the first Carbonari lodges. He apparently was “invited to Naples by Joseph Napoleon where he met Lucien Bonaparte and Saliceti. This may be the origins of the first Carbonari lodges in 1808. Many of the French officials in Naples supported and encouraged the growth of local patriotism
>The contemporary “Grande Loge Francaise de Misraim” states that it is almost certain that the Bedarride brothers, being Jewish themselves, were also attracted to these Jewish lodges. The French Military Lodges in the occupied territories of Italy are said to have attracted a lot of Italian Jews. One such lodge was LES AMIS DE L’UNION PARFAITE, founded by officers of the French garrison at Livorno. Many Jews were members of this lodge. It is possible that the Bedarrides used to frequent this Italian Jewish Cabalistic circle and found there an excellent source on which they based their vision towards certain mystic higher degrees
>The “Ordre Maçonnique de Misraim” recruited eminent aristocratic personages as well as republicans and Bonapartists, and even the revolutionary Carbonari. Among them such men as Pierre Joseph Briot, member of a republican society which was commonly referred to as “Philadelphes” (1), or Charles Teste, the younger brother of the Baron Franqois Teste, lieutenant Philippe Buonarroti, the founder of the “Sublimes Maitres Parfaits” (the first, what can be termed, international political secret society. The S.M.P. only admitted Freemasons) and co-author, with Babeuf, of the “Manifesto of the Equals”. Briot was a proponent of a united and independent Italy. It is stated that he was involved in the establishment of the first Carbonari lodges. He apparently was “invited to Naples by Joseph Napoleon where he met Lucien Bonaparte and Saliceti. This may be the origins of the first Carbonari lodges in 1808. Many of the French officials in Naples supported and encouraged the growth of local patriotism
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