Search Results
7/8/2025, 11:44:37 PM
>>509867010
>When a German conspirator named Witt von Doring was interrogated by the Police in Bayreuth in 1824, he declared that true Carbonarism was concealed in the highest degrees of the “Rite of Misraim”. Witt von Doring’s statement indicates that at the apex of the cellular and pyramidal structure of the “Charbonnerie” was the Rite of Misraim. I have also stated in chapter three that the French authorities at the time used the term “Maconnerie noire”, black Masonry, when referring to the “Rite of Misraim” and its revolutionary intentions. The “Maconnerie noire” was led by those members who held the Arcana Arcanorum degrees, the superior degrees of the rite.
>"Allegedly, the “Rite of Memphis” was the (structural) starting-point of the founders, but they developed a new atheistic form of the rite. It is said that within this “Reformed Rite of Memphis” there was a “Gymnosophist lodge” which allegedly brought forth the founder of socialism, Pierre Leroux. Most of these Gymnosophist lodges later joined the “Philadelphes”." (Witzhard)
>In Italy, the ideals of the Carbonari were continued by a patriotic society that was founded in 1831, “Young Italy”. The movement was led by Giuseppe Mazzini (1805-1872) and consisted of many Italian exiles who lived in Marseille. One of these exiles was Giuseppe Garibaldi (1807-1882). The whole movement would become known as the “Risorgimento”. Members of this movement were behind the foundation of the “Totenbund” in Germany, which was dedicated to the “assassination of tyrants”. Mazzini and Garibaldi were the successors to the Italian Carbonari. Both men were Freemasons. It is often claimed that they re-organized the Carbonari to which they added the high degrees of Egyptian Masonry. In 1881, Garibaldi is said to have united the rites of Memphis with Misrai'm
>When a German conspirator named Witt von Doring was interrogated by the Police in Bayreuth in 1824, he declared that true Carbonarism was concealed in the highest degrees of the “Rite of Misraim”. Witt von Doring’s statement indicates that at the apex of the cellular and pyramidal structure of the “Charbonnerie” was the Rite of Misraim. I have also stated in chapter three that the French authorities at the time used the term “Maconnerie noire”, black Masonry, when referring to the “Rite of Misraim” and its revolutionary intentions. The “Maconnerie noire” was led by those members who held the Arcana Arcanorum degrees, the superior degrees of the rite.
>"Allegedly, the “Rite of Memphis” was the (structural) starting-point of the founders, but they developed a new atheistic form of the rite. It is said that within this “Reformed Rite of Memphis” there was a “Gymnosophist lodge” which allegedly brought forth the founder of socialism, Pierre Leroux. Most of these Gymnosophist lodges later joined the “Philadelphes”." (Witzhard)
>In Italy, the ideals of the Carbonari were continued by a patriotic society that was founded in 1831, “Young Italy”. The movement was led by Giuseppe Mazzini (1805-1872) and consisted of many Italian exiles who lived in Marseille. One of these exiles was Giuseppe Garibaldi (1807-1882). The whole movement would become known as the “Risorgimento”. Members of this movement were behind the foundation of the “Totenbund” in Germany, which was dedicated to the “assassination of tyrants”. Mazzini and Garibaldi were the successors to the Italian Carbonari. Both men were Freemasons. It is often claimed that they re-organized the Carbonari to which they added the high degrees of Egyptian Masonry. In 1881, Garibaldi is said to have united the rites of Memphis with Misrai'm
7/4/2025, 11:18:33 PM
>>509521935
>"The Lodge Theodore de Bon Conseil at Munich, where there were a few men with brains and hearts, was tired of being tossed about by the vain promises and quarrels of Masonry. The heads resolved to graft on to their branch another secret association to which they gave the name of the Order of the Illuminés. They modelled it on the Society of Jesus, whilst proposing to themselves views diametrically opposed".
>"The Lodge Theodore de Bon Conseil at Munich, where there were a few men with brains and hearts, was tired of being tossed about by the vain promises and quarrels of Masonry. The heads resolved to graft on to their branch another secret association to which they gave the name of the Order of the Illuminés. They modelled it on the Society of Jesus, whilst proposing to themselves views diametrically opposed".
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