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Satanic Iluminati Bloodlines

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Satanic Iluminati Bloodlines

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CONTENTS

http://www.theforbiddenknowledge.com/hardtruth/the_satanic_bloodli

nes.htm

INTRODUCTION TO THE SATANIC ILLUMINATI BLOODLINES

CHAPTER 1 REYNOLDS

CHAPTER 2 ASTORS

CHAPTER 3 THE KENNEDYS

CHAPTER 4 THE ROCKEFELLERS

CHAPTER 5 THE ROTHSCHILDS

CHAPTER 6 HITLER’S CONNECTION WITH ROTHSCHILD?

CHAPTER 7 ALBERT PIKE’S VISION FOR GLOBAL

DOMINION

CHAPTER 8 THE MEROVINGIAN BLOODLINE

CHAPTER 9 THE BUNDY BLOODLINE

CHAPTER 10 THE DUPONTS

CHAPTER 11 THE COLLINS BLOODLINE

CHAPTER 12 THE FREEMAN BLOODLINE

CHAPTER 13 THE DISNEY BLOODLINE

CHAPTER 14 THE MCDONALDS

CHAPTER 15 THE KRUPPS

CHAPTER 16 THE VAN DUYN BLOODLINE

CHAPTER 17 THE ONASSIS BLOODLINE

CHAPTER 18 THE RUSSELL BLOODLINE

CHAPTER 19 THE LI BLOODLINE

CHAPTER 20 CALCULAT

EXPLANATIONS OF THE GREAT SEAL

INTRODUCTION TO THE SATANIC ILLUMINATI BLOODLINES

The Illuminati

The Illuminati is the name of many groups, modern and historical, real and fictitious,

verified and alleged. Most commonly, however, The Illuminati refers specifically to the

Bavarian Illuminati, perhaps the least secret of all secret societies in the world, described

below. Most use refers to an alleged shadowy conspiratorial organization which controls

world affairs behind the scenes, usually a modern incarnation or continuation of the

Bavarian Illuminati. Illuminati is sometimes used synonymously with New World

Order.

Origins

Since Illuminati literally means “enlightened ones” in Latin, it is natural that several

unrelated historical groups have identified themselves as Illuminati. Often, this was due

to claims of possessing gnostic texts or other arcane information not generally available.

The designation illuminati was also in use from the 14th century by the Brethren of the

Free Spirit, and in the 15th century was assumed by other enthusiasts who claimed that

the illuminating light came, not by being communicated from an authoritative but secret

source, but from within, the result of exalted consciousness, or "enlightenment".

Alumbrados of Spain. To the former class belong the alumbrados of Spain. The

historian Marcelino Menéndez y Pelayo found the name as early as 1492 (in the form

iluminados, 1498), but traced them to a Gnostic origin, and thought their views were

promoted in Spain through influences from Italy. One of their earliest leaders, born in

Salamanca, a labourer's daughter known as La Beata de Piedrahita, came under the notice

of the Inquisition in 1511, as claiming to hold colloquies with Jesus and the Virgin Mary;

some high patronage saved her from a rigorous denunciation. (Menéndez Pelayo, Los

Heterodoxos Españoles, 1881, vol. V.). Ignatius Loyola (founder of Jesuit

Order) while studying at Salamanca in 1527, was brought before an ecclesiastical

commission on a charge of sympathy with the alumbrados (Spanish Illuminatis), but

escaped with an admonition.

Illuminés Of France

The movement (under the name of Illuminés) seems to have reached France from Seville

in 1623, and attained some following in Picardy when joined (1634) by Pierce Guerin,

curé of Saint-Georges de Roye, whose followers, known as Gurinets, were suppressed in

1635. A century later, another, more obscure body of Illuminés came to light in the south

of France in 1722, and appears to have lingered till 1794, having affinities with those

known contemporaneously in Britain as 'French Prophets', an offshoot of the Camisards.

Rosicrucians

A different class were the Rosicrucians, who claimed to originate in 1407, but rose into

notice in 1614 when their main text Fama Fraternitatis appeared; a secret society, that

claimed to combine the possession of esoteric principles of religion with the mysteries of

alchemy. Their positions are embodied in three anonymous treatises of 1614 (mentioned

in Richard and Giraud, Dictionnaire universel des sciences ecclésiastiques, Paris 1825),

as well as in the Confessio Fraternitatis of 1615. Rosicrucians also claimed heritage

from the Knights Templar.

Martinists

Later, the title Illuminati was applied to the French Martinists which had been founded

in 1754 by Martinez Pasqualis, and to their imitators the Russian Martinists, headed

about 1790 by Professor Schwartz of Moscow; both were occultist cabalists and

allegorists, absorbing eclectic ideas from Jakob Boehme and Emanuel Swedenborg.

The Bavarian Illuminati

A movement of freethinkers that were the most radical offshoot of The Enlightenment —

whose adherents were given the name Illuminati (but who called themselves

"Perfectibilists") — was founded on May 1, 1776 by Jesuit-taught Adam Weishaupt

(d. 1830), who was the first lay professor of canon law. The group has also been

called the Illuminati Order, the Order of the Illuminati, and the Bavarian

Illuminati.

In the conservative state of Bavaria, where the progressive and enlightened elector

Maximilian III Joseph von Wittelsbach was succeeded (1777) by his conservative heir

Karl Theodor, and which was dominated by the Roman Catholic Church and the

aristocracy, such an organization did not last long before it was suppressed by the powers

of the day. In 1784, the Bavarian government banned all secret societies, including the

Illuminati and the Freemasons. The structure of the Illuminati soon collapsed, but while

it was in existence many influential intellectuals and progressive politicians counted

themselves as members. Its members were supposedly drawn primarily from Masons and

former Masons, and although some Masons were known to be members there is no

evidence that it was supported by Freemasons

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