Lies being taught;
Causes of French revolution;
1. An unmanageable national debt.
2. Food scarcity in the years immediately
before the revolution
3. Peasants resented Royal absolutism and
extravagancy.
The Illuminati simply wanted to abolish all
forms of ordered government, patriotism, religion and the family to finally set
up a world government where they owned and controlled everything.
Upright people would never work for such an
abhorrent program, so they marketed the words: “Liberty, Equality and
fraternity”
The Illuminati used ideologies of Nihilism,
Liberalism, Fascism and to market new ideologies of Marxism and Communism,
whereas they themselves were perfectly independent of all ideology.
A conference was held at Mayer Amschel
Rothschild's castle in Wilhelmsbad on the 16th July 1782, where the freemasons
and Illuminati forged a complete alliance. In this way, the leading secret
societies began a closer co-operation with the Illuminati. Thereby, Weishaupt
gained no less than three million tools to work with. In time, the Illuminati
were to bring death and suffering to hundreds of millions of people.
At the Masonic conference in Wilhelmsbad, a
decision to murder Louis XVI of France and Gustavus III of Sweden was made.
(Charles de Hericault, "La Revolution", p. 104.)
The initiative for this conference was
Jewish. (A. Cowan, "The X Rays in Freemasonry", London, 1901, p.
122.) A decision to murder emperor Leopold of Austria was also made at the conference.
He was poisoned on the 1st March 1792 by the Jewish Freemason Martinowitz.
Gustavus III of Sweden was murdered the same month.
The Freemasons had gathered in Lyon in 1778
to discuss the coming revolution. Further congresses were held in Paris in 1785
and 1787 and in Frankfurt am Main (where Rothschild had his bank) in 1786. The
Illuminati sought control over the press and began placing their infiltrators
behind the scenes as "experts". The Order also wanted to influence
schools. See source
Honre-Gabriel Riquetti, Comte de Mirabeau, a
leading revolutionary, indeed espoused ideals which were identical with Adam
Weishaupt, founder of Bavarian Illuminized Masonry. In personal papers Mirabeau
called for the overthrow of all order, all laws, and all power to "leave
the people in anarchy." He said the public must be promised "power to
the people" and lower taxes but never given real power "for the
people as legislators are very dangerous as they only establish laws which
coincide with their passions." He said the clergy should be destroyed by
"ridiculing religion."
First phase:
At the Assembly of Notables in 1787,
Philippe was most vocal anti-royalist. Louis Philippe II, Duke of Orléans
the French Grand Master of
French Freemasons is accused of buying and hoarding all the grain thereby
raising its price. On top of it French debt is rising due to support to
American war of independence, interest has to be paid to Jewish Bankers and
treasury is empty. King proposes to raise taxes.
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June-July
1788:
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Insurrection
at Grenoble. Bernadotte, who was accused of firing the first shot or shot
that killed a civilian leading to public outcry against King was a Freemason.
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8th
August 1788:
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Louis
XVI convokes État-général to
hear grievances.
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5th
May 1789:
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Opening
of the État-général at
Versailles.
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17th
June 1789:
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Representatives
of the tiers état form
a National Assembly swearing not to leave until a new constitution is
established. In the Second Estate Louis
Philippe II, Duke of Orléans the Grand Master of the Masonic Grand Orient de
France headed the liberal minority under the
guidance of Adrien Duport, and led forty-seven noblemen and fellow freemasons
who seceded from their own estate and joined the Third Estate. (wiki)
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23rd
June 1789:
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King
rejects Resolutions of the tiers
etat.
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9th
July 1789:
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National
Assembly declares itself Constituent Assembly.
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12th
July 1789:
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Necker
is dismissed. 50,000 citizens arm themselves with pikes and form National
Guard.
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14th
July 1789:
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Armed
citizens storm and capture the Bastille. The
Royal court accused Louis Philippe II, Duke of Orléans
the Grand Master of the
Masonic Grand Orient de France with able help of fellow Freemasons of being
the master minds behind storming of the Bastille. On
July 14, 1789, after four hours of combat, the insurgents seized the Bastille
prison, killing Marquis Bernard de Launay and several of his guard. The
Parisians released only seven prisoners (some say five), four forgers, two
lunatics, and a sexual offender –Their names and backgrounds remain unknown
till today. What led to their freedom, who wanted it and what was their role
past and future in French revolution? Why was it so important to free these
seven/five prisoners or any particular one of them remains a secret. prévôt
des marchands (roughly, mayor) Jacques de Flesselles who may have known these
facts was conveniently assassinated en route to an ostensible trial at the
Palais Royal, which was under control of Louis Philippe II and thus removed
from the scene effectively silencing him to speak at trial.
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15th
July 1789:
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Lafayette
who led French army in American revolution and a freemason was appointed
Commander of National Guard.
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17th
July 1789:
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‘Great
Fear’ begins as peasants revolt across France.
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5-11
August 1789:
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National
Assembly decrees abolition of feudalism.
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26th
August 1789:
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National
Assembly decrees Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen.
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September
1789:
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The
Louis Philippe II, the
French Grand Master of French Freemasons is alleged to have bought all food
and deliberately withheld grain from the people of Paris leading to shortage
of food that being a direct cause of the October march on Versailles.
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5th
October 1789:
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A
Parisian crowd, composed mostly of rough women working in the markets selling
fish, marched to Versailles in response to the scarcity of bread. Members of
the National Guard followed the march. Lafayette led the National Guard army
to Versailles. That evening, Lafayette replaced most of the royal bodyguards
with National Guardsmen. At dawn, the crowd broke into the palace. Before it
succeeded in entering the queen's bedroom, Marie Antoinette fled to the
king's apartments. Lafayette took the royal family onto the palace balcony
and attempted to restore order. At the balcony, King Louis simply appeared,
and everyone started chanting "Vive le Roi!". Then when Marie
Antoinette appeared people shouted to shoot her, but when she stood her
ground facing almost certain death, no one opened fire. After several seconds
and the lowering of muskets, people started to chant "Vive la
Reine!" ("Long live the Queen"). The
Duke of orlean’s The Louis Philippe II, the
French Grand Master is
also thought to have lied about his whereabouts when the Palace at Versailles
was stormed in the early hours of the morning on the 6th of October, having
stated he was at the General Assembly in Paris, yet several witnesses
(including the Marquise de la Tour du Pin) saw him lead the bloodthirsty mob
to a staircase leading to the Queen's bedroom, protected by Swiss Guards. La
Fayette ultimately persuaded the king to accede to the demand of the crowd
that the monarchy relocate to Paris.
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6th
October
1789:
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King
and the royal family moved from Versailles to Paris under the
"protection" of the National Guards, thus legitimizing the National
Assembly.
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2nd
November 1789:
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Appropriation of all
Church Property. Why? (Remember the Pope
Clements’s decree in concert with French King Louis Philippe IV which opened
on October 13, 1307 against Knight Templar’s predecessors of Freemasons.)
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28th
January 1790:
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Removal of civil
disabilities against Jews. Why? (This is another
proof that French Revolution was Zionist led, Zionist sponsored and Zionist Financed.
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13th
February 1790:
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Suppression of Christian orders
and vows. This is another evidence that French
Revolution was Zionist led, Zionist sponsored and Zionist Financed.
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19th
June 1790:
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Abolition of nobility and
titles. (Remember the Pope Clements’s decree in
concert with French King Louis Philippe IV which opened on October 13, 1307
against Knight Templar’s predecessors of Freemasons.)
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14th
July 1790:
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Civil
Constitution, subordinating the Church to the civil government, inaugurated
by Louis XVI.
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30th
January 1791:
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Mirabeau
elected President of the French Assembly.
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2nd
March 1791:
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Abolition of Royal guilds
and monopolies.
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21st
June 1791:
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Louis
XVI attempts to flee to Varennes but is recognised and forcibly returned to
Paris.
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15th
July 1791:
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Assembly
declares King inviolable and restores his prerogatives.
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17th
July 1791:
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National
Guard fires on crowd protesting against restoration of the King.
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13th
September 1791:
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King
formally accepts Constitution.
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30th
September 1791:
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Constituent
Assembly dissolves.
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1st
October 1791:
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Legislative
Assembly commences.
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9th
November 1791:
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Civil
marriage and divorce instituted. Assembly orders all émigrés to return under pain of
death.
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11th
November 1791:
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King
vetoes Assembly’s ruling on émigrés.
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January-March
1791:
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Food
riots across Paris.
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9th
February 1791:
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Property
of émigrés
forfeited.
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7th
April 1792:
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Alliance
of Prussia and Austria.
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20th
April 1792:
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France
declares war on Austria, but French army flees at sight of the enemy.
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30th
April 1792:
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France
invades Austrian Netherlands.
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1792:
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Rise
of Jacobins; Political group of extreme radicalism and violence. Formed in
1789 as the Society of the Friends of the Constitution, it was known as the
Jacobin Club because it met in a former convent of the Dominicans (known in
Paris as Jacobins). Grand Master of French Freemasons, Louis Philippe opened
the Palais-Royal head quarters of French Freemasonry to the Jacobins as a
refuge from royalist censors. This palace, which was exempt from government
censorship, allowed Jacobins to meet in Paris not only to discuss and debate
revolution but also to print and distribute pamphlets to other Parisians.
Philippe's inheritance of the Palais-Royal allowed him the ability to house a
massive number of Jacobins. Only blocks away from the Tuileries Palace, where
the King had been placed after being ousted from Versailles.
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10th
August 1792:
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The
Tuileries was defended by King’s swiss guards. The Jacobins decided that it
was time to storm the Tuileries, imprison and depose the king and proclaim
the republic. They called on revolutionary city of Marseilles to send men
‘who know how to die’ to lead an attack on Tuileries. Six hundred volunteers
set out from Marseilles, led by Francois Joseph Westermann, a Freemason. As
they Mrched they sang the Chant de
l’armee du Rhin composed by another Freemason Rouget de Lisle in honor of
French Army at Rhine. After the men from Marseilles had sung it on their
march to Paris, the song became known as La
Marseillaise.
With
the help of men from Marseilles, revolutionary fighters of Jacobins storm the
Tuileries Palace, massacring the Swiss Guard, and the King imprisoned at
Temple prison. The ‘Temple’ Prison had another connection to Freemasonry. It
was built by Knight Templar’s (predecessors of Freemasons) in 12th
Century as their European headquarters of Knight Templar’s. Temple prison was
destroyed in 1808 as it had become pilgrimage for royalists.
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19th
August 1792:
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Lafayette
flees to Austria. Invasion of France by Coalition troops led by Duke of
Brunswick.
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22nd August 1792: |
Royalist riots in the Vendée, Britanny; armies suffer setbacks at Langwy and Verdun. |
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20th
September 1792:
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1st
session of national convention. French troop stop invading armies at Valmy.
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3rd
December
1792:
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Louis XVI brought to trial, appears before
the National Convention (11 & 23 December). Robespierre argues that
"Louis must die, so that the country may live". Danton said: “The
Kings of Europe are attacking us; let us throw down to them, as a challenge,
the head of a King”. A resolution finding Louis Guilty of treason and
rejecting the idea of an appeal to the people of France by Plebiscite was
carried by 426 votes to 278, the decision to impose death penalty was carried
by 387 to 314. A deputy then proposed that what to do with Louis XVI be
postponed indefinitely. This was defeated by361 votes to 360 a single vote
that of Philippe Duke of Orleans and grand Master of French Freemasons. On 20 January, a resolution that the death
sentence should be immediately carried out was passed by 380 to 310 votes.
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21st January 1793:
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Louis XVI Guillotined. Father Edgeworth who accompanied King Louis
XVI to guillotine states thus; “I heard him pronounce distinctly these
memorable words: "I die innocent
of all the crimes laid to my charge; I Pardon those who have occasioned my
death; and I pray to God that the blood you are going to shed may never be
visited on France."”
As soon as the guillotine fell, an
anonymous Freemason leaped on the scaffolding, plunged his hand into the
blood, splashed drips of it onto the crown, and shouted, "Jacques de
Molay, tu es vengé!" (usually translated as, "Jacques de Molay,
thou art avenged"). De Molay (died 1314), the last Grand Master of the
Knights Templar, had reportedly cursed Louis' ancestor Philip the Fair, after
the latter had sentenced him to burn at the stake based on false confessions. Source
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After
the coup d'etat in France, Cagliostro stated from his prison cell in Italy
that he also knew of the Illuminati conspiracy that was aimed at various
thrones as well as altars throughout Europe.
Among
the Zionist bankers who are said to have helped finance the French Revolution
are Daniel Itzig (1722-1799), David Friedlander (1750-1834), Herz Cerfbeer
(1730-1793), Benjamin Goldsmid (1755- 1808), Abraham Goldsmid (1756-1810),
and Moses Mocatta (1768- 1857), partner of the Goldsmid brothers, and uncle
of Sir Moses Montefiore (Olivia Marie O'Grady, "The Beasts of the
Apocalypse", First Amendment Press, 2001, p. 123). All were connected to
the Illuminati.
Source;
Occult Theocracy by Lady
Queensborough, and L'Anti-Semitisme by the Jew Bernard Lazare, 1894.
“Webster noted, "All the
revolutionaries of the Constituent Assembly were initiated into the third
degree" of Illuminized Masonry, including revolutionary leaders such as
the Duke of Orleans, Valance, Lafayette, Mirabeau, Garat, Marat, Robespierre,
Danton, and Desmoulins.” Source.
The more the enemies of ‘revolution’ blamed
Freemasons for American and French Revolution, the more revolutionary
Freemasons became. If Masonic lodges were places where revolutions were
planned than that was the place for ardent young revolutionaries to be. And
so began a cycle of revolutions all across Europe more on it later;
Kaps
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