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1610 lines
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1610 lines
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<p>AN ILLUMINATI OUTLINE OF HISTORY</p>
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<p>Alpha and Omega -- Immanentizing of the Eschaton.
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20000000 BC -- Recent Epoch of geeology begins; Ice Age ends;
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human beings spread to all parts of the world.
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30000 -- First Illuminatus, Gruad, rules in Atlantis.
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20000 -- Mythical Lloigor inhabit continent of Mu.
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10000 -- Approximate beginning of agriculture. Estimated date of
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inscriptions on stone disks by the Dropa tribe, a diminuative
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people of the Bayan-Kara-Ula Mountains on the border of China and
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Tibet; disks describe how the tribe came to earth in flying
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machines; ancient Dropa graves contain human remains with huge
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heads and small bodies. Earliest estimated date of carving of the
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Crystal Skull found at Lubaantun in the Yucatan. Hyborian Age in
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Europe.
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9000 to 10000 -- Date of Plato's Atlantis.
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6000 -- Picture writing develops.
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5000 -- First alphabet begins to develop.
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4000 -- Approximate date of discovery of metals, beginning of
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cities, constellations of stars first recorded. Egyptians begin
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placing small pieces of crystal on the forehead of deceased prior
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to mummification.
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3000 -- Approximate date of building of the Sphinx and Great
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Pyramid at Giza and other pyramids elsewhere in Egypt. Indus
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Valley civilization develops complex government, writing and well
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planned cities. Minoan civilization flourishes in Crete.
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Earliest parts of the Bible written. Beginning date of Olmec
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calendar from Central America: 3113 BC. Trephination (cutting a
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hole in the skull) practiced by people all over the world.
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2500 -- Sarmoung Brotherhood of Babylonia flourish according to
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Gurdjieff.
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2100 -- Egyptians record star configurations on which the 24 hour
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day is based.
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2000 -- Stonehenge and other stone circles built in England.
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1800 -- Huge Silbury Mound constructed near Stonehenge.
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1700 -- Babylonian Enuma Anu Enlil, early roots of astrology
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based on celestial phenomena.
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1500 -- Approximate date of the destruction of Thera, on which
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Atlantis legends are probably based. Early references to
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Mithraism on cuneform astronomical tests. Quadrants of the moon
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recorded in China.
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1360 -- Akhenaton's monotheistic sun worship in Egypt.
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1344 -- Tutankhamun, Akhenaton's successor who revived
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polytheism, buried at Thebes; curse reading "Death comes on swift
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wings to he who opens this tomb," written on tomb doorway.
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1300 -- Approximate date "I Ching" written in China.
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1184 -- End of the Trojan War, Illium falls to the Greeks.
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1000 to 2000 -- Legendary Thule civilization in the Gobi region
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destroyed by a catastrophe, "possibly of an atomic nature,"
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survivors migrating to Agarthi and Schamballah.
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1000 -- Huge Sacrificial Table built at Mystery Hill near North
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Salem, New Hampshire.
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950 -- Approximate date of building of Solomon's Temple in
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Jerusalem, traditional origin of the Masonic fraternity; alleged
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assassination of Temple master-mason Hiram for refusing to reveal
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masonic secrets.
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900 -- Approximate time settlers from Europe and the Middle East
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established colonies in North America.
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800 -- Twenty-two "moon stations" in monthly lunar cycle
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recognized in Babylonia, India and China.
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753 -- Legendary founding of Rome by Romulus.
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700 -- Jordanian city of Petra is carved out of sandstone by
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unknown culture.
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600 -- Approximate beginning of money with first coins in Lydia.
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575 -- Nebuchadnezzar completes building Tower of Babel in
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Babylon.
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500 to 600 -- Time of Buddha, Lao Tse, Confucius, Zarathustra,
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Orpheus, Pythagoras, Zachariah and Daniel--an Illuminated century.
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500 -- Sun-Tse's "Treatise on the Art of War," first intelligence
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manual.
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485 -- Execution of Spurius Cassius in Rome.
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450 -- Development of the 12 constellations of the zodiac in
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Mesopotamia, recognizing the importance of the plane of the
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elliptic through which the sun, moon and planets move.
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440 -- Assassination of Spurius Maelius.
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400 -- Druidism in England. Astrological ideas from Enuma Anu
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Enlil transmitted to India.
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390 -- Approximate date Plato's "The Republic" written, featuring
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such Illuminoid images as the Philosopher Kings, the Divided Line
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and the parable of the Cave.
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355 -- Plato's "Timaios" and "Kritias," earliest accounts of
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Atlantis.
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300 -- Invention of Mayan calendar in Yucatan, based on advanced
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astronomy. Fabius family of Rome reaches its greatest heights.
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275 -- Approximate date Greek poet Aratus makes first sytematic
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record of star constellations in "Phaenomena."
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273 to 232 -- Rule of Asoka, king of India who allegedly founded
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the Nine Unknown.
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212 -- Archimedes uses burning-glass to set fire to Roman fleet at
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Syracuse, early use of lens as weapon.
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133 -- Land reformer Tiberius Gracchus murdered and hundreds of
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his followers killed by followers of powerful Roman patricians;
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death of Scripio Africanus a few years later.
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121 -- Gaius Gracchus and 3000 of his followers massacred by
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patricians.
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100 -- The Great Teacher of the Essenes. Essentials of modern
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astrology worked out.
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95 -- Approximate date of assassination of Saturninus and Glaucia.
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92 -- Assassination of Rutilius Rufus.
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91 -- Assassination of Livius Drufus.
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73 -- Revolt of gladiators led by Spartacus.
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44 -- Assassination of Julius Caesar.
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4 -- Birth of Jesus of Nazareth, accompanied by various Illuminoid
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trappings: three early Men-In-Black disguised as the Wise Men;
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strange lights in the sky; miracles such as visits from angels,
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prohpecy and suspension of time are reported.
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0 -- Carnation-Painted Eyebrows Society, Copper Horses, Iron Shins
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and other secret societies active in China.
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AD 30 -- Assassination of the radical Jesus, allegedly on
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Illuminati orders; more Illuminoid trappings; an eclipse; an
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earthquake; visitorsfrom the sky roll away the stone from the
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sepulcher and liberate the crucified Jesus.
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100 -- Hero of Alexandria devises primitive steam-engine.
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125 to 150 -- Simon Magus, Menander, Valentinus and others develop
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Gnostic religious doctrines of esoteric knowledge (illumination).
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135 -- Approximate date Ptolemy records 1022 stars in "Almagest";
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also recorded astrological ideas from Enuma Anu Enlil in his
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"Apotelesmatika."
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150 -- Roman Mithraism competes with Christianity. Yellow Turban
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Society subdues northern China, Triad cult formed in opposition.
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200 -- First book of the cabala, "Sepher Yetzirah," compiled.
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216 to 276 -- Life of Mani, the Illuminator, who founded
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Manicheism, based on ideas from Judaism, Christianity,
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Zoroasterism, Gnosticism, etc.
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325 -- Council of Nicaea in which Christian begins to rigidify.
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400 -- Estimated date of carving of stone statues found on Easter
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Island.
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500 -- Chinese use of gunpowder.
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570 to 632 -- Life of Muhammad, founder of Islam.
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670 -- Callinicus invents Greek Fire, primitive incendiary bomb.
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673 to 735 -- Life of the Venerable Bede, the greatest scholar of
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Saxon England whose "Ecclesiastical History of England" (731)
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contained many occult and unexplained occurances.
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700 -- Sufi mysticism begins.
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730 -- "Al Azif" written in Damascus by Abdul Alhazred.
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772 -- Charlemagne allegedly established Holy Secret Tribunal
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which becomes the Holy Vehm.
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850 -- Ismaili and Fatimid missionaries throughout Islamic Empire
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preach revolution against the ruling Sunni order and Abbasid
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state.
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900 -- Beginning of the Bogomils of Bulgaria, a Manicheian sect,
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roots of Cathari.
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909 -- First Fatimid caliph in Egypt.
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920 to 1003 -- Life of Pope Sylvester II who allegedly visited the
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Nine Unknown in India.
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950 -- "Al Azif" translated into Greek as "Necronomicon."
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1000 -- Approximate founding of Yezidi cult by Sufi Sheikh Adi in
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Iraq. Abode of Learning active in Cairo. Spread of Cathari
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Manicheism throughout Europe. Leif Ericson explores North
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America.
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1034 to 1124 -- Life of Hasan-e Sabbah, founder of the Assassins
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of Persia. Member of the Ismaili sect, Hasan seized fortress of
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Alamut in Daylam in 1090; split with Fatimid dynasty in 1094;
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Assassins flourished for next several centuries.
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1050 -- Approximate date of founding of the Order of Hospitallers
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in Jerusalem.
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1058 -- Member of the Abode of Learning sect gains temporary
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control of Bagdad.
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1092 -- Assassins murder Persian minister Nizam al-Mulk.
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1095 -- First Crusade.
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1100 -- Approximate date Sufi Gilani founds Arabic school of
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Illuminati, Kadiri Order of Sebil-el-ward, in Bagdad. Assassins
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infiltrate Thug cult of India. Bogomil leader Basil burned in
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Constantinople. Albigensian Cathari sect flourishes near Albi,
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France. Avengers and Beati Paoli active in Italy. Joachim of
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Floris founds primitive Christian sect, Illuminated Ones. Robin
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Hood active in England.
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1119 -- Knights Templar founded in Palestine.
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1123 -- Abode of Learning suppressed by Turkish Vizier Afdal.
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1140 -- Rapid growth of Cathari sect begins.
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1149 -- First Cathari bishop established.
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1162 to 1227 -- Life of Genghis Khan, conquerer of China and
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Russia, invader of Europe and Islamic Empire, destroyer of
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Assassin power. Approximate beginnings of the wandering of the
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Gypsies of North India.
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1167 -- Cathari council near Toulouse.
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1170 -- Assassination of Thomas a Becket.
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1171 -- Last Fatimid caliph dies.
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1176 -- Peter Waldo founds the Poor Men of Lyons. Sultan Saladin
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invades Assassin territory, gains truce.
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1184 -- Waldenses excommunicated, suppressed.
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1200 to 1300 -- House of Wisdom in Cairo, roots of the Afghan
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Roshaniya. Origin of the Mafia in Sicily.
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1208 -- Albigensian Crusade begins suppression of Cathari heresy.
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1212 -- The Children's Crusade. Genghis Khan invades China.
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1233 -- Founding of the Inquisition to suppress Cathari and other
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heresies.
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1235 to 1315 -- Life of Dr. Illuminatus, Ramon Llull (Raymond
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Lully) in Spain.
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1241 -- Mongols invade Europe through wise use of intelligence
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information and strategy, introduce gunpowder from Asia.
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1244 -- Massacre of Cathari at Montsegur, France.
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1250s -- Approximate beginning of Holy Vehm in Westphalia.
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Approximate time of Hulagu Khan's defeat of the Assassins.
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1254 to 1324 (?) -- Life of Marco Polo, early European traveler in
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China, Persia.
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1258 -- Hulagu Khan destroys Bagdad; Mongols destroy Mesopotamia,
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the mother of civilization.
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1260 -- Mongol invasion of Islamic Empire turned back.
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1270s -- Cathari hierarchy fades.
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1275 -- Assembly of traveling mason guilds in Frankfort. "Zohar,"
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second book of the cabala, compiled by Moses de Leon in Spain.
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1280 -- Roger Bacon, deviser of early eyeglasses, independently
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invents gunpowder.
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1291 -- Hospitallers retreat to Cyprus.
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1300 -- White Lotus Society founded in China. Inquisition begins
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suppression of witches and other pagan groups.
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1307 -- Philip IV of France suppresses Knights Templar for
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witchcraft and heresies; de Molay imprisoned in the Temple in
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Paris.
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1308 -- Assassination of Holy Roman Emperor Albert I.
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1309 -- Hospitallers acquire the isle of Rhodes.
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1313 -- Knights Templar dissolved by papal decree.
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1314 -- De Molay and others burned in Paris.
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1327 -- Assassination of King Edward II in England.
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1329 -- First appearance of the Tarot in Germany.
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1360 -- Approximate date of the earliest known Satanic cults;
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black masses celebrated in France.
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1369 -- Timurlane becomes Great Khan.
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1375 -- Another assembly of traveling mason guilds in Frankfort.
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1379 to 1482 -- Alleged life of Christian Rosenkreuz, fictitious
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founder of Rosicrucianism.
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1390 -- Gypsies begin to appear in Europe.
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1400s -- Cathari sect dies out. Concave lenses developed.
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1404 -- King Robert revises code of Holy Vehm.
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1410 -- Secret society formed in Italy which eventually joins with
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Rosicrucianism.
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1437 -- Assassination of King James I of Scotland.
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1456 -- Gutenberg Bible begins modern printing.
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1458 -- Abramelin's "Book of Sacred Magic" translated from Hebrew
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to french according to followers of the cult of the Guardian
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Angel.
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1471 -- Assassination of King Henry VI of England.
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1472 -- University of Ingolstadt founded. Fernando Poo discovers
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Fernando Poo.
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1483 -- Assassination of King Edward V of England.
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1492 -- Rodrigo Borgia, head of the powerful Borgia family,
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becomes Pope Alexander VI. Columbus sails the ocean blue.
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1493 to 1541 -- Life of Paracelsus, possible founder of
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Roscrucianism; discover of zinc around 1530; model of the Faust
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legend.
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1500 -- Approximate date of Roshaiya, Illuminated Ones, in
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Afganistan. Beginning of Alumbrados in Spain and Charcoal-Burners in Scotland. Cesare Borgia has his brother-in-law
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assassinated.
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1502 -- Cesare Borgia arrests and executes enemies who have
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conspired against him.
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1503 to 1566 -- Life of Nostradamus, visionary prophet.
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1507 -- Fra Dolcino's version of Joachim's Illuminism suppressed
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by the Bishop of Vercueil.
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1510 -- Beginning of systematic importation of African slaves into
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the West Indies.
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1513 -- Machiavelli's "The Prince" published.
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1519 -- Spanish conquest of Mexico, enslavement of Amerindians.
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1522 -- Hospitallers lose Rhodes to the Turks.
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1530 -- Hospitallers given Isle of Malta by Charles V, become
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Knights of Malta.
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1537 -- Assassination of Alessandro de Medici, Duke of Florence.
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1568 -- First Inquisition edict against the Alumbrados.
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1574 -- Second edict against Alumbrados.
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1575 -- Approximate date of founding of British Intelligence
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services.
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1575 to 1624 -- Life of Jakob Bohme, visionary mystic, illuminated
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one.
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1584 -- Assassination of William I of Orange in England.
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1587 -- English colony established at Roanoke Island, Virginia; no
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trace of the "lost colony" was found when supply ships returned
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three years later.
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1589 -- Assassination of King Henry III of France.
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1590 -- Janssen makes first compound microscope in Europe.
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1597 -- Anonymous alchemist seeks to start Rosicrucian-like
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society in Europe.
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1605 -- Rosicrucian constitution published.
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1607 -- Italian secrect society headed by Count Bernard of Germany
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merges with Rosicrucianism. First permanent English settlement in
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America, Jamestown, Virgina.
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1608 -- Apprentice to Dutch spectacle-maker Lippershey discovers
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principle of focusing lenses; Lippershey builds first telescope.
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1609 -- Galileo independently builds telescope, begins study of
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astonomy. Spanish settlement at Santa Fe, New Mexico, founded.
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1610 -- Assassination of King Henry IV of France.
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1614 -- "Fama Fraternitatis" published, fictional story of
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Rosenkreuz by Johann Valentin Andrea.
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1619 -- First slave ship in America, Jamestown, Virginia.
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1620 -- Plymouth Colony, second English settlement, arrives on
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Mayflower.
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1622 -- Posters appear in Paris warning that the Rosicrucians are
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"amongst you...visibly and invisibly."
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1623 -- Final papal edict against Alumbrados; Guerinets appear in
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France. First submarine built by Cornelius van Drebbel in
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England.
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1638 -- Milton meets Galileo.
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1640 -- Beginning of subliminal persuasion when Rembrandt imbeds
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the word "sex" in a painting.
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1642 -- Civil War in England between King Charles and Parliament.
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1646 -- Earliest known Masonic Lodge to allow non-professional or
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"free" masons, in Warrington, England.
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1647 -- Alleged correspondence between Cromwell and Ebeneezer
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Pratt plotting the overthrow of King Charles.
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1649 -- King Charles convicted and beheaded by Parliament.
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1654 -- Illuminated Guerinets come to public notice in France.
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1667 -- Milton's "Paradise Lost" published.
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1675 -- Leeuwenhoek discovers "animalcules" through the
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microscope.
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1676 -- Sperm discovered by Leeuwenhoek's student Ham.
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1680 -- Madame Le Voisin, innovator of modern Satanism, executed
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in Paris.
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1682 -- Tamanend, sachem and chief of the Lenni-Lenape tribe,
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welcomes William Penn to America, traditionally considered the
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beginning of the Tammany Society.
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1689 -- William III of Orange becomes king of England, allegedly
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through the plotting of the Illuminati.
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1694 -- Bank of England founded.
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1700 -- Quietism of Fenelon and others.
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1701 -- Earliest record of "operative" or professional Masonic
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Lodge in Alnwick, England.
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1702 -- First daily newspaper in England.
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1717 -- Founding of modern Freemasonry with the Grand Lodge of
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London by Desaguliers. Voltaire imprisoned in the Bastille.
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1721 -- British King George I cracks down on the flourishing Hell
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Fire Clubs, popular Satanistic cults.
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1723 -- Anderson's "Constitutions of the Freemasons" published.
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"Ebrietatis Enconium" and other early anti-Masonic works
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published.
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1724 -- Publication of the anti-Masonic "Grand Mysteries of the
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Freemasons Discovered."
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1731 -- Benjamin Franklin initiated into Freemasonry.
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1734 -- Franklin elected Grand Master of Pennsylvania.
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1736 -- Death of the last leader of the Afghan Illuminated Ones.
|
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1749 -- Rousseau's spontaneous "enlightenment" launches the
|
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Romantic Movement.
|
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1750 -- Hell Fire Clubs continue to flourish in Dublin and London.
|
|
Fictional alchemist Joseph Curwen writes letter stating "I laste
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|
Nighte strucke on ye Wordes that bringe up Yooge-Sothothe,"
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perhaps the real power behind the Illuminati.
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1754 -- Six year old Adam Weishaupt is orphaned and goes to live
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with the Jesuits.
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1757 -- First year of Swedenborg's "New Era."
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1759 -- Voltaire's "Candide" published.
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1760 -- St. Germain founds chemical dye factory in Holland, fore-runner of I.G. Farben; disappears with 100000 guilders. Franklin
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invents bifocals.
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1761 -- St. Germain discovered living in Russia. Chinese Emperor
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issues edict against secret societies.
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1762 -- Illumines of France founded. Sandwich invented.
|
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1763 -- Swedenborg's "Doctrine of Life for the New Jerusalem"
|
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published.
|
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1764 -- Voltaire's "Philosophical Dictionary" published; he begins
|
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a prodigious attack on dogmas of church and state.
|
|
1765 -- British Stamp Act imposed to help pay for the French and
|
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Indian War debt. Sons of Liberty clubs formed to resist the tax.
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1767 -- Townshend Revenue Act, another British tax on the
|
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colonies. Kunta Kinte kidnapped into American slavery.
|
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1768 -- Virginia's legislature dissolved for its opposition to the
|
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Townshend Act. Weishaupt graduates from the University of
|
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Ingolstadt, becomes tutor and catechist. Macfarguhar, Ball and
|
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Smelie begin compiling the "Encyclopaedia Britannica." Mesmer
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commissions 12 year old Mozart's first opera, "Bastien and
|
|
Bastienne."
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1770 -- Boston Massacre: British troops fire into a crowd.
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Townshend Act repealed.
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1771 -- "Encyclopaedia Britannica" published.
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1772 -- Weishaupt becomes professor at University of Ingolstadt.
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1773 -- British Tea Tax on colonies. Boston Tea Party in protest.
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Weishaupt marries. Alleged meeting of Meyer Rothschild and others
|
|
to plan a world revolution. Suppression of the Jesuits.
|
|
Franklin's "Rule by Which a Great Empire May Be Reduced to a Small
|
|
One" published.
|
|
1774 -- Britain's "Intolerable Acts" designed to punish rebellious
|
|
colonies. First Continental Congress. Washington begins training
|
|
troops. Louis XVI becomes king of France. Casanova becomes
|
|
secret agent for the Inquisitors of Venice. Catherine II shuts
|
|
down satiric journals in Russia. Jefferson's "Summary View of the
|
|
Rights of British Americans" published.
|
|
1775 -- Second Continental Congress authorizes naval warships,
|
|
sets up secret committee to procure weapons, names Washington
|
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commander-in-chief of the new American Army. George III proclaims
|
|
America in open rebellion. Initial battles of the Revolutionary
|
|
War: Lexington, Bunker Hill, Toconderoga. Bushnell's first
|
|
experimental submarine and torpedo tested. Prince Hall lodges
|
|
(for blacks) chartered by Grand Lodge of London, rejected by
|
|
American lodges.
|
|
1776 -- Illuminati founded by Weishaupt. American Declaration of
|
|
Independence, written by Jefferson, adopted by Continental
|
|
Congress. Battles of Long Island, White Plains and Trenton.
|
|
Nathan Hale executed as spy by British. Franklin becomes
|
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ambassador to France, is affiliated with French Masonic lodges.
|
|
Opening of Freemasons' Hall, permanent headquarters of English
|
|
Masonry. Cagliostro initiated into Masonry. Saigon captured by
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|
Tay Son brothers. Aaron Burr serves as assistant to Benedict
|
|
Arnold. Thomas Paine's "Common Sense" and "The Crisis" widely
|
|
read. Adam Smith's "Wealth of Nations" published.
|
|
1777 -- Weishaupt joins Munich Lodge of the Order of Good Council.
|
|
Articles of Confederation adopted by Continental Congress.
|
|
Battles of Bennington, Brandywine, Germantown, Princeton and
|
|
Saratoga. Washington has his mystical vision of the future of the
|
|
United States while at Valley Forge. War of Bavarian Secession
|
|
begins.
|
|
1778 -- France recognizes American independence, signs treaty and
|
|
provides aid. Franklin assists in initiation of Voltaire into
|
|
Masonic Lodge of Paris. Masonic Convention in Lyons organizes
|
|
Knights of Benficience.
|
|
1779 -- John Paul Jones says "Damn the torpedos!" Benedict Arnold
|
|
becomes a traitor and spy for the British. War of Bavarian
|
|
Secession ends.
|
|
1780 -- John Andre, British agent, captured with secret documents
|
|
from Arnold; Arnold escapes to join British; Andre hanged as spy.
|
|
Weishaupt's wife dies. Illuminati begins rapid growth. First use
|
|
of the title Odd Fellows. Order of the Brotherhood of Asia,
|
|
Rosicrucian off-shoot, founded.
|
|
1781 -- Battle of Guilford Court House, surrended of Cornwallis at
|
|
Yorktown. John Hanson becomes first President of the United
|
|
States in Congress Assembled. Weishaupt seeks abortion for his
|
|
sister-in-law while awaiting dispensation to marry her. United
|
|
Masonic Lodges of Hamburg headed by Fraximus, a secret
|
|
Rosicrucian. Kant's "Critique of Pure Reason" published.
|
|
1782 -- British cabinet agrees to recognize American independence,
|
|
preliminary agreement signed in Paris. Hanson commissions the
|
|
"Eye in the Pyramid" Great Seal, finishes term; Elias Boudinot
|
|
elected second President of Congress Assembled. Illuminati
|
|
dominate European Masonry. Casanova retires as secret agent.
|
|
1783 -- Treaty signed between America and England. Washington
|
|
disbands army, resigns. Hanson dies. Thomas Mifflin third
|
|
President of Congress Assembled. Ex-Illuminati Utschneider sends
|
|
letter denouncing the Order to monarch of Bavaria. Rite of
|
|
Swedenborg founded by Marquis de Throne. Eclectic Rite founded by
|
|
Baron Knigge in Frankfort. Webster's "American Spelling Book"
|
|
published.
|
|
1784 -- Treaty with England ratified by Congress. Richard Henry
|
|
Lee fourth President of Congress Assembled. Bavarian Monarch Carl
|
|
Theodore outlaws secret societies. Cagliostro moves to Lyons from
|
|
Bordeaux to found the Mother Lodge of Egyptian Masonry. Royal
|
|
Commission in Paris, including Franklin and Guillotine as members,
|
|
investigates Mesmerism and returns a negative report.
|
|
1785 -- Weishaupt flees to Gotha; new edict outlaws Illuminati;
|
|
High-ranking Illuminatus Lanz killed by lightning and Illuminati
|
|
papers found on body by police. French "Diamond Necklace" affair.
|
|
Napoleon graduates military school. Franklin returns to America;
|
|
Jefferson becomes French ambassador. Rosicrucian Order suppressed
|
|
in Austria. Anonymous pamphlet appears in Germany revealing
|
|
secrets of ancient Egyptian ceremonies.
|
|
1786 -- Wisdom Lodge founded in Virginia. Secret congress in
|
|
Frankfort where Louis XVI and Gustavus III of Sweden condemned to
|
|
die by Illuminati. Italian Illuminatus Buonarroti's library of
|
|
Masonic and subversive books confiscated by state authorities.
|
|
Nathaniel Gorham fifth President of Congress Assembled. Napoleon
|
|
writes pamphlete defending Rousseau.
|
|
1787 -- German authorities publish letter by Weishaupt admitting
|
|
he sought abortion for his sister-in-law; Weishaupt replies,
|
|
blaming "extenuating circumstances." German Union (extension of
|
|
outlawed Bavarian Illuminati) founded by Bahrdt. Washington
|
|
elected President of Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia;
|
|
new constitution adopted by the convention. Arthur St. Clair
|
|
sixth President of Congress Assembled. Jefferson meets secretly
|
|
in Paris with Brazilian rebel to discuss American aid to
|
|
revolution in Brazil. Shay's Rebellion in Massachusetts to
|
|
protest unfair taxes. Goethe visits Cagliostro's family in
|
|
Palermo. Swedenborgian Church founded in London. Society for the
|
|
Abolition of the African Slave-Trade founded in London.
|
|
1788 -- American Constitution ratified by the states. Individual
|
|
American states begin to outlaw slavery. Cyrus Griffen seventh
|
|
President of Congress Assembled. Paine visits London and Paris.
|
|
"The Federalist" essays published by Hamilton, Madison and Jay.
|
|
1789 -- Washington elected President of the United States; first
|
|
Congress under new Constitution. Jefferson returns to U.S. to
|
|
become first Secretary of State; Hamilton becomes first Secretary
|
|
of the Treasury. French Revolution begins.
|
|
1790 -- Rebellion and massacre throughout France. Cagliostro
|
|
arrested by Inquisition of Rome. Bavarian edict against Reading
|
|
Societies. Blake's "Marriage of Heaven and Hell" published.
|
|
1791 -- Napoleon joins the Jocobin Club. First Bank of the United
|
|
States chartered. Burr begins converting Tammany Society into a
|
|
political machine. The anonymous "Vie de Joseph Balsamo" (Joseph
|
|
Basalmo was Cagliostro's name before he joined the Masons), first
|
|
recorded link of the Illuminati and the French Revolution, appears
|
|
in several European countries. Mozart's "The Magic Flute,"
|
|
containing Masonic elements, performed.
|
|
1792 -- Washington re-elected. War between France and Austria.
|
|
Louis XVI imprisoned in the Templars Temple tower. Massacres of
|
|
September, in which priests, bishops and others are killed.
|
|
Elections for the National Convention, a triumph for Robespierre
|
|
and his followers. France declared a Republic. First
|
|
Swedenborgian church in America. Catherine II outlaws Masonry in
|
|
Russia. "Life of Joseph Balsamo" translated into English in
|
|
Dublin. Assassination of Gustav III at the Stockholm opera.
|
|
1793 -- Year One of the French Republic; the year of the Terror,
|
|
Louis XVI found guilty of conspiracy, condemned to be executed.
|
|
French government kills thousands of its citizens. France
|
|
declares war on England and the Dutch United Provinces; war breaks
|
|
out with Spain and Austria; Russia and Prussia begin partition of
|
|
Poland. French food riots.
|
|
1794 -- Year Two; France passes laws distributing confiscated
|
|
property to the poor, leads victorious battle against Austrians.
|
|
Would-be assassin of Robespierre fires on Collot d'Herbois
|
|
instead; the next day a young girl arrested as suspected assassin;
|
|
she and 40 others sent to guillotine. Other attempts of
|
|
Robespierre's life; his enemies accuse him of attempting to have
|
|
himself declared divine by Catherine Theot, an old woman who
|
|
preached a mystery religion; Robespierre guillotined. Monroe
|
|
becomes minister to France. Whiskey rebellion in Pennsylvania to
|
|
protest liquor taxes.
|
|
1795 -- France makes peace with Prussia and Spain, invades
|
|
Holland. Napoleon suppresses revolt in Paris and goes to Italy as
|
|
Commander-in-Chief. Yazoo land fraud: bribed Georgia legislators
|
|
sell Mississippi.
|
|
1796 -- Adams elected President. Paine publishes letter critical
|
|
of Washington.
|
|
1798 -- Illuminati scare in New England. Knights of Malta lose
|
|
their island to Napoleon.
|
|
1800 -- Death of Thomas Waley, one of the last Hell Fire Club
|
|
leaders. Napoleon comes to power, allegedly through Illuminati
|
|
manipulation.
|
|
1805 to 1881 -- Life of Auguste Blanqui, French socialist, founder
|
|
of numerous secret societies modeled after Buonarroti.
|
|
1815 -- Napoleon's Waterloo. Secret societies which eventually
|
|
become the Decembrist Movement formed in Russian Masonic lodges.
|
|
1817 -- Suppression of the Lodge of Jupiter the Thunderer begins.
|
|
Irish immigrants force entry into Tammany Society, changing its
|
|
direction.
|
|
1818 -- Mar Shelley's "Frankenstein" published.
|
|
1819 -- American Independent Order of Odd Fellows founded.
|
|
Founding of National Freemasonry, the most important of several
|
|
Polish secret societies devoted to ousting the Russians from
|
|
Poland. Liberation of Columbia by Bolivar.
|
|
1822 -- Russian government suppresses Masonry. Equador liberated
|
|
by Bolivar.
|
|
1825 -- Decembrist movement suppressed in Russia after brief
|
|
uprising. Bolivar liberates Bolivia. Founding of Vienna bank by
|
|
Solmon Rothschild and Naples bank by Carl Rothschild.
|
|
1828 -- Tammany Society backs Andrew Jackson for President. Anti-Masonic Party founded, first third-party in America. Attempted
|
|
assassination of Bolivar.
|
|
1829 -- Alleged Illuminati meeting in New York decides to unite
|
|
Atheists and Nihilists into Communist movement.
|
|
1830 -- Anti-Masonic conventions in Massachusetts and Vermont find
|
|
evidence linking Masonry with Illuminism. Book of Mormon
|
|
published. Weishaupt and Bolivar die.
|
|
1831 -- Anti-Masonic Party runs Wirt for President, assuring that
|
|
Mason Andrew Jackson would be re-elected. Poe dismissed from West
|
|
Point.
|
|
1833 -- Jackson orders U.S. funds withdrawn from Bank of the
|
|
United States, effectively killing the institution.
|
|
1835 -- The socialist League of the Just founded in Paris, later
|
|
becoming the Marxist Communist League. Attempted assassination of
|
|
Jackson with two single shot pistols, both of which jammed.
|
|
Revolver invented.
|
|
1844 -- Morse builds first practical telegraph. Bahai religion
|
|
begins when the Bab proclaims his mission in Persia.
|
|
1848 -- Fall of monarchy in France. Republic established in Rome.
|
|
Abdication of Ferdinand I in Austria. Revolts in Denmark,
|
|
Ireland, Lombardy, Schleswig-Holstein and Venice. Germany briefly
|
|
united in a parliament at Frankfort; unity destroyed by the King
|
|
of Prussia. Marx and Engles publish the "Communist Manifesto"
|
|
(allegedly commissioned by the Illuminati) and travel in France
|
|
and Germany encouraging discontent with the Establishment.
|
|
Woman's Suffrage Movement gets underway in Seneca Falls, New York.
|
|
Spiritualism born in Wayne County, New York, when the teenaged Fox
|
|
sisters communicate with poltergeists. Fortean tidbits: moon
|
|
turns "blood-red" during total eclipse; a great comet fails to
|
|
return at the time predicted; visions and "phantom soldiers" seen
|
|
in the skies of France and Scotland; Captain M'Quahae of H.M.S.
|
|
Daedalus reports seeing a "huge, unknown creature" in the ocean.
|
|
Gold discovered in California.
|
|
1849 to 1936 -- Life of Sir Basil Zaharoff, "mystery man of
|
|
Europe," who made a fortune as an armaments dealer and financier,
|
|
selling weapons to both sides in World War I and other conflicts.
|
|
1852 -- Benjamin becomes first professed Jew elected to Congress.
|
|
1859 -- Oil wells invented. Darwin's "Origin of Species"
|
|
published.
|
|
1860 -- Lincoln elected. Electric storage battery invented.
|
|
1860s -- Attempts to suppress the Mafia in Sicily are
|
|
unsuccessful.
|
|
1861 -- Confederate states secede; elect Jefferson Davis
|
|
president; Benjamin appointed Confederate Attorney General, later
|
|
Secretary of War. American Civil War begins. Emancipation of
|
|
serfs in Russia. Jacolliot writes about the Nine Unknown in
|
|
Calcutta. Gatling gun patented.
|
|
1862 -- Benjamin appointed Confederate Secretary of State.
|
|
1863 -- Rockfeller builds his first refinery.
|
|
1865 -- Assassination of Lincoln; Andrew Johnson becomes
|
|
president; "Booth" killed; coded message found among his effects;
|
|
the code key later found in possession of Benjamin, alleged
|
|
Rothschild agent. Civil War ends. Thirteenth amendment abolishes
|
|
slavery.
|
|
1866 -- Ku Klux Klan founded as a social club in Pulaski,
|
|
Tennessee. Benjamin flees to England. Death of Phineas Quimby,
|
|
magnetic healer, founder of Free Thought movement, teacher of Mary
|
|
Baker Eddy.
|
|
1867 -- Ku Klux Klan reorganized along political and racial lines
|
|
near Nashville, Tennessee.
|
|
1868 -- Assassination of Thomas D'Arcy McGee, first Canadian
|
|
political assassination.
|
|
1869 -- St. Germain allegedly completes 85 years in the Himalayas
|
|
after his "death." Mendeleev composes first periodic table of the
|
|
elements in Russia. U.S. transcontinental railroad completed.
|
|
1870 -- Standard Oil Company incorporated.
|
|
1875 -- "Whiskey Ring" conspiracy of distillery owners revealed.
|
|
Madam Blavatsky founds Theosophy Society. Mary Baker Eddy's
|
|
"Science and Health" published.
|
|
1875 to 1947 -- Life of Aleister Crowley, the Great Beast, Golden
|
|
Dawn leader and occult figure.
|
|
1876 -- Disraeli again warns about dangers of secret societies.
|
|
Battle of the Little Big Horn. Bell patents telephone. Otto
|
|
builds four-cycle gasoline engine.
|
|
1877 -- First of seven wills in which Cecil Rhodes leaves his
|
|
money to establish a secret society to expand British rule
|
|
throughout the world.
|
|
1878 to 1945 -- Life of Edgar Cayce, visionary, trance-channeler
|
|
who spoke of reincarnation, Egyptian mysteries, and Atlantis.
|
|
1881 -- Garfield assassinated. Czar Alexander II assassinated by
|
|
secret society. Disraeli publishes "Lothair," a novel about
|
|
secret societies and European politics.
|
|
1884 -- Fabian Society founded in London by Sidney and Beatrice
|
|
Webb and others.
|
|
1885 -- First practical horseless carriage built by Daimler.
|
|
1887 -- Golden Dawn founded in London by Mathers and others.
|
|
Mitchelson-Morley experiement disproving ether theory.
|
|
1888 -- Unsolved murders of London prostitutes by "Jack the
|
|
Ripper," suspected of being one of those implicated in the
|
|
Cleveland Street Affair involving high-society Victorians and
|
|
their patronage of a brothel staffed by messenger boys.
|
|
1889 -- Second Communist International organized.
|
|
1890 -- Biologist Yersin visits India, purportedly to recieve
|
|
plague and cholera serum from the Nine Unknown. Wounded Knee
|
|
massacre.
|
|
1891 -- Rhodes gains control of 90% of world's diamond supply.
|
|
The Round Tables, a secret society allegedly funded by Rhodes and
|
|
the Rothschilds to gain financial and political power, founded in
|
|
the U.S., Canada, Australia, India, South Africa and New Zealand.
|
|
Rockefeller grant founds University of Chicago. Nikola Tesla
|
|
invents Tesla coil, becomes U.S. citizen.
|
|
1892 -- Rockefeller trust transferred to holding company: Standard
|
|
Oil of New Jersey.
|
|
1893 -- Assassination of Chicago Mayor Harrison.
|
|
1894 -- Assassination of President Carnot of France.
|
|
1896 -- Maconi's patent No. 7777 for radio. First "flap year" for
|
|
UFOs: wave of sightings of unidentified airships in U.S.
|
|
1897 -- Assassination of Premier Canovas of Spain. Zionism
|
|
founded in Basil, Switzerland by Theodore Herzl.
|
|
1898 -- Assassination of Empress Elizabeth of Austria. Pavlov
|
|
begins study of conditioned reflex in dogs.
|
|
1899 -- Tesla discovers terrestrial stationary waves which can
|
|
produce electricity; reports receiving signals from another
|
|
planet. Alleged meeting in England at which the Morgans,
|
|
Rothschilds and Warburgs become affiliated.
|
|
1900 -- Assassination of King Umberto I of Italy and Kentucky
|
|
Governor-elect William Goebel. Tesla suggests alien beings might
|
|
be living "in the very midst of us." Boxer rebellion in China.
|
|
Approximate date Adolf Lanz founded the Order of New Templars, a
|
|
fore-runner of the Nazi mentality.
|
|
1901 -- Assassination of McKinley and Russian Education Minister
|
|
Bogolepov. Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research
|
|
(Rockefeller University) founded in New York. First trans-Atlantic radio broadcast: Marconi sends the letter S.
|
|
1902 -- Assassination of Russian Minister of Interior Sipyagain.
|
|
Paul and Felix Warburg immigrate from Germany to the U.S.
|
|
Rockefeller General Education Board founded.
|
|
1903 -- Assassination of Bogdanovich, Governor of Ufa. "Protocols
|
|
of Elders of Zion," alleged plan for Jewish world takeover,
|
|
published in Russian newspaper.
|
|
1904 -- Assassination of Russian Premier Vischelev von Plehev.
|
|
1905 -- Assassination of Grand Duke Sergius and Idaho Governor
|
|
Steunenberg. Abortive revolution in Russia. Expanded version of
|
|
"Protocols of Zion" published.
|
|
1906 -- Assassination of Russian General Dubrassov.
|
|
1907 -- Financial panic and depression allegedly caused by J.P.
|
|
Morgan to gain support for the central bank concept.
|
|
1908 -- Assassination of King Carl of Prussia and Crown Prince of
|
|
Portugal. FBI founded. Founding of the Armanen Initiates, another
|
|
proro-Nazi secret society.
|
|
1910 -- Attempted assassination of Mayor Gaynor of NYC. Secret
|
|
meeting of bankers and politicians at Jekyll Island, Georgia,
|
|
results in Federal Reserve Act.
|
|
1911 -- Assassination of Prime Minister Staliapin of Russia by
|
|
police double agent. Standard Oil of New Jersey broken up as
|
|
illegal monopoly.
|
|
1912 -- Assassination of Primier Canalegas of Spain. Attempted
|
|
assassination of Teddy Roosevelt. Colonel E.M. House, adviser to
|
|
Woodrow Wilson, publishes "Philip Dru: Administrator," a political
|
|
romance which proposed modern social legislation. Founding of
|
|
Germanen Order, another pre-Nazi secret society.
|
|
1913 -- Assassination of George I of Greece. Rockefeller
|
|
Foundation founded.
|
|
1914 -- Attempted assassination of Archduke Ferdinand of Austria
|
|
by Masonic agents, followed an hour later by successful
|
|
assassination; in Russia, Rasputin stabbed the same day. World War
|
|
I begins.
|
|
1915 -- Sinking of the Lusitania by German submarine; allegedly
|
|
carrying secret munitions for the Allies, the ship supposedly
|
|
sacrificed by British and American authorities to drum up war
|
|
hysteria in U.S. Alfred Wegener proposed theory of continental
|
|
drift, receives ridicule and contempt from his fellow scientists.
|
|
Ku Klux Klan revived.
|
|
1916 -- Assassination of Rasputin.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>From "The Illuminoids" c. Neil Wilgus & various sources</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>(Part 2, from Neil Wilgus' THE ILLUMINOIDS and other sources)</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>1917 -- United States enters World War I. Russian Revolution
|
|
begins; Cheka, secret police of Bolsheviks, founded.
|
|
1918 -- Assassination of Russian Czar Nicholas II and his family.
|
|
Attempted assassination of Lenin. New Thought lecturer David Van
|
|
Bush hires H.P. Lovecraft as a ghost writer.
|
|
1919 -- Founding of Thule Society in Germany; Hitler recruited.
|
|
League of Nations founded at Paris Peace Conference. Meeting at
|
|
the Majestic Hotel, Paris, between Wilsonian intellectuals (House,
|
|
Dulles and Dulles, etc.) and "like-minded Englishmen" to discuss
|
|
forming an organization "for the study of international affairs."
|
|
Royal Institute of International Affairs founded. Freud draws
|
|
attention to Austrian neurologist Poetzl's experiments with the
|
|
tachistroscope, an early device for studying subliminal
|
|
perception. Charles Fort's "The Book of the Damned" published.
|
|
Hitler joins the German Workers' Party.
|
|
1920s -- Assassination of estimated 400 German public figures
|
|
begins. U.S. entry into League of Nations blocked in Senate.
|
|
Development of modern advertising techniques emphasizing
|
|
manipulation rather than information.
|
|
1920 -- GWP becomes the National Socialist German Worker's Party.
|
|
1921 -- Council on Foreign Relations incorporated; founded by
|
|
Wilsonians House, Dulles and company upon their return from Paris,
|
|
with the help of the Round Table Group. Marconi states he believes
|
|
mysterious V code on pre-WWI radio came from space; Tesla recalls
|
|
seeing lights, vivid images, when he was a boy. Hitler takes over
|
|
the NSGWP.
|
|
1922 -- Mussolini, alleged British Intelligence agent, comes to
|
|
power in Italy, begins attempt to eliminate Mafia in Sicily. Cheka
|
|
reorganized as GPU, Russian secret police. CFR journal "Foreign
|
|
Affairs" founded. King Tutankhamen's tomb opened in Egypt, thus
|
|
invoking "King Tut's Curse"; 14 violent deaths in as many years
|
|
linked to the curse.
|
|
1923 -- Assassination of Pancho Villa in Mexico. Founding of
|
|
Hitler's National-Socialist (Nazi) Party in Germany. International
|
|
Police (Interpol) founded in Vienna. In the face of the Teapot
|
|
Dome and other scandals, President Harding visits Alaska and
|
|
receives a "long ciphered message" which visibly upsets him,
|
|
causing him to ask what a president could do when friends betrayed
|
|
him; he died soon after among conflicting rumors about the cause
|
|
of his death. Fort's "New Lands" published.
|
|
1924 -- J. Edgar Hoover takes over FBI. During Mars' closest
|
|
approach radios around the world went off the air in order to
|
|
allow interception of any possible messages from space; when
|
|
translated onto photographic tape, signals received produced
|
|
crudely drawn faces. Lovecraft ghostwrites for Houdini.
|
|
1925 -- Lionel Curtis organizes the Institutes of Pacific
|
|
Relations in at least ten countries for the Round Table Group.
|
|
1926 -- Suicide of synchronicity researcher Paul Krammerer,
|
|
biologist, freemason.
|
|
1927 -- Rise of the CFR due to Rockefeller and other foundation
|
|
funding. The Crystal Skull discovered in ruins of Lubaantun in
|
|
British Honduras.
|
|
1928 -- Nomination of Catholic Al Smith sparks last spurt of
|
|
growth for the KKK. Soviet produced film shows conditioned reflex
|
|
experiments on humans.
|
|
1929 -- CFR moves to Harold Pratt Building on 68th Street. Great
|
|
Depression begins. Quisling's "About the Matter That Inhabited
|
|
Worlds Outside Ours and the Significance Caused by It to Our
|
|
Philosophy of Life" published.
|
|
1930 -- Pavlov begins applying knowledge of conditioned reflex to
|
|
human psychosis.
|
|
1930s -- Mafia becomes integral part of the U.S. organized crime.
|
|
Continuing political assassinations accompany Nazi rise to power.
|
|
1931 -- Fort's "Lo!" published.
|
|
1932 -- Fort dies after publishing his last book, "Wild Talents."
|
|
1933 -- Attempted assassination of Franklin Roosevelt; Chicago
|
|
mayor Cermak killed instead. FDR orders use of Great Seal of the
|
|
U.S. on reverse side of the dollar bill. Reichstag Fire, set by
|
|
Nazis, used to suspend civil liberties.
|
|
1934 -- Assassination of S.M. Kirov, Soviet leader and Stalin
|
|
collaborator. Russian GPU renamed NKVD. Beginning of Hitler's
|
|
Black Order. Unexplained "ghostflier" broadcasts in Sweden.
|
|
1935 -- Assassination of Senator Huey Long. First lobotomy
|
|
performed by Egas Moniz in Lisbon.
|
|
1936 -- Beginning of Moscow Purge trials in which numerous
|
|
communist leaders were brainwashed into false confessions and then
|
|
executed.
|
|
1937 -- Spanish Civil War begins. First of 48 "Lost Colony" stones
|
|
found in North Carolina; stones supposedly tell the story of lost
|
|
Roanoke Island colony. Amelia Earhart Putnam, aviator, disappears.
|
|
1938 -- Assassination of Leon Sedov, Trotsky's son; first
|
|
assassination attempt against Trotsky. Nazi invasion of Austria;
|
|
Interpol exiled -- or taken over by Nazis; German expedition to
|
|
Antarctica stakes out 600000 square kilometers, lands near the
|
|
South Pole. Electroshock treatment discovered. Orson Welles'
|
|
dramatization of H.G. Wells' "War of the Worlds" scares American
|
|
radio listeners.
|
|
1939 -- Attorney Leon Cooke, friend of Jack Ruby and financial
|
|
secretary of the union which employed Ruby, killed by union
|
|
president Jack Martin; union subsequently taken over by Mafia.
|
|
League of Nations suspended. Germany invades Poland; World War II
|
|
begins. CFR offers it services to U.S. State Dept. Interpol
|
|
grouped with Gestapo. Amateur radio astronomer Grote Reber
|
|
receives dot-dash signal from space. Attempted assassination of
|
|
Hitler.
|
|
1940 -- Assassination of Leon Trotsky in Mexico. British secret
|
|
police renamed MI-5 and MI-6 for duration of war. Interpol moved
|
|
to near Berlin., with Reinhard Heydrich in charge. Nazis allegedly
|
|
begin building Hitler's secret hideout in Antarctica. Roosevelt
|
|
sends Gen. "Wild Bill" Donovan on info-gathering mission to
|
|
Europe; Donovan recommends a central intelligence organization.
|
|
U.S. State Dept. creates Division of Special Research headed by
|
|
CFR member Pasbolsky.
|
|
1941 -- Japan attacks U.S. Fleet at Pearl Harbor, allegedly
|
|
through the maneuvering of Roosevelt and his advisors to provide
|
|
an excuse to enter the war. Donovan made head of new Office of
|
|
Coordinator of Information. "The Books of Charles Fort" published.
|
|
1942 -- Assassination of Interpol chief H-ydrtch pn
|
|
Czechloslavakia. Donovan's OCI evolves into the Office of
|
|
Strategic Services (OSS).
|
|
1943 -- LSD-25 discovered by Swiss chemist Albert Hofmann. Nazi
|
|
Admiral Doenitz boasts the German submarine fleet has built "in
|
|
another part of the world a Shangri-La on land, an impregnable
|
|
fortress." Juan Peron and other pro-Nazi leaders take power in
|
|
Argentina. Pilots on both sides of the war report seeing "foo-fighters," unexplained flying objects, while flying war missions.
|
|
1944 -- Attempted assassination of Hitler. Nazis begin sending
|
|
millions of dollars worth of jewels, paintings and cash to
|
|
Argentina for safe keeping. Russian NKVD reorganized as MGB.
|
|
Donovan prepares plan for Roosevelt to establish a central
|
|
intelligence agency which is pigeonholed, later reconsidered by
|
|
Truman. American band leader Glenn Miller disappears on unarmed
|
|
flight over the English Channel.
|
|
1945 -- Alleged assassination (suicide) of James Forrestal at
|
|
Bethesda Hospital Neurological Ward, after his attempt to warn
|
|
Roosevelt of Illuminati plot. Roosevelt dies, Truman becomes
|
|
president. Mussolini killed. Hitler allegedly escapes from Berlin
|
|
after arranging for a fake suicide cover story; Hitler's death
|
|
announced, Admiral Doenitz takes command; submarines U-530, U-977
|
|
and others begin secret journey from Norway soon after Quisling
|
|
allegedly refused Hitler's offer to take him "aboard a submarine
|
|
to a safe refuge"; two months after Germany surrenders submarines
|
|
U-530 and U-977 give themselves up in Mar del Plata, Argentina,
|
|
after allegedly being lost from the submarine convoy taking Hitler
|
|
and others to their hideout in Antarctica; Nazi leader Martin
|
|
Bormann escapes without a trace from Berlin after supervising
|
|
Hitler's "suicide." First atomic bombs dropped. World War II ends.
|
|
General Gehlen, Head of Nazi Intelligence, captured by U.S. Army
|
|
and flown to Washington; other Nazi and British agents imported to
|
|
U.S., along wit' Werner Von Braun and other developers of the V-2
|
|
rockets. Interpol dissolved -- or reorganized with headquarters in
|
|
Paris, the story varies. OSS disbanded, its agents moving to
|
|
military intelligence agencies and the State Dept. CFR allegedly
|
|
takes over State Dept. United Nations founded. "Official beginning
|
|
of Bermuda Triangle mystery," when Flight 19, made up of five
|
|
naval bombers, disappears off the coast of Florida; another plane
|
|
sent to investigate also disappears -- 6 planes and 27 men
|
|
vanished. An Air Force plane's engines fail over Iwo Jima as foo-fighters maneuver around it.
|
|
1946 -- Murder of wire service king James Ragen by Syndicate
|
|
friends of Jack Ruby; indictment dropped following additional
|
|
murders. John Kennedy and Richard Nixon elected to House of
|
|
Representatives. Truman's executive order sets up the National
|
|
Intelligence Authority and Central Intelligence Group. Gehlen
|
|
returns to Germany to continue intelligence work for U.S. Army.
|
|
Interpol reorganization meeting held in Brussels. Admiral Byrd
|
|
allegedly leads Naval "research" expedition to Antarctica to
|
|
attack Hitler's secret hideout; attempt allegedly fails and Hitler
|
|
and his "UFO scientists" continue their activities. Waves of
|
|
unexplained "ghost rockets" seen in Europe, especially
|
|
Scandanavia.
|
|
1947 -- Attempted assassination of Minneapolis Mayor Hubert
|
|
Humphrey. Partition of India receives "strong impetus from the
|
|
Round Table Group." National Security Act establishes Dept. of
|
|
Defense, National Security Council and Central Intelligence
|
|
Agency. France creates SDECE, similar to CIA. Second UFO flap
|
|
year; Kenneth Arnold reports flying saucers near Yakima,
|
|
Washington, and other reports soon follow. Maury Island "hoax": an
|
|
early Men-In-Black incident three days before the Arnold sighting,
|
|
in which a "donut-shaped object" dropped slag on a boat near
|
|
Tacoma, Washington; the next day an MIB visited Harold Dahl, who
|
|
was piloting the boat, and warned him not to discuss the sighting;
|
|
the boat's owner, Fred Crisman, was suspected of being a CIA
|
|
employee and was later called to give secret testimony at the
|
|
trial of Clay Shaw in New Orleans; pilot Dahl disappeared and
|
|
UFOlogist Arnold, who investigated the case, reported unexplained
|
|
failure of his own plane's engine soon after two Air Force
|
|
investigators were killed taking off from Tacoma's airport.
|
|
1948 -- Assassination of Mahatma Gandhi. Attempted assassination
|
|
of labor leader Walter Reuther. Beginning of Operation Ohio, a CIA
|
|
program responsible for one hundred European assassinations during
|
|
the next ten years. Beginning of CIA interest in UFOs as a
|
|
"security" problem. McCord employed by the FBI. Nixon gains
|
|
prominence in the Alger Hiss case as member of the House Un-American Activities Committee; goes to Miami where he meets Bebe
|
|
Rebozo and goes yachting with other underworld-connected figures.
|
|
Martin Bormann reported living in Argentina. New nation of Israel
|
|
creates Central Institute for Intelligence and Security. World
|
|
Council of Churches founded in Amsterdam.
|
|
1949 -- Report critical of CIA filed and forgotten, unread by
|
|
Truman; Central Intelligence Act exempts CIA from disclosure laws.
|
|
E. Howard Hunt becomes CIA agent; Clay Shaw becomes agent for
|
|
CIA's Domestic Contact Service. The Gehlen Organization
|
|
transferred to CIA control. U.S. Army begins 20 years of simulated
|
|
germ warfare attacks against American cities, conducting at least
|
|
239 open air tests. Interpol granted consultive status by UN.
|
|
Chaing Kai-shek flees to Formosa; mainland China taken by
|
|
communist leaders; Social Affairs Dept. and other Chinese secret
|
|
police created. Trial of Cardinal Mindszenty in Hungary following
|
|
his brainwashing and confession of conspiracy.
|
|
1950 -- Attempted assassination of Truman by Puerto Rican
|
|
nationalists. Korean War begins. Congress passes McCarran's
|
|
Internal Security Act setting up program for detention of
|
|
subversives. Hiss convicted of perjury; Nixon elected to Senate
|
|
after smear campaign against California opponent. U.S. Army
|
|
engages in "simulated" germ warfare in San Francisco and the
|
|
Pentagon. National Council of Churches founded in U.S. CIA
|
|
organizes the Pacific Corporation, a large holding company which
|
|
was the first of many CIA "private" enterprises. Alleged CIA plot
|
|
to introduce UFO contact ideas with "Little Green Men" stories and
|
|
radio contact "from space." Malcolm X receives visit from an MIB
|
|
while in prison. "Worlds in Collision" by Immanuel Velikovsky
|
|
proposes a catastrophic theory of ancient history in which a huge
|
|
"comet" of matter is ripped out of Jupiter, approaches Earth close
|
|
enough to cause universal fire/flood legends in primitive folklore
|
|
and the settles into orbit as a new planet, Venus; Velikovsky
|
|
receives ridicule and contempt from his fellow scientists, thought
|
|
20 years later Jupiter is generally considered a "cold star"
|
|
rather than a planet and Velikovsky's prediction of a hot climate
|
|
on Venus is confirmed. Approximate starting date of building of
|
|
Mount Weather, secret American government fortress.
|
|
1951 -- Assassination of Ali Razmara of Iran, Riad Al-Sulh and
|
|
Abdullah of Jordan and Ali Knah Liaquat of Pakistan. Army
|
|
simulated germ warfare project in Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania.
|
|
Approximate date CBS begins active cooperation with CIA. McCord
|
|
moves from FBI to CIA. North Korean brainwashing of American
|
|
prisoners begins. TIME magazine popularizes the term
|
|
"brainwashing."
|
|
1952 -- Eisenhower elected president, Nixon vice-president;
|
|
Kennedy elected to Senate. Army germ warfare project in Key West,
|
|
Florida, and Ft. McCellan, Alabama. CIA agent Downey and Fecteau
|
|
captured while on spy mission in China. Third UFO flap year. First
|
|
UFO "contact" case: George Adamski meets Venusians in California
|
|
desert; alleged CIA plot to start UFO scare. UFOlogist George
|
|
Williamson, one of Adamski's witnesses, claims he also witnessed
|
|
ham radio operator establish contact with another world.
|
|
1953 -- Dr. Frank Olsen commits suicide after having been given a
|
|
secret dose of LSD by the CIA, under the direction of the
|
|
mysterious Dr. Sidney Gottlieb. CIA contemplates developing drugs
|
|
to cause amnesia in retired agents. CIA's Robertson Panel views
|
|
UFO reports as national security threat. Army germ warfare project
|
|
in Panama City, Florida. Return of Korean War prisoners, including
|
|
some who underwent brainwashing. 21 POWs defect. Mau Mau (Hidden
|
|
Ones) formed in Kenya to overthrow white rule. UFOlogist Albert
|
|
Bender closes down his International Flying Saucer Bureau after
|
|
being visited by three MIB.
|
|
1954 -- Attempted assassinations of several U.S. Congressmen by
|
|
Puerto Rican nationalists. First Bilderberger meeting takes place
|
|
at the Bilderberg Hotel, Oosterbeek, Holland. Condemnation by the
|
|
U.S. Senate of Joseph McCarthy following his charges of subversion
|
|
in high places. Hunt involved in CIA overthrow of communist regime
|
|
in Guatemala, Carlos Castillo-Armas becomes president. Richard
|
|
Bissell joins the CIA. Army germ warfare project in Point Mugu and
|
|
Fort Hueneme, California. Russian KGB created to replace earlier
|
|
secret police. Broadcaster Frank Edwards fired for discussing UFOs
|
|
on the air. Strange voice "from space" speaks from turned-off
|
|
radios in midwest U.S. and London, warns against preparations for
|
|
war.
|
|
1955 -- Assassination of Jose Antonio Remon of Panama and Adnan
|
|
Al-Malki of Syria. Bilderberger meeting in Barbizon, France. Lee
|
|
Harvey Oswald meets David Ferrie of the New Orleans Civil Air
|
|
Patrol. Doug Durham joins the Marines. The Office of Naval
|
|
Research allegedly receives a copy of Morris Jessup's "The Case
|
|
for the UFOs" with marginal notes in three different hands,
|
|
supposedly by "Gypsies" knowledgeable in UFOlogy; ONR reprints
|
|
several hundred copies for internal use; an MIB called "Carlos
|
|
Allende" is implicated in the affair.
|
|
1956 -- Assassination of Anastasio Somoza of Nicaragua.
|
|
Bilderberger meeting in Frednsborg, Denmark. Clay Shaw's CIA
|
|
contact allegedly stopped. Oswald joins Marines. Durham receives
|
|
special CIA training. UFOlogist Gray Barker publishes "They Knew
|
|
Too Much About Flying Saucers" which reported numerous MIB
|
|
incidents.
|
|
1957 -- Assassination of Carlos Castillo-Armas of Guatemala.
|
|
Exiled Ukranian politician Lev Rebet assassinated by KGB agent in
|
|
Munich. Alleged assassination of Joseph McCarthy at Bethesda
|
|
Hospital Neurological Ward, after warning of Illuminati plot.
|
|
Bilderberger meetings in St. Simon Island, Georgia, and Fiuggui,
|
|
Italy. Oswald assigned to base at Atsugi, Japan, where CIA U-2
|
|
planes were launched; shoots self in elbow. General Edwin Walker
|
|
commands federal troops sent to enforce racial integration at
|
|
Little Rock, Arkansas. CIA helps Iran form SAVAK, secret police
|
|
later accused of assassination Iranian dissidents. Experiments in
|
|
behavior modification sleep-teaching take place at California
|
|
penal institution Woodland Road Camp. Fourth UFO flap year. Anti-atomic bomb propaganda disseminated by saucer clubs -- another CIA
|
|
plot? Unexplained short wave radio signals received worldwide.
|
|
1958 -- Assassination of Abdul Llah, Faisal II and Nuri Al-Said of
|
|
Iraq. Bilderberger meeting in Buxton, England. Russia launches
|
|
first space satellites. Unidentified ex-Marine lives in Minsk,
|
|
USSR, apparently gathering information for the CIA. Oswald on
|
|
maneuvers in the Philippines involving U-2 flights. Francis Gary
|
|
Powers released from Air Force and assigned to covert CIA spying.
|
|
Kerry Thornley and Gregory Hill found Discordianism and publish
|
|
"Principia Discordia, or How I Found Goddess and What I Did To
|
|
Her When I Found Her"; Thornley joins Marine Corps. John Birch
|
|
Society organized by Robert Welch. Nelson Rockefeller elected
|
|
governor of New York. Ham radio operators pick up a male voice
|
|
claiming to be Nacoma of Jupiter and warning of atomic bomb
|
|
disaster in English, German, Norweigian and his own unknown
|
|
language.
|
|
1959 -- Assassination of Solomon W.R. Bandaranaike of Ceylon.
|
|
Exiled Ukranian politician Stephan Bandera assassinated by KGB
|
|
agent in Munich. Attempted assassination of Senator Bircher of
|
|
Ohio and Governor Almond of Virginia. Apparent suicide of UFO
|
|
researcher Morris Jessup who had received communications from
|
|
"Carlos Allende," one of the MIB and whose book was mysteriously
|
|
annoted by UFOlogical Gypsies. Bilderberger meeting in Yesilkov,
|
|
Turkey. Fidel Castro assumes power in Cuba; Cuban Intelligence
|
|
(DGI) begun. Ruby visits casino owner in Havana. Kerry Thornley
|
|
first meets fellow Marine Oswald in California; Oswald released
|
|
from Marines, defects to Russia. Thornley assigned to U-2 base in
|
|
Atsugi, Japan. Durham discharged from Marines, stationed at CIA
|
|
base in Guatemala. UFO sighting at CIA headquarters after Naval
|
|
officer contacts "space people" while in CIA-observed trance.
|
|
Condon's "The Manchurian Candidate" published.
|
|
1960 -- Assassination of Hazza Majali of Jordan. Bilderberger
|
|
meeting in Burgenstock, Switzerland. Eisenhower authorizes
|
|
training and arming Cuban exiles, allegedly issues orders for the
|
|
assassination of Congolese leader Patrice Lumumba. Nixon, CIA
|
|
agent Bissell and others plan Bay of Pigs invasion, obtain
|
|
permission to use Guatemala as launching point. Bernard Baker
|
|
serves as conduit for Bay of Pigs funding. CIA buys Southern Air
|
|
Transport; contemplates development of "recruitment pills" and
|
|
other drugs; studies mysterious amnesia of Korean war prisoners
|
|
moved through Manchuria; contemplates giving truth serum to
|
|
brainwashed American POWs. CIA spy Powers shot down in U-2 over
|
|
Russia; summit conference cancelled. Kennedy-Nixon debates;
|
|
Kennedy elected president. Oswald assigned job in Bellorussian
|
|
Radio Factory in Minsk, USSR. Thornley discharged from Marines.
|
|
Project Ozma, searching for intelligent signals from another part
|
|
of the universe, receives unexplained signals from space.
|
|
1961 -- Assassination of Lumumba of the Congo, Rafael Trujillo
|
|
Molina of the Dominican Republic and Louis Rivagasore of Nurundi.
|
|
Attempted assassination of Castro by Hans Tanner. Michael
|
|
Rockefeller disappears in New Guinea. Bilderberger meeting in
|
|
Quebec, Canada. Thornley arrives to New Orleans; Slim Brooks gives
|
|
Thornley "the haircut" on his 23rd birthday; the same day, the
|
|
CIA invasion of Cuba at the Bay of Pigs, launched from Guatemala,
|
|
fails due to poor planning and cancellation of support by Kennedy;
|
|
the CIA, the Mob, Cuban-exiles, right-wingers and Nixonites
|
|
supposedly vow revenge against Kennedy. Kennedy develops
|
|
extracurricular relationship with Judith Campbell, Sam Giancana's
|
|
girlfriend; Giancana and John Roselli enlisted by CIA to attempt
|
|
Castro assassination. George De Mohrenschildt on hiking trip
|
|
through Guatemala. Brooks introduces Thornley to his
|
|
"brother-in-law," Gary Kirstein, allegedly an undercover E. Howard
|
|
Hunt; Thornley and "Kirstein" begin nearly three-year relationship
|
|
of discussing Nazis, mind-control, the status of philosopher-kings, and plans to assassinate Kennedy. Robert Morrow, working
|
|
with Ruby, Shaw and Ferrie, allegedly smuggle weapons from Greece
|
|
to Central America for the CIA; also picks up information for CIA
|
|
from "Harvey" in the Soviet Union. Ferrie, Gordon Novel and two
|
|
others arrested in burglary of Louisiana arms bunker. Unidentified
|
|
Marine from Minsk divulges information to CIA agent in Copenhagen.
|
|
General Walker resigns after criticism of his anti-communist
|
|
indoctrination of troops. U.S. Military Advisor Group begins
|
|
defoliation project in Vietnam which eventually covers over 12% of
|
|
land area. Milgram's Yale experiments demonstrating dangers of
|
|
obedience to authority. Unexplained transmissions from space
|
|
monitored by ham radio operators worldwide; Bob Renaud, ham
|
|
operator, allegedly makes contact with aliens.
|
|
1962 -- Suicide of Marilyn Monroe under questionable
|
|
circumstances. Bilderberger meeting in Saltsjobaden, Sweden.
|
|
Oswald returns to America with his Russian wife, an alleged KGB
|
|
agent. Retired General Walker arrested on Attorney Robert
|
|
Kennedy's orders when Walker became involved in the racial
|
|
disorders in Oxford, Mississippi; Walker stripped naked and flown
|
|
to Springfield, Missouri, prison for examination; Walker reported
|
|
to be incompetent but was later released and ran against John
|
|
Connally for Governor of Texas. Hunt becomes head of CIA's new
|
|
Domestic Operations Division. CIA interference in Ecuadorian
|
|
politics. CIA allegedly pays a Canadian agriculture technician to
|
|
infect Cuban turkeys with Newcastle disease (though the technician
|
|
supposedly double-crossed them). Ruby allegedly flies from Mexico
|
|
City to visit Havana. CIA begins using secret terror teams in
|
|
Vietnam, roots of Operation Phoenix. Dr. Edgar Schein outlines
|
|
behavior modification programs for U.S. prisons, based on Korean
|
|
brainwashing techniques. Cuban missile crisis. De Mohrenschildt,
|
|
friend of the Kennedys, befriends the Oswalds in Dallas. Durham
|
|
employed by Des Moines Police Dept. UFOlogist Williamson
|
|
disappears in South America. Film version of "The Manchurian
|
|
Candidate" released.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Illuminati History, Part 3
|
|
|
|
From Neil Wilgus' ILLUMINOIDS and other sources
|
|
</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>1963 -- Assassination of Sylvanus Olympio of Togo, Abdul Karim
|
|
Kassem of Iraq, Medgar Evers of US, Ngo Dinh Diem of South
|
|
Vietnam and John Kennedy of US; Texas Gov. John Connally
|
|
wounded, police officer Tippit and Oswald killed. Attempted
|
|
assassination of General Walker in Dallas earlier, allegedly by
|
|
Oswald; Oswald also supposedly threatened to kill ex-Veep Nixon,
|
|
or was it Veep Johnson? the Warren Commission wasn't sure.
|
|
Alleged assassination attempt of JFK in Miami but right-winger
|
|
Milteer spills the beans; another attempt in Chicago also
|
|
supposedly foiled. Attempted assassination of Castro in which
|
|
CIA agent Rorke is killed. Bilderberger meeting in Cannes,
|
|
France. Johnson becomes president; almost immediately reverses
|
|
JFK's decision to withdraw from Vietnam. CIA begins weather
|
|
modification project over Hue, Vietnam. Equadorian government
|
|
overthrown. Profumo scandal in England, involving sex and
|
|
spying, brings down Conservative government. Russia sends first
|
|
woman into space. Unexplained radio transmission interrupts
|
|
astronaut Gordon Cooper in unidentified language. Numerous MIB
|
|
spotted in Dealy Plaza.
|
|
</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Oswald in New Orleans</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Oswald's Fair Play for Cuba Committee established at same address
|
|
as ex-FBI man Guy Bannister's private detective office, also used
|
|
for E. Howard Hunt's (allegedly the "brother-in-law" Thornley met
|
|
with several times over period 1961-1963) Cuban Revolutionary
|
|
Council and other anti-Castro fronts; confrontation with Carlos
|
|
Bringuier, another agent for CIA's Domestic Contact Service, in
|
|
front of Shaw's International Trade Mart; Oswald asks Bringuier to
|
|
hit him, pleads guilty when they are arrested, asks to see an FBI
|
|
agent, is released and appears on radio and TV the next day to
|
|
publicize his activities; Oswald allegedly meets Shaw, Ferrie and
|
|
other operatives of the FBI and CIA; Oswald, Shaw and Ferrie
|
|
allegedly attempt to register to vote in rural Clinton, Louisiana,
|
|
attracting attention by arriving in a black Cadillac; Oswald and
|
|
Thornley allegedly meet at nightclub; Thornley thinks it was a
|
|
'look-alike'; Jack Ruby visits New Orleans to obtain "the services
|
|
of a stripper known as 'Jada,' who became his featured performer."
|
|
|
|
|
|
Oswald in Mexico
|
|
|
|
Although Oswald was allegedly on a bus to Mexico at the time,
|
|
someone calling himself "Harvey Oswald" appeared at the Selective
|
|
Service office in Austin, Texas, to discuss his undesirable
|
|
discharge; the next day Cuban refugee leader Sylvio Odio is
|
|
visited in Dallas by two Latins and "Leon Osward" (whom they
|
|
called "Leopoldo") to discuss violent anti-Castro activities and
|
|
revenge against Kennedy -- though Oswald was supposedly on his way
|
|
to Mexico City; Albert Osborne, who allegedly paid for 1000 Hands
|
|
Off Cuba leaflets which Oswald distributed in New Orleans,
|
|
allegedly rides the same bus with him to Mexico City; Oswald, or
|
|
someone impersonating him, attempts to go to Cuba from Mexico
|
|
City; while Oswald was in Mexico a second Oswald appeared at a
|
|
Dallas rifle range to shoot bull's-eyes, have his scope adjusted
|
|
and talk to people there; Oswald returns to Dallas on bus No. 332,
|
|
or was it No. 340? which had the name "Oswald" added to the
|
|
manifest after the trip.
|
|
</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Oswald in Dallas
|
|
|
|
Soon after returning from Mexico Oswald and his family allegedly
|
|
drove to Alice, Texas, to talk with the manager of KPOY -- though
|
|
Oswald didn't drive and the Warren Commission concluded he
|
|
couldn't have been in Alice then; Oswald attends General Walker's
|
|
John Birch meeting lecture and two nights later attends an ACLU
|
|
meeting where he criticizes Walker's alleged racism; someone
|
|
looking like Oswald visits a furniture store in Irving, Texas,
|
|
with his family, looking for a part for a gun; the second Oswald
|
|
visits the Irving Sports Shop to have three holes drilled in a
|
|
rifle, though Oswald's only had two holes and they were drilled
|
|
before he got it; the second Oswald cashes a $189 check at an
|
|
Irving grocery store, buys groceries Oswald was unlikely to buy
|
|
and gets a HAIRCUT accompanied by a teenager who allegedly
|
|
exchanged leftist remarks with him; Oswald II visits the Lord-Lincoln auto agency to look at cars, test drives one at 70 mph and
|
|
brags about coming into money soon and returning to Russia; Oswald
|
|
II begins visiting Dallas/Irving rifle ranges to demonstrate his
|
|
marksmanship, shooting bull's-eyes and hitting other people's
|
|
targets; Oswald I writes a letter to the Dallas FBI which is
|
|
destroyed soon after the assassination; Oswald I writes to "Mr.
|
|
Hunt" asking to "discuss the matter fully before any steps are
|
|
taken by me or anyone else"; two days before the assassination
|
|
Oswald II creates a scene in a Dallas restaurant where Officer
|
|
J.D. Tippit "glowered" at him; Oswald I allegedly seen at the
|
|
Carousel Club, plotting with Ruby, Tippit and/or Bernard Weissman;
|
|
Oswald I or II allegedly ordered distribution of the anti-Kennedy
|
|
"Wanted for Treason" leaflets in Dallas; Oswald, or was it Billy
|
|
Lovelady? photographed standing in the doorway of the Book
|
|
Depository building at the moment Kennedy was shot; Oswald II
|
|
allegedly seen fleeing from the back of the Book Depository
|
|
immediately after the assassination; Oswald II confronts Tippit,
|
|
Oswald I arrested in the Texas Theatre; Oswald's voice prints show
|
|
he told the truth when he said "I didn't shoot anybody, no sir."</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>
|
|
Faces in the Crowd
|
|
|
|
Among the several hundred witnesses to the assassination were the
|
|
following: the "umbrella man" who supposedly signaled
|
|
assassination teams to fire by closing his black umbrella; the
|
|
"Babushka Lady," who allegedly was introduced to "Lee Oswald of
|
|
the CIA" by Jack Ruby and who also filmed the assassination, only
|
|
to have the FBI confiscate the film and never return it; Joseph
|
|
Milteer, the National States Rights Party leader who had disclosed
|
|
the Miami plot against JFK and who had links through the NSRP to
|
|
James Earl Ray's brother Jerry; three tramps who were arrested
|
|
soon after the assassination, two of them allegedly resembling E.
|
|
Howard Hunt and Frank Sturgis, the third possibly being Oswald II;
|
|
Lee Harvey Oswald and George DeMohrenschildt who, so
|
|
DeMohrenschildt told a hospital roommate just before his death,
|
|
were together watching the parade when the shots were fired --
|
|
Oswald ran and that was the last time DeMohrenschildt supposedly
|
|
saw him.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Some Nagging Doubts
|
|
|
|
Nixon, having attended a convention of Pepsi-Cola executives in
|
|
Dallas, leaves for New York an hour before the assassination and
|
|
was one of the few people who later forgot where he was at the
|
|
time; J. Edgar Hoover also alleged to have been secretly in Dallas
|
|
on the same day. Texas oilman H.L. Hunt taken into protective
|
|
custody by federal agents after the assassination and kept in
|
|
another city for several days to avoid threats by those who might
|
|
think he was involved. DeMohrenschildt, in Haiti, expresses belief
|
|
Oswald was a patsy and that the FBI killed Kennedy (though later
|
|
DeMohrenschildt claimed to have been the link between H.L Hunt and
|
|
Oswald in a right-wing plot to kill JFK). Ferrie allegedly flies
|
|
to Dallas on evening after assassination but his actual
|
|
whereabouts remain unclear. Ruby, allegedly in hypnotic trance,
|
|
shoots Oswald after an unexplained horn honk signal in the Dallas
|
|
Police building basement. Cuban Bay of Pigs veteran named Ruedelo
|
|
arrives in Madrid, Spain, five days after Kennedy assassination,
|
|
jailed for invalid visa. Murder of Jack Zangetti, Oklahoma motel
|
|
owner who told friends the day after the JFK killing that Ruby
|
|
would kill Oswald and a member of the Sinatra family would be
|
|
kidnapped soon afterward to distract attention from the
|
|
assassination. Frank Sinatra, Jr., kidnapped, released unharmed.</p>
|
|
|
|
|
|
<p>Illuminati History, Part 4
|
|
|
|
From Neil Wilgus' ILLUMINOIDS and other sources</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>1964 -- Assassination of Jigme P. Dorji of Bhutan. Deaths
|
|
associated with Kennedy assassination: Betty Mooney MacDonald,
|
|
former Carousel Club stripper who had met Oswald at a party and
|
|
provided an alibi for Darrell Wayne Garner (who was accused of
|
|
wounding Tippit-killing witness Warren Reynolds), found hanged
|
|
in her cell after being arrested for fighting with her roommate;
|
|
Garner disappears, later found dead; Hank Killam, whose wife
|
|
Wanda was also a stripper at Ruby's club and who was a friend of
|
|
John Carter who once lived in Oswald's rooming house, evades
|
|
police for several months, then found with a slashed throat in
|
|
Pensacola, Florida; Gary Underhill, former LIFE editor and CIA
|
|
agent who begged friends to protect him because he knew who
|
|
killed Kennedy, found shot in left side of head -- ruled suicide
|
|
even though he was right-handed; Bill Hunter, LONG BEACH PRESS-TELEGRAM reporter, who had met with Ruby's roommate George
|
|
Senator and Ruby's attorney Tom Howard at Ruby's apartment a
|
|
few hours after Oswald's murder, shot to death by a policeman
|
|
in Long Beach, California, police station, accidentally; Jim
|
|
Koethe, DALLAS TIMES-HERALD reporter also present at the meeting
|
|
in Ruby's apartment, killed by karate chop to the throat as he
|
|
emerged from the shower; Mary Meyer, painter, niece of forester
|
|
Gifford Pinchot and one of JFK's lovers (who allegedly funneled
|
|
LSD from an unsuspecting Timothy Leary to JFK), shot while
|
|
taking a walk in Washington, D.C. -- her secret diary
|
|
confiscated by her CIA friend James Angleton, later allegedly
|
|
destroyed. Robert Kennedy allegedly stalked in assassination
|
|
plot during his New York senatorial race by Frank Chavez,
|
|
associate of Ruby; Puerto Rican Teamster Ramon Ducos and Miguel
|
|
Cruz who was allegedly arrested with Oswald in New Orleans and
|
|
who claimed to have killed Kennedy; Chavez later killed by his
|
|
bodyguard, Miguel Cruz. Durham kills wife, terminated from Des
|
|
Moines police. Bilderberger meeting in Williamsburg, Virginia.
|
|
Congress passes the Tonkin Gulf resolution giving LBJ power to
|
|
make war on Vietnam. Virginia Miller, later known as "Blue
|
|
Dove," allegedly begins career as "disrupter" in the Amerindian
|
|
community; later serves as FBI informer on Indian activities.
|
|
REPORT OF THE WARREN COMMISSION ON THE ASSASSINATION OF
|
|
PRESIDENT KENNEDY released; Commission finds that Oswald, acting
|
|
alone, killed JFK.
|
|
1965 -- Assassination of Pierre Ngendandumwe of Burundi, Hassan
|
|
Ali Mansour of Iran, Malcolm X of US and Mario Mendez Montenegro
|
|
of Guatemala. On the day Malcolm was killed Pio Ghana de Pinto,
|
|
who had been working with him to coordinate poor Americans and
|
|
Third World Africans, was machine-gunned at his home in Africa.
|
|
Deaths associated with Kennedy assassination: Tom Howard, Ruby's
|
|
attorney who met with Senator and others after Oswald's death,
|
|
died of a heart attack after "acting strangely" for two days, no
|
|
autopsy performed; Rose Cherami, another Carousel stripper who
|
|
told a psychiatrist Kennedy had to be killed two days before it
|
|
happened and who said she'd seen Oswald at Ruby's club many
|
|
times, killed in a hit-and-run car accident near Big Sandy,
|
|
Texas; Dorothy Kilgallen, columnist and TV panel-show figure who
|
|
had a private half-hour interview with Ruby and said she was
|
|
going to break the Kennedy case wide open, found dead in her
|
|
apartment of an apparent overdose of alcohol and barbiturates;
|
|
William Whaley, Dallas cab driver who took Oswald from the Book
|
|
Depository to his rooming house after the assassination, killed
|
|
in an auto accident -- the first on-duty cabbie death in Dallas
|
|
since 1937; Karen Bennett Carlin, another Carousel entertainer
|
|
who reported seeing hate-ad signer Bernard Weissman at Ruby's
|
|
club and was the last known person to speak to Ruby before he
|
|
shot Oswald, died of gunshot wounds in the head in Houston.
|
|
Bilderberger meeting in Lake Como, Italy. Fighting in Vietnam
|
|
escalates into major war. US Army explores sites in the Middle
|
|
East for potential locations for nuclear devices intended to set
|
|
off earthquakes. Early prison behaviour mod program, CASE,
|
|
begins in Washington, D.C., boys school. Durham involved in
|
|
various Mafia activities and acts as informer for police,
|
|
possibly CIA. Fifth UFO flap year. Three Russian scientists
|
|
report receiving unexplained signals from space. California
|
|
highway inspector Rex Heflin, who took pictures of UFOs, visited
|
|
by MIB who took the original photographs and left; NORAD denies
|
|
they were their men, as claimed. Another ham radio operator,
|
|
Sidney Padrick, makes contact with UFO aliens.
|
|
1966 -- Assassination of Sir Abubakar Balewa of Nigeria, J.T.V.
|
|
Ironsi Aquiyi of Nigeria and Hendrick F. Verwoerd of South
|
|
Africa. Attempted assassination of James Meredith in US.
|
|
E. Howard Hunt serves as CIA contact in assassination plot
|
|
against Castro. Retired naval Lt. William Pitzer, who had
|
|
photographed the secret JFK autopsy and was beginning a job with
|
|
a TV station, found dead with a bullet in his head. Bilderberger
|
|
meeting in Wiesbaden, Germany. CIA begins weather modification
|
|
experiments over Cuba, later used in an attempt to ruin Castro's
|
|
sugar cane crop. Army simulated germ warfare project in New York
|
|
City.
|
|
1967 -- Assassination of American Nazi George Lincoln Rockwell
|
|
in Virginia. Che Guevara killed in Bolivia after CIA
|
|
questioning. Deaths associated with Kennedy assassination: Jack
|
|
Ruby, whose lawyers charged Dallas authorities with neglecting
|
|
his health, died of cancer while awaiting retrial; David Ferrie,
|
|
who was to be a key witness in the trial of Clay Shaw, found
|
|
dead in his locked apartment in New Orleans, ruled suicide
|
|
though how the ruptured blood vessel which induced his brain
|
|
hemorrhage could be self-inflicted was unexplained; Eladio del
|
|
Valle, a friend of Ferrie's who had hired him to fly bombing
|
|
missions over Cuba, found shot through the heart in a parking
|
|
lot in Miami, Florida, the same day Ferrie was killed. Dr. Mary
|
|
Sherman, another friend of Ferrie, shot in New Orleans, her body
|
|
partially burned by her killer. Bilderberger meeting in
|
|
Cambridge, England. Beginning of Clay Shaw trial; DA Jim
|
|
Garrison subpoenas Allen Dulles and ex-CIA employee Gordon Novel
|
|
to testify; both escape testimony. CIA's Operation Phoenix,
|
|
which was to assassinate and torture over 40000 in Vietnam,
|
|
officially launched. Beginning of CIA's $21 million rain-making
|
|
program over Indochina which would make 2600 sorties by 1972.
|
|
Approximate date La Costa Resort hotel built near San Clemente,
|
|
California: meeting place of Mob figures, Teamsters, politicians
|
|
and other big-wigs. Winthrop Rockefeller elected governor of
|
|
Arkansas. Black Panther party formed. Military takeover of
|
|
Greece allegedly executed by secret Operation Prometheus.
|
|
Australian Prime Minister disappears while swimming. Jim
|
|
Thompson, ex-OSS commando and "Silk King of Thailand,"
|
|
disappears on Easter Sunday; five months later his sister is
|
|
murdered. Rex Heflin again visited by MIB in connection with his
|
|
photos of California UFOs; similar MIB incidents in New York and
|
|
elsewhere; another MIB, Mr. Dixsun, allegedly visits Colorado
|
|
University UFO researcher Edward Condon and offers to help him
|
|
contact the space people.
|
|
1968 -- Assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr., in Memphis,
|
|
Tennessee, and Robert Kennedy in Los Angeles, California. Dr.
|
|
Nicholas Chetta, who performed autopsies on Ferrie and Dr.
|
|
Sherman, died of an apparent heart attack; Richard Carr, JFK
|
|
assassination witness about to testify in the Clay Shaw trial,
|
|
learns police have arrested a man planning to shoot him.
|
|
Bilderberger meeting in Mont Tremblant, Canada.
|
|
King assassination: James Earl Ray begins international travels
|
|
thanks to "Raoul" who sounds very much like his younger brother
|
|
Jerry Ray; FBI begins search for Ray as lone assassin, ignoring
|
|
considerable evidence of a conspiracy with Ray as patsy --
|
|
including reports of the mysterious "sausage and eggs man" who
|
|
was seen in the neighborhood of King's motel with a rifle before
|
|
and after the murder. Following King assassination black leader
|
|
Ron Karenga meets secretly with California Governor Reagan and
|
|
later with Los Angeles police chief Thomas Reddin. Spiro Agnew's
|
|
law-n-order handling of riots following King's assassination
|
|
brings him to national attention; Agnew allegedly chosen for
|
|
Nixon's vice-president to obtain CIA and Greek oil and shipping
|
|
firms' contributions. Robert Kennedy assassination: Sirhan
|
|
Sirhan, who wounded Kennedy in the shoulder pad, still doesn't
|
|
remember what happened but perhaps security guard Eugene Cesar,
|
|
who carried the same caliber gun as Sirhan, does; Kennedy was
|
|
shot in the back of the head at close range -- Cesar was close
|
|
behind him, Sirhan several feet in front; a "girl in the polka
|
|
dot dress," who earlier had been seen with Sirhan, reportedly
|
|
leaves the scene saying "We've shot him!" Nixon and Agnew
|
|
elected. Approximate date group called The Kaisers founded --
|
|
60 German-Americans allegedly planning to make Nixon a dictator.
|
|
FBI begins secret Cointelpro campaign against New Left and black
|
|
radicals. New York police BOSS unit founds local Black Panther
|
|
party using undercover agents. FBI informer William O'Neal
|
|
infiltrates Chicago Black Panthers, becomes chief of security,
|
|
Los Angeles police establish Criminal Conspiracy Section which
|
|
employs Donald DeFreeze, Louis Tackwood, Ron Karenga, the
|
|
Steiner brothers and other agents to infiltrate prison reform
|
|
and black power groups. CIA penetrates the Students for a
|
|
Democratic Society at Columbia College; National Caucus of Labor
|
|
Committees (NCLC) formed within the SDS. Congress creates LEAA
|
|
to fund state and local police programs. Behavior mod token
|
|
economy program set up in West Virginia youth center. Mystery
|
|
ship Scheersberg disappears between Antwerp and Genoa with 200
|
|
tons of uranium believed to have been taken to Israel.
|
|
Astronauts circling the moon interrupted by unexplained voices.
|
|
Unexplained distress signals from the mid-Pacific received by
|
|
radio stations, no ships found during search. UFOlogists
|
|
Steiger, Whitenour and Keel smeared during MIB visits in UFO
|
|
flap area. Continental drift theory confirmed.
|
|
1969 -- Assassination of Tom Mboya of Kenya and A.A. Shermarke
|
|
of Somalia. Clyde Johnson, who had allegedly attended parties
|
|
with Ferrie, Ruby and Oswald and who was beaten up to keep him
|
|
from testifying at the Clay Shaw trial, shot to death near
|
|
Greensburg, Louisiana. Richard Carr, while visiting in Atlanta,
|
|
is attacked by two men with knives. Fifteen Russian generals
|
|
die in "unrelated" incidents within a month's time. CIA-linked
|
|
Professor Thomas Rika disappears from Boulder, Colorado.
|
|
Bilderberger meeting in Copenhagen, Denmark. First manned lunar
|
|
landing. Chappaquidick accident involving Edward Kennedy; Mary
|
|
Jo Kopechne dies. Trial of Shaw for conspiracy to assassinate
|
|
JFK; with Jim Garrison's witnesses dead or discredited by CIA or
|
|
FBI and other government agencies, Shaw was soon found not
|
|
guilty. Nixon issues Executive Order No. 11490 establishing
|
|
plans for dictatorial control in the event of a "national
|
|
emergency." NEW YORK TIMES reveals secret US bombing of
|
|
Cambodia; Nixon authorizes phone taps of Kissinger's staff to
|
|
discover leak. Chicago police and FBI raid Black Panthers, kill
|
|
Fred Hampton and Mark Clark (who were possibly drugged by
|
|
O'Neal); a series of earlier clashes had left other Chicago
|
|
Panthers dead. Black Panther leaders killed in Los Angeles by
|
|
the Steiner brothers, members of Karenga's United Slaves;
|
|
Panther headquarters raided by SWAT team. New York Panthers
|
|
indicted for conspiracy. CIA's Colton Westbrook returns from
|
|
Phoenix program in Vietnam to become involved in Black Culture
|
|
Association (BCA) program in California prisons. DeFreeze sent
|
|
to Vacaville, California prison, begins to undergo personality
|
|
changes. Pentagon and Department of Interior researchers study
|
|
methods of inducing earthquakes by injecting fluids into deep
|
|
wells. Alleged CIA spy Humberto Carrillo Colon arrested by Cuban
|
|
government which seized his Very Low Frequency transceiver and
|
|
coded messages describing strange lights, a minisubmarine and
|
|
other unexplained items. MIB "Carlos Allende" visits UFOlogists
|
|
Jim and Coral Lorenzen in Tucson, gives them a copy of the ONR
|
|
reprint of Jessup's CASE FOR THE UFO. Woodstock rock festival
|
|
in New York state draws well over half a million.
|
|
|
|
|
|
</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Illuminati History, Part 5
|
|
|
|
From Neil Wilgus' ILLUMINOIDS and other sources</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>1970 -- Assassination of union leader Joseph Yablonski and his
|
|
family in Pennsylvania. Attempted assassination of Pope Paul VI.
|
|
Reuther dies in plane crash under suspicious circumstances.
|
|
Bilderberger meeting in Bad Ragaz, Switzerland. US Army experts
|
|
complete a "mock assassination" project against the president
|
|
and Congress, demonstrating that determined terrorists could
|
|
wipe out US leaders through use of chemical of germ warfare.
|
|
US invasion of Cambodia; Kent State killings; massive protests.
|
|
Nixon staffers develop the Huston Plan and "Plumbers Unit" in
|
|
plot to use police and intelligence agencies at all levels for
|
|
political purposes. Attorneys Lefcourt in New York and Gary in
|
|
San Francisco are subject to the first of over 100 unsolved
|
|
break-ins which take place over the next five years; valuables
|
|
untouched but sensitive political information taken. FBI/police
|
|
attacks on Black Panthers in Seattle, Baltimore, New Bedford,
|
|
Philadelphia, New Orleans, Toledo, Detroit and Carbondale.
|
|
Westbrook meets DeFreeze; BCA at Vacaville encourages
|
|
revolutionary ideas and racial hatred in inmates. Personality-altering Prolexin administered to 1093 inmates at Vacaville;
|
|
Special Programs Unit behavior mod program begins at Joliet,
|
|
Illinois, under Dr. Martin Groder; Bureau of Prisons requests
|
|
funds for Federal Center for Correctional Research in Butner,
|
|
North Carolina. Approximate date of the "Korea-gate" scandal:
|
|
Korean CIA undertakes massive influence-peddling campaign, 50
|
|
congressmen accept bribes, links made with Nixon Administration
|
|
and the Unification Church.
|
|
1971 -- Assassination of Wasfi Tal of Jordan. Daughter of
|
|
conspiracy investigator Mae Brussell killed in suspicious car
|
|
accident. Bilderberger meeting in Woodstock, Vermont. PENTAGON
|
|
PAPERS published. Hunt hired by White House to gather damaging
|
|
evidence against Daniel Ellsberg, Edward Kennedy and other
|
|
"enemies"; Hunt hires Barker and other Bay of Pigs veterans to
|
|
make break-in at Ellsberg's psychiatrist's office. Barker
|
|
attempts to get plans to building which will house the
|
|
Democratic Convention. Plumber chief David Young, former
|
|
Kissinger aid, contacts CIA for psychiatric profile of Ellsberg,
|
|
referred to Howard Osborn, a possible Oswald link. White House
|
|
agent Sergretti meets with FBI, Minutemen and others to plan
|
|
kidnapping of radicals during the 1972 convention -- a plan
|
|
later scrapped. FBI begins (or continues) illegal break-ins,
|
|
mail-openings and wiretaps, conducted by Squad 47 of the
|
|
internal security division in search of Weather Underground
|
|
fugitives. Future SLA members Camilla Hall and William Wolfe
|
|
move to Berkley, become involved in radical and prison reform
|
|
activities. Electroshock treatments given to hundreds of inmates
|
|
at Vacaville. Black Panther party in shambles; Cointelpro
|
|
supposedly disbanded. Zimbardo's Stanford experiments
|
|
demonstrating dangers of prisoner/guard role-playing.
|
|
"Deprogrammer" Ted Patrick begins kidnapping Jesus Freaks and
|
|
reconverting them to conventional behavior. John Keel's OUR
|
|
HAUNTED PLANET discusses more MIB cases.
|
|
1972 -- Assassination of Abeid Karume of Zanzibar. Attempted
|
|
assassination of George Wallace in Maryland by "loner" Art
|
|
Bremer who had more money than he should and had alleged
|
|
connections with CIA-types. Warren Commission dissident Hale
|
|
Boggs disappears on flight to Alaska. Death of E. Howard Hunt's
|
|
wife Dorothy in plane crash while carrying large amount of cash
|
|
-- alleged murder described separately under Flight 553. Other
|
|
alleged murders involving secret funds include Rep. William O.
|
|
Mills (suicide) and his assistants Col. J. Webster and James
|
|
Glover; a Mr. Taub, Kalmback employee; Dennis Cossini, alleged
|
|
CIA contact with Bremer; Lou Russell, security cop employed by
|
|
McCord Associates; and Mrs. Andrew Topping, wife of man alleged
|
|
to be plotting assassination of Nixon during 1972 convention.
|
|
J. Edgar Hoover dies. Bilderberger meeting in Knokke, Belgium.
|
|
A series of dirty tricks eliminates Muskie as presidential
|
|
contender; Humphrey and Jackson also smeared; Nixon aides and
|
|
west coast Nazis cooperate in attempt to keep Wallace of
|
|
California ballot; Hunt ordered to break into Bremer's apartment
|
|
but refuses. Watergate break-in; FBI official Charles Bates
|
|
placed in charge of investigation. Agnew allegedly meets
|
|
Brienguier (Oswald's buddy) in New Orleans. Tackwood alleges
|
|
that plans are made to disrupt Republican convention in San
|
|
Diego, declare martial law, assassinate Nixon (or make false
|
|
attempt). ITT scandal forces Republicans to move to Miami. CIA
|
|
attempt to crack columnist Jack Anderson's information source
|
|
fails. William and Emily Harris, Angela and Gary Atwood and
|
|
others move to Bay area, become involved in radical and prison
|
|
reform activities. Thero Wheeler, another alleged police agent,
|
|
meets DeFreeze at Vacaville; DeFreeze moved to Soledad prison.
|
|
BLACK ABDUCTOR, anticipating the Hearst kidnapping, published by
|
|
unknown California publisher. Exposure and defeat of planned
|
|
psychosurgery program at Vacaville; CARE behavior mod program
|
|
begins at Marion, Illinois; START program begins at Springfield,
|
|
Missouri; Joliet unit closed. West German authorities produce a
|
|
skull they say was Martin Bormann's a few days after articles
|
|
appear with evidence he is alive in Argentina. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Flight 553
|
|
|
|
Chicagoan Lawrence O'Connor, who had used United Airlines Flight
|
|
553 or its equivalent to fly from Washington to Chicago on Friday
|
|
nights for years was warned by a White House source not to take
|
|
this flight; among those killed in the crash at Midway Airport,
|
|
Chicago, were: Dorothy Hunt who was carrying $50000 in Watergate
|
|
payoff money and close to $2 million she was attempting to place
|
|
in foreign banks; Michele Clark, CBS newswoman who was to
|
|
interview Mrs. Hunt on a story that could allegedly destroy Nixon;
|
|
at least four people alleged to have knowledge of a large labor
|
|
union "donation" to the Committee to ReElect the President
|
|
(CREEP), paid to stop the indictment of a Chicago labor hoodlum;
|
|
and a group of gas pipeline lobbyists, attorneys and gas company
|
|
officials (Robert Moreau, Nancy Parker, Ralph Blodgett, James
|
|
Drueger, Lon Bayer, Wilbur Erickson) who had allegedly gathered
|
|
evidence against former Attorney General John Mitchell in an anti-trust case involving El Paso Natural Gas Co.; also aboard was a
|
|
"hit-man" using the cover of Harold Metcalf, of Drug Abuse Law
|
|
Enforcement, who told the pilot, Captain Whitehouse, he was
|
|
carrying a gun and was assigned a jump seat near the food galley
|
|
and rear door; Captain Whitehouse and six of the Watergate-related
|
|
passengers were found to have unexplainably high cyanide content
|
|
after the crash, though the other 35 passengers killed did not;
|
|
following the crash hit-man Metcalf, in a jump suit, walked out
|
|
the cracked open fuselage; up to 200 FBI and CIA agents allegedly
|
|
took over the crash site immediately, beating the fire department
|
|
to the scene, refusing to allow in a medical team, confiscating
|
|
Control Tower tapes, interviewing survivors and witnesses before
|
|
National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) investigators had a
|
|
chance to; CBS News requested immediate cremation of Michele
|
|
Clark's body; evidence of sabotage includes possible tampering
|
|
with altimeter and air data computer, malfunctioning of the runway
|
|
visual range recorder and the Kedzie localizer which acted as the
|
|
runway's outer marker, a series of misdirections from air traffic
|
|
controllers and the failure of Flight 553's standby power system;
|
|
an in-flight robbery gang known as the Joseph Sarelli mob
|
|
allegedly came into possession of some of the Hunt money and
|
|
Mitchell documents soon after the crash and reportedly fenced it
|
|
for $5 million; the day after the crash Nixon aide Egil Krogh,
|
|
Jr., of Ellsberg burglary fame, appointed Undersecretary of
|
|
Transportation and placed in charge of the two agencies
|
|
investigating the crash (NTSB and FAA); ten days later Nixon
|
|
assistant Alexander Butterfield, a CIA-aviation liaison, appointed
|
|
head of Federal Aviation Administration; a few weeks later Nixon
|
|
aide Dwight Chapin becomes top executive with United Airlines.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>1973 -- Assassinations of US diplomats Cleo A. Nobel, Jr., and
|
|
George C. Moore and Belgian diplomat Guy Eid by Palestinian
|
|
guerrillas in Khartoum; Richard Sharples of Bermuda, Mohammad
|
|
Ali Osman of Yemen, Salvador Allende Gossens of Chile, Luis
|
|
Carrero Blanco of Spain and Dr. Marcus Foster in Oakland,
|
|
California; assassination of an American Army officer by
|
|
insurgent group in Iran. Senator Stennis shot in Washington,
|
|
D.C. Bilderberger meeting in Saltsjobaden, Sweden. Trilateral
|
|
Commission founded under the direction of David Rockefeller,
|
|
with Jimmy Carter and Walter Mondale among the founding members.
|
|
Agnew resigns. Sidney Gottlieb, head of CIA's LSD and other drug
|
|
programs, destroys records to hide details of program. Kissinger
|
|
and his deputy General Scowcroft order a series of CIA spying
|
|
operations in Micronesia. Hunt beaten in his cell before
|
|
testifying about the Bremer connection. Durham becomes FBI
|
|
agent, infiltrates American Indian Movement (AIM), becomes chief
|
|
of security. Liberation of Wounded Knee, South Dakota, by AIM.
|
|
Blue Dove becomes an FBI agent. DeFreeze escapes from Soledad;
|
|
Wheeler escapes from Vacaville. "Race war" in Bay area
|
|
culminates in the killing of Dr. Foster which the SLA claims
|
|
credit for in its first communique. Experiments with implanting
|
|
electrodes in the brain carried out at Vacaville and elsewhere.
|
|
Behavior mod unit started at El Reno, Oklahoma, prison; START-type program introduced to Maryland public schools by Behavior
|
|
Research Institute. Sixth UFO flap year.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>
|
|
Flight 553 Revisited
|
|
|
|
Alex Botto, Jr., who had infiltrated the Joseph Sarelli air piracy
|
|
gang for the Citizen's Committee to Clean Up the Courts (CCCUC),
|
|
seized by federal marshals, taken to the federal prison hospital
|
|
at Springfield, Missouri, and held for 40 days without hearing or
|
|
trial; Botto and another CCCUC agent, Joseph Zale, testified to
|
|
seeing evidence from the sabotaged United Airlines Flight 553 in
|
|
the Sarelli mob's possessions and turned over evidence on this and
|
|
an earlier crash robbery to Nixon's Strike Force in Chicago; just
|
|
before the reopening of the case Zale was indicted in an alleged
|
|
frameup by federal agencies; CCCUC chairman Sherman Skolnich
|
|
revealed at the 553 hearings that his group had stolen the entire
|
|
government file, 1300 pages of documentation, and was presenting
|
|
it as evidence of foul play in the Midway Airport crash.
|
|
|
|
</p></xml> |