Wednesday, October 31, 2012

A Submission

Very excited about an email I got from Chris Silk who remembered that I had a thing for the Count

His email had some links and some points of interest.

Anyway, please take a look at these URLs and the information enclosed.
See paragraphs 25 to 31 (above).  What is particularly interesting is the connection ot Sir Francis Bacon, which I had mentioned in earlier LT posts.  Bacon also wrote the New Atlantis, the book many believe was the guiding influence for our country's founding fathers.  And when you speak of the founding fathers, please don't forget the Freemasons.  There is also a reference in this section to Helena Petrovna Blavatsky, one of the founders of modern Theosophy (again, there are interesting connections to gnosticism and early Egyptian esoteric thought/wisdom).
Seems to me I have heard this reference before, and I did, see below:
Love to know your thoughts...

The first link, I have not seen before.  It's an online version of:  
Leadbeater, C.W. The Hidden Life in Freemasonry.  33° The Theosophical Publishing House: Adyar, Madras, India, 1926. Second Edition 

The forward is written by Annie Besant, who claimed to have met the Count.  Paragraphs 25 to 31 present an account of the Count being the Headship of the Ceremonial Ray and a master of wisdom.  It also mentions the Count taking an interest in Freemasonry around 3 AD.  Such an odd and precise time (personal thought).  There is an incredible history of the Count where there is claim that he was born in England to an old Roman family.  I'll just post the text.

Good find Chris Silk!  Thank you!  Sorry it took me so long to get to it.  I was in the middle of a move.

Below, sections 25-32 from the aforementioned online resource: The Hidden Life in Freemasonry.

25.                          PRESERVATION OF RITUALS AND SYMBOLS

26.                          That the rituals and symbols should have been preserved to us with so wonderfully little altera­tion is surely a marvellous thing; it would be inexplicable but for the fact that the Great Powers behind evolution have taken an interest in the matter, and gradually brought people back to the true lines when they had swerved somewhat away from them. This business was always in the hands of the Chohan of the Seventh Ray, for that is the ray most especially connected with ceremonial of all kinds, and its Head was always the supreme Hierophant of the Mysteries of ancient Egypt. The present holder of that office is that Master of the Wisdom of whom we often speak as the Comte de S. Germain, because He appeared under that title in the eighteenth century. He is also sometimes called Prince Rakoczi, as He is the last survivor of that royal house. Exactly when He was appointed to the Headship of the Ceremonial Ray I do not know, but He took a keen interest in Freemasonry as early as the third century A.D.
27.                          We find him at that period as Albanus, a man of noble Roman family, born at the town of Verulam in England. As a young man he went to Rome, joined the army there, and achieved considerable distinction in it. He served in Rome for some seven years at any rate, perhaps longer than that. It was there that he was initiated into Freemasonry, and also became a proficient in the Mithraic Mysteries, which were so closely associated with it.
28.                          After this time in Rome he returned to his birth­place in England, and was appointed governor of the fortress there. He also held the position of “the Master of the Works”, whatever that may have meant; he certainly superintended the repairs and the general work in the fortress at Verulam, and he was at the same time the Imperial Paymaster. The story goes that the workmen were treated as slaves and wretchedly paid, but that S. Alban (as he was afterwards called) introduced Freemasonry and changed all that, securing for them better wages and greatly improved conditions generally. Many of our Brn. must have heard of the Watson MS of 1687. In that a good deal is said about S. Albans work for the Craft, and it is specially mentioned that he brought from France certain ancient charges which are practically identical with those in use at the present time. He was beheaded in the persecu­tion by the Emperor Diocletian in the year 303, and the great abbey of S. Alban was built over his remains some five hundred years later.
29.                          In the year 411 he was born in Constantinople and received the name of Proclus - a name which in after life he was destined to make famous. He was one of the last great exponents of Neo-Platonism, and his influence overshadowed to a great extent the medieval Christian Church. After that there is a gap in his list of incarnations, as to which at present we know nothing. We find him reborn in the year 1211, and in that life he was Roger Bacon, a Franciscan friar, who was a reformer both of the theology and the science of his day. In 1375 came his birth as Christian Rosenkreutz. That also was an incarnation of considerable importance, for in it he founded the secret society of the Rosicrucians. He seems some fifty years later, or a little more than that, to have used the body of Hunyadi Janos, an eminent Hungarian soldier and leader. Also we are told that about 1500 he had a life as the monk Robertus, somewhere in middle Europe. We know practically nothing about that, as to what he did or in what way he distinguished himself.
30.                          After that comes one of the greatest of his births, for in the year 1561 he was born as Francis Bacon. Of that great man we hear in history little that is true and a great deal that is false. The real facts of his life are gradually becoming known, largely by means of a cipher story which he wrote secretly in the many works which he published. That story is of entrancing interest, but it does not concern us here. A sketch of it may be found in my book The Hidden Side of Christian Festivals, from which I am epitomizing this account.* (*Op. cit.., p. 303.)
31.                          A century later we are told that he took birth as Jozsef Rakoczi, a prince of Transylvania. We find him mentioned in the encyclopedias, but not much information is given. After that considerable mys­tery surrounds his movements. He seems to have travelled about Europe, and he turns up at intervals, but we have little definite knowledge about him. He was the Comte de S. Germain at the time of the French Revolution, and worked much with Madame Blavatsky, who was at that period in incarnation under the name of Père Joseph. He also appears to have disguised himself as Baron Hompesch, who was the last of the Knights of St. John of Malta, the man who arranged the transfer of the island of Malta to the English. This great saint and teacher still lives, and His present body has no appearance of great age. I myself met Him physically in Rome in 1901, and had a long con­versation with Him.
32.                          In Co-Masonry we refer to Him as the Head of all True Freemasons throughout the world (abbreviated as the H.O.A.T.F.) and in some of our Lodges His portrait is placed in the east, above the chair of the R.W.M., and just beneath the Star of Initiation; others place it in the north, above an empty chair. Upon His recognition and assent as Head of the Seventh Ray the validity of all rites and degrees depends. He often selects pupils from among the Brn. of the Masonic Order, and prepares those who have fitted themselves in the lower mysteries of Masonry for the true Mysteries of the Great White Lodge, of which our Masonic initiations, splendid though they be, are but faint reflections, for Masonry has ever been one of the gates through which that White Lodge might be reached. Today but few of His Masons acknowledge Him as their Sovereign Grand Master, yet the possibility of such discipleship has ever been recognized in the traditions of the Order.

Monday, October 8, 2012

Brief Information on Names Previously Used

Weldon/Welldoun
No sound information yet.

Saltikoff (also Saltykov)
A surname of a Russian noble family.  Many from this family were statesmen, translators, and diplomats.  Sergei Saltykov was a lover of Catherine the Great.

de Saint-Noel

This name literally means, in modern day culture, "Santa Claus" or "Saint Nick".

Marquis de Montferrat
The last known Marquis de Montferrat passed in 1708 at the age of 55.  Ferdinando Carlo Gonzaga (31 August 1652 – 5 July 1708) was the only child of Duke Charles II of Mantua and Montferrat, and the last ruler of the Duchy of Mantua of the House of Gonzaga.  The House of Savoy obtained the remaining half of Montferrat, having already conquered the first half in the War of the Mantuan Succession in 1631. The Duchy of Mantua became Austrian and ceased its independent existence. Ferdinando Carlo died the same year in Padua.  More information here.

Comte Bellamarre
So far I have only found references (other than to C. St.Germain) to Quebec, Canada.

Chevalier Schoening
No sound information yet.

Graf Tzarogy
No sound information yet. 

Prinz Ragoczy
No sound information yet.

Major Fraser  
No sound information yet.