Evidence that Saunière was a Freemason

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On the brandnew website of Terre de Rhedae it is reported that Antoine Captier recently presented an important new artefact that once belonged to Abbé Bérenger Saunière. The item is a Sautoir, a garment worn around the neck by Freemasons known as a Masonic Collar. It proves beyond any doubt that Saunière’s interests reached well beyond those of an ordinary village priest. Captier is said to do more revelations in his book that appears to be scheduled for release very soon. The article is in French.

Alarming Truths about Ancient and Modern Cults

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The British researcher and author Philip Gardiner has released his latest foray into the dark and sinister world of secret sects. The new book and dvd are called Secret Societies: Gardiner’s Forbidden Knowledge, Revelations About the Freemasons, Templars, Illuminati, Nazis, and the Serpent Cults.Among startling revelations are previously unknown links between the Vatican and the Nazi Party. He discusses in-depth the threads running from the secret organizations of centuries ago to the living cults and cabals of today, and their influence on our minds and our ways of life.

Secrets kept in store but no Holy Grail

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Freemasonry is believed to have begun its evolution 500 or more years ago in Scotland, among bands of skilled stonemasons, such as the craftsmen who would have created Rosslyn Chapel. Scottish newspaper The Scotsman talks to the Grand Librarian of Scottish Freemasonry Bob Cooper. Despite the myths and the mystery, the speculation and the secrecy, the Grand Lodge turns out to be just another office HQ, with two busy receptionists juggling buzzing phones at the enquiry desk, empty wood panelled boardrooms and a function suite.

Does Necropolis hold the key to Freemasonry’s secret history?

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Freemasons can now extend their Scottish holidays and visit Glasgow… Necropolis.
Historian Ronnie Scott has unearthed previously unseen patterns in the design of the early 19th-century cemetery and suggests that the site is a giant Masonic symbol, fully 37 acres of landscaped metaphor. Scott argues that the fact that the designers were Freemasons and several of the monuments are Masonic, substantiate his conclusion. He will present his conclusions at a Freemasonic conference in late May in Edinburgh.