From Rags to Richess

It’s often said Saunière got his fortune by
committing simony or mass
trafficking: requesting money for masses he never said. There’s
clear evidence that he was guilty of this practice like so many of his
colleagues at the time. However, the amounts of money he spent are in no
relation to his illegal income from this practice. Detailed analysis of his
records has taught he received 110,000 requests to say mass, which is a lot more
than he ever could have said when you think a priest could say 3 masses in one
day (and didn’t hold sermons every day of course). The going rate for a mass
was 1 franc around 1880, increasing up to 1.5 francs at the time of his death.
From this he could have earned no more than some 150,000 francs which only
accounts for less than a quarter of his recorded spenditure (and which was only
part of what he really spent). Saunière’s
income is further dissected in this article.
The Silent Witness
It is probable that Bérenger Saunière made one or more discoveries
during his life that brought him fortune in one way or another. Moreover he did
some pretty strange things during his long ministry in Rennes-le-Château,
always assisted by his faithful housekeeper Marie
Dénarnaud who was 16 years his younger. Many times they were seen digging in the
cemetery at night together to such extent that the municipal council filed an
official complaint for deplacing graves and disturbing the dead. From 1910
onwards, Saunière was under investigation by the Diocese of Carcasonne for
excessive spending and failing to produce evidence of the source of his
fortune. In his defense he claimed the money had been given to him as gifts. He
also stated he had only spent 193,000 francs. When he kept refusing to share
his account books with the bishop he was sentenced for trafficking masses and
forbidden to perform his sacerdotal duties any longer. Marie Dénarnaud, lived
on for another 36 years after her master’s death. She promised Noel Corbu,
to whom she sold the estate in 1946, to tell him a secret on her deathbed that
would make him both powerful and rich. To Corbu’s intense frustration,
Dénarnaud had a fit some weeks before she died, leaving her unable to speak or
write. She took the secret to her grave. Contemporaries remembered her
saying the people of
Rennes-le-Château walk on gold, without knowing itand that what
was left was enough to feed the whole village for a hundred years and there’s
still be left. To Corbu’s inquiries why she had never
tapped from whatever the source was herself she replied that she would never touch it.
Birth of a Mystery
Noel Corbu is probably responsible for what the mystery is today. In
need of something to attract visitors to his Hotel du Tour (the refurbished Villa
Bethania) he started telling a treasure story to his customers. This
after he had failed to find any treasure on the domain himself. The story
worked like a magnet. In fact he got so busy telling the story that he recorded
it on tape for his customers. He enhanced the story somewhat in his enthusiasm
and attracted the attention of local newspaper Le Depeche du Midi resulting in
three full page articles in January 1956 about this Abbé Saunière, the
billionaire priest who had found the Treasure of Blanche of Castille. In
reality, there is no shred of evidence that queen Blanche indeed left a
treasure in the area that Saunière could have discovered. Some 10 years later,
the story was published in book form by French journalist Gérard de Sède: Accursed Treasure of Rennes-le-Château.
De Sède’s book marked the start of a misinformation campaign by French
adventurer Pierre Plantard and his friend the Belgian Marquis and actor
Phillippe de Chérisey. Allegedly, De Sède published a manuscript by Plantard
that he edited. In the next couple of years Plantard and De Chérisey used
original Saunière material and home made forged documents to construct a story
around the mystery of Abbé Saunière by which they meant to “prove” that
Plantard was actually a descendent of the Merovingian bloodline and thus a
rightful heir to the French throne. To this end they deposited a series of
forged documents in the French National Library: Les Dossiers
Secrets. The misfinformation campaign got completely out of hand
when BBC scenario writer Henry Lincoln got the scent of a good treasure story
and with the help of Michael Baigent and Richard Leigh, drew some conclusions
that were a million miles away from what Plantard and the Chérisey had
intended: not only was Plantard of Merovingian blood; according to Holy Blood and the Holy Grail, the Merovingians were direct
descendents of the offspring of Jesus Christ and Mary Magdalene.
Today it is almost impossible to distinguish the truth from fantasy.
However, most of the leading theories are losely based on facts and legends of
the area that can be traced or demonstrated. The half truth is the most
difficult to dissect.
The Mystery’s historical roots
In the spring of 1645, a shepherd called Ignace Paris found an unknow
quantity of golden coins on the lands of Blaise d’Hautpoul, who’s territory
included Rennes (at the time not yet called “le-Château”). Blaise was an
ancestor of François d’Hautpoul-Rennes, whose wife Marie de
Nègre is believed by many to be at the center of the mystery of
Rennes-le-Château. Local legend says Paris was killed after having told where
he had struck gold. What followed was a long fight between the Jansenist bishop
of Alet Nicolas
Pavillon, Blaise d’Hautpoul and the brothers Nicolas and François
Fouquet. Nicolas was Louis XIV’s treasurer, François became the bishop of
Alet’s neighbour Narbonne in 1659, three years after his brother Nicolas
Fouquet wrote a letter to Nicolas, describing a meeting with famous French painter Nicolas
Poussin in Rome:
He and I
discussed certain things, which I shall with ease be able to explan to you in
detail – things that will give you, through Monsieur Poussin, advantages which
even kings would have great pains to draw from him, and which, according to
him, it is possible that nobody else will ever be able to rediscover in the
centuries to come. And, what is more, these are things so difficult to discover
that nothing now on this earth can prove of better fortune nor be their equal.
In September 1661, Jean Loret, who ran a magazine called ‘La Muze
Historique’, wrote of a treasure found in the diocese of Alet(-les-Bains),
roughly in the same area. Loret worked for the Fouquets and the Duchess of
Longueville who maintained an extensive mail relation with Pavillon. The
spiderweb stretches wider still. In 1666, Colbert,
who had succeeded Nicolas Fouquet as French minister of Finance, founded the
‘Compagnie Royale des Mines et Fonderies du Languedoc’ with the intend to start
mining on Blaise d’Hautpoul’s land (much the same like Bertrand de Blanchefort
allegedly asked the Knights
Templar to start mining the same lands near the Château de
Blanchefort in 1130). In return Blaise was formally granted a status ‘de ne dépendre que du roi’: It made him answerable to the King alone. You can read more about this
in Franck Daffos’ (French) book le Secret Dérobé or on the website he runs with valued
colleague researcher Jean-Pierre Garcia: Rennes-le-Château
Archive.
There must have been something interesting
enough in this region to attract the attention of so many rich and powerful
people. The link with Poussin comes full circle with Louis XIV acquiring his
famous painting the Shepherds of
Arcadia in 1685 from C.A. Herault, a well known arts dealer at the time. The
painting adorned the king’s private chambers until his death.
What Bérenger Saunière appears to have found
There are numerous theories and ideas as to
what Saunière found. Several instances have been recorded in which Saunière
made reference to something like a treasure. For example Antoine Beaux, Abbé of
Campagne-sur-Aude was attending a dinner party at Saunière’s table once. He
remarked “My friend, to see you doing so well, one would think you found a treasure”.
To this the host appears to have answered: “Me l’an donat, l’ai panat, l’ai parat é bé lo teni“. It’s Saunière’s dialect of the Langue d’Oc. In modern French it means
“Ils me l’ont donné, je l’ai pris,
je l’ai apprêtré; eh bien, je le tiens bien.” An English
translation would be: “They gave it
to me, I took it, I made it work and I will hold onto it.”
According to Antoine Captier, the grandson of Saunière’s bellringer
of the same name, a glass vial was found by his grandfather inside a wooden
baluster in the 1880s. This wooden support pillar that carried the old pulpit,
had been taken down during the work to restore the church. When Captier did his
round through the church one evening, he noticed part of the baluster had come
loose, revealing a small hidden compartment. Inside he found a small glass tube
with a document inside. He gave it to Saunière, who started his digging
activities in the graveyard soon afterwards. Several local sources have
confirmed this story as documented in Captier’s book and thebook of Pierre Jarnac. Captier and Jarnac are generally
regarded as among the most serious of researchers. What’s more they are closest
to the original sources.
The story that Saunière found documents in
the hollow visigothic
altar pillar is most probably not true. Research reveals that there was no hollow
space inside that pillar so it seems unlikely that is true.
A last story is that Saunière found a pot
filled with golden coins and a golden chalice during the renovations. This too
apparently happened during the renovation work on the church altar. Saunière
immediately sent the workmen off for the rest of the day. When he was asked
what it was they found he replied that it was nothing but a collection of
worthless religious medals. The Abbé did give a golden chalice from the time of
Bigou to his friendEugène
Grassaud. The chalice still exists. It was donated to the church of
Rennes-le-Château by the Order of the Knights of Malta around 1750. As it
appears his predeccessorAntoine
Bigou stashed it away in the church before he fled to Spain to escape the
French Revolution.
From these stories it seems likely that Saunière did indeed find some
coins, a chalice and one or more documents. The documents either led him to a
secret entrance to the old crypt of the Eglise Madeleine (for example via a
fake grave of Marie de Nègre) or to another location where he found something
that brought him fortune.
The documents Saunière is believed to have found are often referred to
as being…
1. A parchment containing the genealogy of King (Saint) Dagobert
II from 681 to 1244, when Jean VII married
Elsinde de Gisors. The document is dated 14th March 1244 and carries the seal
of Blanche of Castille, Queen of France
2. The testament of François-Henri d’Hautpoul, Lord of Rennes and Bézu,
with attached a genealogy of the Merovingian descendants from 1200 to 1644,
where 6 lines of descent are related to Saint Vincent de Paul. This document is
dated 23rd November 1644 and is signed by Captier, Notaire at Esperaza
3. The testament of Henri de Hautpoul, dated 24th April 1695, in which five saint are invoked of which
Saunière later put statues in his church
4. A double sided parchment produced
by his predecessor Abbé Antoine Bigou containing on one side a piece of Latin text from the new
testaments, compiled from Luke, Matthew and Mark. On the other side it contains
the story of Jesus visiting Lazarus in Bethania from the Gospel of John in
Latin. The double sided parchment (item 4) contains a number of messages, some
of which are easy and other which are extremely hard to decode. In combination
with the tombstone of
Marie de Nègre d’Ables, (who was buried by Antoine Bigou who also
made her tombstone), are said to lead to a treasure. It appears like Abbé
Saunière, alone or with the help from experts in Paris, cracked the code and
followed the treasure map that resulted. The double-sided parchment was first
published in two separate sides (the so calledgrand and small parchments) by
Gérard de Sède in the Accursed Treasure of Rennes-le-Château.
In his book Rennes-le-Château, le puzzle reconstitué (2007), Jarnac
and French researcher Franck Daffos build a plausible case that the last
mentioned parchments actually existed and where sold off by Noel Corbu.
What kind of Treasure could there have been?
Again, numerous possibilities and stories go
around. If you disregard those about UFO’s and
extraterrestrial visitors there are a number of options. The area
around Rennes-le-Château is drenched in a history of bloodshed and treasure.
Visigoths, Templars, Catharsand
assorted scoundrels, clerics and adventurers roamed the area at different times
in history. It is not unthinkable that some of the treasure that these groups
brought with them or accumulated was left behind in the region. The accounts
that are underpinned with some sort of theory and evidence to at least identify
them from pure fantasy are mentioned here. Saunière found:
§
the Crypt of the Lords of Rennes beneath his church. If the genealogies are correct, it might even have
been the Crypt of one or more Merovingian royals, buried with the artifacts and
treasure that was the custom of the time
§
a treasure
hidden in 12 places supposedly cryptically coded into the book The True
Celtic Language and the Cromleck of Rennes-les-Bains by
Saunière’s colleague Abbé Henri Boudet of
Rennes-le-Bains
§
the treasure of the Visigoths, containing
the treasure of the temple of Jerusalem, that roman emperor Titus took from the
Holy Land in ad 70. and Alaric I, in his turn took from Rome during the sack of
394
§
the treasure of the Cathars. When the
last Cathar bastion of Montségur fell,
the besieging royal troops found nothing of the famous Cathar treasure.
Shortly before the surrender four man three men were lowered down from the
ramparts by ropes under cover of the night. According to local legend they
carried with them the Holy Grail
§
the treasure of the Knights Templar. The Templars had a presence in the region. There was a commandery at
Campagne-sur-Aude and an observation post onMount Bézu.
The Templars weren’t allowed to have personal belongings so their treasures
that belonged to the order were passed on through the ages without anyone being
able to get their hands on it. Anything belonging to the Templars has always
inspired great fear in those who had to guard it or had reason to approach it
§
the treasure of Blanch of Castille. The mother
of Saint Louis, regent of France, came to Rédé (Rennes-le-Château) in 1249
loaded down with innumerable items of baggage. Supposedly, according to one of
the alleged parchments, this baggage was buried in an underground passage below
the former Château of
the Counts of Voisin and then walled in
§
evidence that
the Merovingian bloodline is unbroken. Allegedly,
after the murder of Dagobert II and his family in 679 by orders of Pepin the
Fat, a son survived named Sigisbert IV that found refuge in Rhedae
(Rennes-le-Château) to become lord of the region. This would mean that the
Merovingian bloodline had survived to this day with a legitimate claim to the
French throne. In 1791, when Saunière’s predecessors had to flee the revolution
to Spain this would indeed have been explosive news
§
evidence that
Jesus didn’t die on the cross but was in
fact married to Mary Magdalene. After the crucifixion that either he survived
or during which a replacement figure died, Marie Magdalene came to France
carrying her offspring that later became the Merovingians or intermarried with
them. Saunière supposedly blackmailed the Vatican with this evidence who paid
him for his silence
§
the tombs of
Jesus and Joseph of Arimathea in the
vicinity of Opoul Perillos, as indicated by a miniature model of the
Holy Places Saunière allegedly ordered just before his death and that was never
finished
§
the tomb of Mary Magdalene and perhaps even one or more of her children in the vicinity of
Rennes-le-Château, perhaps in the Grotto locally known as the Grotte du Fournet, Dite de la
Magdeleine or Burial Site of Mary Magdalene
§
evidence that
the Ark of the Covenant or at least its contents survived the ages and
is hidden or was hidden below the church of Rennes-le-Château in the old crypt of the
Hautpoul-Blancheforts. It was taken there from Notre Dame
de Marceillebetween 1893 and 1902 by its keepers Saunière, Boudet, Gélis and Billard.
This hypothesis is a lot less far-fetched than it sounds when you have read the
meticulously constructed and carefully researched book ‘The Holy Grail and the Ark of the Covenant‘ by acclaimed Dutch writer Klaas van Urk, in which his brother and he
documented their ten-year chase of the Ark’s trail through history. Sadly his
book is only available in Dutch for the moment.

§
two
genealogies from 1244 and 1644 that were bought by the the Vatican after
which they kept giving him large amounts of money to continue his search though
their aid Henri Boudet. The Vatican hoped Saunière would find the Ark of the Covenant that had been lost for over 600 years.
§
money and
valuables stashed away by the noble families of the region when they had
to flee the country from the French Revolution
§
the mummified body of Christ, Mary
Magdalene or both is buried in the region somewhere
§
the Arma Christi (the
instruments used during the Passion of Christ) were kept in Notre Dame
de Marceille and Rennes-le-Château by a group of Fransciscan Ebionites.
source: http://www.renneslechateau.nl/mystery-of-rennes-le-chateau
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar