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Vatican Assassins

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Chapter 18 247<br />

“I said so on the authority of Lady Morgan, who, in her work of Italy, in the<br />

fourth volume, says that the sacrilegious curiosity of the French at the time<br />

when they occupied Rome, in the beginning of this century, overcame all<br />

obstacles, in order to see so famous a seat. They took off its copper<br />

covering, and drew out the seat, and examining it diligently, found there<br />

engraved in Arabic characters these words: – ‘There is one God, and<br />

Mahomet is His prophet.’ . . . The Pope, then, knowing that amongst the<br />

relics there was a seat, brought as a relic from the Crusades, ordered this to<br />

be taken and brought for veneration . . . ” {7} [Emphasis added]<br />

Did not the Jesuits benefit when Napoleon Bonaparte drove the Bourbon<br />

King of Spain, Charles IV, into exile? Did not the Jesuits benefit when Napoleon<br />

exiled the Braganza monarchs, Queen Maria Francisca I (1777-1816) and her son<br />

John (later King John VI, 1816-1826) of Portugal to Brazil? Did not the Jesuits<br />

benefit when Napoleon drove the Knights of Malta from the island of Malta,<br />

confiscating all their treasures and weapons? (Remember, the Knights had previously<br />

expelled the Jesuits from Malta.) Did not the Jesuits benefit when Napoleon<br />

conquered the Protestant Dutch Republic, founded by one of our heroes, William I of<br />

Orange? Did not the Jesuits benefit when Napoleon conquered Italy, and vanquished<br />

Austria as both nations had expelled the Jesuit Order? Did not the Jesuits benefit<br />

when Napoleon conquered Protestant Switzerland? Would not the Jesuits have<br />

benefited if the French General Hocke had succeeded in breaking away Catholic<br />

Ireland from Protestant England (later accomplished after World War I)? Would not<br />

the Jesuits have benefited had Napoleon conquered Jerusalem, he having called for<br />

the establishment of “Jerusalem for the Jews” on April 14, 1799? Did not the Jesuits<br />

benefit when Napoleon broke up the Pope’s Holy Roman Empire? Why did nearly<br />

every strategy of Napoleon result in benefiting the Jesuit Order? The answer is in the<br />

person of Abbe Sieyes. According to Ridpath’s Universal History this priest was a<br />

prime mover of the French Revolution, the Directory, and was the Second Consul on<br />

Napoleon’s Consulate (Pierre-Roger Ducos being the third), calling for the end of<br />

the nobility and clergy — the enemies of the Society of Jesus! It is also most<br />

fascinating to see that Sieyes, the man whose coup d’etat brought Napoleon to power,<br />

was Jesuit-trained. We read:<br />

“Sieyes, Emmanuel Joseph (1748-1836), one of the chief political thinkers<br />

and writers of the period of the French Revolution and the first empire . . .<br />

He was destined for the Church, was educated by the Jesuits, became a<br />

licentiate of the Canon law [including the oppressive and evil Council of<br />

Trent] . . . ” { } 8<br />

[Emphasis added]<br />

Thus Napoleon, the Roman Catholic Freemason called “Robespierre on horseback”<br />

by Madame de Stael, whose right-hand man was both a Jesuit-trained and controlled<br />

advisor, Abbe Sieyes, was brought to power from the Jesuit stronghold of Corsica.<br />

The Jesuits – 1789 - 1815

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