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virtually all of Europe. Even today, France has more land than any other country in western<br />

Europe. In 1812, when Napoleon moved against Russia; England, Spain and Portugal were<br />

already at war with France. They were later joined by Sweden, Austria; and in 1813, Prussia<br />

joined the coalition to end the siege of Europe, and to “assure its future peace by the reestablishment<br />

of a just equilibrium of the powers.” In 1814, the coalition defeated France, and in<br />

March of that year, marched into Paris. France’s borders were returned to their original 1792<br />

location, which had been established by the First Peace of Paris, and Napoleon was exiled to<br />

Elba, a small island off the Tucson coast of Italy.<br />

After the Napoleonic Wars, the Illuminati thought the world would be tired of fighting, and<br />

would accept any solution to have peace. Through the Congress of Vienna (1814-15), the<br />

Rothschilds hoped to create a sort of League of Nations.<br />

From September, 1814 to June, 1815, the four powers of the allied coalition, winners of the<br />

Napoleonic Wars, met at the Congress of Vienna, along with a large number of rulers and<br />

officials representing smaller states. It was the biggest political meeting in European history.<br />

Representing England, was Lord Robert Stewart, the 2nd Viscount Castlereagh; France, with<br />

Foreign Minister Charles-Maurice Talleyrand de Perigord; Prussia, with King Friedrich Wilhelm<br />

III; and Austria, with Emperor Franz II.<br />

Other representatives were: Frederick VI, King of Denmark; Maximilian Joseph, King of<br />

Bavaria; Friedrich I, King of Wurttemburg; Napoleon II, King of Rome; Eugene de Beauharnais,<br />

Viceroy of Italy; King Friedrich August I of Saxony; Count Lowenhielm of Sweden; Cardinal<br />

Consalvi of the Papal States; Grand Duke Charles of Baden; Elector William of Hesse; Grand<br />

Duke George of Hesse-Darmstadt; Karl August, Duke of Weimar; the King of Bohemia; the<br />

King of Hungary; and emissaries from Spain, Portugal, Denmark, Holland, and other European<br />

States.<br />

The main concern of the Congress was to redistribute conquered territories, create a balance<br />

of power, restore the pre-Napoleonic order through King Louis XVIII, return the power to<br />

families who were ruling in 1789, and to return the Roman Catholic Church to its former power.<br />

Discussion revolved around the creation of a Federation of Europe that would establish a group<br />

of independent kingdoms which would be tied together through an administrative governing<br />

body that would, among other things, provide military defense. In their plan, Switzerland was<br />

made a neutral state that served as a repository for their finances.<br />

In March, 1815, Napoleon left Elba, because the pension promised him by King Louis XVIII<br />

was discontinued, and he believed that Austria was preventing his companion, Marie Louise, and<br />

his son, the former King of Rome (who became the Duke of Reichstadt in Vienna) from being<br />

able to join him. Plus, he was made aware of the growing discontent with the King. Thus<br />

Napoleon returned, began the Hundred Days War, and was immediately labeled a “public<br />

enemy.” The coalition at the Congress put aside their diplomatic business, and joined in the<br />

battle.<br />

Shortly before Napoleon’s defeat at Waterloo, negotiations at the Congress of Vienna were<br />

completed, and the treaty was signed on June 9, 1815. The Second Peace of Paris, in November,<br />

exiled Napoleon to St. Helena, an island 1,000 miles off the African coast, where he died in<br />

1821. The Russian czar saw through the planned European Federation, recognizing it as an<br />

Illuminati ploy, and would not go along with it. On September 26, 1815, the Treaty of Holy<br />

Alliance was signed by Alexander I of Russia, Francis II of Austria, and Frederick William III of<br />

Prussia, while the allies were negotiating the Second Peace of Paris. The Treaty guaranteed the<br />

sovereignty of any monarch who would adhere to Christian principles in the affairs of State. The

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