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THE
CHURCH OF MARY MAGDALENE
The Sacred Feminine AND THE
Treasure of Rennes-le-Chateau
JEAN MARKALE
THE
CHURCH OF MARY MAGDALENE The Sacred Feminine AND THE
Treasure of Rennes-le-Ghateau
JEAN MARKALE Translated by Jon Graham
Inner Traditions Rochester,
Vermont
Inner Traditions
One Park
Street
Vermont 05767
Rochester,
www.InnerTraditions.com
©
1989 by Editions Pygmalion/Gerard Watelet, Paris English translation copyright © 2004 by Inner Traditions International Copyright
Originally published in French under the I’or
Rennes-le-Chateau
title
et
Venigme de
maudit by Editions Pygmalion/Gerard Watelet, Paris
First U.S. edition
published by Inner Traditions in 2004
All rights reserved.
No
part of this
book may be reproduced or
utilized in
any
form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Markale, Jean. [Rennes-le-Chateau. English]
The church of Mary Magdalene sacred feminine and the le-Chateau / Jean Markale translated by Jon Graham, :
treasure of Rennes-
;
p.
cm.
Includes index.
ISBN 0-89281-199-4 1.
3.
(pbk.)
— France— Rennes-le-Chateau. Mary Magdalene, Saint — Miscellanea. Occultism
4.
le-Chateau. 5.
Rennes-le-Chateau (France)
2.
Sauniere, Berenger, 1852-1917.
Treasure-trove
—France — Rennes-
—History— Miscellanea.
Sainte-Marie-Madeleine (Rennes-le-Chateau, France)
I.
6. Eglise
Title.
BF1434.F8M3713 2004 944787 dc22
—
2004008842
Printed and
10
bound
in the
United States at Lake Book Manufacturing,
987654321
Text design and layout by
Mary Anne Hurhula
This book was typeset in Sabon
Inc.
Roads
that climb also descend
—Heraclitus
Contents 1.
2. 3.
Part The Site of the Mystery 1
On Roads
A
6.
Fortified
The History of 7. 8.
He Who 4.
of Stone and Dust
Encampment
the
2
35
Earldom of Razes
Part 2 Brings Scandal
The Abbe Sauniere Legend
100
Who Was Abbe
146
5.
One
Train
67
Sauniere?
Can Hide Another
195
11.
Part 3 The Mystery of the Cursed Treasure Treasure Island
The Door 9.
That
10.
Is
on the
226
Inside
243
Odd Mary Magdalene 256
The Shepherds of Arcadia
The Queen’s Gold Index
301
287
274
Part
1
THE SITE OF THE MYSTERY
1
On Roads
of Stone
and Dust
It is
hard for travelers
Aude high
who
have been making their
Valley out of Carcassonne to imagine
—that
is
to say,
on
and ancient picturesque continually
drawn
The
the plateau. villages
its
valley
is
taking place on
rich in
is
the upper
shady groves
such as Limoux and Alet, and the eye
to the flowing river
promontories bordering
what
way up
whose path
is
is
determined by the
winding path. Once travelers have pro-
gressed to Couiza, where the Sals River flows into the Aude, they will be
tempted to continue southward toward Quillan, the gap leading to those castles
constructed “on the flank of the abyss”
Breton’s expression)
—
borrow Andre
castles that are described as Cathar.
land that bears the imprint of those
too quick to
(to
whom many
call dualists, heretics,
For here
is
people have been a
a
bit
and Albigensians. Everything here
depends on what travelers truly seek: either the gold of the Holy Grail or the gold of the devil. exclusive ble to
The quests
for both of these
—not
—do need to be undertaken over time. From Couiza
make
mutually it is
possi-
a detour to the east and, following the Sals Valley, to climb
a steep path that leads to the top of the plateau, into the midst of rocks
and mineral dust that have accumulated over the the flank of the abyss,”
looms
“on
end of a
cul-
a strange village lost at the
de-sac, a hamlet sitting atop the setting sun,
from the surrounding
centuries. There,
and barely distinguishable
stone: the village of Rennes-le-Chateau.
2
On Roads It
took
me
In truth, for
a long time to discover the
my
most of
of Stone and Dust
road to Rennes-le-Chateau.
had no idea of the existence of
life I
3
this iso-
lated village in the Corbieres region or of another hidden in the hollow
of a neighboring valley and bearing a similar name: Rennes-les-Bains.
The word Rennes brought fluence of the
tomary zones
for
Ille
me
to
me
those people
name Rennes
reindeer
1
,
ever since
and
I
was
naively
cus-
border
extremely remote
the
name
of Catalonia.
(located
a child, for
I
wondered about
me
was
in those
had
Ille-et-Vilaine)
in
had heard of the Laplanders,
lived in the frozen steppes of the north
animals, described to station, rather
I
It
(so evocative of a blazing sun) conceals
authentic but “foreign”
who
capital of Brittany.
Aude region from
the
Nevertheless, the intrigued
only the city located at the con-
spend much more time there than
whose French name
much more
the
my mind
and Vilaine Rivers, the
separating
Roussillon,
to
and hunted
the connection between these
as very similar to stags,
and
this city
—or train
—where, night and day, the train that brought me toward
Broceliande stopped, sometimes for a very long while.
extraordinary about childhood imagination terrifying possibility of going as far as
is
we can
What
immense and
the
is
so
finally
possibly go in exploration
of the fantasy world. Sociocultural censorship has as yet no role to play
with children and they breach the ultimate frontiers of reality quite casually and unconsciously. Accordingly,
I
envisioned extending outside
of the Rennes tram station a snow-covered plain over which figures
zon
loomed, tracking the animals that
lost in the night.
somewhat reminiscent of
is
of an animal at bay, isn’t
them
is
toward an
invisible hori-
This was the time of steam locomotives; the puff-
ing of these machines
dislike of
fled
shadowy
it? I
smoking
nostrils
have never been fond of hunters, and
as strong today as
the killing of animals in this
the
way
it
was
as a child. In fact,
as a criminal act;
I
I
my
regard
have never under-
stood the kind of sordid and sadistic pleasure some derive from shooting at rabbits, partridges,
and deer who have never done any
anyone and too often have been raised only to serve for those .
1.
.
.
f
It
is
who
think
virility is
synonymous with
normal for human beings
Rennes means “reindeer”
in
French.
as
ill
moving
targets
But
digress
cruelty.
I
to defend themselves against
— Translator
]
to
an
The
4
Site
of the Mystery
attack by a ferocious or poisonous animal.
It
normal that human
is
would survive
beings, in certain penurious times such as the ice ages,
the expense of animals. But
what can be
a matter of perspective, of course.
It is
words,
kingdom, but
and that
eventually accepted the fact that
I
was once
it
the capital of
doubted the
same name
I
I
cross.
it
was
my
ancestors.
so,
however,
done
I
I
the
name
of a
did not give the
would not have
possibility of the existence of another village bearing the
completely foreign to me.
in a region
Nobody
to the Corbieres region. it.
Had
my own
were to follow
Rennes reminded me of the animal
to say that initially
is
matter any more thought.
ken of
If I
would rescue every unfortunate animal whose path
I
All of this
city
said of those slaughters organ-
few members of the privileged
ized for the disturbing pleasure of a class?
at
In fact,
was only
it
I
tles
of trademarked wine, that the
for
me, though
I
had no connection
spent time with had ever even spo-
when
later,
I
I
read the labels of certain bot-
name Corbieres took on any meaning
should state for the record that from the time
I
became
impassioned about literature the name brought more readily to mind the Breton poet Tristan Corbiere (without the
s)
than a good red wine
worthy of some family celebration. At the time when
me Le Cure
pleasure to read to
it
was my
de Cucugnan, the famous story attrib-
who was
uted to Alphonse Daudet (but actually written by Paul Arene,
Daudet’s black servant),
Cucugnan was located and not
in the
I
father’s
was
far
from supposing that the
precisely in the
village of
mountainous region of Corbieres
completely imaginary Provence created by the author of
the immortal Tartarin.
And
yes
.
.
.
Cucugnan
is
not that far from
Rennes-le-Chateau. According to the vision of the steadfast cure,
it
seemed that the residents of Cucugnan allowed themselves to be ensnared
in the trap of the devil’s gold.
Could
this also
be true of cer-
tain inhabitants of Rennes-le-Chateau? I
must frankly confess that
Chateau
for the first fifty years of
per articles published about noticeable trace in
a novel
way
it
my memory.
were merely the ploy of
up
was completely unaware of Rennes-le-
I
my
life.
in the ’50s I
The magazine and newspaand ’60s had not
probably thought
a skilled local
at the
businessman
left
any
time that they
who had dreamed
of bringing tourism to this forsaken Corbieres region.
had other subjects
for reflection
and research that were
I
entirely cen-
On Roads
my
on
tered
my
personal “poles”: in Brittany
of Stone and Dust
cherished Broceliande
Mound, and
Forest and the Barenton Fountain, the Gavrinis
Morbihan Gulf
New
when
that turns so blue
Grange mound
the
flooded with sunlight; or the
in Ireland, the absolute center of all the Celtic
mythological tales that motivate me; or the strange
on Salisbury Plain
5
in
circle of
Stonehenge
England, where Merlin had used his magic to
transport from Ireland this fantastic “Dance of the Giants” that early
on
I
had guessed
an ancient religion
to be the solar temple of
knew
I
nothing about. Under these conditions, what would have compelled interest in a village in Corbieres, a region
course,
I
had
had been its
ramparts
called
—
Corbieres and the
is
I still
am, by the powerful images that
— inspired
even
in
my
imagination. But Carcassonne
Razes. At this time
less the
is
not
had never even heard
I
name Razes spoken.
What
is
odd about
particular place
luck but
the interest
more what
arises
my
Jean Hani,
I
how
friend the poet
long ago,
my
origins
literature professor in high school,
(that
bought
a
is
—a
not really
I
have
I
lived in
and the great
my meetings
with
and the abbot Henri
who was my
true spiritual is
my
men-
great love
now confess all. In 1948, thanks to my who then “ran” the Librairie Celtique on
name
again!) in Paris, a bookstore that closed
book published
to be truly illuminating:
that
cir-
will
I
Renee Willy,
Rennes I
came about
spent in the Broceliande Forest as to
and druidism.
the rue de
this interest
have never spoken of previously, however,
I
for druids
it
due as much to
Gillard, the “Rector of Trehorenteuc,”
What
awakens
the surrealists called “objective chance.”
Celtic legends, a situation
of time
display for a given subject or a
from some “act of chance” that
already recounted in other books
amount
we
the circumstance that
is
cumstance that often
tor.
city. I
haunted by the beauty of the centuries of the so-
still
Dark Ages
had never frequented? Of
and wandered through the old
visited Carcas'sonne
affected deeply then, as
I
my
three years earlier that turned out
Robert Amberlain’s
Au
pied des Menhirs (At
the Foot of the Menhirs).
This admission
may
sign petitions that accuse at the
same
cause snickering
me
time, “pinching”
among my
detractors,
of both inventing everything it
from
my
colleagues.
their stories straight before casting aspersions
who
write and,
I
They should
on others
.
.
.
but
get let’s
”
6
The
Site
continue. to
I
of the Mystery
cannot deny that Robert Amberlain’s work was a “revelation
me and encouraged me
Celtic spirituality. This
of neo-druidism,
is
to undertake
book
—which
is
more
intensive research into
most suspect kind
inspired by a
devoid of any serious reference, and
based on
is
vague analogies and romanticized translation of purely apocryphal texts
—certainly
other doors. tions, that further.
I
I
It is
am
was
it
Robert Amberlain’s debt, for he provoked
in
now
He was
scientific research.
had more
to
now
that
it
I
to
go
I
did not
was
better
do with frenzied poetry than
clearly raving. But isn’t raving
forms that Celtic logic takes?
me
Erwan Berthou-
dead, at the Hall of Geography in Paris.
that way: His neo-druidism
who
and aberra-
for this reason, despite the book’s failings
understand a word of what he said and realize
Lebesgue,
key that opened
a
attended the conferences of the druid
later
Kerverziou,
has no intrinsic value, but
one of the
much about Phileas Gauls.” He was merely a
could say as
claimed to be “druid of the
“poet and peasant,” but he possessed incontestable literary merit. Likewise, the theme of Rennes-le-Chateau
was imposed upon me by
one of those apparently chance meetings that leave an indelible imprint
on those who in
1981
at
are
aware of having enjoyed such an experience.
newly opened bookstore
a
Genevieve neighborhood
my
in Paris, to
which
friend Jean Picollec, the publisher.
the
in I
Montagne
It
was
Sainte-
had been invited thanks to
The ambience was very
pleasant.
who was squeezing in among the books was a young man who made me a present of his latest volume, complete with a charming inscription, and urged me to explore it for anything I One
of the learned assembly
might find interesting. The
title
of this
book was Le Tresor du
d'or (The Treasure of the Golden Triangle), and
Chaumeil. So
it
is
its
author was Jean-Luc
thanks to Jean-Luc Chaumeil that
straight to the middle of Rennes-le-Chateau
triangle
was ushered
I
and the mystery of
its
cursed gold. I
read his book with a bemused curiosity insofar as
I
have always
regarded treasure hunting as merely an inconsequential mind game.
Chaumeil spoke of Gisors and the castle of this city
on the border of Normandy and
secrets of the mysterious
make known
to a
secrets possibly buried beneath the
the Ile-de-Lrance,
Templars that Gerard de Sede had helped
wider audience a few years
earlier.
He
also spoke of
On Roads
of Stone and Dust
7
Stenay in northern France, the holy city of the Merovingian dynasty;
monument
the Saint-Sulpice church in Paris, a
that
I
consider to be a
triumph of the absolute horror of religious architecture; and Rennes-le-Chateau, where slept the “secret” of a strange
Beranger Sauniere,
in a
priest,
like
a legitimate claim to the throne of France. All this
an excellent piece of historical importance to
ative
Father
foggy atmosphere from which emerged the
who
ure of a so-called authentic descendant of the Merovingians,
make
finally of
and
fiction,
could
seemed to me
could attach only
I
fig-
rel-
without taking any position whatsoever on the
it
hypotheses developed in the work.
was more
I
simply said to myself,
“Why
not?”
At the time
I
legend
Montsegur, a short distance from Rennes-le-Chateau.
in
attracted to the Grail
Therefore, Jean-Luc Chaumeil’s of
my
its
book remained “hibernating” on one
bookshelves.
A seed had It
and the implications of
been planted in
was impossible
rant of
fertile soil,
to hunt for something at
what may have transpired
gious and enigmatic the feeling that this
site.
From my
however, even
buried deep.
Montsegur and remain igno-
in the area first
if
surrounding
this presti-
climb to Montsegur
I
retained
whole region revealed traditions and reminiscences
that asked only to be recalled at the level of the conscious mind. Ever since childhood
era
I
had been somewhat enthralled by the Merovingian
and had dived with delight into the troubled waters of Augustin
Thierry’s Recits des temps merovingiens. After
actual
500
life
of
my
favorite hero,
B.C.E., the transitional era
all,
I
told myself, the
King Arthur, took place around the year between the end of the
Roman Empire
and the beginning of those “barbaric” times ceaselessly embroidered
upon by my imagination. Colorful and
perfectly odious female figures
such as Queen Fredegonde and Queen Brunehaut only added to the
problems that occurred to lization to another. reality of the
West.
I
imprint
I
me
concerning the transition from one
was already
feeling considerable
civi-
doubt about the
“barbarous” and “savage” invasions of the Christian
justly felt, for
example, that the Visigoths had
on the Occitan mind-set, and
unearthed by archaeologists refined, although poorly
their
left
a
profound
astounding objects
testified to a culture that
was
surprisingly
understood and unjustifiably scorned. This
period that the Anglo-Saxons have dubbed the Dark Ages held
much
The
8
Site
of the Mystery
that fascinated me, for in
it
I
found again the soul of the ancient
Britons, those of the Isle of Britain tle
and those who had
on the Armorican Peninsula, They had and not
a simple “warrior chief”
endowed
warriors, sometimes
magical powers that lains
a
there to set-
who was
King Arthur,
only
and whose knights were only
a king,
— according to legend —with formidable
made them more
similar to gods incarnate than vil-
concerned with sacking fortresses. Insofar as
I
had established that
myth was
the origin (or at least one of the origins) of the Grail
situated
whose Christian veneer had not com-
exactly within this era, in a West pletely
left
smothered the pagan Celtic and German substratum,
could not
I
refuse consideration of the strange stories, completely unverifiable but terribly seductive, that tell of possibly legitimate
of the presence of “secrets” not far from
would be dangerous history as
it
power and then
is
who
said,
2
1
them
to lead
me
as a deliberate
in a direction
nize
it
at the
lie
secrets that
own
intended to
and ideologies of those
sole
means
humanity but
as such
opportune moment,
humanity that searches
for
but have merely refined
crystallize the itself. I
it,
I
myth
equivalent to
myth
of proving the existence of
in its materialization, in its incarnation in
is
As
societies.
consider history a material expression of myth. This
The
in
chosen by those called the
no more than manipulators of
are really
a mental structure inherent to
nothing.
—
and
has been recorded.
orient people according to the circumstances
have
Montsegur
heirs
to divulge because they challenge the West’s
History has always appeared to
“elites,”
Merovingian
to recog-
is
men and women who,
unconscious impulse of
have not changed
my
opinion on
and have attempted to make
it
this this
more com-
prehensible and better adapted to the changes that our universalist and industrial society has forced
considered inspires
its
immutable, dogmatic, and completely heroes
wealth of the
when
human
it
2.
Mainly
in
feels the need.
being (even
dred people!), the hero
The roads
on primitive values that have been too long
— any
if it
hero
sterile.
But because free will
exists in only
—influences
is
History the sole
one out of a hun-
how
history unfolds.
that climb are also those that descend.
my
preface to
The
Celts (Rochester, Vt: Inner Traditions, 1993)
afterword to La Tradition celtique
(Paris: Payot, 1975).
and
in
my
On Roads
of Stone and Dust
This digression into the relationship between myth and history purposeless:
however
it,
took place and the
only recognized existence
tale
subsequently told
myth
pure potentiality,
is
who
But
itself,
holds true for history. Because history
longer measurable save through
crete
and
it
memory
hear or read
de facto,
all, it
must be given
is
it it.
no
(memoirs, writings, various
make
appears in the same position as myth. To
accessible to
its
makes
the story (epic, tale, legend) that
is
concrete and accessible to the imaginations of those
monuments),
who assumed
and the goodwill of those
objective,
responsibility for driving this story. Because
this also
not
is
allows us to measure both the distance that separates a
It
historical event that actually
about
9
a body,
whether
this
con-
it
body
is
the narrative history of events or scholarly, coded diagrams that intro-
duce the most
scientific
kinds of notions. This, however,
risks being distorted or falsified, for
timonies of the past? Even
when
what
credit
is
where history
can be given to these
tes-
they are surrounded with the best guar-
antees of authenticity, there exists the risk of
them
straying because of
errors of appraisal or the deficiencies of sensibility. Pure objectivity
only an illusion; our perception of the past
our present viewpoint, which
and the most excessive suffer the all
same
fate.
is
I
I
Both myth and
history, therefore,
had personal confirmation of
the particulars surrounding the
At the time when
completely dependent on
loaded with the most varied motivations
interpretations.
Soon
is
is
murky
affairs of
regarding
this
Rennes-le-Chateau.
read Jean-Luc Chaumeil’s book, however,
I
had
not yet reached a point of raising such questions. Rennes-le-Chateau
appeared to esoteric)
as
me more
works gladly
much by
like
one of those poles that esoteric
label as vital centers,
(or so-called
where something happens
virtue of the geographical situation
and the configuration
of terrain as by their place in the delicate magnetic, telluric, cosmic, and
simply mystical ileged spots
field that
covers the surface of the earth. These are priv-
on the earth that
since the
dawn
of time have been dedi-
cated to celebration by certain cults, to prayer, to so-called miraculous
phenomena. Such places are sanctuaries where heaven and earth communicate, sacred
sites called
nemeton by the
Celts,
and locations on
which many Christian churches have been constructed. Rennes-le-Chateau was one of these privileged places.
knew enough
yet to attempt to decode
it.
I
I
thought
did not feel
I
The
10
One
Site
time
of the Mystery
my
wife,
Mon, and
just given a conference,
Catalonia.
having
had decided
saw no good reason
I
I,
Toulouse, where
left
to continue our journey
back up the Aude a blanquette (a
wine
I
We made
a short stop in
We
what
is
called the Midi.
theless delighted to find myself in
Somewhat
The town
Servan,
first
site
of Alet brought to of the
terrace of
have always been
I
disoriented but never-
an area totally unfamiliar to me,
We
began to daydream as we journeyed. there.
on the
Being more accustomed
trees.
to the rugged granite landscape of the Atlantic coast,
attracted to
planned to
Limoux, not to enjoy
detest), but to refresh ourselves
under the shade of a row of plane
a cafe
toward
and thus had gone
to Prades by secondary roads
Valley.
had
to plan a stop in the Razes region, yet
our travels would be taking us quite close to the area.
make our way back
I
I
continued southward from
mind
name
the former
town and bishopric
of Saint-
of Saint-Malo. Couiza
flashed by like a single street through a valley. Quillan seemed just
another peaceful village slumbering in the
we promised
the direction of Perpignan, first
May
ourselves
As we turned
we would
in
take the
fork that led to the mountain route to Prades.
We several
therefore passed quite close to the Razes, indifferently noticing
remnants of Cathar
castles in the distance.
reach Prades, located in what was a totally interior region of Catalonia called the
of this trip
some of
I
Mon
and did not even know
made
years earlier she had
was
unknown
in a
hurry to
area to me, the
my own.
She had spent part of
had expressed the wish that she show me
the places she haunted as a
family circumstances,
I
Cerdana. Actually, the purpose
was much more Mon’s than
her childhood in Prades, and
ily
heat.
had
young
Because of some painful
contact with her paternal fam-
lost all
at that time
a long trip
girl.
where her father was. Several
through the Pyrenees
in
hopes of
finding him, but until our trip together she had never dared travel
through to the end. There was,
Would
We Once
it
bank of fog
in
Mon’s memory.
be dissipated in Prades?
drove through miles of vineyards before reaching our goal.
there
ily plot. It
What
in fact, a
we was
a strange
had not seen
visited the
cemetery where
there
we
day
was, seeing
it
Mon
hoped
to find the fam-
learned that her grandmother
Mon
for twenty-five years. This
was
still
alive.
with a grandmother she herself
was
to be their last meeting, as
On Roads it
woman was
turned out, for the old
soon
Mon
after.
about her
11
destined to pass from this earth
saw her aunt and uncle again and received news
also
me through
She led
father.
of Stone and Dust
the streets, searching for the fast
freshwater streams that gushed from mountain springs and raced
through the town. She brought
Cuxa and
Saint-Michel of
me
Abbey
to visit the magnificent
day when, as a
recalled the
We
trious figure. at a strange,
left
made
Prades by the mountain road and
empty inn
had
child, she
attended a Pablo Casals concert there and shook the hand of this
of
illus-
a stopover
La Tour de Carol. The windows of our room
in
overlooked the old Spain Road. Everything there was outmoded and
shrouded
in the
remote and long dead
was Mon’s small dog, who had
trip
old and sick at that time, but
our joys and hardships.
though
I
was not even
a pretty black
I
had other subjects of
book on
research for a
interest,
north.
about
I
civilization that
king
the stops to
[Vespasien
and dispensed
justice
in the
is
thus giving
tree,
4
).
Razes during the thirteenth century. Wasn’t
the queen, Blanche de Castille,
somewhere
the French
Vespasianus (69-79
name
the feet of lepers
my work
opinion of the Cathars and what might really
or documents
C.E.).
in Razes,
name
for the
most
had buried
which are known
in
Published in Paris by Editions
Herme
in
— Translator
1985.
a treasure
66
C.E.,
he also
as Vespasiennes
an attempt to restore solvency to the
Vespasian imposed a tax on public bathrooms.
in
Vespasian, Titus Flavius
While known primarily for invading Judea
fact that in
it
likely in Rennes-les-Bains?
Roman emperor
to the public urinals in France,
doubt due to the
4.
all
into the
my
rumored that
lent his
me
Saint Louis brought
sagesse (The
have taken place
3.
There
me the title for the book: he Oak of Wisdom In creating this work, I was
compelled to rethink
fact
that
had aroused the suspicions of the lords of the
who washed
from beneath an oak la
name
Brittany.
wondered how the Occitains would have greeted
this
Cbene de
(a
in
although from time to
Occitan regions where the Capet kings had pulled out
smother a
cats,
dachshund, remains
From La Tour de Carol
all
a question of visiting Rennes-le-Chateau at that time.
Time passed.
my
3
.
we headed westward toward
me),
that
odd name of Vespasien He was
have always loved animals, particularly
I
as a very dear friend.
moved
has always
Accompanying us on
loved him very much, and he shared
must say that Vespasien,
my memory
time
I
the
past.
Roman
— no
Empire,
The
12
of the Mystery
Site
There was food for thought
in this strange
expanse of earth that
I
had
yet to see for myself.
Then
my
I
what would prove
received
personal quest: one of the
to be
an important element
in
French editions of a book that
first
enjoyed huge success, Holy Blood, Holy Grail by Michael Baigent,
Richard Teigh, and Henry Lincoln, 5 a
my
earn ing
and it
I
the hypotheses
all
who
appreciation.
devoured
— quite
this
seemed guaranteed
that
title
to
book, however, without support-
audacious hypotheses
—of
its
authors,
were more akin to sensationalist journalists than writers
in truth
whatever the true value of6 this book
historians. Yet
had the merit of
may
be, for
raising potentially embarrassing questions that
me had
obviously never before been raised or answered, and thus presented
extremely original directions for future research.
That initial
said,
Holy Blood, Holy Grail
is
was
all
reaction
to completely reject
had finished reading
it, I
viewed
it
approach, for
I
am
the ideas
it
Western values.
accused of being an agnostic, which spirituality,”
“irritating”
work, and
my
prompted. Once
I
as a deliberate provocation, a deliber-
ate attempt to destabilize traditional
Western
an
am
I
and
not,
I
have often been
a “gravedigger of
which seems an absolute contradiction to
my
greatly concerned about observations that challenge
the profound reality of the Gospels as well as fundamental pre-Christian texts,
whether Greek, Germanic, or
full hilarity in
Celtic.
While
reading Holy Blood, Holy Grail
impression that
its
subject matter
was of
,
1
I
often surrendered to
nonetheless retained the
essential
importance and that
might prove necessary to revise our old judgments about the
and legendary data of called
Roman
the result of a
a
historical
Europe that had barely emerged from the
Peace' to scale the slopes of a
harmonious synthesis of
all
new culture.
it
so-
This culture was
the sources that
had watered
5.
Holy Blood, Holy Grail (New York: Delacorte
6.
This was especially true with regard to the so-called genealogies, which have been
shamelessly 7.
falsified,
truncated, revised, and corrected.
The Pax Romana, which
turies,
era
is
Press, 1982).
history books depict as a reality that endured for several cen-
one of the most remarkable swindles committed by historians. Never was an
more troubled and more
fertile in revolt,
delights, especially in the territory of Gaul,
acquire and hang on to a
power
usurpation,
where
that escaped them.
a large
civil
wars, and other such
number
of usurpers tried to
On Roads it.
At
least
The Holy
I
of Stone and Dust
had found confirmation of something
I
had long
13
believed:
Grail, the sangreal, in old French, could just as easily designate
“royal blood” (sang royal) or royal lineage as platter that-— if
we
it
could a cup, chalice, or
subscribe to the version of the story popularized
by the Clunisians, then by the Cistercians
—contained the blood of
first
Christ.
But supporting the theory of legitimate descendants of the “hairy kings,”
meaning the Merovingians, and
their debatable origin (Jesus
and Mary
Magdalene), was out of the question for me, even from a heuristic per-
though the
spective,
possibility
was worth
raising.
This was during the
time before Scorsese’s film The Last Temptation of Christ had unleashed
such outrage and controversy, yet the book by Kazantzakis on which the film
was based had been around
for
some time without unleashing such
debate. Let us not forget that the church of Rennes-le-Chateau
cated to
Mary Magdalene and
that she
is
dedi-
is
oddly and abundantly depicted
in the interior of this sanctuary. This reflects the will of Father Sauniere,
also the builder of the
Magdala Tower
in
which he wished
to house his
me to ask myself many obviously unanswerable questions. It also compelled me to reread Le Tresor du triangle d’or by Jean-Luc Chaumeil, who in this library. Strange,
no? The reading of Holy Blood, Holy Grail forced
instance turned out to be
my
white assembly,” where
was
I
Here again, however,
I
“introducing brother” to a strange “closed the sole noninitiate.
found nothing
satisfactory. Despite his data,
which he claims are authentic but are unverifiable because no reference is
ever supplied, Jean-Luc Chaumeil and the authors of
Holy Grail
—who
take themselves a
little
too
much
for
wizards and heirs of ghosts from Scotland’s haunted castles into a trap that
I
think
is
the
most pernicious and
Holy Blood, Anglo-Saxon
—have
fallen
characteristic of our
age devoted to false prophets and cheap gurus: the famous Priory of Sion. This ghostly priory, allegedly resulting
from a
Templar order (beneath the elm of Gisors, thank you Sede!)
and including among
its
scission in the
for that,
Gerard de
grand masters people as famous as
Claude Debussy and Jean Cocteau, seems to be pure invention. story
sewn from whole cloth by
failed
It is
a
would-be writers, country squires
boasting their Merovingian ancestry, and some crackpots of stage and
who must
be laugh-
his provocations.
This tale
screen grouped around the brilliant Francis Blanche, ing in his
tomb
at the
unexpected success of
The
14
of the Mystery
Site
of mysteries of every has been picked up, revised, and corrected by fans of a certain kind and by treasure seekers who have made the glory Charroux in a time when the hazel wand is being replaced by
Robert
pan”). the metal detector (colloquially called a “frying
This means, of course, that
although
I
did not take any of
I
had begun spending time
it
seriously,
Montsegur researching the
at
may have had Cathars, especially the problematic relationship they Rennes-lethe Grail. Still, I was not ready to start exploring
with
Chateau, and
know
I
friendly hoaxers
when
ing this time,
would have taken
it
a lot to
change
my mind
dur-
were taking advantage of moonless
far as to set off nights to dig holes almost everywhere, even going so the legendary explosives in a cemetery in search of the fabled treasure of out of felt it was a wise move on my part to stay
Beranger Saumere.
I
lunacy and ignore the mysterious Razes region. agitated and adventurous life I have learned during my somewhat been given the that I should never undertake anything before having
this frenzied
actions on “green light” by those certain obscure powers that guide our certain figures are earth. I have also realized that our encounters with
correspond to a never a matter of chance, and that they necessarily stage of the quest
we pursue
all
our
lives, especially
when we
claim, as
ideology, have, to be acting independently of any dogma, preconceived
I
or political and philosophical obligation.
obedience or
affiliation;
no “slaves .”
think,
though
I
9
am
I
always ready to admit when
I
I
am
my
life,
When
I
was
women whose
a professor
I
Some have
as
many
I
and
cer
what
I
have been wrong.
I
I
say
I
should
former fellow student
I
me some
as twenty.
unex-
totally
can find him again.
I
am
oaths have crossed mine over the course
did have quite a few students, of course, but that
ferent matter. 9.
my
giving
pected information but no address where
8.
and no
thinking of that mysterious Yann-Ber Kerbiriou
appears from time to time in
thinking of the
less disciples,
have indicated the paths
thinking of Andre Breton and
am
Jean Cathelin.
who
who
sect
myself up as some sort of guru of
not commissioned by anybody.
have encountered only people follow.
set
have no students much
am
I
I
8
any system of thought. tainly
nor do
acknowledge no
I
is
a dif-
On Roads of
my
and who,
of Stone and Dust
famous “maidens” who
15
left their
imprint
on the errantry of Lancelot of the Lake, have each brought me
a ray of
life
like the
sunlight that enabled
me
go farther
to
darkened caverns of the
in the
earth and perceive there the presence of monstrous dragons ready to
swoop down upon me.
my
hands
just at the
I
am
books that
also thinking of certain
moment I needed them: Le
and Holy Blood, Holy Grail
,
Tresor du triangle d’or
more important has been
for instance. But
Michel Lamy’s book Jules Verne,
initie et initiateur,
fundity and oblique approach. 10
You may
because of
what
well ask
has to do with the mystery at Rennes-le-Chateau.
thanks to Michel
Lamy
that
It
its
was
definitely
grasped what was essential in the fog
I
ticular It
ture.
to
I
is
I
how
figured out just
It
was
to enter that par-
dark cavern.
was from Montsegur
that
was
I
finally
always need a connecting door, be
which
sun
starting point that
pro-
Jules Verne
surrounding Father Sauniere and his problematic “cursed gold.”
from that
into
fell
I
my
scorching the earth and
blood
is
this
adven-
only temporary, or a spring
it
must return from time to time
launched into
to slake
my
when
thirst
the
thickening and moving slug-
my veins. Occitania is in no way my two women who have mattered most in my
gishly through
native land,
although the
life
Occitan.
It
was through them
that
paths of the south, even though that
seemed unreal
to
me.
I
I
was able
sometimes
was thanks
It
to
wander on
to felt
are both
the stony
inebriated by a light
Mon that
I
was
able to enter
Montsegur, the very heart of the Cathar mystery. Since that time,
Montsegur has become not only one of the fundamental poles of personal quest, but also a place of asylum, an oasis where in the fullness of spirit
and
in close contact
Wagnerian, although Wagner most ary at the ends of the earth. that
the
I
have friends there.
I
I
with a nature
never
likely
like the village of
love walking
amazing shadow of the pog and
its
on the
in the
10. Published
bookstore of
by Editions Payot
versally ignored
by the allegedly
my
friends
in Paris in
gladly label
Montsegur and know village streets
I
beneath
enjoy spending
Raymonde and Nicolas
It is
home
battlements that always threaten
1984. This
alert critics.
I
feel at
set foot in this sanctu-
to pierce the sky with their philosopher’s-stone teeth.
hours
I
my
work seems
likely that
it
Reznikov.
to have been almost uni-
proved to be “disturbing.”
The
16
I
Site
of the Mystery
familiar atmolove the shadowy, completely old-fashioned, strange yet
and generosity
ity
Fernand Costes,
mean
the castle.
like
have never village of
of light that shines
I
have written a
from
my
fair
its
11 Carnac and the mystery of Atlantis
my
— so
it is
darkness.
I
anxieties as in the
number
on
of pages
my book on
subjects related to other specific sites— for example, in
as
is I
Montsegur. Because
Montsegur
there
who is the true guardian of the temple, by which He knows its every corner and stone no matter how
so good, so at ease, so cleansed of
felt
Then
of ancient times.
priestess
a
knows every glimmer
small; he
Costes presides there with seren-
Madame
sphere of the Costes Hotel.
not surprising that
took
I
launching point to the other side of the Aude River
in
pursuit of the ghosts of Rennes-le-Chateau.
So that
way from
is
how
one day
in
September 1985
Mon
and
Aude
made our
Montsegur
the Atlantic slope of the Pyrenees (where
located) to the Mediterranean side, crossing the
I
at
is
Quillan and
going back up toward the north to Couiza, that small town we had passed through a year earlier and seen nothing of which but a single
running through the floor of a
street
valley.
the back road that follows the Sals River into the mountains,
whose peaks,
as
This time, though,
and then the zigzagging roads
might be guessed, were arid and
sun-scorched even in those waning days of summer. row, winding roads. They remind I
discovered the world on
without comprehending into a
of
my
I
am
partial to nar-
childhood crawls, the time
fours, the time
when we
When we emerged upon
learn the
the plateau,
most
it
was
world of complete wonder.
What trast
it.
all
me
we took
is
unsettling about the Corbieres region
between the
valleys,
which are closed
abundance of greenery and where there
is
in
is
the complete con-
upon themselves with an
fresh running water,
and the plateaus,
never any escape from the wind and sun and whose hori-
zons, riddled with stone debris, defy time. Beneath these massifs there
sometimes emerge even darker buttes whose flanks are curiously crowned by trees that have somehow survived the dog days of summer. There on one of these buttes, village
11.
after
many
turns in the road,
we
spied a
whose houses huddled up against one another beneath
Carnac
et
Venigme de VAtlantide, Jean Markale (Editions Pygmalion,
the
Paris: 1986).
;
On Roads imposing mass of a
castle
and the more
from which, extending westward, a
of Stone and Dust
17
discreet steeple of a church
a bizarre construction in the shape of
tower seemed to defy the abyss below. This was Rennes-le-Chateau,
many
a village, like so
from stone and
others, built
and made up of empty
streets that
Roman
tile
roofs
seemed to suggest that no one had
ever dared to live there.
my car in the shade and then, after going through the village, turned my steps toward the tower that so intrigued me. In truth, I was wondering just what I was doing there. In my confusion I was first
I
parked
worried that
my
would go unrecognized and questions would
I
presence in this place that
is
that the inhabitants of Rennes-le-Chateau
Would
usual haunts.
had had more than
be considered one of these snoopers
I
come
the tranquillity of a village sleeping beneath the sun?
maleficent intention.
buried in the gardens or in the cemetery.
still
the townspeople
me
as both a cursed location
wanted the freedom
Our The
their daily lives.
imbued with the atmosphere of
to be to
and
site
form
to
I
I
knew
their
fill
to disturb
had no such treasure
was
was not concerned with
simply wished to see
this place that
I
wished
had been described
and a high sanctuary of the
my own
reaction, then, both
first
I
was no concern of mine whether
It
I
whose motivations were highly
of treasure seekers and other snoopers suspect.
my
so far from
about
arise
past.
I
opinion.
Mon’s and mine, was one of wonder.
was simply magnificent and arranged
to
my
personal tastes:
oriented toward the setting sun so that a vast landscape of peaks and valleys,
some bathed
We
shadow, was revealed.
in
shared the impres-
sion of finding ourselves in an ideal location where
good
life,
we could
live the
perched between earth and heaven and sweetly
in a village
caressed by mountain breezes charged with aromas and tinted with the
We
richest colors of the sun.
Gothic structure that leaned over tion.
I
library.
have
its
knew
wall and were lost for a long time in mute contempla-
Here was
a
man
after
had
my own
built this
heart!
I
tower to house
would be delighted
his
to
library at such a site, overlooking this kind of serene yet
grandiose landscape.
amid
toward the strange neo-
had been told was the Magdala Tower, and we
that Father Sauniere
my own
tower,
I
directed our steps
all
my
It
seemed that
books, and
it
I
would have
would have been
felt
inspired in this
quite easy to
work
The
18
Site
of the Mystery
there, to think deeply
on things and meditate
there.
No
doubt Father
of such a project. By virtue Sauniere had been inspired even to conceive of this, everything disturbing that priest
I
had been told about
this village
build this kind of became pure invention. Any man who could seeker, and a seeker of for meditating could be only a truth
observatory
the truth could never
sell his
soul to the devil.
but not
made our way along the path toward the church, the Villa Bethania, an incredbefore being dumbfounded by the sight of among the most horrible housing ible construction worthy of a place
We
then
developments
where suburbs of Paris before the war! In a region noteworthy, why stone architecture is remarkable and
in the
the traditional
the merit of being in the noobuild a structure that does not even have 12 stations? Metro Paris old the and dle” style of the architect Guimard different allure, even Curious ... The Magdala Tower has an entirely the early 1900s is too apparent in its design. if the neo-Gothic mania of I
told myself that
maybe Father Sauniere was not
as rich as his biogra-
not take long to be conphers have claimed, an observation that did
add as adornments to his firmed, given the monstrosities he sought to parish church.
Because
it
was morning and
the church
ule our visit there for the afternoon.
I
was
certainly
we had to schedunderstood why the resclosed,
so that tourists are not idents of Rennes-le-Chateau took precautions
left
would have been emptied alone in their church. Otherwise the church snoopers. These preand totally altered long ago by the work of careless to the village that tells viscautions, along with the sign at the entrance borders of the that excavations are forbidden within the itors explicitly
operating on moontownship, do not prevent a few “scratchers” from and, most imporbut they protect the essential in the village less nights,
tant, the tranquillity of the people of
that the church
was
to study the cross pillar
closed. For the time being
on the
was placed upside down.
rative.
formally referred to
— Translator]
couldn't complain, then,
it
was
I
still
possible for
me
and observe that the
could also meditate on the inscription
Terribilis est locus iste (This place
is
terri-
Guimard forms of the 1890s-era architecture designed by the term was pejoas the “noodle style,” though originally
12. [The curvilinear, organic
now
I
so-called Visigoth pillar
above the door of the church:
is
Rennes.
On Roads This inscription intrigued
ble).
word
which has a
iste,
me
for
two
of Stone and Dust
The use of
reasons:
clearly pejorative sense (and
me
equivalent of the second person possessive) plunged
words above the door,
In addition, after reading the
on the request of Father
recall that
bizarre
fairly
the inside”
(in
I
the Latin
sometimes the
deep
in thought.
could not help but
I
myself had written a
above the door of the parish church of
inscription
Trehorenteuc
Flenri Gillard
is
19
Morbihan).
can
It
—and while of course
it
still
be seen today
—-“The door
does not share the same idea,
I
on
is
found
myself in familiar territory and sensed these two churches were analogous, however vaguely, despite the great distance separating them.
Because
on
it
was noon and time
ourselves a table
charming and well-shaded restaurant patio. The weather was
a
splendid and
we
felt
child
we took
course,
took
I
for a
which
I
name was Morgane. Of
because her
girl
little
one more coincidence, for Morgan
le
Fay
is
the Broceliande Forest
and
is
on the Stations of the Cross
Morgane was
later learned that this
no way invalidates the speculations
in
Nor must we lower
handsome
boy,
had formed concerning
ourselves to meaningless quarrels over the
sex of angels. In any event, this angel and the unruliness of a as impertinent as he
Once
in fact a I
Trehorenteuc
in the
between Rennes-le-Chateau and the Broceliande
relationship
Forest.
distracted by the presence of an impertinent
shadow soaring over
specifically depicted
church.
was
this as just
the great mythical
though our
perfectly in tune with the countryside,
attention to our meal
the
we found
for lunch,
the time
was on
Morgane-Morgan had
little devil. I
the face of an
hope he forgives me for being
that September day in 1985.
had come, we went back
panied by a certain number of tourists
accom-
to visit the church,
who were
visibly interested in
every detail of the structure and seemed buried in great perplexity.
seemed the question of the hour was, “What could All of the visitors shared a similar detail that
with a
had escaped
strange
all
impression:
Magdalene was no longer ical treatise in pictures
son must
the rest
be hiding?”
hope of stumbling upon the one
who had
visited the church.
The poor church dedicated
a place of
—coded
strive to find the key.
all this
was
I
was
to
left
Mary
worship or prayer but an alchem-
pictures, of course, to I
It
insistently
from the Trehorenteuc church: “The door
is
which each per-
reminded of the phrase
on the
inside.”
The
20
I
of the Mystery
Site
must confess that on
this first visit
be aware. The
tried only to
I
had been presented to me, with its I opened my mouth— “aura” of mystery, required some thought before testimonies concerning treasand even before I tried to imagine which Western world and a challenge to the basis of the entire
Rennes-le-Chateau “affair,” as
it
ures, secrets,
might be
just
valid.
advised myself then: “Don’t panic!”
I
accused of raving, though the accusation est rationalist to
unfounded.
is
I
am
I
am
often
the cold-
serves as the be found in a domain where the irrational and all intellectual and spiritual approaches. I
absolute engine for any
have also been labeled an agnostic, though
in fact
am
I
a person
who
texts— of all religions— has a great belief in the value of religious Truth, I believe, would because all address the unattainable Truth. This the reality that the
be more appropriately labeled as deep reality Surrealists attempted to flush out
and distraction that day
Blaise Pascal
1985, however,
in
I
felt
from behind the
denounced so
false
appearances
On this
well.
September
myself to be a kind of extraterrestrial in
full
comprehension. It is flabbergasted contemplation of a world beyond incomprehensible. But I was askoften said that the designs of God are design in this church. ing myself if there was really any of God’s Obviously, the words above the door that “this place
From is
the
is
I
itself
know
full
well that this devil,
the holy water stoup,
13
is
could easily conclude that
Asmodeus
He
but beneath I
felt
it.
is
It is
me
the Saint-Sulpice church in Paris. This
is
in
a kind of horri-
to those in the
we
Was
it
Was
it
a detail of ill
little
at ease
account, yet
on entering the
only Rennes-le-Chateau and
surely not by chance.
something
because of the inscription over the
the presence of the grotesque
ing posture could not hide the fact that he
13. [This refers to the
know,
find the devil not in
of unease, tried to analyze the origin of this feeling
experienced as well.
it
sagging under the weight of
strangely
sanctuary, a sensation that has filled
door?
the inscription referring?
obliged to hold. Here
disconcerting nonetheless.
Mon
is
the visitor beforehand
and that we are being welcomed by
not in the most glorious position:
I
we
enter the church
the holy water stoup he
is
but to what place
terrible,”
moment we
the church
ble devil.
is
warn
Asmodeus, whose humiliat-
was guardian
French version of the expression “sticks out
“sticks out like a devil in a stoup of holy water.
Translator]
of the temple?
like a sore
thumb
.
On Roads And what created
of the temple
more
itself?
I
of Stone and Dust
21
confess to feeling that the church
was
marginal celebrations along the
for
of “black
lines
masses.” Throughout the structure there exists a bias toward reversal:
Not only
is
down
the “Visigoth” pillar upside
outside, but inside the
Stations of the Cross are also arranged in a direction that
that found in
most churches. What are we supposed
to
is
make
opposite
of the
two
plaster statues reflecting the purest nineteenth-century Sulpician style,
one depicting Joseph and the other Mary, each holding a child and ing the other
on
either side of the nave?
The theme could be Cathar but
And what
there
is
Were
there
It
infant Jesuses?
nothing Cathar
of the strange painting beneath the
appears, thanks to Father Sauniere?
two
depicts
fac-
in the
church.
placed there,
altar,
Mary Magdalene,
it
the
patron saint of the parish, inside a cave, contemplating a death’s head. Finally,
what
the
is
meaning behind the presence of two Saint
Anthonys, both the hermit and the saint of Padua? be drawn, a priori, from these “curiosities,” but
No
conclusion can
we must admit
that
they provoke and even nourish a certain unease. In this regard
cannot refrain from raising anew the problem of
I
aesthetics as related to religion
most ancient times,
artistic
ing purely aesthetic. the sometimes
dominant tional
and abstract
toward the tinction
religion.
We know
that
from the
manifestations were religious before becom-
known
ambiguous
religions,
megalithic
It is
— any
that theater, for instance,
rituals
and that
all
is
based on
borrowed from ceremonies of pre-
forms of visual art
— both representa-
—on the walls of caves or the supporting columns of
monuments assume
a kind of transcendence of the
divine. In those civilizations that
had not
human
yet created a dis-
between the sacred and the profane and that combined both
intellectual
and manual labor with the
powers that give the shaping of
all
life
act of
to the world, beauty in
worshipping the higher
all its
forms presided over
types of worship, temple construction, and the orna-
mentation of sanctuaries. Now, the aesthetic of Rennes-le-Chateau does not correspond in the slightest to this fundamental search of humanity for
its
Creator.
How
brac, accumulate in
could so
many
what remains
believe that the person
whose
horrors, so
religious bric-a-
a religious sanctuary?
inspiration
ing this church, Father Sauniere,
much
was
was responsible
a complete
Are we to for decorat-
ignoramus from the
The
22
artistic
Site
of the Mystery
point of view, or that he deliberately ignored the aesthetic aspect
in deference to a purely intellectual
aspect of his message It
not at
glance.)
Father Saumere that he lived
was no longer any understanding whatsoever of harmonize beauty and glorification. This was at the end of
when
the need to
all visible at first
in defense of
should be mentioned
time
in a
is
message? (The specifically spiritual
there
the nineteenth century
and the beginning of the twentieth, an era that
witnessed the construction of the basilicas of Fourviere in Tyon, Sacre-
Coeur
in Paris,
and Sainte-Anne-d’Auray
unanimous opinion of being
manifestations
art lovers,
of an
in Brittany,
monuments
aggressive
which
are, in the
to ugliness in addition to
and triumphal Catholicism
against the rise of secularism. Grillot de Givry, in his remarkable and
unmask it
was even then
striving to
the deception that consists of building just anything
provided
relevant
still
work Lourdes
brings in a crowd,” and,
was already thy
ville initiatique,
,
I
might add, a
a horror in 1900.
—and genuinely
faithful
I
— Grillot de Givry would emit
the Basilica of Saint Pius X,
lot,
and the atrocity of
Mary! Things should be
religion are connected. Ancient times
was
most fervent devo-
monuments
that are as glorious
tempted to regard the ornamentation of the Church
initially
Magdalene
as an
Trehorenteuc that was decorated through the efforts of Fienri Gillard,
cussions
14. ical
in
[
and
said as they are: Beauty
14 example of “miserabilism” before the fact, was reminded again of my Broceliande Forest and tnat church in
of Saint I
in the
a Stations of the
worship of the deity as they are for humanity.
in their
but
at the sight
and the Middle Ages have proved
the truth of this assertion in a series of
I
basilica
which has been pompously
Cross perfectly designed to cause nightmares tees of the Virgin
The Tourdes
can imagine the howls that the wor-
of Lourdes’s underground parking
dubbed
profit.
—
I
and to which
—through my presence
as
its
rector, Father
much
as
my
dis-
had contributed. The two churches by no means share iden-
Miserabilism
is
a
word coined by Andre Breton
to describe those cultural
tendencies in a given time that tend to depreciate
which he was writing, he targeted
specific
life
rather than exalt
movements, such
it.
and
polit-
In the era
as existentialism,
which
he described as the offspring of Hitlerite fascism and Stalinism, as the main threat to “sacred language” and the vital connection of the concrete to the abstract, the ideal to the real.
— Translator]
On Roads tical features
fully
examined by
inal. It is a
23
other than the reverse arrangement of the Stations of the
The ornamentation
Cross.
of Stone and Dust
tourists
which has been
in Rennes-le-Chateau,
down
to
its
tiniest detail, offers
care-
nothing orig-
Sulpician creation of which other examples can be found in
Rocamadour. But ornamenta-
several sanctuaries, including the one in
tion in Trehorenteuc
on location under the
original, painted
is
direction
of Father Gillard, with elements influenced by regional style, including
when
a scene that caused a scandal
it
of Jesus falling at the feet of the fairy
of
lust. Yet,
was created
Morgana
1948: a depiction
in
as a symbolic depiction
wouldn’t there be a close connection between the Morgana *
of Celtic tradition, “the hottest and lustiest
Mary Magdalene, been forgiven,
Regardless,
and incorporated into
As
testify.
I
have
from the decadent
era.
sight of this sanctuary, with
church’s
inversions
prompted by the
Could
its
a
and
intention-
who
has
triumphant
my
nonetheless origi-
is
ornamentation of the
said, the
church Saint Magdalene of Rennes-le-Chateau style
Brittany,”
ornamentation of the Trehorenteuc
the
note aesthetically speaking,
little
can personally
I
all
woman
the so-called repentant sinner, the
sanctified,
church, while of nal, as
of
one of the sacred prostitutes from antiquity
ally depicted as
Christianity?
woman
is
the purest Sulpician
feelings of unease at
my
first
Masonic checkerboard and the
imitation
and tawdry Baroque atmosphere, have been
site’s
ugliness rather than by
more
intangible reasons?
But memory, or rather the function of memorizing, comprises a series of trigger
ment.
I
work within
are at
was reminded then of some of Father
that time told
mechanisms that
me
had brushed only a of his
1939-1940, the
fairly
weak
Gillard’s stories that until
my
level of
less
He had
than glorious end of the war following the debacle
German
troops by the French army. During this
time he had been wearing the French uniform, for citizens of
awareness.
“drole de guerre /’ the one that took place during
of the confrontation of
good
a delicate instru-
an age to bear arms. Following
ments he found himself
in
it
was
a series of
right for
troop move-
Rodez, where he was decommissioned, but
before being able to return to Brittany, where his church ministry calling,
all
he was forced to wait. Because he was a
man who
was
could never
stand being inactive, he took advantage of this time before repatriation to travel through the surrounding area
and explore
a region
unknown
The
24
to
Site
him before
He
Aude.
of the Mystery
then.
visited
He was
not far from the Aveyron in Anege and the
Montsegur, where the theme of the Holy Grail con-
interest in the nected to that Cathar fortress influenced him to take an of a Arthurian romances and this major Western myth. And he learned
he told me, in the
village,
Aude
region where a priest of modest
transform the village into a pilgrimage
and the
religious needs
wishing thereby to
his ruined parish church,
had completely restored
site
interests of the
would
that
town
s
means
satisfy
both
his
inhabitants. In short,
what Father Gillard discovered down there was the vocation of reliin the folgious and cultural tourism that he would put into practice lowing years in Trehorenteuc, the Broceliande.
What
I
vital
center
was
did not realize at the time
of
legendary
the
that this place
down
was Rennes-le-Chateau, which amounts to another example that cernothing ever happens by chance. I who had taken part, at least to a Morbihan and tain extent, in the renovation of that forgotten corner of
there
his had, in some way, assisted Father Gillard in the fulfillment of now found myself that September in 1985, six years after Father
who vow,
Gillard’s death, in
dence? I
I
one of the places that inspired
do not think
his action.
A
coinci-
so.
then realized a few things:
Of
course, there
was no question of
attempting to incorporate Father Sauniere into Father Gillard. They
were not of the same time nor of the same stamp, and their profound motivations seem to have been fundamentally different. The sole conlevel, in their desire to
nection between them exists on a superficial
transform modest parish churches into
tourism” and fices.
Of
sites
of “religious and cultural
in the indelible imprints they left
course, abbe Gillard
was entombed
on
their respective edi-
inside the Trehorenteuc
abbe church, a practice that was customary in ancient times, and the Sauniere was buried outside the sanctuary but beneath the chevet, in a Marie strange cemetery next to another tomb, that of his seivant
Denarnaud,
who was
We made
also
an odd individual.
sure to visit the cemetery that September,
and gained
through a door that brought a smile to my face, for it was an imitation and a clumsy one at that of the triumphal portals that have been the glory and reputation of the parish grounds in Finistere.
access to
it
—
We
—
pulled ourselves together in front of Father Saumere’s
tomb with
the
On Roads confused sense that
this
beyond him. Hadn’t
What was someone
man had
25
unleashed something that went far
been told that
I
of Stone and Dust
his
tomb had been
A treasure
looking for here?
desecrated?
or a secret?
I
had been
told that Father Sauniere himself, in circumstances that remain myste-
had performed
rious,
a kind of defilement
on another tomb. What
could be the meaning behind his action?
The
truth
is
that that this short visit to Rennes-le-Chateau,
which
me even though it included deep gulfs my memory as an experience of pure enchant-
constituted a real discovery for
of perplexity, remains in
ment. The beauty and calm of the castle, the
Tower
village, the
powerful simplicity of the
mysterious gardens laid out by Father Sauniere, the Magdala
that faces a horizon
I
imagine as completely bathed by the
of the red sun setting behind the mountains and mists
imparted a sense of great comfort. Yes,
Of
place where anyone could live well. there
was nothing
to be
I
it.
If
I
all
thought to myself,
course,
I
of these this
was convinced
is
a
that
found either by digging up the ground haphaz-
ardly or through shrewd calculations, each
before
—
light
more
false
had been a resident of Rennes-le-Chateau,
than the one I
would not
have calmly accepted others coming to disturb the fullness and serenity of this area. In short,
complete harmony
felt a
I
in this place
Rennes-le-Chateau. The arid plateau around
and a few there to
that a
mountain
or surveillance post,
taken as a whole,
knew
this region
this
who
still
watchtower of
a fortress. Actually,
landscape gave the impression of a fortress.
when
are
in the southeast,
present to serve as an observation
is still
like the
had served
those of the time Visigoths,
much
solely in
resonates with ravines
peak of Bugarach
insistent trees against the
show
it
— but not
haven for
as a safe
the Razes ruled
its
I
former inhabitants,
and during the time of the
considered to have been “barbarians,” though
they were simply foreigners blessed with a brilliant civilization. In addition,
hidden somewhere
Rennes, which to this
my
sense formed an
Rennes perched on the
We
left
was Rennes-les-Bains,
in a valley
side of
road that snaked across the plateau.
my
car
the aridity of
an abyss.
for Rennes-les-Bains that
road, but nothing that
odd contrast with
that other
It
September by the most unlikely
was more
a path than
an actual
had not seen before, having swallowed
The
26
its
Site
of the Mystery
share of dust and sun. This proved to be a marvelous pilgrimage dur-
which we thought ourselves hopelessly
ing
we found
because of the dead ends hamlets
we
We
encountered.
was
several occasions
at every crossroads
and
in all the
slowly descended through the September
heat into a valley that surprised us with serenity that
on
lost
its
totally different in nature
greenery and shade and a
from what we had experi-
We
enced on the summit. This was a domain ruled by water.
quickly
discovered on our arrival that the village of Rennes-les-Bains was an authentic thermal spa. 15
worn
inscription
on
small
left
the
first
things
noticed there
I
I
town buried
greenery from affecting
in
I
me
fully.
16
this
have always
I
have wanted to take the cure
myself, but rather because of the curious fin-de-siecle style in
a
thought, in a region where the
an indelible imprint! This did not prevent the charm of
been fond of spa towns, not because
found
was
a defunct old-fashioned spa hotel: “Specializing in
Rather amusing,
cures for catarrh
Cathars
Among
have always
I
them, a triumph of decadence in the sense given to that word
by the poets
who
succeeded the symbolists and helped
17 of the Belle Epoque.
I
am
time
vitalize the
not, however, a fan of the big spa cities.
I
prefer the small, sometimes half-forgotten stations such as Vals-les-
Bains in the Ardeche, Neris-les-Bains in les-Bains in Nievre. Rennes-les-Bains
that
Allier,
and even Saint-Honore-
had the same appeal
for
me, a spa
seemed to stand completely outside time and space, almost absent
from the maps, succumbing swallowed while
still
to the torpor or heaviness of valley air
charged with the aromas of
all
the herbs growing
on the plateau.
The myth continues
as well in Rennes-les-Bains.
Rennes, as they were formerly called, are mysterious date from the time of the
Romans, which means
The Baths of
in nature.
that the
They
Romans
ren-
ovated an establishment that was previously used by the Gauls. They are also subject to wordplay:
The Baths of Rennes
15. Currently, this small spa has been given a
the
new
lease
on
are also the baths of
life,
thanks particularly to
sponsorship and assistance provided by the city of Rennes (Ille-et-Vilaine
in
Brittany). 16. [Here the author 17. |The Belle
is
enjoying some wordplay with Cathar and catarrh.
Epoque was
a time
Nineties in England or America.
— Translator]
on the Continent that was equivalent
— Translator]
to the
Gay
On Roads the reine (queen). This to echo the
rumor
pun was
27
for local tradition
mother of Saint Louis, spent
— or discovered; there are several ver-
— a treasure, or documents. Both Rennes, whether the one on high
or the one below, are definitely
which only adds
of hiding places of this nature,
full
to the mystery of a region that
mysterious as a result of is
was required
that Blanche de Castille,
time there and, of course, buried sions
that
all
of Stone and Dust
its
is
already sufficiently
simultaneously wild and refined nature.
It
a small bit of land lost in the Corbieres where, as Rabelais once said
regarding the years of drought, everyone must have a cool and well-
stocked cellar
Merely
— stocked with the
fruit of the vine, of course.
souvenirs of the remote past are enough to guarantee the
its
town’s mysterious nature, but Rennes-les-Bains
almost magical place,
who was
Boudet,
if
only because of the shadow
He
whose
figure
role,
more confusing than
from what
know
I
that of his colleague
mystical,
a
left
by Father
same time Father
the parish priest there at the
Sauniere was officiating in Rennes-le-Chateau.
mon
also
is
another uncom-
is
of his time, appears even
on the plateau. Father Boudet
prided himself on being a writer, historian, expert on prehistoric times,
and even
He wrote and
a distinguished linguist.
Langue
the true Celtic language (La Vraie
work on
which he recon-
celtique),
from the English language with the aid of an alleged cromlech
structed
encompassed the
that
published a
fragments of
this
Very odd.
entire region.
book and was forced
of the hysterical laughter
it
induced.
I
to put
I
it
attempted to read some
down
each time because
further believe that at the time of
publication of the volume, which went unsold but
was
liberally distrib-
uted to learned societies and local scholars, no one took seriously
Father Boudet’s linguistic ravings.
It
required the resurgence of matters
concerning Father Sauniere to reawaken interest in Father Boudet and
prompt
the republication
—on numerous occasions —of
his
mented with prefaces that were equally delusional. Unless .
.
.
so
many
stupidities written in
ously not an idiot does merit the
work
Mon The
is
one book by someone
some examination. For
concealing something. But
and
I
made
I
felt
as
so,
it
could be
who was
obvi-
instance, perhaps
what?
sure to visit the parish church of Rennes-les-Bains.
building, quite sober in style,
town. Here
if
work, aug-
though
I
was
is
ensconced
in the old part of the
truly in a sanctuary that
was authentic
The
28
of the Mystery
Site
and intended are the joy
worship and prayer, despite the strange paintings that
for
— and anguish —of mystery decoders. The church
almost uterine in nature;
malevolent influence from the outside. that each of us likes to find tire
the eyes
gious
art,
and
but
who
seems to protect those
it
mind.
enter
dark and
from any
the kind of peaceful haven
to time in the midst of travels that
from time
irritate the
It is
is
It is
no masterpiece of
certainly
reli-
does not seem that Father Boudet, having been preoc-
it
cupied with intellectual research,
left
his
own mark on
the walls.
here; the church reveals nothing shocking
Nothing has been renovated or disconcerting.
The cemetery, however,
a completely different story.
is
abodes of the dead generally have a reputation for cemeteries, especially
church (which
more
agitated.
Instead
I
located in the middle of
am
am
town next
to a
seem much
not talking about ghosts, those folk legends of
draw abundantly from
lands that
tranquillity, rural
increasingly rare these days), definitely
is I
when
Although the
confining
my
all
the fantastic world of phantoms.
observations to the real world.
example, are there two tombs for the same individual
Why,
for
in the Rennes-les-
Bains cemetery? Countless hypotheses have been offered to explain this strange anomaly.
It is
for his entire life,”
and
of Rosicrucian lodge then,
is
it
that the individual in question “did
when
alive, as this inscription
The
possibility of a
to this particular case.
There
to every individual to discover his or her
There
is
good
cannot be doubted that he belonged to a kind
the real story here?
seem relevant up
known
is
macabre hoax does not
another reason, and
own
it is
truth.
Andre Breton
a point at which, as
shows. 18 What,
Second
said in the
Manifesto of Surrealism, the various aspects of reality cease to be perceived as contradictory. This is a very difficult notion to accept because life,
as
it
appears to us, rests on this fundamental contradiction that
have demonstrated so
many
times,
if
I
only in the perpetual combat
between the Archangel of Light and the Dragon of the Depths. Everything would be so simple complicated. But the
18.
if
people did not try to
human mind
is
things
“twisted,” and permeated by
[One of the three commandments of Rosicrucians
— Translator]
make
is
to
do nothing but good deeds.
On Roads maleficent forces (by which
mean
I
I
many
realized that there are so
intelligence
is
my
heteroclite elements that
I
is
my
did not carry
human
from what
seemed to me
In this sense the Rennes-les-Bains cemetery
of a certain state of mind, but
to Rennes-les-
first visit
no longer capable of discerning what
29
and decon-
the forces of destruction
struction inherent in the mind). During
Bains
of Stone and Dust
is
not.
a revelation
speculations any fur-
ther at that time.
Whatever the case may
domain” of
what had
the Razes
my
be,
“enchanted
intrusion into the
was merely an epiphenomenon with
chiefly captivated
my
respect to
interest at that time: the extraordinary
adventure of the Cathars, and especially the relentless efforts
made by
those on high (the papacy and the Capet monarchy) to destroy a doctrine
I
consider to be the most wonderful in existence, a doctrine that
world cannot recover
asserts that the last
human
soul
— an angelic
saved and refolded into
its
soul,
it
its
original Light as long as the
goes without saying
—has yet to be
primal purity. Wouldn’t sin then be defined
as not helping others to save themselves?
Wouldn’t
sin be a case of
ignoring rather than giving assistance to someone in danger of dying? I
returned to the Razes with
published.
I still
field of vision
Mon after my book on Montsegur was
saw Montsegur
as the place
from which
to
and dive more deeply into an understanding of a
mented Occitania caught between the Mediterranean and the
among Greek,
Latin,
my
expand
tor-
Atlantic;
and Germanic influences; between the megalithic
peoples and the druids; between northern France and the peaceful king-
doms
of the sun; between the mountains and the causse
Many
things
had changed
in
my
ing the world through the mists of
everything goes out of focus, as
life,
or at least in
which was once the
if I
astray in the ruins of
its
seat of
cathedral
were
at death’s door.
(a
had been one since prehistoric times.
is
of see-
So we did
the climb to
We
had gone
former abbey), which, though in still
retained from the past
privilege as a sacred site both out of principle
19. [The causse
made
an important diocese.
the process of being completely restored,
it
my way
some disconcerting evening when
return to Rennes-le-Chateau, but only after having Alet,
19 .
and due
When we
the limestone plateau of southern France.
its
to the fact that
travel
through the
— Translator]
The
30
Site
of the Mystery
upper Aude Valley, we are not
What we
find there
I
by
call
just
completing the leg of a journey.
name, nemeton, meaning
Celtic
its
com-
a
middle of the woods near run-
pletely natural sanctuary located in the
ning water that circulates through the veins of the earth like blood
through the
arteries of the
human
body. Only here the water irrigates a
mysterious heart whose beatings can be
to pick out the echoes of telluric currents flooding the world.
how
am
I
highlight
not a druid, contrary to the claims of a few
my contradictions.
shadows of the and
who know
only by those
felt
ritual
seek to better
cannot claim to have rediscovered the pale
—nor especially
priests of Celtic society
—twenty years
sacred function
I
who
their doctrine
after their disappearance. In the priests’ time all
was combined with
a social
would not seem
to be the case today.
masquerades
which
I
and cultural function, which
have never taken part
in those
in
white robes and
insignia that are bizarre to say the least (including the
Aryan symbol, the
in
by dressing
individuals,
swastika), seek to abrogate to themselves the right to officiate as priests in the
name
of eternal druidism.
during the time of the
by
So
As we know, the
Roman Empire
last
not only because of persecution they became Christian priests.
Roman authorities, but also because why look for them where they will
not be found?
restore a jury-rigged druidism that has nothing to
worst
aware of taste.
how
crazy our era
is
Why
claim to
do with how
about folklore, even that
who
But what credit can be given to people
was
it
and Vercingetorix?
truly experienced during the time of Caesar fully
druids disappeared
I
am
in the
declare them-
by asserting that heaven spoke to them and revealed
selves druids solely
true that a
good num-
ber of these neo-druids have never claimed to be doing
more than
into the
same mash
to
them
the great secrets of their ancestors?
researching through the tradition. But they
It is
all fall
brewed up by the eighteenth-century Welsh scholar
who was
merely a
intellectual
But
I
brilliant “antiquarian,”
with a dearth of sources. So
do know how to recognize druidic
I
am
sites;
meaning
of Alet, with
dreamlike
alleys
imprint on
Mon
its
I
know how
I
Morganwg,
pre-Romantic
God
help me!
to sense
them
sites for all time.
ruined cathedral and medieval streets,
and impenetrable and me.
a
not a druid,
because they have been and will remain sacred
The town
Iolo
know and
stillness,
left
an
its
unforgettable
love medieval cities.
I
have spent
On Roads much
of Stone and Dust
31
time dreaming on the slopes of Puy-en-Velay, behind the ramparts
of Concarneau and Aigues-Mortes, on the
upward
Dinan and
slopes of
Baux-de-Provence, and around Rouen Cathedral. There was a time
when
the
me.
gifted
I
Middle Ages exerted an it
with
Ages no longer tic
mind
analysis,
the novels
exists, or else
it
and fascinating force over
constructed, but, alas, this Middle
I
emerges from the feverish and roman-
of Viollet-le-Duc and his English counterparts. In the final
what
Glastonbury
I
in
truly prefer
the rough
is
England, the alleged
Queen Guinivere; detail),
all
irresistible
site
and wild beauty of the ruins of of the
tomb
of King Arthur and
Tintagel in England (actually, in Cornwall, a mere
where lurk the shades of Arthur, Merlin,
Tristan, Yseult,
and
King Mark; or even the wrenching melancholy of the Clonmacnoise
Monastery great
in the center of Ireland, the place
fundamental texts of Gaelic tradition were
Christian monks, no
less!
whose roughness expresses occurred there. But in
where the majority of the
I
also prefer the harshness of Montsegur,
better than
also love Alet
I
down-— by
set
and
any restoration the drama that its
tiny streets.
I
felt
as
if I
another world there, one similar to that Celtic Other World
been hunting
down
with no respite for so
Alet, however, with everything
was not our
goal.
We
visiting the church.
allow to permeate that
was
We
the site
we wished
a kind of incomprehensible stillness
more information about those ate at the
into a restaurant.
We
We
I
had
same place beneath the a
in the
little
tombs of
meantime gathered
up
trees in a
in the
this
modest Razes
park transformed
town. Then
Rennes-les-Bains, again by the same dusty roads. the cemetery, at the double
again experienced
greatly the year before:
details that stirred
wandered
to
and a sense of absolute well-being.
Yet the mystery remained intact, for
We
level,
and
to contemplate
were not disappointed.
same atmosphere that had impressed us so
village.
years.
evoked on a subconscious
it
have
returned to Rennes-le-Chateau, this time without
It
us.
many
I
were
We
we
set off for
stopped once at
the lord of Fleury,
and then con-
tinued our journey northward and eastward in a futile search for the
famous tomb not
far
from Arques that was allegedly the model
for the
one painted by Nicolas Poussin. This was the mysterious tomb sur-
rounded by shepherds trying to decipher ego.
Of course,
these shepherds
its
inscription:
Et
in
Arcadia
would have been incapable of discovering
32
The
the true
of the Mystery
Site
meaning of
this logogriph.
Of
course, the
a “fake,” erected after Poussin’s painting still
ask why).
Of
course,
we
is
was created (though we may
manage
didn’t
tomb near Arques
to find the
tomb, but we
nevertheless wished to go farther.
A new her
circumstance had arisen
owned
father
Mouthoumet,
middle of
in the very
far
from Razes,
Now, because Mon’s
truly familiar.
in
same Corbieres region with
this
set foot in the region, curiosity
well imagine.
She had learned that
had
father
house and, what’s more, had to a degree forbidden
this
daughter to
life:
house somewhere not
a
which neither of us was
abandoned
Mon’s
in
We
had to
was
killing us, as
Mouthoumet. That
visit
his
you may
why, leaving
is
Rennes-le-Chateau, passing through Rennes-les-Bains, and then going
we were
looking so desperately for the famous
back up by
Serres,
on the road
to Arques, the one immortalized by Poussin.
Our road con-
tinued on through other green valleys and garigues that
were
We
of snakes.
full
finally
rant in town.
much under
somewhat
The
louder than anyone
else.
when we
somewhat
was even
take our order.
What would happen
in
such
and probably
jovial 20
were embroiled
a
little
too
in a discus-
uniformed gendarme speaking
a
Needless to say, no one paid us the slightest
entered.
thing cool to slake our thirst. least a quarter of
guessed
entered the only bar and restau-
we
the influence of “Corbiere,”
sion. In their midst there
of attention
thirsty,
clientele,
we
reached Mouthoumet, which proved to
be a seemingly deserted, sunbaked village. a place? Feeling
tomb
We It
sat
was
down
in
bit
hopes of getting some-
a waste of time.
We
waited for
at
an hour without any sign of a hostess or waitress to
The
glancing our way.
clientele
We made
continued to talk noisily without even a dignified exit
from the establishment,
which was no doubt highly rated by the Michelin Guide but was obviously reserved only for zombies, and yet ... It reminded me of an old television
remember ful
movie whose plot took place the
title; I
recall
Clothilde Joanno,
involved a couple
from
all
in a Corbieres village.
I
cannot
only that the main actress was the wonder-
who,
who found
alas,
was taken from us too soon.
It
themselves in a village completely cut off
contact with the outside world. The telephone wasn’t working
20. [Corbieres
is
known
for
its
red wine.
— Translator
]
On Roads and cars could not enter or leave the
short,
was
it
which the
a nightmare in
world were so close together that ple to
tell
which world they were
June afternoon World.
had
I
1986
in
possible for the cou-
had the impression on that
in. I truly
Mouthoumet (Aude)
in
was only
a seeming,
automatons. In
world and the imaginary
real
that
a very sharp sensation that everyone
that restaurant-bar silentes,
like perfect
was no longer
it
33
place, but the inhabitants acted as
were normal, though they behaved
if all
of Stone and Dust
what
I
I
was
saw
Other
in the
in the
room
of
the Latin poets called the
those people who, according to ancient Irish legend, dwelled in
glass towers in the
and went about
middle of the ocean. They could be seen, they moved
their lives
(what kind of
lives
did they lead?), but they
could not answer the slightest question that audacious sailors might ask
A strange impression-— a strange land. We found ourselves strolling through the streets of Mouthoumet, where there was not a soul to be seen. We saw nothing but the sun and them.
houses whose windows were frightfully empty of any
Following the directions father’s house.
was
It
in perfect condition,
doned.
We
parked the It
was then
eling grocer
of his horn.
the
life.
which
streets, all of
we made our way back
A a
a
Its
roof was
led into scrub-
to
We
where
I
had
heard the noise of a
van that had stopped on the square.
It
was
a trav-
gathered his customers together with some loud blasts
miracle unfolded before our stupefied eyes, for at that
crowd of women surged from
lifeless
houses
we had
ing us greeted us amiably, as
if
set
we were
say, this scene intensified the vision like the city of
all
over,
emerging from
just passed. Cackling, they
around the van where the grocer had
up
found Mon’s
easily
had obviously been aban-
itself
that something happened.
who
moment same
we
empty and absent of
but the house
of sorts,
given,
presence.
car.
motor and spotted
very
just as
continued wandering the
Somewhat out
land.
we had been
human
I
up
his stand.
gathered
The women
pass-
old acquaintances. Needless to
had of an Other World swallowed
Ys beneath the waves and regaining the surface on
only a few rare occasions, at which time the inhabitants would take
advantage of their freedom to speak and ask something of those
happened by chance Unfortunately,
I
who
to be there at that time.
have no idea what the people of Mouthoumet
The
34
of the Mystery
Site
might have asked of us on that sunny afternoon, the day
mer
solstice.
our
way out
change our
We
of the village and onto the road west. But
We
itinerary.
forests.
I
valleys
mountain that seems
to the foot of
to find that area so
wooded.
demanded some
Montsegur
in
an area where
some
left
traces.
Here
I
way by
again trial
knew where
and
error.
We
I
was and we no
were
in the very
we made our way directly our base camp of Montsegur.
center of the Razes region, and from there
town I
hesi-
Bugarach Peak, the mysterious
to be a counterpart to
longer needed to find our
the
to
and the “Bougres,” meaning the ancestors of the Cathars,
the Templars
have both
wanted
to lose themselves in dense
and appeared
would never have expected
we made our way
tation,
I
then took secondary roads that threaded their
crossroads to the next, each of which
From one
sum-
climbed back into our car and had no problem finding
way through narrow dark
after the
of Quillan and then back to
to
have retained an ambiguous remembrance of that day. Just what
happened then? Had some indefinable shadows lurking above Rennes-leChateau and Rennes-les-Bains decided to accompany us on
this pilgrim-
age through a foreign world that was necessarily at the very border of the unreal and the impossible?
The discovery of
simply to recognition and knowledge of the be spent in the that
is
company
a country
visible. It
visible,
never limited
demands
that time
of the intangible, in the presence of everything
subtle yet forms the very soul of a region.
on the
is
we can comment upon
We
can report rationally
landscapes and monuments,
assign a value to the events that took place here or there
— but
we can
it is
much
harder to describe impressions, especially those born of an almost mystical contact
among
with the soul of beings and things.
We
could say that the heat
those sun-scorched rocks caused hallucinations and even actual
mirages.
We
could also point to the importance of the underlying myths
and legend that formed the foundation of our approach. But one thing remains certain, to
me
at least:
Rennes-le-Chateau and the Razes would
henceforth nourish a rich and fantastic world.
—
2
A
Fortified
Rennes-le-Chateau
is
part of a small region, the Razes, located in the
foothills of the Corbieres
Aude department on 1
Encampment
mountain range
the border of Roussillon.
The Razes
small mountains, plateaus, and deep valleys with, at
Aude
Valley,
toward which converge
begin in the mountains.
on the Aude
River,
Perpignan to the
There
a
is
Its
all
its
heart, the
the streams
most important town
and
upper
rivers that
at present
is
Quillan
Carcassonne to the north, and Foix to the west.
heavy Pyrenees influence here, but is its
this
landscape
climate, although the southern
not a destination. Over the
last
is
typically
wind ushers
cold temperatures during the winter. In principle the Razes transit,
a land of
is
forming a crossroads from which stray the roads to
east,
Mediterranean, as
end of the
at the southern
is
in
a place of
few years, though, tourism
notably trips starting from Montsegur to the so-called Cathar castles has sparked noticeable interest in people driven straight through the region.
mystery has drawn to curious, the skeptical,
paper
article
1.
is
is
would have
course, the Rennes-le-Chateau
and assiduous treasure seekers ever
picturesque and
beautiful countryside than for
[France
previously
remote spot huge crowds made up of the
on the church appeared
The Razes its
this
Of
who
in
35
better
somewhat dubious
divided into ninety-five administrative regions
— Translator]
news-
1956.
would merit being its
since a
known
known
for
reputation. In
as departments.
The
36
Site
of the Mystery
accordance with the saying that there
we should acknowledge
ever,
As we
never smoke without
is
fire,
how-
the reality of certain mysteries in the region.
shall see, the better part of these mysteries
is
connected to the Aude
countryside as well as to both the mind-set and the ancestral traditions of its
inhabitants. Certainly there
nothing surprising to be found there; in countless other regions, especially in
found
similar “mysteries” can be
are sometimes referred to as “fortified lands” containing natural
what
curiosities, architectural riches,
end. In fact, there are so tell
is
a story
must
many
and connections to both history and such connections that those
clearly establish
first
particular scene
its
—even
and a church.
around a
castle
capital of
an earldom
ticular role in the
a capital
is
a
is
It is
if
the tale
simple village of houses clustered
hard to imagine that
—even one of reduced
size
city. It
it
was once
—that played
Merovingian Dark Ages. Despite current
not necessarily a large
wish to
and space.
will turn fantastic, ultimately taking place outside of time
Today Rennes-le-Chateau
who
leg-
its
own
belief,
the
par-
however,
could simply be the residence of
recent historical times, a leader need not have
a leader; then, as in
more
been surrounded by
all his
people. Versailles, for example,
was
the resi-
dence of the king and his court but was removed from the true capital of
There was probably never anything more
Paris.
at
Rennes-le-Chateau than
one that included a number of dwellings
a fortress, albeit a well-equipped
around the count’s residence. This does not mean that there were no outposts in the surrounding area that were also fortified. In Merovingian times,
it is
likely that in the valleys there
were additional populated com-
munities where economic activities necessary to the survival of the group
took place. There were countless examples of merchant and artisan towns located center
and within proximity
to a
resources. Their location apart
the inhabitants of these
generally situated
with
this
The
much
to a
more
waterway or
fertile
on easy paths of communication
on
understanding that village’s position, is
—
we
in the event of
population
land or even mining
fortified area in
towns from seeking refuge
a height
of the horizon,
from the
fortified
no way prevented
inside the fortress
war or other
danger.
It is
should consider Rennes-le-Chateau.
high on a rocky promontory that dominates
certainly ideal, allowing for excellent surveil-
lance over the surrounding area. Furthermore,
it
is
—or
rather,
located on an important communication path (no one takes
was it
into
]
A account anymore). The
village, in fact, sits
Fortified
on the
Encampment
site
37
Roman
of the
road that connected Carcassonne to Catalonia by way of the famous pass
known
as the Pass of Saint-Louis,
which served
between Catalonia and France. But
a frontier post
for a long time as this ancient road,
which must have been constructed over an older
Gallic road,
is
no
longer visible today except for a few stray remnants here and there in the countryside.
We
can best grasp the importance
over a veritable eagle’s nest, must have had
way
this
town, perched
when we approach
it
by
of department road 52 out of Couiza. All the residences are in fact
on the
summit, situated below the
butte’s
was renovated considerably. during
castle,
which
is
very old but
The
the sixteenth century.
dominates the north side of the promontory, which
is
castle
most
the side
exposed to the attacks of possible enemies. Striking above
all is
the
grouping formed by the church and the property converted by Father Sauniere, which consists of the gardens, the Villa Bethania, and the
Magdala Tower overhanging famous
was
site
also well
now
the magnificent landscape. This
known
from the postcards
in Sauniere’s time
he printed of his “work,” but in his time no one talked about cursed treasure or jealously guarded secrets held by a mysterious priory.
The rocky platform supporting Rennes has an 1,540
and
feet,
largely
that are nestled here
and there
whose name
there. Farther
down
in
pockets on the plateau.
—
Casteillas
the valley,
—
the
Toward
as the Etroit d’Alet,
and ruined
we can
beyond some rounded is
the
hills,
2
the north are the
and a
castle of Coustaussa,
that overlooks the Sals River.
To
little
Aude
woods, and
perched
among
the south are
the rocks
By
evidence a sacred
who
site,
on a
woody clumps
tion of Bezu.
all
what
is
farther northeast are the village
which extends to the town of Granes
[The Alet
once stood
Valley and
Forest,
2.
below a
see
town of Esperanza.
up the Lauzet
Templars,
look
northwest are Couiza and Montazels, part of Father
Sauniere’s native area.
known
When we
signifies that a fortress
the outlines of the Pyrenees in the Ariege region,
Toward
about
overshadows the hamlets of the surrounding area
out over the countryside from the Magdala Tower, small village
altitude of
hillside
that
make
in the direc-
Bezu was the domain of
enjoyed a very special status that allowed them to escape
Straits.
— Translator
The
38
Site
of the Mystery
the persecution of Philip the Fair.
of Bugarach, which
about 4,000
is
tion of Rennes-les-Bains
number
The southeast
mark out
Maurine, Lavaldieum Sourde, and
To
feet in height.
le
wooded
hills,
are a
a narrow, sharply winding road:
Pas de
not help but bring to mind a past that
the east, in the direc-
a wall of
and hidden behind
of small hamlets that
dominated by the pech
is
still
la
Rocque
—
many
holds
their
names can-
mysteries.
This brief description provides some idea of the appearance of the
immediate area around Rennes-le-Chateau. Beyond describe.
It is
world of
a
its
own,
a closed world,
though
may have
seems he
it
is
it
hard to
and there are reason-
immense cromlech
able grounds for Father Boudet’s talk of an here,
this,
intentionally played
existing
on the confu-
sion between natural features of the landscape and rudimentary
human
construction.
The streets
of Rennes-le-Chateau
village
and the imposing mass of
its
picturesque with
is
The
castle.
dates back to the twelfth century and
its
narrow
oldest part of the castle
was
on the
built
of a
site
Carolingian (and perhaps Visigoth) fortress by Guillaume d’Assalit,
Damaged
the steward of the counts of the Razes.
was
the centuries,
it
who
over the course of
restored and renovated during the sixteenth century
was
to include four towers that flanked the walls surrounding an inner court-
yard. Until the Revolution the castle family, descendants of the Cathars.
Negri
d’ Abies,
of legend:
It
who
is
was
the property of the
One member
Hautpol
of that family, Marie de
buried in the Rennes cemetery, has become a figure
appears that her tombstone was,
if
not the starting point,
then an important element in the mysterious activities of Father Sauniere.
The garden to the cemetery
in front of the
in
Rennes-le-Chateau gives access
where Marie de Negri d’Ables
A
in its design.
church
what
buried and
central path cuts diagonally across
church door with the famous inscription are the
is
words attributed
it
is
quite
odd
and leads to the
Terribilis est locus iste.
These
to Joseph in the biblical text of the Vulgate, but
are they doing here
and what could they mean
the so-called Visigoth pillar (which
is
in this context?
To
actually Carolingian, as
the
left is
its
craftsmanship and decoration incontestably show) holding up a
statue of
that
Our Tady
was found
upside
down
,
of Lourdes.
inside the
The
pillar
is
in fact
church and placed
after being recut
and recarved
an old
altar stone
in its present location,
for the
Mission of 1891.
It
A originally
measured a
under two and a half
mate patty cross
more than
little
feet tall.
fitted at the
Encampment
39
now
a bit
a carving depicting a
gem-
Fortified
a yard in height
On its surface
is
and
is
end of a cabled molding and crowned by
an alpha and an omega, which are the symbols of creation of the divine infinite universe, the
beginning and end of
things, equivalent to the
all
famous ancient symbol of the ourobouros, the serpent
To
the right of the pillar
lar to the grotto of
Lourdes
is
a kind of false grotto
— and on the wall along
own tail. no way simi-
biting
—
in
its
garden path
this
is
a depiction of a standing stone reminiscent of a menhir. Others have
noted that
this
“menhir” can be seen
in the wall
Bethania Villa and the Magdala Tower. By
had something
mind when he
in
laid
Farther to the right of the pillar
descending from the
evidence, Father Sauniere
all
out
this
we
find a circular path that goes
garden.
around a Calvary cross inscribed with words that have inspired much analysis: Cbristus
cross that tive
had
its
A.O.M.P.S. defendit.
It is
a version of the inscribed
origin in the Occitan cross (which itself
was
a distinc-
symbol of the Volques Tectosages people of Gaul) and the famous
Celtic cross. Farther along
pool that was vandalized
toward the cemetery there
in
1979, and
beyond
just
is
it is
a crater-shaped
an
altar for the
dead arranged against the surrounding wall. The cemetery proper
is
entered through a porch above which Father Sauniere had engraved the
words pronounced by the
officiating priest
Augmenting
this inscription
a phylactery.
The
skull,
is
on Ash Wednesday
a sculpted skull over
which seems
corresponding to the number of cards
tarot.
This portal, which reveals extremely bad are,
by
all
in the
tibias
Major Arcana of
taste,
on
shows twenty-two
to be snickering,
teeth,
dead
two crossed
services.
and the
the
altar of the
evidence, a souvenir of those grand triumphal porches
that are the glory of the parish property of Finistere. Here, however,
we
search in vain for any sign of beauty or the least evidence of the grandiose.
Or was
Is this
the result of a lack of
their creation
The Rennes church, which is
a lack of artistic taste?
an act of derision? Whether we want them to or
not, these are the questions that
Magdalene,
means or
come is
to
mind
now known
in the
garden.
as the
the former castle chapel of the counts.
Church of Mary
The apse
the twelfth century, the time of the castle’s construction, but
dates to
was subse-
quently expanded and transformed, then finally restored and decorated
The
40
of the Mystery
Site
by Father Sauniere to meet
his needs.
It
must be
was
Sauniere’s arrival, the state of the property
Several
said that prior to
from
far
documents reveal the general decrepitude of
satisfactory.
this parish
church
long before 1885, the date Sauniere assumed the reins of office. For
example,
in
1883 the vicar general of Carcassonne made an urgent plea
to the Council of State for assistance to repair the building,
threatened to
fall
and emphasized the
into ruin,
of the village, lost
on
a high
fact that the
which
populace
and dry plateau, was too poor to assume
the costs of such work. Accordingly in his request he described “the
deplorable state of the sanctuary,
altar,
whose frames have been broken and went on it
carried
away by
to underline the danger this situation
seems that the
civil authorities, at
a hurricane.”
posed to the
We
can easily see
Sauniere, confronted with a sanctuary in ruins, did restore
it.
What
faithful,
He but
the beginning of the quarrels of the
turned a deaf ear to this plea.
laity,
and the two nave windows,
all
why
Father
he could to
could be more understandable or more honorable? The
circumstances of this restoration, however, were very strange and
its
result quite startling.
The welcome given every really
any
faithful
the immediate his
who
still
visitor
grimacing face, his eyes
he
is
His
knee
is
forced to hold.
ally holy. it is
left
The
right
is
disconcerting.
the horrible devil
is
at the
To
Asmodeus, with
—one has been replaced-— popping from
head and staring demonically floor.
enters the church (are there
attend this sanctuary?)
of the entrance
left
who
his
black-and-white checkerboard
bent beneath the weight of the holy water stoup
We
might well ask
hand of
the devil
is
if
the water
it
contains
is
actu-
closed to form a kind of circle;
said he originally held a trident, the kind the
demons
of hell used,
according to medieval folk imagery, to prod their victims into their ovens. As a rule such representations were placed just outside of
medieval cathedrals and churches, generally on the north (or sinister side, better to illustrate that the sole
was by entering famous fresco
means of escaping
infernal torment
the church. Perhaps Father Sauniere
inside the Kernascleden church (in
knew
Morbihan), or even of
the horrifying taolennou [paintings] that Breton missionaires, initiative of
of the
on the
Father Julien Maunoir during the Counter-Reformation of
the seventeenth century,
displayed to the faithful of remote rural
A parishes after having subjected
them
Fortified
Encampment
sermons and making
to terrifying
them attend equally evocative dramatic performances. That the forced to hold the holy water stoup
the Christian perspective. In the church of the devil
word
of
abyss as
is
it is
mous work of
Campeneac
Morbihan),
(in
emanates. All of this brings to mind Satan’s
and
richly
lyrically described
La Fin de
called
Asmodeus puts
Satan. Yet
it
by Victor
Hugo
fall
into the
in a
posthu-
cannot be said that the sight
at ease the visitor to Rennes-le-Chateau.
Fortunately, he
is
not alone at the entrance. Above the devil and the
stoup are four angels, each executing a part of the sign of the cross. the pedestal
we can
umph,” which
is
prop up the rostrum from which the
similarly obliged to
God
devil
an excellent idea, from
in itself
is
41
read the inscription “By this sign you will
On tri-
about Emperor Constantine, who,
recalls the legend
overcame
after seeing this inscription in the sky,
enemies and issued
his
an edict of tolerance that brought an end to anti-Christian persecution.
Along with the angels on haps
basilisks,
this pedestal are
two
assumed to be Beranger Sauniere’s donors are always preserved
the back wall of the church,
intriguing for both depicts Christ
uals
who
on
its
clearly
spilling
from
What meaning
is it
placed, there
is
details that
names of
is
the
sort
a fresco that
can be made out
this
should be given to
in
is it.
mountain of flowers
a partial clue
enthusiastic searches,
wheat are
this representation?
from the sack be the words of Christ
and everywhere, yet have not been underabout a “treasure”
buried somewhere in the region? This
many
the
which has no openings of any
At the foot of
spilling
that have spread here, there,
Or
all,
a grain sack that has burst; grains of
Could the grains of wheat
stood?
After
safely
a flower-covered mountain, surrounded by individ-
make out
it.
initials.
and the
naivete
are difficult to identify.
we can
which can be
letters B.S.,
in religious buildings.
and against which the confessional
It
are per-
mythical animals borrowed from a medieval bestiary, as
well as a circle surrounding the
On
two monsters, which
though
it
—one
that, of course,
last interpretation
rests
on no
is
has inspired
precise foundations.
Sacred texts and the illustrations of episodes recounted in these texts
appear here only with what all
in
is
generally called “artistic license.” Again,
that can be declared for certain
mind when he commissioned
is
that Beranger Sauniere
the depiction of this scene.
had an idea It
should be
42
The
of the Mystery
Site
added that the
details in this
in fact, consists of
ground,
and towns. Could
work
are especially irritating.
The back-
which we can
see villages
an odd landscape
in
be Razes as seen, fantasized, and revised by
this
Father Sauniere, or else a vision of a paradisial world in which Jesus,
through
his parables,
evokes the profound reality through the deceptive
appearances of a world threatened by the ironic eye of Asmodeus?
On is
nothing intrinsically surprising about
depiction of
a painting that, accord-
is
unverifiable witnesses, Father Sauniere himself created.
some
ing to
There
the opposite wall, beneath the altar,
Mary Magdalene. But
its
subject;
it is
simply a
has nothing to do with the Gospel
it
story of the resurrection of Jesus, nor even with the Provencal legend
about the Holy Balm. In
ments on her knees interlaced. She
some
tree
there
is
a
it
in a
we
see Saint
Magdalene clothed
cave with her hands clasped and her fingers
from
staring fixedly at the top of a cross fashioned
is
branches and stuck in the cavern
human
in rich gar-
skull,
Outside the cave
and
we can
a
little
farther
floor.
Next
back there
is
see a barren landscape that
to her knees
an open book. is
crowned by
sketchy ruins stretching into a luminous but stormy sky. The cavern entrance seems to be framed by stone blocks fallen from the wall. This is
Of
certainly a very strange painting.
mind
Christ’s
tomb, but what would
course, the cave can bring to
this skull
be doing there?
reminiscent of the cavern of the Holy Balm, but
more
It is
Mary Magdalene
also
has
the air of a rich aristocrat here than of a poor hermit. Interestingly,
the image of the skull reappears
church
itself,
on
Mary Magdalene
a statue of
as well as in the private chapel Father Sauniere
in the
had con-
Mary Magdalene,
structed in Villa Bethama. This depiction of
the
patron saint of the parish, must have been a matter of heartfelt importance to Father Sauniere. But
what could
this strange painting really
mean? As
for the other statues in the church, they
all
display a frightening
There are plaster saints similar to those that can be seen
artistic nullity.
everywhere: Saint John the Baptist, Saint Germain, and Saint Roch. But
why
are there
two
ted temptation objects
statues of Saint Anthony,
and the other of Padua (who
and causes), each standing almost
Here again,
one of the hermit
it is
is
who
resis-
the patron saint of lost
directly opposite the others
impossible that their presence
is
merely accidental.
It is
A
Fortified
Encampment
43
apparent that in positioning them opposite each other, Father Sauniere
compare them and
certainly intended that viewers bolic significance.
Given these oddities,
creating novels based
reflect
on
sym-
their
so surprising to see people
is it
on the “Temptations of Father Sauniere” and seek-
ing lost buried treasures in Rennes-le-Chateau?
There are
still
two more
looking at the altar
—
is
Saint Joseph
and on the
There would be nothing extraordinary about holding an infant Jesus.
I
for
is
it’s
this if
We
—when
the Virgin Mary.
each of them was not
any more
a notion that could hardly be
worth. 3
is
left
father, the other the issue of his
have already proposed one theory on
what
right
the
seems there are thus two Jesuses in Rennes-le-
It
Chateau, one the issue of his putative mother. Here
On
statues framing the altar.
heretical.
this subject that
find ourselves in a land
can be taken
where the Cathar
influ-
ence has played a strong role. The strong presence of the devil in this
church
may
be reminiscent of the belief of Cathars, at least the radical
dualists, in a principle of evil incarnated ter,
an “almost god” of
evil
who
by Satan, the creator of mat-
opposes the
God
of good.
almost be said, then, that the child held by Joseph on the ter
—
side of the altar
held by
Mary on
is
left
could
It
— or
sinis-
not Jesus but Satan, whereas the true Jesus
the right side.
To use even
is
further the theory of dual-
ism expressed by some Cathars, both of them, Jesus and Satan, are brothers, sons of
God
manifestations of a good and evil deity. this
one put forward by Franck Marie,
Why is
not? Another hypothesis,
equally interesting:
The
held by Joseph represents the masculine element, that which ent, visible,
held by
what
is
and external,
Mary
like the
ilar
why
placed on the
not?
We
left
should not overlook the fact that
and from which the divine word
side of the altar.
exoteric symbol that permits a sonorous
divine thought. But
3.
appar-
male sex organ. Conversely, the child
the rostrum, source of the exoteric is
is
child
represents the feminine element, the subtle element of
hidden. 4 Again,
emanates,
two
the Father, the sole Creator; they are the
on the
The
bell
tower
is
a sim-
outward manifestation of
right side of the church
is
the door leading
Jean Markale, Montsegur and the Mystery of the Cathars (Rochester, Vt.: Inner
Traditions, 2003). 4. F.
Marie, La Resurrection du
“
Grand Cocu ” (Bagneux:
S.R.E.S., 1981), 16-18.
The
44
of the Mystery
Site
more important, from
to the small sacristy and,
We
had constructed.
that Father Sauniere
there to a secret
room
should also remember that
the Stations of the Cross are arranged in reverse order in this church
(which
extremely rare), and that following the Stations requires
is
beginning on the
on the
of the church and ending
left side
Rennes-le-Chateau, then, everything
At
right.
arranged as though someone
is
wished to show us the importance both of not being taken
by appear-
in
ances and of following the external, exoteric path to eventually discover the secret, esoteric path.
Trehorenteuc
(in
Morbihan)
fully justified in this
A
there that has
door
on
is
the inside”
— appears
Mary Magdalene. visit to
the
on display the mysterious Stone of the
was discovered
actually a bas-relief that
is
church and which offers a
difficult challenge to
those
who would
in the inter-
has been claimed, without basis and with no proof, that this
It
it.
written on the door of the church of
— “The
church of
Knight. This “stone”
pret
is
Rennes-le-Chateau cannot leave without a
visitor to
museum
small
What
an extremely significant piece of evidence regarding the presence
is
in
the Razes of a legitimate Merovingian descendant, a son of Dagobert
(who, novel
we know,
—which
World,”
who
is
died at a very still
growing!
young
—concerning
famous upside-down
Carolingian
pillar
work dating
is
is
no more Merovingian than It
arcades.
a very
is
handsome
and depicting two
The horse of the
rider
on the
possible this rider
it is
because of the hairstyle and the folds
in the
left
may
be
garments that she
wearing. As for the rider on the right, like other representations of
this type
and perfectly characteristic of Carolingian
ing a spear
and holding
scene, a profane as
is
Visigothic.
seems to be drinking from a trough, and
woman
the future “King of the
to the eighth century
mounted knights beneath two
a
of this grew the serial
will be the recognized heir of the first dynasty, that of
the “hairy kings.” In fact, this bas-relief the
Out
age).
II
was
work
a
round
shield.
It is,
Sauniere
who
church, and
is
brandish-
hunting
that the artist sought to Christianize by adding,
biblical
stories
and the Tree of
and Grail legends.
discovered this stone while overseeing
it is
he
in all likelihood, a
proper, a grape representing the Eucharist
made famous by
art,
certain that
it
was one
It
Life
was Father
work on
the
of the constituent elements of
the chancel, the separation between the nave
and the
choir.
But what-
A ever the truth
may
resentation, the
century,
work
and
this
art
from
works of
be and whatever is
alone merits
45
said about this rep-
its
removal to the museum. Authentic
this site are rather rare.
more than
It is
may have been
Encampment
a splendid testimony to the art of the late eighth
Rennes-le-Chateau was not the region.
Fortified
site
of the
first fortress in
likely that the Gallic site
place called Le Casteillas, an
the Razes
would have been
enormous limestone mass
at the
that haphazardly
emerges from the rachitic plant growth and can be easily seen by look-
toward the southwest from the foot of the Magdala Tower. The
ing
name Le Latin)
Casteillas indicates a very ancient fortification (castellum in
and designates almost everywhere
Britain) settlements of
it
dog
appears in France (and in
rocky promontories in Celtic times.
It
evokes cer-
tain hill forts that are particularly plentiful in the southwest portion of
England.
If
Rennes-le-Chateau
almost certain), then
we should
the small rise separated
is
truly of Celtic origin (and that
concentrate our search in Casteillas, on
from the town of today by the curiously named
Stream of Colors, which forms a depression that is
is
is
difficult to cross. It
currently impossible to see anything there but rocks and vegetation,
though during the nineteenth century the existence of “three blow holes”
may
was
discovered. “In fact,” as noted by a geologist of the time, one
note “a kind of
Casteillas, as the
air that
lower region
lunker’s paradise” 5
treasure hunters
warm
is
seems to emerge from the
studded with
entrails of
galleries, a veritable spe-
—and, one might well add, a
veritable paradise for
and other fans of hidden mysteries. There have
also
been recent claims of the discovery of a column and the remnants of an extremely ancient portico. This information must be regarded with the customary reservations, because
known examples a
summit
if
compared with
all
all
the better-
of this architecture, this Celtic-style castellum
was only
encircled by ramparts consisting of a foundational layer of
dried stones
on top of which
a
wooden
palisade
was
erected.
The
“dwellings” inside would have been constructed in the same fashion. All that could be discovered there,
if
systematic excavations were to be
undertaken, would be various objects, weapons, and jewels. If
5.
we
leave Rennes-le-Chateau by the road that snakes across the
R. Bordes, Rennes-le-Chateau (Paris: Editions Schrauben, 1985), 30.
The
46
of the Mystery
Site
limestone plateaus,
we
tory and legend. This
are transported through areas charged with hisis
Coume Sourde
the
same name, which
lated hamlet of the
sometimes spelled come, appears so frequently
is
road,
named
after the iso-
Coume,
Celtic in origin.
is
simply the French and English combe, which
toponymy
in the
of the Hexagon. 6
It
comes from
a Gallic root
meaning “curve” but through semantic evolution has
mean
“a winding valley.” There are countless variations on this
come
to
Combourg and Combrit
theme, from Chateaubriand’s beloved Fimstere to the various trip
Chambons
in the Central Massif,
with a side
through Chambord (“the ford on the bend”), not to mention
Combes
many
that distinguish so
in
place-names. In this instance,
all
the
Coume
Sourde, according to the regional historian Father Sabarthes, means “sordid combe,” an allusion to the poverty of this area. But according
Doctor Gourdon
to a specialist in thermal spas, a arly
work
1874 on
in
this subject, the
who wrote
a schol-
region of Rennes’s subterranean
area contained “a basin limited to close to 5,000 feet” beneath the
town, which would assume an expanse of groundwater (no doubt
warm,
if
one
which would give
refers to Casteillas),
meaning of “Combe from which
a dull
this
place-name the
sound emanates.”
Why not?
But
another entirely Celtic etymology can also be offered here. The word sourde, in this case, siccus, “dry,”
would
derive
from
a Gallic root akin to the Fatin
which engendered the Gallic sych. In these circumstances,
Coume Sourde would
simply be “dry combe,” which corresponds per-
fectly to the characteristics of the countryside.
of having the last
There sis:
is
word
in
is
not a typical
Fongny and Montagne-au-Perche
site
name
ruins of an abbey of the Val-Dieu in the in the
that lends itself to analy-
for this region.
Reno
Orne
in all these cases there
Dei, “Valley of
name
6.
God.” The
is
region,
dates from the Christian era or
if it
Upper Foire region,
the area of
lie
de Sein proper.
— Translator]
refers to Vallis
determining whether
this
might be carried over from an
[The French often refer to France as the Hexagon because of
mean
find the
and the extremely
no doubt that the name
difficulty lies in
We
Forest located between
beautiful cloister of Favaldieu near Brioude in the
and
boast
matters of toponymy?
another strange and desolate
Favaldieu, which
Who, however, can
its
shape;
it
can also
A
Fortified
Encampment
47
older time. According to a local legend recorded before 1874, long
before the events relating to Father Sauniere, Dr.
Gourdon pursued
on the thermal groundwaters of the region and came up
investigations
with a curious hypothesis: There once existed “in
name was sometimes corrupted god Baal
One
fices.
into Bal-Dieu, a temple erected to the
tempted to believe that
is
founded by Phoenicians Spanish coast.” This
is
who
this
it
and
to
make
sacri-
temple would have been
created several colonies on the closest
not impossible; the Phoenicians might well have
advanced into the backcountry of the Mediterranean, the gold
whose
this place
which the inhabitants of the land gathered
in
his
if
only to exploit
mines that were once so plentiful there. But perhaps
silver
not necessary to go looking for a Phoenician god. Couldn’t the
is
name have been
a corruption of the Celtic Bel,
Belenos, meaning “Brilliant
One”
or “Shining One,” a nickname given
to different Gallic deities that have left
names—-most
an abbreviation of
numerous
traces in place-
often confused with the French adjective belt
It
should be
Coume Sourde were, for a while, Templars of Bezu, who enjoyed a very spe-
pointed out that both Tavaldieu and the property of those strange cial status, as
mentioned
earlier.
Locally the ruined castle sitting above the village of Bezu called the Templars’ Castle.
down
hands of the king’s men, and that
The legend goes on
said, “a long
the cemetery
office for the dead.
way
column of white shades” can be seen “leaving
7
their
former church, where they wish to sing the
Certainly this region cannot be found wanting in
of legends.
called the Ruins of
It
7.
there.
on the nights of October 12 and 13.” At that
But Bezu prompts other questions.
Albedun
still lies
from
and climbing up toward the ruins.” These are the dead
Templars searching for
the
this bell
it
to say, according to Father Mazieres, that “it tolls
a death knell every year it is
still
legend claims that these Templars cast
a well the silver bell of their chapel in order to prevent
falling into the
time,
One
is
is
First, the
Albedun on a general
staff
Castle of the Templars
map from
1830. The
is
name
incontestably of Celtic origin (Albo-Duno, “white fortress”).
can be found farther to the north, toward Rennes-les-Bains, in the
Abbe Mazieres, Les Templiers du Bezu
(Paris: Editions
Schrauben, 1984), 30.
The
48
Site
of the Mystery
Franco-Occitan form of Blanquefort, or Blanchefort, designating the ruins
was
of a castle that
famous Blanchefort
the birthplace of the
Albedun and Blanchefort are therefore two
identical
name “white
fortress”
pointed out, however, that the
out the entire territory of ancient Gaul, where
whether
fortified city, ory.
This
is
the former
it
Nor
“enceinte, wall”).
“white city”
is
easily
name
of Vienne
we
are
far
should be
common
is
through-
designated an ancient
(Isere),
once
known
as
mem-
Vindobona and bona,
“white,”
from myth: In popular imagination, the
8 confused with the “city of glass,” the marvelous
city
always placed at the beginning of
his-
of olden days (the realm of Faery
by people
tory) inhabited
It
flourishing, in rums, or existing only in
still
from which comes the Breton gwenn,
(vindu,
names.
family.
who
is
belong more to the Other World than to the
world of mortals. In Chretien de Troyes’s Lancelot, or the Knight of the Cart, Guinivere
is
brought to the “city of Gorre (or Voirre, meaning Verre)
by Meleagant, another form of Maelwas, who, according to the most archaic Arthurian legends,
now
is
was king of
Glastonbury Tor
in
the Glass Tower, located
England.
Somerset,
Glastonbury, following a false interpretation of the
passed for the city of glass and even for the It
can also be noted that Bezu
for the savage beauty of
its
still
Isle
It
on what
known
is
name (which
is
that
Saxon),
of Avalon.
retains all
its
landscape as for the myths
it
—
as
much
evokes
—and
mystery
possesses just the right atmosphere for such “affairs” that have shaken the Razes not just over the last decades, but since the early
Contrary to what some authors maintain, however, impossible for the the
name Bezu
is
name Bezu
to derive
it
we
region, not far
Wales
in the
is
find a Bezu-la-Foret
from Gisors.
form of Bedd.
8.
from the
[“Glass”
(a Celtic
It
by the
and a Bezu-Saint-Eloi
in the
Celts.
Eure
also appears frequently in the country of
Its
meaning
is
ambiguous, though, for
it
root akin to the Latin betula) and “tomb,”
famous Grand Be of Saint-Malo, where Chateaubriand’s tomb
located. This
far
phonetically
extremely widespread in the names of villages and in
means both “birch” as in the
is
from Albo-Duno. Furthermore,
place-names throughout the domain once occupied Accordingly
Middle Ages.
is
is its
most current meaning
village of Tre-Taliesin, the
verre in French.
— Translator
in
Wales, where
we
find,
not
remnants of a dolmen called
A Bedd
Taliesin, the
Tomb
Fortified
was
of Taliesin. Taliesin
Encampment
49
a semi-historical, semi-
legendary bard of the sixth century. Local tradition claims that anyone
who same
sleeps
on
this
dolmen
will
wake up
madman
as either
or poet.
tradition exists in the Central Massif, in Pilat, not far
Rock. But with regard to the Bezu
called Merlin’s
by the Templars and the Cathars and should
we
still,
by
all
prefer the etymology of birch or
Templar ghosts would seem to weigh
is
it,
is
tomb, a meaning sup-
we
would imply
immediate
common
Sougraine alludes
village of
fact, the
name Granes,
is
built
who
second after the Gallic Mercury
in
name
on the agnomen, or
rather one of the agnomens, attested to during the Celtic Apollo,
like the
former name of Aix-la-Chapelle
(Aquae Granni, hence the German Aachen),
Gallo-Roman
era:
Caesar, in his Commentaries , placed
popular veneration. This Apollo
primarily the tutelary deity and initiator of healing springs, and a
with
a land rich in grains, yet apparently nothing
in the Vosges, as well as the
Grannus of the
its
find Celtic tradition intact.
granum, and that the name of the
could be farther from the truth. In
Grand
the fading
rituals.
has been correctly said that Granes has something in
to this. This
is
only partially present in the neigh-
boring parish of Granes. Yet here again
the Latin
site,
due as much to nature as to the historical and
legendary auras connected to
It
haunted
evidence, a sacred
This distinctive atmosphere reigning over Bezu and surroundings, which
so-
tomb? The legend of the
in favor of
and archaic
from the
in the Razes,
ported by the neighboring White Fortress, which evidently recollection of ancient beliefs
The
it is
is
as
god of medicine that Apollo entered Indo-European mythology before
being incorporated into a solar deity, in reality before usurping the place originally held by a solar goddess (Artemis for the Greeks, Diana for the
Romans). One thing
Grannus
him
relate
sacred waters.
certain: All the inscriptions
to medicine
and the healing of
so happens that Granes
It
Campagne and
is
est antiquity
is
—hot waters, as the name
and exploited
gious purposes,
illnesses
through
quite close to Bains-de-
Rennes-les-Bains, and that the subterranean region
beneath the Rennes-le-Chateau plateau thermal waters
is
mentioning
it
occupied by a large pocket of indicates,
known from
earli-
for medicinal purposes (and medico-reli-
goes without saying, given that in long ago times
medicine, magic, and religion were
all
connected).
The
50
of the Mystery
Site
Because the solar aspect of Grannus cannot be overlooked, the erence in the
name Granes
one of the most honored Celtic
to
deities cre-
may have
ates a counterweight to the alleged temple of Lavaldieu that
been a sanctuary for Bel-Belenos. In the healing of
sun com-
illnesses the
city of Bath, a
plements the water gushing from the earth. In England’s
dedication to the goddess Sul has been discovered on the
famous thermal spa of the Victorian era that was
Roman
ancient
clearly indicates her solar characteristics
ancient times,
when
if
we
seems that
it
are to believe the
his
many
was
a
of
site
goddess
this
were
god of medicine,
mythological variations on U
Irish grian,
sun”
theme. y
this
name Grannus most
from the same word that gave us the in the
of a
daughter played the principal healing role
should also be pointed out that the
found
on the
deity of medicine
female. Likewise in Ireland, even though there
Diancecht,
site
and makes reference to very
and the
the solar deity
built
The name of
(therefore British) baths.
ref-
It
likely derives
—the word also
shape of the heroine Grainne, one of the most obvious pro-
totypes of Isolde the Fair, the last medieval translation of this former solar goddess.
There can be no doubt as to the Celtic paternity of Granes; the
toponymy of
the Razes contains
detect the Gallic in the
we may
addition,
Saint-Julia-de-Bec,
name Rennes and
note the Gallic
word
in the
bee,
the village Artiques
root arto, meaning “bear.” Cassaignes
name Razes
meaning
—
derives.
cal cello,
The name
for the
which means “hard.”
Limours, and Lake Leman),
and
in the
ancient
name
is
In the
name
of
name through
its
See Jean Markale,
Gallic
“oak”
for
it is
(as in
Limoges,
word lemo, “elm,”
not hard to
make out
the
the alders.”
Razes that poses problems as
terrain as
a kind of
word
Limoux
recognize the Gallic
of the stream Verdouble,
a site in the
figuration of
9.
we
a
peak of Chalabre contains the radi-
,
is
a “point,” in
derived from the Gallic v/ord
Vernodubrum or “water course through
There
In
itself.
comes from the
cassano, “oak,” from which the current French
chene
We may
Celtic elements.
and the Coume de Bee, coume being likewise
The name of
Gallic term.
numerous
much by
the con-
by the origin and symbolic meaning of
its
haphazard sacred geography that we can begin
The Druids (Rochester,
Vt.: Inner Traditions, 1999),
69
ff.
,
A to perceive in this region.
which reaches
Does the
I
am
village take
its
name from
knows, though we do know
in the
feet in height,
if
we go by
this parish
a charter
from 889 that
by the abbots of Saint-Polycarpe
Carcassonne diocese. The value of these monastic charters
were quite
expanded
skillful
monks
is,
of
of the Middle Ages
forging of documents that confirmed or
in the
their privileges.
in this charter
Whatever the case may
be, the
under the Latinized form: Burgaragio.
name appears
We
find the
same
designating the same place in 1231 in the form of Burgaragium.
1500
In
village.
Nobody
the peak or vice versa?
course, always subject to caution, for the
name
and the
for certain that the village has been called
Bulgarach since the tenth century confirms the ownership of
51
speaking of Bugarach— both the peak,
thousand
close to forty
Encampment
Fortified
appears as Bigarach, in 1594 as Bugarai'ch, and in 1647 as
it
Beugarach.
noted that
Its
this
current spelling did not appear until 1781.
place-name
is
found south of Toulouse
Bourdeaux
not unique to this particular in
the
in the very close spelling
It
has been
site; it is
also
form of Bougaroche and near Bougarach. In any case, the word
appears only in what was once the Occitan domain.
What, then, Razes
site
Germanic
that
the origin of this
names?
it
radical burg
the Celtic duno)
But
is
It is
that
tempting to see
which designates
is it
as mysterious as the as a derivative of the
a fortress (the equivalent of
and which passed into the French language
term was never used
this
word
Occitan language. that has given us,
It is
more
among
in the lands that formerly
likely to
have originated
as bourg.
spoke the
in the ethnic
word
other words over the course of the Middle
Ages, bulgari, bugares, burgars, bougrais, and the modern Bulgarian.
We know so
—
the
that the Bougres or Bulgarians generally pass
as the direct ancestors of the Cathars.
name
10
We
— and
rightfully
should agree, then, that
of the peak of Bugarach refers to a place where, for a certain
unspecified period of time, heretics from the East found refuge. These heretics led
had a great influence over the region’s inhabitants and thereby
them
to
adopt so-called dualist ideas. Bugarach would therefore
have a direct or indirect relationship with the Cathar matter.
10. See Jean Markale,
Traditions, 2003).
Montsegur and the Mystery of the Cathars (Rochester,
Vt.: Inner
The
52
of the Mystery
Site
There
an obscure relationship between the pog of
fact
in
is
Montsegur and the pech of Bugarach. Fernand field of
top experts in the
Niel, once
one of the
worth
built a hypothesis
Cathar studies,
keeping. According to the very precise calculations taken by this
impassioned by the dualistic heresy, the
who was
road engineer
rail-
builders, or rather rebuilders, of
Montsegur around 1200 would have
consciously aligned the Cathar fortress on the average position of the sunrise:
[T]his east-west direction falls over the pech of Bugarach, the ter-
minating point of the Corbieres, which has an altitude that
Montsegur and
quite close to that of
same
To
as well.
a latitude, 42° 52', that
is
the
is
the extent they [the builders] followed their east-
west direction precisely, they would have seen the peak of
Bugarach standing out spurred, they
at
would have
the
end of
definitely
their
adopted
alignment. Thus
this reference
point
11 offered by nature.
In short,
opposite.
Bugarach was a kind of double of Montsegur, or
No
it
was
its
one can deny there was a correlation between the two
peaks, at least from the symbolic perspective and, as Fernand Niel said,
from a perspective that used the reference points offered by nature. sacred geography does indeed exist throughout the world, tainly be admitted that this
Relative to this,
it.
it
it
a gigantic cromlech, the
Razes region offers a gripping example of
see in the
if
Father
environment of Rennes-le-Chateau
code of which he claimed to hold.
There are coincidences that are no longer such when everything lies
together.
The
solar aspect of the castle of
be subject to doubt once the strange ing the rising
a
summer
solstice
11.
F.
to those
Niel, Les Cathares de
tal-
Montsegur can no longer
phenomenon
that occurs there dur-
has been witnessed. At that time the rays of the
sun enter the windows of the
room analogous
a
should cer-
should no longer be a cause for surprise
Boudet thought he could
If
fortress’s
mysterious medieval
“chambers of the sun” so
Montsegur
(Paris: Seghers,
1976).
hall,
plentiful in Celtic
A tradition
None can avoid comparing
12 .
New
spires at megaliths such as
England, and the Dissignac
Encampment
the ensuing effect to
Grange
Mound
Fortified
tran-
Stonehenge
in Ireland,
in Saint-Nazaire
what
53
when
in
the rising
sun of the winter or summer solstice strikes the center of the monu-
ment
may
13 .
But the neighboring Granes and Lavaldieu, the
of the Razes
mind
of a journalist looking for a story.
notion in no
way
us that this sacred geography
phenomenon hatched
not merely some
is
show
Whether you
landscape.
the rest
It is
visible realities It
believe or reject
exists,
and symbolic form, propped up by natural
intellectual
addled
in the
eliminates the observations that people have been
induced to make. Yes, the cromlech at Rennes really
and
which
well be an ancient sanctuary of Belenos and both of which are tied
to the presence of thermal springs,
this
latter of
—
—that
in other is
but in an
features of the
words, the interpretation of tangible
the imagination’s domain.
has been said that the pech of Bugarach was a landmark for
“extraterrestrials.”
The
idea has been floated that the sides of this
mountain house caverns where these
extraterrestrials hide out while
conducting missions on our planet. Taking advantage of
this idea of
hidden caverns, some have declared that the mountain holds fabulous treasure.
Why
or Delphi?
not, then, that of the Cathars, the
It is
always possible to invent
Temple of Jerusalem, and
stories,
it
seems that no
one has held back. Yet a century ago Jules Verne took a close in the
Razes and the Bugarach peak
Jules Verne
now know
is
left
coded messages
in all his
of pseudoscientific and fantastic adventure,
12.
I
kind of esotericism.
have given
Why?
in particular.
not only an author of novels for the young. Because
that he
in a certain
interest
this subject a
We
are also
works, concealed
we
are
aware of
aware of
thorough examination
in
his
we
in tales
his interest
membership
my book Montsegur and
Mystery of the Cathars. The Chamber of the Sun, or the Crystal Chamber,
is
in
the
an image
that appears frequently in Celtic legends, particularly in the story of Tristan and Isolde. It
should not be forgotten that Isolde represents,
form, an ancient solar goddess. The
Chamber
regeneration by sunlight takes place, especially
mer or winter 13. See also
in a fictionalized
of the Sun
when
is
the sun
and Christianized
a kind of sanctuary is
at the height of
where
its
sum-
strength.
Jean Markale, Carnac
et
Venigme de V Atlantide
(Paris:
Pygmalion, 1987).
The
54
Site
of the Mystery
a “philosophical society,” a
term used to designate an
hood, of course. Which brotherhood is
important
is
that Jules Verne
and the traditions lurking
in fact a little-known
brother-
in particular hardly matters;
what
perfectly familiar with the Razes
was
long before the
in this land,
which Father Sauniere was more or
initiatic
“
affairs ”
of
There
less the intentional hero.
novel by Jules Verne, published under the
title
is
of
Clovis Dardentor, in which the Razes and the peak of Bugarach play a
fundamental
role,
even though they are presented under the cover of a
very different region, exotic North Africa.
The
plot of the novel
is
centered on the hunt for a treasure hidden
We
somewhere on
the coast near Oran.
wordplay
Oran equals or en [“gold
here:
that the hero’s
can immediately detect the
in”
It
].
has even been thought
name, Clovis, evokes the Merovingian legend of the
Razes and that the name Dardentor can be read of which ure.
is
erotic but all of
Verne even goes so
Oran
the
Arabs,”
which immediately brings to mind the
d’Auran
in the
commune
The heroes of
of Quillan.
ways, one
to the hunt for treas-
which are connected
far as to call
in several
“Gouharan
of the
of
Gourg
village
the adventure, fur-
thermore, eventually find themselves at the Vieux Chateau, in the quarter of the Blanca [whites]. This last allusion
is
clear cut;
the ruins of the Blanchefort Castle. In the novel, near
there
is
Bain de
name
la
Reine [the Queen’s Bath].
of Rennes-les-Bains
was
les
Now, we know
end concerning Queen Blanche of
Castille. Jules
with a “light odor of sulfur,” which
mal waters of Rennes-les-Bains. The
One
final,
is
that the former
Verne even made sure
had
a “clearly salty”
characteristic of the ther-
absolutely convincing aspect of the novel
entire expedition, directs everything,
name
who
is
that the
takes charge of the
and knows the plan leading
highest peak in the region and thus exceeds all
to the
that Verne did not invent: Captain Bugarach.
There can be no possible doubt: The peak of Bugarach, which
tory landmark for
a leg-
similarities are curious, to say the
captain of the ship, an authoritarian figure
treasure, bears a
Kebir,
called the
comes complete with
to specify that the waters of the spring in his tale
least.
is
el
Bains de Rennes and that one of the
springs, actually called the Queen’s Bath,
flavor,
Mers
a small thermal spa (imaginary, of course) that
involves
it
all
others,
successful quests in the Razes.
is
At
the
is
the
manda-
least, that is
A what
Jules Verne
is
saying.
1
*
But whether
Encampment
Fortified
we
take this presence of
Captain Bugarach as mere geographic allusion or look for a sacred
onance
in
it, it is
55
nonetheless true that Jules Verne
telling us
is
res-
an odd
story that takes place inside a camouflaged Razes that the novelist
seems to
know
quite well.
Fundamentally these authenticity
no one can
“coincidences,”
verify,
pech of Bugarach exercises on
Razes landscape, serenity, its full
it
its
its
quest in the Razes, even
if
many
Bugarach
this quest
where the good
life
own. An indispensable element of the
great height a region that has experienced
inexplicable. Yes, “Captain”
its
only reinforce the attraction that the
share of historical events,
The good
whose
remains, despite everything, a haven of peace and
overlooking from
icent landscape
traditions
these
life
can also be found
is
of which remain confused and is
the master builder of every
simply the search for a magnif-
can be found. This village, with
in Rennes-les-Bains.
ancient houses and antiquated hotels, lost at the bottom of a lush green
valley traversed
by the
salty
What’s more, the virtues of
water of the Sals River,
its
is
a
charming
sight.
waters are recognized not only for healing
rheumatism, head colds, and other “catarrhs,” but also for simply restoring health to the overburdened
The most
and “stressed-out” people of our
interesting spring in Rennes-les-Bains
known, complete with wordplay, tion claims that
is
time.
one commonly
as the Bain de la Reine. Local tradi-
Queen Blanche de
Castille
was
mother of Saint
the
Louis and that she actually stayed in Rennes to take the waters. This far
from proved, but
it is
known
that,
is
shaken by the expeditions against
the Albigensians, Blanche de Castille did play a considerable role during the beginning years of the thirteenth century.
From
a strictly north-
ern French perspective, she could even be faulted for her excessive
indulgence of the heretics
Raymond
and
join the
VII of Toulouse,
camp
who was
ever ready to help
of the enemies of the king of France.
could be assumed that Blanche de Castille, at the time
when
the
It
famous
Trencavel sought to regain his earldom of Razes, had secret negotiations with certain Occitan lords regarding mysterious
documents that
book by Michel Lamy,
Jules Verne, initie et
14. For
more on
this topic, see the excellent
initiateur (Paris: Payot, 1984).
The
56
Site
of the Mystery
would have been stored
of Rennes-le-Chateau. This unveri-
in the area
one might guess, to
fiable part of the story has helped, as
fuel the
famous hypothesis of legitimate descendants of the Merovingians ing refuge in the Razes. But
also
it
means
that
it is
find-
not impossible that
Blanche de Castille visited Rennes-les-Bains.
The problem emerges when we note Queen) primarily designates
that the Reine Blanche (White
a mythological entity that
is
well
known
everywhere, but most particularly in the Pyrenees and their immediate surroundings. The White Queen, or the White Lady,
a translation of
and the White Goddess of ancient mythological
the fairy of folktales tales.
is
She often appears in riverside caves 15 that are located near springs,
which she
Could something
said to have caused to appear.
is
have occurred
similar
would not
at Rennes-les-Bains? In this case the springs
have been called forth by Blanche de Castille but instead would be from a
bygone age when
who bestowed in the valley
life
a
White Goddess
—
a healing goddess, of course,
and health with the waters she caused
—was worshipped
Reine and Rennes,
it
there.
As
for the
to
gush forth
homophony between
has been thoroughly played, multiplying the
mythological components of the theme. In
any event, we
know
that springs, especially those with recognized
curative properties, have been highly frequented places of worship since the earliest days of antiquity. There the springs of the Seine during the the goddess Sul
was worshipped
ditions speak of fairies
was
famous temple dedicated to
Gallo-Roman
in Bath,
who were
a
era.
As noted
earlier,
England. In Vichy curious
tra-
once the benefactors of the land. The
Gauls were perfectly cognizant of the use of thermal waters, especially because druidic medicine was one with the religion of druidism and the druids themselves were both priests and doctors (as well as things).
The Romans had only
to follow the
many
example of the Gauls, and
they renovated springs that were already in use.
They were
particularly
interested in saline springs because salt (especially in regions far
15.
Without seeking
Soubirous
in the
to cast
doubt on the appearance of
Lourdes grotto,
it
is
White Lady
Church and
and the numerous versions of the White Lady that are out the Pyrenees.
a
worth noting an astonishing
these “apparitions” that are recognized by the
other
from the
to Marie-Bernarde similarity
between
the faithful the world over
said to have been seen through-
— A was an indispensable element
sea)
lace
Encampment
Fortified
for the vital equilibrium of the
popu-
—and for that of animals. This explains the importance of the
mal establishments of Fontaines-Salees
ther-
Burgundy town of
the
in
57
Saint-Pere-sous-Vezelay, or even Salins in the Jura not far from the real Alesia,
which was a
fortress-sanctuary. There
is
Roman
on the ancient baths of Rennes-les-Bains, but the is
widely confirmed.
And once
word thermal
again, the
documentation
a lack of
presence there
implies worship
given to healing deities, Apollo in particular under the names Grannus
and Borvo
name Bourbon), and
(“boiling,” hence the
desses often presented in triads (the Three
also solar god-
Mother Goddesses), which
obviously brings us back to the traditional theme of the White Ladies.
The water of
the spring called the Queen’s Bath stands at about 41
degrees Celsius and contains a high is
amount of sodium
another spring in Rennes-les-Bains that
when we
consider the worship of
piety that
the
is
with some sulfurous elements
mixed
in.
The second name
Father Boudet, author of
La
name
in the
is
It is
called
intriguing
Razes and Abbe
Furthermore, in the legend of her
Mary Magdalene
is
connected to
also explains the painting beneath the altar
of the church in Rennes-le-Chateau. salty
it.
told throughout Occitania,
theme of the grotto, which
first
Mary Magdalene
Sauniere’s apparent understanding of
—but there
worthy of attention.
is
Magdalene or the Gode. Of course, the
either the
chloride
The Magdalene spring
—
also quite
in the literal sense of the
for this spring, the
Vraie
is
Langue
Gode,
is
word
very interesting.
celtique and, secondarily, priest
of Rennes-les-Bains at the beginning of the twentieth century, probably
came up with
the idea of rediscovering the Gallic language through the
English language here.
word god
(or
The word Gode seems
goddess ), which connection would demonstrate that
was placed under
spring
to the Irish
the
name
Boyne or the Vivian of Arthurian
tion
16.
F.
Why
is
Gode
as ‘to goad,’
tradition.
“[I)t is surprising to see that
Father Boudet, so quick to interpret every guage, transcribed
this
of a deity, a Fairy of the Waters similar
As noted by Franck Marie, however,
on.’”
quite close to the English
word by
meaning
did he avoid the translation of
Gode
the English lan-
‘to needle, incite,
as
urge
“God?” 16 The ques-
an interesting one. Franck Marie goes further by suggesting that
Marie, La Resurrection du
“
Grand Cocu’' (Bagneux:
S.R.E.S., 1981), 106.
The
58
Site
of the Mystery
the appellation of to
Gode
la
Bugarach but closely
famous Limoux Carnival
tied to the
during the
festivities that are
Limoux
Axat by way of
to
custom, specific
refers to a traditional local
in
which,
spread throughout the Razes region from
Alet, Couiza, Quillan,
can see processions of masked
and both Rennes, we
called
figures
fecos
and goudils.
According to Marie the fecos are “ones nauseous on wine lees" and the goudils are “ragpickers.”
The
goudil, however, represents the hermit
(man or woman) who
low
in a
lies
cave and appears in the world only
on certain occasions, namely during Carnival. Couldn’t recollection of the Celtic feast of
tries
Samhain on November
Day and
the Christian All Saints’
this be a
is
1
that
remote
became
highlighted in Anglo-Saxon coun-
by the carnival-like parades of Halloween? Couldn’t the goudil be
one of the in the
deities that the Irish called the
mounds
the earth
There
(megalithic
who
Tuatha de Danann,
lived
monuments) and emerged on the surface of
on the eve of Samhain? is
something unsettling about
this interpretation,
nected to the White Lady because the fairy
women
of the
con-
still
mounds, who
sometimes shift-shape into white swans, are extremely important
Under these conditions
ures in early Celtic mythology. interpret the spring called the
the
Mounds,
after she
humans but who, necessary for
life
Magdalene, who, call the
who
any
in
and let
Gode
tempting to
Woman
as the spring called the
awaits the propitious
them and
case, protects
health. So what, then,
us not forget,
it is
is
is
moment gives
them the water
whom we
Three Marys? Everything seems to be linked
of
to appear to
the connection to
one of those
fig-
Mary
currently
in this sacred
geog-
raphy of the Razes. But
this sacred
geography
appear. Fantastic novels
is
not as simple and precise as
on the Razes have been
built
it
may
out of totally
authentic elements. Accordingly, the White Ladies and other goddesses
could very well be no more than the redrafting of various Fedie,
who
facts.
Louis
remains an incontestable historian of the Razes, points out
a local folk legend that
would explain
the myth:
Once, some time ago, a queen of Spain named Blanche de took refuge
in the castle of Pierre-Pertuse (Peyrepertuse) to
dangers that threatened her very
life.
The governor
Castille
escape
of the fortress
A treated her with
all
Fortified
the respect due one of her rank
Encampment
and misfortunes,
and she passed her sorrowful days sometimes praying and sometimes taking walks
59
in the
chapel
in the countryside near the castle.
The
inhabitants of the neighboring villages worshipped her like a saint
and watched her from greater respect
when
afar with a curiosity blended with even
down
she went
the foot of the ramparts.
And
to the fountain that flowed at
there, seated
beneath an old weeping
willow whose branches leaned over the crystalline waters, she spent long hours emitting her plaints of exile and bemoaning her fate as
woman
a
One
without a husband and a queen without a crown. day, distracted by her painful memories, she let slip
her hand a silver goblet that rolled over the precipice and
much
later
by a shepherd
goblet, bearing the coat of
who
sold
arms of
it
from
was found
to the lord of Rouffiac. This
Castille,
was
in the possession of
the royal treasurer of the Fenouillede region 17 before the Revolution.
He
resided in Caudies and guarded
The
it
as a
most precious
relic.
18
historian continues his story, or legend rather, with the mention
of an illness that Blanche de Castille contracted, probably the famous scrofula. ried
by
waters.
To
and gain her
relieve her affliction
to the
litter
Locus de Montferrando
Hence the name given
to this spring
according to Louis Fedie. The problem this story
seems to have nothing
Perhaps
Louis.
this
cure, she
in
is
had
herself car-
et Balneis to
was
take the
the Queen’s Bath,
that the Blanche de Castille in
common
with the mother of Saint
queen was a chatelaine from the area and a
Spaniard. Local tradition no longer seems to distinguish reality from fiction,
much
and
it
seems that the story of Blanche refers to
older than the thirteenth century.
The mystery remains. And what do we make of Dr.
Gourdon, who,
in his research of
spelling for the
Madeleine
who
is
an alternative French
name Magdalene] simply comes from used this spring around 1871?
The region south
18. Louis Fedie,
the declaration of
hot springs in the Razes, claims
that the “source of the Madeleine” [Madeleine
17.
beliefs that are
of the Razes.
It
he Comte de Razes
What happened
also neighbors Roussillon. et le
a certain
diocese d’Alet (1880).
Miss
to the
The
60
of the Mystery
Site
myth of Mary Magdalene from
moment onward? There
that
Over the course of the
incontestable fact:
is
one
numerous Roman
centuries,
remnants have been found near the springs, particularly statues, some of which depict a feminine figure. Was this the goddess of the Rennes
was well known,
springs? This small thermal spa
for even in the four-
among
teenth century Rabelais cites in his Pantagruel that
the springs
name
frequented in his time there was a Liomons, an obvious alternate
Limoux. Because there are of course no springs
for
Limoux,
in
this
be a reference to Alet or Rennes-les-Bains. Did Rabelais personally
must visit
the Razes? Perhaps. According to Father Boudet’s testimony, an anthro-
pomorphic sculpture was removed from the springs it
from vandalism.
the sculpture
to protect
by the priest as the head of Jesus Christ,
Identified
Man]
of
speaks of menhir!). In
thoroughly confused.
1884 and
1884
had been found on rocks bearing the name Cap de
l’Homme [Head
in
in
a female
fact,
A
it
seems that everything
male head was discovered
head was found
been mixed together by
Boudet,
(the spelling of Father
storytellers.
in
in this
who
even
account
is
in Rennes-les-Bains
1889. Both of these items have
The female head
is
described as fol-
lows by the archivist Rene Descadeillas, the great demystifier of the Sauniere
affair:
“This sculpted head could be of cult origin
sents the face of a female deity jutting
water.
And
What
could be more
would be
in this case, she
common
in a
from
a
Lady of
the
Lake
form of sculptures.
In
Gallo-Roman, which the
Roman
is still
is
any
repre-
rock emerging from the
the deity of a spring or stream.”
Romanized thermal establishment
that dates back to the earliest days of Gallic prehistory?
the
if it
The myth
of
present and sometimes materializes in the
case, the craftsmanship of the sculpture
is
not surprising given that those in Gaul before
conquest never depicted their gods
in
animal or
human
form. This simply shows that Rennes-les-Bains was a place of worship at the
same time that
it
was
a thermal spa.
But the Magdalene spring and the Queen’s Bath are not the only springs that exist there.
and
five
which
is
The Rennes-les-Bains Valley has
hot-water springs
in all.
There
33 degrees Celsius and
Skinflints because of
springs there
is
its
is
is
also
cold-water
the Spring of the Gentle Bath,
known
as the Spring of the
reputation for treating leprosy.
the Fountains of Love,
five
Among
the cold
which has inspired more than
A one regional commentator to give
Encampment
Fortified
61
free rein to his speculations. All those
seeking to explain the importance of the Queen’s Bath from the time of antiquity are free to explore this choice terrain.
They
will find not only
water, but also obvious remnants of the prolonged use of the
site
and
longstanding sacred nature.
its
Yet spa.
should not be thought that Rennes-les-Bains
it
only a thermal
which Father Boudet reigned during the
also the parish over
It is
is
end of the nineteenth century and the beginning of the twentieth. This is
who
and is
who
the priest
thought himself both a linguist and an archaeologist
He was
studied his region from a curious perspective.
said, the discreet inspirer arid
mentor of
Chateau, Father Beranger Sauniere.
also,
it
his colleague in Rennes-le-
thus perfectly legitimate to take
It is
a look at his parish church.
We we
enter the church through a vault offering the distinct feeling that
are truly in a sacred place
which
lage of
this
church
and that
this sacred place includes the vil-
an integral
is
part.
sion of entering a bazaar where everything the case in Rennes-le-Chateau. Instead,
It
is
does not give the impres-
for sale, as
it is
is
unfortunately
truly a place of prayer, a
sanctuary that will never give anyone the idea that a “backward Mass”
could take place there. This its
site,
however, does pose some questions of
own. The parish church of Rennes-les-Bains has a complete simplic-
ity that
verges on Jansenist austerity.
affectation
and projects a sense that the
their sanctuary
And
it is
a
It
and periodically gather
good thing
communion with
anomaly,
is
and
it
communion with
in this
church
a curious detail: a painting of
cally speaking, but that has
Christ
there, maintain
in
are
proud of
good
the Hare,
it
Christian sanctuaries.
nature but also
It
is
that, while
mediocre value,
a Pieta, like those
was donated
who was
of the church. Christ
and
not an artisti-
proved to be quite mysterious. Entitled
found
in so
to the parish at the
many
the
other
end of the
eighteenth century by Paul-Urbain de Fleury, the local lord and of the Queen’s Bath,
repair.
Creation aspires.
all
something
definitely
is still
who
everything that exists in that great fraternity of
beings and things to which
There
local people,
to gather in a nemeton, a sacred ancient druidic
clearing in the middle of the forest, in in
has been restored without any
owner
considered to be one of the benefactors
Hare would
certainly not attract
any
The
62
attention
reversed
of the Mystery
Site
were not
if it
—copy of
of which
work composed
a
in
— and,
more important,
1636 by Van Dyck, the
Museum
in the Fine Arts
on display
is
somewhat modified
a
of Anvers.
hold forth endlessly on certain details of this painting, and
meaning, but what
ceals a special
have not failed to analyze
known
ting this be
with a tradition of secrets
The
that sincerity
is
from revealing
tiation.
But
instance,
how
can
we
we do not
if
in the
Razes
it
is
someone
their symbols. If
would
cer-
to others first because of self-interest,
valid only
is
pompously
if
it
has been
referred to as the path of ini-
find the central
first
let-
and falsehood are automati-
a given mystery, he or she
then because the solution to a mystery
achieved by following what
surely con-
with objects that are invested
difficulty
were to discover the solution to tainly refrain
could
answers have refrained from
any interpretation of
cally intertwined in
We
from every angle, but apparently without
it
publicly.
Treasure hunters
is it?
who found some
those
result, unless
it
original
chamber of
a
mound,
for
cross the stage of initiation or, in other
words, the entrance into a domain where obscurity, out of principle, rules as absolute master?
Every
visit to
the parish church of Rennes-les-Bains necessitates vis-
iting the adjoining cemetery. less
tormented than the cemetery
have been defiled, though in a
The
number
ing Christ
it is
site is
calm, peaceful, and definitely
Rennes-le-Chateau. Here no tombs
at
the story of a
tomb
here that
is
troubling
of ways. Again Paul-Urbain de Fleury, donor of the paint-
and
the Hare, figures into the story, this time in circum-
stances that are, to say the least, bizarre. Paul-Urbain de Fleury has
tombs
in this cemetery. In addition, the set of dates of birth
on these two tombs
inscribed that
what you
good”
will.
The questions
errors in the dates?
two tombs
is
Why
surprise.
By
all
it?
from one another. Make of
— “He
Perhaps
this raises are
two tombs
and death
it
constitutes a Rosicrucian
obvious:
for the
departed while doing
Why
these intentional
same individual? Which of
the real one? Every “quest” in the Razes definitely
passes here, and any
is
for the epitaph
—what are we to make of
signature.
these
As
are different
two
who
find the answers will be
rewarded by some
evidence the cemetery of the church in Rennes-les-Bains
not a neutral zone.
It
should never be forgotten that an ancient Gallic
sanctuary was located there long before the
Roman
invasion.
It
seems
A some
that even in the eighteenth century
Fortified
Encampment
individuals, as
63
shown by
the
Rosicrusican Paul-Urbain de Fleury’s two funeral monuments,
knew
what
up
They have
the real story was.
each of us to take the
test or, if
left
you
behind
its
imprint.
It is
to
prefer, the initiation. All the rest,
including the scholarly decoding of the true Celtic language by Father
Boudet,
is
only sensational literature.
The exploration of Bains,
the mysterious Razes does not end in Rennes-les-
though that place does present
geography that
is
itself
as the pivotal point of a sacred
sketched without showing
its
exact contours very clearly.
we head north before angling eastward in the direction of Mouthoumet, we first pass through the village of Serres. Tong before reaching Arques in If
commune
we find the hamlet of Pontils. Not far from here is an authentic menhir known regionally as the Peyro Dreto (Standing Stone). Finally we reach the Tomb of Arques. As Pierre Jarnac rightly said the
of Peyrolles,
in his magisterial
Despite
work on
great antiquity,
its
more
ence of a rectly, the
the affairs of Father Sauniere:
recent
Tomb
was placed
its
prestige has suffered through the pres-
monument
customarily called, though incor-
of Arques. This tomb, almost hidden by the trees,
on the edge of a peak
there
with a small bridge
level
crossing a stream, the Cruce, that has run dry now. ...
has the
It
appearance of a parallelepiped topped by a truncated pyramid
This
monument
ous commentaries.
has lent
It is
itself to
the
most diverse and
in fact a replica of the
tomb
truly deliri-
depicted by Nicolas
work
that
affair. It is
said
Poussin in his famous painting The Shepherds of Arcadia, a has been heavily embroiled in the Rennes-le-Chateau that Father Sauniere, while visiting Paris to have
documents he discovered
in his church,
made
19 .
someone decode the
a special visit to the
Louvre to study the painting and even bought a reproduction of all
evidence
it
is
the
painted by Poussin. it
was
built at the
tomb
in Pontils that
We know
is
a
it.
By
copy of the monument
through supporting documentation that
beginning of the twentieth century by a certain Louis
19. Pierre Jarnac, Histoire
Cazilhac, 1998), 400-401.
du
tresor de Rennes-le-Chateau (Paris: Editions Belisane
The
64
Site
Galibert,
of the Mystery
who
buried his grandmother in
Later, a
it.
new owner
of the
property, Louis Bertram Lawrence, an American, renovated the tomb.
The
actual landscape behind the
monument
resembles that seen in
enigma made more mysterious by the phrase
Poussin’s painting, an
inscribed
on the tomb
brings to
mind
in Poussin’s painting,
Et
in
the comparison certain authors have
Arcadia ego, that
made between
the
Razes and the Greek Arcadia. Lending further mystery to the enigma the river that winds through the Arques Valley, the Realses,
means “royal water.” (This the south.)
name
also the
is
is
the seeming correlation
in Poussin’s painting,
between the shepherdess depicted
resting her
a
moun-
It is
certain
hand on the neck of one of the shepherds, and the name of 20 tainous pass seen from the actual tomb: Col d’Al Pastre.
that Nicolas Poussin wished to depict this landscape. But
indeed the question.
tomb
We may
built at this location
ous and more or
less
which
of a large national forest in
another mysterious detail
Still
is
why? That
is
why someone deliberately had a around 1900. Are we really in that mysterialso ask
mythical Arcadia where the underground Alpha
River flows?
These coincidences were
name
all
of the village of Arques.
that It
needed to
I
has been seen as a derivative of area,
word
“arch,” but also “secret,” as in the
make
to
the
tomb and
start inquiring into the
arcane. This
the painting by Poussin (of
was enough
which a reversed
replica exists in England) the key to all of the mysteries in the Razes.
Unfortunately, up to the present no one has succeeded in deciphering the
meaning of the painting or the
inscription, unless those
successful have not boasted about risk being disappointed It
derives
from the Latin arx
“fortress,”
and
is
the village. There the
when
it.
As
have been
for Arques, the fans of secrets
they learn the real etymology of this name: (plural arces ),
a souvenir of a castle that is
who
nothing surprising in
same mountain the ruins of the
castle
which means “citadel” or
was once located
this; farther
Coustaussa
in or
near
west on the side of rise.
The toponym
Coustaussa comes from the Latin custodia, “guard” or “guard post,” a
provenance that
is
not belied in any
tion, for the castle literally
20. [This
way by
guarded the
means Shepherd’s Pass or Shepherd’s
its
geographical configura-
Sals Valley.
Collar.
— Translator
]
A The Christian town of
town
the Razes
Encampment
Valley,
between Limoux and
Couiza. The regional historian Father Tasserre described
God took
a basket of flowers in a delightful valley that
ing with
the gifts of nature.” 21
all
rounding landscape
doubt gave
The medieval
and perfectly maintained,
tastefully restored
is full
65
Alet, currently a simple, rustic
is
bottom of the Aude
nestled at the
Fortified
is
it
as “placed like
pleasure in enrich-
village,
which has been
admirable, and the sur-
of charm. Water gushes everywhere, which
The
this site its ancient reputation:
earliest
no
information avail-
able about Alet concerns a thermal establishment there during the Gallo-
Roman
era. It
is still
a
town of
waters, which contributes to
making
it
a
place heavily frequented by bpth tourists and visitors taking the cure.
The
village sits
on the
left
bank of the Aude and
is
bordered on the
west by a bend in the river and on the north by a stream called the Cadene.
These two natural defenses combine with ramparts that almost completely encircle the village’s houses six large streets in Alet, all
square.
One
and gardens
kind of pentagon. There are
in a
arranged in a star pattern around a central
of the streets connects the square to the north entrance of the
abbey, which occupied the area nearest the Aude. At one time another street crossed Alet
Porte Calviere
new
route
—
from north to south
until
1776, after the monks ceded part of their lands.
was then created
rating the village
—from the Porte Cadene to the
(the current
A
Departmental Road 118), sepa-
from the abbey and connecting to the seventeenth-
century bridge that allows access to the right bank. This bridge replaced
an older medieval bridge that had been located farther north.
The houses of Alet
are notable for their stylistic purity.
Those
fac-
ing the square have corbeled, half-timbered facades with sculpted
beams. In one of the narrow the
Romanesque House on
floor with
streets there
the rue
an entrance door
dows whose
and
wood and
six
lit
It
consists of a
ground
surbased arches, and a
by two magnificent win-
semicircular arches are supported by small columns with
leafy capitals.
tecture
one notable structure called
du Seminaire.
in sections
second story built of corbeled
is
It is
a very beautiful
and very rare example of
civil archi-
from around 1200.
21. T. Lasserre, Recherches historiques sur la
Carcassonne, 1877).
ville
d'Alet et son ancien diocese (Paris:
The
66
of the Mystery
Site
The abbey was once huge, but only fragments remain. The
cloister
has disappeared entirely, and the remainder of the abbey-turned-cathedral
nothing more than some protected ruins. The
is
the nave can
This
still
be seen on the north side, which
is
and part of
aisles
the best preserved.
where a door opens out onto what were once monastic buildings,
is
including a very
handsome
capitular hall.
Around
the remnants of the
Gothic choir, which was built when Alet became a bishopric in 1318
Romanesque apse remains almost
place of Limoux, the magnificent intact. It
opens onto the nave by
columns with illions
with
the apse
is
finely
part of the semicircular vaulting in
windows with
tion, the original
floral motifs.
This Romanesque chevet in Saint-Jacques
Romanesque abbey
of Alet
is
row
of
strikingly
de Beziers. In addi-
seems to have served as a
for Saint-Just in the city of Carcassonne,
model
interior splaying that
over a string course depicting a
and foreshadows the chevet
original
upon two
The lower
interrupted by deep-set
and ovals with
of a triumphal arch set
and abaci and decorated with mod-
rest at the height of the walls
pearls
way
capitals
worked
floral motifs.
in
though
its
renovation
has been subject to the influence of Saint-Sernin in Toulouse. The entire edifice,
a
although belonging to two different eras and
remarkable
unity.
It
for both the daring of
styles,
has retained
stands out as a rich and powerful conglomerate its
construction and
its
abundant decoration.
It is
highly regrettable that this ancient monastery-cathedral has been subject to so
much abuse
likely be
at the
hands of time and men.
It
would otherwise
one of the most beautiful medieval religious monuments
Languedoc, which
is
not lacking in exceptional sanctuaries.
As consolation, however, we can
still
wander through
Often the remnants evoke a past whose presence can be keenly smallest stone
and the
Christian spiritual
in the
life
tiniest sculpture.
Alet
was once
the ruins. felt in
the
the center of
in this area of the Razes, for while the “affairs”
connected to Father Sauniere and Father Boudet seem to place a greater
emphasis on the pagan elements that preceded Christianity or on what has been improperly labeled heretical, there
is
always continuity
in beliefs
it
should not be forgotten that
and worship. Attempting to under-
stand Rennes-le-Chateau without referring to this abbey bishopric of Alet
would be
like
looking for a treasure lost in the deepest abyss of the seas.
3
The History of the Earldom of Razes
The earldom of Razes textbooks.
It
should
is
first
practically
be
made
unmentioned
clear that the
French history
in
Razes
is
located in
Occitania, a country that, before the time of Saint Louis, had nothing in
common
with the Capet kingdom, which emerged from the over-
throw of Frankish Merovingian usurpers and strove
empty Occitania of
factions united, to tity
and to despoil
materially.
it
textbooks of national
modest
It is
torical events that
was
it
all
it
fell
upon
comprises.
the
Roman
Pax Romana, and
troubled time
filled
and
spiritual iden-
surprising, then, that
history have ignored this
was more Spanish
partially incorporated into the
appear until the Visigoth
era of the
over,
we should
The earldom era, at the time
respect the his-
of the Razes does not
when Germanic
Empire. This, the textbooks as authentic
Capet king-
say,
documents show,
“bar-
was it
the
was
a
with palace coups, murderous wars, and a deca-
dence so complete that in
not at
(in fact, nationalist)
dom. While history cannot be made
barians”
cultural
territory located within a Catalonia that
than French before
really
its
relentlessly, all
it
prompts us to ask why
it
has been passed over
such complete silence.
But the earldom of the Razes, and thus the region of Rennesle-Chateau, did not wait for the Visigoths to arrive to establish as a cultural
and
territorial entity. In fact, the
67
itself
presence of megalithic
The
68
Site of the
monuments
— not
Mystery
Abbe Boudet’s imaginary cromlech but
menhirs and pieces of dolmens
most
ited
— proves that
this area
which
likely since the Paleolithic era,
is
authentic
had been inhab-
more commonly
regarded as the time of the cavemen. The geology of the area consists of heavily creviced limestone, and though there are no visible remains of these times, there
is
no doubt that the Razes provided
dwelling place for very ancient peoples. lore” in the pejorative sense of the
who
otherwise
fulfill
called temptations of
word
Abbe
Sauniere,
1
start wildly
cursed treasure of Rennes but have also
by presenting in a clear
intentionally surrendered
way
when
when
is
the
shown evidence
of their objec-
pieces of a dossier that have been
in
it
When
seeking to exploit a
order to disorient any potential
a tactic as old as the world, going
work
and
and foggily represented by others, thus allow-
necessary to thicken
it is
seekers. This
time
exaggerating
to demystifying the legend of
ing for the wildest kinds of speculations.
mystery,
authors,
population of the Razes. In these
Rene Descadeillas, who have contributed
tivity
when contemporary
is
better to refer to local historians such as Louis Fedie
is
it
this turns into “folk-
a valuable role as historians regarding the so-
their discussion turns to the ancient
cases,
Where
a peaceful
back
at least to the
of Thucydides caused Herodotus’s mythological
narratives (already filled with essential information) to
become
histories
that took pains to respect actual facts.
The nature.
first It
problem that
arises
is
both historical and linguistic
in
concerns the names Razes and Rennes, formerly Redhae or
Reddae, which no doubt have come from a of an author
(whom we need
common
root.
The words
not name) regarding these two words
may
induce us not merely to smile but to laugh outright: “The names Razes
and Rennes come from Red, god of lightning and storms, whose temples
were underground.”
How
could anyone have come up with such
an interpretation? The ground of Rennes
1.
I
am
is
riddled with caves, that’s
thinking here of Pierre Jarnac, who, in his book Histoire du tresor de Rennes-le-
Cbateau, presented some very convincing documents related to Abbe Sauniere and conducted an extensive inquiry into the serial-novel builders.
Razes and
his
May
sites
that have been shamelessly exploited by certain
Pierre Jarnac forgive
imagining of
its
me, but
his
evocation of the primitive
original Celtic inhabitants simply recycle
wildest fantasies of serial novelists
whom
some of
he quite frankly denounces elsewhere.
the
The History of the Earldom of Razes certain.
It is
— author, me remind you, work on the true Celtic language — believed that the Celtic Abbe Boudet
also a fact that
of a priceless
69
let
language could be explained only by modern English. Let’s also recall that at the beginning of the nineteenth century, the Breton
Le Brigant, following
Tour d’Auvergne,
grammarian
Theophile-Malo Coret de La
in the footsteps of
grenadier of the Republic, declared in
first
all seri-
ousness that the low Breton dialect was the language spoken in Eden
long before the unfortunate adventure with the apple
names Razes, Rennes, and Red, god of lightning
mythology
And
if
the
former name Reddae did descend from
— a figure who
is
completely absent from Celtic
because in English Red also means the color red. But
it is
useless to “see red”
it is
we
—
its
tree.
when confronted by such
ineptitude. Instead
are going to take a snake’s-eye view of the situation:
We know
that
ophidian worship has been a great delight to the esotericists of every stripe
and that the megaliths have inspired numerous interpretations of
nature, notably in Carnac (in
this
England).
Morbihan) and Stonehenge
long procession of priests and
in fact, easy to visualize a
It is,
worshippers winding
among
(in
countless standing stones.
Why
Not
not?
even Hollywood has presented such an image. It
was by means of
“The name Reddae Aereda the serpent. stretches out.”
is
It
following explanation was found.
this that the
also related to the entity of the Gallic sun god,
comes from the term Her Red, racing snake who
would be extremely
It
sun god-serpent
in relevant
difficult to detect
any trace of
this
mythological documents, unless our only
recourse was to turn to the well-known Gallo-Roman representation of
Anguipede
the Knight of the
ing a monster with a
in the
shape of a warrior riding or
human head and
the
tail
fight-
of a serpent. But this
snake interpretation appears elsewhere: “The name Reddae comes from Aer-Red, the racing snake or mystical Wouivre.” The etymology tainly Celtic, as later
is
suggested by the Wouivre, the
became the Melusine of Poitou. As
“serpent,” but in
modern
Breton. So
how
provide an explanation for an ancient
for aer,
woman it
serpent
really does
could a modern Breton
name appearing
is
in
cer-
who
mean word
southern
France? The Gallic language, which must have been the tongue of the ancient inhabitants of the Razes,
few words from
it,
is
almost entirely
lost;
we know
thanks to Gallo-Roman inscriptions, glosses
only a
in certain
70
The
of the Mystery
Site
Roman
Greek and
ilous, therefore, to
manuscripts, and the study of place-names.
It is
per-
peremptorily declare meanings of Gallic words with-
out attempting to find their oldest versions.
But
we should
not
no shortage of pos-
the Celts established themselves in the Razes
speaking was raucous,” they gave Rith. In the
means “to
Welsh
cast or
throw with
form of Rhyd,
means
“free.”
We
force.”
two words
(rather than the dialect). still
this region the
As
in
for
discussing here.
and when
“their
name Rhed, Rhid,
Rheiddum means “spear” and
dialect
ble finding these last
the
is
two words we have been
sible interpretations for the
When
hold us back! There
let this
We would have a
the verb rhuid-il
great deal of trou-
in a dictionary of the
Welsh language
Rhid and Rith, they can be found under
Welsh, and meaning “ford,” or Rhydd, which
might have better luck with Rhed as the Welsh rhedeg
and the Breton redek, both meaning “to run” or “to flow quickly” a watercourse).
It is
in these latter
assumed Gallic root word rivers
terms that
red, a root that
we
we
is
also find in the
where we should focus our search
of Razes, Rennes, and Reddae. This radical red
name
of the Gallic Redones people,
department of
Ille-et-Vilaine.
2
who had
Redones
is
(as in
find the derivative of the
Rhine and Rhone, which actually are two fast-moving
This, in fact,
or
is
meaning
found
what
therefore “those
of the
rivers.
for the
also
settled in
name
is
who
in the
now
the
run” or
“the quick ones,” a description well suited to an adventurous people.
Because the Gallic word for “chariot,” reda, has also been confirmed, the Gauls could also be considered “those
who
travel in swift chariots.”
This etymology based on reda has not been regarded with indifference
by the fans of esotericism and astrology, and the Razes was
easily
turned into the Land of the Chariot, which also refers to the constella-
From
it’s
not too far a leap to envision the
Razes as a central region or kind of
terrestrial pole equivalent to the
tion of the Big Dipper.
Pole Star, with
all
here,
the analysis that goes along with this.
Whatever the case may
be,
it
is
probable that the names Razes,
Reddae, and Rennes come from Redones. The evolution of the French language eventually transformed
name Razes
2. [This
is
is
it
into
Rennes
as in Ille-et-Vilaine.
The
the result of the Occitan phonetic evolution of the word,
one of the departments of Brittany.
— Translator]
The History of the Earldom of Razes similar to
what took place
of Rennes
in Brittany,
where the modern Breton form
Roazhon, which corresponds quite
is
71
closely to Razes.
The
names Rhedae and Reddae
are merely different variations following
Celtic colonization in a land
where there was considerable blending of
different languages as a result of invasions.
had strong centralizing tendencies, Gaul ries
Under Roman
itself as
well as
all
of the ancient Gallic peoples were integrated into the
tration.
These
largest settlement often
of retaining
became
fairly large territories
its
original
which
rule,
the territo-
new
adminis-
civitates, “cities,”
whose
took the name of the people themselves instead
name. For example, the Rennes
took on the name of the Redones, whereas
it
was
in Ille-et-Vilaine
originally called
Condate, meaning “confluent.” Later, as part of the imperial structure, these cities
became
divisions that, as
dioceses,
which were then grouped
we know, remained
in provinces,
in the administrative apportion-
ing of the Christian Church. Within this system the smaller territories
remained pagi,
“countries,” 3
and
untouched by Romanization and in the current sense of the
to
their
generally
inhabitants,
later Christianization,
left
became Pagani
word pagans. The Razes corresponds
exactly
one of these “countries.”
Given the
domain of
fact that this part of the
the Gallic people called the Volques Tectosages,
priate to ask
what
role the
a significant distance
Armorican Peninsula. There
between these two groups.
exclude their influence on this basis;
from the Harz region on the other
all
groups, each of which retained there were later migrations: in
its
their
name
in the
in
Medoc
3. [In this
is,
after all,
should not, how-
and
came
in their west-
split into
two or more
name. In addition,
original generic
The Helvetians’ requested passage through
order to reach the sea
conquest.
We
side of the Rhine,
is
another proof of
Caesar’s pretext for invasion, which
Roman
appro-
the people of Gaul
ward march what had been one people may have
Gaul
it is
Redones played here when they were appar-
ently tied to their region in the
ever,
Languedoc region was the
One group
marked
this.
This was also
the beginning of the
of Helvetians, the Vivisci,
who
have
left
Vevey on the shores of Lake Leman, eventually ended up region,
where they became the “guests” of the dominant
use “countries” refers to rural districts.
— Translator
]
The
72
of the Mystery
Site
people they found there. The Atrebates,
who
could be found in both the
Pas-de-Calais (Arras) and England, also migrated through Gaul, as did the Osismi of the western
what
is
now
the
Armorican Peninsula, who could be found
Orne Department,
both Bohemia (that region takes
Arcachon, where they have Gablaes settled
in the
it
in
Exmes. The
name from them) and
left their
name
ended up
Bo'iens
in
the region of
at the Teste-de-Bwc/?.
Cevennes and could also be found
in
in
The
Gavaudun
(Lot-et-Garonne), in the land of the Nitiobrigi. Such small groups were either
absorbed by the peoples of the host countries or tolerated as eth-
and made
nic units
into vassals.
been the case for the Redones Corbieres, in the vast
who
domain of
We know almost nothing Razes. No doubt there was
Something of
this
settled in the
nature must have
western part of the
the Volques Tectosages.
about
this Celtic
period of history in the
below Rennes-le-
a castle in Casteillas
Chateau to keep watch over the plateau and especially the ancient road
came from
that once
Peninsula by
way
the north
and made
it
way toward
of the famous Pass of Saint Louis.
that this mountainous, forested,
(though
its
was located
at a
can also guess
and somewhat out-of-the-way region
comfortable altitude) was a choice
druidic worship. Yet because the Celts before the
constructed temples and did not sculpt in stone, their original sites
We
Roman it is
difficult to locate
with precision. The lack of archaeological finds, how-
druids, did not engage in a vast Celts
site for
conquest never
does not imply that the Celts and particularly their
ever,
the Iberian
amount
priests, the
of activity here. After
were excellent metalworkers, and even though the mines
Razes are not profitable significant.
The same
abundant springs
is
at present, they
were once both
all,
the
in the
common and
true regarding the “medicinal waters” of the
in the region.
The Redones of ancient Reddae must
have contributed, to the extent of their means and
talents,
to the
grandeur of the large confederation of the Volques Tectosages, assuredly the
most powerful people of the Occitania of
mix
as well. After
all, isn’t it
their era.
Legend enters the
said that certain survivors of the expedition
of the second Brennus in Greece and Delphi (the others having formed the
Galatian
kingdom
in
Asia
Minor) had managed to
settle
in
Occitania, where they buried the treasures they pillaged in Greece, especially the
famous “cursed gold” from the temple of Delphi?
The History of the Earldom of Razes
It
was
121
in
B.C.E. that the
Languedoc that
still
to arrange their
supremacy over
its
Romans made
73
appearance
their
in a
bore a heavy Celtic imprint; The Romans, seeking all
of the Mediterranean’s shores, plied
waters in confrontations with the Phoenicians,
supremacy. This was also the time
when
the
who
first
contested this
vague invasion
attempts by the Germans appeared. The Cimbrians and Teutons, peo-
who were
ples
incontestably Germanic but were heavily influenced by
common names provide the proof of this), were stopped by Marius in what is now Provence. The occupation of southern Gaul became necessary to ensure the security of the Roman state. Little by little, moving in from the coast, the Romans won the interior lands by
the Celts (their
them
either reducing
who
over peoples
to small islands of resistance or keeping
did not inspire their confidence or exploiting
rather,
having their slaves exploit
in the
Occitan Midi. In
—was
capital. This
created. is
Gallia Togata,
why from would be
camps
—the numerous gold and
silver
— or
mines
way, at the impetus of the proconsul
—
in other
words, a “conquered
terri-
Narbonne (Narbo-Martius) was designated
The Romans never establish
this
Romana
Domitius, a Provincia tory”
watch
its
the time of Augustus’s reign this part of Gaul, called the Narbonnaise.
occupied a country. They were content to
totally
at strategic sites
and reconstruct the
existing paths into
roads suitable for vehicles and for allowing an entire army with arms
and baggage to move quickly from one place ated
Romanized
who were
to the foreground,
elite
Roman
of a conquered people, such as the druids
forbidden to teach), pushing their
and practicing
so-called Gallic temples date
merely
also cre-
centers chiefly through founding schools (to gradually
reduce the influence of the in the Razes,
They
to another.
religious syncretism.
from
this time,
own
ideology
The numerous
though they are
really
temples that haphazardly absorbed the Celtic deities and
incorporated them into the somewhat disparate pantheon characteristic of the
Roman
Empire. Having thus “squared” the terrain, the
could permit themselves to go ever farther so that Rome, both (cities)
and urbs (towns), was
This tactic
is
in
in civitas
truly the center of the world.
very visible in the Razes. There are virtually no
remnants on the plateaus. There Chateau. But
Romans
the
is
more vulnerable
nothing places
Roman
—that
is
in
Roman
Rennes-le-
to say, in the
The
74
Site of the
Mystery
“bolts” or paths of communication that are the valleys, such as Alet the
Roman
presence was
felt
more
Romans
Rennes-les-Bains because the
was
strongly. This
also true of
appreciated the benefits of the
Roman conquering, the Razes became Roman fashion but retained its archaic
thermal springs. In the process of a pagus:
It
was governed
character and It
was
at the
sions, that the belief of
Reddae.
own
its
lifestyle.
Roman
end of the
Empire, with the
Razes emerged from obscurity. This
numerous It
in
was
historians that the Visigoths
is
the basis of the
founded the
who, unlike the Romans,
the Visigoths
great inva-
first
city of
an indelible
left
imprint on this territory, though this fact has unleashed a series of
unsupportable assumptions. In truth the Razes was no more Visigothic than the
rest of
Septimania, those seven Occitan lands that distin-
guished themselves during the Merovingian era. The fact does remain,
however, that the “fortress” of Reddae certainly appears to have been if
not founded, then reorganized and expanded by the Visigoths.
But
just
where was
Chateau? This
what some
is
fortress
was
we know
Casteillas.
that the original location of the
Next, the situation of the
surface area do not allow for a city as populous as
have been.
It is
Rennes-le-
In
are desperate to have us believe, but noth-
ing could be less certain. First,
Rennes
of Reddae?
“fortress”
this
site
and
Reddae appears
its
to
claimed, based on local tradition, that Rennes had a for-
midable enceinte wall, but no remnants of
modest substructures, have been found. possessed two castles, which
is
far
it,
It is
except for some extremely also claimed that the
town
from being proved, and that
it
included two churches, one dedicated to Saint Peter and the other to Saint
There
John is
(the latter
no mention, however, of Mary Magdalene’s name.
stated that the is
town numbered some
strictly impossible,
this
was
located
almost certainly being the seigneurial chapel).
and seven butchers’
true, then the fortress of
somewhere
surveillance post
else.
on
Then where was
thirty
has been
thousand inhabitants, which stalls.
The
Reddae would by
fact
is
that
if all
necessity have been
Rennes-le-Chateau would have been only a
the road
from Carcassonne
to Iberia.
the location of this formidable fortified city that
documents suggest was on the same Carcassonne?
It
scale as the actual citadel of
Logic would suggest that
Limoux was
its
location.
The
The History of the Earldom of Razes
name Limoux It sits
in the
suggests an ancient settlement dating from the Celtic era.
bottom of
a valley,
easy to expand, and easy to tainly could
where a
fortress
would be easy
have lived there. This does not mean that the seigniorial
from the confusion caused by the word
precise site
— such as the
Empire and long
after,
city of
the
etymological sense, which citizens.”
to build,
Thirty thousand inhabitants cer-
fortify.
residence could not have been located in Rennes-le-Chateau. arises
75
Never
Carcassonne
city: It
would
it
designates a
moral entity
a
that of the Latin civitas, or
in ancient times
error
— but during the Roman
word designated only
is
now
Our
in the
“community of
have been possible to confuse
— a community of law and such a grouping together of of one ethnic group — and a town, or urb Latin, perfectly situated
city
as
citizens
in
a precise location
defense. Lor the
among
city,
and
truly a place of habitation, activity,
in
and group
same reason, there could be no possible confusion
town, and
citadel,
arx in Latin, which was the equivalent
of the medieval castle fort and could be located either inside or outside a city or town. In his
work Le Comte de Razes
et le diocese d’Alet,
pulls out all the stops in his attempt to
le-Chateau. His imagination
when he
is
show
that
Louis Ledie
Reddae was Rennes-
stronger than his eyesight, however,
claims that “the fortified enceinte occupied the entire plateau.”
But perhaps because he realizes that
this assertion
is
somewhat
strange,
he goes on to add, “However, large spaces remained unoccupied on the perimeter.” These
empty spaces may well have
existed during the Gallic
castrum was never a town, only a temporary
era, but, in this case, the
meeting place, a place for assembly, exchange, and also protection during times
Visigoth
“hollowing the example of
of war:
cities,
even
when
they were
special allocation, forming
sites
in
Carcassonne.”
was divided
towns, the
of war, remained true to their
one or two towns inside the enceinte of
town, one or two citadels within the
found
Roman
He pursued
into three quarters,
still
citadel.
An example
a
of this can be
this idea, declaring that
Reddae
recognizable in the village, and that
“the fortifications surrounding the citadel of Reddae have not completely disappeared.”
Given that the entire plateau must have included
surveillance posts at various times, the opposite prising. Yet
how
are
we
would be more
to believe that Rennes-le-Chateau,
sur-
which had
76
The
of the Mystery
Site
only two hundred inhabitants in 1709 (some
homesteads), could
fifty
have had thirty thousand during the Visigoth era, some twelve centuries earlier?
During
this era the
the former Gaul,
and people were widely scattered
urban centers, which are
many
population was not great in the territory of
people. This
laid
as a rule.
Only
large
out for easy supplying, could hold that
definitely not the case for the dry plateau of
is
Rennes-le-Chateau, incapable of supporting the needs of even a reduced
population on located
on the
did exist, that
own and
its
in
comparison to other centers
plains or in the liberally watered, fertile valleys. is
certain,
and though
sand people, a number that
of present-day
Limoux
it
was not inhabited by
certainly exaggerated,
is
nificant population. Therefore, site
poor
quite
it
it
Reddae
thirty thou-
did have a sig-
could only have been located on the
or perhaps Alet or Quillan.
Whatever the actual location of Reddae may have been, the Visigoths did surely invade the Razes and turned
reorganizing the region as
who had
if
to have
it
in reserve.
it
into a kind of
When
lair,
King Reccared,
recanted Aryanism (the Visigoths were Aryan Christians,
don’t forget), wished to reorganize the bishoprics of Septimania and
proposed naming a bishop for Reddae, the bishop of Carcassonne until that time
opposed him, because dependencies and
this
size of his revenues.
Reddae had been one of
nomination would have significantly reduced the
Then, by an ironic twist of
during the reign of King
Wemba
fate
perform
his functions
that these
fueled
flee
and seek refuge
many
later,
who
forced the
Redda, from which he might It
must be noted
Aryan and Orthodox Christians have
speculations that were quickly transformed into legends.
This was also the time
when
a large
immigrated to the Razes, where, especially in Alet.
architecture
in
over the whole of his diocese.
quarrels between
some time
680, the Episcopal seat of
in
Carcassonne became occupied by an Aryan bishop
orthodox bishop to
his
Today we can
it
number
of Jews fleeing persecution
seems, they were
see
some
warmly welcomed,
traces of their presence in the
and ornamentation of the abbey. This, of course, became
the starting point for another story having to
do with the ancient Jewish
origin of the Merovingians, in particular the “legitimate” root stock
hidden by the Carolingian usurpers who, as the Razes!
we know, sought
refuge in
The History of the Earldom of Razes
The
certain extended presence of the Visigoths in Rennes-le-Chateau
had other region.
effects
on the legendary history
in fact
It is
historical legend
Rome
brought
had divided among themselves and
Titus
carefully hid
it
is
in a secret location in
same treasure that the
and Vespasian would have brought back from the
sack of Jerusalem. So here
Chateau
this
who accompanied Alaric back much of the treasure they
the Razes. This treasure would, of course, be the
Romans under
—of
claimed that the contingents
and sack of
in his capture
— or
we
are,
having come
full circle:
Rennes-le-
holding a treasure in some mysterious cave or grotto.
not necessarily consist of gold and jewels, but
is
more
likely
It
does
made up
of
documents of primary importance because they concern the end of Jewish independence and the “sect” of Christians. This legend, which
may
be merely a distortion of certain facts (why wouldn’t the Visigoths
have brought back valuable objects and documents from Rome?), was not overlooked by those who, during Sauniere’s
life
but especially since
1956, have exploited the theme of the odd “millionaire priest.” likely that
due to to
keeper of “secrets,” which the Vatican wanted
buy from him so that they might be kept This
is
smoke without
the fire,
way
which
is
treasures or
why
for better or
—even
all,
never
in the
at first glance
Razes of
earlier
from
may appear holes that we it
worse?
whose conversion, all
if
constructed of black
The Visigoth empire represented odds with
is
the Visigoth history of the region,
documents that were stolen several centuries
incredible. Isn’t history, after
particular,
from unhealthy public
on the possible presence
Jerusalem, should not be ignored
fill
safe
grown. But then again, there
stories are
especially everything touching
strive to
is
he was in contact with the most zealous occultists of his day
his position as the
curiosity.
It
a threat to the Franks, Clovis in
albeit obviously opportunistic, set
him
at
things Aryan. Political interests and religious interests
always go hand
in
hand, as would be shown again
in the thirteenth-
century Albigensian Crusade. The Crusades not only offered the opportunity for eternal salvation; for some, they also contributed to a
temporary, terrestrial happiness.
More
enterprising
cynical than the other Frankish leaders, Clovis
through either ruse or hired after the job
was done)
killers
to prevent
more
and primarily more
saw
to their
removal
(who were executed immediately
them from becoming obstacles
to his
The
78
Site
of the Mystery
personal ambitions. After concluding a treaty with the lone powerful
remaining on the
authority
Church
of the
soil
Roman Empire
late
— he attacked the Visigoths, defeating Alaric
II
—the
near Vouille in
1507. This triggered a rush of Franks immigrating to the south, where they could easily take possession of domains and sinecures.
On
their
arrival at the Pyrenees, they established a kind of protectorate over all
of Occitania, but
seems the Razes escaped their covetuousness, no
it
doubt because the Franks considered short, the Visigoth presence
still
Chateau and the surrounding It
was during
to be of
it
little
importance. In
endured for some time
in Rennes-le-
area.
the troubled Merovingian times that the “marginal”
nature of the Razes was thoroughly confirmed. In
region
this
fact,
remained outside the incessant internal wars waged wholeheartedly by the descendants of Clovis,
who were worthy
heirs of their ancestor,
experts in every kind of crime, yet nonetheless immortalized in French
who
history textbooks by authors
Tours’s chronicles the “lazy kings,”
now know what last
all
who to
make
ily
4
who
in specially outfitted carts
The
fact
is
these kings were
thanks to the palace mayors, the formidable fam-
of Pippin d’FIeristal,
those
We
of the ridiculous stories that allege that these
so they could enjoy a well-deserved nap: into nothings
Gregory de
have been the delight of French academics.
Merivingian monarchs were transported
made
to read
through. Then arriving on the scene were
way
the
managed
never
who were
preceded them. To
just as cruel
and more cynical than
this piece of history
legend of a descendant of Dagobert Pippin’s orders. This descendant
is
II,
has been grafted the
who was
said to have
assassinated
found refuge
on
in the
Razes, where he had a family, which therefore makes him the ancestor of an authentic Merovingian line this
whose
offspring
legend has been spun with the help of
“secret
illicit
documents” that have miraculously
still
exist.
Of
course,
genealogies and alleged
— and anonymously— been
deposited at the National Fibrary in Paris.
It
is
part of the
myth of
Rennes-le-Chateau and the mystery of the cursed treasure. The fact remains, however, that under Carolingian domination, the Razes would
4.
[This
is
Faineants.
more
an untranslatable pun on the French name for the “lazy kings,” the Rois
“Made
into nothings”
literally translated as
is
faits neants, a
“made nothing.”
homonym
— Translator]
of Faineants that
would be
— The History of the Earldom of Razes continue to exist in that same marginal land that
its
is
79
chief distin-
guishing feature.
with his
contrast
In
Charlemagne took
a
predecessors,
keen interest
though,
To keep himself
the region.
in
appears that
it
informed of events there, he sent the bishop of Orleans, Theodulfe, as
The bishop reported
his envoy.
form of
in the
poem on what
a
seen, citing for the first time the cities of Carcassonne
should note that he refers to them as
cities [cites]
making Carcassonne and Reddae more or
would be independent of
Charlemagne had good reason to keep
who had
Razes. “Saracens”
and not towns
less equal.
in their region
were not Arabs
Of
at all.
from the Iberian course, contrary
There were never
to conquer nearly the entire Mediterranean basin in
enough Arabs
centuries’ time.
known
can easily
close surveillance over the
Peninsula were constantly threatening Septimania.
nique
We
[villes],
the Carcassonne seat.
spilled over the Pyrenees
to popular opinion, Saracens
As
is
well
known,
the
Muslim Arabs
two
practiced the tech-
They began by subjugating
as telescoping:
We
and Reddae.
understand the Razes clergy’s insistence on the creation of a bishopric that
he had
their nearest
neighbors and converting them to Islam, then sent them to continue the
same task
away.
in regions farther
It
can be certain that the Arabs
defeated by Charles Martel in Poitiers were essentially Iberians accom-
panied by some Moors
—that
same was
who
true of those
to say,
is
Maghrebi [North
Africans].
ceaselessly infiltrated Occitania
The
and who
at
times invited a martial expedition on behalf of the emperor and that of his vassals
which was
who were most
built the great epic of the
Charlemagne which he
Though Saracens
directly involved. This
truly
is
was
the basis
chansons de geste
in
on
which
portrayed as the great defender of Christendom
was
—engaged
in a merciless struggle
with the Saracens.
they do not resemble Arabs, what can be said about the is
that they symbolize all the pagans
opposed
to the task of
converting Europe to Christianity, which the Frankish emperor was
undertaking with the explicit accord of the papacy. Charlemagne, wishing to turn the Razes into a kind of citadel to keep
prevent
Muslim
raids,
region, bestowing
Razes was born.
named
upon him
watch and possibly
a trustworthy individual to
the
title
of count.
govern the
Thus the earldom of the
The
80
The
Site
of the Mystery
was
first earl
a
most notable individual, William of Gellone,
leader and
great military
a
devoted a large part of his
After having
of conviction.
Christian
a
to successfully fighting the Saracens,
life
William of Gellone came to spend
remaining years
his
at
Saint-Guilhem
whose construction he had ordered. Part
of the Desert, an abbey
Carolingian and part Romanesque,
remains one of the most hand-
it
some examples of Occitan abbeys. William of Gellone died, shrouded in the scent of sanctity, hence his canonization vox populi and the attribution of his
name
to the monastery.
William of Gellone
is
claimed by some to have been a descendant
of the Merovingians through the son of Dagobert refuge in the Razes and
said to have
is
This overlooks the fact that the
than William of Gellone. son,
if
It
first
who had
taken
the daughter of the count.
count of the Razes was none other
also overlooks the fact that
Dagobert
IPs
he truly escaped the Carolingian assassins, would have been a
very young child
when he
arrived in the Razes.
nothing can be firmly concluded, family tree was It is is
wed
II,
known
seems that William of Gellone’s
it
somewhat “rearranged”
true that this holy
man was
as the cycle of Garin de
Here again, although
to serve the needs of the cause.
what
a figure of legend. In fact, in
Monglane
in the
chansons de
geste,
he was the model for the extraordinary figure of William of Orange, called William of the Short
Nose
means
(curb nez, not court nez, which
“hooked nose”), protector of Louis the Pious and great destroyer of Saracens.
The
cycle of Garin de
Monglane incorporates
real historical
elements into a mythological framework from a clearly archaic tradition (as revealed by the
William
Indo-European
(Guilhem/Guillaume)
Saracen Orable,
who becomes
of
social structures within
Guibourc, forms a kind of fantastic duo is
comparable
to the ones
by Charlemagne and Roland, Arthur and Gawain, and
sons of their
Celtic tradition (with the
sisters,
which
This
Orange, husband of the former
with his nephew Vivien (Vezien) that
and nephews of
it).
all
formed
those kings
nephews being, of course, the
signals a matriarchal line of descent).
William of Gellone’s destiny, both
real
and imaginary, was thus
quite amazing! In addition, he contributed to an event of considerable
importance for the Christian West by aiding
Aniane
in his
his friend Saint
Benedict of
reform of the original Benedictine Order, established three
The History of the Earldom of Razes
81
centuries earlier by Saint Benedict of Nursia, through integrating into
elements from the rule of Saint Columba, the Irish saint the restoration of Christianity
on the continent. This
who
to follow the
command
all
helped in
led Louis the
monks and
Pious, son of Charlemagne, during a large gathering of
abbots in Aachen in 817, to
it
the monasteries in the empire
reformed Benedictine Order.
Shortly before this time, an abbey had been founded in Alet under a
name
course. IV,
that
was
rare at that time:
still
The charter of donation
Lady.
It
was was
dates from 813 and
count of the Razes, though, as
monastery charters from
this era,
of the error mentioned in
it:
The
Our
is
it is
Benedictine, of issued by Bera
the case with the majority of
quite suspect, especially because
charter places the monastery under the
pope’s protection, something that never occurred before the end of the tenth century.
The construction of
the abbey did take place, however,
and the counts of Razes took pains to ensure
the
it
means
to exist.
A
century later Alet was part of a kind of monastic confederation under the aegis of the
famous monastery of Saint Michael of Cuxa
of the Canigou. In 993
Abbot Garin controlled
at the foot
Saint Michael of
Saint Pierre of Mas-Grenier, Saint-Hilaire, Pierre de Lezat,
Lady of
Alet.
Upon
Cuxa,
and Our
the death of Garin, this confederation dissolved in
998, at the time of the development of the Cluny Order, which would contribute to another reformation of the Benedictine monasteries, the
most
significant to occur before the rise of Saint
Bernard and the new
Cistercian Order.
William of Gellone gave the earldom of Razes to one of
his sons.
There were accordingly several generations of counts named Bera protected the Razes until 870.
On this
date the line of succession passed
into the
hands of the noble house of Carcassonne,
number
of years,
its
after
a very important center
and the meeting place of
all
all, it
even claimed to
which enormously increased itable pilgrimages
made
its
own
in Alet
con-
a fragment of the True Cross,
prestige as well as the
there. In
remained
the lords of the sur-
rounding area. Meanwhile, the development of the abbey It
which, for a
ownership was disputed between the counts of
Carcassonne and the counts of Barcelona. Throughout
tinued apace.
who
number
of prof-
1090 the Saint Polycarp abbey
fell
under the control of the abbot of Alet, and on June 16, 1096, the abbey
The
82
of
Site
Our Lady on
there
of the Mystery of Alet received a visit from Pope
II,
who came
Toulouse and Carcassonne. This gesture demon-
a visit to
strated the pope’s
Urban
sudden
development of the monastery
interest in the
on the banks of the Aude. In
1067
Ermengarde
Countess
Carcassonne and the Razes to her
sum
Barcelona, for the
her
sold
relative
over
sovereignty
Raymond-Beranger, count of
of one thousand ounces of gold. Catalonia’s
ownership of the region would have certain consequences for the status of
orders, in particular the branch of the order of the
some monastic
Templars established
in Bezu,
which would not be under the sway of
the king of France, Philip the Fair, but the count of Barcelona, allowing
A
it
would remain
in the sphere of
to escape French royal persecution.
period of obscurity then began for the Razes. This was the time
of the Cathars in Occitania. This group of '‘heretics” had spread with
amazing speed, benefiting from the strong support of
local
lords.
Religious problems mirrored political difficulties; the Occitan nobles
knew
full
well the ambitions of the northern French, particularly the
Capet family. The Occitan Midi has always been a land of heresy and protest, as
though these were integral parts of the Occitan mentality.
Catharism, which very
first
fertile soil for its
appeared
in
blossoming
in
France in the Troyes region, found Occitania and more particularly in
the region of the former Septimania (including the Razes).
At it
Razes had fallen to the rank of viscounty. In 1194
this time, the
was under
the
flag
of
Raymond Roger
Trencavel, viscount of
Carcassonne and Beziers, a hero of the Albigensian Crusade basely betrayed by in his city of
of revolt.
As
Simon de Montfort and perished
Carcassonne a boy, he
raised in his court
in
dark dungeon
1209. His son quickly picked up the torch
had been entrusted
where swarmed
heretics of all stripes
in a
who was
who had
— and
this
to the count of Foix
was no
only one thing in
secret to
common:
a
and
anyone profound
hatred for the French and their king.
For while the prevailing heresy of the time was that of the Cathars, there were quite a few others. dissident churches,
Never has any time been
and strange
cults
— some
openly diabolical
twelfth and thirteenth centuries. While the Inquisition
ated to fight with both
word and
fire
as rich in sects,
was
—
as the
officially cre-
those respectfully called the
good
The History of the Earldom of Razes
men
in the countryside
was
also to check the rising tide of various resurgent
and Dualists
in the ecclesiastical courts,
ditions unfolding over Christian Europe. Tolerance
a time
when
in fact
no one knew what
syncretic tra-
was not an option
and the major
“There
no salvation possible
is
works of the time show
outside the Church!” Yet artistic and literary
many
—though
an equal number of
deviations from orthodox belief
heretics
were
There
is
left
to rot in prisons or
an explanation for
were burned
Roman
its official
was completely unheard of
relativity
refrain of the time was,
in
Catholic Church nothing
could cast doubt on the word of the Scriptures and those of
commentators. The principle of
task
was. All discussion was impos-
it
Roman
from the perspective of the
sible, for
and
its
83
at the stake.
Catholic aggressiveness: The
Cathars as well as a certain number of other sects were casting doubt
prominent and necessary role of the
as to the
on
erable situation for a system based classes: those
who
prayed, those
who
priest.
This was an intol-
a society divided into three
who worked.
fought, and those
Furthermore, even though the clergy was not only uneducated but also often living in wretched conditions, at least in the poorer rural regions,
never before had the Church been richer in worldly goods.
Church were
to
go along with the Cathars,
served no purpose,
it
would
cut
who
the
claimed that the priests
from the abundant resources
itself off
procured through the performance of worship and obligatory Fear gripped the orthodox Occitan clergy due to the at the onset of the thirteenth century
If
rise
tithes.
of Cathar ideas
combined with the ambition and
bitterness of the northern nobles, ever ready to enter a struggle to the
death
if
they might win some lands. This fear
was obviously masked by
the crusade against heretics of any kind as well as the Occitan nobles
who had
the gall to side with such miscreants. Cathar Occitania
destroyed in the
name
of a
God who
is
never
the material interest of the king of France It is
this
wrong and
and
in the
was
name
of
his vassals.
impossible to turn a blind eye to the injustices and atrocities of
Albigensian Crusade, which overturned the rights of
all
humans;
contradicted Christian charity; satisfied a most monstrous egotism; and
amounted
to spiritual
and cultural genocide and,
blessed by a papacy that did well by the
overlook the massacres of Beziers.
It
whole is
finally,
pure hypocrisy
affair. It is
impossible to
impossible to excuse the
The
84
Site
of the Mystery
“sadism” of Simon de Montfort and the also impossible to
remake
least of his
refrains of his killed his
own
was brought up on
companions father,
it is
history.
Thus, Trencavel the younger went to of Foix, where he
henchmen. But
As
in exile.
he could not
live at
the court of the count
the anti-French
and anti-papist
a victim of the intolerance that
listen to these refrains indifferently.
Despite his young age, he loudly declared his desire for vengeance and
swore to whoever would
listen that his life’s
quest of the heritage stolen from
him
—that
is,
purpose was the reconthe earldoms of Albi and
Carcassonne and the viscounty of the Razes, which was a region especially
dear to his heart.
Trencavel
He was
a curious figure.
is
not a typical adventurer
those that were plentiful in this troubled time, but of Grail quester, a knight these characteristics that
the real
model
against windmills.
some have not
instead a kind
It is
fact,
however,
is
because of
hesitated to claim that he
was
and king of the Grail accord-
version of the Perceval story by
Eschenbach. The sad yet
tilts
for Perceval, the discoverer
German
ing to the
who
was
like
that the
Wolfram von
young Trencavel was not
born when Chretien de Troyes introduced the figure of Perceval
in
the Arthurian epic in 1190. Perhaps the opposite occurred: Perhaps the
young Trencavel had known about the work of Chretien de Troyes (generously completed and expanded by skilled writers of the early thirteenth century),
who
who
fulfilled his
sought to use as his heroic model a fatherless boy
vengeance against
his father’s
murderers and became
the king of an ideal kingdom.
As official
save Alet.
was buried
for actual history, while Trencavel
guardian, Bertrand de Saissac,
what remained
to be saved,
had
who was
in his
dreams, his
desperately striving to
difficulties in the
Razes, mainly in
Following the death of Pons Amiel, abbot from 1167 to 1197, the
monks
of
Our Lady
of Alet had elected as his successor Bernard de
who was
already the abbot of Saint Polycarp. Bertrand de
Saissac rushed to Alet
and seized the new abbot, ordered the body of
Saint-Ferreol,
Pons Amiel disinterred and placed upon ordered the
won
monks
to hold a
new
his abbatial throne,
election.
and then
The monks, seemingly
either
over to his position or out of fear of him, did not dare refuse. They
chose a certain Bozon,
who
hastily sent a large
sum
of
money
to the
The History of the Earldom of Razes archbishop of Narbonne to gain both this
his
approval and
85
his blessing of
coup. But Bernard de Saint-Ferreol, the dispossessed abbot, spent
his time instituting ecclesiastical
violent act
proceedings and
had occurred. Bertrand de
“good men,” did not
trust
let it
be
known
that a
Saissac, himself a partisan of the
Bernard de Saint-Ferreol,
whom
he deemed
too “orthodox” and overly devoted to the papacy.
The
affair
would drag on
for
some
On
time.
July 21, 1222, at the
council of Puy-en-Velay, the pope’s legate, Cardinal Conrad, nullified
Bozon’s election and ordered the It
would be
monks
to leave the
and placed under the
secularized
abbey immediately.
direct authority of the
metropolitan archbishop of Narbonne. But the
monks who had
ported neither Bozon nor the coup that put him in power
sup-
made an
appeal to the pope. Gregory IX appointed two abbots to examine the
was restored
request for adjudication and eventually the abbey
monks, who hurriedly
elected a
new
to the
abbot. By then Trencavel
was
occupied by concerns other than keeping watch over the abbey of Our
Lady of fully
Alet, for he could not return to his
recovered from the
domains. The abbey never
crisis.
Trencavel soon became the heart and soul of the revolt of the faidits,
which was the name given to the lords who had been stripped of
their lands as a result of the prosecution of heresy.
to
win them back.
In
1239 and again
in
1240, at a time
and
severe repression of the Cathars, Trencavel
Termes,
who
still
The
faidits
when
prepared there
was
his vassal Olivier de
held the Corbieres, the Temenes, and the fortresses of
Queribus and Peyrepertuse, launched expeditions that were more akin to guerrilla raids than military operations.
They operated
and Trencavel, who was welcomed everywhere immediate successes.
He
Trencavel had received promises of aid from
Raymond
as a liberator,
had some
did not follow up on them, however, which
allowed his adversaries to regroup and react.
of Toulouse.
incrementally,
VII
was known
to be
It
seems, moreover, that
Raymond
on the
VII, the
count
side of the heretics,
but was in a very delicate position; by dint of his hesitation, he did not intervene in time on behalf of Trencavel, and the situation turned sour. Olivier de a vigorous
Termes made
his
submission to the king of France following
French counteroffensive
— he was no
doubt bought by the
Capets and betrayed Trencavel outright. The result was checkmate.
The
86
Site
of the Mystery
Trencavel then had to
make
his official
submission to the king as well,
but his lands were not returned. Brooding about his dark designs, he
hoped
resolved to stay in Aragon, where he
money
listeners as well as
resume the
to
The Razes was now occupied by
to find
some understanding
fight.
the troops of the French king,
devoted themselves to an all-out hunt for heretics.
were plenty to be found
had seen the creation of rate
in these isolated
there
mountains! The year 1225
Cathar diocese
a veritable
God knows
who
in the
Razes sepa-
from the Cathar diocese of Toulouse and entrusted to Benoit de
We know that Cathars did not recognize who were more or less preaching brothers.
Termes, a relative of Olivier. a priesthood, only
deacons
(The prefects within Catharism were not priests but rather believers attained the highest level of spiritual development and
who had
administered only the consolamentum.) ecclesiastical organization.
repression
—they
Nor
did they see any value in
For the cause, however
had been forced
to
set
who
—mainly to confront
up a kind of clandestine
counter-church with a hierarchy and leaders
who were
given the rank
of bishop. There was, then, a Cathar “diocese” in the Razes, and because
Cathar worshippers were many,
and find refuge
this hierarchy
managed
to limit arrests
in inaccessible places.
In the Razes, oddly enough,
an alliance with the Cathars. As
it
seems that the Templars concluded
we know,
the Templars were solidly
established in the Rennes-le-Chateau region.
Some were
located in
Campagne-sur-Aude and Lavaldieu, dependencies of France, and others,
who were no doubt more
powerful, had a fortress in Bezu and were
dependents of Aragon. According to documents that reliable but
do
would seem
to have concluded
ily,
who owned
accord
is
testify to a certain
in
1209 with the Aniort fam-
almost the entire region of Rennes-le-Chateau. This
said to have consisted of the fictive cession to the
What
be none too
de facto status, the Bezu Templars
an accord
the Aniort family properties that ity.
may
this clearly says
in this instance the
is
Templars of
were open to seizure by royal author-
that the Templars willingly aided heretics,
Cathars of the Razes.
We
should note that they acted
almost identically during the previous century with respect to the Jews; a
document
the Razes
explicitly states that in
who owned
1142 the
fairly
numerous Jews of
lands had turned them over to the Templars as
The History of the Earldom of Razes tenant farms. These seemingly unnatural alliances
some, yet
it
took any part tainly
be surprising to
should be understood that the Templars had always played
ambiguous
a fairly
may
87
role in the Albigensian Crusade. In fact, they never
There are
in this war, either directly or indirectly.
cer-
grounds for suggesting that the Templars were the secular arm of
the Cathars,
whose
religion forbade the use of
Why
weapons.
not?
Whatever the case regarding armed support, the collusion of Cathars and Templars seems to have been
The Templars
conducted operations
clearly
1156 they elected
region. In
fully operational in the Razes. in
man named
grand master a
as their
mysterious
this
Bertrand de Blanchefort. Contrary to what some have declared without verifying their sources, however, he
was not
a
member
of the Blanchefort
family of the Razes. Bertrand de Blanchefort, grand master of the Order of the Temple,
was from
be no doubt about
this.
well-known family
a
But
precise
in a veritable
— to work
this
time the Templars of Bezu
German workers
colony of
in the area’s mines.
Guyenne. There can
not prevent him from giving the
this did
Razes very special attention. During brought
in
The
— smelters, to be more
mines of the region were quite numerous but not very because they had been heavily exploited during rather confusing, though,
and not miners, to
as
question the
Furthermore,
French
or,
why
is
workers
more important, Occitan?
who
Under such circumstances
We
It
who knew
rich, largely
What
times.
is
on smelters
are therefore obliged
Germans were asked
these
hire foreign
use foreign laborers
Roman
that the Bezu Templars called
would have been expected. “work”
and gold
lead, silver, copper,
not a
to
perform.
word
of either
seems that the intention was to
could not speak to the local inhabitants. it
is
understandable that so
many
legends
have spread concerning Rennes-le-Chateau’s buried treasure, secret mines, or gold guarded by the devil, not to mention
its
hidden treasure
of Delphi, treasure from the Temple of Jerusalem, or treasure of the
Templars or the Cathars. Indeed, include the
why wouldn’t one
of these caches
Holy Grail?
The mysterious work of
the
Germans
whom the Templars
employed
and the apparent collusion between the Templars and the Cathars obviously bring us back to the Albigensian Crusade and the unresolved mysteries
it
has presented.
It
is
now
established that the negotiations
The
88
Site
of the Mystery
between the Inquisitors and the
Roger de Mirepoix and surety of
Ramon
Bains.
is
It
last
Ramon
defenders of Montsegur, Pierre-
de Perella, were conducted under the
d’Aniort, lord of Rennes-le-Chateau and Rennes-les-
also accepted that following the escape of four prefects
charged with transporting the famous “treasure” (whatever days before the capture of Montsegur, a
eral
Mountain
and the Cathar valuables were
cess
a
know
to let the besieged
man who was
Given
all
was hidden,
The noble and
all
that the operation
safe.
envoy to
these circumstances,
“treasure”
tinies,
a special
it is
was
fire
As
it
Ramon
lit
it
was) sev-
on Bidorta
had been
a suc-
happens, Escot de Belcaire, d’Aniort, lighted this
fire.
reasonable to assume that the Cathar
at least initially, in the depths of the Razes.
families of the Razes at times acted out their strange des-
were more or
less in
league with the “heretics.” After
1231 the king of France entrusted Limoux and the Razes to the seneschal Pierre de Voisins, a minor noble from the ile-de-France and a
companion of Simon de Montfort. His most urgent task was mantle
all
the fortresses in the region, but later, oddly enough, the
seneschal’s grandson, Pierre
II,
made dogged
even saw to the building of Rennes Castle. later time.)
to dis-
efforts to rebuild
(It
them and
was renovated again
at a
Following the disappearance of the Cathars, the majority of
nobles regained their holdings and hastened to refortify those structures that
had been dismantled, foreseeing future troubles and possible future
heresies as well as the need to reckon with the bandits of
all
kinds
who
lurked in the area. For example, a band of Catalan brigands invaded
Rennes-le-Chateau and pillaged the
castle, the
church, and numerous
homes, thereby bringing about the ruination of the
A
long time had passed, however, since the Trencavel family had
renounced
all
their holdings in the Razes.
French and betrayed by his ing an
village.
ambiguous
his struggle. In
own
objective, the
1247 he ceded
France, Fouis IX.
He
still
people
Harassed by the northern
when
they saw he was pursu-
unlucky Trencavel decided to abandon
all his
managed
rights to the
Razes to the king of
to pull out of
it
rather well:
It is
claimed that Saint Fouis was quite upset with Trencavel and wished to imprison him, but Blanche de Castille defended him with
demanded indulgence good Christian
much
zeal
and
for this impenitent rebel that the French king,
that he was, did not display to his enemies. Certainly
The History of the Earldom of Razes
Blanche de Castille did
Razes
trail
compromise. Did Trencavel
in this
if
know
a secret, or at least
that could lead to a secret? Let’s not overlook the fact that the
name Blanche de even
she could to dispossess Trencavel of the
— and she succeeded— but we must ask what was the currency of
exchange of a
all
we
Castille
is
linked to a spring in Rennes-les-Bains, yet
take into account the well-known legend of the White Lady,
we might
guardian and protector of the springs,
denying any grounds for
which
this affair in
still
hesitate before
a nonnegligible role
played by Trencavel. Wasn’t Trencavel a Cathar himself? really searching for?
What would
What were
questions episodes In
any
it is
also a
dence
it
way
in
building
stories
in its entire business
murky
have held a
—joined
by two of
fairly
with the Cathars. By
— Geraud,
their cousins,
Simon de Montfort. They were
com-
all evi-
all
Othon, Bertrand, and
were violently opposed to
excommunicated, of course, and
their castles confiscated, but shortly afterward, curiously
excommunications were
lifted
and part of
to their possession. D’Aniort Castle
was
their
enough, the
domains were restored
slated to be razed, but at the
Louis IX sent a messenger to countermand that order.
short time later
showed him
zones.
the side of the heretics at the time of the crusade in
was on
moment
just
with multiple
of shining light into certain
1209. The four d’Aniort brothers
Ramon
And
find in his church or elsewhere? Posing these
case, the d’Aniort family appears to
promising position
he
the Templars of Bezu looking for?
can be quite helpful
— but
was
What was
Colbert be looking for later in these same places?
what did Abbe Sauniere
last
89
Ramon
d’Aniort was received by Saint Louis,
a courtesy that
was
quite exceptional
and somewhat
A
who dis-
concerting, considering the role he had played as both rebel and ally of heretics.
Why
the king?
party?
We
this indulgence, or at least these retreats,
Was
on the part of
he motivated solely by a desire to pardon the guilty
might well wonder what price was required from
Ramon
d’Aniort in order for him to purchase his pardon, for everything in politics
who are later canonized. As we Ramon d’Aniort know?
has a price tag, even for kings
asked of Trencavel, what did
All the mysteries of the Razes
seem
to crystallize
family as well as the descendants of Pierre de Voisins,
have
around the Aniort
who was
entrusted
with guardianship over the territory to Trencavels detriment. The
The
90
of the Mystery
Site
on very good terms with the Templars and
Voisins were also
lowing the persecution triggered by Philip the
made arrangements Spain.
good number of the
to help a
whom we
Philip the Fair himself
It is
Fair,
later, fol-
one of the family fugitives escape to
find visiting the Razes in
1283, before he assumed the throne, though he was merely accompanying his father, Philip the Bold, son of Saint Louis,
Languedoc
The king stayed
region.
the lord of Rennes
at the
home
on
through the
a trip
of Pierre
II
de Voisins,
and guardian of the whole of Razes on behalf of the
kingdom. The purpose of Philip the Bold’s
trip
was
to obtain the benev-
some of whom, because of the com-
olent neutrality of the local nobility,
plex ramifications of feudal power, were vassals of the king of Aragon.
He wanted
to take
some precautions
wage against Aragon; thus
to
his
was
view of the war he was planning a very
good explanation
for his
de Voisins. Yet he took advantage of this sojourn also to
visit to Pierre
Ramon d’Aniort, who,
visit
there
in
along with his wife, Alix de Blanchefort, and
younger brother Udaut d’Aniort, warmly welcomed the monarch even seems that a solid bond of friendship was formed at
and
his son.
this
time between the future king of France and Udaut, with Philip sug-
gesting to
It
Udaut
had other ideas This
visit
that he
in
become
his
comrade
in
arms. Udaut, however,
mind. Fie wished to become a Templar.
could not be any more suspect or strange.
Two
of
Ramon’s
uncles had been diehard Cathars, and the d’Aniorts had always stood to protect the “heretics.” Alix de Blanchefort faidit
was
the daughter of a
noble and the sworn enemy of Simon de Montfort. The designs of
a king, however, are often impenetrable.
of this
visit
was
It is
possible that the purpose
to arrange a marriage. In fact, Pierre
III
de Voisins, a
widower, subsequently wed Ramon’s cousin Jordane d’Aniort. In
way
up
the
two
families
this
were united. But to what end? To keep watch over
the d’Aniorts through the Voisins or to rehabilitate the d’Aniorts?
Ultimately, the Templars found themselves beset by unfortunate cir-
cumstances. As
we know,
they were hounded
all
over France at the will
of Philip the Fair, hauled before ecclesiastical tribunals, and finally, after
some strange confessions
— not
all
of which were extorted by violence
they were condemned, 5 and the Order of the Temple disappeared,
5.
For more on
this subject, see
Vt.: Inner Traditions,
2002).
my book The Templar
Treasure in Gisors (Rochester,
The History of the Earldom of Razes
absorbed into the Hospitaliers of Saint John of Jerusalem. But secution by Philip the Fair’s
henchmen and
91
their per-
minion Nogaret did not
his
extend beyond France’s borders. The Templars, though not spared totally,
were absorbed into other kingdoms, and we know that many of like
those
of Bezu, benefited from a special status that temporarily sheltered
them
them, forewarned in time, were able to escape, while others,
from
all
persecution.
had shown
In an Occitania that least
orthodox kind of doctrines,
the purification of bodies
it
ever willing to support the
itself
was necessary
to ensure, along with
and minds, an increased surveillance of souls
and consciences. This was why
in
1317 the French pope of Avignon,
John XXII, on the advice of the king of France, which he was obviously obliged to take, action
would provide
made
the decision to create
means
a better
to isolate
new
dioceses. This
problem areas and also
provide a slight check to the omnipotence of the metropolitan arch-
bishop of Barbonne and the bishop of Toulouse.
New
bishoprics were
Saint-Pons de Thomieres, and Saint-
thus established in Limoux,
Papoul. Immediately the pope received a violent protest from the nuns of Prouilhe,
who,
for
more than
the religious establishments of
a century,
were paid
Limoux and
significant fees
the surrounding area.
by
The
papal decision threatened to ruin them, and because they had such influence over the archibishop of a revocation of the bull that
Narbonne, he obtained from the pope
had created
a seat in
however, did not abandon his desire to establish a
Limoux. The pope,
new
bishopric in the
Razes. In 1318 he created the Episcopal seat of Alet, which explains
how
the
Abbey
of
Our Lady
the last Benedictine abbot,
of Alet became a cathedral. Barthelemey,
became the bishop of Alet shortly
This was the beginning of a It
was too small
new
life
for the old
to be a true cathedral, but
the addition of a Gothic choir,
the village of Alet
Romanesque
was extended on
some of which remains. At
was transformed
thereafter.
abbey.
the east with
the
same
time,
into a veritable small city surrounded
by ramparts and provided with a new parish church, Saint- Andre, which still
exists
until the
on the southern
side of the abbey.
The
French Revolution, though of course
difficulties before that time, especially
which the cathedral was
it
bishopric of Alet lasted
experienced
its
share of
during the Religious Wars, during
pillaged. In the sixteenth century, the Episcopal
of the Mystery
92
The
Site
seat
was
in the
hands of the Joyeuse family, and the bishopric
was then an abbey-bishopric, with abbot
—was
the bishop acting as both bishop
new
In
cathedral church oriented
monks.
to south in the former buildings of the
of the Benedictines,
1637
a
was
it
and
Bishop
definitively secularized. In the seventeenth century,
Etienne de Poverel decided to create a
from north
— which
In
memory
called Saint Benedict Cathedral.
young bishop named Nicolas Pavilion took control of
the
Alet diocese, from which position he played a significant role. Along with
and the abbot Jean
Saint Vincent de Paul
and seminary of Saint-Sulpice
founder of the church
Ollier,
he was the driving force of the
in Paris,
famous Brotherhood of the Holy Sacrament, upon which plenty of remains to be shed. There are
still
of the
Holy Sacrament
XIV under was an
ties
connecting the Brotherhood
to the family of Nicolas Foucquet, the superin-
who was
tendent of finances
known
judged and imprisoned iniquitously by Louis
conditions that are obscure, to say the
incredible
megalomaniac
was unable
of pressure that he
light
who had
least.
Nicolas Foucquet
means
at his disposal certain
to turn to his use
and which were
ulti-
mately used against him. Shortly after his imprisonment, his victorious adversary Colbert ordered that excavations and document searches be
undertaken
in the Razes.
was seeking
to exploit the
plateau that might
still
coincidences in this
had
Why? The most
reason
is
have had some value. But there are
affair,
that Colbert
few gold mines on the Rennes-le-Chateau
and those
discreet investigations
a direct relationship to “the secrets
row an
realistic
known by Mr.
far
too
seem
many
to have
Foucquet,” to bor-
expression of the time. That combined with the mysterious
letter
from Nicolas Foucquet’s brother concerning Nicolas Poussin, painter of the
famous Shepherds of Arcadia, only increase the shadows that
the Razes.
Whatever the truth may
be, Nicolas Pavilion,
lie
over
bishop of Alet,
along with the other members of the Brotherhood of the Holy Sacrament, strove to aid Foucquet, as
was
the king’s desire.
Foucquet matter
None
6.
spills
And whether we
like
it
or not, the Nicolas
over into the Razes. 6
of this stopped Nicolas Pavilion from attending to
For more on
this, see
Pygmalion, 1989). In the Iron
which spared him from simply being put to death,
Mask, or
it
Jean Markale, La Bastille et Venigme du I
Masque de
work
Fer (Paris:
develop the hypothesis that Nicolas Foucquet was the
at least
“one of several
Men
in
Iron Masks.”
in
Man
in
The History of the Earldom of Razes
his diocese. in Alet
He
on the advice of Saint Vincent de
aware of the
young
created a seminary for the instruction of Paul,,
who,
priests
becoming
after
intellectual poverty of the clergy of his time, displayed the
greatest zeal in finding a
way
to
remedy
During the
it.
entire time he
held the bishop’s chair, Pavilion had frequent contact with
who was
93
Abbot
Ollier,
himself the founder of the seminary of Saint-Sulpice. Given
these circumstances,
why
is it
surprising to encounter so
much
specula-
tion about the subtle relationship that existed between the church of
Rennes-le-Chateau and the church of Saint-Sulpice in Paris? But times change. The Razes slumbered in a kind of torpor, as
wrapped
in a
summer
The few dominant
mist. Certain incidents did occur,
families
who seemed
though
watch over
to
if
discreetly.
this territory
almost fiercely witnessed their financial strength shrink over time. The aristocracy this
In
was no longer what
it
used to be, and land, especially that of
scorched region, no longer took in the kind of revenues
1422 the
once did.
it
heiress of the Voisins (and thus of the d’Aniort family),
Marcafava, married Pierre-Raymond d’Hautpoul, heir of one of the oldest
and most
illustrious families of Occitania.
The founders
been named the Kings of the Black Mountain, a indicative of their propensity “to their
mountain
title
that
of his line had
was somewhat
go underground” and to mock from
fortresses the legal authorities
who
claimed they should
submit to the laws. At the time of the Albigensian Crusade, they obviously favored the “heretics” and found themselves stripped of their castles
and
were
lands. In short, in the fifteenth century the Hautpoul,
worthy representatives of those
faidits lords
imprint on the Cathar region and
Hautpouls
who would
later
its
become
who
left
still
such an indelible
immediate surroundings.
It
was
the
the lords of Rennes-le-Chateau.
In 1732, long after the troubled affairs of the reign of Touis XIV,
Francois d’Hautpoul married Marie de Negri d’Ables, rights to the inheritance of the d’Aniort family
owned
this family’s archives.
who
and who,
it
also
had
appears,
Francois d’Hautpoul and Marie de Negri of them, Elisabeth, lived and died a
d’Ables had three daughters.
One
spinster in Rennes-les-Bains.
The second, Marie, married her cousin
d’Hautpoul-Felines, and the third, Gabrielle, married the marquis of Fleury,
who
seems to have been a member of various secret
most notably the Freemasons and Rosicrucians.
societies,
The
94
of the Mystery
Site
When
for the succession of their parents to be settled,
came time
it
Elisabeth quarreled with her sisters concerning the allotment of prop-
them
erty, refusing to give
that
it
the family papers
and
was dangerous (we may wonder why!)
ments and that
would be more appropriate
it
distinguished which were family
Perhaps
could
this
mean
titles
to consult these docu-
and
to “have deciphered
and which were not
that the Hautpouls,
family, possessed in their archives
on the pretext
titles
at
all.
to the d Aniort
full heirs
documents that were not the family’s
but which they held for safekeeping and no doubt did not have the right to dispose of as they
what
We
we can
— but to whom? That
agree that is
it is
we
know
will never
possible they were
the real question.
must further take note of the very strange story whose events
took place a
whom
quite obvious that
fit. It is
these papers were, but
compromising
full
century
1870.
later, in
It
appears that the notary with
the Hautpoul-d’Aniort family papers were stored refused to turn
them over
to Pierre d’Hautpoul, descendant of this illustrious line,
would be
pretext that
it
documents.
What
dote?
saw
are
terribly
we
to
Some have imagined
marked with
of this obviously unvenfiable anec-
among
these
documents were genealogies
the seal of Blanche de Castille, proving the
the Merovingian dynasty. She
ing her stay
imprudent to relinquish such important
make
that
on the Razes
nobility of the region,
in
on the
would have signed
permanence of
these genealogies dur-
exchange for the submission of the principal
which would explain her extreme indulgence of
Trencavel and the d’Aniort family.
It is
impossible to confirm such an
assumption, however, because the notary never passed on these docu-
seems that the theory of the per-
ments and no one has ever seen them.
It
manence of
smacks not only of fantasy but of
the purest
From one until
the Merovingian dynasty
form of fraud
as well. All of this
coincidence to the next
we end up with whatever
it is
church when he was renovating
was then claimed be
to be
— and
we
is
— the “treasure” of Blanche de
in fact, quite irritating.
are buried ever deeper in shadow,
that
He now
it.
is,
Abbe Sauniere discovered
actually did find something,
in his
which
even more strenuously claimed to
Castille.
But what treasure
is
this?
At the time of the disagreement between Elisabeth d’Hautpoul and her sisters, just before the Revolution,
someone did know of
the exis-
tence and perhaps the contents of the mysterious documents:
Abbe
The History of the Earldom of Razes Bigou, priest of Rennes-le-Chateau. Antoine Bigou was the a priest
hood, as
who had
in
also served in Rennes.
1176 he succeeded
Rene Descadeillas
Once he had
nephew
of
joined the priest-
Rennes-le-Chateau, enjoying,
his uncle in
“the respect and esteem of his parish-
tells us,
Marie de Negri d’Ables was
ioners.” At this time
95
living
an impover-
ished existence with her daughter Elisabeth d’Hautpoul in the Rennes
where she died
castle,
in 1781.
She was buried in the small cemetery
behind the church beneath a tomb that bore the inscription that has since received serious study, especially recently, for
been defaced by Abbe Sauniere, though tion contains mistakes that have
we may
drawn
derniers seigneurs
and
in his
ask why. The inscrip-
the attention of cryptogram
Rene Descadeillas* says again
fans, but as
appears to have
it
in his
work Rennes
et ses
Mytbologie de Rennes-le-Chateau, there
is
nothing surprising about these errors. “In these remote villages of the seventeenth century education was not widespread and the person
knew how
to handle the chisel
was carving
.
.
.
was ignorant of
the letters
who
and words he
Cutting another stone and carving another epitaph
were out of the question. This work was not
free,
and we know that the
Hautpoul[s] of Rennes were not very rich.” Yet this does not negate the provable fact that Abbe Sauniere inventoried this tomb of Marie de
Negri d’Ables and then made sure the stone disappeared
why was
in
1906
— but
he getting mixed up in this?
Following the death of Marie de Negri d’Ables, Abbe Bigou contin-
ued to take an active already assumed to there
is
for the
came
a
nephew With
to the
this
the arrival of the Revolution, however,
wide array of troubles, including those triggered by the
Civil Constitution of the Clergy.
Legislative
and
to discontinue fulfilling that func-
Bigou truly knew the contents of
how Abbe
strange family’s documents. there
the role of proxy for the Hautpouls,
some extent
was no reason
tion. This, then,
Hautpoul family matters. His uncle had
interest in
On November 29,
Assembly declared that
new government would
all priests
1791, a decree of the
who had
not given an oath
be suspected of revolt, would have their
pensions taken away, and would be exiled or punished with two years of detention. Before this edict, on February 20, 1791, the oath but coupled
it
Abbe Bigou swore
with such conditions that
Considered henceforth a refractory
priest,
it
was
refused.
he soon saw himself on the
The
96
Site
of the Mystery
verge of being deported per the law of August 26, 1792. During the
first
days of September that same year, however, he slipped clandestinely over the Spanish frontier, as did the majority of the refractory clergy of that region.
At
this
He
time Antoine Bigou was seventy-three years old.
from
his diocese in Sabadell (in
found lodging with several other
priests
the province of Barcelona) or
immediate surrounding area. This was
its
where death found him on March 21, 1794.
Abbe Antoine Bigou, who ject of the
documents
in the
ing place close to a century later
Abbe Bigou made objects
of the sub-
keeping of the Hautpoul family, died
taking his secrets to the grave.
exile,
knew much
in all likelihood
Is this
show
in
truly so certain? Events tak-
that before leaving the country
sure to conceal in the Rennes church valuable cultural
and currency belonging
into exile. This stash
is
to
him
incontestably
that he could not take with
him
what Abbe Sauniere discovered
during the restoration of his church. But this
still
leaves the mystery of
the possible manuscripts that were allegedly found in a hollow pillar
holding up the
The
altar.
made
inventories
in
1793 show that
none of what was hidden had been found. This was result
and the subsequent
sale of objects of
nothing. We should note that the same
and
if
was
our time the “treasuries” of
in
extremely beautiful precious objects,
which was
ing them,
all
it is
to the greater
a disappointing
worship brought true for
many
in
its
face.
torpor.
The
At
this
Industrial
churches can boast of
owing
to this practice of hid-
good of our
cultural patrimony.
Age had begun, and
were outside the new centers of
The plateaus of the Corbieres,
grown with
fell
back
time wealth was no longer measured by land surthe Razes escaped that furious
blaze of activity that characterized the nineteenth century. that
almost
most parishes then,
After the Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars, the Razes into
in fact
vegetation, the
activity
the valleys that
towns
in
The lands
were quickly forgotten.
had quickly became over-
which the houses slowly crumbled
because the owners could not afford to pay for the necessary repairs: All of this
remained slumbering peacefully
Political
lenged.
7. Pierre
New
in the mist of the past.
regimes succeeded one another as each found ideas
itself chal-
were spreading, but because the multiple channels of
Jarnac, Histoire du tresor de Rennes-le-Chateau, 114-15.
The History of the Earldom of Razes
97
communication automatically distorted them, no profound changes occurred.
The Razes merely became one of those regions
ever mentions and
which serve
to shelter a kind of
human
that
being
no one
who
is
on the verge of vanishing. Hence the dilapidation and great dissolution within a society that no longer knows what will become of it. The old families tried to survive
the species,
knowing
that everything
—poorly, more often than not— well that they
full
would have
much longer and commoners who had been
would not
to be sold to the
mutation of
this
last
enriched by the sale of national properties.
There was one exception, however: the Hautpoul family, heirs to the d’Aniort over
whom
hovered the shadow of Trencavel.
It
should
be remembered that Gabrielle* d’Hautpoul de Blanchefort married the
marquis Paul-Fran^ois-Vincent de Fleury, a figure
home
at
Enlightenment and a member of so-called philosophical
whom,
Several children were born to this couple, one of
in
the
societies.
Paul-Urbain de
Fleury (born in 1778), had the good fortune not only to survive this hunt of former aristocrats but also to earn a considerable fortune under strange circumstances. This the properties his
and
He
ties.
his wife’s families
then
who was August
—the Rennes
7,
wed
is
It is
in a
is
home
fifty-eight
who
in this
when
new
Merlin the magician
buy back
an immigrant
society.
He
in the
died on
cemetery
has two tombs, one of which bears the
while doing good,” an obvious symbol of
the dates carved
Two tombs
upon them
definitely a disconcerting land.
does elsewhere. Until
to
as national proper-
and was interred
Rosicrucian organization.
excessive, especially
it
he
“He has departed
membership
means
—that had belonged to
and which had been sold
1836, at the age of
The Razes as
castle, in particular
nonetheless perfectly at
inscription
the
a representative of the fallen nobility,
of Rennes-les-Bains.
his
was how he found
this time,
who had
the
it
was
for
one
man
are incorrect.
Nothing happens here
figures like
King Arthur and
honor of multiple tombs. Would
Paul-Urbain de Fleury therefore be part of the lineage of one of these mythological characters and, more significantly,
tempted to think
so.
who have long been a part of Western Europe the human collective unconscious? We may be
But
we should
not overlook that in
all
these lost
regions, as one generation takes the place of another, traditions remain as
if
they constitute the essential structure of
reality.
While we can
The
98
Site
of the Mystery
indulge ourselves with a detailed nomenclature of anomalies, oddities,
and anachronisms that can there
is
easily be seen in such regions the
a great risk that the task will take a long time.
there been such interest in the Razes
Chateau and Rennes-les-Bains? There tinguishes the history of the Razes Really,
is
him
then, has
in Rennes-le-
from other regions of to say about
priest of Rennes-le-Chateau,
that the scandal erupted.
over,
nothing that substantially
Yet in 1885 an ecclesiastic native to the region,
was named
Why,
and particularly
no one should have anything more
Sauniere,
world
and
dis-
this kind.
it.
Abbe Beranger it
was through
Part 2
HE
WHO
BRINGS
SCANDAL
—
4
The Abbe Sauniere Legend
It
was
summer
the
Corbieres
that
of 1885.
down
looks
The heat was over
Aude
the
Republican government was expediting
intense in the part of the
its
Valley.
In
Paris
daily business in an
the
atmo-
sphere of torpor and expectation. The ministers had only a single idea in
mind: to get back to their
districts,
not only to take a vacation but
also to properly prepare the voters to reelect
them by
a comfortable
majority in the coming elections scheduled for October. Tife
was larly
was good
for the servants of the Republic. Their sole difficulty
getting reelected.
because of the
Here the future was not always
Roman
certain, particu-
Catholic Church. Thanks to the Concordat,
not only did the clergy receive seventy-five gold francs a month, but they were also permitted to criticize as they pleased the policies of those
who were
governing. This
feeds you.”
great one,
None
of this
their churches at least
and
it
if
the
first
hand
that
Napoleon, the
ill-advised idea of concluding such a pact
was necessary
their presbyteries,
on the surface,
drawn up
truly a case of “biting the
would have occurred
had not had the
with the pope. Thus
was
for there
to support the ecclesiastics, repair
and do them
was no
a
thousand favors
lack of very subtle plans being
to contrive the separation of
Church and
State.
There was
even thought of seizing the property of the clergy, something achieved
by a good number of sovereign authorities elsewhere, more or cessfully. All this
is
less suc-
simply to say that during the year 1885 anticlerical
campaigns were multiplying among the Republicans and that these campaigns often found
a favorable
echo
100
in the
Aude, which as every-
The Abbe Sauniere Legend
one knew was a
leftist
101
department, a red department, ever ready to
fol-
a revolt or a heresy. Wasn’t this the land of the Cathars,
low the lead of after all?
At
Monsignor
man
creet
time the Episcopal seat of Carcassonne was held by
this
Felix Billard,
in love
with
whom
justice.
witnesses described as a good, dis-
all
He had
recently
Rennes-le-Chateau, the rotting parish that
appearing despite the poverty of sun,
and which brought
in
its
still
named
new
a
managed
priest to
to avoid dis-
inhabitants and the harshness of the
nothing for the bishopric. The inhabitants of
Rennes did not have a reputation for being fervent Christians; even rumored that some of them indulged
something that was not so rare overall
it
was
in the practice of sorcery,
in the
Carcassonne diocese. But
because the town had to have a spiritual leader, Monsignor Billard had
who was thirty-three years old and still the region who understood the local men-
recently assigned a priest there full
of illusions, a native of
tality
and who
for several
minor parish of no
in a
and
native of Montazels family. His
interest.
a
It
suffering
from melancholy
This priest was Beranger Sauniere, a
member
of an honorable and fairly well-off
younger brother was also a
authorities.
religious
months had been
would be
all
priest,
but of the kind to alarm
to the greater
good
if
Abbe
Sauniere found himself back in his natal mountains, where he would be
from the bad influences he might be subjected
sheltered
brother whose daily
life, it
to through his
was guessed, did not conform
to
what was
expected of an ecclesiastic.
Thus,
full
of joy and trusting in his future,
arrived in Rennes-le-Chateau
was
a familiar sight, for
the region, with ate
cool
brown
a hot
resembled
day
all
in
June 1885. The village
the other villages he
knew
in
houses holding up each other in an attempt to cre-
havens from the torrid weather. The colors of their
Romanesque a
its
it
on
Abbe Beranger Sauniere
tile
that
roofs, determined by age, ranged
from a bright red to
combined with the color of the moss withering on the
tiles.
“This village,” writes Louis Fedie, a witness of this time, “offers
large
empty spaces
face.
Neither time nor the efforts of
shape of
this
that take
up almost two thirds of the plateau’s
man
have changed
rocky mass that, cut and carved
in the
cone, dominates the plain in every direction.”
in
sur-
any way the
shape of a truncated
He Who
102
Brings Scandal
Abbe Sauniere would have
nest he
on
sense of pride
felt a
He would
dominating position.
a
universe and master of the elements. Wasn’t this
made
do
to
in the service of
From
his arrival.
God and humanity?
this eagle’s
be observer of the
what
was
he, a priest,
Certainly, he
had some
weaknesses: some health complaints and a weak heart of which he was aware. But he was young, and this ailment did not prevent him from looking
—even
staring
it
was not only
proof of
at
He was
passed close by. well
—
women,
sensitive to feminine
was
a desolate site:
no panes of collapsing
—
the building self if his
window
set in.
may
His
is
its
needs. For
was
to his church.
to cave in.
There were
was on
the verge of
vault
—and the dilapidation of the
rest of
Beranger Sauniere asked him-
interior.
not have sent him here for penitence and not as a
promotion. Such case occurred frequently
which
first visit
The
frames.
he thought so
matched that of the
bishop
quite
The roof was threatening
glass in the at least
charm and knew
without eating and drinking.
But disenchantment rapidly It
who
The body has
for aesthetic reasons.
this, try to live
younger ones
especially the
just as deft at giving
in the
out punishments as
Holy Roman Church, it is
rewards. But what
grave sin could he have committed? His faith was sure, as he had
on many occasions. He was scrupulously devoted
to his
shown
work. Could
he have been paying for the sins of his brother? Whether this was true or not, he asked himself this question. After leaving the church he went
on
meant
to the presbytery
to serve as his
too appeared on the verge of collapse, suggesting that the com-
ment,
it
mune
of Rennes-le-Chateau, which
was obliged
upkeep, was instead devoted to the devil ics
who
its
sorry fate, and
rying
it
truly
to
—
to ensure the church’s
in this instance, the anticler-
wished to see the Republic abandon the Holy Church to
who would
even take potshots at the ambulance car-
its fate.
In reaction to the
mune, Beranger a
home. Another disappoint-
felt
a
dominant
leftist political
reawakening of
his
tendencies of this
monarchist impulses.
com-
He was
Republican only to the extent necessary for those resolved to accept
a fait accompli. all else,
But
tradition
in his family, tradition
was
the Church.
Who
was everything
— and above
could defend the Church
the monarchy, the sole regime that could
still
if
not
safeguard the alliance
between priesthood and empire and harmonize the relationship
The Abbe Sauniere Legend
103
between the sacred and the profane? Abbe Sauniere told himself that he
would change what he found before him. He was
a fighter. Despite his
weaknesses he was physically resourceful and basically
God and
wished for change and made the commitment before to contribute to cese.
He
making
was not
his family
would show
all
.
no one had ever been held back by
was
In this instance the devil
to conjure
— but
away
the
He
devil*.
.
a
little
man-made
time and a
and
well
a defeat
his
bishop
knew
that in
and no one had
or devil-made.
even imagined that
it
knew
would be
the
the faithful at the door of the
in a terrible position of inferiority,
of holy water, which everyone
He
.
himself
present, but Beranger Sauniere
who would welcome
devil himself
church
With
He
in the entire dio-
these peasants
the soul of a slave. Patience
ever been bested by adversity, whether
how
most beautiful
perfectly capable of achieving this.
felt
great deal of energy, he that his
his parish the
intelligent.
knows
holding up a stoup
full
the devil cannot touch without
Was the devil looking for him? Beranger Sauniere knew how to make him bow down. Aren’t there folktales everywhere, after all, that tell of the great saints of this world who have
experiencing great suffering.
1
forced the devil to erect buildings, bridges, and even cathedrals with-
out having to give anything in exchange because the devil can always be “conned” by those
attach himself to
this)
it
and make
essential to find the
The went
are pure of heart? So Beranger Sauniere’s
was made. He had been given an inhospitable
decision
became
who
first
task
was
in search of the
and
it
the
means
most beautiful rock imaginable.
mayor town
to register himself (his salary official
commune was
about the sorry
is
notably the case
that Saint Tugdal dral in
made
one night and
in
Treguier
(in
state of the
church
complaints only by say-
would look
later at
make
what could be
Cotes-du-Nord), where local legend maintains
a pact with the devil,
in return
his
depended on
not rich and did not have the means to
the necessary repairs, but that they
This
It
to reach this goal.
and presbytery. The mayor could respond to
1.
He would
to get the situation in order. Sauniere therefore
to belabor the
ing that the
rock.
who was
to build
him
a magnificent cathe-
could take possession of the souls of
those
all
who
died
between High Mass and Vespers the following Sunday. But Saint Tugdal immediately began singing the less
first
chant of Vespers as soon as High Mass was over.
variations on this theme.
1
here are count-
104
He Who
done.
He
Brings Scandal
advised the
new
priest to take
of the parish’s inhabitants. In this
with a
woman
way
up temporary lodging with one
Sauniere found
of the village and ran up
room and board
some debts
at the grocer’s
2 because he had not yet received his wages and his savings were meager.
The summer passed sities
—that
is,
quietly. Sauniere tried to deal
he cleaned out
all
the debris that
with basic neces-
had accumulated
in the
church and asked the devoted parishioners to do the routine house-
work.
One
He
fine
managed
therefore
day he received a
visit
priest of Rennes-les-Bains.
an honorable place of worship.
to present
from
his closest colleague,
Abbe Boudet,
Boudet approached Sauniere with an
air of
condescension; he was sure of himself and slightly self-infatuated, as
though he was holding confidential information. He convinced Sauniere that some of this information was intended for the priest of
Rennes-le-Chateau, but that he, Boudet, would dole
it
out piecemeal on
the condition that Sauniere prove cooperative.
What
kind of cooperation did he mean?
It is
a real mystery.
old tomcat Boudet refrained from confirming anything; he to
make
The
sly
was content
suggestions and give advice to his colleague. Sauniere,
who was
younger than Boudet, was impressed. Boudet’s stand-out reputation preceded him:
He was
a scholar
who had
published journal articles and
even books and who, moreover, was connected to very influential people
who were
quite capable of providing the funds to undertake the
restoration of the
Church of Saint Mary Magdalene
How
Chateau. Sauniere began to ruminate.
was
it
from Rennes-les-Bains could have such influence?
conform to what to grasp
him.
his elder told
what he was being
It
that a It
in
Rennes-le-
modest
priest
was important
was even more important
told in such sibylline terms. In short,
to
to try
what
we have here is Abbe Sauniere ’s first temptation. It would not be the last. Abbe Boudet had invited his young colleague to come visit him in At
the parish of Rennes-les-Bains.
horseback, or by cart.
It
was
this
a long
time people traveled by foot, by
way between Rennes-le-Chateau
and Rennes-les-Bains, and unlike Abbe Boudet, not everyone had the
good fortune
2.
I
am
There
is
to
own
recounting the
a cart. Nevertheless,
Abbe Sauniere legend
no need to say that the
reality
here as
Abbe Sauniere managed
it
was completely
to
has been contrived since 1956. different.
The Abbe Sauniere Legend
make
his
way down
in Rennes-le-Bains.
complete change from the wretchedness of furnished with paintings and a bookcase
was
would normally be served only on
Abbe Boudet’s
peer,
any more attention.
How
such a
lected so
life
attention? Sauniere
It
there
was
a
was handsomely
Abbe Boudet
Though
cook
a
not have been very pretty and
age. Beranger Sauniere didn’t
who
pay her
at that time minis-
447 inhabitants (which does not mean 447
many books and
the display that Boudet,
may
of creature comforts?
well-to-do family. But this
own.
of books, for
full
could Abbe Boudet,
tered a population of only faithful), live
his
special occasions.
servant
had long ago reached canonical
The presbytery
and Sauniere was given a meal that
a distinguished intellectual,
without
from the neigh-
into the valley, thanks to a peasant
borhood. Here he was
105
How
could he have col-
beautiful objects? Perhaps he
was not
somewhat
the case. So cynically,
came from
a
what can we make of
brought to
wondered what kind of place
this
his colleague’s
was. After
all,
both Abbe Boudet and he were only modest servants of poor parishes.
The
priest of
Rennes-le-Chateau wondered what was the source of the
affluence of his colleague in the valley.
Boudet
clearly refrained
excite his curiosity,
he too, after
He
Sauniere’s weaknesses
try priest.
was
all
just as
much
magnificence.
who was welcomed warmly enough
who
cer-
amount of condescension. Now, one
pride.
He knew
leisurely
of
that one day or another he
and that he ought
A storm of emotions was raging in the mind
Boudet,
he could to
his envy. Sauniere told himself that
to return Boudet’s invitation
a hundredfold.
him, but he did
could treat his visitors with
but also with a certain
would have
telling
and consequently
the poor relation,
felt like
tainly,
all,
from
to return
of this coun-
extended his display of wealth
Boudet was the image or incarnation of the tempter
it
whom
.
.
.
Balzac
described in Le Pere Goriot, wearing the features of Vautrin. Sauniere
could have read the book while course, for Balzac
version of souls.
spheres that
was
It
still
in the seminary,
but secretly of
blacklisted as a craftsman specializing in the per-
was obviously forgotten
Honore de
Balzac,
in the higher ecclesiastical
worthy student of the Oratorians of the
College of Tours, had described in his Louis Lambert the states of the soul of a to
young man who was prey
mention
spiritism. Finally,
to the
demons
of spirituality, not
Beranger Sauniere cast aside his literary
He Who
106
Brings Scandal
recollections; they incited a disturbance that
He
similar to the ado-
by the description of the Jewish beauty
lescent agitation once inspired
Esther Gobseck.
was too
what Boudet was
listened to
him, which
telling
blended with these temptations very welcome considerations about the local oddities, strange rocks,
and caves that held
His
secrets or treasures.
host ended by saying that certain people were firmly counting on
Sauniere to perform a mission that could be entrusted to him. Sauniere
was astonished.
How could a poor country priest such as himself be able Boudet
to serve the designs of the powerful people of this world?
sured him that in often the
It is
the
everyone has a role to play and no one
life
most humble who are promised the greatest
words of the Gospel, “the
first will
Beranger Sauniere no longer
useless.
destinies. In
be last” and vice versa.
knew where he
stood.
The servant bus-
around him and poured after-dinner drinks. His head was spinning.
tled
He wished the
is
reas-
he was back up on the plateau, where he was sheltered from
somewhat shady
he really in his
delights
Boudet was proposing. After
know about Boudet?
It
was
said that he
seal himself
study for days, where he would consult old grimoires.
said that he
surely not the
Good
proachable priest and a person could
without having to
fortify
closest bistro. But
why
priest,
was asked
also
hand, looking for
God
Lord. True, he was an
irre-
in
listen to his
It
sermons attentively
him- or herself beforehand with a drink
at the
the insistence to Beranger Sauniere that he, the
to complete a mysterious mission? Sauniere even-
tually returned to Rennes-le-Chateau in the cart of the peasant,
had waited patiently for him. Back sleep of the just,
The summer
it
seems. But the devil had his eye on him.
died. Elections
took place
in
October 18, Abbe Beranger Sauniere addressed
two
tiers, as
his
polls
rather disconcerting.
He
praised the fact that the
satisfactory results but indicated that victory
occasion he invited the parish
ones attending Mass
—to exert
—that
is
said
their
power over
was
had provided
was not complete.
—who were
on
congregation in the
first tier
women all
usual,
opened on
Magdalene Church of Rennes-le-Chateau, and what he
the right choice”
who
in his village that night he slept the
October 4 and October 18, 1885. But before the
Saint
up
was
wandered the countryside, maps
knows what but
new
would
what did
all,
On
this
obviously the only their
men
to
“make
to say, to convince the ill-informed electorate
The Abbe Sauniere Legend
During
to vote for the defenders of religion.
his address he
107
made com-
ments that have been scrupulously reported: “The Republicans, they are the devil to be defeated; they are to be brought to their knees beneath the weight of religion
and the baptized. The
ous and with us!”
It
was
church was already
visible,
famous
inscription:
“With
as
if
the ornamentation of the
Was
you
will be victorious.”
victori-
Magdalene
So what was
there something in the excellent wine
Abbe Boudet had given him? This
that
is
complete with the devil Asmodeus and the
this sign
eating the priest Sauniere?
sign of the cross
is
just
one more mystery
in the
Razes, where customary logic does not always seem to apply. In
with
this
hand
inopportune sermon, Beranger Sauniere was openly biting the
was granted
that fed him, for his mo*nthly salary
French
fact,
state,
which was
to
him by
the
as Republican as could be.
This sermon, in fact a political speech that he had no right to make,
was an
assault
on the detachment he was expected
servant. His aggressiveness against the Republicans,
to observe as a civil
who were
seriously
contemplating action against the clergy in 1885, was equaled only by his lack of awareness.
He was
not reactionary right.
It
Aude
in particular,
preaching the vote for the conservative
so happens that the Occitan Midi at that time,
was veering
what we might today
if
to
what was then
called the red
and
The Radicals triumphed almost
call pale pink.
everywhere, and Sauniere, as a priest of a parish supported by state funds,
was denounced
to the
asserting electoral pressure.
against Sauniere.
He was
Aude
It is
prefect for inciting disorder
certain that the law
and the
rules
and were
caught in the wrong. The Aude prefect could
only conclude that he was guilty and sentence him to a salary suspension,
which was put through immediately by the Ministry of
Poor Beranger Sauniere! Later he would be suspens a bishop, but for the
This
situation
Monsignor the
moment was
Billard clearly
his salary
serious,
for
understood
annoyance named Abbe Sauniere
small seminary in Narbonne.
was suspended by the this
of
money
at that time.
was protected by Monsignor
priest
and
in
by
his
own
his prefect.
had no resources.
an attempt to remedy
to the position of professor at the
Most important, however, was
Sauniere of two hundred francs out of his
sum
divinis
Cults.
own
his loan to
pocket, a considerable
Should we believe that Beranger Sauniere Felix Billard?
He Who
108
Brings Scandal
Here the story reaches new heights, and the versions, their details
and conclusions, are
all in
agreement on one point: Abbe
Sauniere was manipulated by Monsignor Billard,
bishop of Carcassonne, but also an eminent sect.
The purpose of
ments hidden reestablishing
was
this sect
who was
member
on the throne of France
not only
of a mysterious
to rediscover a treasure
Rennes-le-Chateau
in
differing in
and docu-
order to use them toward
in
a legitimate representative of the
meaning the Merovingians, who were themselves
original dynasty, to
an even more prestigious dynasty, no
by
way
of Jesus and
Mary Magdalene.
who had
Sauniere, a native of the region,
Monsignor
delicate mission.
3
less
than the House of David
was
It
heir
the poor abbe Beranger
been chosen for
this
him
Billard could not leave
extremely
in need, for
Sauniere had found himself in this situation as a result of obeying his
ambiguous words of Abbe Boudet,
orders, albeit those conveyed by the
who was
himself an influential
member
of this
As we know, quarrels between various
same
sect.
authorities
do not
last long.
After a period in which each side displayed intimidation tactics, a
promise was
1886 the Aude
finally reached. In July
the punishment
prefect, feeling that
had been long enough (and no doubt having had enough
of the pressures put
on him
to
end
it),
withdrew the suspension and
restored Beranger Sauniere’s administrative duties, along with his stipend.
The
priest
“In triumph”
women
could is
now
stretching things quite a
in the parish
less so.
a person
who were accustomed
Here again within
known
needed to be
of
all
enemy
bit,
however. The few
to his preaching
were
voted Republican, were
was
a foe of circle dances,
of democracy and one
who
they were to avoid future problems with the
prefecture as well as the bishopric.
were profoundly
whom
their walls
to be an ardent
set straight if
monthly
return in triumph to Rennes-le-Chateau.
delighted, but their husbands,
much
com-
anticlerical,
The people of Rennes-le-Chateau
which they had been proving
since the
time of the Cathars. They would keep the priest under surveillance while giving him to understand that they would accommodate him on points that icy during
3.
Again
this
would not offend anyone. This would be
Abbe
is
the municipal pol-
Sauniere’s ministry.
the story,
and not
historic fact, that
I
am
citing here.
The Abbe Sauniere Legend
He had
But Sauniere did not return empty-handed from Narbonne. the considerable
amount
of three thousand gold francs at his disposal, an
was generously given
that
widow
the
sum
of the count of
French throne
who
109
him by
to
Chambord,
a legitimate pretender to the
lived in exile in Austria.
thought to the words of Abbe Boudet,
it
Chambord,
the countess of
Sauniere ever gave
If
seemed he had proof
now
that
highly placed individuals expected something of him. Curiously enough,
according to the documents at our disposal, the total cost for the most
Magdalene Church proved
urgently needed repairs at the Saint
2,797 francs. The coincidence
Abbe Boudet and with
too perfect to be fortuitous. By
is
the blessing of
Monsignor
Billard,
to be
way
of
Abbe Sauniere
seemed to have been given a mission to accomplish something he may not have grasped
was
entirely, yet realized
know how
aged Armagnac: “There
believe at first hearing, but
was
a fortune in
is
when
we might
vow
to
begin to be interested.
exactly
is
make Rennes-le-Chateau
what Sauniere
the
in fact
drawn up
in
Of course,
if
you
work did,
other option
for the parish
remembering
this restoration.
his
diocese.
The laws
way that when it was seen that neither commune could act, it was up to the parish
such a
the church council nor the priest to act.
What
most beautiful parish of the
Beranger Sauniere had his hands free for
were
you
a packet of three thousand francs falls
there than to order the urgent restoration
church of Rennes? This
for
it
the spell of
These are the kinds of words we might not
to catch it.”
into our lap, then
Though he could
may have been under
not recall certain words of Boudet, he his colleague’s
essential.
the
commune
of Rennes
was too poor
to under-
take even the smallest kind of construction work, and the church council
had only
priest.
a small
sum
at its disposal,
bequeathed to
Sauniere therefore assumed almost
the gift that the countess of
concerns were the missing dilapidated),
and the
altar
Chambord
window
all
it
by a former
the repair costs, thanks to
sent his way. His immediate
panes, the cathedra (which
was
(which was threatening to collapse). To
address these concerns he turned to craftsmen and settled on prices and job schedules with them. It
was
at this time that
he received a
presented herself to him on behalf of
visit
from
a
young
Abbe Boudet. She
the priest of Rennes-les-Bains had asked her to
told
come look
girl
who
him
that
after his
He Who
110
Brings Scandal
needs so that he could This
tions.
fulfill his
ministry under the best possible condi-
had been working
girl
as a hat
maker and her name was
Marie Denarnaud. 4 Sauniere, who had moved into the presbytery
after
“plugging up the holes,” accepted Marie Denarnaud as his servant, but the presence of this young, fairly attractive
amount
woman
caused him a certain
of understandable torment. Thus, several days
Denarnaud went from being
a
modest servant
later,
Marie
to being the mistress of
the robust and spirited priest of Rennes-le-Chateau. She remained in this role for the rest of her life,
to
whom she
devoted
mitted against
all
proving an exemplary
her time
—despite the
acts of infidelity he
For as was often repeated
her.
in the region,
sin.
5
In addition, the
brother, the Jesuit rejected by his brotherhood, a notorious relationship,
him.
Of
what
course,
com-
Beranger
Sauniere was “hot-blooded,” and Marie Denarnaud was not the
cause him to veer onto the path of
man
fidelity to the
first
example of
who would soon
to
his
live in
provided some kind of encouragement for
a beautiful love story
it
makes,
this passionate
adventure between a modest parish priest and his young servant.
Obviously she was not of canonical age, meaning the age required by
who cared about this in common saying goes, “A priest is
ecclesiastical rules. 6
After
all,
as the
But
Rennes-le-Chateau? a
man
just like
any
other man!”
So Abbe Sauniere had
exuded it,
a
set
somewhat sulfurous
though,
why
was
later but
Beranger. After
an entirely invented episode. This possible
has not been proved
creators. But that’s just
The members of
not of chastity.
took the 6.
vow
It
how
household
uncommon Abbe Boudet, who
understanding that had
all,
liaison
why
—which would have begun
is
quite regrettable for our story’s
the lay clergy, including parish priests, took a
was
the
couldn’t Marie
it is.
members
of the regular clergy, therefore,
vow
of celibacy but
monks and nuns, who
of chastity.
[Meaning the age required to be mistress to
woman.
this
— between Sauniere and Marie Denarnaud owes absolutely
nothing to any introduction by Abbe Boudet, which
5.
if
no one complained about
his delight at the fine
grown between Marie and
is
odor. Because
increasingly in contact with
seems to have expressed
This
a household, even
not continue and even openly display this
liaison? Sauniere
4.
up
— Translator]
a priest, usually the age of a
postmenopausal
The Abbe Sauniere Legend
Denarnaud be
a
pawn
— and
one of great importance
—
111
game
in the
played in the parish of Rennes-le-Chateau? In the world of make*
believe, female spies
inspire a
and
secret agents
somewhat murky
become Abbe
respect. In fact,
Sauniere’s mistress,
She was a dedicated, poor
still
it
was
enjoy great success and
Marie Denarnaud did
if
at the orders of a higher-up.
but she was ultimately well rewarded,
girl,
for Sauniere subsequently left all he
owned
Here
to his servant/
more
is
food for thought for those more sensitive souls. This unexpected love affair did not prevent Beranger Sauniere from
pursuing his work.
owner of
He came
an agreement with the municipality, the
the sanctuary, don’t forget,
struction.
The members of
reconstruction of the est
to
and voted
and
set
up the
relationship between the
modest subsidy
mayor and
who
the mayor. This nuance
abandoned
in return
large his desire to see France
divine right.
made
The sermons
and
The
the priest, strained at the onset, to
make
things pleas-
efforts not to be disagreeable to
was huge, though,
his reactionary ideas
in the public inter-
at the priest’s disposal.
became much more amicable. The mayor strove ant for the priest,
phase of con-
the municipal council realized that this
Mary Magdalene Church was
to provide a
first
still
for Sauniere
had
in
no way
displayed before the world at
become once more
a
monarchy
of the priest were very clear:
to the old medieval distinction of three classes,
They
ruling by
all
referred
which oddly enough
corresponded to the famous Indo-European tripartition revealed by the
works of Georges Dumezill. This
tripartition
was common
to all the
peoples of Western Europe, and medieval Christianity incorporated
it
admirably.
To
7.
This
get his projects off the ground, Beranger Sauniere did not hesitate
is
absolutely true. At his death Sauniere
Denarnaud’s name. Under these circumstances, leaves
all his
owned
why
nothing. Everything
was
in
imagine a scene in which Sauniere
earthly possessions to his beloved servant?
The
reality
is
much more
prosaic.
Following the seizure of church property and the separation of Church and State, not
in the interest
of any
member
of the clergy to
own
personal property.
to figureheads or organized associations, such as those established by the
hold their property
—a practice that
is still
relevant today.
to seize the property of the clergy today, there
bers of the clergy
own
Marie
If
Many
it
was
resorted
law of 1901, to
by chance the State decided
would be nothing
to seize; officially
mem-
nothing (outside of salaries and personal family possessions).
— He Who
112
Brings Scandal
good word
to carry the
to certain individuals
had made. For example, he persuaded Bot
who
8 ,
lived in
a cafe
whose acquaintance he
owner by
name
the
Luc-sur-Aude and had a good deal of
of Elie
free time, to
attend to the most critical construction on Saturday afternoons and
Sundays.
He
boy named
also secured the help of a fourteen-year-old
Pibouleau, a native of Bezu. With his unqualified but devoted manual
Abbe
labor,
Why the
Sauniere began to turn the interior of the church upside down.
was
on the
interior of the
church when
most urgent work concerned the roof and windows? The answer
very simple:
an
there this ardent focus
Abbe Boudet had
interest in
Sauniere
let
know
that those
It
would be
the result of whatever he dis-
covered here that would enable him to undertake other, profitable searches,
him
les-Bains
which some
in high places
were
and not the
priest of Rennes-le-Chateau.
never undertook a step without the advice of his colleague
who
much more
essentially expect-
make. Definitely the master builder was the
to
took
Rennes-le-Chateau wished the priest to essentially con-
cern himself with the inside.
ing
who
is
priest of
Rennes-
Beranger Sauniere
—or the order, who knows
lived in the valley below. This
was no doubt
because Boudet had promised him great wealth that would allow him to transform his parish
whispers
of Marie
— unless we should consider the more discreet
Denarnaud.
momentous, and while
“Pillow talk”
sometimes quite
is
the locals generally accepted that the priest
sleeping with his servant, people were beginning to take
umbrage
was
at the
exceptional importance young Marie was assuming. Every time anyone
went
to visit the priest, he
had
to first
go through
Mane
Denarnaud;
she seemed to be acting as the boss not only of the presbytery but even of the church. Tongues were wagging. People were wondering these two, along with Elie Bot
and they imagined
to
whomever would
8.
—which
kinds of odd scenarios.
lend an ear that priests of
of practicing magic white!
all
and the young Pibouleau, were
—white
or
black,
Kabbalah and
in this matter.
but
really
up
Some would remind
kinds had the reputation black
more
often
than
increased the parishioners’ respect for their pastor on
In certain versions of the story, Elie Bot
the
all
what
as a
man
is
portrayed as a Jew holding the secrets of
linked to a mysterious priory that
was
pulling
all
the strings
The Abbe Sauniere Legend the one hand, but also increased their fears. Because
known
for sure,
was
it
on
better to be
his
good
113
could never be
it
side rather than suffer *
curses of inexplicable origin. true that the priest often remained alone in his church.
was
It
People doubted that he was there only to pray.
was sounding
the walls
and
and other coatings to
ter
What Saint
and find out what might
try
He was hoping
this place
evidence Sauniere
He
The
from Maison
and
the old one decisive
Monna
moment was lift
at
in
altar.
way
it
that the
he succeeded
around which were
rolled
hand.
pillar,
discovery, however,
an expert
One
day,
altar stone,
when
new
terra-
he was working
he noted that the
was hollow and
filled
with
wooden
left
the time of the French Revolution, before he
on the places that
ferns.
spools in front
could decipher them. This
Sauniere think:
Abbe Bigou, had
must have been other hiding
pillar,
could not read. Only a paleographic
in ancient script
made Abbe
cessor from long ago,
a
documents proved incomprehensible; they
in script that they
archivist or at least
to begin the
some parchments. He unrolled them
witnesses, but the
were written
He knew
something
went
that his prede-
in this
church at
into exile. Surely there
He began pursuing his work, conappeared hollow when he tapped them. He places.
even enlisted boys of the village to help him in his task.
One Sunday those
after
who were
him on
Mass Abbe Sauniere asked
nice treat as a reward.
the inside.
On
his choir boys, at least
nine and ten years old, to perform a small job for
the following
it
was now necessary
Sauniere fished inside and pulled out two or three
centrating
if
Thus he ordered
Toulouse, and
up the
famous pseudo-Visigothic
two
knew
clear out a space for the new.
with his two assistants to
of his
beneath them.
some help from
led him, with
told himself that the best
renovation was to replace the old
move
that
layers of plas-
— a very human hope—thereby to leave
where destiny had
the Episcopal authority.
cotta altar
lie
that he
he would be able to transform the sanctuary and adorn
it,
mark on
the
all
Magdalene Church was hiding something and
as he pleased.
to
was thought
and was sanding away
could he be looking for? By
in finding
his
floor,
It
Thursday
On
after catechism,
promising them a
that day Sauniere locked the church
the floor of the nave, not far
from
from the choir walk,
He Who
114
Brings Scandal
iron bars were arranged near a single large flagstone,
been freed from the floor around
its
tried to lever
began to pay over a
up. Finally everyone’s
it
The
off:
which allowed several
little,
Unfortunately
was dark,
it
ing the nave. Because
we
saying: “Listen,
and
selves,
was
flagstone
in four
it
The
entire circumference.
and the boys pushed the iron bars under the and
which had
sides of the flagstone
good
will
and
They
lifted slightly.
efforts
shifted
it
steps of a stairway to be seen.
was
despite the sunlight that
illuminat-
was now noon, Sauniere thanked
will stop
priest
Go
working.
the boys,
out and amuse your-
hours come and get your treat ...”
And
that
is
what happened. 9
But the boys had time to see that at the bottom of the oule, a large pot,
and that
inside
it
pit there
was an
were shining objects that looked
like
gold coins.
Of
course,
no one knows what the
priest did
more than
he
twelve and four.
It is
ration of the underground room. carried
it
ments.
He
He may
away. never
is
floor,
him what long
all
over the centuries, and
it
unearthed the pot and
it.
As
for the flagstone that
had
known today as the Flagstone of the adjoining museum of the Rennes church. the village that the priest
No
had found
one, however, asked
The inhabitants of Rennes-le-Chateau had
that hiding places
objects of value.
of
tongues wagged nonstop.
the treasure was.
known
thorough explo-
it is
displayed in the
and
a
have discovered other objects or even docu-
The rumor quickly ran through a treasure,
made
He would have
made any mention
been pried up from the
Knight and
likely that
between the hours of
was
had been fashioned throughout the area a sure bet that
Some were even found,
some of
these caches held
but their discoverers
made
sure
not to alert the crowds, preferring to keep their discoveries to themselves
and cash them
in discreetly
when
the opportunity presented
itself.
Thus, no one was about to reproach Sauniere for doing what any one of
them would have done
in his place. Several
days
later,
with the help
of Elie Bot and several others, Sauniere began to clean out the location
9.
Testimony collected by Pierre Jarnac and published by him
de Rennes-le-Chateau, 140-45.
in his Histoire
au
tresor
The Abbe Sauniere Legend
of the high
altar.
On
covered.
Here another oule
the pretext that
it
was time
workers and again remained alone Beranger Sauniere’s these discoveries, it
had taken
with shiny objects was
to eat, the priest sent
dis-
away
the
in the church.
was turned completely upside down by
life
which did not occur through happenstance. Certainly
a long time
through
and
trial
searching in the correct locations. clues
filled
115
but he was always
error,
He must
have been given some
— and who better to supply him with these than
Abbe
his colleague
Boudet, in the name, of course, of that mysterious brotherhood that hid
behind the priest of Rennes-les-Bains? Of intrigued Sauniere the
what
the treasures,
most were the manuscripts, though he was
pable of reading and understanding them.
informed him of
all
his various finds,
point that the story veers in
He
inca-
thus sought out Boudet,
and asked
his advice. It
is
at this
murkiest and most suspect direction.
its
Abbe Boudet began by congratulating his colleague on the excellent work he has achieved and revealing to him that the “treasure” he has unearthed
can keep
is
his
compensation,
his “salary” to
for himself so that his sanctuary
it
some
degree,
might benefit from
he warned Sauniere that he would have to be careful.
an agreement with the municipality so that
The town could not
dishonest actions.
part of the “treasure”
was
to
and that he
it
He
would not accuse him of
refuse the agreement because
go toward repairing a communal prop-
Boudet asked Sauniere to entrust them to
As
him
for the time being so that he could try to decipher them.
sent his colleague back to Rennes-le-Chateau, telling
soon be giving him other instructions Sauniere actually did inform the
10.
A number
took place
in
manuscripts.
him
that he
mayor
Why
was not
until
He
especially
1893 that Sauniere was
did he wait so long? There
fact,
would have been so long
The discovery
with the famous
in advising Sauniere to
Abbe Boudet
however, that Boudet had the rep-
utation of a scholar and prided himself on his archaeological knowledge,
asked him to examine them. In
from the
principle
in Paris
it
emphasized
not a shred of proof that
is
had knowledge of these parchments. Given the
sible that Sauniere
would
of his discoveries, though
of inconsistencies can be noted in the story at this point. it
then
10
and obtained an agreement of
1886 but
He
.
seems that he downplayed their importance. the manuscripts
But
should strike
erty.
for the manuscripts,
it.
this case
we may
it is
question
have them deciphered
not impos-
why Boudet
in Paris.
116
He Who
Brings Scandal
municipality allowing him to
Meanwhile, the
offer for them.
continued. In 1887 the
months
sell
new
later stained glass
the nave. Sauniere then
them should
there ever be any sort of
interior refurbishment of the
was
terra-cotta high altar
was
installed in the
installed
windows
had the walls reinforced.
church
and two
of the choir and
Finally,
he placed an
order with Giscard Statuary of Toulouse for a bas-relief, intended for the entrance door, embellished by a statue of
The work was
saint of the church.
Mary Magdalene, patron 1891 and that same year
finished in
Sauniere asked authorization from the municipal council to enclose at his
expense the public square adjacent to the church so that he might
was given with
erect a religious statue there. This authorization
conditions:
always be
The key
to the
door that allowed access to the square must square was
at the municipality’s disposal, for the
land open to
all;
certain
communal
not give the priest any
further, the municipality did
property rights to the places that had been renovated.
Beranger Sauniere wasted no time. The so-called Visigothic stone
was moved and Lourdes.
On the
stone
become
all his
was carved Mission 1891 and on
parishioners,
numerous
On June 21,
clergy
diction of
all
this
were
capital
1891,
of
in the pres-
area,
to preach the Mission
performed the inauguration and bene-
the church’s exterior renovations
orthodox than
its
from the surrounding
and Father Ferrafiat of Limoux, who had come for a week, Beranger Sauniere
Our Lady
a support for a statue of
words penitence, penitence.
inscribed the
ence of
cut to
What
could be more
pious display? The priest of Rennes-le-Chateau
began to be known throughout the region for
his incessant activity
on
behalf of his sanctuary, and no one had any complaints.
But what of the manuscripts? Sauniere had not forgotten them.
Boudet had confessed
his inability to interpret
them, so Sauniere had
taken them back. Because the mayor had asked him to entrust them to the town’s archives, the priest provided the story, for
it is
him with copies
quite obvious that Beranger Sauniere
—
at least this
is
would have been
incapable of making suitable reproductions of something he did not
know how
to read.
his bishop,
Monsignor
On
the advice of Billard,
Abbe Boudet, Sauniere sought out
and explained the problem to him. The
bishop considered these documents with great that three might have been prayers
interest. It
seemed
to
him
and that the fourth could have been
The Abbe Sauniere Legend
a fairly complicated genealogy, but
Monsignor
was not
Billard
117
a paleo-
graphic archivist and ultimately was also unsuccessful in decoding the
documents. Next, of course, Sauniere should have turned to a qualified expert.
The
simplest solution
would have been
to visit the Departmental Archives
of the Aude, where they surely could have found a specialist in this ancient
But no, Monsignor Billard refused to consider the archives of the
script.
men who were much
Aude. They were run by anticlerical. It
was impossible
to entrust
them with documents
be used in their propaganda to promote the
ments might have held
much
better to keep
He
Abbe
nection to
would be
Bieil
gave him a
by the name of Ane,
seller
documents
Ane had
a
laity.
After
Bieil,
that he go to Paris to find letter
all,
were dangerous to divulge.
them among themselves. Monsignor
Abbe Sauniere
suggested to individuals.
secrets that
too Republican and thus
It
would be
Billard therefore
more trustworthy
of recommendation to a strange book-
who produced
religious
books and had a con-
the director of the Saint-Sulpice Seminary.
and
give
him an opinion.
nephew who was studying
ized in ancient languages
Abbe
In addition, the bookseller
for the priesthood
and who
Billard,
who was
having secured the
special-
and everything having to do with cryptography.
This nephew, Emile Hoffet, could be of great assistance to
after
these docu-
able to take the county priest under his wing, examine his
at leisure,
Monsignor
that could
Abbe
Sauniere.
definitely extremely considerate of Sauniere
priest’s
commitment
to leave his parish for three
weeks, gave him fourteen hundred francs to pay not only his travel and
room
expenses, but also those incurred in his investigative work, includ-
ing any expenses incurred for transcription of the manuscripts.
This attitude on the part of the Carcassonne bishop clearly indicates his great interest in the
parchments unearthed by Abbe Sauniere
11 .
But the priest of Rennes-le-Chateau knew quite well what to expect of Billard, for
Abbe Boudet had
revealed to
him
the existence of the secret
brotherhood to which allegedly the monsignor belonged. Sauniere had been awaiting instructions; he
left
11.
There
now
here they were.
With no
further delay,
for Paris.
isn’t a
shred of evidence to confirm this discussion between Sauniere and his
bishop, nor are there any documents concerning the mission entrusted to the Rennes-le-
Chateau
priest.
He Who
118
Brings Scandal
hard to imagine Abbe Sauniere alighting from the train
It is
middle of Paris
in the
old-fashioned cassock, prey to some very under-
in his
standable misgivings. Paris was truly a foreign world to him, especially
time
in a
when
poor country
the people
priest
Abbe Sauniere found
home and promised also told
him
was
it
from the provinces a
rarely traveled. For this
world apart. Nevertheless, on
the bookseller Ane, to introduce
him
to
who
eral days. Indeed, Sauniere did see
gave him lodging at his
Abbe
that his nephew, Emile Hoffet,
Abbe
his arrival
Bieil the
would be
He
next day.
arriving in sev-
and showed him the
Bieil
parchments. The director of Saint-Sulpice waxed enthusiastic over these
warmly thanked
precious documents and
the priest for
son to show them to competent and discreet people.
coming
He
in per-
also told
that he could place complete trust in Emile Hoffet to successfully plete the delicate task of transcribing
him
com-
and interpreting them, and he
advised Sauniere to entrust him with the documents so that Emile could
them
give
a detailed
he
specialists that
Abbe Sulpice,
examination either by himself or with the help of
knew
do not
Bieil,
forget,
was
the director of the Seminary of Saint-
and thus the remote successor of Abbe Jean
Saint-Sulpice
and an
influential
Holy Sacrament
of the
well.
member
Ollier,
founder of
of the all-powerful Brotherhood
in the seventeenth century.
and Nicolas Pavilion, the bishop of Alet, shared
Because Abbe Ollier
a tight-knit relationship,
and because the decoration of the Church of Saint-Sulpice echoes that of Rennes-le-Chateau,
back
we
at the beginning
At
this time,
find ourselves once
and Abbe Sauniere was
and the bookseller Ane’s shop were
is
We
in the Razes.
spiritualistic activity.
The
famous
differ-
Parisians, Saint-Sulpice
at the center of
least that
are
in familiar territory.
toward the end of the nineteenth century, when
ent groups blossomed around various
and
more
an intense religious
can be said about these groups
that they were not very Catholic. In fact, they could be openly labeled
occult. Here, then,
sphere that he
may
we
find Beranger Sauniere plunged into an
not have foreseen but which would reveal
atmo-
itself to
be particularly favorable to him. In truth,
all
temptations of
many
guises,
of this
is
somewhat
Abbe Sauniere"
unsettling, for here
truly began.
some of which were
The
quite pleasant
devil
is
where “the
came cloaked
in
and hardly conformed
The Abbe Sauniere Legend with the medieval image of the enemy.
It
119
was Emile Hoffet, who pur-
sued his studies not at Saint-Sulpice in Paris but in Lorraine,
who
considered to have been the person responsible for introducing
is
Abbe
Sauniere to the occult milieu of that time. This “Father’ Emile Hoffet
(who was not
yet a priest)
a curious figure.
is
decoding old grimoires; taking an interest
life
He had
in
more or
ences; primarily devoting himself to intensive studies of
and “angelic”
ternal”
When
usually under the seal of secrecy.
had put together an extraordinary to the present
viduals,
who must
as there
is
day
open only
is
all
over the world;
odd messages,
None can deny
which
few rare and privileged
who
have provided proof of their
that there
is
Did he
really
he had entrance into
all
found himself perfectly
at
home
fully
inspiration?
and apparently
them.
in
taking into account the fact that
been constructed around
was Hoffet
it
together,
(to Sauniere’s benefit)
the role of the “introducing brother” in the worldly
occultist salons to
To
can be confirmed that
and Sauniere got along famously
the Sauniere matter, Hoffet
mer-
have a religious voca-
the circles of that decadent era
case, according to the story that has
who assumed
it
indi-
a Hoffet mystery just
Who was his
tion? All of these questions go unanswered, but
any
greatly coveted but
an Abbe Sauniere mystery, and the figure of Hoffet
secret society did he belong?
In
is
to a
deep interest for more than one reason:
what
“fra-
he died in 1946, Emile Hoffet
library,
be ecclesiastics and
intellectual honesty.
its
numerous
“infiltrating” the intellectual elite in order to spread
which
less secret sci-
and other associations whose true
societies
purposes can never be distinguished but which exist
and
spent his entire
to bring the country priest. “His
which he hastened
conversation was always interesting
.
and
.
.
Passionate and impassioned dis-
cussion went on long after the after-dinner drink and coffee were served,
with an unsettling note that disturbed the strait-laced atmosphere of the right-thinking gatherings.”
12
Thanks
introduced to the very closed
Debussy and other Jules Bois
shed.
He was
is
to Hoffet, Beranger Sauniere
circle of Jules Bois,
was
where he met Claude
celebrities of the time.
another person on
friends with
all
whom much
the symbolist poets
12. Jean Robin, Rennes-le-Chateau, la colline envoutee (Paris:
light
remains to be
and with those who
Guy
Tredaniel, 1982), 24.
He Who
120
would
Brings Scandal
become known
later
as the Decadents.
sects of the Illuminati, the Rosicrucians
persuasions, which did not prevent
with clearly
“Satanic"
books such
him from being
and Le Satanisme
nues,
enough.
He was
famous
also
invisible,
13 .
He was
L’Au-dela
Magie, the
et la
the guru of a
though not necessarily
tendencies,
he Monde
as
also frequented the
and the Freemasons of various
“black" and destructive sense of the word eral
He
titles
group in
the
the author of sev-
incon-
et les forces
of which are revealing
for his participation in several affairs that
provide a good illustration of the world Abbe Sauniere encountered during his stay in Paris, at least
if
we
believe those
who
have invented
the Sauniere myth.
One
of these affairs
is
particularly interesting for
the duel between Jules Bois
The motive
was
mistress. Together they
and magic
occultist, Stanislas de Guaita.
whom
founded
set
he
made both
a kind of bizarre
up shop with
his disciple
community
and
in
his
which
a theology guaranteed to cause
even the most radical Christians to tremble. Here
Chaumeil described
in
the
passion for a nun of La Salette,
sexuality
involvement
mad and sordid adventure of Abbe orthodox priest who had become deranged by his
for this duel
Boullan, a perfectly
and another
its
how
is
Jean-Luc
this “affair.”
Occultist and friend of Maurice Barres, the marquis Stanislas de
Guaita, had accused another occultist, priest
He
should be
It
called together a “tribunal” to
known
that Satanism
the Christian ritual. In the
is
in the
and the Shadow
not necessarily an erotic-obsessive perversion of
mind of authentic
Darkness where he
redeemed and renewed, god. To some extent
while the origin of tion.
—
Through
myth of
it
evil
is
in
Satanists,
it
does not involve blaspheming
is
the original
a kind of reversed
god and God the Father
Catharism. The victim
(metaphysical and otherwise)
Jules Bois’s Satanism
will return
consists of glorifying
God and who,
enchained, represents for his adepts the hope of a world
the King of the World,
ows, but
it
other words, Satan unjustly dethroned by
for Satan is
to black
condemn Boudan and
for pleasure, as vulgar atheists are apt to do. Quite the contrary,
the Being
a defrocked
and friend of Huysmans, of having devoted himself
magic.
13.
Abbe Boudan,
who
we can is
is
to be
found
is
is
the usurping
the Fallen Angel
in this divine
also see the broad lines sketched
usurpa-
from the
subject to the cruelest imprisonment in the shad-
one day to restore balance to a universe gone mad. Mythological
justifications are not lacking in Satanist doctrines.
The Abbe Sauniere Legend
was
the result
a
men
“magician’s duel” between the two
that
“One evening Guaita modeled
Barres reported in these terms:
121
a
small
wax
figure that he pierced with a needle to enchant the
priest,
who
used the secrets of the Kabbalah in his
priest, in response, cast a spell
blind. Guaita
was
shock,
took
cast
his
on
through a return
spell,
whose death put an end
priest,
Abbe
the battle.” In fact,
on January
ing been struck in
some inexplicable manner. Immediately
3,
The
make him
his adversary’s eyes to
measures, and the
back upon the
evil designs.
1893,
to
Boullan died, havJules
Bois picked up his journalist’s pen and wrote, “I have been told
Marquis of Guaita
that the
lives in fierce solitude, that
ulates poisons with great science
and marvelous
certainty,
he volatilizes them and directs them through space.
without incriminating anyone,
ing,
the causes of this death.”
As soon
that
is
he manip-
some
and that
What I am
light
ask-
be shed on
as the article appeared, Stanislas
de Guaita sent his witnesses to Jules Bois. 14
It
goes without saying that none of this took place under normal
two
circumstances. Jules Bois had
and deadly, before arriving
accidents, both of
at the duel.
Two
without result and honor was thus saved. All
which were bloody
bullets this
is is
were exchanged to illustrate that
Beranger Sauniere found himself at once in a strange milieu. But didn’t similar affairs take place in the faraway Corbieres, right in the middle
of the department of the In fact, as a priest
Aude?
Abbe Sauniere was
magic practices that were valleys.
It is
not
formidable one
and more
went on
known
—was
if
me
and
if I
it
currency in the mountains and
reserved for certain priests
resistant than others, but he
in the
aware of certain
he was an exorcist himself, for this role
who were
—
stronger
was not unaware of what
really
hamlets of his parish and the surrounding area.
The Aude has always been ards,
common
still
necessarily
a receptive land for magicians
will not be the
bishop of Carcassonne
who
and wizwill belie
declare that the forbidden arts (at least those forbidden
14. Jean-Luc Chaumeil,
Le Tresor du
triangle d'or (Paris: Lefcuvre, 1979),
104-105.
He Who
122
when
Brings Scandal
the Inquisition thrived) are
Abbe
where.
more
evidence here than else-
in
Sauniere, child of the region
who,
may
it
be said
was
so close to the people, could not have remained
unaware
majority of sorcery
performed back-
wards, and
the folklorists, for
all
dance of backwards prayers
women
only religious
rites are
rites
that the
want of exorcists, 15 have an abun-
in their files as well as stories of old
walking the path of the Stations of the Cross backwards
while muttering inaudible threats. 16
We
should not forget that Abbe Sauniere placed his so-called
down and
Visigothic pillar upside
No
backwards.
path of the Stations of the Cross
his
doubt he never forgot what united the
rustic sorcery of
Razes with the distinguished magic of the Decadents, the
the
Symbolists, and other “initiates’
drawing to
Even
of
if
Paris while the century
and
Abbe Sauniere was not were
his friends
—sometimes dangerously—not whose
striving to
to
a
of hacks and
more or
— for the moment,
manipulate psychic
played very bold positions on matters of
Church
in their
own
those
Maurice Leblanc
less influential
Emma
muses such
as
Calve, mistress
Society, the Rosicrucians,
the Lreemasons (Scottish Rite), and individuals
all
invis-
at least. This very stylish high society
had connections with the Theosophical
ness for “heretics,” for
well
Around Claude Debussy,
Georgette Leblanc and the beautiful opera singer of Jules Bois
full
mention those subtle and
secrets they claimed to hold.
swarm
knew
naive and
Stephane Mallarme, Maurice Maeterlinck, and
crowded
was
he found himself somewhat intimidated by fashionable
that Jules Bois
ible forces
High
a close.
Parisian gatherings,
forces
1
who
spirituality.
of
it
dis-
There was a weak-
interpreted the texts of the official
way. The works of
Huysmans have shown evidence
moving within
and
this.
Remy
The
de
latest
Gourmont and
snobbism was
to
take part in magic sessions, preferably black ones, and even authentic
15.
More on
this subject
can be read
a seventeenth-century ecclesiastic,
in Traite des Superstitions
with an introduction by Jean-Marie Goulemot
Editions du Sycomore, 1984). 16.
J.
Robin, Rennes-le-Chateau,
by Jean-Baptiste Thiers,
la colline
envoutee, 144.
(Paris:
The Abbe Sauniere Legend
123
black Masses. Wagnerism was newly discovered and dreams were spun
from the ambiguous
Bayreuth.
liturgies of
was- Parsifal that excited
It
who had
the imagination, especially that of the privileged few
chance to go to Bayreuth, for
Wagner,
until
the
1914, by the express will of Cosima
opera was not allowed to be performed anywhere
this strange
Vincent d’Indy, however, composed a Pervall, a sort of French
else.
remake of
Parsifal,
ogy
while Claude Debussy, haunted by the legend of Tristan,
fully,
obligingly
and Reyer created a Sigurd that displays
listened
the
to
first
of Maeterlinck’s
drafts
his tetral-
Pelleas
et
Melisande. The Middle Ages was being rediscovered not in the grandil-
oquent way of the Romantics, but
who decoded
Symbolists,
Paris architecture the
the
in the
most arduous
famous “noodle”
more
texts
style,
way
subtle
of the
and even imposed on
which
only a revised
is
and corrected Neo-Gothicism. So
it
was
to the fin-de-siecle salons that Emile Hoffet dragged
Beranger Sauniere.
And
the
the star of these soirees that
little
priest
from Rennes-le-Chateau became
went on interminably. Why?
wondered what was expected of him, but he did not revelation: Highly placed people
would counsel him
expectations in exchange for which he
would
forget Boudet’s to
this,
and the
entire villge of Rennes-le-Chateau.
Abbe Sauniere
fulfill
certain
receive a fortune.
not that Beranger Sauniere loved money, but he needed the church
Fie confusedly
It
was
to embellish
it
When
he recalled
listened with his fullest attention, seeking to pene-
trate further the fine allusions others
made
in his presence.
In fact, he listened so attentively that the bewitching voice of
Emma
Calve penetrated
much more
deeply than expected.
Calve was one of the greatest sopranos of the day, whose talent,
Emma in the
words of her contemporaries, was incontestable. She was the darling of the latest salons and
had her sing some of Bois.
Now,
when
it
was
tied
by friendship to Claude Debussy,
his melodies,
though she was the mistress of Jules
Jules Bois’s intimate acquaintances
came
who
to esotericism, hermeticism,
were never innocents
and magic. Did
Emma
Calve
belong to that mysterious brotherhood whose shadow always hovered over Beranger Sauniere? Her real surname was Calvat, which she
changed for euphonic reasons. She was Calvat, the shepherdess of La Salette
a distant cousin of
who was
Melanie
the heroine of those
He Who
124
Brings Scandal
fraudulent appearances of the Virgin 17 that so greatly helped the reactionaries of the mid-nineteenth century.
Emma
Beranger Sauniere quickly became the lover of she been lightning struck by the
Was
priest”?
man
she called “her
Calve.
little
Had
provincial
she acting on the orders of Jules Bois to better circumvent
and influence Sauniere? Both answers are possibly correct and are not contradictory. Subsequently,
was even claimed
Emma
that the soprano
Calve visited Rennes-le-Chateau.
was
able to buy her
dream
It
castle in
her homeland thanks to the priest’s generosity, and that she bore
Sauniere a child, but there
is
obviously not a shred of proof to support
these claims.
Despite their
from
his
affair,
mind, and
remind him of
it.
if
Calve did not drive the
priest’s
he did forget, she would have been the
When
mission first
to
had been examined by Abbe
the manuscripts
and Emile Hoffer, Sauniere presented himself to hear the two
Bieil
experts’ conclusions.
no
Emma
He was
told that three of the manuscripts were of
interest but that the fourth
exceptional.
—that mysterious genealogy—was quite
The two then proposed
keep the manuscript and that
would allow him
else
could he have done?
would
in return they
to find a lost treasure.
He
felt
give
The
him
certain clues
priest accepted.
What
caught in a trap from which he was
unable to extricate himself. Furthermore, he had
who
They would
a deal to Sauniere.
made
He
his choice.
wishes the end wishes the means, and his objective remained to
embellish and glorify his parish of Rennes-le-Chateau. It is
definite that the experts he consulted
sages of the manuscripts and provided
How in the
we
can
had explained certain pas-
him with
a course to follow.
otherwise understand Sauniere’s infatuation with lurking
Louvre
Museum toward
time he had never
shown any
the end of this stay in Paris? Until that
particular taste for painting. Nevertheless,
he often could be found in the gallery housing Nicolas Poussin’s painting
17.
The Shepherds of Arcadia
During
a
resounding
trial,
and Jean-Marie Vianney, the
was
this
was not
the staging of these appearances
the only
was
all.
work he
judicially recognized
priest of Ars, received the confession of a
declared that he had seen nothing at saintly priest of
— and
shepherd
who
Sickened by the uproar caused by the sham, the
Ars traveled to Grenoble to lodge a complaint with the bishop there.
politely requested to return
home and keep
his
mouth
shut.
He
The Abbe Sauniere Legend
He was
sought.
fascinated by a painting by Teniers and eagerly wished
an anonymous portrait of Pope Celestin
to find
125
the end of the eighteenth century.
We
V who
ruled briefly at
5
must wonder why.
Ultimately, not content with merely viewing the paintings, he acquired
reproductions.
It
was The Shepherds of Arcadia
vate his research, as
if
there
a clue that his initiators
know
did not
was
was something within
seemed to most motithis painting,
had recommended that he examine
attentively.
identical to the
one painted by Poussin.
It
—by the seventeenth-century
when
But might he have
painter.
to
life
imprisonment, Louis
and did not
known
that
rest until
it
XIV
was part of
initiated a search for this paint-
his private collection?
could of course be said that Beranger Sauniere, whose goal was
It
refurbishing his church as best as he possibly could,
tion there for ordering the
own monument. At
works of
art that
Louvre had no
The
effect at all
on Sauniere’s
to eduinspira-
the glory of his
which he favored the
would seem
it
draw
to
would be
the sight of the horrors with
Magdalene sanctuary, however,
was seeking
museums, and
cate himself in one of the world’s best
Saint
—or imag-
Nicolas Foucquet, protector and admirer of Poussin, was con-
demned ing
He
sat before a
landscape that was physically the same as the one represented ined
perhaps
then that on the Arques road not far from his parish there
tomb almost
a
that
that this visit to the
aesthetic sensibility.
remained decidedly strange from
village priest’s stay in Paris
beginning to end because of both the people he surrounded himself with
and the
activities to
conviction that sidered
him
all
to be
which he devoted
the
his time.
Henceforth, he had the
famous people he knew took him seriously and con-
an important man.
What
could be more comforting?
Beranger Sauniere eventually took leave of his hosts. The separation with
Emma
Calve was melancholy, but Beranger savored the
incomparable happiness to be found priest, ital.
won
the favors of one of the
They did promise
knew in
had
that
in the fact that he, a
most
visible
to see each other again,
Marie Denarnaud,
his faithful
poor country
women
in the cap-
and of course Beranger
and kind servant, was waiting
Rennes. Onward!
Abbe Sauniere could eagle’s nest; he
regain without regret the solitude of his
had not been duped. At the
price of a
few
lies
he
He Who
126
would
Brings Scandal
need to soothe the anxieties of Monsignor Billard,
still
would be
as Beranger Sauniere did not need
A
lusty fellow such
any help getting
his foot into the
same, to exchange a genealogical tree for the key to
stirrup. All the
a treasure
parchment and
greatly surprised at the absence of the
already regretted his letter of recommendation.
18 .
.
,
Whatever the case may
Beranger Sauniere had at
be,
last
ning to sincerely like him, although they thought him a
must have
felt
a
Of
his stay in Paris?
joy.
course
he mentioned the opera singer
Emma
Of
Did she
— but the say,
when
Calve. Sauniere did not have a
com-
anxious around the armpits, as they
little
begin-
bit eccentric.
course Marie Denarnaud also greeted his return with great
pepper him with questions about
returned to
who were
Rennes-le-Chateau to the great joy of his parishioners,
priest
who
pletely easy conscience with regard to his parishioners, his bishop, Marie,
and himself, life
for he never forgot that he
did he deny his priesthood.
When
it
was
a priest
comes
and obtaining possible forgiveness from God,
They
faithful do:
confess.
certainly not Boudet,
Who
who was
was Abbe
and
no time
at
to easing their conscience priests
behave as
Sauniere’s confessor?
some shady
his partner in
in his
dealings.
the
all It
was
Was
it
his brother, Alfred Sauniere? Surely not, for confessions are neither given
nor heard between family members. While Alfred Sauniere himself abreast of
some
things,
it
may have
kept
was because he was both Beranger’s
brother and an accomplice in the famous scandals that would later erupt
concerning corrupt Masses. What’s more, he himself hardly provided a
good example of
a priest
beyond reproach.
who seem
There are two clergymen
to have received the confi-
dences and, no doubt, the confessions of Sauniere.
Abbe Eugene Grassaud, who was Lycee secret
in
Perpignan
—and
—to
a professor at the
which Sauniere went
who became
the priest
first
One
Abbe Grassaud
man, both good and
18.
J.
left
erudite,
frequently,
Robin, Rennes-le-Chateau,
la colline
almost
in
of Amelie-les-Bains, then of
behind the
whose
was
Louis de Gonzague
Saint-Paul-de-Fenouillet in the Perpignan diocese, which the Razes.
of these
memory
library
was
close to
of an enterprising
was abundantly furnished
envoutee, 25.
The Abbe Sauniere Legend
with books and manuscripts of
kinds.
all
He
127
and
also strove to repair
embellish the churches in his charge. Furthermore;
.
.
.
the bonds of friendship between
Grassaud were never the
rumors that
never scared to
the elder
was faced with
all
by the bishopric inspired. Sauniere was
his trial visit his
when
even
colleague in Amelie-les-Bains, a courtesy
canon often returned very willingly whenever he had
that the
enough
belied,
Abbe Sauniere and Canon
free time. After the
death of his friend Sauniere,
Canon
Grassaud did not spare any pains to help Marie Denarnaud through
life’s difficulties.
19
It
was
to
Eugene Grassaud that Abbe
Sauniere gave a gilded silver chalice around 1893. 20
Where might
have come from? Probably from the cache
this chalice
Sauniere found in the Rennes-le-Chateau church, the famous treasure
hidden by Abbe Bigou.
Another
priest,
who
confessor, as well as his elderly cleric
who was
much closer, may have been Sauniere’s confidant: Abbe Gelis, priest of Coustaussa, an lived
still
of sound
mind and who would be murdered
several years later under very mysterious circumstances. There
is
a
strong possibility that on his return from Paris, Beranger Sauniere went to confess to his colleague in Coustaussa.
The somewhat “Satanic” atmosphere his Parisian
He
that
certainly
sojourn was beginning to weigh heavily upon him.
thing to hold for safekeeping faith,
it
activities.
Profiting
Abbe
On
this
Gelis with some-
— some documents, perhaps? In complete
seems the answer would be
In Rennes-le-Chateau,
odd
lot to say.
had enveloped him during
occasion might Abbe Sauniere have entrusted
good
had a
yes.
Abbe Sauniere devoted
himself to
some very
from construction work undertaken by the
municipality in the cemetery, he had a wall erected around, which
included the famous portal that can
19.
P.
be seen there today. After
its
Jarnac, Histoire du tresor de Rennes-le-Chateau, 334-35.
20. “This is
still
is
a piece
carved and
with no great commercial value.
in perfect
a Maltese Cross,
condition, but
it is
It is
(P.
and
only gilded metal. At the foot of the chalice
formed by four green enamels, can be
from the eighteenth century.”
a superb piece, certainly,
seen. This chalice dates at
most
Jarnac, Histoire du tresor de Rennes-le-Chateau, 336).
He Who
128
Brings Scandal
completion he often locked himself into the walled cemetery at night. But what was he doing there? By stones; in fact he to find?
It
had been given
particularly hard
was moving tomb-
evidence, he
the cemetery’s tombs.
can be assumed that he undertook
the clues he
worked
was defacing
all
in Paris in
What
did he hope
this labor as a result of
exchange for the genealogy.
He
on the tomb of Marie de Negri d’Ables, Lady
of Hautpoul and Blanchefort,
who
died in 1781.
The tomb was
built
from two flagstones, of which the upright one was the work of Abbe Bigou. ible
The
lady’s epitaph
number
tions.
A is
this stone
had been carved with an incred-
of mistakes, which has not failed to
some Greek
Latin inscription with
horizontal stone; It
on
it
letters
Abbe Sauniere spent considerable time
scratching out the inscriptions that had been carved a
can be read on the
remains incomprehensible.
incontestable that
must have had
prompt some ques-
good reason
for this
upon
this
tomb.
He
— but he did not know that the
carved writing had already been recorded by a conscientious archaeologist; indeed,
it
was reproduced
in
1903
in the bulletin of the very seri-
ous Archaeological Society of the Aude. Sauniere, therefore, went to a great deal of trouble for nothing,
which might be seen
these inscriptions represented something very important tial
as proof that
—even essen-
—to him. No doubt these were the very keys that allowed him to
direct his nocturnal
The
and quasi-clandestine searches.
vertical flagstone
was
inscribed as follows:
CT GIT NOBLe M ARIE DE NEGRe DABLES DAME
DHAUPOUL De BLANCHEFORT AGEE DE SOIX ANTE SePT AND DECEDEE LE XVII JANVIER
MDCOLXXXI REQUIES CATIN
PACE
The Abbe Sauniere Legend
Above
this, after
the initials
P.
S.
and
129
was carved
in parentheses
PRAECUM. All of this is quite mysterious and lends itself to much analysis. A vain attempt has been made to portray as clumsy or igno-
—
who carved this stone quite a stretch, for even the date is incorrect. When he was attempting to decipher this inscription, Beranger Sauniere did not know he would suffer rant the seventeenth-century worker
a fatal attack of illness
on January
17. Curious, isn’t
it?
one applies to the text formed by the anomalies and connected
If
found within the text
to a key
known
itself a
decoding method that
Vugenere Method), and
to cipher experts (the
if
well
is
one dou-
by the “knight’s tour,” another method requiring a chess-
bles this
board, a clear text can be obtained that does retain a sibylline aspect: “Shepherdess
key peace 68
Daemon
no temptation that Poussin Teniers hold the
— by the cross and the horse of God this
very comprehensible, but
is
Beranger managed to “decipher” the inscription cause for great rejoicing. In
brought to Abbe
Bieil
fact,
it
ables
was
it is
when
must have been
it
one of the same messages that he
and Emile Hoffet and
of this proved that the research that
this
guardian at noon. Blue apples.” 21
cannot be said that
It
complete
I
still
was pointing
had
at his disposal. All
in the right direction
and
urgent, then, to eliminate anything that might put undesir-
on the scent of something
to
which they had no
right.
Because the
mysterious brotherhood had given him the mission to follow his search to
its
conclusion, Beranger Sauniere
was ready
to
do take any measures
to eliminate the others.
Furthermore, Abbe Sauniere held the key to in
order to get to
starting
the
T in
from the
its
true meaning,
first
anomaly noted.
the place of the I in
from that
spot,
it
it
ci git
this text.
was necessary
[here
lies]. If
M. Lamy,
knew
a diagonal
a diagonal line
will inevitably reach catin [trollop],
Fortunately, Sauniere
draw
that
Now the first anomaly is assuredly
seems an unpleasant description of the noble
21.
to
He knew
which
woman
is
drawn
certainly
lying
there.
that under certain conditions, particularly
Jules Verne, initie et initiateur, 68.
— 130
He Who
when
it
appears where
tions,
is
a
word
the
Brings Scandal
should not, the
it
cat in did not necessarily
was no longer
in the
in the family’s
name
meaning
a catin,
Tau
home
mean “whore,”
He was
but could
but had been
moved
cairn
—that
determine
Of ible
a
tomb
a megalithic
is,
just
all,
what
mean
“cav-
and beneath
it
is
when
also a “cavern,” especially
was and where
it
was
steps
it is
legible
Roman
REDDIS and CELLIS. On
a
were to
located.
characters.
Above
it
illeg-
were the
Sauniere could read praecum In the middle a .
On the
arrow separated two groups of two words each.
vertical
T
Poussin’s
course, the other flagstone also held an inscription, albeit in
initials P. S.
a
instead into
him of
mound. The most important
this cairn
Greek characters and
that
This consideration along with the mention
of Poussin and the Shepherdess obviously reminded painting, for after
knew
was no longer
of the Hautpoul (as there
22
also
thus able to grasp that “the treasure
in the inscription),
a “cave .”
in esoteric tradi-
He
code that means “treasure” of some kind.
“cavern,” or “uterus.”
ity,”
or the
T,
the right were
left
were
REGIS followed by ARCIS. The
words were quite confusing because they could not be read continuously.
The word
or the Razes; the
“king”; cella,
meaning Rennes
reddis might have a connection with Reddae,
cellis is
word
regis
certainly the genitive of rex,
is
a plural ablative, therefore
it is
“cave,” or “underground hut”; and the
arx, “of the citadel .” 23
Make
of
what you
it
meaning
a preposition of place, of
word
will,
arcis
is
the genitive of
but Sauniere could have
it
only as confirmation of what had been whispered to him in
Paris: “in
Rennes, in a cave of the king’s citadel.” The treasure of Blanche
viewed
de Castille
is
not far from
this,
or
it
might be that of the “lost king,” the
fabled descendant of the Merovingians. This figure
make an appearance
in the
was
just
beginning to
adventures of Arsene Lupin, the character cre-
ated by Maurice LeBlanc, friend of Jules Bois and brother of Maurice
Maeterlinck’s companion, Georgette LeBlanc. Beranger Sauniere did not greatly
comprehend
In the cemetery he
this story of lost
had made
Merovingians, but
it
did not matter.
a discovery of great interest.
His quasi-clandestine nocturnal investigations
and disruptions
earned him the disapproval of the inhabitants of Rennes, however
22.
Interpretation
Chateau 23.
The
made by
(Paris: Belfond,
Jean-Pierre Monteils, Le Dossier secret de Rennes-le-
1981), 61.
authenticity of this flagstone
is
a subject of great controversy.
The Abbe Sauniere Legend
They admonished
especially that of the municipal authorities.
who
in turn
believe
became angry,
yelling,
have the right to defend
I
131
the priest,
“When someone treads on my myself!” He eventually came
turf,
I
an
to
accord with the town, which meant he could continue his excavations in the cemetery. But this
Aude
sent a petition to the
When
Rennes
the inhabitants of
prefect to alert
him
and they
to their priest’s activities.
are not at
all
happy about the work being carried out
cemetery, especially under the present circumstances. are removed, as are the tombstones, repairs. his
furious,
they did not receive a response, they sent in a second petition that
“We
read:
made
24
and none of
The
in the
crosses there
this alleged
work
is
for
Nothing was done, hQwever, and Sauniere continued to pursue
nocturnal and somewhat macabre explorations for a long time.
But these were not the only tion.
and hike through the mountains with Marie Denarnaud
To those who asked him what he was looking was picking pebbles
that he fact,
Sauniere to attract atten-
For entire days at a time he would pace around the outskirts of the
village side.
activities of
for,
at his
he responded
to use in constructing a Lourdes grotto. In
he was often seen returning during the evening, bent under the
weight of apparently
full sacks.
Sometimes when
the direction of Rennes-les-Bains, he
Boudet,
who was
his
would happen
walks took him to run into
in
Abbe
involved in archaeological explorations that included
recording the position of certain rocks or discovering a rupestrian
an ancient cross buried
inscription or
projects kept
throughout France and the
Then an extremely The following
article
Carcassonne, dated
horrible crime
24.
An
-
All in
wounds
authentic
rest of the
all,
Sauniere’s
world.
serious event took place not far
can be found
November
5,
in
La Semaine
from Rennes. religieuse
de
1897:
was committed sometime during Sunday night or
Monday morning result of
2
him constantly busy but did not prevent him from writing
to individuals
A
in the brush.
in the
Coustaussa parish. Abbe Gelis died as the
suffered to his head
and
document presented and published by
lay in the presbytery’s
P.
Jarnac, Histoire du tresor de
Rennes-le-Cbateau, 151-53. 25. In reality
some of
it
it
seems that Sauniere went hunting.
to his parishioners as gifts.
He brought back much game and
gave
He Who
132
Brings Scandal
kitchen, bathing in his
own
blood.
.
.
.
There
is
ture concerning the murderer’s possible motive. ers
no lack of conjecMystery
still
hov-
over this sorrowful event, although the public prosecutor and
working with
the police are
those responsible.
Abbe
most laudable
a
was
Gelis
a pious priest
in his every action all the gentleness of
down
effort to track
who
reproduced
nature appropriate to a
minister of Jesus Christ.
As mentioned Gelis,
born
in
earlier,
seems that Abbe Jean-Antoine-Maurice
it
1827, was the confessor and confidant of Abbe Sauniere.
Indeed, Beranger Sauniere
was overwhelmed by
news and, along
the
with a large crowd that included the vicar general and
gymen, attended the funeral So of
what happened
just
Le Midi
libre,
we can
many
other cler-
services for his unfortunate colleague.
to
Abbe
Gelis? In the
October
3,
1976, issue
read an extract from the 1897 inquest
files
con-
cerning the circumstances surrounding the unfortunate priest’s murder.
The precautions
that were taken betray an incredible presence of
mind. The kitchen, following such havoc, was put back into perfect order,
enough
with no trace of footprints. The murderer was
to avoid three large pools of blood.
of evidence found outside.
On
the
two minuscule drops of blood sin,
who, without leaving
alert
There were no traces
first floor, in
Abbe
Gelis’
room,
attested to the passage of the assas-
the slightest bloody imprint, forced the
lock of a traveling bag that contained various papers and docu-
ments belonging to the steal items,
priest.
The murderer opened
the bag not to
but to search for something. In fact 683 francs’ worth
of gold and notes were found in the priest’s desk and 106.90 francs
were found
in his dresser. Stranger
body had been
laid
out on
its
still
was
the fact that the priest’s
back toward the middle of the room,
with the head and face in a normal position and the hands folded over the chest. There was but one mute witness to this bloody tragedy,
which was committed
priest did not
smoke and hated
for
no apparent motive. While the
the odor of tobacco, an entire pack
of Tzar brand cigarette papers were found floating in the second
pool of blood near the window.
On
one
leaf,
written in pencil,
were the words Viva Angelina [Long Live Angelina].
The Abbe Saunter e Legend
133
What did Beranger Sauniere think of all this? No one will ever know. Did he who was working so hard on decoding messages understand the exact meaning of Viva Angelina written on a cigarette paper? Beranger
Sauniere did smoke, though he should not have because of his heart con-
knew much more about
matter than he cared to
dition.
Perhaps he
say. In
any event, no one ever asked him a thing about
this
it.
In the days fol-
lowing the discovery of the crime, the authorities arrested the victim’s
nephew, a good-for-nothing
who was
always short of cash and had been
harassing the aged priest with his incessant demands.
else.
something and
Abbe
who
Gelis’s killer
left
We may wonder
—a
whom
this
definitely
smoker who was looking for
behind a message
for
was quickly
on the night of the murder he was
established, however, that
somewhere
It
—was never found.
message was intended. This was
probably what Beranger Sauniere was wondering as he headed back up
month
to Rennes-le-Chateau during that sad
Abbe Sauniere was not involved In
of
in the affair in
November 1897,
any way. Unless
.
.
for .
as the expression goes, other fish to fry. His
any event, he had,
plans were grandiose in nature and he refined them every day on paper,
ordering construction here and there and supervising what he could
when
time allowed. Thanks to his obliging brother,
who had many
worldly acquaintances due to his collection of mistresses, he did not forget to ask for
Masses from the more well-to-do. The donors responded,
and Beranger Sauniere took advantage of for that
was
his passion, or, as
This was the time his financial affairs.
ble of all
managing
regional,
we might
when he began
As the
it
to begin collecting stamps,
say today, his hobby.
seriously concerning himself with
child of a peasant family, he
his holdings.
He opened
was
quite capa-
accounts in banks that were not
which can appear surprising
for a
modest country
priest.
who are very good at spotting who will be the most profitable.
Bankers, however, are discreet individuals the
most
attractive clients
—that
is,
those
Sauniere trusted banks but did not put
all his eggs'
on one
basket.
It
was
claimed that he had an account in Austria and even that he went to
England twice.
All that
is
known
for certain
is
that his
main bank was
in
Perpignan, which he visited often under strange circumstances.
When he left, he never said where he was going. He would down to Couiza, where he caught the train for Carcassonne. And
travel after?
He Who
134
We now know
Brings Scandal
that he often
modest Eugene Castel
went
to Perpignan,
where he stayed
Each time that he was absent
hotel.
in the
for several
days, though, he wrote letters in advance, mainly addressed to the bish-
which he would have posted over the following days by Marie
opric,
Denarnaud. This disconcerting behavior could not help but prompt
among
questions
He was
a
good
all
who knew
priest,
him, but his parishioners said nothing.
very understanding, and in addition to
all
the
renovations he had obtained for the church and the village, he devoted
much
time to those in abject circumstances and did what he could to
ease as
much
as possible the
problems of those
he had a very good reputation
among
in need. In other
his flock,
words,
and despite some tem-
porary differences with the mayor on some minor matters, he got on quite well with the elected municipal officials of Rennes-le-Chateau. All
was noted when he
of this
inaugurate his It
new
invited his bishop,
that his time
had not been wasted. Frescoes, the
Stations of the Cross, the statue of
room
Billard, to
church.
was apparent
stained-glass
Monsignor
windows, the new
Asmodeus,
statues of the saints,
altar, a rebuilt sacristy
(with a secret
serving as a storage area), a renovated rostrum, a beautiful
confessional
—everything was
the presence of
all
in place.
the inhabitants
During that memorable day,
could only congratulate him for his achievements. really
in
and clergymen of the region, Abbe
Sauniere gave a homily praising the merits of charity.
what he
wooden
We
The monsignor
can only wonder
thought of the bizarre decorations installed through the
pains of the priest of Rennes-le-Chateau, though that according to the legend,
rious brotherhood
Billard
was part of
the myste-
whose name Sauniere never dared speak aloud.
Abbe Sauniere had he had certainly
Monsignor
we must acknowledge
certainly fulfilled his mission in his parish,
and
From
this
fulfilled
it
with regard to other individuals.
time on he launched himself into sumptuous expenditures that were not all
intended to further good works.
It
was
as
if
Magdalene Church had suddenly found himself
immense
He
in
possession of an
fortune.
started by buying the lands that lay to the west of the church,
or rather purchased
was
the priest of Saint
in her
them through Marie Denarnaud,
name, though
it
was he who
actually paid.
for everything
On
this
newly
The Abbe Sauniere Legend
villa,
which he would name
Mary Magdalene. Then
he had the walls next to
acquired land he built a neo-Gothic
Bethania in honor of
where he
the presbytery extended to the edge of the promontory,
planned to construct a neo-Gothic tower intended to be office
and to be called the Magdala Tower, again
saint of the parish.
his library
all.
honor of the patron this construction,
—now renovated—
and the Magdala Tower he
and arranged. Between
set .up a veritable
Villa Bethania
park, with pools, beds of
and even
rare flowers, shaded allees, greenhouses, an orange grove,
small zoo. As he
was
a practical
etable garden there as well.
which has cost
man, he did not neglect
was
It
his servant, a
lion gold francs, the priest,
which he liked
who had
arrived fifteen years earlier with-
very grand style.”
live in
to appear
Certainly he received Masses and justifying his luxurious daily
He
domain,
poor hat maker, the bagatelle of three mil-
course, he published postcards portraying his in
a
to plant a veg-
a veritable paradise: “In this
out a penny to his name, began to
graphs
in the lone
Aside from the construction, the priest saw to
that green spaces were planned
Of
and
of his faithful servant.
Yet this was not it
in
While awaiting the completion of
he continued to reside in the presbytery
company
135
domain
and which he sold
gifts,
—photo-
at a profit.
but nothing that came close to
life.
acquired a rich library and a collection of 1,000,000 stamps,
brought in a bookbinder and photographer, and bought extremely expensive furniture and tableware. Everything was
made
to order
and, quite often, revealed a taste for luxury that bordered on extravagance.
We
saw, for example, a service of crystal glasses; Sauniere
had them manufactured
in
such a
way
lightly in a certain order, the glasses
The table
priest of
that
when
they were struck
played Ave Maria! 26
Rennes-le-Chateau also entertained a great deal. His
was open not only
to the
few colleagues
who
cared to
make
the
climb up the plateau the better to denigrate his architectural and decorative fantasies, but also to distinguished guests
26. J.-L. Chaumeil,
Le Tresor du
triangle d’or, 109.
who
normally would
He Who
136
Brings Scandal
hardly be expected to take the trouble to
mountain
who
parish.
but
visited,
nificently.
seen,
The
many
This was
recalled a very beautiful
such as Dujardin-Baumetz,
Chambre
as
Maurice Leblanc; and
who was
sang mag-
artists
and painters
Aude
also a representative of the
des deputes, a Freemason, and temporarily the under-
secretary of state for the fine arts.
noted
woman who
Calve, of course. “Gentlemen” had also been
no doubt writers such
in the
priest of a
populace was not very familiar with those
local
Emma
modest
the
visit
A handsome
—Jean Orth— but few knew that
in reality
foreigner
was
also
he was Jean-Salvator
of Hapsburg, cousin of the emperor of the Austro-Hungarian empire.
He
visited quite often
and Sauniere treated him with great esteem. The
two men sometimes held though by
all
private discussions that lasted for hours,
evidence their relationship was based more on business
than on friendship. This, however, did not stop Orth from taking part organized in Villa Bethania.
in the fashionable gatherings Sauniere
For
it
was
in the villa that
he received his guests. Marie Denarnaud,
a splendid cook, gave orders to
some second-rate
servants hired for the
occasion and prepared savory feasts that allowed the guests to appreciate great
French cuisine, especially that of Occitania.
We
do not know
whether Marie Denarnaud might have been seized by the temptation to
add
a
was
visiting.
little
rat
poison to the soup on those evenings
Marie Denarnaud was
the
man
ity,
presence, and generosity. She
her
in her life
mouth
modest
and probably completely dominated by
knew when
devoted to
spirit, entirely
it
his author-
was necessary
to keep
shut and swallow certain resentments that threatened to
compromise
knew
a
when Emma Calve
a situation that, after
well that the soprano
all,
was not so
disagreeable.
would never take up residence
there, but
Had
she heard
she held against Beranger the gifts he gave the singer. talk of the large
Marie
sums of money that Sauniere had rained over
Emma
Calve, funds that permitted her to buy the castle of her dreams in the
Aveyron and (even nastier gossip) to priest of
raise the child she
had with the
Rennes? People are so wicked!
People, of course, lend only to the rich. Bankers also arrived to visit
Beranger Sauniere. it
Was
to help his “savings”
it
for the loans he asked
them
to give
him or was
grow? Nasty tongues offered that he fed
gers to his ducks. Regardless of the truth of this,
what
is
ladyfin-
certain
is
that
The Abbe Sauniere Legend he overlooked nothing
book
November
for
no. 1031; 45
when
it
1 testifies:
liters at
came
2 francs = 90 francs. 50
almost historic, vintage). 33
33
of Malvoisie. 17
liters
as his account
“one cask of Martinique rum
(perfect, liters
and drink,
to food
liters
of
liters
of
rum
in case
of muscatel.” 27
was
liters
invitation to
Monsieur the abbe’s during
It
Haut Barsac white wine.
definitely this “Belle
But didn’t the flashy luxury of their host
ABS
at 2.35 francs
of golden quinine tonic wine. 55
Banyuls. 12
137
good
liters
to receive
of
an
Epoque.”
—who perhaps eased
his
conscience by thinking of the precious nard that Christ in Bethany
had allowed Mary Magdalene
to use in anointing his feet
—have
the scent of scandal to the bishop of Carcassonne, that poor
Monsignor
Billard,
to
largesse
kingdom? He displayed great
to Sauniere’s priest
whose previous
had opened the doors discretion
left
our
Did he think that
construction and gatherings.
his
and
Sauniere had acquitted himself with his tribute to the glory of
heaven by restoring that
much
— before
his
church
—
his first concern, let’s
concede him
launching into profane construction? This
is
very hard to believe, given that the very “Italian Renaissance” style
employed by the
priest in this instance
plethora of artisans hired at his
and,
How
more important, any
own
through the support of a
expense lacks discrimination
sense of taste. 28
could an Austrian archduke, a famous Parisian opera singer, and
other important figures tolerate the visible a strange
of the
work
of Beranger Sauniere,
and disparate work that we might say was struck by the Angel
Odd?
But times change. Monsignor Billard grew old, and in the of his
life
He was Beausejour, who
tion for being very tolerant. Assuredly, Sauniere
ing his nomination in
1902 that
27. J.-L. Chaumeil, 28.
J.
Robin, Renne
Le Tresor du le
Chateau,
did not have a reputa-
must have thought dur-
this individual
brotherhood. In truth, he would soon learn
was not part
of “our”
this at great cost to himself.
triangle d’or, 109. la colline
month
replaced on the seat of
he was practically powerless.
Carcassonne by Monsignor de
last
envoutee, 27-28.
— He Who
138
The diocese
what
Abbe
not.
is
when he assumes
working and
Sauniere’s behavior did not seem to
comply very
and
it
see for himself
accustomed to Episcopal palaces that were
comfortable than rural presbyteries, but a hierarchy.
is
new
a
infinitely
more
the same, there are limits
a simple country priest
If
Monsignor de Beausejour waited
Abbe Sauniere
all
who knows where
than a bishop,
lifestyle
what
Monsignor de Beausejour
the evangelical teaching of poverty.
certainly
and there
his position in the is
to travel through
much with was
thing a bishop does
first is
Brings Scandal
it
assumes a grander
might lead to next? 1905, however, to offer
until
parish. Sauniere bluntly turned
down on
it
the
pretext that he could not leave the parish where his interests held him.
The bishop eral
insisted
and summoned the
summons, Sauniere
tificates.
bishop
Then
in
hid, each time
1909, realizing the
named him
priest of
abbe Marty to replace him
priest to hear him. Despite sev-
producing phony medical
will of his subordinate, the
ill
Coustouge
in the Corbieres,
phe for Sauniere. He obviously refused
earlier parish.
It
was then
new
as
the role of poor priest he
moral potential with both
whom
parish
Calve,
had attained
his parishioners
Was
and the “strangers” with
he happy?
No
would spend
man. Instead, she belonged erhood that pulled the
him appropriately
sure to treat
enamored of
lover, as a Beast
one knows.
his Belle.
How
strings.
pawn on
a chessboard,
the visible stage. So
Neither
help him.
when
It
we
Emma
was up
to
days with
as a transfixed
Emma
Calve belonged to no one
and
to that mysterious broth-
to her public
with Herculean strength, which
ficulty.
company
his
could she consider Beranger any-
thing but a pawn, though a very sympathetic pawn, to be sure
only a
women
like.
— a pawn
But Beranger Sauniere was
and the game masters were absent from
find the priest of Rennes-le-Chateau in
nor those
him
his
a high degree of ease as well
to enjoy an endless stream of peaceful days in the
who made
was
right for Beranger Sauniere.
of his mistress-servant, and from time to time
Emma
—which
was more important than
had gone
he had an unusual relationship.
He appeared
nomination
his
that his real hardships began.
Until this point, everything
From
and rushed an
Rennes-le-Chateau. This was a catastro-
in
actually a promotion, for his
cer-
who were
to find his
way
behind her
out of his
some
dif-
lifted a finger to
difficulty.
After
he was ordained a priest, he swore obedience to his bishop.
all,
The Abbe Sauniere Legend
He
Sauniere was of another stamp, however.
perament of a
ments and certain to
make
secrets.
use of them.
but he did not ing
Furthermore, he
slave.
know
knew
The problem was
He had
did not have the tem-
that he held certain docu-
know how
that he did not
a veritable nuclear
the instructions for using
Monsignor de Beausejour, who wished
139
it.
bomb As
at his disposal,
a result of oppos-
empty Rennes-le-Chateau
to
of his presence (no doubt the bishop had his reasons), he stepped outside the
law
— and as everyone knows, “outside of the Church, there
no salvation.” Sauniere soon had the sad experience of one of
his so-called friends
such great expense would trary,
they did
all
whom
He was
and not
he received at his Villa Bethania at
make any
effort
on
To
his behalf.
the con-
they could to sink him and reduce him to nothing.
They no longer needed him now, had been intended
this,
is
for him.
for he
He was
had
fulfilled the
mission that
out of service and out of the game.
thus abandoned. Only the unconditional devotion of Marie
Denarnaud saved him from
despair.
Monsignor de Beausejour, bishop of Carcassonne and
legal repre-
sentative of religious authority, being unable to dislodge
him from
Rennes-le-Chateau, sought to attack him through his weaknesses.
These did not include Marie Denarnaud. That kind of arrangement was so
common
in the clergy that
no one could decently hold
against him,
had not created any scandal among
especially given that the situation
around him and that Our Holy Mother Church was not
those
besmirched by
it.
No,
indulgences, the equivalent of of the
what was once
selling
there
Masses and
called simony,
from the
famous Simon Magus.
The plan behind
the accusation
was
quite simple: Beranger Sauniere
had undertaken construction work that cost
him say where and how he acquired such his disposal.
him
the bishop of Carcassonne attacked
where he was weakest: He accused him openly of
name
it
We
a great deal of
significant
money. Let
sums of money
at
can see that the attack was not a direct one, but was
nevertheless one that could not be ignored.
The
priest
had to account
for himself before his hierarchical superior.
As
the bishop expected, Sauniere did not precisely explain himself.
He
simply presented rows of numbers that meant nothing, for he was incapable of proving the origin of the funds that he attributed to generous
;
He Who
140
Brings Scandal
donors, an attribution through which he incriminated himself, making himself guilty of canvassing, not only in the diocese but elsewhere as well, for
in the eyes of the
honorariums for Masses. Beranger Sauniere,
Episcopal authority, was
not
if
guilty,
then at least greatly compro-
mised. All that Monsignor de Beausejour requested of him was a
justi-
fication for his extravagant expenditures.
Of
course, he clearly
felt
that Sauniere
would never be
able to jus-
them. Sauniere then came up with a statement whose rough draft
tify
we’ve had
in
our hands. 29 For the church construction work alone, he
admitted 193,000 gold francs. This was a considerable sum. In that time a French ambassador earned only forty thousand francs a year. But Sauniere was cheating; examination of his bookkeeping (which he
made
sure not to include with his statement)
showed
that he spent
fif-
teen times that amount, 30 which does not include any of the cost of his
is
The bad
constructions. 31
civil
more than evident
faith of the
here.
Beranger Sauniere was thus found ily
Rennes-le-Chateau clergyman
guilty.
At
first
he was temporar-
suspens a divinis the bishop simply wished to give him a warning
new nomination. But as was his right, Sauniere made an appeal to the court of Rome, where this kind of affair could drag on for years. In addition, he claimed he could not move out and make him accept
his
of the Rennes-le-Chateau presbytery and the municipality sided with
him, claiming that the location worked for Sauniere and no one
else.
Apparently the priest of Saint Magdalene Church was well liked by parishioners, even by those In
who
1913 Beranger Sauniere
did not attend church.
— by occult means, perhaps? —won
29. Since Sauniere’s time, the different statements drafted by
(and unpaid)
bills
his
—have been gathered and published
him
in part in
—
in particular, the
two important
his
paid
parallel
works: Le Fabuleux Tresor de Rennes-le-Chateau, by Jacques Riviere (Nice: Editions Belisane, 1983)
and Historie du tresor de Rennes-le-Chateau by Pierre Jarnac
published). These authors dedicated themselves to remarkable investigations, results
There cision.
30.
I
match, taking into account the quite understandable divergences is
no need
to repeat their
The photos published
leave
it
to Jean-Luc
31. Jean-Luc Chaumeil,
work, which
in these
is
two books
notable for both are
triangle d’or, 110.
and the
in interpretation.
patience and
documents that speak
Chaumeil to take responsibility
Le Tresor du
its
(self-
its
pre-
for themselves.
for his contention.
The Abbe Sauniere Legend case in the court of
Rome. Monsignor de Beausejour returned
offensive, however,
and demanded the
141
to the
obedience. This time,
priest’s
because war had broken out, the atmosphere had changed completely.
Suddenly Beranger Sauniere was no longer paying obliged to borrow money. Nothing
wicked tongues chimed archduke resurfaced,
in,
was going
his bills
and was
anymore. The
right
of course, and the figure of the Austrian
at least in conversation.
The
civil
authorities sus-
pected Sauniere of indulging in espionage and maintaining relations
with the enemy.
It is
obvious that his relationship with the archduke of
Austria (since proved to be an absolute fact) constituted a serious
charge against him. Sauniere was considered an agent
information to the central empires. has ever been proved
espionage
now
is
Sauniere affair
Of course, nothing about
—and nothing
will ever be proved, for
when
banished from consideration
— but
it
was
who
said that the
passed
his actions
any idea of
comes
it
to the
Magdala Tower served
as
an
observatory for enemy spies and that some of them hid in the “secret
chambers” of
Villa Bethania.
Thus we next
find Sauniere in the defendant’s chair. In truth, he
defended himself so clumsily that he gave credence to every slanderous
word
said of him. In
1915 he was suspens a
which meant he no longer had the perform Mass
duties, to
who
in public, or to confer the
did not live there. This in no
from attending the built
still
no one had the plicity of the
The
a
new
priest,
serials written
though
prevented the townspeople
gardens, and the
had had
Magdala
Marie Denarnaud) and
presbytery, with the official
municipal authorities, was
Here the various
Some
way
villa, its
Sauniere and not to the official priest.
tions.
now had
private property (belonging to
right to evict him.
all,
holy sacrament of
services that Sauniere held in the chapel he
beneath Villa Bethania, for the
Tower were
once and for
right to exercise his ministerial
the Catholic Church. Rennes-le-Chateau
one
divinis
It
still
was
legally rented to
com-
Beranger
a curious situation.
about Sauniere go
in different direc-
say that Beranger Sauniere and Marie Denarnaud traveled
across Occitania in search of money, even selling blessed medals to
wounded priest
and
soldiers being treated in hospitals. Others maintain that the his servant hid
often. Others
out
in their
domain and avoided
show Sauniere using every means
leaving
it
too
at his disposal in the
He Who
142
Brings Scandal
attempt to have his position in the church to say that Beranger
and Marie were hounded more and more by
creditors. Fortunately,
if
we may
war was going
say so, the
servant
made
Since iety,
for
Magdalene Church
it
in
did not have a friend or relative at the Front?
his loyal
Who
“who
did not
died for
country”? In Rennes-les Bains, Abbe Boudet was growing old. The
tumult of war did not affect him, but
although the war was
still
stopped and no one
home
of his family. In 1915,
knew what might happen articles
not far from Rennes-le-Chateau, Abbe
He summoned
still
to his colleague’s side.
What
did the
30, 1915, Henri Boudet gently
left this
stories of soldiers
In Axat,
Boudet
Beranger Sauniere,
As might be expected, no one witnessed
It
next. Anxiety
and the
on furlough, generally the convalescing wounded.
God and
He
going on, the Germans had been momentar-
was known only through newspaper
coming
declining.
remote rural regions of the Aude, where the war
ruled, even in these
approaching.
was
his strength
resigned his post and retired to Axat,
ily
ex-
France had been gripped with great anx-
include in their immediate entourage at least one person his
The
through the storm relatively unscathed.
1914 every family
who
Rennes-le-Chateau and
in
their
on, and the
recovering of debts was not the chief concern of the courts. priest of Saint
concur
officially restored. All
his
felt
which was
who wasted no
two of them
hour
last
time in
discuss then?
their conversation.
On March
earth, apparently at peace with
himself.
was
matically.
at this point that
He
his suppliers.
Beranger Sauniere’s fortunes changed dra-
abruptly paid off his most pressing debts and reimbursed
He
regained his taste for
making ambitious
plans.
a canal system that
wished to improve
He wished
life.
Now full
of hope, he started
to furnish Rennes-le-Chateau with
would bring clean water
into every house.
living conditions in the village
and
He
to build a large
tower on the east side of the town that would balance the Magdala
Tower and from which he could preach wished to
listen.
Of
put in his orders and Just
these there
made
what happened
to
his
the
who had no doubt. He
good word
would be many, he
to all those
down payments.
prompt
this
turnabout? The simplest expla-
nation for this “resurrection” relates to
Abbe Boudet. Perhaps
before
dying he entrusted Sauniere with the great secret that the priest was
still
The Abbe Sauniere Legend
lacking.
Was
143
an inexhaustible treasure or important docu-
this secret
ments? Calculations can allow us to make brisk progress here: The fact
man
remains that in 1916 Beranger Sauniere became again the
was-— a man of boundless ambition, ready build things
more
to
perform great
he once
feats
and
beautiful than any of his earlier achievements to
ensure that he would be remembered for a long time to come. This
would be
revenge against Episcopal authority, for while he had
his
quarrels with the bishopric, he
had
in
no way renounced
his faith
and
continued to hold Mass in his chapel, most often in the presence of the faithful of
who
Rennes,
preferred to forgo the official
Mass performed
by a priest they did not accept. Until the end, Beranger Sauniere
remained “priest” of Rennes-le-Chateau.
The year turned
who had
on Abbe Sauniere’s wish all
the
and
still
erected in
itors.
monument was
list,
communes in
He worked on
fit
list
of those
erected that
memorial to the dead similar to those
a
his plans while waiting for the time to realize
on January 17
the threshold of the
He was
was now
of France. Beranger Sauniere
carried into his
them
date on the tomb-
(recall the
stone of the marquise d’Hautpoul) an illness took
was crossing
had not been
condition. His powerful build impressed his vis-
concretely. Nevertheless,
ered.
The
on.
died for their country grew longer every day, and soon on the
Rennes-le-Chateau square a
sixty-five
The war dragged
to 1917.
him down while he
Magdala Tower, and he never recov-
room
in
the presbytery,
and while
Beranger suffered, Marie Denarnaud anxiously sent someone in search of a doctor.
He had known
he was
ill
for
some
time, but
had always pretended
otherwise. Several days went by, and then he asked Marie to bring a priest. It
was Abbe
to Rennes.
He
Riviere, the priest of Couiza,
who made
closeted himself in Sauniere’s room.
conversation rather, went on for a long time.
came down from
the village, he
The
When
was pale and
the climb
confession, or
the Couiza priest
livid. It
has even been
claimed that he remained laid out for a long time before recovering his peace of mind.
What
have entrusted to
frightful secret
his ears?
It is
might
his colleague
also claimed that at the
Abbe Sauniere
moment
of his
death, the priest of Rennes-le-Chateau had uttered this mysterious
name
in the
presence of Doctor Courrent: Jean XXIII.
It
was
also claimed
He Who
144
Brings Scandal
that he received
Extreme Unction only conditionally two days
after his
death, before being buried in the small cemetery bordering the church
he had loved so well.
We
will never
them
or entrust
about
know
The dead take
the truth.
Abbe
conversation with
his last
Abbe
to the confessional.
their secrets with
Riviere never said a
them
word
Sauniere, but after the priest’s
death on the night of January 22, 1917, tongues were wagging at top speed,
only about his funeral arrangements. Through the efforts of
if
Marie Denarnaud, he was allegedly placed on of his
villa
and clad
man
tional
was even
through
robes sporting crimson
in rich
crush of visitors from
all
over,
whom
coming
to
pay
final
homage
to this excep-
scandal had arrived in Rennes-le-Chateau.
a black crepe veil
Following the somewhat pagan ceremony
woman whose
—Emma in
It
face
32 Calve, of course!
which the
visitors tore the
from the robe of the deceased, the townspeople carried Sauniere’s
coffin into the church, his church, priest’s
tomb was
When the
where Abbe Riviere
for his
will of the deceased
bank accounts, no
Denarnaud, trapped
was
in her grief,
read,
never
memory
revealing any of his secrets.
It
was
it
name
was discovered he owned of Marie Denarnaud.
left Villa
Bethania. She led a sad
of Beranger Sauniere without ever
on gold.
then
If so,
why
did this old
die destitute in 1953, in such financial difficulties that she sell
her property to Noel
there the rest of her
life? If
there
Corbu
had
was not
so tenacious that
it
now
32. Jean-Louis Fournier has his television film
on
F.R. 3,
by Jean-Michel Thibaux.
really
the case, that this
been gold coins underfoot,
web
more honest.
have to
of invention has been
a
remarkable job of transferring
L’Or du Diable
[Devil’s
fiction, of course,
but
this to the screen in
Gold] (1989), based on two novels is
no more absurd than
has been said and written seriously about Beranger Sauniere. it is
We
passes for historical reality.
done
It is
was
in return for the right to live
she should have been able to profit from them herself. believe that this
As
often said that she repeatedly told
the villagers that they were walking
forced to
The
them has ever been found. Marie
trace of
existence there, living in the
woman
officiated.
erected against the wall of the sanctuary.
nothing. All his properties were in the
to say
There was a
tassels.
said that a barouche brought a beautiful
was concealed behind
tassels
a throne in the large hall
I
all else
would even go so
that
far as
The Abbe Sauniere Legend
Yet there
There are
is
the
Church of Mary Magdalene
Villa Bethania
Rennes-le-Chateau.
and the Magdala Tower. There
Beranger Sauniere’s shadow
between truth and
in
is
present everywhere.
fiction to be
found
in this
145
is
the fact that
Where
is
the line
absurd though highly
instructive story?
There grafted
is
a Sauniere myth, but
upon an inner
reality,
no myth
even
if
it
exists that has
not been
difficult to see that reality
through the fog of the imaginary. There was a Sauniere mystery, no
doubt about
it.
Who,
then,
was
this
uncommon
individual?
5
Who Was Abbe On
June
1,
Sauniere?
1967, the vicar general Georges Boyer published a
fairly
long article in La Semaine religieuse de Carcassonne under the “Clarification
and Warning.”
It
includes this particularly notable
title
line:
For several years our old Razes has periodically become the theater of disappointing searches, impassioned excavations, and sensational publications.
The
wave
epicenter of this tidal
appropriately enough, in Rennes-le-Chateau, where centrically over
it
is
located,
extends con-
Coumesourde, Rennes-les-Bains, the plateau des
Fees (Las Brugos), Blanchefort, and
Campagne
sur
Aude
—
in short,
over this Visigothic center rich in history but even richer today in legends and a wealth of apocryphal documents. unhesitatingly that a treasure olis
is
It
is
declared
hidden there in an ancient necrop-
and that the bishop of Carcassonne knows of the existence of
this necropolis
of the
but refuses to disclose
fortune
—and
the
gamut
secret.
expenditures
Rennes-le-Chateau, Abbe Sauniere, a rich
its
who
—of
.
a
.
.
The explanation
former priest of
died in 1917, stretches in
of assumptions, from the profits of wartime espionage
to the discovery of a Visigothic, Cathar, Templar, or royal treasure.
After
all,
the hunt for treasure
is
and the work of the imagination tion
— does
a healthy,
if
not profitable, diversion,
—even that of an unbridled imagina-
not justify some kind of warning in a religious weekly,
which, by nature, should be peaceable. The quote continues: 146
Who Was Abbe Until then,
was permissible
it
to smile. But after that point
been no longer possible to hold our
now
we
1
heard
and
sacred to us,
we
.
.
it
to have
it
clearly
names
to be used for dubious or
.
easy to see that by like
we wish
not allow them to be attacked
will
will not allow their
commercial ends
Whether we
is
preceding that
in the
unjustly
now
has
have a whole bundle of proof and presumptions. Because the
reputation of our priests
It is
it
long inquiry
silence. After a
147
Sauniere?
or not,
its
very nature the subject
Abbe
is
a delicate one.
Sauniere, devoted priest that he was,
belongs to history, and history belongs to everyone. The main
objective
becomes knowing what any given person anyone can force the
a display of total bias,
is
facts
trying to prove. In
and documents to
deviate support to one view over the other, depending desire
is
to
on whether the
whitewash Sauniere against certain accusations or to exploit
the personality of this unusual priest to the extent of claiming that he
had sold
his soul to the devil.
domain and
in this
that
it
We
have to accept that confusion reigns
can be quite
difficult to separate the reality
of the events from the sometimes absurd interpretations that have been
made
of them. Given, then, that a Sauniere “mystery” really exists, an
made
attempt must be
if
not to solve
this end, the first thing to
who Abbe
just
do
is
it,
then at least to explain
to learn, based
on
reliable
should not be overlooked.
He was born
April 11, 1852. Astrology’s devotees
documents,
in
is
a reality that
Montazels, near Couiza, on
would be
able to deduce
—why haven’t they done so already? —that Sauniere was an
The
To
Sauniere was before legend took hold of him.
Beranger Sauniere was a native of the region. This
this
it.
chief characteristic of this sign
obstacles headfirst, even
if
is
a subconscious desire to
from Aries.
ram
into
the consequences can be quite onerous.
Beranger was the eldest son of an honorable family: His father was then steward for the marquis de Cazemajou and the manager of the flour mill
1.
—that
The bishopric
is,
he held an important position, especially in that era.
released a portion of the
documents from
sequently published and analyzed in Jacques Riviere’s
Rennes-le-Chateau
Cbateau
in
in
castle’s
1983, and
in Pierre Jarnac’s
this inquiry,
which were sub-
work Le Fabuleux Tresor de
book Histoire du
tresor de Rennes-le-
1985. These two books form the essential foundation for any objective study
of the case of
Abbe
Sauniere.
He Who
148
The land
Brings Scandal
Couiza Valley
in the
rich
is
oldest families of the region a family
The
irrigated.
The Cazemajous
of pastureland and orchards.
full
and well
and are cousins of the Negri d’Ables.
members. Consequently,
its
is
are related to the
devoted to the Christian cause and could count
and nuns among
valley
many
It
was
priests
can be declared that the
it
Sauniere family, although commoners, albeit not run-of-the-mill ones,
shared the same conditioning.
became
We was
priests:
Two
of Joseph
Saumere’s children
Beranger and his younger brother, Alfred.
should also examine the era during which Sauniere grew up. This
the time of the Second Empire.
The noble
families of the Occitan
region and their “supporters” voted en masse for Louis-Napoleon out of fear of the Republicans
were Catholic by
and
especially the Socialists. Here, individuals
tradition, principle,
and conviction, and those who
shared this view could not place any trust in individuals who, under the influence of Jewish bankers
and Freemasons of every
stripe,
were apt to
betray the interests of the Church. Following the disaster of 1870, most 2 of those in Occitania were, of course, anti-Communard, praying for the
transformation of the young Republic into a monarchy with, at a
man worthy
of the rank
and incontestable legitimists
who
—
in this instance,
monarchy of
head,
Henri V, count of Chambord
heir of the legitimate line, for in
believed in the
its
Montazels people were
divine right
and damned the
Orleans pretender to Hell. They could not forgive him for being the
descendant of Philippe Egalite, a well-known regicide and grand master of the Freemasons during the years that preceded the Revolution. This
why a
Masonic order
well.
made concerning Beranger
the accusations
We know
Sauniere ’s membership in
are not only ridiculous, but completely unrealistic as is
it
the checkerboard pattern of the floor of the Saint
Magdalene Church that has given is
rise to that
opinion, but anyone
a partisan monarchist in favor of the legitimate line
mentalist Catholic; the
pope from
his
is
it
could not be otherwise.
is
also a funda-
When Napoleon
III
papal states by means of Italian intermediaries,
quickly explained that the deed
2. [This refers to the Paris
Commune
drove it
was
was motivated by an agreement between
that took control of the capital
and established
popular government following the debacle of the Franco-Prussian War. The
was bloodily suppressed by
who
the Republican
government of A. Thiers.
a
Commune
— Translator]
Who Was Abbe the former Badinguet 3
Sauniere
149
and those diabolical Masons who wished
to per-
Napoleon
vert the world.
had shown hypocrisy
III
he
in this matter, for
was, as we know, personally dependent on the Carbonari.
It
was
to
conciliate the French Catholics that he pretended to aid the pope.
Fortunately, Pope Pious
X
condemned
the bush, he
soon appeared, and without beating around forms of democracy as counter to the
all
who
designs of God. There were the producers, the warriors, and those pray. This
is
the
famous Indo-European
Middle
tripartition that the
Ages raised to a position of honor and which corresponds to the Divine
Of
Plan.
course,
always possible for someone
it is
ducer to become a
member
who
starts as a pro-
of the sacerdotal class. In fact, this
is
what
Beranger and his brother Alfred did. This life
is
the ambience in
which the young Beranger was
raised. All his
how
he would remain loyal to his monarchist convictions, no matter
reactionary or paternalistic they were.
work he wished
explaining the priest
must be the engine of
tual plane.
In
Why
It
also goes a long
to accomplish in Rennes-le-Chateau:
on both the material and the
society
would Beranger Sauniere want
1874 Beranger entered the
large
Alfred had been ordained, a year illustrates that
earlier,
to attain the goal he
years old and
spiri-
to be anything else?
study. After his brother
he was ordained a priest in
way
he had some difficulty making his
through and that he was clearly not of exceptional
managed
had
set for himself.
was named Vicar of
A
seminary of Carcassonne,
where he pursued the appropriate course of
1879, which
way toward
intelligence. Yet he
He was
twenty-seven
Alet, with a salary of nine
hundred
francs a year as established by the law governing the concordat realized
between Church and
He showed to
combine
himself to be a devoted priest and never missed a chance
his duties
with humanitarian actions, by either seeking to
give or having others give a constant with
fortune,
it
State.
Abbe
money
to his neediest parishioners. This
Sauniere: Although he
was accused of amassing
must be acknowledged that he always planned on using
others. This
is
was
it
a
for
obviously quite a paternalistic tendency, which conforms
completely with the behaviors of the aristocratic class of the time. The
3. [This
is
Napoleon
Ill’s
given name.
— Translator
He Who
150
Brings Scandal
implications of this system are immediately apparent: the French populace in a state of
who
those
They maintain
dependency upon the Church and
have concluded an alliance with
it
—
words, the
in other
monarchists and the right-wing Republican parties
who were
always
ready to rally to the Royalist cause. Sauniere’s attitude, which he shared
with a good number of his colleagues, was obviously a result of his education in the
When
shadow
the priest
streets of Alet.
of an aristocratic family.
had some
He was
free time, he liked to stroll
man
a
through the
of the country with a large build and
seemed to exude strength and health. He loved to go out and “take the
and was always interested
air,”
in
what he might
of his favorite paths led around the
He
remnants of the monastery.
monument and was
see
on
his walks.
One
rums of the old cathedral and the
regretted the
bygone splendor of the
sorry that Viollet-le-Duc had decided against
restoring this edifice in 1862. Sauniere could also often be seen before the
tomb
of the former bishop of Alet, Nicolas Pavilion, the friend of
Vincent de Paul, sioned
who
—extremely rare
also gave charity to the
time
in his
poor and had envi-
— both the participation of women
and the education of the
the spreading of the gospel
in
rural populace.
Sauniere often pondered on the example given by the twenty-ninth
bishop of Alet, and
when he took
Rennes-le-Chateau, he vision.
Might he have
made
matter
every attempt to put into practice his
recalled the
troubadour Uc de Saint-Circ
—that claimed that
it
responsibility for the parish of
ambiguous words of the Occitan
—words
related to a completely different
was through
Perhaps his thoughts had turned, even
Woman that one attained God?
at this early age, to the strange fig-
Mary Magdalene. After all, it was she to whom turned when he needed someone to bring the news
ure of
the resurrected
Jesus
to his disciples.
Over the course of these “archaeological” promenades, Beranger Sauniere met an individual
who
Rennes-le-Chateau
though he turned the
affair,
has received scant notice in the whole
down. This meeting may have been an life,
of a
man
life
work he accomplished.
one pointed out the importance of these meetings
as mysterious as
upside
essential influence in Sauniere’s
or at least justification for a part of the
Why has no
priest’s
Abbe Sauniere? This
individual
in the life
was Henri
Dujardin-Beaumetz, a painter whose works have not been passed
down
Who Was Abbe to posterity, but
who
He appeared
ties.
himself had a decisive affect on Sauniere’s activi-
later as a
favored guest at Villa Bethania.
Henri Dujardin-Beaumetz was born profession, he could not earn a living politics.
He became
151
Sauniere?
in
from
1852. Though an his paintings
a general councilor for the
1889, he was elected deputy.
He took an
Aude,
artist
by
and so entered after
active role in the
which, in
Chamber
of
Deputies and later rose to the position of undersecretary of state of fine arts. is
of
Dujardin-Beaumetz was a member of the Radical party and, what
most important consideration
here, a die-hard Freemason.
a curious friendship that linked these
and
legitimist
who was
a monarchist
scrupulous of his duties; the other was anticlerical, which
— a man who was ready to
san of laity and combisme. 4
And
lasted until the death of
What
his
fight for the Left, a parti-
Dujardin-Beaumetz
in
1910.
to talk about?
They discussed
hid his opinions and neither
mind, but they also
is
yet neither betrayed the friendship,
men have found
could these two
politics, of course, for neither
changing
was
ready to fight for the Right, a sincere believer and priest
not to say atheist
which
two men. One was
It
likely discussed art
was
close to
and archaeology
as
they strolled together through the ruins of the Alet abbey. Sauniere was
completely ignorant on this subject. Before the modern era,
was given priests.
in seminaries to
This
is
the reason
developing the
why
so
many
artistic sensibilities
village priests
statues at bargain prices to antique dealers
little
This
is
and replaced them with the
why, before the time that buildings were
listed as historic
monuments, countless
of future
have sold beautiful
horrible Saint-Sulpician plaster statues that are the disgrace of tuaries.
thought
priests
murdered
many sanc-
classified
their churches,
transforming sanctuaries of prayer and beauty into conference
Beranger Sauniere listened to what the painter had to to hie
PYnhnatinnc nn the vprv
rirh
and
say,
halls.
5
and no doubt
and vprv svmhnhr ornamentation of
He Who
152
this
Brings Scandal
venerable and neglected sanctuary that quarrymen continued to dev-
astate with the permission of the administration, despite the protests of
Dujardin-Beaumetz.
No
doubt Sauniere pondered the great necessity of
giving people concrete examples and images of the Christian doctrine,
even
bore an unsettling aspect. As a
these examples sometimes
if
Freemason, Dujardin-Beaumetz knew such symbolism and taught the
young
vicar certain keys. This
But a
On
ever.
man
is
not a matter for debate.
such as Beranger Sauniere does not remain a vicar for-
June 16, 1882, the new bishop of Carcassonne, Monsignor
Felix Billard,
named
Sauniere priest to serve the parish of Le Clat, in the
deanery of Axat. This was a village of some 282 inhabitants, perched
on the edge of
looked out over the magnificent landscape
a plateau that
quite poor
The parishioners were
of the Sault region.
and supported
themselves by breeding mules. This was hardly a desirable posting, but Sauniere behaved appropriately, keeping in
He remained
said that Sauniere
It is
refrained from saying for
discover just
books
in
what
his desire to
and leave behind some architectural
the fate of the populace his passage there.
mind
had
improve traces of
there for three years in great solitude. a passion for books, but people
what books, and no one has ever been
his library held. Surely
it
have
able to
held sacred texts and also
Greek, Latin, and Hebrew. But Sauniere was no intellectual;
he was instead a village in Axat,
man
of action
—
While
a builder, not a meditater.
in the
he probably suffered patiently, knowing that one day or
another he would be given a parish worthy of him. In
1883 important news made
the death of the count of
its
way
to Le Clat: Sauniere learned of
Chambord, who was
the legitimate pretender to the throne of France,
by
his followers.
It is
the tricolored flag,
tion of those
known
and
his
who would
We know
Duke
who was
of Bordeaux,
called
otherwise have accepted his return to the throne.
was
heir.
From then on
the sole pre-
the count of Paris, an Orleans.
that during that
these
monuments
monuments
to the
still
V
obvious disdain for the people alienated a por-
same year Royalist committees, which
were particularly active and benefited from rather anonymous erected
Henry
that his intransigence, his refusal to accept
Yet he died in exile in Austria, without an tender of Capet origin
also
memory
exists in
of the count of
largesse,
Chambord. One of
Sainte-Anne d’Auray
(in
Morbihan),
in
Who Was Abbe the addition to the basilica that
was
erected
and reactionary
ple of the triumphalist
the
art
in
honor
a characteristic
exam-
on during 1883
which
of the patron saint of the Bretons, and
is
153
Sauniere
—or rather pseudo-art—of
Catholic Church of the end of the nineteenth century. Other
famous
Coeur
—and
aesthetically horrific
in Paris;
Notre-Dame de Fouviere
Ars-sur-Formans Salette
Ardeche). There
in
and the painful-to-see is
this style are Sacre-
Lyon; the
new
basilica of
hideous basilica of Notre-Dame de
(in Ain); the
Isere);
(in
—expressions of
basilica of
la
La Louvesc
also the basilica of the turncoat
(in
who remained
nonetheless a devoted extremist, Saint Francis-Regis, the “apostle” of the “repentant” Protestants, and, finally, the zenith
and the very pious
artists
of Lourdes.
The
umph.
Its
and reactionary Christianity of Pious
intransigent
traces can be
all
Notre-Dame
Grillot de Givry, the basilica of
canonized for the needs of the cause) was
(since
denounced by
found
in the
midst of a
X
tri-
Dreyfus Affair and in the machi-
in the
nations of Leo Taxil over the Freemasons, as well in the overly famous
“Protocols of the Elders of Zion.” This fake document, duly recognized as such today,
prompted the
wreaked havoc
first
tually lead to the
in earlier fundamentalist milieus
manifestations of an anti-Semitism that
would even-
crematory ovens of Nazism (which some intellectuals
who today confuse history and ideology deny ever existed). What characterizes these monuments and churches is not taste,
only bad
but also something that could be described as a systematic chal-
lenge to beauty. Everything in just a
and
shadow
thus terror.
product of
It
them
of the image of a
artistic sensibility
bogeyman
and
this tendency.
deity
It
was
his
was not very developed, he
ological views with the advice he
His lack of
ugly, formless,
who
and grandiose, with inspires respect
and
should be emphasized that Beranger Sauniere was a pure
this era
blame him
is
entirely for the
bad
was
own
culture. Because his
strove to conciliate his ide-
given. This
is
why
it is
difficult to
taste that prevails at Rennes-le-Chateau.
artistic sensibility left
him open
to influences that included
those that completely contradicted his personal positions.
Whatever the truth may be about lations,
and
artistic
specu-
He
visual-
Beranger Sauniere dreamed of something grandiose.
ized himself at the faithful
his intellectual
head of
would come
a
new Lourdes, where
countless crowds of the
to worship not him, but the religion he represented.
He Who
154
Brings Scandal
Unfortunately, Monsignor Billard did not offer
He was
his plans.
motions:
offered Rennes-le-Chateau.
He moved from
Was Monsignor
It
Billard trying to get rid of
when someone
sibility
of a
is
named
way
sented as a promotion but in reality
some kind of vice, the
Roman
to pursue a course that
a
is
he
is
offered the responhis talents to a
to another parish because
which
is
conforms to that which
—the newcomer
is
is
pre-
failed ini-
to be extremely poor or
not always very
Catholic Church wants
—
move
punishment for certain
the nature of
Usually, after an apprenticeship
manage
one of 298.
or another. Such a
The new parish customarily turns out
The hierarchy of
to
to
of people. There are cases, however, where a clergyman
he displeased his superiors in one
stained by
form
the tiniest of pro-
more important parish where he can bring
served a parish as vicar or priest
tiatives.
in the
serving a parish has per-
satisfactorily for a certain period of time,
number
to realize
him? The promotion does
formed
who
was
282 inhabitants
a parish of
indeed seem strange. Ordinarily,
larger
means
the
discharged from the parish of Le Clat, but
was
of a promotion
him
its
6
spiritual servants
expected of a
is
clear.
a trial period in a place that
priest.
difficult
is
given a position that suits his aspirations as
common good. But it does not seem that this was the case Sauniere. He found himself in a new parish equivalent to
well as the
for
Beranger
his
though perhaps more
first,
6.
I
have personally witnessed a case of
familiar
Given
is
that of
his age,
Abbe Henri
and
after
Gillard,
having
to administer than his previous
difficult
this nature.
whom
I
The example with which
rightly consider to be
fulfilled his duties as vicar in
two
my
I
am most
spiritual father.
parishes,
where he
dis-
pleased both the incumbent titleholder of the parish as well as the bishop of Vannes, on
whom
he depended, he was
named
rector of Trehorenteuc (in Morbihan).
What was
seemingly a promotion turned out to be only a snare because the parish, numbering no
more than one hundred most
difficult to
locally as the
inhabitants,
was not only
the poorest in the diocese but also the
administer both temporally and spiritually.
“chamber pot of the diocese.”
No
It
was
actually
known
need to say that Abbe Gillard met the
challenge and transformed this modest parish into one of the most important centers of spiritual
and secular pilgrimage currently existing on the peninsula. But
reflection, that this
independence and Gillard’s
promotion was actually
spirit
of initiative. For
the republication of several pamphlets that
Helias,
Yann
Brekilien,
book
punishment
more about
book Les Mysteres de Broceliande
Personally assembled by him, the
a
for
this, see
(Paris: Ploermel,
Abbe
seems, on
having shown too
much
my
Abbe
introduction to
1983), which consists of
Gillard published while
also includes
and Charles Le Quintrec.
it
still
alive.
commentaries by Pierre-Jakez
Who Was Abbe
155
Sauniere?
charge and without the merit of being more prestigious. This state of affairs
brings
up the problem of Monsignor
bishop of
Billard,
Carcassonne and hierarchical superior of Abbe Sauniere.
It
should be
noted that originally only bishops were considered Christ’s true heirs and therefore the only ones eligible to give sacrament. later
was only during
It
development of the Church that the bishops delegated some of
powers to those “charged with the mission”
word
cure [priest]) to
their
meaning of the
for rural populaces the apostolic
fulfill
they, for lack of time, could
(the actual
work
that
not fully realize themselves.
This brought Beranger Sauniere to Rennes-le-Chateau. His
impression must have been one of disappointment: the middle of a barren mountain. parish,
“enriching”? Every parish has
its
for
from
this
bad
dioceses.
The
—would have
took care
state
—the repair of the church and depend on
to
So work he would, while recovering a legacy
win
its
number. The stingy salary allotted by the
the presbytery, for instance
a hole lost in
was long-standing: The populace was
of the priest’s basic needs, but anything else
trying to
was
first
being difficult and hardly
for
good dioceses and
reputation of Rennes-le-Chateau in
It
What could he have hoped
which then had a reputation
poor and few
the
left
by
his
own
efforts.
his predecessor
and
the support of the local church council, in charge of admin-
istering parish property,
and the municipal
who
authorities,
are the local
sponsors of a state body controlled by the Ministry of Worship.
The poverty of Rennes-le-Chateau and
the state of dilapidation in
which he found the church and presbytery determined Beranger Sauniere to this
act. If
something needed to be done, he would do
“something” was out of the ordinary and marginally
respect to the laws of that time.
good
evaluating
to recall the unfavorable situation in
arrival in Rennes-le-Chateau.
tions did not help matters.
Monsignor
Billard
Though
and recovered
“failure to maintain his duty to
legal
Sauniere,
forced out, he
very
it is
his
elec-
was protected by with the reestab-
we saw earlier, was suspended show detachment.” To whom
for his
did he
appearing on the blacklist of the
Republican regime: the intervention of
who was
if
with
which he was plunged on
his position as priest
his rapid reintegration after
Dujardin-Beaumetz,
Abbe
even
His loud and ill-timed stance on the
lishment of his salary, which, as
owe
When
it,
much
his in
friend
the
Freemason
favor in Paris, or that of
He Who
156
Monsignor times?
No
Brings Scandal
Billard, his bishop,
who
could also have a “long arm” at
one knows and no document offers answers to
There
are, then, the fierce desire
he displayed to restore the church;
odd association with Marie Denarnaud;
his
this question.
the
incomprehensible
indulgence of his bishop; the excavations in the church and the discov-
tombs
ery of something; the defacing of
in the cemetery; his
wanderings
on the stony plateau; the discussions with Abbe Boudet; the confidences
made
he gave and confessions he the
humble country
ments
to
Abbe
Gelis; the
priest into the great feudal lord; his actual achieve-
with people foreign to
in the village; his definite relationships
region; his repeated journeys
astoundingly rich
(all
lifestyle; his
tions; his unsettling
metamorphosis of
proved except for
this
his trip to Paris); his
continuous support for monarchist posi-
and controversial refurbishment of the church;
exchanges with the archduke of Austria, quarrel with
(this is indisputable); his
who was known
as Jean
his
Orth
Monsignor de Beausejour, who
succeeded Monsignor Billard to the Carcassonne
seat; the accusations
of trafficking in Masses that were lodged against him; his clumsy
defense of himself; his refusal to explain the true origin of the funds at his disposal; his
of
Rome;
temporary disgrace and
his definitive ouster as
first
suspens a divinis; his relentless desire
to stay lodged in Rennes-le-Chateau; his
beginning of World
War
I;
and
finally his death,
hovers over his
last
number
the display of
lie
more grandiose and onerous
until
managed
and
1953. All of this raises a
in areas of significant
Beranger Sauniere was a secretive sharing confidences, and he
death of
(did he receive absolution or not?),
Marie Denarnaud
of problems that
at the
which was quite sudden, the mystery that
moments
the strange attitude of
temporary poverty
his return to strength following the
Abbe Boudet, complete with plans;
rehabilitation in the court
shadow.
man who was
to convince
little
inclined to
Marie Denarnaud
to
keep quiet about him after he had stepped into the beyond. This she did, thereby respecting the wishes of the deceased, to
been, in one
way
whom
or another, blindly devoted for her entire
she had
life.
In the
photos taken of him (which he subsequently published as postcards and
He
customarily had these pic-
and Marie Denaraud taken
in front of Villa Bethania,
sold at a profit), Sauniere liked to strut. tures of himself at the
Magdala Tower, or
work and showed
in his
convoluted gardens.
the assurance of
He had
pride in his
someone who has nothing
to lose,
Who Was Abbe even
in
Sauniere?
157
matters that could prove harmful to him. In a word,
Abbe
Beranger Sauniere was a secretive and discreet
man
whose deepest
This
reality
difficult to single out.
is
all his life,
why
is
and one
it is
impor-
tant to meticulously scrutinize the areas in shadow. Paradoxically, they
shed light on the personality of Beranger Sauniere and give
may
rise to
considerations that are completely different from those in the story that
was
up around him forty years
built
after his death.
SHADOW OF MONSIGNOR
THE
Too much emphasis has been placed on
BILLARD
the “complicity” that might
have united the bishop of Carcassonne and the priest of Rennes-leChateau.
It
has even been said that while the bishop
hardly glorious posting,
priceless value to the
Monsignor
if
why choose
Monsignor
likely
hidden there, prob-
toward Sauniere has the advantage of Sauniere over someone else?
Some peo-
— but
on whose
was
acting
on orders
his
archbishop or from the Vatican
that are both ingenious
and opaque have suggested that
orders? Did he receive
Minds
the priest with
before his exile to Spain. This explanation of
ple maintain that the bishop
itself?
most
that were
Billard’s attitude
being logical. But
to this
not a treasure, then at least documents of
Church
Abbe Bigou
ably by
was because he had charged
it
a secret mission: to find,
named him
Billard
was
them from
acting in the
name
of a mysterious brotherhood
that supervised the Sauniere operation. There for this explanation, however.
It
is
no pressing evidence
appears normal for the ecclesiastical
hierarchy to take an interest in documents concerning the Church, and
even to be ready to place these documents in a secure location (for
it is
not good to publicize everything). Nevertheless, this hypothesis of collusion faith,
on
one that no more casts doubt on the honesty, good
and Christian
his
ceeded
have
a valid
is
subordinate
zeal of
Abbe
in his mission,
let
it
Monsignor
Sauniere. is
the priest act as he
Billard than
this,
the bishop
financial affairs.
hurls
To reward Sauniere
opprobrium
for having suc-
conceivable that Monsignor Billard would
saw
fit
in the
the building of the original structures he
Yet to do
it
renovation of his church and
had created
would have had
in his
imagination.
to shut his eyes to Sauniere ’s
He Who
158
Brings Scandal
true that
It is
Monsignor
always
Billard
Sauniere free to accom-
left
whatever he wanted to undertake. While he
plish
ornamentation of the church and
at the bizarre
show.
let it
seems that he saw
It
priest to present
That
parishes.
is
decoration only the desire of a
in this
There
all.
from neighboring
his
nothing intrinsically shocking about the
is
is
depicted in submission, fulfilling a role
he detests: holding up a holy water stoup. There
we may wonder how Monsignor
Indeed,
surroundings, he never
its
something that would distinguish
devil at the entranceway, for he
this.
may have been shocked
is
nothing heterodox
in
might have been
Billard
able to reproach Sauniere for displaying such an eloquent symbol.
Whether
it
in
is
good
taste
Monsignor
aesthetics of
The argument
that
is
another matter entirely
Billard
— but perhaps the
matched those of Abbe Sauniere.
Monsignor
Billard entrusted Sauniere with his
mission on behalf of a mysterious brotherhood
is
based on the fact that
following Billard’s replacement as the head of the diocese by Monsignor Beausejour, circumstances changed and the defendant’s seat.
It is
Abbe Sauniere found himself
not far to travel from there to claiming that
Monsignor Beausejour was unaware of there
is
in
his predecessor’s dealings. Yet
nothing that prevented Monsignor Beausejour from sharing the
same outlook
as his predecessor. In reality, however, during Billard’s
final years in his post the
sor naturally
wanted
atmosphere had became too
hand and
to take things in
lax.
His succes-
restore order to the dio-
he was no doubt deeply shocked at Sauniere’s overly visible
cese;
display of
what was
called his fortune.
dience to his bishop even rights
made
The
if
A
priest in a diocese
owes obe-
he can, in certain cases, take advantage of
available through canonical law.
attitudes of
Monsignor
Billard
and Monsignor Beausejour
appear perfectly comprehensible. Nothing whatsoever gives any basis to the accusation that
Monsignor
weird game. Furthermore, there
was involved
Billard is
in
some kind of
not a shred of evidence that he
belonged to some sort of brotherhood that worked in the shadows, and it is
dishonest to claim otherwise. While Sauniere gave his bishop doc-
uments that he had discovered found some
—
in
in his
church
doing so he was only
— for
it is
fulfilling his
certain that he
duty as a
Likewise, Monsignor Billard, by hiding these documents, filling his
duty as a prelate. All the rest
is
mere
story.
priest.
was only
ful-
Who Was Abbe
159
Sauniere ?
THE SHADOW OF ABBE BOUDET There were friendship
No
definitely
numerous contacts and
and mutual respect between Abbe Boudet and Abbe Sauniere.
one would dream of denying
the basis of the claim that
terious secret brotherhood
Sauniere’s searches
But
it.
who
personally manipulated by
obviously was a
and the
and achievements. This story
book on
assertion
Regarding the
and overseer of supposedly sup-
is
perfectly concrete:
The
first
assertion:
It is
his passions,
even
if
is
an
Abbe Boudet’s account books.
involves
that
The second
the true Celtic language.
lifelong interest in local history
were
is
of the mys-
Boudet’s fondness for archaeology and linguistics, and the
publication of his unverified
member
on-site instigator
ported by two pieces of evidence, one of which
Abbe
has been used as
this friendship
Abbe Sauniere was
the priest of Rennes-les-Bains,
first is
on
a relationship based
incontestable that
Abbe Boudet had
a
and archaeological explorations. These
his efforts
were amateurish
rative sense of the term. Unfortunately
—
for
him and
in the
most pejo-
for everyone else
he wrote and published his appalling book on the true Celtic language, the ineptitude or naivete of belief that the
to
work was
set
which
down
borrow an expression dear
The second fied
is
so
enormous
in code, in a
that
it
has fueled the
“language of the birds,”
to fans of esotericism.
piece of evidence
—the conditional
is
would be
imperative here.
serious
It is
if it
said that
could be veri-
Abbe Boudet’s
account books indicate that from 1885 to 1901 the priest of Rennesles-Bains gave francs,
Marie Denarnaud the fabulous sum of 3,679,431 gold
which would invalidate any discovery of treasure on Sauniere’s
part as well as demolish accusations that he trafficked in Masses. But
what would be this fortune
the reason for such generosity?
intended to support?
It is
What
secret mission
clear that this assertion
was
would
lend credibility to the theory of Sauniere’s “manipulation” as well as the discreet but effective presence of a mysterious brotherhood behind the figure of Boudet, for
such a
it
is
not imaginable for a single second that
sum could have come from
try priest. Assertions like this
the personal account of a poor coun-
keep perpetuating the
Unfortunately, this bit of information
is
by one man, Pierre Plantard de Saint-Clair
story.
provided only one time and in his preface to
one of the
160
He Who
Brings Scandal
reprints of Boudet’s
La
Vraie
Langue celtiqued
Saint-Clair clearly seems to have been,
who
the one
inspired the story built
hard to take him at
is
still
exist at the family
his
Now
Pierre Plantard de
not the creator, then certainly
if
up around Sauniere since 1956.
It
word, especially given that Boudet’s papers
home
in Axat.
No
one has yet come forward to
verify the authenticity of these rather strange “donations.”
Henri Boudet was born
All of this calls for thought.
November gence, he
was
his studies
When
16, 1837.
the vicar of Quillan noted his keen intelli-
sent to the seminary of Carcassonne. There he excelled in
and obtained a degree
He was
in English.
and served two parishes before being named
He remained
Bains in 1872.
moved back
Axat
to
a quiet, simple a
good
(of
priest
life
who
and
mother and
No
sister.
slightest hint of
I
in his past.
lost
Abbe Boudet was
He was born
Edmond
Boudet’s grand-nephew,
touch with his
it
“certainly not as
into a petty bourgeois family.
Boudet, 8 was the notary in Axat
Aude).
in the possession of
still
is
(in
can be seen that Abbe Boudet earned sub-
from lands he owned
Because Henri Boudet’s ever, inventions
led
memories the picture of
and never
close to his family
have viewed, one of which
stantial revenues
He
country parish!) for archaeological and
in a
poor as some have implied.
In the deeds
parishioners’
a notary.
scandal sheet ever noted any transgressions or the
mystery
His elder brother,
who was
and
retired
never neglected duties, although he used his free time
He was
work.
when he
there until 1914,
left in his
ordained a priest
to the post at Rennes-les-
to live with his brother,
which there was plenty
linguistic
Quillan on
in
were called
jointly
with his
sister.”
appeared too simple and clear
life
for,
sometimes
at the price of
9
cut,
how-
an incredible
dishonesty. This accounts for the testimony (false, of course) given by a certain
Abbe Courtauly regarding an
Pierres gravees
7. Paris:
Vraie
Langue
Edmond, who was
celtique.
much commentary on 9. P.
a collection attributed (falsely, of course)
Editions Belfond, 1978.
8. It is this brother,
La
du Languedoc,
edition (false, of course) of Les
Edmond
the potential
famous map found
the author of the
Boudet’s signature at the bottom of the
wordplay
there:
It is
alleged that
Jarnac, Histoire du tresor de Rennes-le-Chateau, 278.
sulted the
Boudet archives, had found any reference
Denarnaud, he would not have
If
to the
failed to share his discovery.
it
at the
map
end of
has inspired
conceals a message.
Pierre Jarnac,
famous
who
“gifts” to
con-
Marie
Who Was Abbe to
Eugene Stublein, a
tury,
did
from the end of the nineteenth cen-
local scholar
who was said (falsely, of course) to be an in fact know Sauniere and Boudet in
archaeologist. Courtauly
youth.
his
He was an
extremely conscientious priest as well as a very original and seeker.
He
died in his native village close to
of seventy-one. In 1966
—that
is,
161
Sauniere?
two years
Limoux
in
1964
at the age
—
his alleged
after his death
preface graced the false collection of Pierres gravees de
tireless
Languedoc and
included some outrageous remarks. Here are a few examples:
In
1908
spent
I
Chateau.
two months
was barely
I
at Sauniere’s
eighteen.
was
It
home
in Rennes-le-
a splendid location but
extremely drafty. Sauniere was remarkable. With his help
I
com-
10 pleted a small painting in the Rennes’s church.
There was a big fuss with Boudet.
He
left
Rennes-les-Bains in
May, 1914. He had had some problems with the His manuscripts were destroyed before
bishopric.
his eyes, his
n .
.
.
book Lazarus
was burned. 12
Rescaniere, diocesian missionary, took over as priest of
Abbe
Rennes-les-Bains in May, 1914.
He
tried to shed
some
light
on the
Boudet-Sauniere matter, but one Monday, toward one or two in the
morning
—
no
trace of
whom
it
was February
found dead,
still
But there
more.
is
1,
1915
—he received two
visitors
has been found since. That morning he was
dressed, lying
on the
floor.
13
10. Courtauly did in fact help Sauniere restore the painting of
Mary Magdalene beneath
the high altar. 11. This
is false.
12. False.
Boudet never wrote Lazarus and
burned. But sion to the in
Aged and weary, Abbe Boudet was only thinking of
in
order to
Holy
make
his
retiring.
manuscripts were never destroyed or
the story exciting, there
is
a great
need to make an
allu-
Inquisition, which, although long vanished, remains unfailingly present
everybody’s mind.
13. In reality he died of a heart attack, but this story.
was too prosaic
a detail for a sensational
— 162
He Who
Brings Scandal
Boudet, depressed, was in Axat; he decided to write the bishopric
on March 26, 1915, about Rescaniere, 14 but when the delegate from the bishopric arrived on Tuesday, March 30, 1915, Abbe Boudet had
just died a very painful death.
day he had received
With
excerpt
this
a visit
we
Over the course of the
from two men.
are definitely in the middle of a mystery novel,
or a “whodunit.” During the Middle Ages, people
would have con-
cluded that these two men, obviously in black, were devils sent by Satan. Here, the preference
is
to say nothing about them, implying that
they belonged to that mysterious brotherhood, or even a rival group that wished to take possession of secrets held by the clergymen.
was
that the author
twenty years Sauniere of
earlier. if
it,
Why
Gelis
some
not embroider on the theme and accuse
need be? Wasn’t
who had
Sauniere,
murder of Abbe
inspired by the actual
seems
It
it
true that after Boudet’s death
been experiencing financial
denly solvent and launching
new
projects? All
is
difficulties,
was sud-
contrived as
if
some-
one wished to besmirch Sauniere and Boudet for the obvious purpose 15 of increasing the aura of mystery hovering over Rennes-le-Chateau.
What can
be salvaged from
all
of this?
The answer
is
simple:
Nothing. Abbe Henri Boudet and Abbe Beranger Sauniere were two colleagues and neighbors
who found agreement on many
on the very legitimate love they each
ticularly
region, a place they wished, each in his
known
own
points, par-
for their native
felt
fashion, to praise
as widely as possible. Sauniere leaned
toward the
and make
visible
monu-
ments and construction that had the power to attract a large crowd of
Boudet worked more
pilgrims.
praise in the
command
From
he
is
at
our disposal, nothing con-
the inspirer of
some kind
Abbe Beranger
of mission
of a string-pulling, ghostly brotherhood in
no trace of
There
15.
For the details concerning
unwillingly
documents
said to have paid for
14.
is
the
Abbe Henri Boudet was
whom
Sauniere,
silence, preferring to present his
form of a book, which contributed to available informa-
tion about the Razes.
firms that
in
on the
some kind of
this letter.
— made to play
this
manipulation and the role Abbe Courtauly was
in the basest
sor de Rennes-le-Chateau, 268-78.
of circumstances, see
P.
Jarnac, Histoire du tre-
Who Was Abbe game. To those
who
who
is
who
the story,
tell
it is
game
a
in
163
Sauniere?
which no one knows
or what anyone’s deep and true motives are, just as in the
Gothic novels of English authors at the end of the eighteenth century.
The shadow
of
Abbe Boudet, while
le-Chateau, has nothing unsettling or diabolical about the purposes of fiction, but that
simply
is
how
it
—too bad for
it is.
SHADOW OF THE COUNT OF CHAMBORD
THE
Following his “exile”
in the small
cumstances discussed
earlier,
seminary of Narbonne under the
Abbe Sauniere regained
on July
parish of Rennes-le-Chateau
1886, with,
1,
if I
three thousand gold francs in his pocket, donated to
Chambord. She was
of
and Rennes-
exists over Sauniere
it
the
widow
cir-
possession of the
can put
him by
it
this
way,
the countess
of the self-styled Henri V, legitimate
pretender to the throne of France, who, through his shilly-shallying and his reactionary intransigence
had caused the
restore the Capet-Bourbons.
It is
whose old
statue
Anne d’Auray
is
probable that
currently rusting at the
Breton
affairs?)
—
this
this
is
a
like,
represented something for
Abbe
Sainte-
who pompously called hima colorless figure of
Chambord, whatever he was
the count of
V
Capet-Bourbon doing mixed up
king without a crown
no breadth. Nevertheless,
pseudo-Henri
basilica erected to the
Count of Chambord and Duke of Bordeaux, was
self
attempt to
bend of the road from
monstrous
to Brech, in front of the
glory of the Breton patron saint (what in
failure of every
Sauniere,
who had
really
been piously and
monarchistically raised in a family of bourgeois peasants pledged to the
gloomy
clericalism of the aristocrats at the
Gloomy
clericalism
the debacle of
was held
1
is
the exact term for these circumstances. After
870, for which the usurper Badinguet, alias Napoleon
responsible,
it
was necessary
resent the French elite to regild the
the hands of the Reds
XVI and tected
16.
abandonment of
Napoleon Bonaparte,
that
it
a
III,
claimed to rep-
arms of this poor France delivered into for the regicide of Fouis
who
pro-
Revolution. 16
The
the country to the Freemasons,
worthy
was Lucien who “created”
the lodges of France
in the milieus that
—and to exact payment
Napoleon Bonaparte was not himself
known all
the
end of the nineteenth century.
a
heir to the
Freemason, but
the
his brother
Lucien was.
It is
emperor on 18 Brumaire, with the help of
and Navarre and the complicity of the European lodges.
He Who
164
Brings Scandal
monarchist faction that
from
still
hoped
drew
support
its
papacy that was more antipopulist and reactionary than any other
a
The pope did
in history.
he could to correct the situation of “this
all
Eldest Daughter of the church,”
None
to govern France
of this
is
who had cowardly
offered as a joke; this
religious reality of France at the
from which the
was
end of the nineteenth century
had been the ignominious defeat
at Sedan.
(whom
it
had posed
a
France
There had been the capitula-
had been happy
the “Royalists”
to French society.
—
had been amputated. There
support once upon a time). There had been the ble threat
and
the actual social, political,
territories of Alsace-Forraine
tion of the emperor-usurper
betrayed her mission.
Commune and
to
the terri-
There had been warnings from
Heaven: The Virgin Mary had already warned the French of the dreadful awaiting them
fate
they
if
succumbed
the
to
satanic
charms of
Republicanism, and especially democracy, which were the worst snares of the devil. In 1846, in Salette-Fallavaux, a
ment
in the
commune
of the Isere depart-
who
Grenoble diocese, the Virgin appeared to two children
were shepherds, Maximin Giraud (who
and who ended
the priest of Ars,
Calvat, cousin of the soprano
later retracted his story before
an alcoholic) and Melanie
his life as
Emma
Calve, the so-called mistress of
Beranger Sauniere. Calve was the real mistress of a certain number of
known
esotericists
and
The name Fallavaux means Could
this
famous
Satanists, including the
Jules Bois.
“false valley,” or even “vale of lies.”
be telling? During the course of a later
which she was
trial in
defended by the Freemason lawyer Camille Pelletan, a future cabinet minister
and exalted
aristocrat
nized” as the author of these apparitions. There this contention.
Famerliere was “recog-
named Constance de is
nothing dubious about
Constance de Famerliere had indeed acted on the orders
was then
of the legitimist and fundamentalist monarchist fringe that trating French society
that the ends justify
he declared that
17. [In
it
means, even
all
John XXIII, who was secret” of the Salette,
and seeking to restore the Ancien Regime.
far
A
was
a
century
later,
said
when Pope
from being stupid, became aware of the “third
which was divulged only
monument
after a long period of time,
r of stupidities.
September 1846 the Virgin Mary was said to have appeared to two children,
Maximin Giraud and Melanie them
deceit.
It is
infil-
Calvat, at La Salette, France. She
was
said to have given
secret prophecies, including the restoration of the Catholic faith in Protestant
countries.
— Translator)
Who Was Abbe The aim of the
was
Salette operation
to terrorize the faithful, even
doing so required manipulation and staging. 18 The talist,
monarchist fringe thought
it
165
Sauniere
worth
if
fundamen-
legitimist,
their while to lay
on
it
War
a bit
in
1870.
Their plan referred back to the Paray-le-Monial (Saone-et-Loire)
affair,
thick following the tragic events of the Franco-Prussian
where on June 16, 1671, two centuries
earlier, a
Margaret had a vision of Christ coming toward
nun named
her.
His heart was bleed-
and he told her that France would be saved from
ing
dedicating
French, the
and
trines,
rise of
its
to the Sacred Heart of Jesus.
itself entirely
unionization, the
Mary
Sister
enemies only by
The
defeat of the
penetrations of Marxist doc-
first
especially the temptation gripping certain Christians to sup-
port social democracy 19 would
all
lead to an extraordinary reaction
orchestrated by representatives of the legitimist pretender.
new form
After this, Paray-le-Monial became the very core of a religion, a nationalist religion
whose
canticle “Save, save France, in the
can be found
refrain
name
this
worship of the Sacred Heart (and
it
its
became necessary legitimate
Commune
odious
had permitted the French
communists and
the
“Saint”
Marx
this instance,
it
capital to escape
inspired by the devil, or at least his usual
(who read
socialists
the
18. This in age,
was deemed appropriate
to
Why,
hill
19. This
Sangnier.
deceits are
prompted the
Not
a
mon-
basilica, like
who would
fund
the faithful of course, through a skillfully organized
no way prevents
more
henchmen,
dominate Paris with
of Montmartre. But
la Sallette
from currently being
and from making a profit (one of the primary
that the
from the
in preference to the other four canonical scriptures). In
wedding cake on the
this basilica?
Adolph
Gospel according to
ument. Thus was erected Sacre-Coeur, that papier-mache a giant
to
monarchy)
into other regions, mainly Paris, for thanks to the slaughter of
Thiers, Providence
famous
of the Sacred Heart ...” Paray-
le-Monial was in the provinces, however, 20 and
expand
in the
of
a place of frequent pilgrimIt
seems
France, inspired by
Marc
virtues of a pilgrimage site).
denounced, the greater the success of such birth of the Sillon
surprisingly,
it
movement
was condemned by
the
in
a place.
pope before going on to become the
core of the Christian Democrat party. 20. Currently Paray-le-Monial ditional pilgrimages, but even ist
groups of
whose
fairly
is
experiencing increased activity not only because of tra-
more because of
the concentration there of fundamental-
obscure purpose and members of the “charismatic” movement,
true objectives
and somewhat
secretive financing are
no
clearer.
He Who
166
Brings Scandal
subscription drive, but
Monsignor
500,000 gold francs on
the count of
Chambord, who bestowed
undertaking while his supporters traveled
this
throughout France, repeating everywhere that “France its
enemies only by devoting
Now
itself entirely
saved from
will be
to the Sacre-Coeur.”
1885, two years after the death of the count of Chambord,
in
Beranger Sauniere returned to Rennes-le-Chateau with three thousand gold francs that were a
gift
comparison to the 500,000 francs donated
quite a small gift in
Sacre-Coeur of Paris, but
and of what
from the countess of Chambord.
is
very revealing both of Sauniere
s
is
for the
intentions
Keeping
certain fundamentalist milieus expected of him.
the proportions, the comparison
mind
'
was
It
worth making. Funding
in
for the
Sacre-Coeur would be covered by the sale of postcards for the more direct appeal for donations
modest subscribers and by individuals
and associations.
have here the model used priest
from wealthy
Now what did Beranger Sauniere do? “We but in more modest fashion, by the
later,
Beranger Sauniere to build his various constructions and fund his
restorations.” 21
It is
legitimist Sauniere
Chateau into
and
quite certain that the sincerely fundamentalist
remembered
a pilgrimage site
all this.
and
He
sought to turn Rennes-le-
a place of grandeur.
bas-relief of the church, placed there in 1897,
In
Rennes the large
is
of Christ with a Sacred Heart, like the statue placed
on
Villa
Bethania in 1902. The obsession in 1885 had been the freeing of
France from the Republic but
we saw
the
outcome of
the elections
Aude: to deliver France through penitence 22 would also be
in the
23 the sense of his Mission.
Instead of embroidering esoteric themes about
would be which
better to place
it is
him and
22.
J.
Riviere,
Do
context in
possible to explain him: that very distinctive context of the its
openly expressed monarchis-
Le Fabuleux Tresor de Rennes-le-Chateau, 57.
Our Lady
of Lourdes placed
upon
the
upside-down “Visigothic”
tament to the Mission of 1891. J.
it
not forget that Sauniere had had “penitence, penitence" carved beneath the
statue of
23.
Sauniere,
his convictions in the very
beginning of the Third Republic, with
21.
Abbe
Riviere,
Le Fabuleux Tresor de Rennes-le-Chateau, 57.
pillar
—
a tes-
Who Was Abbe tic
tendencies and the intolerance of
Rome toward
transformations of traditional society. Without
cannot be explained. This shows
how much
167
Sauniere f
the innovations
this,
and
Beranger Sauniere
stronger the
shadow
of the
count of Chambord loomed over Rennes-le-Chateau.
The problem
lies in
widow
contact with the next,
how
knowing how Sauniere was
able to establish
of the pretender to the throne of France and,
he maintained his close connections with the monarchist and
fundamentalist milieus. Tlere a
new shadow
emerges, that of his brother,
Alfred Sauniere.
THE
SHADOW OF ALFRED
SAUNIERE
Beranger’s younger brother, Alfred, certainly had a greater learning than he himself did.
brother and, what elitism
and
is
He became
more, with the
insistence
on accepting
for
gift
a priest before his elder
Jesuits,
who
are
known
for their
into their order only those with a
may have been blessed with endowed when it came to those
strong intellect. But while Alfred Sauniere intellectual gifts, he
was much
regarding the priesthood.
He
less
well
quickly became the talk of the
which gave
the scandalous liaisons he arrogantly exhibited, assertion trial
— as Beranger recognized
—that the
priest of
town
for
rise to the
bishop during his
in a letter to his
Rennes-le-Chateau quite often ended up paying
the penalty for the misdeeds of his younger brother.
While Beranger did pay for his brother,
it
for his brother, however,
seems, facilitated his labor on
Beranger was only a modest country
priest,
many
Alfred
an honorable reverend father with great standing that era, a brilliant debater tive to
women.
It
role
and
was
tit
for tat,
occasions. While
was
in the
a “gentleman,”
high society of
and man of the world who was quite
attrac-
so happens that during this time (the end of the nine-
teenth century), though intellectual
it
women may not yet have won
aristocratic circles especially they
the right to vote, in
still
played a deciding
through their counsels as well by the connections they made among
members
of this worldly society in which they often figured as muses.
Alfred did introduce his brother to a certain Marquise of Bozas. At that time Alfred was, according to the standard expression, her “latest
conquest.” era
He had good
when sponsorship
of
relationships with those in high society, in an
good works was regarded
positively, as
was
He Who
168
Brings Scandal
regularly attending religious services with great
Having
a lover, selected
from among
pomp and
artists, intellectuals in
ceremony.
good stand-
even the clergy worthy of frequenting, was also socially accept-
ing, or
able. This represents a certain corruption of society, but the era lent
to that magnificently.
itself
The end of
when good bourgeois
beginning of the twentieth was a time
would weep hot young
girls
the nineteenth century
tears every time a singer
condemned
bemoaned
to prostitution, but
who
and the
Catholics
the misfortunes of
at the
same time
rele-
gated their maids to garrets with no heat or running water, of course leaving
them exposed
Although this did
fully
by
all
kinds of rogues.
aware that the “good” society of
his
time was rotten,
to the temptations offered
not stop Beranger Sauniere from profiting from
ing his brother for introductions to environments he
dared venture into on his own.
It is
during
it
and from ask-
would never have
period of Sauniere ’s
this
life
that he solicited certain well-off families for donations that could help
modest church and transform
him
restore his
that
would draw hundreds of
pilgrims. His
his parish into a sanctuary
was not
a vision of another
Sacre-Coeur. Others could take care of that. For Beranger to exploit Saint
crowds and and
fill
his brother
the vaults.
was
in the Gospels. This
It is
“proxy.”
Sauniere explained to his bishop about the
It
what would
attract
between Beranger
gifts
Later,
when Beranger
he had received, he had
about some of them. “High” society appreciates discretion.
can be certain that Alfred Sauniere served as intermediary between
Beranger and the countess of Chambord.
was
such a brief
background during 1885-1905. Alfred
revealed himself to be an excellent
to keep quiet
is
certain that the alliance
at play in the
was enough
who makes
Magdalene, the Mary Magdalene
and mysterious appearance
it
It is
infinitely likely that Alfred
also responsible for introducing Beranger to certain scenes that gladly
described themselves as esoteric
—not necessarily Parisian
that nonetheless wielded great influence planes. This
would explain
A
valuable clue
is
political
and
but ones religious
the alleged relationship between Beranger
around
the occultists grouped
on the
circles,
Jules Bois
and
and Claude Debussy.
provided by the duties held by Alfred Sauniere
the Chefdebien family of Zagarriga.
He was
in
in fact the tutor to this
noble family and was forced from his position because of an indiscretion
about which nothing
is
known. Yet
Alfred’s sojourn with the Chefdebien
family clearly appears to have been the cornerstone on which the
Who Was Abbe Sauniere ily?
myth was constructed. But who,
The name
know
no doubt the Frenchification of
Penmad, which
translation of
Narbonne
is
in fact,
is
the
name
is
Sauniere
the Chefdebien fam-
a Breton
name.
certain
that the
is
It is
the
of a Breton family exiled to
in the eighteenth century for unspecified reasons.
for
169
What we do
head of the family, the marquis of
Chefdebien, was in his time a Freemason of high degree.
The marquis, an honored counselor of
the Scottish Directory of
Septimania, would have dutifully frequented the Lodges of the
Rhine area, when he was lished in
1770
was not
the sole
With
a History of
domain
Masonry. But
in
in
1780
a
new
rite,
seat in the Philadelphia
its
literature,
which he produced a
his father, the viscount of
founded
and had pub-
in garrison at Strasbourg,
even esoteric,
creative
work.
Chefdebien of Aigrefeuille, he
the original Rite of France,
which had
Lodge of Narbonne. At the famous
Masonic convent of Wilhemsbad he defended the theory according to
which the Templar Order
existed in secret,
still
its
leaders being
none other than the famous “Unknown Superiors” who allegedly guide the destiny of Freemasonry. tors,
He hoped that these
occult direc-
keepers of alchemical recipes to which the medieval Templars
owed
their
immense wealth, would agree
to forming a relationship
with the Masons that would attempt to resurrect the association in the secrecy of the Lodges.
So here
it
is.
It
24
took a long time for the connection to be made
between Abbe Beranger Sauniere and
more or
less
later, after
bits of
a
“mysterious brotherhood”
linked to the Templar Order. Others
Abbe Sauniere was dead and
buried,
would remember
it
which shows that these
information cannot be absolutely confirmed. Nevertheless,
it
remains a fact that standing behind Abbe Sauniere are the unsettling
shadows of these Illuminati
secret societies, the heirs,
and the Angelic
Society,
more or
less,
of the Bavarian
which developed over the eighteenth
century in parallel (and in shared understanding) with Freemasonry.
These
24.
J.
societies picked
up considerable steam
Robin, Rennes-le-Cbateau:
la colline
in the nineteenth century,
envoutee, 60-61.
He Who
170
Brings Scandal
mainly with the Romantics, and had their crowning successes around
1900 with the triumph of the Rose+Cross and the Theosophical
many
not to mention the as
de
Stanislas
Bois,
Jules
sects
whose hierophants were such Guaita,
Society,
individuals
Claude Debussy, and Maurice
Maeterlinck, and whose great idolized priestesses were Annie Besant,
Renee Vivien, and
Emma
druidesses of the
de Sein. These models were revised and corrected by
the symbolist
Moreau and
lie
and decadent poets
and
from
this vision,
his relationship to the
by painters such as Gustave
as well as
those of the Vienna school
their roles as revealer
directly
Calve after the models of Velleda and the
initiator.
who
The
sought to restore to
figure of
Emma
women
Calve emerges
but the demiurge was Alfred Sauniere through
Chefdebien family as well as to other families
equally committed to this fin-de-siecle style of hermeticism, occultism,
and esotericism. Alfred Sauniere,
who no doubt wished to know more
of the secrets of those families he frequented,
cuted
man
hunted and perse-
He incurred the wrath of his superiors and was Company of Jesus. 25 He was also eventually excluded
families he
financial benefit living in a
a
all his life.
excluded from the
from the
was
than he should
had exploited and despoiled
and found himself more or
common-law
He died there may perhaps
in
less
for his intellectual
defrocked
in
and
Montazels,
relationship with a certain Marie-Emilie Saliere.
1905, leaving few behind to
mourn
This
his passing.
explain the letter Beranger Sauniere sent his bishop,
which he complained of being made
Monsignor de Beausejour,
in
for the sins of his brother.
“The
priest of
to atone for the sins of his brother,
who
Rennes-le-Chateau
is
to
pay
expected
died too soon.”
way of putting it: “died too soon.” This expression is quite ambiguous. Had Alfred died before he was able to explain his true attitude and motives? Or else should we read it to mean that That
is
a bizarre
Beranger was nothing without his brother, Alfred? these questions.
the
shadow
The
letter
contributes
little
We
to shedding
any
light
upon
of Alfred Sauniere that continues to hover over his brother,
the priest of Rennes-le-Chateau.
25. [The
cannot answer
Company
of Jesus refers to the Jesuit Order.
— Translator]
Who Was Abbe
SHADOW OF EMMA CALVE
THE Of
all
Abbe
that has been said about
Emma
great opera singer
171
Sauniere
Calve
is
Sauniere, his “liaison” with the
not the smallest of contributions to
the construction of a fine love story set against a backdrop of espionage
or manipulation. Yet however necessary this relationship
invention of a good story,
necessary to
it is
know whether
have corresponded to Beranger Sauniere’s real
ally
In fact, there
between
Emma
is
may it
be to the
might actu-
life.
not a single shred of proof concerning any liaison
Calve and Beranger Sauniere. The entire assumption
based on that famous
trip to Paris
he allegedly
made
is
following his dis-
covery of the parchments inside a hollow
pillar of the altar in the
church of Rennes-le-Chateau. Yet no one
even capable of providing
the specific year in
The
or 1893?
which he made
truth
that there
is
Beranger Sauniere ever making Actually, Paris to have
it is
not
Church
comprehension.
It
all
this journey.
it
in
1888, 1891,
any evidence for
this trip to Paris.
that absurd that Saunere might have traveled to
authorities
would be
examine the documents that
logical, that
add the anecdote about Monsignor
to
make
to
Abbe
own
Was
also a lack of
is
to
the journey, giving Bieil,
is
him
and paying the
is, if
Billard
the letter of
travel
pains had not been taken
commissioning the
and expertise expenses out of
had access to other means of investigating these parchments
we
priest
recommendation addressed
pocket. As bishop of Carcassonne, Monsignor Billard
course,
resisted his
his
would have
—
unless, of
accept the ridiculous theory that the bishop belonged, either
tangentially or directly, to the invisible brotherhood. Let’s
assume, however, that out of curiosity, the bishop of
Carcassonne authorized
some
specialists.
his
Why would
subordinate to
show
these parchments to
he send Sauniere to the director of the sem-
inary of Saint-Sulpice and his entourage rather than to a paleographic archivist
who
vations?
Would Monsignor
could translate and transcribe the text and share his obserBillard
and Beranger Sauniere have
dis-
who shared monarchist and then we must also assume that
trusted a paleographic archivist, even one
Catholic opinions? the
If this
were the
two clergymen already knew,
manuscripts contained.
It
case,
at least generally or broadly,
can be seen that by following
this line
what
the
of reason
He Who
172
we
Brings Scandal
will inevitably be forced to accept the existence of a secret society
that did not
certain
who were
of those
assume
Let’s
Abbe
want
documents
to
go astray or end up
hands
in the
not members of the brotherhood.
on the part of Monsignor
a certain naivete
Billard
and
Sauniere. Let’s assume that this journey actually took place and
was paid
for
through Sauniere’s agreement to return with three parch-
ments instead of
four.
It
seems that there would be some traces of
this
journey, whether at the bishopric of Carcassonne, in Sauniere’s personal
there
is
no such
trace.
will raise the objection that the
Some, of course, Carcassonne
is
celebrities introduced to Sauniere. Yet
works of the
papers, or in the
under no obligation to present
dossier, that Sauniere
had no need
to
mention
his
all
the
bishopric of
files
from
this
journey in his records
(even though he kept excellent records of everything he did), and that
because the people he met in Paris were naturally inclined to secrecy, is
normal that they should leave no trace of
reasoning
The his
when someone wants
to
this trip. All
make up
of this
it
handy
is
a portion of a story.
sole elements that lend credence to Sauniere’s trip to Paris
encounters there with the group of intellectuals
who
and
gravitated
around Jules Bois are certain novels by Maurice Leblanc and Jules Verne’s Clovis Dardentor.
No
one has ever claimed, however, that Beranger
Sauniere met Maurice Leblanc
Maeterlinck. Pelleas et Melisande is
certainly a symbolist
strongly initiatory. But
work
that
or
certainly a
is
extremely rich symbolically and even bit far to
have been inspired by the Sauniere Pelleas (the Fisher
Golaud
Debussy, whose
affair,
consider this major
even
if
Beranger
is
King from the Grail Romances), Jules Bois
(the cuckold),
she nevertheless
“Merovingian” drama.
is
going a
it is
Georgette Leblanc and Maurice
and
Emma
would have
Calve
is
brilliantly.
work was thoroughly permeated by full
to
viewed as is
seen as
cast as Melisande, a role that
interpreted
meticism, gave Pelleas et Melisande the
work
It
Maeterlinck and
this fin-de-siecle her-
power of their
genius. But did
they really need the unfortunate Sauniere to reach this point? Clearly, novels such as L’lle
aux
U Aiguille
creuse [The
Hollow Needle] and
trente cercueils [The Isle of Thirty Coffins]
have plots that can appear unsettling when
around Abbe Sauniere.
L Aiguille
by Maurice Leblanc
we know
the story built
up
creuse involves the treasure of the
Who Was Abbe kings of France that cliff
full
is
173
Sauniere
supposedly hidden somewhere near Fecamp in a
that can be found only by completing an entire initiatory journey
of
pitfalls. L’lle
aux
trente cercueils goes even further, involving the
Secret of Secrets, a sort of philosopher’s stone (or kind of Grail) of
Bohemian kings interests
power and glory and which
that can bestow
an adventurer
who
greatly
claims to be of royal blood. Fortunately,
Arsene Lupin, a gentleman thief but also a good and gallant Frenchman, appears on the scene to reestablish order to a certain degree and see that the guilty get their just desserts. All of Arsene Lupin’s adventures revolve
around
this
same theme, which,
if
of the quest for the Floly Grail in
you think about all its
The correspondences between Jules Verne’s novel Clovis
literary, artistic,
Parzifal. This
is
no
was
that Verne lar to the
and eso-
Wagner
name a
of
Dardentor are much more
its
member
capital,
of a
secret to anyone.
intriguing.
Bugarach,
more or
is
less secret
is
Abbe Sauniere claim
that he
stay in Paris. In reality, Jules Verne
The
so-
camouflaged
a
significant.
We know
“brotherhood” simi-
Rose+Cross and the Masons, but not even those
created the story of
and
the Renne-le-Chateau affair
North African country described by Verne
Razes, and the
his
The
frequented by Maurice Leblanc had a passion for
and were particularly obsessed with
called
than that
less
shapes and forms, including the
variation of sangreal, or “royal blood.” teric circles
no
it, is
met
who
have
Jules Verne during
had no need of Beranger
Sauniere to be familiar with the Razes and Rennes-le-Chateau. already visited the area and, while there, was
He had
made aware of
certain
Abbe
local traditions concerning a lost treasure. This fact indicates that
Sauniere had no need to go to Paris to learn that astounding claims
were made about a very ancient hoard hidden somewhere even a tomb near Rennes-le-Chateau.
It
in a
was even Punchinello’s
cave or secret.
Neither Maurice Leblanc nor Jules Verne needed to rely on Beranger Sauniere to construct his fictional intrigues. To the contrary, the far
more
recent creators of the Sauniere story
through not only the basement
level of
who
—
the
word
rifle
Rennes-le-Chateau but also the
to their fictional narrative. After
assumed that Abbe Sauniere read
has been
have had to
novels of Maurice Leblanc and Jules Verne to lend weight of nobility
it
all,
why
— and appreciated
—Jules Verne’s Clovis Dardentor? This may
— and
letters
couldn’t
it
be
in every sense of in fact
have been
He Who
174
Brings Scandal
where he discovered the famous “key” that allowed him the treasure, then something.
Claude Debussy,
Emma
least of all,
or,
if
not
hard to see what useful purpose was
It is
into the story Emile Hoffet,
met by introducing
to find,
Abbe
Calve.
It
Bieil, Jules Bois,
can be definitively
was never recognized
stated that the beautiful soprano
in Rennes-le-
Chateau during those times when Beranger Sauniere was treating guests in a lordly manner. There were
more than enough
his
beautiful wives
of notaries and doctors in the region around Dujardin-Beaumetz.
Emma
shadow over
Calve’s
more than an
airy
phantom
Sauniere’s head
that the slightest
is
definitely nothing
wind could
dissipate
and
destroy.
SHADOW OF JEAN ORTH
THE There was one
He had been is
mysterious figure lurking around Abbe Sauniere.
fairly
labeled the Foreigner but called himself Guillaume. There
no doubt that
was John-Salvator of Hapsburg, son of Leopold
this
imperial prince of Austria, royal prince of
grand duke of Tuscany. Proof of
this
for as Pierre Jarnac notes, the abbe, chist
from the time of
his arrival in
is
any of the
anticleric.
He
provided by police documents, a fundamentalist
monar-
Rennes-le-Chateau, had become the
who was
a fervent Republican,
never missed an opportunity to denounce
priest’s activities that
appeared bizarre to him.
that the presence of the Foreigner excited
which
Bohemia and Hungary, and
who was
pet hate of Doctor Espezel of Esperanza,
Freemason, and
II,
It
so happened
Doctor Espezel’s
curiosity,
led to a police inquiry. Their investigation quickly revealed his
true identity,
which they transmitted to the Deuxieme Bureau, 26
called for in such cases.
These
visits
as
was
occurred in 1888, 1889, and 1890.
But never again after that time. In fact, because of his
profound disagreement with Emperor Franz-
Joseph, John-Salvator of Hapsburg eventually renounced his
even his Austrian nationality.
name
of Jean Orth,
1890 he
26. [This
set off
was
the
on
He had become
name
a simple citizen
borrowed from the name of one of
a long journey
titles
and
by the
his castles. In
from which he never returned (though
of the intelligence service of that era in France.
— Translator
]
Who Was Abbe this
does not
mean
that he lost his
life). It is
175
Sauniere
certain that
Orth came to
Rennes-le-Chateau for three years in succession and spent time with
Abbe
Sauniere.
Of
The archduke’s shadow
is
thus perfectly real.
course, the authorities very politely asked Jean Orth to explain
They had
the reasons for his sojourn. resentative of one of the
most
a right to
illustrious
—was doing
who had renounced
his title
ileged regions of the
Aude department.
know
just
what
Europeans families in
a rep-
—even one
one of the most underpriv-
He
claimed that while traveling from Italy and Spain, chance had
led
him
to Couiza. There
itously led
Sauniere.
him
to Rennes,
He was
ha took the wrong road, which
fortu-
where he had been introduced to Abbe
traveling incognito, he told them, in search of a
27 refuge for himself and his family.
His answer held up and he was allowed to come and go as he pleased.
We can question, however, the famous stroke of luck that brought the archduke to Sauniere ’s presbytery, countess of
Chambord
—an
him
parish priest and sent
just as
Austrian, in
we might question how the fact! knew of this modest
—
three thousand gold francs for his
Chance does not explain everything;
it is
duke came to Rennes-le-Chateau, he had But raising these questions
obvious that
if
good works.
the fallen arch-
a valid reason for doing so.
not the same as answering them. The
is
mysterious shadow cast by Jean Orth keenly excited people’s imagination, at first
because the locals had trouble understanding what business
a lordly gentleman
had
in their
out, a fairly long time
peared, 28 yet the
town. By 1914, when the war broke
had elapsed
memory
he had
left
since the
archduke had disap-
behind had not faded. Tongues
began to wag about the odd relationship that brought together the priest
and an Austrian (thus enemy)
prince.
From such
a place
it
was
only a small step to accusing Sauniere of being a spy in the pay of the
Jarnac, Histoire du tresor de Rennes-le-Chateau, 355.
27.
P.
28.
One
tradition,
which has nothing to do with Rennes-le-Chateau, claims that Jean
Orth took advantage of
name
in
America.
Why
a
shipwreck to disappear and build a new
not? For
more on
mysterieux d'un archiduc: Jean Orth
this subject, see
(Paris, 1959).
life
under another
Maurice Paleologue, Le Destin
He Who
176
Brings Scandal
Central Empire.
among
can hardly be doubted that Doctor Espezel was
It
who howled
those
Magdala Tower had been upon?
artillery fire
mous sums
It
built to
support
was rumored
money
of
charge the loudest.
this
It
was
said that the
But what would
artillery.
this
had received enor-
that Sauniere
and the
for selling information to the Kaiser
Austrian emperor, which would explain his expenditures. Yet no one
wondered
just
what
on
the priest might have been spying
region with no military value.
Some
suggested that Sauniere provided a
house where German or Austrian spies could find
safe
as artists
—painters,
remote
in this
in particular. Clearly the
shelter,
sumptuous
passing
feasts of Villa
Bethania had not been forgotten!
So
was
it
the
shadow
was responsible
of Jean Orth that
Abbe
charges of espionage so readily hurled against be admitted that with
exposed himself to
all his
his critics
more or
less
there to Perpignan. But while
one of
is
his banks, the
just as easy to believe that
on
we know on
Veuve Auriol
It
must
clandestine travels, Beranger
When
and excited imaginations.
the train to Couiza, he did so simply to go
least
Sauniere.
for the
to Carcassonne,
and from
reliable authority that at
et ses fils,
he used his
he took
was
in
Perpignan,
visits there to
go
it
farther.
Perpignan was an important transit center that would have allowed him
documents pub-
access to any destination he chose. In fact, thanks to lished by the archivist
affluent
Rene Descadeillas, we know that Sauniere
and charitable individuals
Beziers to solicit donations.
in the regions of
Nothing about
although according to certain testimonies,
London
now
be laughable,
mysterious, however,
appears he
may have
vis-
Now, while these accusations of espionage may during World War I they gave rise to harsh criticism,
which must have contributed
his
it
is
Narbonne and
twice. 29
ited
Saint
this
visited
to the disgrace that struck the priest of the
Magdalene Church of Rennes-le-Chateau when he was
tried
by
bishop for canonical infractions. Beranger Sauniere’s behavior,
29. This detail
comes from
a confidence of
Marie Denarnaud.
sor de Rennes-le-Chateau (page 356) gives a detailed
Sauniere could not absent.
The
list
fulfill his
shows many such examples
ever, that those periods
funerals)
duties to the parish, until
list
P.
Jarnac’s Histoire du tre-
of the periods of time
when
which of course suggests that he was
1909. Jarnac takes pains to note, how-
during which he did not perform services (baptisms, marriages,
were not necessarily times of absence; though
have been during these times.
if
he was away,
it
could only
Who Was Abbe which many found incomprehensible, would
easily
177
Sauniere?
have caused him
problems, but did so especially during wartime. 30
any
In
was
case, the relationship
between Jean Orth and Abbe Sauniere
a business relationship, according to all the evidence.
duke’s
visits
The
arch-
corresponded to the years when Sauniere was making
No
doubt he sold some objects to Jean Orth. But
his
if this
first
discoveries.
was
the case , might they not have been objects connected to Austria
Of
course, nothing
is
known about
There was talk of a crown
crown
—could
these objects.
Were they
jewels?
have been a royal or imperial
it
Why
that once belonged to the Hapsburgs?
not?
The
objects
Abbe
Sauniere found in his church were those hidden in the church by
Bigou before he went into
Hautpoul
family.
It is
exile
—surely
known, however,
objects
that there
belonging to the
was
a connection
between the Hautpouls and Austria. Perhaps the objects were impor-
documents that the Austrian family needed
tant
possession.
No
one knows for
back into
to take
their
which means that everything
sure,
is
imaginable. People have even gone so far as to speak of a precious cup that might be the
Holy
Grail!
It
true that
is
no one ever saw what
Beranger Sauniere found, and he refrained from ever speaking about to anyone, except, of course, to those to
of his searches. Jean Orth
He
he could
sell
the results
number.
this
could serve to explain the origins of Abbe Sauniere’s fortune.
The shadow of
30.
was one of
whom
the archduke
is
quite heavy indeed.
should point out some information that Pierre Jarnac provides in a footnote on
I
page 362 that comes from an
article in
Midi
(February 13, 1973).
libre
Monsieur Espeut, who had consulted Sauniere’s personal papers around 1930, regard to the charges of spying that he
The
first:
was authorized
to
make two
Baron von Kron, head of the German Secret
domain might not have been an
enemy
state secret:
a
said with
revelations.
if
Abbe
Sauniere’s
was proved. The second
certainly touches
upon
a
At that time, the mother superior of a convent close to Rennes-le-Chateau
German nun. She was
Pierre Jarnac
at the
the kaiser’s
was even more
Prouilles.” All of this speaks
encountered
certain
between Germany and Spain for
ideal relay station
agents. But of course nothing
A
Service, lived in Barcelona
during the war. The Deuxieme Bureau wondered, after the war,
was
it
own
sister
.
.
.
specific, saying that
“this
monastery was that of
volumes about the Sauniere mystery and the
beginning of World
War
I.
difficulties
he
He Who
178
Brings Scandal
THE
SHADOW OF THE DEFILEMENTS
When
Beranger Sauniere began the transformation of his church, he
made
discoveries perhaps by chance, although information seems to
suggest that Sauniere had long this
is
known what
not a serious concern; after
from
their hiding places.
The
for.
was
it
real question
his
duty to remove them
whether Sauniere had the
is
can be
right to sell these objects for personal profit. Yet here, too, he
forgiven, for he restored the church
and he constructed buildings not
only for his personal use but also as a retirement (which, of course, he himself
embezzlement by tions, but
would one day
home
be).
for aged priests
When
accused of
he openly displayed his charitable inten-
his bishop,
we know
Yet
objects were prudently hidden
all, if
by Abbe Bigou during the Revolution,
he was searching
that there are gaps in his accounting: There
was
a
huge imbalance between the enormous sums he spent and the rather
minor
receipts he agreed to
A much more
acknowledge.
serious matter, however,
ments he was responsible for if
many
the
shadow
in the parish cemetery.
Aude
only in the petitions sent to the
spent
is
of the defile-
Here there
is
proof,
prefect, that Beranger Sauniere
nights turning the cemetery upside
down and
defiling
tombs, not to mention scratching out inscriptions on the flagstones of
Not merely
the marquise d’Hautpoul’s tomb.
wishing gossip, these actions were quite tain problems, not so
were rather
elastic),
much from
a matter of legends or
This obviously raises cer-
real.
the perspective of morals (Sauniere’s
but from a consideration of the exact object of his
search and his choice of specific tombs. In a word, Sauniere
he was looking for
The tively
ill-
— and he wanted to find
prevailing sentiment today
view Sauniere’s clandestine
among
it,
no matter what
those
activities
is
knew what
who
it
cost.
are trying to objec-
that he discovered the sep-
ulchers of the ancient lords of Rennes inside the church, and that as a
some of them
result of selling these finds, or It
is
at least,
also believed that he gave to several people
he
made
—one
of
his fortune.
whom was
thought —some of the jewels he unearthed. But —what he had discovered that he did not dare —or was unable
Marie Denarnaud
it is
to sell
sell
in the cemetery.
This assertion, however,
The obsessive nature of
also
calls for
some consideration.
Sauniere’s excavation of the marquise
d’Hautpoul’s tomb and the tactless act of erasing
its
inscriptions are
Who Was Abbe
too flagrant to be aspects of a single episode. To the contrary,
much
seems that if
179
Sauni'ere
we pay
this
tomb might be
strict
attention to
at the very heart of the
it, it
allow
will
it
—indeed,
mystery
the elements of the puz-
all
zle to fall together.
The Hautpouls,
as the lords of Rennes,
were
clearly in possession of
certainly
would
have inherited the documents of those families that married into
theirs.
all
the ancient
As
the one
documents
who was
Abbe Bigou was
and they
relating to the region,
responsible for the burial of objects and documents,
the family’s confidant.
testably at the very heart of
all
The Hautpoul hoard
Sauniere’s discoveries
and
is
is
incon-
consequently
the source of everything imaginable about the objects or alleged docu-
ments that Sauniere would have
unknown
purposes, even
if
sold,
exchanged, or even kept for
simply as a secret bargaining tool that could
guarantee him immunity or the assurance of being
The vandalism of the tomb
left
alone in peace.
of Marquise d’Hautpoul, Marie de Negri
d’Ables, could have even greater significance than previously thought. is
certainly connected to the donation of the countess of
surprised that
no one
discusses this connection, for
it is
Chambord.
I
It
am and
quite evident
plays an essential role in the whole affair of Sauniere. In fact, “this singular donation to the priest of a remote village
the
Upper Aude Valley
who
is
greatly disconcerting,” remarks Jacques Riviere,
offers three explanations for
request Sauniere personally
—to
time
majority.
made
it.
The
is
first
explanation consists of a
of the pretender’s
wit, the elections of 1885,
The second
from
when
that the donation
widow
at a difficult
the monarchists lost their
was
a sign of the countess’s
gratitude to Sauniere for his loud and brazen display of his legitimist
opinions. In both cases the intervention of Alfred Sauniere
been key, It
is
know
for, as
we know,
would have
he had extensive contacts inside the aristocracy.
We
the third explanation that deserves our extra attention.
that the countess of
in her heart for the
French,
Chambord was Austrian and had
whom
she
deemed
little
frivolous, fickle,
love
and
loyal to the great values of the past. But she:
.
.
.
was not unaware
that the parish of Rennes-le-Chateau
was an
ancient Hautpoul fiefdom, and the Hautpouls were no strangers to her. In fact, in
1834 an Hautpoul-Felines was tutor
to her husband,
dis-
He Who
180
the
Brings Scandal
young Henry
down
all
V.
The marquis Armand d’Hautpoul had turned
recompense
and
for this teaching post
testified
on several
occasions of his esteem for the duke of Bourdeaux. Notably, he traveled through
London
in
all
of
Germany with him and
visited
him again
in
1843. 31
So these are the pieces of the puzzle collected from the Hautpouls.
What
confidences might
tender? Could
it
Armand d’Hautpoul have
be that something of great importance to the legitimate
French monarchy was located
much
shared with the pre-
in
Rennes-le-Chateau? This provides a
better explanation for the donation to Sauniere than does the grat-
itude of an Austrian countess
who
despised the French. Might the dona-
him
tion have been for the purpose of helping
the defilement of the
tomb
find something? In this case
of the marquise d’Hautpoul
would simply be
the execution of a mission entrusted to the priest of Rennes-le-Chateau
by the royal family, rather than an act of vandalism. This explanation also has the merit of accounting for the
by Jean Orth, the
visits
fallen arch-
duke, and the negotiations he would necessarily have held with Sauniere. It
is
an attractive hypothesis, one that
is
not at
absurd and
all
allows us to better understand Beranger Sauniere’s bizarre behavior, especially given that he never relinquished his legitimist opinions. Thus,
without needing to go so far as imagining that what Sauniere discovered was the will of Blanche de Castille,
we can
still
consider that what
he found might have been essential documents concerning the French
monarchy,
its
origins,
and
its
authentic legitimacy.
It
may
be recalled
that Blanche de Castille displayed a relentless desire to dispossess
Trencavel of the Razes and did everything she could to place at the earl-
dom’s head
men whom
indulgence toward the
There
on
is
she could trust, while
title
holder
who had
indeed a mystery in the Razes
a state secret, but there
is
still
demonstrating great
been stripped of his
rights.
—one that indubitably touches
no need
to invent false
genealogies in order to present a convincing case of
its
Merovingian
existence.
Could the shadow of the defilements performed by Abbe Sauniere in the
Rennes-le-Chateau cemetery merely cover an imperative for
cretion concerning a matter of great importance?
31.
J.
Riviere,
Le Fabuleux Tresor de Rennes-le-Chateau, 47.
dis-
Who Was Abbe
THE We
SHADOW OF THE TRAFFICKING OF MASSES
should remember that during the entire period in which Monsignor
was bishop of Carcassonne, he never asked Abbe Sauniere
Billard
account for
and expenditures.
receipts
his
Beausejour took over, the
priest’s lifestyle
than two hundred inhabitants.
a
When Monsignor
that this removal of Sauniere
was
save his priest from becoming
compromised by shady
from
At
this
It is
him
logical to think
necessitated by the bishop’s desire to financial deals
and
tainting the other clergy in the diocese.
time France was no longer under the concordat regime; the
Combes laws Priests,
in
A certain amount of oversight of Sauniere
promotion that would take him away from Rennes.
to keep such a scandal
de
which numbered no more
exercised discreetly, followed by the suggestion to give
initially
to
appeared excessive to him
relation to the obvious poverty of his parish,
was
181
Sauniere?
of 1905 had instituted the separation of church and state.
whether of a parish or simple
vicars,
were no longer
to
them
a living by appealing to the faithful,
who,
vants and were no longer paid any salary by the state. to figure out
how
to
make
civil ser-
It
was up
according to the logic of this system, were the priests’ “customers” for everything concerning spiritual
merce here, for no one riages,
and
enterprise,
burials.
is
life. It is
necessary to use terms of com-
obliged to buy Masses, baptisms, church mar-
The Catholic Church became merely another
though with one
slight
private
advantage that would eventually turn
out to be quite positive: All buildings of worship and presbyterial
resi-
dences were taken over by the government, in this instance the municipal
governments (and by the
involved, in keeping with It
was thus
honorariums
its
state
when
historic
monuments were
role as guardian of the national patrimony).
the responsibility of the faithful to pay their priests with
for every
Mass and other
sacerdotal services. This
triumph of economic liberalism exalting
Combes laws went
into effect, priests
receive gifts. This gifting
who
free
enterprise.
was
a
Before the
did enjoy a salary could
still
was indeed necessary because church upkeep
was expensive and municipal
authorities often required a bit of persua-
sion before opening their purse strings for this purpose. Before 1905, then, priests after
1905
still
this
appealed to the generosity of their congregations, but appeal became a
vital necessity.
Hence, there existed
He Who
182
Brings Scandal
ecclesiastical rules
whose broad
as baptisms, marriages, first in
in effect. Services
and funerals are subject level to
such
to a certain set price,
avoid any abuse or unfair
Masses that are requested for various purposes are paid accord-
ing to the principle that is
remain
still
each diocese, then on a national
pricing.
priest
lines
labor should be salaried.
all
The
officiating
thereby transformed into simply another worker or employee.
Again, though, to avoid any unfair practices the bishops of
all
dioceses
have specifically ordered that priests refer to the proper authority of
honorariums for saying Masses.
their dioceses every time they receive
In fact, there
demand
is little
Masses
for
in
some
an almost
parishes, while in
number of
others, mainly pilgrimage sites, there
is
requests. In the interests of fairness
and equality (Republican
have
Church),
infiltrated into the
priest
have enough income to
What
could be more normal? In
one parish
leged. This
is
way
this
in
and
a high
wage
is
demand
thus provided to
abnormal
gifts either for their
Masses
at
little
Masses but rather
is
redistribution to
all
for specific purposes by
A minimum livevery member of the clergy. No one should
in
what
indigent
is
priests
members
it.
it.
essentially a perfectly honest
and
bal-
have never been forbidden to accept
personal use or to do
ored expression would have
good works,
as the time-hon-
These involve giving assistance to the
of the congregation, including covering the
costs incurred by worship. Here, too, If
for
in others that are less privi-
Masses demanded and bought
anced system. In addition,
more
priesthood.
guarantees every priest, whether active or retired, at least
It
find anything
concern that every
fulfill his
one Mass daily and the honorarium that goes with ing
ideals
by the bishopric to those with
same diocese or
not trafficking
priests of special
the faithful.
in the
a matter of
live in dignity
will be redistributed
demand, whether
is
it
limitless
all is
consistent
and
perfectly
fair.
abuses do occur in specific instances, they are considered infractions
of canon law.
These principles are
still
valid today 32
tain “simplistic” anticlerical critics
32.
It
should be specified that today, as a general
dead are no longer subject to fixed feel
is
took
right according to their
fees.
means.
The
and
it
would be good
if
cer-
this into consideration before
rule, the requests for
individuals requesting
Masses
for the
them pay what they
Who Was Abbe
183
Sauniere?
33 While there are sometimes scanattacking the “wealth of priests.”
dalous exceptions, they only prove the general
rule:'
The French
clergy
overall live quite modestly while fulfilling their priestly duties in often difficult conditions.
Having
34
said that,
it is
now
said
addressed Monsignor de
Abbe Beranger Sauniere
Beausejour’s accusation that
Masses.
we
high time
trafficked in
has been asserted that the bishop of Carcassonne would have
It
—the
conditional
always mandatory in such cases
is
accusation was merely a pretext.
It
—that
this
was primarily because Sauniere
refused to leave Rennes-le-Chateau that
Monsignor de Beausejour
insti-
tuted canonical proceedings in 1909.
The
issue
Two
is
complex one:
a
essential points
emerge from examination of the ledger of
abbe intentionally doubled the actual revenues
receipts. First, the
from the collection boxes
welcomed
salaries of the family
church as well as the
installed in the
35 In reality, this false to Rennes.
accounting masks the trafficking in Masses he had been perpetrating
33.
I
can personally
During the 1950s,
come and go lost
none of
as
I
I
testify to a
of cases that should inspire pity in this regard.
spent quite a bit of time in the presbyteries of Brittany, where
pleased.
their faith
I
and
saw
priests
who,
the rector of
I
could
had
despite living in deplorable conditions,
fulfilled their priestly duties in
moving memory of
ticularly
number
complete honesty.
Iffs (in Ille-et-Vilaine),
a parish
I
have a par-
famous
for the
who lived in complete want. I also remember the rector of Nostang (in Morbihan) who lived in a kind of dank and unhealthy basement with no comforts whatsoever. He wore the sad smile of those who know that life on earth is but a transitory moment in an incomprehensible eternity. would like to take a moment here to pay homage to these modest and good priests. And magnificent stained-glass
windows
of
its
church,
I
I
have not yet mentioned the rector of Trehorenteuc,
and
stale
church.
bread because he put
Where
is
the author
conditions in which 34.
1
want
sider the
familiar
much
all his
who
money toward
will dare write a
I
have put forth.
enough with the
lived
on hot sweetened water
the restoration
and decoration of
tell I
those
am
who
not at
issue to avoid getting
his
nonpolemical book on the wretched
of the French clergy live at this beginning of a
to take advantage of this to
arguments
who
accuse
all
me
new millennium.
of anticlericalism to con-
“knee-jerk” anticlergy and
hung up on appearances and
I
am
to direct
discussion to the most essential considerations. 35. This refers to the
Denarnaud
family,
which speaks volumes about the exact nature
of the relationship between Beranger Sauniere and Marie Denarnaud.
He Who
184
1896
since
Brings Scandal
Sauniere always declared that he had never enriched
36 .
.
.
He acknowl-
himself with the honorariums he received for Masses.
edged
in
1911 the
in his defense that
them among in
There
And
he collected these honorariums to redistribute
a certain
number
doubt
what does it
it
mean
would be more
whom he named
to the bishopric.
obviously fraud here, but does
precisely
No
of priests
unknown
1910, were deceased or
is
Masses 37 but claimed
reality of these requests for
to traffick in
fitting to
What arguments
but who,
39
concern trafficking in Masses?
it
Masses?
speak of Sauniere ’s actions as
“beating the bushes.” The specific purpose of his “fish” for Masses.
38
many
No
did he rely upon?
that emphasized the distinctive worship offered to
trips
was
to
doubt those
Mary Magdalene
in
Rennes-le-Chateau, given that she was the patron saint of the parish.
many
Beranger also wrote requests,
letters
in
which he repeated the same
which allowed him to put together
various countries. While the priest of the Church of
was condemned
for having
engaged
stamps from
a collection of
in “trafficking”
Mary Magdalene around 1905, we
should not overlook that the system had been in place ever since his arrival in
Rennes-le-Chateau or that he was aided
in
“beating the
bushes” by his brother, Alfred.
Nothing
is
known
of the understanding they shared concerning
what
should be called “beating the bushes” for donations, but whatever the arrangements were,
Each played writing to
it
cannot be denied that
it
was
their roles to perfection. Sauniere spared
numerous
and charitable
souls.
religious
I
no
effort in
communities and countless well-off
To those he knew
to be
poor he sent
ing for old stamps, ancient post cards, pious images,
36.
quite effective.
letters fish-
and so
leave to the author of these lines the responsibility of his judgment,
forth.
which
I
per-
sonally contest most energetically. 37.
Through small advertisements (mainly
visits
in
Les Veillees des Chumnieres) and personal
he solicited specific Masses from the rich and pious, especially those with monar-
chist tendencies. This
is
a
proven
fact;
he was creating propaganda for his parish.
38. In doing this he substituted himself for his bishop, a transgression of canonical law. 39.
J.
Riviere,
Le Fabuleux Tresor de Rennes-le-Chateau, 135.
A
bird’s-eye
view of Rennes-le-Chateau. In the upper central portion
of the photo, the Magdala Tower and, immediately to
its
right, Villa
Bethania can be seen.
Abbe Ber anger Sauniere
Marie Denarnaud
The
Visigothic pillar inside of
which Sauniere discovered
the mysterious parchments
The holy water stoup held up by
the devil
at the entrance of the church
Asmodeus
The Magdala Tower
The Shepherds of Arcadia, by Nicolas Poussin
The tomb near Arques that modeled
is
said to have been
after Poussin’s painting
Who Was Abbe To those he knew
185
Sauniere?
to be rich he wrote letters soliciting aid for *
rebuilding “a ruined church” and for constructing “a retirement
home
and disabled
for aged
priests.”
He
in fact relied very
little
on
the classifieds, preferring to personally prospect for his clientele
through correspondence or repeated mailings that would not be sent in vain. 40
The problem
was
raised by the bishopric
the fear that the priest of
Rennes-le-Chateau was simply depositing in the bank the honorariums for these
Masses and was never celebrating them. Indeed,
forced to celebrate
all
the
Masses
for
both night and day. But he
else
we know, among
other priests
even those outside of the diocese. In addition,
celebration of a Mass. There sation that he
was
is
it is
him more than
that Sauniere ’s benefactors gave
he had been
which he had received honorari-
ums, he would have been doing nothing divvied up this money, as
if
whom
he knew,
always a possibility
normal price
the
for the
not a great deal of support for the accu-
trafficking in Masses. Because the bishopric sought to
bend Abbe Sauniere to
its will,
41 the prosecuter of the Officiality lodged
The
three complaints against him.
first
was
rariums for Masses and had done so for
that he trafficked in hono-
many
years, especially after
1896. The second was that he had used these honorariums, at least parto realize his restoration
tially,
Chateau. The third and
who had
final
and construction work
in Rennes-le-
charge was that he disobeyed his bishop,
forbidden him to “beat the bush” for Mass honorariums.
on
In fact, based
his
account books,
it
clearly
seems that Abbe
Sauniere collected some fifteen hundred to two thousand gold francs a year.
This in no
way
begins to explain the expenditures he
made
or the
construction he undertook. Ultimately, this accusation was dropped by the bishopric because
doubt.
It
it
could not be proved beyond the shadow of a
must be admitted that with
his
clumsy attempts
at defending
himself and especially with his refusal to reveal the origin of the funds
40.
P.
Jarnac, Histoire du tresor de Rennes-le-Chateau, 338.
Sauniere’s notebooks can be found in this text, including the
wrote and those
who
Numerous
lists
facsimiles of
of those to
whom
he
responded. This allows a better idea of the incredible amount of
correspondence he put together during 41. [Eccesiastical court.
— Translator
his
life.
He Who
186
Brings Scandal
he had received,
Abbe Sauniere only aggravated
the Officiality responsible for conducting the
from
tion for his removal
by
trial.
This
his post at the parish of
which he appealed
—
in fact,
his
own
at the presbytery
still
He
position.
brate
Mass and
Mass
in his private
which gave him
services in public,
hard to
know what
and conscience, but
self guilty
full latitude
Canon law
can vary
in
is
fairly
all this in his
quite certain that he did not consider him-
when he used
luxurious
the donations he received for
and the Magdala Tower, which were
complex when
it
in
fact,
even
comes
each ecclesiastical province with regard to cer-
(in
Breton
it is
which includes
Dol and Saint-Malo), Saint-Brieuc (and Treguier),
(as well as
Quimper (and Leon), and Vannes,
Sauniere
to the attribution of parishes to priests.
tain cases. Accordingly, in the current ecclesiastical province of Brittany,
Rennes
if
(which public rumor no doubt
lifestyle
each diocese and even
the dioceses of
and
42
intended to function later as a retirement home. In live a
their priest
Beranger Sauniere thought of
it is
of embezzlement
appeared to
to say
.
the construction of Villa Bethania
It
no longer
chapel at Villa Bethania. The local residents contin-
always remained faithful to him
42.
lived in
still
—while
ued to attend these Masses, for they were quite fond of
soul
a period of
holding the post of parish priest and being forbidden to cele-
officially
It is
divinis against
Rome. His removal was followed by
to
one that was as ambiguous as
Rennes-le-Chateau
the explana-
is
Rennes-le-Chateau
roundabout method, namely the suspens a
a rather
flux,
his case in the eyes of
the officiant of an ordinary parish, called the rector
person ), cannot be transferred without
his consent,
which
is
not the case
for the holder of a deanery, the deacon/priest. But in the ecclesiastical province of
Narbonne, of which Carcassonne Sauniere could be
moved from
is
a dependency, this distinction does not exist.
the parish of
a certain point in the trial, Sauniere, playing
post as priest of Rennes-le-Chateau.
accept this resignation.
If
life
in
on the
it,
his consent.
subtleties of
The bishop did not
he had accepted
Sauniere was tenured for
Rennes without
fall
This
is
why,
canon law, resigned
into the trap
priest to
decamp from
he would have implicitly recognized that
that position.
The
least that
can be said
strictness of canonical law, ity.
The
priest
Masses” was a makeshift attempt to force the
his parish.
with
its
There
is
is
and compelled to
strictly
that that
recalcitrant
always a large gap between the apparent
corollary obedience to the bishop, and concrete real-
from the lay clergy retains some of
for the regular clergy, in
his
and refused to
Monsignor de Beausejour could not do very much of anything against Sauniere and the charge of “trafficking in
at
which every monk
is
his
autonomy, which
is
not the case
closely subordinated to higher authority
observe the Rule. In any event, the case of Beranger Sauniere
must have given nightmares to Monsignor de Beausejour.
Who Was Abbe
Sauniere?
187
exaggerated to a considerable extent), he never lost sight of the fact that
he was there to
fulfill
which others would It
in
would seem,
Masses
—a
mysterious one, perhaps
— from
profit.
then, that the
shadow
by Sauniere’s trafficking
cast
quite a thin one.
is
THE No
a mission
SHADOW OF ABBE
one talks about the matter of Abbe
Gelis.
GELIS
Apparently most place
it
outside of the events concerning Beranger Sauniere, but further exami-
nation shows that
it
cannot be merely an epiphenomenon. The priest of
Coustaussa knew Abbe Sauniere quite well;
know
know
is
Abbe
if
for certain that
priest of
could not be otherwise,
were part of the same deanery. 43 Of course,
for they both ble to
it
was Abbe
Gelis
Sauniere’s confessor, but
Abbe Sauniere spent time with
Coustaussa was aware of some of
Gelis
are
left
it
into the
we do
and that the
his colleague’s “affairs.” It
therefore impossible to consider the priest’s mysterious
out introducing
impossi-
it is
framework of the Sauniere
murder with-
story,
even
if
we
with only conjecture.
Regarding Gelis,
November
it
is
first
necessary to
the
recall
facts.
On
1897, the abbe Jean-Antoine-Maurice Gelis, priest of
1,
Coustaussa, seventy-one years of age, was discovered murdered in the kitchen of his presbytery. His killer the crime remain
who was
unknown. Near
was never found and the victim,
who
the motives for
smoke and
did not
repulsed by the odor of tobacco, an entire packet of cigarette
papers was found.
An
inscription
on one of the papers
read: “Viva
Angelina.” This might be the promising start of a good detective novel.
known of the tragedy for certain is that earlier that Abbe Gelis, who by nature was very suspicious and lived clois-
All that
evening
is
tered behind locked doors,
had received
43. As a general rule, the priests of the the deanery has
a late-night visitor. Because the
same deanery
most often corresponded
(since the time of the
to a civil canton) are expected to
meet on a
homes
of various
regular basis. These meetings generally took place over a meal at the priests,
each of
whom
Concordat,
hosted by turns depending upon a
priest’s activities
and other
cir-
cumstances. During these fraternal agapes, priests exchanged news and discussed the religious
life
of the deanery.
He Who
188
Brings Scandal
entrance door had not been locked again, received a visitor he
other than this lage
had the
well
and that
But
who
could
visitor.
it
to have been
was determined
murderer would be none
have been?
No
committed by someone the
was not
that theft
one
priest
in the vil-
knew.
Abbe
the motive: All of
who was
savings were found intact. His nephew,
would
his
information to give the gendarmes, but the crime
slightest
was assumed It
knew
can be assumed that he
it
Gelis’s
held for several days,
wasted an opportunity to pocket whatever
certainly not have
turned up, for he was chronically short of cash and was constantly
badgering his uncle for assistance. But on the night of the murder he
was somewhere a
murder
The
else,
which removed from the
list
the heinous crime of
money.
for
mentioned another very important piece of
police report
mation. “The body had been arranged in the center of the
infor-
room on
its
back, head and face in a normal position, hands folded over the chest, like a figure
on the
of a tomb.” This suggests that the murderer
lid
He took
not a run-of-the-mill criminal.
pains after the act to place his
victim in a dignified, even religious posture, as
may have
respect that he
was
if
he was expressing the
held for the person he had just murdered.
Strange.
There was no assassin
went
theft.
Unless
.
.
According to the police report, the
.
upstairs to the abbe’s
room
(as if
he were familiar with
the premises). There, while taking infinite precautions to leave
no
trace
of his passage, he “forced the lock of a travel satchel that contained var-
and documents belonging
ious papers essential:
is
“[T]he murderer opened the satchel in search of something.”
Of course derer
to the priest.” This next point
there
is
was looking
was looking to be able to
for
not a single clue to help identify just what the murfor,
Angelina.”
it
must
certainly be admitted that
must have been extremely important
commit such
calm and confidence Finally,
but
there
a cold-blooded crime
in
what he
order for him
and then display such
in his search.
is
What was
the
inscription
the
meaning of
on the this
cigarette
message and to
paper:
“Viva
whom was
it
addressed? Altogether these are the elements of a mystery that no one has been able to solve and, as ularly dreadful
we may
shadow hovering over
imagine, which creates a particthe Sauniere affair.
Who Was Abbe Under such dreadful circumstances,
it
is
189
Sauniere?
normal to ask questions.
Because the “elimination” of Abbe Gelis, a priest beyond reproach
whose
life
good around him,
to doing
Was
had been without incident and whose vocation was dedicated not normal.
is
Gelis the keeper of a secret or
provided justification for
this
It
surely conceals something.
documents whose possession
crime? Did anyone benefit from his
disappearance from the scene? The inquest revealed that his murderer
knew
the abbe
and the premises. The crime appears
to have
been premeditated, though the motive was not money, but the recovery of documents.
What might
The murderer was, however, him out
like the
these
documents have held?
respectful of his victim’s
recumbent figures
body and
laid
44
in Christian sepulchers
.
.
.
People are free to embroider as they wish on this diverse array of
Coustaussa
facts.
is
only a mile and a half as the crow
le-Chateau. During the time priest of the parish of
when
was
Gelis
flies
from Rennes-
priest of Coustaussa, the
who
Rennes-le-Chateau was Beranger Sauniere,
devoted his time to strange pursuits,
He
discovered buried objects and
documents, defiled the sepulchers of the parish cemetery, and established relationships with people
whose
beliefs
were foreign to
his religion. This
adds up to quite a number oddities. Perhaps the message Angelina” to
left
behind by the murderer was some sort of rallying
“Viva
But
cry.
what? Could the shadow of the mysterious “brotherhood” that has
so often been connected to
Abbe
Gelis?
adds
this
Abbe Sauniere
“The mystery remains
somewhat
following this event, at this point that
who
intact,” says Jacques Riviere,
perfidious remark:
Abbe
also have been hovering over
“We cannot
Sauniere’s behavior
help but note that
seemed
different.
It
was
he devoted himself to his municipal construction
45 through the investment of significant sums of money.”
It
Gelis
seems there are two pieces of information that add up:
was
unknown person wished
to take
himself (and succeeded), warning through his message that
].
Abbe
the keeper of certain secrets (which the rifling of his satchel
appears to prove). Second, an
44.
First,
Riviere,
45. Ibid., 146.
Le Fabuleux Tresor de Rennes-le-Chateau, 145-46.
it
was
them
for
better to
He Who
190
Brings Scandal
obey, under pain of death, the mysterious brotherhood in the Razes.
Having received the message, Abbe Sauniere no longer excavated the
tombs but devoted himself
to
municipal construction, which he
his
claimed was charitable in nature. Or, in another scenario, the assassin was
him
seeking to take possession of the final piece of a puzzle that could lead to a complete
there
and
understanding of
full
secret. In this case,
its
nothing whatsoever to support such an
is
murderer might be Beranger Saumere himself.
an
insult to the
memory
illogical declaration, the
raising such a possibility
of this priest? Similar questions have been asked
The ambiguity of Sauniere ’s
before.
Is
although
attitude
is
such that an outright cate-
monstrous accusation
gorical rejection of this
is
impossible. Beranger
Sauniere might have been, then, not only a prevaricator, an embezzler
(why not that
and
a swindler?),
and Masses
were never performed, but also a murderer capable of doing anything
to achieve his ends
—that
one had entrusted
to him.
find
a trafficker in both stolen objects
it
impossible to
is,
the mission he
What
is
we know
that
town
also the
wash Sauniere completely
and jewelry the priest
hounded Sauniere
It
all his life.
is
in the
From
not appear imme-
precise testimonies
the tutor Jamet,
who was money
what? About the finds
Church of Saint Magdalene? About the
Although Jamet has been recognized
we
that
has been proved that Beranger paid him in
defilement of tombs in the church’s cemetery? entirely?
that some-
clean of the accusation.
to keep silent. But to keep silent about
made
upon or
affair that did
someone was blackmailing him: clerk.
fixed
so deplorable in this story
There was a consequence to the Gelis diately but instead
was
priest’s
Or about something
else
as being perfectly odious (to
the extent that his descendants changed their name), he does cast a fairly legitimate
shadow over
well-built, strapping
Yet there
is
the generally reassuring image of Sauniere as a
man who was
nonetheless incapable of hurting a
nothing more deceptive than appearances.
truths behind the tutor’s blackmail of stantial
sum? Let he who
is
without doubt cast the
46. Personally, from the bottom of
circumstances, although fited
it
Abbe Sauniere
my
fly
What were
46 .
the
to the tune of a sub-
first
stone.
heart and soul, as people are apt to say in such
might seem that the murder of Abbe Gelis could have bene-
the priest of Rennes-le-Chateau,
I
absolutely refuse to believe that Beranger
Sauniere was capable of such a criminal and monstrous deed. In spite of his faults, Sauniere was good, and demonstrated that quality on numerous occasions. This personal conviction, but
I
am
unable to support
it
with any proof.
is
my
Who Was Abbe It is
true that while
no one can
sation of murdering his colleague
191
Sauniere?
clear Beranger Sauniere of the accu-
Abbe
Gelis for extremely obscure rea-
sons having to do with the “treasure” of Rennes, neither can anyone
prove he committed
shadow
of
Abbe
this
abominable
Whatever the case may
MARIE DENARNAUD
According to contemporary opinion, Beranger Sauniere
from Marie Denarnaud, who forms with him,
handsome couple Just think about
have been
What
in the imagination, a
with his sweet Marie. As for
in love
divulge the secrets of a
It is
inseparable
Sauniere gave her everything he owned!
it:
in love
is
that tugs at the heartstrings of people everywhere.
faithfulness to his
have been
be, the
Gelis hangs quite heavily over the Sauniere affair.
SHADOW OF
THE
act.
man
to
whom she
what devotion!
her,
memory! What constancy
He must
in her refusal to
had devoted her
life!
She must
with Beranger.
shadow
true that the
of Marie
Denarnaud
is
entwined with that
of the priest of Rennes-le-Chateau. In fact, the priest himself did
could to bring
tographed
this
in the
all
he
about, even going so far as to have himself pho-
company
of his “servant” in the gardens of Villa
Bethania and then publishing the photos as postcards. But at the risk of disappointing those
who
have been nostalgically imagining a relationship
similar to that of Tristan
and
Denarnaud and Beranger Sauniere may not have been True enough, loans are made only to the
had a reputation brother, Alfred,
what’s more, a
between Marie
Iseult, the relationship
and
rich,
for “hot-bloodedness.”
it
Without
all
that
appears that Sauniere a doubt, however, his
was “hot-blooded,” even though he was
member
of the very honorable
seemed.
it
a priest and,
Company of Jesus,
or Jesuit
Order. Should his bad reputation extend to the Jesuits as a whole?
Beranger Sauniere complained so often about paying for the sins
and transgressions of
When
relationship with
Marie Denarnaud.
there
no proof of an amorous
is
strictly
Denarnaud and
was given
his brother that little scrutiny
the priest of the
all is
said
and done,
liaison
to his in fact,
between Marie
Church of Mary Magdalene.
No
one
has ever been able to put forth a definitive claim that Marie was the mistress,
companion,
or, if
you
prefer,
concubine of Beranger Sauniere.
He Who
192
Brings Scandal
must be admitted, though, that there are strong grounds
It
suming that the two did have a relationship of
who
hires a fairly
—
monies
is
—who was
young servant
A
this kind.
for pre-
country priest
also pretty, according to testi-
A
only laying himself wide open to suspicions.
twenty-four-
year-old female servant in the presbytery will cause tongues to wag, that for sure,
there
is
4'
especially given that Sauniere
a great willingness to
tell
stories
was
where
a resident of Occitania,
about
priests
who
sleep with their
some even
servants. Occitan folktales are full of stories of this sort,
is
bor-
dering on the scatological and impertinent. 48 In Occitania people say a priest is
is still
seen in
man and
a
this.
has the right to act just like other men.
Their main concern
is
that their priest “not
too black and white” with regard to others
who
make
“sin”
No harm
everything
and that he be
women from whom he receives confession. why not find some mutual understanding? In
morally flexible toward the
And
this
being the case,
Rennes-le-Chateau no one ever complained about the parish
ambiguous
are
some
and when Sauniere was hauled up before the
situation,
bishop’s tribunal, he
was never
faulted for living with
things that the bishopric has to ignore,
Denarnaud. There
however
Sauniere’s case, doubts about his relationship persisted,
more reason
that
it
priest’s
was never addressed. Let Sauniere
real they are. In
which was
sin;
it’s
all
the
his business,
provided he doesn’t cause a scandal. 49 But unlike his unfortunate brother, Alfred the Jesuit, Sauniere never caused a scandal in this area.
The to
story of
how Marie Denarnaud, who came
Abbe Sauniere (whether
or not she
was
to offer her services
sent by
Abbe Bigou) and
47. Normally a female servant in a presbytery must be of canonical age forty-five to fifty years ing;
it is
simply very
minimum. This
realistic, for a
rule
woman
is
— that
is
to say,
not based on moral or theological reason-
of canonical age
is
not at great risk of giving
This circumvents any possible scandal as well as the practical consequences con-
birth.
cerning the raising and educating of a child. 48. For
more on
1984
1987 by
to
this subject, see the excellent
GARAE
Les Contes licencieux de
books published
(Groupe audois de recherche /’
et
in
Carcassonne from
d’animation ethnographique),
Aquitaine and L'Anneau magique, works
we owe
to
Agen
native and folklorist Antonin Perbosc, a contemporary of Sauniere.
49. Recall the scene in Moliere’s Tartuffe
when
the
worthy representative of the Party of
Devotees, meaning the Brotherhood of the Holy Sacrament (Saint Vincent de Paul, Ollier,
and Nicolas Pavilion), gave a
causing a scandal
is
not sinning.”
brilliant
Abbe
sermon on the theme “sinning without
Who Was Abbe immediately ing
— but
it
is
with the “great man,”
in love
fell
is
At the beginning of
utterly false.
beautiful
bytery in
what must be described
comfort.
tive to
whom
family,
was not
It
knew
he
would help him crown The Denarnaud ple: the
both in
work was completed, he
renovation and repair
until
When
the
lived in the pres-
as rather precarious conditions rela-
1892 that he
invited the
Denarnaud
well, to Rennes-le-Chateau, for this family
his
works with
success.
family, natives of Esperanza, consisted of four peo-
mother, the father, a daughter, and a son. The son and father were
The daughter,
skilled artisans.
1868
in Esperanza.
whom
they
moved
Sauniere in fact
would speak of
it
named Marie, was born
She was twenty-four years old
Rennes-le-Chateau to help her mother
him
and mov-
his stay in Rennes-le-
Chateau, Sauniere moved in with a charitable parishioner. initial
193
Sauniere?
the
when
“maintain”
Denarnaud family
she arrived in
the
presbytery.
into the presbytery.
meaning they lodged with
as a family of “hospitality,”
in return for a rent that in this instance consisted of repair
ovation work. Later father and son
left
He
to
work
in
and
ren-
the factory in
Esperanza. Marie’s mother soon followed them, effectively leaving Marie alone with Beranger. Seen from this angle, the story less
romantic.
exist
Of
between the
ily lived at
course, there priest
is
is less
novelistic
and
nothing to say that a liaison did not
and Marie, even during the time when her fam-
the presbytery. Yet there
is
no proof of such
and written proof that Sauniere
a single clue. What’s more, in the receipts
gave the bishopric at the time of his
trial,
a relationship, not
he
made
sure to note the salaries
he claimed to be giving Marie Denarnaud and her mother.
Whether or not she was
his mistress,
Marie Denarnaud remained
with the priest and acted as his confidante until his death. She held a boundless admiration for Abbe Sauniere, and seemed ready to self for
him
if
he
demanded
it.
Her devotion
kill
her-
to the priest even after his
had confided
death
is
impressive. She never betrayed a single secret he
to her,
50
respecting the law of silence to the end, satisfying herself
now
and then only by saying that the inhabitants of Rennes-le-Chateau
walked on gold and knew nothing about
50.
The only time she betrayed
place to the
new owner
Sauniere had cleared
it
of the
without
it.
Perhaps, though, these were
the priest’s confidence
was when she revealed
home, Noel Corbu.
was empty, however.
telling his servant.
It
a hiding
No
doubt
He Who
194
words of
Brings Scandal
derision.
Marie Denarnaud died poor and impoverished.
order to survive, she was forced to
sell
her house in return for a
annuity and spend her old age with the family of the she had
made
life
new owner, whom
her sole legatee.
She was a strange individual, entirely
In
devoted to the
man
in her
this
life,
who was
big-hearted servant
happy
to
remain
in his
shadow and
perpetuate his memory, and discovered to be the incumbent owner of everything the priest had bought and constructed.
have been quite an extravagant situation for her priest’s mistress. In
if
course, this
certainly
would
she had not been the
her receipt of the priest’s fortune, there
most stubborn imaginations;
excite the
Of
no
is
material to
been
effort has
spared to create a beautiful love story out of what after
all
might have
who no doubt shared esteem and affection for each other as well as an uncommon love. Marie Denarnaud’s shadow is particularly moving, especially when been only a perfect understanding between two individuals
it
tomb
lingers over the
of
Abbe
Sauniere.
There are many shadows, some murky, others so pellucid that they evaporate in the
air’s
opaque and more
movement. There are some, though, that remain
resistant to the storms that should carry
Who
was Abbe Beranger Sauniere?
who
could give us that answer.
good nor wholly time
when
that
matched
evil.
was
it
He was
difficult to
No
It
would be
doubt the
them
off.
a very clever individual
man was
neither wholly
a priest convinced of his mission during a
be a priest and have political convictions
religious convictions.
Was
he a megalomaniac? Surely he
was, but for the worthy cause of leaving behind something that would
remind others that he had lived while doing good. a Rosicrucian or a
He was
Freemason, as has been said too often by those
fantasize about the bizarre decoration of his church. lated?
He had
for
Why,
it.
then,
is
there so
much mystery around
this
he manipu-
man? Why,
espe-
much
noise
following his death, has there been so
his alleged activities?
try priest,
Was
who
neither the mentality to be used nor the character to stand
cially in the forty years
about
certainly not
Why was
Beranger Sauniere, a modest coun-
changed into a hero of a legend?
Despite himself and because of circumstances, Sauniere embodied a
myth, and
in
order to be seen, myths, like gods, must incarnate in theo-
phanies that give fuel to the dreams of those ing the truth.
who
are desperately seek-
6
One
Can
Train
Hide Another wf
In January
1956 three
Villa Bethania, the
Magdala Tower, and
in the very serious journal articles
was
on Rennes-le-Chateau, with photos of
articles
La Depecbe du Midi. The
a complete item in
a pillar of the high altar,
of course the church, appeared
itself:
title
of one of these
“With one blow of
Abbe Sauniere brought
his
pickax to
to light the treasure of
Blanche de Castille.”
The
die
was
cast. In the
publications, both regional
own
articles
and national, made certain
on the mysterious case of
enough here to slumbered
ally
weeks and months that followed, other
restore
life
to publish their
a millionaire priest. There
to this lost corner of the Aude,
at the wind’s pleasure
take a few days of vacation in
its
was
which usu-
without inspiring anyone even to
healthful environment, free
from pol-
lution, let alone to visit in search of treasure. It is
nalist
curious to observe that while he
found
it
worthwhile to write the
was
alive,
tiniest
not a single jour-
column about Abbe
Sauniere’s discoveries or bizarre construction. Also interesting
from the time of the cles in
who
priest’s
is
that
death in 1917 to the appearance of the
arti-
1956, no one besides Marie Denarnaud and the parishioners
retained a poignant
had discovered
memory
a treasure.
It
of
him had mentioned
would take
who
thirty-nine years for tongues to
loosen and pens to start scratching. There
195
the priest
is
food for thought here,
He Who
196
Brings Scandal
went
especially given that the Sauniere affair ultimately
original
beyond
far
its
framework, spreading throughout Europe by way of newspa-
per articles, so-called documentary films, television broadcasts, and finally
books with large print runs.
Odd, you say? But you don’t know the
an
common affair
just
how odd
it is.
.
.
.
This
is
reply that has applied perfectly to the Sauniere affair (and
it is)
ever since that
memorable January
1956, thirty-nine
in
years after the death of Beranger Sauniere and three years after the
Of
death of Marie Denarnaud. his or her
own
liking,
more
a great deal
course, everyone interprets the facts to
and there are those who took the
Some have proclaimed
to the story.
who
shadows. These
in the secret.
We
might ask
why
had already been working
Chateau have grown singularly
work with
there are
who work
for a long time in
they waited until 1956 to emerge, or pretend
shadows
to emerge, for since that year the
In addition to the
Then
have simply kept score, and those
last
and added
their skepticism
for all to hear, earning the snubs of the true believers.
both the indifferent,
bait
thicker.
newspaper
a pickax, the year
that hover over Rennes-le-
articles
concerning Abbe Sauniere’s
1956 witnessed three events that may have
gone largely unnoticed by the general public, but which eventually took
on great importance
was published entirely
in
Geneva by Editions des
unknown
Book of Constitutions Commanderies de Geneve, an
in the affair. First, the strange
publishing house. Next, there
was
the deposit at the
Bibliotheque Nationale in Paris of a study on the Merovingians by a certain Henri
Lobineau (who turned out to be
totally nonexistent),
along with genealogies that threatened to overturn
all
current knowl-
edge on those remote times. Last, at the prefecture of Haute-Savoie, located in Annemasse, and as defined by the
Law
of 1901, there
was
the founding or “declaration” of the Association of the Priory of Sion.
Those who declared were Delaval, three iar to
Pierre
unknowns, and
Bonhomme,
Pierre Plantard,
Pierre Defagot, Jean
whose name was
those steeped in esotericism and the serial novel.
These
three
events
merit
some
clarification.
The Book
Constitutions concerns the Priory of Sion, asserting that this order, original seat
1099
famil-
in
was
the
Abbey
of
Our Lady
of
Mount
Sion,
of
whose
was founded
in
Jerusalem by Godefroy de Bouillon. In the disorienting flood of
One information delivered by of Sion
Can Hide Another
197
we can
eventually grasp that this Order
the torch
from another interrupted order
this text
was somehow taking up
Train
with Gnostic tendencies, and that
it
shortly thereafter
became the occult
group that directed the Templars. After separating from the Templar
Order during the famous
split that
took place beneath the elm of Gisors,
1
the Order of Sion survived in secret, century after century, surreptitiously
acting in the world’s affairs
and presiding over the
of annexed or subordinate brotherhoods.
Its list
destinies of a
number
of grand masters included
such prestigious names as Nicolas Flamel, Leonardo da Vinci, Isaac
Newton, Charles Nodier, Victor Hugo, Claude Debussy, and Jean Cocteau.
It
was
this
Order of Sion that presented
itself in
Annemasse,
in
legal
compliance with the rules of the French Republic, as the Priory of
Sion,
more or
who
let it
be
less
under the leadership of Pierre Plantard de Saint
known
to
any
who wished
descendant of the legitimate Merovingian
We
to listen that he
was
Clair,
the last
line.
should note that according to the Book of Constitutions, the
Order of Sion had assumed the mission of safeguarding the Merovingian blood that flowed until
in the veins of
Godefroy de Bouillon
such time as an authentic descendant of the authentic
remount the throne of France. In
this
way
line
could
they would drive off in the
same opprobrium not only the Republicans and the Bonapartists, but also the Capets, the Bourbons,
and the Orleans
as usurpers of a throne
that did not belong to them.
Was
it
the Priory of Sion that across the centuries whispered their
punishment to Godefroy’s descendants, the dukes of Lorraine? Was it
it
the Priory of Sion that
armed the Fronde against Louis XIV? Was
the Priory of Sion that inspired Nicolas Poussin’s painting
The
Shepherds of Arcadia, and entrusted to him the dangerous secret he confided to Nicolas Foucquet? Finally, was
supported the efforts of the
1.
See
2.
J.
my book The Templar
Company
it
of the
the Priory of Sion that
Holy Sacrament? 2
Treasure in Gisors (Rochester, Vt.: Inner Traditions, 2003).
Robin, Rennes-le-Chateau:
la colline
envoutee 80. The author devotes his efforts to
a subtle demystification of the Priory of Sion,
,
whose
existence
is
dubious, to say the
least.
He Who
198
Brings Scandal
Jean Robin poses these questions with great
clarity, yet
obviously with-
out giving them any credence, but this does not change the fact that the
appearance of these pieces of information on the Priory of Sion
moment
the
Rennes-le-Chateau
was unleashed
affair
at the
somewhat
is
unsettling.
The documents deposited false
name
pieces
at the Bibliotheque
Nationale under the
of Henri Lobineau are in complete agreement with these
of information.
They amount
to
a
veritable
re-reading of
Merovingian history that peremptorily brings the Razes into the mix for the first time.
It is
in the Razes, they
contend, where the
last
descen-
dant of the legitimate lineage of the Merovingians sought refuge. As proof, they include genealogies that at siastic research. false.
The author
ify existing
first
look
like the result of
enthu-
Unfortunately, they quickly reveal themselves to be
hoax was content
(or authors) of this
to slightly
mod-
— and trustworthy—genealogies by adding a name here and
subtracting one there. She or he could not have been
honest about historical matters
3 .
more
casually dis-
As they were presented, however, these
genealogies have had a great effect on the fans of the sensational and
on those who are always seeking
to rewrite history in a
way
that suits
them. The Lobineau “documents,” although exposed and demystified
on
several occasions, have
There est
no need
is
only to those
had
offspring.
to speak further about falsifications that are of inter-
who
launched them into the public arena. There
is
no
need to expand more on the ghostly Priory of Sion, that mysterious
“brotherhood” that hounded Sauniere ’s every that has been built
Book of
around him.
It is
step, at least in the story
worth knowing, though, that the
Constitutions, the Tobineau “documents,”
birth of the Priory of Sion
affair
“official”
overall
scheme intended to
and the very
distinctive adventure
form part of an
emphasize the Rennes-le-Chateau
and the
of Beranger Sauniere. Three individuals have been the promoters of this conspiracy:
One was Noel Corbu,
the buildings constructed by
heir of
Abbe
Marie Denarnaud and owner of
Sauniere; and the other
authentic aristocrats, the count Pierre Plantard de Saint Clair,
two were
who
calls
himself a hermeticist, and the marquis Philippe de Cherisey, a writer and
3.
For more on
this subject, see
Richard Bordes, Les Merovingiens a Rennes-le-Chateau
(Rennes-le-Chateau: Editions Schrauben, 1984).
One whose hour of glory was caught by
actor
when he played
the Gregoire of
Corbu had vanished due ally
—or
who
in
performer
rather,
1967 published
we might
We
will
—
in the very talented writer
UOr de Rennes
a vast epic,
expect, revised
affair
and corrected
for that
is
in
what
who still lived in Rennes-le-Chateau and memory of Abbe Sauniere, was beginning moved around with
have a very clear grasp of
[The Gold of Rennes],
time to discover the genesis it
was
War
—that has earned an Marie Denarnaud,
II,
enjoyed a modest
lifestyle in
to experience hard times. She difficulty
and did not always
After the Liberation
reality.
Gerard de Sede,
for the public at large.
unprecedented success. At the end of World
getting old: She
found an
throughout the world, though,
have to take a few steps back
—
199
the antenna of France Culture
to a car accident, the “conspiracy”
of this skillful machination
was
Can Hide Another
Roland Dubillard’s Amedee. Once Noel
which spread word of the Sauniere as
Train
it
was necessary
to
exchange old bank notes, for many were counterfeits made by the
Germans during
the Occupation.
The inhabitants of Rennes-le-Chateau
then saw “Mademoiselle Marie,” as she was respectfully known, burning a pile of
bank notes instead of going
exchange them.
Was
she afraid
her rather indiscreetly, but what
Some questioned
of something?
in to
was
done was done and Marie Denarnaud was even more hard up than before.
At ist
this
point Noel
who had opened
detective novel.
Corbu entered
several small
the scene. Fie
was an
industrial-
companies and had even published a
During the Occupation he had experienced some ongo-
ing difficulties regarding his attitude.
Corbu knew
the Razes quite well
He had heard of Abbe Sauniere and asked all he met to tell him all they knew about the priest and his story. Perhaps the topic interested him as a potential subject for a new novel, though and had
it
visited
it
often.
seems that the idea of a hidden treasure strongly appealed to
imagination, which was naturally
his
drawn toward adventure.
Wishing to leave the region of Perpignan, where there were too many uncomfortable memories connected to
Corbu moved
himself, his wife,
There he made friends with the probably he ily
made an
made
who
first
his black
and two children to Bugarach village
in 1944.
grade school teacher, and
it
was
spoke of Beranger Sauniere. In 1945 the Corbu fam-
excursion to Rennes-le-Chateau and
the acquaintance of
venirs of “that
market dealings, Noel
Marie Denarnaud,
it
was then
that
Corbu
who showed him some
sou-
poor Monsieur the abbe.” Corbu returned several times to
He Who
200
Brings Scandal
Rennes-le-Chateau, and a
Corbu
servant and the
his ulterior motives,
warm
fellow feeling developed between the old
Very
family.
sincerely,
Noel Corbu proposed
without revealing
in
any way
buy Marie’s property.
to
In
exchange the Corbu family committed to taking care of the old woman. This deal was sealed before a notary on July 22, 1946. Noel Corbu and
became the
his wife
sole legatees of
her entire family on this same occasion, as the notarized
Marie Denarnaud continued family ever,
left
for
if
to return to France.
rebuild the family fortune that his
upon
then, that he hit
Sauniere
affair.
It
dealings,
And where
Moroccan
was probably on
how-
could he go
became necessary
It
reduced. The intelligent and tenacious Noel everything to a profit.
attests.
on her property and the Corbu
to live
not to Rennes-le-Chateau?
disinherited
document
Morocco. Following some poor business
Corbu was forced
there
who
Marie Denarnaud,
for
him
to
business affairs had so
Corbu knew how
France in 1950,
his return to
the idea of exploiting in one
to turn
way
or another the
Marie Denarnaud trusted only him and
his wife.
She
had even promised one day to give him a “secret” that had been entrusted to her by “that poor Monsieur the abbe.”
Corbu waited
patiently
and scrupulously respected the commitments he had made to
Marie.
does seem that the Corbu family had a real affection for the
old
It
woman, and
she clearly returned
at the age of eighty-five
She was buried in the
whom
it.
In 1953, however,
Marie died
without having passed her “secret” to her
little
cemetery next to the tomb of the
she had devoted not only her youth but her entire
heir.
man
to
as well.
life
Noel Corbu was now owner of everything that had belonged
to
Sauniere and Marie Denarnaud. His innate business sense gave him the idea to transform Villa Bethania into a restaurant
and
hotel,
which did
not prevent him from searching wherever he could for documents that
might put him on the
trail
of Beranger Sauniere’s famous “secret.”
plan to transform the Rennes property offered two advantages: rant and hotel
would bring
in
The
A restau-
revenue and the propagation of the story
of the old Rennes priest through his clientele could bring in elements that
might guide
his search.
The
villa
months of 1953. 4 Yet the few
4. P. Jarnac, Histoire
du
was ready
clients
who
for business
by the
last
frequented the restaurant
tresor de Rennes-le-Chateau, 296.
One brought
in
Can Hide Another
Train
201
no information that Noel Corbu did not already know. He *
knew
then that
it
would be necessary
mation was not coming
he would have to supply
in,
it.
He
way, even
profit
from an influx of
who were
tourists
Montsegur was not so
far
castle sat
but from other countries as well, lous treasure of the Cathars,
all
—
region.
would be enough
from France
obsessed by the story of the fabu-
which might even be the
creetly, of course, for secrets are
who
in the
travelers not only
Grail.
who had
channel toward Rennes-le-Chateau those
priest
discerned that
away, and even at that time visitors gathered
on the pog where the Cathar
It
the infor-
fans of unsolved mysteries.
There was certainly no shortage of such people
Montsegur?
If
he was unable to discover the secret, he would at least
in this
if
to look farther afield:
Why
ventured to
to spread as best as possible
always more exciting
not
—
dis-
—the story of the
discovered a treasure in his church. But the narrative had to
conform to the model that had already been well established Montsegur. The Sauniere public unless
it
would not have any
affair
was tacked on
Noel Corbu put himself
in
credibility
at
with the
to actual events in local history.
charge of this task. As his detective novel
demonstrated, he had a certain talent for narration. Thus the owner of the Restaurant de la
made
Tour
(the
name he had
a tape recording of a short
of the story to give to his
more important,
guests to spice up their stay and,
ination
summary
given his establishment)
enough that they would return and bring
This
summary was
to excite their imag-
their friends.
Corbu began by pointing
crafted very skillfully:
out that “during the entire duration of his Church
trial,
Abbe Sauniere
had started no new construction.” This was an important point to make,
for the story of a priest at
region
whose
made
.
heretical past
is
.
reworked
bishop plays well in a
last!),
the interdicted priest
his plans to include construction of the
Couiza to Rennes-le-Chateau to
his
beyond question. Once the Church had
the rupture official (free at
.
odds with
at his
own
road from
expense, for he intended
buy an automobile; conveyance of water
to
all
the inhabitants;
construction of a chapel in the cemetery; construction of a rampart
around the whole of Rennes; construction of
a
tower 130
feet tall
who
entered
with a circular staircase and library within so that
all
He Who
202
Brings Scandal
town could be
the
and
seen; the addition of a winter garden
another story to the existing tower.
We
have to admire the genius of Noel Corbu. To entice
he focused on
Abbe
Sauniere’s altruistic attitude (which
could a humble country priest undertake at his tion projects
whose
costs
were estimated
how
talking about.
for all of
this treasure
dis-
was
It is
an interrupted work, espe-
one halted under certain circumstances, that speaks more to the
January 22 he died.” Here we have if
fate,
Sauniere died of natural causes?
about the manner of
his clients to
While lift
mid-
Abbe Sauniere had
imagination: “But twelve days after signing, the priest
know
in the
Beranger Sauniere had realized his plans, however, they
would not even be worth cially
1917,
5,
knew where
covered an immense treasure, or at least If
gold francs, or
and signed the order
the construction.” This obviously implies that
to
perfectly
expense construc-
at eight million
dle of the war, he accepted the estimate
located.
own
1954 France? “[OJn January
billion francs in
tling
was
don’t forget) and the grandiose nature of his projects. But
real,
two
his clients,
his death?
This
fell ill,
but also a mystery. Isn’t there is
finally
and on
Who
can
something unset-
what Corbu allowed
assume.
it is
good, however, to allow mystery to
linger,
it is
necessary
a corner of the veil: If Beranger Sauniere could order such exten-
sive construction,
it
was because he knew where
to find “the old treas-
ure of the Capets, hidden in the thirteenth century.”
We
can see that the
treasure did not yet involve the Visigoths or Merovingians. Pierre
Plantard de Saint-Clair had not yet
come
this
way, and to mention the
Cathar treasure would offer unfair competition with Montsegur. No,
Noel Corbu appealed instead to ure?
local legends:
The explanation comes from
“The
origin of the treas-
the archives of Carcassonne. Blanche
de Castille, mother of Saint Louis and regent of the kingdom of France
during the Crusades of her son, deemed Paris to be too unsafe to hold the royal treasure because the barons
against royal authority.” There are
education concerning
and the commoners were
some gaps
difficulties that
in
in revolt
Noel Corbu’s history
Blanche de Castille,
widow
of
Louis VIII, actually experienced during her son’s minority. She was faced with the rebellion of the nobles of the kingdom, led by Thibaud
One
Train
Can Hide Another
Raymond
de Champagne, Pierre Mauclerc, and
VII of Toulouse, with
Trencavel right behind. There was a crusade, of course, but
one against the Albigensians. 5 But
203
was
it
the
in his defense, all of this did take
place in the thirteenth century.
This
is
the point
where history suddenly picks up speed. Blanche de
Castille
.
.
.
therefore
had the treasure transported from
Paris to
[Rennes-le-Chateau, of course], then undertook to put rebellion. She succeeded
the
again for the Holy Land and
left
died in Tunis. His son, Philip the Bold, must have tion of the treasure because he
to counterfeit
down
and died shortly afterward. Saint Louis
returned from the Crusade, then
But the knowledge was
Rennes
showed much
lost after
him and
known
interest in
Philip the Fair
the loca-
Reddae
.
know
its
.
was obliged
money, for the treasure of France had disappeared.
have to assume that he did not
.
We
hiding place.
A treasure was lost because it was too carefully hidden by the greatgrandmother of poor
Philip the Fair,
who was
thus obliged to resort to
expedient measures, as history shows, due to a lack of money! But
keep moving
— and
don’t waste
Carcassonne archives. Fair got hold of
If
there
let’s
time trying to verify this at the
had been documents, no doubt
Philip the
them and then made sure they disappeared
after he
found the treasure.
way
This lack of documentation in no
prevented Noel Corbu from
declaring seriously, “Based on the archives, which provide the treasure,
it
consisted of 18.5 million pieces of gold,
some such
that Sauniere found that a connection be Castille
it
made between
The mention
established as fact
treasures in his church.
It is
essential
the fantastic story of Blanche de
Corbu then determines
See Jean Markale, Le
1985).
important;
in
and the more modest but more recent legend of Beranger
Sauniere. Noel
5.
is
of the
some 180 tons
weight, as well as numerous jewels and religious objects.” of the jewels and religious objects
list
Chene de
la sagesse:
un
the total treasure to have been
roi
nomme
Saint Louis (Paris:
Herme,
He Who
204
worth four
some
Brings Scandal
while Noel
Corbu was
trying to attract as
Rennes-le-Chateau by spouting his fairy
sible to
understand that
dreams are bigger than others.
people’s
Now,
We
1954 valuation).
billion francs (at their
many
visitors as pos-
another figure was
tale,
some land and studied
lurking in Rennes-les-Bains, where he bought
known
hot springs, particularly that of Magdalene and the one
He
Queen’s Baths.
prospected the heights that
hemmed
in the valley,
The name of this man was
as the
asked
two tombs of
questions of everyone, and seemed quite intrigued by the
Fleury in the cemetery.
the
He prewas known as
Pierre Plantard.
sented himself as an archaeologist, but in certain milieus he
He was often seen in the company of the young Marquis de who had more or less broken with his family because of his
a hermeticist.
Cherisey,
desire to be
an actor and was trying as best he could to earn
was
small productions. Pierre Plantard
however. All that anyone a
book
that
knew
of
from
by himself,
in Rennes-les-Bains
him was
was almost impossible
his living
that his bed-stand reading
La
to find,
Vraie
Langue
was
celtique et
le
cromlech de Rennes-les-Bains, written by Abbe Henri Boudet, priest of
when
that area
Nowhere But
it
Sauniere
is it
was
officiating in Rennes-le-Chateau.
said that Pierre Plantard
and Noel Corbu ever met.
impossible to presume that Pierre Plantard never
is
made
the
climb to Rennes-le-Chateau and never heard the short recorded speech that
was handed out
to guests at the Restaurant de la Tour.
There
is
no
doubt the two men were made to get along, and while they may never have actually met,
we must admit
that there
junction between the “histories” each of
At
time, though,
this
is
an extraordinary con-
them launched
Noel Corbu managed
later.
his restaurant
and
patiently continued his searches, for he firmly believed in the treasure’s
existence that
all
and was convinced that Sauniere held the
that
was necessary
did
its
work.
An
increasing
lurking in Rennes-le-Chateau. This journalists cles in
who were
put into motion, and It
looking for
La Depeche du Midi it
He
determined
to have access to the fabulous
Blanche de Castille was to rediscover
mouth
key.
in
this key.
number
made
stories.
hoard of
As time passed, word of
of visitors were discreetly
its
The
way
to the ears of a few
result
was
the three arti-
January 1956. The machinery had been
could not be stopped.
should be emphasized that Noel Corbu never abandoned his
One
Can Hide Another
Train
searches on the church’s grounds. During that
same
205
1956, he
year,
appropriately obtained an excavation authorization and he and
some
enthusiastic seekers undertook the sounding of the church’s basement.
They found some remains and unquestionably a ritual
human
a
wound
skull “bearing a slot
similar to those
Carolingian and Merovingian cemeteries. of the
wound was
to certain
to prevent the deceased
Germanic
among
ancient times and
from reincarnating, according is
it
During
also plausible:
was customary
had been buried. 6 Could
to place
this skull
basement indicate that treasure had been buried near there? Noel
Corbu
certainly thought so,
which was why he continued
tions, only this time in the cemetery.
nothing was found. After
It
was wasted
effort,
his
excava-
however, for
no doubt because he discovered some
this,
information in the documents of Sauniere his
in
possible that the purpose
It is
so-called barbarians,
a perforated skull near treasure'that in the
found on the remains
But another motive
beliefs.
on top”
in his possession,
still
crew into the park between the Magdala Tower and
he led
Villa Bethania
to begin digging. There a significant surprise awaited them:
An
intensive excavation
was begun within an area
four square yards. The soil was
from somewhere
else.
fill
that
that
was about
had been brought there
At a depth of close to
five feet
our workers
unearthed a skull and some remains. Because such discoveries are not rare in the subsoil of Rennes, they gave this no attention and
continued their task. Great was their surprise an hour
N. Corbu’s dogs
sniffing these
macabre remains, turning them over
with their paws, and licking them. In astonishment the
more
closely.
The
skull they
and hair adhering
to
it,
had exhumed
still
men looked
had pieces of skin
along with the remains of a mustache.
There were fragments of clothing and linen scattered
6.
later to see
This involves a magic ritual intended to repel
at the
Evidence of
defilers.
bottom
this tradition
can
be found in an early medieval Welsh tale that forms part of the Second Branch of the
Mabinogian. in the
White
It
concerns the head of the hero Bran the Blessed, which had been buried
Hill of
London.
will never be invaded.
that the Capitol of
was
buried.
We
Rome
It is
said that as long as the head remains there,
should also is
the spot
recall that
Golgatha
where the head of
a
is
England
the “Place of the Skull” and
man named
Tolus (Caput Toli)
He Who
206
Brings Scandal
of the hole. Other remains were also contained therein
by a sudden
chill,
they
left
Of course, Noel Corbu
the
atively recent
was
called
and
and
it
Struck
.
.
and abandoned the
The mayor ordered
to thirty-five years of age. Their deaths
was learned
area.
more
a
which they found the remains of three
their clothing
Maquis] had stayed
site
alerted the police.
intensive excavation, during
young men, twenty-five
work
.
was
that
surely of military issue.
members
were
An
rel-
inquest
of the Spanish resistance [the
in Villa Bethania during the war. Yet the identities
of these three unfortunate souls, clearly the victims of a settling of old scores,
them,
were never discovered. All that could be done was to rebury
in the
This
many
cemetery incident
little
secrets did
visitors
after this the case files
add
certainly
were closed.
spice to the story. Just
how
and so much
curiosity.
To
the great delight of
the residents obligingly recounted every step of the operation. In
affairs of this kind, the
those
would
and
Rennes-le-Chateau hold? “Rennes became famous. Never
were there so many all visitors
this time,
who had
macabre element
is
8 the crucial factor.” There were
not forgotten the fabulous treasure and
only Rennes but also the archives of
who
haunted not
Limoux and Carcassonne. Noel Corbu
wrote a book about the Rennes-le-Chateau treasure and Saumere that was never published (the manuscript
is
now
lost).
As may well be expected,
a
complete ignorance and boorishness, dug holes
horde of wild excavators,
in
everywhere. In
happened so often (sometimes with the help of
fact, this
dynamite) that the municipality enacted a decree in 1965 prohibiting any excavation on
communal
property.
There were of course legitimate and duly authorized seekers
who
ran some search operations with no results. In 1962 Robert Charroux,
then host of a well-known television
came
in
person to see about the
story.
show
This
is
called Treasure Hunters,
what he offered during an
interview with Jean-Tuc Chaumeil.
We
went
several times to Rennes-le-Chateau, club
myself, with our detectors.
7.
We
Rene Descadeillas, Mytbologie du
got readings from two tombs, one
tresor de
Rennes (Carcassonne: Savary
1988), 56. 8.
members and
R. Descadeillas, Mythologie du tresor de Rennes, 57.
reprint,
One of which
was Beranger
no doubt there it
is
Train
We did not want to
Sauniere’s.
something to be discovered
We
is
little
area X, but
we
did not find
suspect Corbu,
who was
a false scent, or at least
not the best one.
and the famous
We
but
it is,
radiation.
attacked a given point
Corbu property toward
the
what we were looking
our disposal,
I
Today,
a secondary trail that undoubtedly
He knew better than anyone the
believe
11
completely charming, of having put us on
on
treasure.
for ...
He had
dedicated his
was
history of Sauniere
life
to
its
discovery.
he truly wished to collaborate with us and the detectors
12
9
began some excavations, but took great precautions because
was determined by heading from
thing.
it,
207
even more interesting. 10
the local people were closely watching us. that
defile
Whatever
there.
does not appear to be lead, which produces very
The other tomb
I
Can Hide Another
we had
If
at
we would perhaps have ended up with some-
Corbu must have found something by
himself:
no doubt
a
part of the whole that Marie Denarnaud, servant and mistress of Sauniere,
had hidden
several hiding places.
have put
all his
in a safe place. Sauniere himself
The
priest
same
eggs in the
found one of these treasures. 14 taken seriously ...
9.
was
1
a cunning
basket.
I
must have had
man. 13 He would not
am
certain that
Corbu
repeat, Rennes-le-Chateau should be
15
But others had no such scruples about taking on
this task.
10.
Robert Charroux purposefully refrained from saying exactly which one.
11.
It
remains to be seen what Robert Charroux was truly looking for apart from some-
thing sensational he could treasure hunter,
show
Charroux exaggerated
12.
The conceit of Charroux
13.
It
clumsiness It is
later.
is
when
it
came
to history, archaeol-
obvious here.
seems that despite appearances
no audacity and even
14.
a great deal
While certainly an excellent
and even esotericism.
ogy,
his
off in his productions.
bles pure
cunning. The
— unless he was playing
unlikely that
He
less
wasn’t “rolling
and simple
and powerfully corpulent), Abbe Sauniere had
way he defended
himself at his
in
trial
demonstrates
at being a fool.
Corbu found anything considering money,” as they
say,
and
his
the difficulties he encountered
departure from Rennes resem-
retreat.
15. Interview by Jean-Luc (Paris:
(tall
Chaumeil from
Henri Veyrier, 1985), 232-33.
his
book
Du
premier au dernier
Temp Her
He Who
208
So
many
Brings Scandal
Abbe
vain attempts! Nevertheless, the story of
whether true or
false,
would spread and enthuse
Sauniere,
the crowds. Television
got into the act and a crew showed up in Rennes-le-Chateau to film episodes in the
of the “millionaire priest.”
life
orable period in the
Rennes, a number of
mem-
whom
to the
were used as extras
good
folks of
in the films.
the starring role, dressed as priest of 1900, wearing
Corbu played a
definitely a
of this remote village.
life
Nothing could have brought more excitement
bands and
was
It
Roman
16
hat.
From
the seriousness with
which he
played his character, the unction that permeated him through and through, the condescension and benevolence that marked his every
word and
attitude,
it is
easy to sense that he had long played
mind before putting on
this role in his
the habit.
It
was Sauniere,
but a refined, restrained, eloquent Sauniere stripped of his athletic
appearance, his cheer, and his somewhat vulgar
was no one other than Corbu who could and gestures that legend attributed Sauniere slaving his role as
away on
joviality.
Yet there
better repeat the
words
to the priest. Viewers could see
his research, joyful at his discovery; in
patron distributing money to those
him; and as an adviser to these good folks
who
who had
helped
painfully carried
water until they could soon enjoy the benefit of a
their pails of
potable water system. The picture was complete. All that was '
missing was the treasure!
Ah
yes,
it
was
of looking. Noel activities
rant.
was
1
the treasure that
was missing but
Corbu assuredly did not
find
it,
it
was not
though
for
want
his search
caused him to neglect the management of his hotel and restau-
Madame
Corbu,
getting tired of
who was
little
responsible for cooking and supplies,
profit for a lot of
wasted time. Noel Corbu,
however, never lacked for ingenuity and found a more profitable occupation. In an outbuilding he installed a
16.
Noel Corbu can be seen
as
workshop
Abbe Sauniere
in
manufacture
two photos published by Rene
Descadeillas at the end of Mythologie du tresor de Rennes. 17. R. Descadeillas,
for the
Mythologie du tresor de Rennes, 65.
One
Can Hide Another
Train
of lampshades and fans. Ultimately ravaged by
fire, it
209
ran until 1965.
That year Corbu decided to move to Fanjeaux on the old road that goes
from Carcassonne Restaurant de
to
Mirepoix.
He
left
the
region,
selling
the
Tour to Monsieur Henri Bouthon. Thus a page was
la
turned in the history of Rennes-le-Chateau, but what Noel Corbu had written on
was
it
far
from being erased. After leaving Rennes-le-
Chateau, Noel Corbu was involved in some bad business dealings. In
1968 he died
an automobile accident, but the business that had
in
earned him nothing was definitively launched. Unfortunately,
who
others
1967
In lite
profited
from
was
it.
book by Gerard de
a
it
Sede,
L’Or de Rennes ou
la vie inso-
:
de Beranger Sauniere, cure de Rennes-le-Chateau appeared in book-
stores.
18
It
priest of a
was no
smash
a
less
and
hit,
modest
Abbe
time
this
Sauniere, the modest
became
village in the Razes,
of local history but of the whole of Europe as well.
What
both for history and for Sauniere the individual,
icant,
the priest
was made
to play.
He would
have been the
dimensions certain episodes of his
at the
The
subject of this
book
life
a hero not only is
more
signif-
the bizarre role
is
first
to be surprised
were made to assume.
both simple and complex: Abbe Sauniere,
is
priest of a small parish, discovered a secret, long jealously
and piously
preserved, concerning the survival of a legitimate heir to the Merovingian
king Dagobert
(transformed into Saint Dagobert by popular acclaim).
II
This king was assassinated by the Carolingians the forces of Pippin), but earlier he
(at
the time
it
was
rather
had hidden immense treasures
in
Rennes-le-Chateau for the purpose of reconquering the Aquitaine, a task he failed to accomplish and
left
Sauniere discover the secret? That
know
that he
was authorized
tion that he keep is
it
secret.
18.
(Paris: Julliard, 1967).
we
la vie insolite
a third
1977 an edition with
title,
draw from
“someone”
this royal treasure
Abbe
let
him
on condi-
Sion, a very
de Beranger Sauniere cure de Rennes-le-Chateau ,
new
title
a great deal of
Signe Rose+Croix.
did
are given to understand that his identity
The book was republished
ket collection of “J’ai Lu,” under the in
a mystery. But
mandated representative of the Priory of
L’Or de Rennes: ou
Then
is
How
This very mysterious and discreet “someone”
obviously anonymous, but
involves a duly
to
to his descendants.
several times, mainly in the
mass mar-
Le Tresor maudit de Rennes-le-Chateau.
new
material
was published by Plon under
He Who
210
Brings Scandal
ancient order parallel to the Templar Order, 19 which
survived by
it.
beyond
lived
was
clandestinely
Instead of respecting his commitments, however, the priest his
means, which led to a warning from
“someone.” Sauniere made a bargain with
mysterious
this
this individual
and was thus
given permission to leave clues and landmarks so that others
him could have
after
access to the treasure
and use
it
who came
to restore the legit-
imate Merovingian dynasty. Sauniere then died, dreaming of founding a
new
religion of
What
which he would be the
should
we
think about
edge that Gerard de Sede has a the sources he gives
The sources
leader.
we might acknowlBut what can we say about
of this? Mainly,
all
of talent.
lot
and the documents he so obligingly reproduces?
are unverifiable,
and when they can be
they are based on documents that were falsified
themselves
—photographs
verified,
earlier.
of stones and manuscripts
we
see that
The documents
— are
obviously
fakes that while not attributable to Gerard de Sede, are attributable to
those of
who
Abbe
had been
inspired him. Such
Sauniere, miraculously transferred from England, where they sleeping,
it
appears, in a bank, and of which copies were sent
to several people, one of in
whom
is
the current
owner of
Villa Bethania
Rennes-le-Chateau.
We know fact
that Beranger Sauniere found parchments in the pillar
had held up the former
that
lic
the case for the so-called parchments
is
altar
—
all
the testimonies agree
— but nothing remains of these documents anywhere, not
library or
an archival cache.
they do
If
still
exist, let’s
on
in a
this
pub-
hope someone
has the good grace to reveal them.
Some have maintained
that reproductions
would be welcome news, but we would
still
marquis Philippe de Cherisey, talented
artist
of these exist. This
have to interrogate the
and friend of
Pierre
Plantard de Saint-Clair.
On
visiting
Abbe
19.
Rennes-le-Chateau
Sauniere’s death the
in
town
Gerard de Sede had already published
which enjoyed resounding success. cited for the first time,
writer
is
quite old.
It
was
1961,
hall
a
learned that following
had burned down (along with
book
in this
I
in
book
1962 on the Templars of Gisors, that the
name
Pierre Plantard
was
which shows that the relationship between Plantard and the
One its
archives), so
that the
I
Train
211
Can Hide Another
took advantage of the situation to invent a story
mayor had made
a
copy of the parchments discovered by
20 the priest. Then, at the suggestion of Francis Blanche,
on
creating an encoded copy based
Gospels, after which
I
had
I
encoded. Finally, through a circuitous route
made
I
Gerard de Sede. The
my labor found its way to my wildest dreams.
just
set
about
from the
certain passages
deciphered what
of
1
personally
sure the fruit
results surpassed
21
Cherisey completed his confessions to Jean-Luc Chaumeil, someone
who was
always quite close to the Sauniere
cated the parchments,
whose ancient
who
Chateau, 23 took
But upon
farce.
There are
of
“I fabri-
took, en onciale, to the
Dom
Cabrol.” 22 Philippe
boasted of knowing the true secret of Rennes-le-
this
hoax
as
whom was
still
I
work
Bibliotheque Nationale, based on the
de Cherisey,
text
by saying:
affair,
deserves to be taken
it
—that
is,
as a
good
he intending to play this farce?
more elements
Other documents pre-
to this farce:
sented in good faith in L’Or de Rennes,
some of which involve
reproduction of carved stone, are more than suspect. The famous of the marquise d’Hautpoul
20. Cherisey
became
is
of guaranteed authenticity, but
met Francis Blanche during
friends.
The
a film shoot in Belgium,
brilliant Francis Blanche,
program Signe Furaxf
Who
Who
versation Cherisey told Francis Blanche
what he knew of
it!
could forget the radio
who
false
documents and send them
conscientiously performed this
work
— but
to
him
the Rennes-le-Chateau affair,
made
this
is
sure they discreetly found their
what Philippe de Cherisey
way
into the
Arnaud de Chassipoulet,
hands of Gerard de Sede. At
la colline
22. J.-L. Chaumeil,
Le Tresor du is
to
least
says. J.
Robin,
envoutee.
Rennes-le-Chateau,
Most important
to
instead of entrusting the parchments to
21. Philippe de Cherisey, L’Enigme de Rennes, typed brochure, 1978. See
23.
him
to be used in Signe Furax. Cherisey
Francis Blanche through the intermediary of the director, Pierre
he
cre-
During the course of con-
particularly about the parchments found by Sauniere. Francis Blanche then asked
manufacture
what
brilliant Pierre
has forgotten the “gag” of these two colleagues,
ated a psychiatric clinic for loco weeds ? Someone had to do
stele
and the two men
accomplice of the equally
Dac, had a well-known taste for derision and mystification.
the
triangle d’or, 80.
know whether
of Pierre Plantard de Saint-Clair.
Cherisey was acting on his
own
or in the
name
212
He Who
Brings Scandal
about the others? These stones were supposedly cited from entitled Pierre gravees de
Languedoc and attributed
a booklet
Eugene Stublein,
to
from the end of the nineteenth century, who happily
a local scholar
signed his works “Stublein of the Corbieres.” But Eugene Stublein
would have been
greatly surprised to see his
which can be consulted only
who
spent his
this rare booklet,
at the Bibliotheque Nationale, for he never
concerned himself with archaeology. In
astronomer
name on
he was an amateur
fact,
looking only at the
life
He
stars.
never
made
any study of the “carved stones of the Languedoc.” The booklet
is
blatant fake, in which, moreover, the unfortunate abbe Courtauly also introduced
The
—though he too had nothing to do with
it.
led a
offers that apparently the
name
Abbe Courtauly had been mixed up with
the story of “the carved stones
of the Languedoc” and the Sauniere affair because he had
“[h]ow could
priest in his youth. Yet
led to lending his
name
is
Rene Descadeillas
farce ultimately took a strange turn.
thorough inquiry into the matter and
a
this
good and old
to such aberrant fictions?
known
priest
What
the
have been
strange chain
of circumstances could have been behind it?” Rene Descadeillas found the answer to these questions, but simply uncovering the pot of gold
does not necessarily
During the les-Bains,
mean
inalienable possession.
final years of his life,
Abbe Courtauly
while taking the waters at Rennes-
frequently encountered a strange individ-
who had taken to lurking in the neighborhood at the end of the 1950s. This man was a resident of Paris who had no connections or
ual
known tive,
him
Hard
relatives in the area.
and wily with a said he
was hard
gift for
to define, he
language. Those
was
colorless, secre-
who had
contact with
down. Because he was not following any
to pin
regular medical treatments, his presence there raised questions, for
he would
visit
even
in winter.
on
his interest in natural
no
intellectual.
People indulged in endless conjecture
and archaeological
curiosities, for
His strange manner intrigued people:
He
he was
often
went
out and walked the land, asking about the origins of different properties
and
setting his
doned and of no
cap for those that were overgrown or aban-
interest to
the questions he posed to
anyone.
all
.
.
.
His comings and goings and
and sundry could not remain long with-
One out giving
rise to
haps laughed
at
rumor.
He was
him without
Train
regarded as a maniac and some per-
realizing that the
man was employing and
every strategy to build a case in which banal events
took on unexpected proportions. Considerations of
ple
definition
who were
age.
placed in the mouths of respectable peo-
fear of attributing declarations to those
On recordings,
recorded on tape. tell
any story he
likes.
as
we
know,
all
Thus he
it is
On
are quite definite.
priest’s life
or
dealt with the priest
24
Rene Descadeillas did not
whom
he
Abbe Courtauly
credited
who knew and
point those
this
whom
permissible for
with extravagant remarks that did not concur with the character.
impor-
little
esteemed for their sagacity but perhaps weakened by
He had no
anyone to
when
trivial facts
and vague phrases acquired
tance, hastily delivered estimations,
much more
213
Can Hide Another
feel
necessary to
it
name
the person
he had described with such precision, but he noted that the
famous carved stones of the Languedoc are mentioned only multiple-author
work
Nationale of Paris (again!) merovingienss
had been placed
that in
1964.
It
was
in
entitled
the
in a small,
Bibliotheque
Genealogie des rois
et origine des diverses families frangaises et etrangeres
soucbe merovingieene d’apres I’abbe Pichon, ,
docteur Herve
le
de
et les
parch emins de Vabbe Sauniere de Rennes-le-Cbateau (Aude). The
avowed author
of this
odd booklet was Henri Lobineau, who resided
22, place du Mollard, Geneva.
It
no 22, place du Mollard, and
that
knows who Henri Lobineau
is.
But
who
just so
happens, however, that there
no one,
in either
is
France or Switzerland,
These Lobineau papers are also fakes.
has profited from them?
Rene Descadeillas
is
this person:
He
matching information that the strange
descendant of Dagobert Before going on,
it
realized through the play of
visitor in Rennes-les-Bains
the author of the Lobineau papers. This
man
offered that he
was
was
a
2S
II.
would probably be
a
good
idea to cite an extract
from the book by Gerard de Sede himself, Aujourd’hui
24. R. Descadeillas, Mythologie du tresor de Rennes, 76.
25. Ibid.
at
les
Nobles:
He Who
214
Brings Scandal
The record of Baron Barclay de Lautour individual, ical
who
is
bettered by far by this
flooded the Bibliotheque Nationale with genealog-
brochures written under pseudonyms suggesting that he, as a
descendant of the Merovingian king Dagobert
a
II, is
much more
legitimate pretender to the French throne than the Carolingians, 26 Capets, Valois, Bourbons, and Orleans put together.
Did Gerard de Sede
finally realize that
he had been
a fool by Pierre Plantard de Saint-Clair? For this
is
literally
the
name
played for
of the mys-
man in Rennes-les-Bains whom Rene Descadeillas described. But we are only at the beginning of the farce. The placement of 2
terious
sham booklet Genealogie families frangaises
Pabbe Picbon,
le
des rois merovingienss et origine des diverses
etrangeres de souche merovingieene,
et
the
docteur Herve
Rennes-le-Cb ateau (Aude)
et les
d’apres
parchemins de Pabbe Sauniere de
in the Bibliotheque
Nationale was followed
by the unexpected discoveries of new documents, each revealed to be just as false as the
previous ones. These multi-authored works were
still
being sent from time to time to the Bibliotheque National, which was clearly running the risk of
Chateau
if
becoming the municipal dump of Rennes-le-
game from
those running this
the
shadows continued
flood the copyright office. In order for one of these works
“Dossiers
secrets
Lobineau:
d’Henri
Rhedae, due de Razes,
a
Monseigneur
legitime descendant de Clovis
le
serenissime rejeton ardent de roi saint Dagobert teur present ce receuil
must if
.
sign a deposit slip
.
.
etc.”
—to be
a legally copyrighted,
this particular
the mysterious individual in Rennes-les-Bains.
is
how
well
roi des Francs,
known
is it
servi-
someone
in these instances
no one there has ever heard of the
Perhaps the person in the case of
say,
comte de
le
son humble
and provide an address. But
the address even exists,
so. After all,
II,
I,
—
to
booklet
We would
is
sender.
once again
have to think
that rejeton ardent [hearty offshoot]
simply a translation into modern French of Plantard (plant-ard)?
Meanwhile, no one was asking the inhabitants of Rennes-le-
26. Aujourd’hui les Nobles (Paris: Editions Alain 27.
Philippe de
Lobineau.
Cherisey claims
it
Moreau, 1975).
was Count Henri de Lenoncourt,
alias
Henri
One Chateau
their opinion of all of this deception.
silence except for a
It is
Train
madness.
.
.
Can Hide Another
They simply
215
suffered in
few outbreaks of complaining.
For
.
have been coming from
fifteen years they
all
over: Montpellier, Toulouse, Bordeaux, Paris, Nancy. There are even
Germans
foreigners,
pendulum
in
hand or some apparatus slung over
an ordinance tions that
Sometimes they walk around with a
especially.
we
map are
do, everything
is
in their pocket, they indulge in
all
mysterious opera-
too familiar with here. As long as this
and we are happy
fine
is all
they
welcome them. But some
to
They
of these people are real vandals.
and
their shoulder
dig
and tunnel, break and
destroy anything and everything wherever they want, and the cost high. In
Rennes people are generally happy to welcome
those
who
fairly
relaxed about
even
have come to hunt for the famous treasure. Residents are this;
no one
them demolish you
have begun to
everything. if
—yet no one
Some
they thought
feel
about to discover the trove tomor-
is
row. These people are welcomed
right over
visitors,
is
it
is
at all
prepared to see
will
not give up; they would run
was
necessary. So
you
see,
people
they have had enough of these kinds of tourists.
These grievances appeared
in a
Toulouse newspaper quite some time
ago, but they allow us to begin to see
why
there
is
no longer
a hotel in
Rennes-le-Chateau. If
there
was not an
entirely authentic
component,
niable reality behind the Sauniere affair, the treated with the scorn
among real. it is
the
perhaps for
deserves. But truth compels us to declare that
this
who
“One
manipulating
all
train
tol-
over to overwhelm their village.
it is
does profit from
all this
Who
is
If
certainly not the townsfolk.
commotion? Never has
can hide another” been so appropriate.
this intoxication?
onettes onstage?
something
reason that they sometimes reach the limit of
the Sauniere affair profits anyone, But, then,
exists
of Rennes-le-Chateau are fully aware of this and
when people come from
expression
whole crazy story could be
brouhaha and permanent inebriation there
The inhabitants
erance
it
a piece of unde-
the
Who
is
pulling the strings of the mari-
The Priory of Sion?
Recently a small magazine has published a text by Pierre Bahier, a
He Who
216
Brings Scandal
The
fan of the Priory.
article
attempts to serve as intermediary between
and the researchers.
the curious public
In a gripping fable of
wisdom, he sums up the situation with
humor and words.
just the right choice of
At the time of the Crusades, ten Knights Templar returned
to France
with documents seized from the Temple of Jerusalem. The text (quoted here in
its
entirety) addresses the question of
know
have been. Does anyone
No
question
their
1.
these knights might
names?
insoluble for the readers of Facettes. So here
is
(based on Jules Moschefol) the
we owe
who
Order of Sion
the founding of the
Dupanloup of Sion (Haut-Savoie), Dupanlupus
The
Seduini, in Sabodiae.
that
it is
use of the
word
ortus
in
vico
“town,” proves
vicus,
Sion (Haute-Savoie) rather than Sion (Valais), an Episcopal
documents of that era
city described in the
tures of
whom
of these ten knights to
list
is
Dupanloup provided
as civitas.
the subject of a
The adven-
famous Templar
marching song that has since been adopted by the French army. 2.
Goupil of Gatinais, Vulpes Gastinense pagi. Vulpes should be translated as Goupil
an 3.
uncommon name
Moschefol
Aureliaensis, civis.
4.
Ar Pen of
it
[fox],
The
quite
still
interest of this
Caput
Genabensis,
insanus
Turpis
mention
clearly identifies Caesar’s
Brittany,
which was
during that era.
Orleans,
of
experts, for
and not Renard
Letaviensis.
will
Genabum
not escape the
with Orleans.
The name Letavia
nates Brittany in several hagiographic legends.
vel
We
desig-
think there
is
10.
good reason
to translate
Formidable
in
combat,
Caput his
as
Ar Pen rather than
as “head.”
German Templar comrades
nick-
named him Kaput-Caput. 5.
Dupont
6.
Rouget of
7.
Tartarin of Tarascon-sur-Ariege
8.
Chapuzot of Tremblay-le-Vicomte
9.
Fanfan,
of Avignon Fille
known
as
The
Tulip,
(sic).
a
(Eure-et-Foir)
bastard child of
unknown
parentage.
Pandard of Rennes-le-Chateau (Aude). This of the second class, whereas
all
last,
a simple
Templar
the others were petty officers or cor-
One
lightweight
tal
superiors considered
was never promoted. His
porals,
(levis
insanus) from
Lefebvre
One day
erally.
the
drill
his
grounds (martis campi later
it
clavis).
seizure he
them
parchment known
(Ultimi Judicii grandibus
as
He
in,
lit-
key to
never returned to the that the documents,
had disappeared and with
The Big Word on
litteris),
men-
The Marechal
in search of the
was noticed
had participated
whose
a
this expression translated
comrades sent him out
campground. Sometime
a
(nitidi testiculi).
— 1755-1820—loved to use
him
the hard knocks he took
all
which he survived without a scratch
217
Can Hide Another
Train
the Last
Judgment
an overpowering text that con-
tained the exact date and precise time of the Second Coming.
Here his
is
what happened
next:
The Templar Pandard, weary of and returned to Rennes-le-
fled Palestine
companion’s jokes,
Chateau, where he became a sacristan. There he of the presbytery,
p r i est Arts
who had numerous
wed
children by either
the servant
him or
the
—the scholars of the Carcassonne Society of the Sciences and
still
cer the
debate this question.
He
thought to
sell
to the corner gro-
parchments he brought back from Jerusalem, but the
lage tutor (Vici
puerorum Magister), having seen
and thinking they might be of
interest to
the
vil-
documents
future generations,
advised him to hide them instead beneath the high altar of the parish church, which he did. In
1887
the
Beranger Sauniere
When
documents were rediscovered by the
when
construction
work began
in the
priest
church.
the priest traveled to Paris to get an expert opinion of them,
he by chance met Jules Doinel, archivist of Loiret,
documents from him.
(It is
who bought
absolutely false to maintain, as
some
the ill-
intentioned individuals have, that this meeting took place in One-
Two-Two,
the
famous pleasure establishment on the rue de
Provence, whose threshold the two parties in question never
documents
crossed, as might well be expected.) Today, these
well as those discovered since in Carcassonne by the
who
took advantage of
a job
is
preparing their complete publication
tion by la Pensee Universelle.
same Doinel,
opening to have himself transferred
there in 1899, are deposited in the archives of the
which
as
in a
Order of Sion, French transla-
He Who
218
Until
Brings Scandal
it
Memoires d'un
Jules Doinel,
Night sous
presidence
la
Ma
et
de Sadi-Carnot,
look
to:
(posthumous
archiviste departmental
work), Carcassonne, 1905; Laguillamette
Pandard,
may
appears sometime in the future, readers
Croquebol, Baris by 1950;
Paris,
Pierre
Famille et BOrdre de Sion, Annemasse, 1957; Bernard
de Sade, La Dernier e Charge des Templiers, Toulouse, 1984; Jean
Mabize, Les Templiers precurseurs de
Waffen
la
5.5., Paris,
1986.
— Based on Jules Moschefol, Prior of Saint-Samson (Order of Sion). 28
There
nothing incongruous about
is
humor
is
ognize
who
this text,
or fable rather, and
perhaps more corrosive than simply irreverent. Readers will recis
who
concealed behind the Templar Pandard and
needled in the “bibliography.” 2 "
Most important,
—that
and
is
to say,
being
its
exact con-
between a problematic and phantomlike Priory of Sion
who was
a perfectly real individual, Jules Doinel,
archivist of the
is
this fable, in contrast to
so-called serious works, places the Sauniere affair back in text
its
Aude
departmental
he performed the same function for Loiret.
after
Doinel was a notorious Freemason, but most notably was the founder of a bizarre Gnostic sect that perfectly
which was halfway between
28. Facettes, no.
champs names
drill
(at full liberty)
Rouget de
and the blackest kind of Satanism.
this firmly
common
tongue-in-cheek article
French expressions,
and champs du manoeuvres (parade or Dupont, d’Avignon
Lille relates to
Rouget de
drill
(the bridge of
Rennes-le-Chateau 29. is
It
will be
We
Lisle, the
in this
whose
inclusion
others, attention is
knew
directed to Jean
explained by his research on the
with secret societies. legend (by
is
Do
Wolfram von Eschenbach),
the Grail
German
protection of pilgrims traveling to the
in the
name
S.S.
is
in the
about the Sauniere
German army and
guarded by
work
of a
— Translator]
Mabize (Jean Mabire,
German
pop-
that of Doinel. This
is
a great deal
not forget that according to the
are closer in appearance to the
the
is
documents.
bibliography
du
who wrote “La
French soldier
affair slightly altered in the story of the
not without reason, for Jules Doinel probably
Among
la clef
can also see the names of principal players
noted that the only intact name
affair.
is
ground). The knights’
Avignon, as
Marseillaise,” the French national anthem; Tartarin de Tarascon
by Alphonse Daudet, and so on.
around 1900,
that are often untranslatable. For example, the expres-
grounds” combines two
also involve wordplay:
ular song);
spirituality
the tone of the era
187 (May 1988), 26-27. [Most of
composed of puns and wordplay sion “key to the
fit
its
in reality),
relationship
version of the Grail
a troop of
Templars
who
than to Christian knights charged with the
Holy Land.
One Jules Doinel
always
in the
was present
background.
Masonic symbols and partly
in the
Train
in Beranger Sauniere’s If
we need
life,
but discreetly and
to find an explanation for the
church of Rennes-le-Chateau,
to Dujardin-Beaumetz that
we
he asked advice from certain individuals.
should look. Beranger Sauniere
It
Jules Doinel
and Gnostic who
was
also rather
It is
certain that
so happened that Dujardin-
Beaumetz was a painter and a Freemason, and archivist
partly to Doinel
it is
did not have any kind of well-defined artistic sensibility.
Freemason
219
Can Hide Another
was
Jules Doinel
a
specialized in hermetic symbolism.
an odd duck. Did he have contact with
Beranger Sauniere at the time the priest made his
first
finds in the
church? Perhaps. Did he have some effect on the behavior of the priest of Rennes-le-Chateau? Perhaps. Jules Doinel “secrets” shared by the various sects
little
societies that
He had
was aware
many
at that time.
held a post in Orleans and concerned himself specifically with
which the so-called adepts of the Priory of
when
Sion designated as having been their fallback point forced to leave Palestine. There principal a
humorous one,
is
a reason
why
refers to a Jules
“mad fly”), who was called the Prior of However real the Order of Sion may have
certainly
knew
Samson) ended
the
Saint
Samson
been,
it
of Orleans.
was hiding some-
sight of
it.
Now
the
Ecclesial Gnosis in
who
from the Loiret archives (one
Saint
relating to
Carcassonne, where he was practically
assured a connection with the no-less-singular local scholar
Boudet.
was
the Facettes article, in
most about the archives
his career in
the order
Moschefol (which means
and Doinel was shrewd enough to catch
In fact, this singular conservator
II,
of the
and so-called philosophical
were swarming over the surface of the earth
the Priory of Saint-Samson,
thing,
of
unfortunate Doinel,
who had
Abbe
restored
the
1889 under the patriarchal name of Valentine
seemed predisposed to serve
influences. In fact, he
as
an instrument of highly suspect
soon recanted Gnosis before the bishop of
Orleans and, under the pseudonym of Jean Kotska, published
books that were
30.
J.
in the spirit,
Robin, Rennes-le-Chateau,
ex-Freemason
who wrote
it
might be
la colline
said, of
Leo
Taxil.
envoutee, 87. Leo Taxil was a journalist and
anti-Semitic pamphlets and turned against the
lishing a series of invented
documents.
30
Masons by pub-
He Who
220
Brings Scandal
Doinel subsequently
some
back into
fell
his
Gnostic errors and published
rather stupefying books in which phrases such as the following
could be found. “The count of Saint-Germain was one of the most pow-
demon missionaries of Satan.” This quote emphasizes what a murky and unsettling presence Jean Doinel was, and how he could erful
allow himself be manipulated by
While “one Chateau ulating
affair,
train
we no
this side or that.
can definitely hide another”
know who
longer
whom. Manipulation
hiding
is
the Rennes-le-
in
whom
who is manipeven if we do not
necessarily took place,
or
believe in the actual existence of certain “philosophical brotherhoods.”
These groups have had the good sense to remain
borrowed names, or even orthodox. This
is
why
in the
groups that are perfectly
infiltrate existing
the Priory of Sion appears to be a red herring.
intended to hide something, to divert attention, which respect to the Sauniere affair.
sion of the facts that the
One day visitor,
in
shadows, assume
good
It is
is
very clear with
to carefully read the abridged ver-
famous Lobineau papers give
us:
February 1892, the young abbe Floffet received a strange
Abbe
had come to
Sauniere, priest of Rennes-le-Chateau since 1885,
him
see
linguist to translate
in order to ask this
who
young and knowledgeable
some mysterious parchments
that
had been found
in the pillars of the Visigothic
high altar of his church. These docu-
ments bore the royal
Blanche de Castille and revealed the
secret of
managed
It is
seal of
Rhedea with the to establish
ments discovered
lineage of
Dagobert
after the Revolution. 31
The prudent
other linguists to
as
Abbe Pichon had
between 1805 and 1814, according to docu-
the importance of these acts, kept a
the exact truth.
II,
whom
Abbe
Hoffet, conscious of
copy but did not give Sauniere
priest of
Renne-le-Chateau consulted
he gave only fragments of documents.
31. During the time of the First Empire,
Napoleon gave Abbe Pichon the
responsibility
of classifying, consulting, and possibly selecting the various archives and documents he
had been able to
seize
from the Vatican. The figure of Abbe Pichon was naturally con-
siderably enlarged in the esteem of occultists and other amateurs of the nineteenth cen-
tury and
became almost
secrets of the papacy.
a myth.
He was
alleged to have
had access to the most dreadful
One
221
Can Hide Another
Train
obvious that there was never any question of the lineage of
It is
Dagobert
II
before the so-called Priory of Sion decided to publish infor-
mation on the subject or disperse
information through individuals
this
acting as buffers. This immediately exuded an odor of fabrication a posteriori
for Beranger Sauniere never
Merovingian
era.
made
shown
Yet the cleverness
a single reference to the
here consists of the close
connection between the real folk tradition about the Reine Blanche the
White Queen who would
now, the one from
be, for
Castille, a local
legend of Rennes-les-Bains and not Rennes-le-Chateau (which Pierre Plantard, the inspirer or author of the Priory,
long stay at the “Bains de
his
la
Reine”)— and
covery of the existence of a direct
Abbe
who was no
Sauniere,
knew
line
the completely
members
dis-
complete innocent, had never believed as
on the hoard gath-
Abbe Bigou.
of this
famous Priory of
Sion. In
He was
merely a simple student of theology.
1882 Emile Hoffet was
not an abbot, and what
s
he had been a priest, he would have been called Father, for he
more,
if
was
member
a
new
should note the lack of historically correct information about
We the
from
descended from Clovis. Poor
naively as he believed that he had placed his hands
ered by his predecessor,
perfectly well
of the religious congregation
known
as the Oblates of
Mary. The writer or writers of the Lobineau papers would have been able to learn
from any clergyman the customs of the Catholic Church
and should have been able to make certain that dates coincided. But these are mere trifles. The most important was yet to come.
During
this time,
Abbe Hoffet
reestablished, thanks to this valu-
able information, a complete genealogy of the descendants of
Dagobert
II,
the king Ursus
whose ancestors were kings
so happens that the kings of Arcadia
It
the
Mount
came from Bethany, near
of Olives, from the tribe of Benjamin.
we understand
If
in Arcadia.
this correctly, the Priory of Sion,
although the
guardian of secret traditions, had to wait for Sauniere’s discovery to learn that descendants of the Merovingians
there a
still
lived.
Without Abbe Sauniere,
would be no Lobineau papers and Priory of
new
legend was grafted onto the
first
Sion. But at this point
one: the legend of King Ursus,
—
]
He Who
222
Brings Scandal
whose ancestors were kings
in Arcadia.
This obviously brings to mind
Nicolas Poussin’s The Shepherds of Arcadia and the strange
on
We
the road to Arques. 32
against
good reason,
all
which
is
pocus
it is
a plural
located
might even connect Arques to Arcadia
name Arques comes from
for the
noun meaning
“citadels”
—
for with a
the Latin arces,
of hocus-
little bit
easy to construe the names Arques and Arcadia to have
from the Indo-European word that gave us the Breton found
tomb
name Arthur and which means
in the
Ursus and
his ancestors,
who were
come
arz,
which can be
“bear.” So here
we have King
kings of the land of bears
—that
is,
Arcadia. The bear has great symbolic importance as the animal that sleeps in the winter
and reawakens
summer. Follow where
in the
going here: The descendant of the Bear will soon rule over a
Happiness
is
promised for tomorrow. And
inscribed in the heavens;
and Arcturus.
It
is
Arthur
British king
we have
know But
Celtic
let’s
no one thought of
members
mythology or even the
move
stories of the
Round
not
Table.
on. After having declared that Dagobert
never mentions them. But then again,
let’s
entirely, for before his assassination
why
II
II.
34
by the family of the Pepins,
coveted the kingdom for several generations, Dagobert
saw
that a large treasure
it
second wife, mother to treasure
his
was hidden
son Sigebert
was an important motive
us.
No,
who had to
has
history
not allow that to stop
the motive for denying the existence of Dagobert
is
citing the
of the Priory of Sion did
descendants, there really should be an explanation as to
Here
of course,
is,
pseudo-mythological morass; he would have
clinched the deal. Perhaps, though, the
not
of this
new Arcadia.
only to look up to see the Big Dipper 33
truly regrettable that in the
all
am
I
in
Rhedea, the land of
The
IV.
this
his
existence of this
for his murder. Neither
Blanche nor King Louis IX dared touch
II
Queen
sacred hoard, even in
the year 1251, because legend threatened the destruction of those,
whether king or pope,
who
appropriated
it
without any
32. [Since the time of this book’s initial publication, this
right.
tomb has been
destroyed.
The
current landowner became weary of chasing trespassers off his property and decided to
remove
it
as the object that attracted this
33. [Called the Big Bear in French.
unwanted
attention.
— Translator]
— Translator
34. History has never denied the existence of
Dagobert
II,
only that of his descendants.
One But the story gets
was
Christian,
better.
superstitious
curse and for this reason
We
would not
about the
tribe of
Benjamin
Merovingian family
II. It
lost in
will not put
frightened of the Merovingian
lay a finger
on the treasure amassed
should be said that the story’s detail
Arcadia and then rediscovered in the
some
minds
people’s
kings of France have had Jewish ancestors?
first
223
model
learn that Blanche, although a
— she was
through the pains of Dagobert
Can Hide Another
Train
It
at ease.
Could the
happens that
at the
time Sauniere discovered the famous parchments, there was no “commissariat for the Jewish Question,” as
was
the case during
World War
*
had been, Sauniere would have been suspected not of spying for the Austrians but of betraying France for the benefit of an alleged Jewish plutocracy. Even so, during Sauniere’s time anti-Semitism was II. If
there
on the It
is
and
rise
his discovery
easy to see
secret.
.
.
why
What was
.
occurred shortly before the Dreyfus Affair.
Sauniere would not have wanted to reveal his
important, though, was to have these documents
suggest the theme of the Lost King.
For hope remained.
In the great century, says
one of the parchments, the offspring
regain the heritage of the great Ursus. This
Gospel
is
the legend in
used to curse in the parchments the malefactor
One parchment
to steal a part of this treasure.
tory of an epoch about which
Sauniere
is
was summoned
explain himself.
He was
which the
who
dares
also retraces the his-
we have known almost
to the papal court in
will
Rome
35
nothing.
Abbe
but refused to
accordingly suspended from office
and
"
died in mysterious circumstances on 22 January 1917.. His servant
and life
heiress
Marie Denarnaud, who died
in seclusion.
37
in
January 1953, ended her
Without Abbe Hoffet, no one would have known
the strange history of a family
whose
time. Henri Lobineau, genealogist,
origins are lost in the mists of
March 1954. 38
—the bishop
tribunal
35.
before the official Church court
is
appealed his sentence to the pope, but he was never
to
He was summoned all. He subsequently
s
and that
summoned
Rome.
36.
He was
37. This
is
suspens a divinis, which false,
is
quite different.
but because she was already old, she almost never
38. Papiers Lobineau
,
14.
left
the premises.
He Who
224
Brings Scandal
we might
First
note the language employed in these excerpts by the
so-called genealogist.
order to understand their meaning, some
In
phrases have to be read twice;
We
from German.
lated
acknowledge Sauniere Instead,
the merit
all
upon
as
if
the text has been clumsily trans-
can also note that the text does not really
for having brought these is
awarded
reveals again that the Priory reliant
it is
Abbe
to
Hoffet. But
knows nothing
fortuitous discoveries.
None
documents
all this
of history and
of this
is
to light.
is
simply totally
at all serious
—
it is
surprising that sensible people could put faith in such twaddle. All the
more aggravating launched that “he
among
when an
that
is
those
inquiry on
who knew and worked
had never taken an
interest in the
Emile Hoffet was
with him,
it
was learned
Merovingians and that
it
was
impossible for someone to have consulted with him in 1892, for that
was
the year he completed his study of rhetoric
and solemnly put on the
habit as a novice in Holland.” 39
They have made
The Sauniere
their case.
affair
is
not resolved by giving prominence to the
imposter Lobineau, to the pseudo-order called the Priory of Sion, or to
any others does it
lurk in the
shadow
this eliminate the possibility of a
might be
gold
who may
is
in the
— buried somewhere
a reality
swamps
we must
of that “brotherhood.”
mysterious “treasure”
in the Razes.
—whatever
The enigma of
the cursed
accept or otherwise risk getting bogged
of confusion.
39. R. Descadeillas, Mythologie
du
tresor de Rennes, 84.
Nor
down
Part 3
THE MYSTERY OF THE CURSED TREASURE
7
Treasure Island
There
is
not a single region in the world that does not have
buried treasure tradition.
It is
its
own
one of humanity’s most tenacious myths,
probably connected to the myth of the Golden Age of Eden, that Paradise Lost slumbering in the depths of every individual. Having been
hounded out of Paradise, year-round,
we humans
believe this place
behind a screen of mist or under our
our Mother
that the earth
is
without which
life
Orchard whose
that marvelous
could not
as our “reverse world,”
who
feet
through a darkness that ends
is
in the
out of sight
just
within the earth. For
produces
exist, gives a
which
hidden
is
fruits are ripe
fruit,
we
feel
provides the water
haven to the dead, and serves
reached only after
sudden blaze of
much
light
crawling
from caverns
glimmering with gold and precious stones. All folktales and mythological epics
mention caves. Depth psychology has related
all
these imagi-
womb, but this concern how we live life.
nary yearnings to the unconscious desire to return to the explanation, while perfectly logical, does not
How we
live is fueled
The Razes, buried treasure.
like
by
beliefs
everywhere
and not else,
does not lack for legends about
could even be said that they are more plentiful here,
It
for the region’s very nature lends itself as it
certitudes.
does to maintaining the permanence of
much
to this kind of fantasy as
human
relics. It is a
borderland
of tortured contours; steep-sided, isolated valleys; and ground that dled with is
needed
more or is
a
less
map
undiscovered caverns. As everyone knows,
and, more important, knowledge of
to find the Treasure. Alas!
Few people 226
how
succeed, for treasure
is
all
rid-
that
to read is
it,
not only
227
Treasure Island
very skillfully hidden and inaccessible, but
more or
less like fairies
or
demons
it is
also guarded by beings
that forbid access to
anyone
who
does
not carry the famous Golden Bough. In other words, every time
speak of treasure,
of a guard at
repelled, pacified, or eliminated
must be
chamber
secret
we immediately speak
if
The
that holds the hoard.
its
threshold
we
who
anyone wishes to reach the
myths
structure of such
is
almost identical everywhere and broadly corresponds to that of the quest for the Grail or even with that of the shamanic journey.
There if
is
no need
to travel far
from Rennes-le-Chateau to discovers
not a treasure, then a traditional treasure legend peddled for centuries
by the voice (and ways) of the serving ancestral
memory.
We
folk,
which
we
the best
method
need only travel northeast of the
far as the ruins of Blanchefort Castle. This
those
is
is
the site of a story
for pre-
village as
much
like
hear on long winter evenings, a tale that was recorded in 1832
by a certain Labouisse-Rochefort, an enthusiast of travel and legends.
We
were quite close to the remnants of that
where the
devil has long
positively convinced that in gold,
fortress of Blanchefort
guarded a treasure. The local people are it
consists of nineteen
whether bullion, objects, tokens, or coins.
can be seen that the legend of cursed gold
It
and a half million
in
1
Rennes-le-Chateau
does not date from Abbe Saumere. The notion of gold guarded by the devil It
forms a theme that
is
corresponds with the ambivalent nature of
and buried Desire
is
But
in the
subconscious before
Here
is
One
it
all
that
is
memory.
secret, obscure,
takes material form on earth.
inspired by fear, and vice versa.
this state exists
permanently, and could even be called a latent
state. It requires a specific
circumstance to cause the event to manifest.
the story:
day,
when
the devil
Revolution) and his nineteen
1.
particularly widespread in popular
and
it
was
had some
a beautiful
free time (this
was before
the
sunny day, he started to spread
a half million over the mountainside.
Labouisse-Rochefort, Voyage a Rennes-les-Bains (Paris, 1832), 149.
A young
The Mystery of the Cursed Treasure
228
shepherdess of the neighborhood ing
saw
huge
this
pile of beautifully
the sight with a mixture of alarm call
who had
arisen early that
gleaming coins and reacted to
and surprise and turned back to
her mother, father, aunt, and uncle to the scene. All
ning to see
it,
but the devil
is
morn-
very quick
came run-
—everything had disap-
peared before they got there.
A
contemporary observer might conclude that what the young shep-
herdess
saw was only
on the white stones of
the sun’s reflection
Blanchefort or even that she was neurotic and had only projected her
own
desire,
and there the matter would
ple did not think this
The
big
much
rest.
But once upon a time peo-
way:
news swept through the
village, inciting curiosity
and excitement. Several townsfolk got together to
bustle
and dis-
cuss the matter and decided to consult a magician. This they did
and told him not stupid;
all
about the marvelous discovery. The magician was
first
he specified that he be given half of the treasure
once they had taken
hundred francs
The
it,
but before that he would need four or five
pay for the preparations for
to
reaction of the magician
is
also a classic one.
his voyage.
Someone who performs
magic, or a priest, must always be given something to be
crowned with
success.
secret risks of the mission.
one wishes the
rite
The magician takes upon himself only
the
It is
up
The money was counted and
if
to others to bear the material risks.
the townsfolk set off to the magi-
cian’s.
He forewarned them
when
he called, someone would have to step up and help him.
Everyone swore to keep up to the site
that he
their
where the gold was
would be
battling the devil
courage and then made their
seen.
The magician put on
speaking invocations and threats while tracing figures in the
air.
folk took fright
All at once a loud noise
and
fled at great speed,
circles
combat they
left
him
way
a show,
and strange
was heard. The towns-
pursued by stones and
crackers. In vain the magician cried: Help! Help! at the
and
Without
fire-
a glance
yelling there. Finally, a long time later,
229
Treasure Island
he reappeared, sad, gasping for breath, and covered with dust.
who had abandoned
complained to those
down and was on
the devil
ning at his
He
call,
He had knocked
him:
top of him, and
they had
if
they would have had the victory
come
Limoux
after
run-
—and the treasure.
reproached them for their cowardice and, grumbling and
bling, left for
He
mum-
having retained the deposit made for
his services.
We
can immediately hear the ironic tone the story takes here. After
the magician only pretended there
convenient
way
villagers. In a
had been a
some money
to earn
battle,
would be a very
it
some credulous
to the detriment of
land such as the Occitan region that has been eaten
rationalism or by
what
and anti-magician
is
called “scientism,” this
is
how
all, if
away by
the anticlerical
—tendency would be expressed.
In other religions, there might be a slight variation in the ending to this
For example, a Breton story from the Auray region recounts a story
tale.
of treasure buried beneath a menhir that lagers decide to take the
hoard for
their
is
guarded by the
own
the cooperation of a priest in their endeavor. to dig while he “reads
from
his
or answer during this task.
guises
and comes to engage them villagers
make
The plan
book”; but no one
word
end one of the
but
Of
devil.
Some
vil-
certain to ensure
calls for the villagers
else is
allowed to say a
course, the devil assumes different
in talk, but they say
cannot restrain himself. At
nothing until at the
this point a burst of
flame erupts from the place where they have been digging. The priest then
them, “If you had followed
tells
my
advice, this treasure
would be
yours.
But you could not manage to avoid the temptation to speak. Now, no one will ever
dox
be able to get
here, but
In
it
this treasure.”
2
The conclusion
ortho-
common mortals An esoteric journal
any event, the treasure escapes possession by strategies are
openly declares
in
an
employed
article entitled
Saumere”: “This treasure, whatever ated by secret societies
2.
much more
remains quite similar to the Blanchefort tradition.
no matter what
Like
is
many
who
it.
“The Fabulous Treasure of Abbe its
true origin, has been recuper-
keep jealous watch over
other treasures that are
unknown,
Jean Markale, Contes populates de toutes
1977), 294.
to take
les
it
its
hiding place.
must serve
to finance
Bretagnes (Rennes: Ouest-France,
The Mystery of the Cursed Treasure
230
the secret designs of the mysterious masters of the world steps while
we
none the
are
And who would
wiser.
master of these “masters of the universe” devil
convenient because he symbolizes
is
We would
wrong
be
about “secret societies” does
to take this
who
direct our
be the supreme
not the devil himself? The
if
that
all
warning
is
obscure.
even
lightly,
if
this story
laughable to us, for this “cursed treasure”
is
even appeared openly in the year 1665, during the reign
exist. It
who took
of the Sun King,
a
keen interest
imprisonment of Foucquet and
Razes following the
some mysterious excavations
initiated
Here again the event
in the region.
in the
conveyed by oral folk tradition:
is
One spring day an old shepherd of Rennes was returning with his flock when he noticed a lamb was missing. He followed the example of the good shepherd
Once
spent the day.
Drawing
there, he indeed
down
shepherd climbed the animal,
he could
it
took
his
His fingers
way forward
felt
The
and burrowed into a narrow tunnel that
into the ground. Pursuing the
make
pit.
into the hole, but just as he caught hold of
fright
when he
denly dumbfounded vel!
heard bleating.
he saw that the animal had fallen into a
closer,
went deep
Gospel and returned to the location where he had
in the
lamb
into the dark,
where
only by stooping over, he was sud-
collided with something.
the edges of coins.
with terror that he was also touching
What
a
mar-
Groping further he realized
human
remains. As
if
pursued
by a thousand ghosts, the unfortunate shepherd hastily retraced path back to the pieces of
cern ery.
was
but not until he had
first filled his
money. Once back on the surface of the earth, to return as quickly as possible to
He was
in his
pit,
life. It
his hands. It
dazzled by so
much
gold
his
ill
Rennes, probably Henri d’Hautpoul,
was
his discov-
that put this fortune into
luck that news of his discovery ran through-
out the village until the rumor quickly
tunate shepherd
con-
—he had never seen any before
was not Providence, however, was
hood with
his chief
Rennes with
his
seized
made
its
who saw
and questioned
in
way
to
it
to the lord of
that the unfor-
order to
make him
confess exactly where he had found the gold in his possession. But the
3.
ill
treatment he received at the hands of the torturers prevailed
Nostradamus, no. 51.
231
Treasure Island
over the peasant’s advanced age and he succumbed to their mistreatment. Furious at the ill-trained brutes’ heavy-handedness, the
had
lord of Rennes
What we have ical
his
here
clumsy torturers executed. 4
is
a perfect
example of a myth within a
histor-
context. All the ingredients are here: the chance discovery, the
underground location, the gold coins, the human remains that fear,
and,
punishment because someone has made
finally,
inspire
off with part
of a treasure that belongs only to higher powers (in this instance, the
who
lord of Rennes),
Even though
this in
no way implies that the adventure
example, however,
more or had
possible to date the events in this tale
is
we can
see that the terrain
Abbe
clandestine excavations of
less
took place. Through
really
seems that Sauniere knew
it
carved on the pediment of his confessional. In
the scene in
spoke directly to
his heart.
of those “keys” that detail of the
Of
It
his
course,
it
this
for the
proof
is
we can
that he
see there
pursuing his lamb
is
theme
is
something that
could also be seen as a clue, one
strive so
Church of Mary Magdalene
without
fact,
back bent,
seems that
some observers
In the years that followed
convinced,
this story; the strongest
which the shepherd, with
through the underground tunnel.
was prepared
Sauniere.
It
minor
and give the
of the shepherd (Ignace Paris) and that of the lord (Hautpoul),
name this
it
are the sole guardians of these “infernal abodes.”
doggedly to find in
in every
Rennes-le-Chateau.
Abbe
Sauniere’s death, the villagers were
or
even envy, that the priest and
bitterness
“Mademoiselle Marie” had discovered an underground tunnel that led
from the church to the
castle.
According to popular
belief,
it
was
in this
underground corridor that Sauniere and Marie discovered gold coins, precious jewels, and even a crown. This tradition
is
alive
and
is
what was
ceaselessly adapts old myths,
contemporary within a
specific
said.
But oral folk
making them more
framework.
This has long been the case in the Razes, where both local and regional public opinion, whether or not influenced by the clergy (sole
keepers of knowledge), has always concealed places of refuge for fugitives of
4.
all
kinds as well as for their secrets and their most precious possessions.
Quoted by
P.
Jarnac,
point of a legend
(
who
believes in the reality of the facts
and makes
Histoire du tresor de Rennes-le-Chateau, 108).
it
the starting
— The Mystery of the Cursed Treasure
232
from
It is
this perspective that
we understand
the large Jewish presence in
the Razes. Jews settled there long ago to escape persecution. While true that a significant portion of the
Aude populace
it is
Jewish, there has
is
never been reason to believe, outside certain authors’ imaginations, that they are the descendants of the lost tribe of
Israel.
There
is
a firm belief in
the region that the Razes likewise provided asylum for Alaric’s Visigoths,
who were hounded
out of
Italy;
indeed, a similar belief
shared through-
is
out the entire Corbieres region and even Carcassonne. This has inspired another belief: that treasure brought by Alaric there,
still
torical
hidden
an inaccessible location. There
in
to be found
is
incontestable his-
support for the presence of the Visigoths in the region and the
on
ing influence they exerted
provides an open door for
it,
but
This tradition
in fact
is
matches
history,
it
Temple of Jerusalem.
We know
Emperor Vespasian, “pacified”
or in other words, he sacked its
closely
based on verifiable events.
the year 70 C.E. Titus, son of
Jerusalem and pillaged
when myth
last-
kinds of speculation, including some asser-
all
tions concerning the treasure of the
who
is
turn
in
it.
that in
Palestine
In the process he took the holy city of
temple. This
a
is
memorable date
since that time have never ceased meeting
for all Jews,
and praying
at the
Wailing Wall, the sole remnant of the temple attributed to Solomon.
The Romans, who could display great tolerance toward
who
resisted them.
Temple of Jerusalem had become
a necessity to
than their own, were nonetheless merciless to those
The destruction of
the
ensure their presence in the Middle East.
found gold
temple
in the
—
Of
course, the sacred objects
huge chandelier made of
in particular, the
peoples subjugated by
The empire’s Goths.
It
410 and
was
Roman
decline
city.
death, his brother-in-law,
and
the
settled in
all
who
seized
its
way
now leader
southern Gaul.
riches they
Rome
All the imperial treasure, including the
in
booty
into his hands. Following Alaric’s
of the Visigoths, and his people
It is
left
thought that Alaric’s successors
settled in Toulouse. Naturally, they did not forget to bring
immense
the other
growing menace of the
Alaric, the leader of the Visigoths,
pillaged the
from
in
authority.
was accompanied by
from Jerusalem, thus made
the
solid
—were brought back to Rome, where they figured prominently
the imperial treasury, along with the spoils wrested
Italy
religions other
with them
had stolen from Rome. At the time of Clovis,
233
Treasure Island
Alaric
ruling peacefully over a large Visigoth empire. But in seek-
was
II
hegemony and claiming
ing to ensure his
Roman
emperors, Clovis could not tolerate the Visigoth presence and
invaded Aquitaine.
was
It
One
my
of
time that Alaric
at this
war
safe storage for his fabled
5.
to be the true successor of the
on the mountain of
Alaric, sent
me some
haste to find
5
treasure
former students, Gerard Lupin,
made
II
.
who
is
currently engaged in intensive research
information that has the possibility of overturn-
ing official notions concerning the struggle of the Visigoths and Franks and the famous
A native of Corbieres,
treaure of Alaric.
Gerard Lupin
first
he had heard personally: “Between Alaric and Alaricou Alaricou
about
mountain of
a detached part of the
is
Alet.
mentioned a popular saying that the treasure of three kings.”
is
Here
what Gerard Lupin has
is
The
to say
“This saying alludes to Kings Solomon, Caesar, and Alaric, whose com-
this subject.
bined treasures would have been hidden in the mountain of Alaric during the era of the Visigoth Septimania.
The fabulous
treasure
would
come from Rome by way
therefore have
of Calabria to be hidden on this mountainous island in the Languedoc plain. There
formed of limestone,
ing surprising about this because this mountain,
some
cheese, liberally seeded with caves,
words of
Greek historian Procope,
the
between Alaric
II
Narbonne.’ This his
placement of Vouille
and
his treasure is
He
in the sixth century that the battle
wrote
in Vouille,
but ‘between Carcassonne and
“New
goes on to say,
in the
Gerard Lupin
which means that Procope
come
elements have
and the words of Procope, by which seas has allowed a
his elephants.”
—
mountain that bears
stresses the fact that the
based only on the words of Gregory de Tours,
unreliable as the Byzantine Procope,
I
mean
number of Visigoth
a veritable Swiss
contention local people rely on the
this
where where Alaric would have been buried
name, along with
de Tours.
who
and Clovis did not take place
is
the
is
A
ial rituals,
good number of and
highway connecting the two
a great battle
in the
had taken place there and burial was made
were somewhat neglected.”
It is
official site
in
Alesia,
it is
which suggests that such
such great haste that the rituals
at the
testis nullus!)
Roman
sites
We
hill fort it
was
at Alise-Sainte-
in the land of the Sequani,
should not forget that
that have been arbitrarily retained because
who
could turn
it
it
is
of Cotes, just
official history
on gratuitous declarations or unique testimonies (however,
generally local businessmen,
pilgrimage
that the true Gregovie
totally impossible that
in Alaise or at Salins-les-Bains.
quite often based solely
unus
hole,
Burgundy. The location of Alesia can be found only
meaning the Jura, is
customary Visigoth bur-
We know now
on the plateau of Merdogne, but
above Clermont-Ferrand. As for Reine
in
for several
not absurd, then, to place the battle of Vouille here. There
are plenty of examples of other false placements.
not at the
same
town of
to
do not correspond
found
Gregory
Languedoc legend
sepulchers to be unearthed near the
these sepulchers
several skeletons have been
equally as
just as credible as
to the aid of the
work on
that
is
who
Capendu. These were so numerous that work on the highway had to be halted months.
noth-
better explored than others, that neighbor the
abandoned Roman mines. To advance
shafts of
is
is
testis
pleased certain individuals,
to their advantage.
that allegedly hold the relics of this or that saint.
The same can be
said of
The Mystery
234
of the
Cursed Treasure
But as to the place where the Visigoth king concealed his treasures, the versions diverge considerably. In one of these variations, the burial
place
Carcassonne. This, in
is
fact, is
sage of Procope (De Bello Gothico,
Franks
a pas-
mentions the arrival of the
2) that
Carcassonne: “having heard that they held the imperial riches
in
had carried away when he captured the
the old Alaric
Among
I,
what can be deduced from
these riches,
nishings, said to be
it
was
said,
Rome.
city of
were a good number of Solomon’s
fur-
adorned with jewel work, and something beautiful
to behold.
The Romans had once brought
Jerusalem.”
We may note that the chandelier is not mentioned
these furnishings out of at all
and
that the description involves only a part of the treasure.
This
of information
bit
gave
birth
to
numerous hypotheses.
According to some, another part of the treasure was secreted
mountains and divided among several hiding ers,
it is
in
what
is still
called the
mountain of
places.
in the
According to oth-
Alaric. For
some, the rem-
nants of Solomon’s treasure are housed on the sides of the peak of
Bugarach. And, of course, the citadel of Reddae also figures into the equation. In any event, Alaric’s treasure,
whose
existence there
is
no
reason to doubt, has experienced quite a few moves in these unstable times. Alaric
that were
that
II
still
was defeated and
in
Toulouse
had been moved
fell
earlier
killed at Vouille in 507.
The
riches
into the hands of Clovis, but everything
escaped his grasp. Theodoric then came
along to transport the treasure to Ravenna, but
it
was subsequently
returned, taken to Spain, then hidden again in Carcassonne or in the
Corbieres
— and what better hiding place,
at least
according to the
leg-
end, than the fortress of Reddae?
This was the version of the story that was popularized during the nineteenth century.
German
It is
based on
famous
smelters brought into the Razes by the Templars during the
twelfth century and the searches tion, a fair
centuries,
number
modest
larger deposit
When
fairly specific traditions: the
still
made during
Colbert’s time. In addi-
of fortuitous discoveries have been
finds to be sure, but lies
enough
made
over the
to suggest that a
hidden underground somewhere
much
in the region.
he arrived in Rennes-le-Chateau, Beranger Sauniere could no
more ignore in the area.
the legend of Solomon’s treasure than could
anybody
else
235
Treasure Island
Complications
arise,
however,
when
a parallel
the
Whatever the motives behind the
testable presence of the Templars. settle in
drawn between
and the equally incon-
incontestable Visigoth presence in the region
Templars’ decision to
is
Bezu (surveillance of the road to Saint-
Jacques of Compostella, a safe haven near the
frontier, military rea-
sons?), the region’s inhabitants have always believed the knights
came
to
this
remote area to find a safe place to store treasure, and folk tradition
still
echoes this belief today.
We
should not forget that the Templars of
Bezu were dependents not of the kingdom of France, but of Roussillon
and
thus, indirectly, of
Aragon, whereas those Templars
in
Campagne-
sur-Aude answered to France. This complex situation has given
rise to
strange speculations. According to tradition, the Templars of Bezu
.
.
concealed part of their monetary reserves, which were not safe
.
They
in Roussillon, in very secret caches.
the
also stored in such places
monetary reserves entrusted to them by the great
“Majorcan” part of Roussillon, who,
families of the
would not
incidentally,
recover their deposits, including perhaps the property of the king of
Majorca. Their presence
in the valley of
and
that they were hiding treasure here ings. In reality, a large
Bezu encouraged the in the
belief
immediate surround-
portion had been entrusted to the Templars
of Campagne-sur-Aude,
who would
have hidden
it
in
an under-
ground cache located beneath the church and the area around the church. that
What
has contributed to giving credence to this tradition
Campagne
is
a small medieval
vestiges of the past
tunnels beneath
it,
it
some
traces of
the Lauzet Plateau
is
is
curious for
all
the
and
throughout history have come to
which
remain.
still
What
also
that strange discoveries have been in the
Under these conditions, we can
see
Bezu
why
this region,
to create “caches.” In light of this, the to the village of Rennes-le-Chateau
6.
that
contains and for the presence of underground
substantiates the tradition
made on
town
is
Valley.
so
many
where
moving of is
6
treasure hunters
it is
relatively easy
the Templar tradition
self-evident:
Popular opinion
Abbe Mazieres, Les Templiers du Bezu (Rennes-le-Chateau: Edition Schrauben),
24.
The Mystery of the Cursed Treasure
236
maintains that the caches were divided over the entire region. All the data are combined and the treasure of the Temple of Jerusalem makes its
way back
to the surface.
who were
In fact, the Knights of the Temple,
established in
first
way
to
and admitted purpose of the order
at
Jerusalem and charged with the security of pilgrims making their
Holy Land
the its
(this
was
the original
Middle
creation), enjoyed long periods of contact with the
even claimed that they saw eye to eye with certain Muslim event, they
had
a
East.
sects. In
profound knowledge of the Holy Land. From
this
not far to imagining that they had recovered documents from the
Solomon’s Temple. Given that they had done
this,
while denying the Crucified One,
is
it is
site
life
of
of Jesus, the
Crucifixion, and the Resurrection? This question has been raised
and the strange behavior of the Templars,
any
why wouldn’t they have
discovered Christian documents as well concerning the
times,
It is
who
spat
many
on the Cross
not the least of the arguments used
both to condemn them and to cast them as the keepers of dreadful
secrets.
Thus, along with the Templars’ reputation for possessing immense wealth (though in reality to
istic
it
seems they
may
only have
owned
lands),
it
was
real-
assume that they also owned documents, manuscripts mainly, that
were even more valuable than gold or material goods. All of this
cannot help but add to the mystery of the “treasure” that
could be discovered in the Razes, and story built
Sauniere
around Abbe Sauniere
more
7
alluring,
it
it
after
was necessary
had
a great influence
on the
1956. To render the figure of to
make him,
if
not a member,
then at least the involuntary servant of a secret society.
Now, what
could be more secret than the Order of the Temple, officially disbanded
by Pope Clement V, but that some claim has survived clandestinely! This fact has inevitably prompted like Priory of Sion,
“secret dossiers” invisible higher
vived their faith to
7.
See
power
—would
that manipulated the Knights
said about the Templars.
was aware of
my book The
suspect documents
have been the
Templar and
sur-
certain that Beranger Sauniere never accorded any
what has been
do, for he
speculation around the ghost-
which, according to the Lobineau papers and other
— highly
fall. It is
much
He had
the secret deposit hidden by
Templar Treasure
better things to
Abbe Bigou
dur-
at Gisors (Rochester, Vt.: Inner Traditions, 2002).
Treasure Island
ing the Revolution. There
was thus no need
Templars or the Visigoths.
either the
(parchments), as
we
believe, his find
him
to have recourse to
he did discover documents
If
was
for
237
He was
fortuitous.
not look-
ing for them, at least at the start of his excavations.
These documents are obviously Abbe Bigou’s perfectly ure”
—
or, rather,
Hautpoul family
the
merely made the depositor, placing
which Bigou was
treasure, of
in
it
safekeeping
real “treas-
when
the situation
had become untenable.
The Bigou
treasure does not conflict at
with the Visigoth treas-
all
ure (thus Solomon’s treasure) or with the Templar treasure (also from
Jerusalem).
The Hautpoul family was
heir to all the great families that
succeeded one another in the Razes. They were thus keepers not only of objects passed
down
for generations, but also of archives of various
documents, some of which should be of great significance, especially given that the Hautpouls of the eighteenth century seemed to have a
connection with secret
societies.
more
list
as
What
compiles the
it
a windfall for those
The
story only
of the possible treasures hidden in the Razes.
who
developed the
would be
difficult to find richer material in
so closely
combined
that
waxes and embellishes
it is
impossible
Abbe
tale of
Sauniere!
It
which history and myth are
tell
one from the
other.
There are other hypotheses that remain unverifiable but conform to the essential outline already noted in the traditions mentioned above.
There
is
the old story of the cursed gold of Delphi: During the third cen-
tury B.C.E., the survivors of a Gallic expedition to the Balkans headed by a certain Brennus returned to
Gaul with the booty gained from the
lage of Delphi. Historically, this expedition to Delphi
came on
to naught,
and the Gauls and Brennus were
into Asia Minor,
Galatians.
Of
where they
course,
settled
myth has come
is
not be their
left
out, however.
booty by plunging
from Delphi
it
to a certain lake that
the west of the city (others say Saint-Sernin).
When
the
Romans
it
to history’s aid,
tale.
Some moved
and the epic of
Roman
the habit of sacralizing
some Toulousian in
authors,
The “treasure” of Delphi can-
would have thus entrusted
is
it
and founded the kingdom of the
The Gauls, who had into a lake,
a reality, but
scattered.
Delphi, passed on in fragmentary fashion by Greek and
has become a veritable mythological
pil-
the gold
traditions place to
an underground lake beneath
invaded,
it
is
said that they took the
The Mystery of the Cursed Treasure
238
treasure. Because this
was bad luck
was sacred
for the consul
who
gold,
however
appropriated
—thus cursed gold —
it.
Some
of this gold had
of course been saved by the Gauls and hidden elsewhere.
home
place for such a hiding place than the Razes,
gold
still lies
touching
it is
somewhere
in the region
but
it
it
What
better
of the Redones? This
dangerous to touch; for
is
the equivalent of committing a sacrilege. This treasure has
been combined with the fictions of the Lobineau papers concerning the royal treasure placed in safekeeping by Dagobert
Blanche de Castille did not dare touch. of the Merovingian treasure
had
its
We can
origins.
II,
see, then,
It is
the hoard that
where the story
not a folk tradition but
instead the recuperation of another tradition that has been diverted to the benefit of a dubious ideology.
There
is
also the royal treasure that Blanche de Castille allegedly
concealed in the Razes during a time of difficulty with the high lords of the realm,
when
the Albigensian Crusade
was
in
full
swing. This
matches the true folk tradition of the presence of a White Queen [Reine Blanche] at Rennes-les-Bains, though no one precisely.
goddesses
It is
knows which white queen
likely related to a fairy, the souvenir of ancient fertility
who
procured riches for their hierophants, not to mention
their lovers. This
is
an entirely mythological theme and
of Blanche de Castille that
it
was
the
name
prompted the hatching of the legend. But we
should bear in mind the interest in the Razes displayed by the mother of Saint Louis and her relentless striving to wrest the region from the
unfortunate Trencavel. Here again, myth and history get along well.
Of
course, there
is still
the treasure of the Cathars. This tradition
closely
combined with
parties
concluded an objective
that of the Templars, as alliance.
it is
known
The Templars
that the
is
two
often protected the
Cathars, gathering them together and hiding them and also managing their properties.
But the Cathar treasure also involves documents on the
Cathar doctrine, rather than a material hoard. The assembly of sacred treasure at the time of Montsegur’s
fall
this
could very well have been
effected in the region of Rennes-le-Chateau, in particular
on the slopes of
Bugarach, for Bugarach has mystical and geographical connections with
pog of Montsegur. The Razes was
a
Cathar country and even formed
a diocese of the Cathar’s pseudo-church.
There would be nothing unusual
the
about the prefects profiting from the rallying of the Razes’s inhabitants,
239
Treasure Island
nobles in front, to entrust to them this important heritage. This holds up
concealment of a “treasure” of documents
historically. In addition, the
belonging to the Cathars of Montsegur has been historically proved.
know went this
that the four escapees
from Montsegur entrusted with
into the Razes. But did they stay there?
does not
mean
it is
It is
not
this
Of
likely.
We
mission course,
of no avail to search at Bugarach or in isolated
ravines for the last traces of the Cathars of Occitania. Finally, there
is
the Grail. This, however,
not part of the older folklore of the region.
“hermetic”
circles that
visit to Paris.
Grail, the fin-de-siecle intellectuals tried
on
several occasions to
We may
determine the location of the Castle of the Grail. they recognized
it
in
Montsegur, though
in Glastonbury.
it
Wagnerian
In full
haunted by the grandiose and mysterious image of the
tradition,
nized
and
in literary, artistic,
were frequented, some stubbornly maintain, by
Beranger Sauniere during his alleged
“Holy”
an intellectual creation
It is
from the end of the nineteenth century, born
and
a recent tradition
is
8
If
at the
same time others recog-
anyone speaks of the Grail
primarily from the influence of
recall that
what took place
at
in the Razes,
it is
Montsegur, which
is
not so far from there, remember. All these traditions refer
harmony
outline: the quest for the
once found by those worthy of possessing
lost object that,
restore
back to one basic
to the
world and happiness to humanity.
It is
will
it,
a quest
for perfection diverted into a quest for material objects and, finally, into
a simple search for wealth.
The main consideration
is
the goal that one
proposes to seek.
Now,
this
hunt for treasure presumes an
initiation, for
chance
dis-
profit
from
their find. Further, as a rule they find only a disabled portion of
what
coveries
do not count, and discoverers “by chance” never
allegedly exists. initial
Such was the case with Beranger Sauniere,
discoveries
was probably
this
somewhat
to chance.
He was
who owed
his
missing something.
“something” that he then searched for
ceaselessly.
It
Of
course, nothing can be found without the key that allows the seeker to
open the
8.
secret door,
For more on
Pygmalion, 1989).
is
on the
inside or, according to the expression
my book Montsegur and the Mystery of the Cathars (Rochester, 2003), as well as my book Broceliande et Venigme du Graal (Paris:
this, see
Vt.: Inner Traditions,
which
The Mystery of the Cursed Treasure
240
used by alchemists,
To
“the open door of the closed palace of the king.”
is
find the key, patience
is
required, along with the ability to note the
on the
smallest signs that can put the seeker
right path. Because these
signs are
by nature ambiguous, they must be interpreted, which
a bizarre
game
well in his
sets
up
of Snakes and Ladders that Roger Caillois described so
work Cases d'un
echiquier [Squares of a Chessboard]:
Paradox of the Treasure. There are many novels of the Treasure Island type in which interpreting a pirates, the
it is
a question of rediscovering, by correctly
coded document, the fabulous buried treasures of the
Templars, or the pharaohs. The same paradox can be
observed: The owners of the treasure, scattered freebooters, perse-
cuted
sects,
or dethroned monarchs, appear to have been singularly
preoccupied with providing the clues necessary for someone take possession of
Hence the establishment of
it.
cryptogram intended to guide the possible spires as
He
if
else to
a complicated
seeker. Everything tran-
the keeper of the treasure wished to reward ingenuity.
organizes a
game
of “Hide and
comer has a chance, provided he
is
Go
Seek” in which the
clairvoyant and shrewd.
demonstrates the greatest perspicacity, not he
who would
first
He who have the
most legitimate claim to an inheritance, takes the booty. 9
We now
see
what
the point
is
for all this:
from these elaborate
It is
preparations involving codes and so forth that the “test” takes
meaning. rent laws
It is
not always the legitimate heir
young hero, one who the solution in short
ity’s
is
princess,
is
the test in
It is
all its
fullness
is
the price of
which human conciousness can exceed
Cases d’un echiquier
(Paris:
right,
finds
which
Gallimard, 1970), 42-43.
and
— and whoever passes
the stage at which, as the Serpent in Genesis (himself a
9.
who
the prize of intelligence
capable of succeeding at others. Such
progress, in
from
often they involve a
though he has not the
permits him to usurp power. is
Most
stories
poor, of course, but very intelligent,
and weds the
cunning. The process the test
—with respect to the cur-
—who acquires the right to the succession. All the
oral folk tradition emphasize this point.
all its
itself
human-
and
attain
symbol of
this
Treasure Island
torturous but effective intelligence) states, the creature that cannot even use a tenth of
its
human
241
being, a poor
mental capacity, could be
“as a god.” This embodies the sin of pride, perhaps, but without pride,
what would
What
the future hold?
these stories about hidden treasures give us
is
a lesson of
metaphysics and theology, for these treasures are bidden, with
shadowy zones and bad. This
this
word
why Roger
is
Of
holds.
all
the
shadow can be both good
course,
Caillois stresses
... the double nature of treasures: they are secret, hence the hiding place; they are talismans, thus necessarily consisting of materials
are
that
and almost superstition
history,
and,
10 .
need be, antiquated coins.
if
consisting of
bank
charged with legends, and
valuable,
intrinsically
They
A
notes, I.O.U.’s,
bearer. All fiduciary currency
is
consist of gems, jewels,
treasure
is
not imagined as
and checks payable
to the
excluded.
This imagined nature of treasure stems from the idea that paper
currency
not reliable and that
is
aura that
it
cannot be cloaked
indispensable to the effectiveness of the treasure-talisman.
is
In addition, this treasure can
come only from
the Past.
It is
remnant of what could have been a beginning, during that that
is
a symbolic
illud
the base for any itinerary belonging to the Sacred.
Sacred, like the cial
shadow
that protects
it, is
and maleficent. Hence the double
and repulsion
attraction
magical
in that
tempus
And
the
both good and bad, benefi-
attitude of the seeker
—and the dual nature
— both
of the treasure, which
can provoke either the best or the worst.
Taking
all
of this even further, treasure has a
pendent from that of
He who do it.
its
The
treasure
is,
that
is
almost inde-
owner. Roger Caillois writes:
has amassed or discovered
his descendants,
life
nor even those
it,
does not profit from
who
it,
nor
aided him to accumulate
so to speak, always at stake and will pass again
10. This obviously brings to
mind
the jewels that carry bad luck. But the very notion of
cursed gold, cursed treasure, belongs to this category.
The Mystery of the Cursed Treasure
242
hands of the most
into the
skillful.
For
this individual
of fortune rather than the fortune
itself:
spend the treasure he discovered.
It is
We
the guarantee of his excep-
open account.
moment
compose
new
a token
have never seen a hero
tional destiny, not a kind of
of his death, he will
it is
suppose that
I
at the
and begin
a rebus in turn
a
contest.
This
the case with Beranger Sauniere
is
the accusations lodged against
construction.
It
was not
him concerning
only idle gossip. In
cast
doubt on
the flashy luxury of his
for his personal gain but rather for his
that he spent the fortune (whatever allegations about his
and should
sumptuous fact,
its
origin) he
parties
had amassed, and the
and Pantagruel-like
under examination
work
we may
feasts are
see that
Abbe
Sauniere never personally profited from what he had discovered. To the contrary,
it
substantiates the theory that he
would have
left
an obvi-
ously coded, symbolic message to indicate to others this “door on the inside” that can be
The
opened only by those
who
hold the key.
detractors of the Sauniere affair have vainly
inconsistencies
and obvious errors noticeable
“work,” as well as those
in the
work
of those
in
what
is
denounced the considered his
who have approached
it.
These inconsistencies are countless and the errors are incontestable. In contrast, the partisans of the affair (who, after
emphasize
all
these inconsistencies
all, is
the affair for?)
and mistakes by saying they are too
obvious not to be intentional. They are hiding something.
So
let
us try to
open the door.
8
The Door
on the Inside
Is
Legends are tenacious, especially when they are only a mere twenty
Some people wish
years or thirty years old. in the
one concerning the Rennes-le-Chateau
was
legend, Beranger Sauniere
Henri Boudet,
a
match
in a chess
To
siderable vested interest. tation,
us to place complete faith
According to the
poor pawn shamelessly used by Abbe
which someone (who?) had
in
who
listen to those
was Boudet who,
it
affair.
the
in
name
a con-
stand by this interpre-
of the
ever-mysterious
“brotherhood,” guided his younger colleague Sauniere in his excavation, research,
Now we know from a sure source and
and achievements.
supporting testimony that Abbe Boudet was not at
who remained
hierophant
move about on
in the
an honest
1.
when
they hear
mind was not priest
A characteristic
with
it
Abbe Mazieres, who Boudet: “Those who knew
said that he wished to leave a mes-
at all disposed to that.”
integrity,
and even
Boudet was certainly
a puritanical streak
anecdote about him was recounted in the Bulletin de
scientifiques de I’Aude (1973), 221. Henri
gladly took part in excavations.
while excavating a
Roman
site,
Boudet had a passion
One day toward
la
carry out the
it
up or touch
commands
1 .
But he
Societe d' etudes
for archaeology
and
the beginning of the twentieth century,
he and his coworkers found a very beautiful statue of
Venus. She was depicted nude, however, and Abbe Boudet, horrified by refused to pick
to
the stage, or rather before the altar.
are surprised
sage. His
a diabolical
shadows while allowing Sauniere
wrote several books on the Razes, said of
him
all
it.
Is
this the attitude of a
man
ready to do anything to
of a fairly unorthodox brotherhood
require committing the worst kinds of misappropriations?
243
this nudity,
—especially
when
they
— 244
The Mystery of the Cursed Treasure
made
a mistake in writing
le
and publishing La Vraie Langue celtique
et
cromlech de Rennes-les-Bains. This work, which enjoys great success
today,
would have
fallen into total oblivion
if
by happy
—or unhappy
chance Boudet had not been the priest of Rennes-les-Bains while Sauniere was priest of Rennes-le-Chateau.
To be
fair, it
should be stated that Abbe Boudet certainly could have
done without publishing
work
a
that earned
him nothing but
while he was alive and the label of insanity after his death. it
have been any great
what’s done
is
loss to science
if
that
is
Nor would
he had abstained. But in the end,
done. The opinion that
researching the Sauniere affair
ridicule
is
most widely shared by those
La Vraie Langue
celtique holds
the key that allowed Sauniere ’s secret drawer to be unlocked.
La Vraie Langue
celtique et
astounding work that
starts
cromlech de Rennes-les-Bains
le
from a
is
an
series of linguistic equivalencies
(completely aberrant ones) based on observations from Rennes-les
Bains and the surrounding area, and from these claims demonstrates that the Celtic language
Abbe Boudet goes on never uttered the
is
the oldest language in the world. Further,
spoken
to declare that the patois
name
Occitania)
“true Celtic language.”
“One
is
a very pure
thinks one
is
in the
remnant of
Razes (he
this archaic
dreaming when hearing
these Celtic expressions, treated scornfully today as wretched gar, as clearly the original
This declaration
language
Adam
and
vul-
taught to his children.” 2
It is
not new, however, for in the
latter years of the eighteenth century, the
famous “Celtomaniacs” La
is
disconcerting.
Tour d’Auvergne and Le Brigant made low Breton the mother guage of humanity, the tongue that was spoken thereby recognized in
all
Eden. Le Brigant
modern languages an obvious Breton root
and found arguments to persuade Boudet proceeds
in
lan-
his readers to share his view.
in a similar fashion,
but his originality
lies
Henri in his
observation that in addition to the Languedocian patois, the purest representative of this ancient Celtic language English.
It is
true that
Boudet had
tion nonetheless led to
is
quite simply
modern
a degree in English, but this asser-
some astonishing conclusions,
including, for
example, the explanation he gives for the name of the Rdalses River
2.
Boudet, La Vraie Langue celtique et
le
cromlech de Rennes-les-Bains, 213.
The Door north of Rennes: “The Rialses “tax”
— flows
from sunrise
—
Is
on the Inside
245
effective”;
cess,
“real,
real (rial),
to sunset in a valley
whose
fertile
soil
allowed the inhabitants to pay the tax that the Celts imposed on lands easily .”
grew crops
that
think of
3
All that
was required was
someone
for
it.
Obviously, the cromlech that Boudet speaks of does not purely a product of his imagination. But this imagination a landscape that forms a kind of amphitheater its
center
them
to
is
exist. It is
supported by
—with Rennes-les-Bains
at
—from which emerge natural rocks, though Boudet considered
to be megaliths, or rather “druid stones,” as they
were called dur-
ing the time of the Celtomaniacs. Boudet, however, extended his study far
beyond the Razes. Here, Locmariaquer
Here
is
in
for instance,
is
how
Morbihan: “Locmariaquer
is
he explains the
a place near
name
Vannes Lake
the composition of this word: a lake that prevents hunters
4 .
—loch
5 mar, “prevent”; yager (iagueurj, “hunter.”
(lok), “lake”; to
And
of
while he
is
at
it,
he explains the origin of the
name Sarzeau on
the peninsula of Rhuys: “All the authors concerned with Celtic industries
have taught us that horsehair cloth was a Gallic invention, but they
cannot
tell
us the
site
of
its
invention and fabrication. Sarzeau, on the
peninsula of Rhuys, teaches us
“tammy, horsehair cloth”;
And on pores over
it
all
goes.
(so),
“attach,
—sarce
(sarse),
in this vein.
Boudet
topic
sew.” 6
and modern tongues and rewrites the history
of humanity in his fashion. to
sew
this
The whole book continues
the ancient
from “to coin,”
to
much on
We
thereby learn that the
mint money, to invent.
ancestor of smiths and metalworkers?
We
Isn’t
name Cain comes
Cain regarded
also learn that
as the
Sodom comes
from “sod,” the ground, and “to doom,” to judge or condemn, which justifies the destruction of this city. Whenever he can, Boudet brings his explanations back to a regional expression of his native land, a place-
name,
a part of his “cromlech.”
His foggy, murky considerations
3.
Boudet, La Vraie Langue celtique
4. In 5.
et le
fit
the tone of nineteenth-century
cromlech de Rennes-les-Bains, 227.
other words, the Gulf of Morbihan.
Boudet, La Vraie Langue celtique
6. Ibid.
et le
cromlech de Rennes-les-Bains, 156.
The Mystery of the Cursed Treasure
246
Celtomaniacs.
He drew
his
conceptions of Celts and Celtic civilizations
from Henri Martin, Amedee Thierry, members of the and romantic
historians. For
him
book
numerous people
to
way
this
his
work
Academy,
as for them, the megalithic
ments were obviously druidic and were used for Henri Boudet took
Celtic
monu-
sacrifices.
quite seriously,
it
seems, and sent his
as well as to scholarly societies of his day. In
he attracted rather ironic reviews, such as this one from the
Toulouse Academy of Sciences, Inscriptions, and Belles-Lettres:
We
cannot enter into a detailed criticism of
discuss
its
eccentric theories
as they are audacious
very
fertile
this
book
and declarations that are
and would seem
in order to
as gratuitous
to betray the presence of a
mind. Taking a stand from an exclusively religious
point of view, the author ceaselessly introduces authorities
have nothing to do with .
.
.
We
linguistics
such as
it is
who
understood today
were greatly surprised to learn that the unique language
spoken before Babel was modern English, preserved by the Tectosages. But this
is
what Mr. Boudet has demonstrated with
his
prodigious etymological tours de force.
The
reaction of
It
is
The
Societe d’etude scientifiques de
PAude was no
regrettable that this author bases his only suppositions
gentler.
on
vague and arbitrary etymologies from which he has drawn highly
unorthodox proofs, and
cites
But as Philippe Schrauben noted
Langue
...
celtique, this
is
a large
only ancient authors
.
.
in his preface to the reissue of
La Vraie
book:
mosaic of extracts from carefully selected nineteenth-
century works chosen to create a more or
made up
.
less
coherent unity.
It is
of not merely short citations, but entire pages transcribed
verbatim and placed end to end.
Was
the intended purpose a
rebirth of the true Celtic language as desired in the Celtifying
of the end of the nineteenth century?
up boundaries
Or was
for a hypothetical “Celtic
it
mode
an attempt to
cromlech”
set
in Rennes-les-
The Door
Is
247
on the Inside
Bains? After finishing the book, one has the impression that
Boudet believed ject,
By
work
in neither one,
but wandered from subject to sub-
and Greek mythology
topics as different as water cures
all
evidence,
La
Vraie
Langue
celtique forms part of the
body of
written during the nineteenth century by county seat scholars, as
they are called,
who
thereby seek to
show
the love they bear for their
region despite the fact that they have had no scientific training and rely
on no serious reference works
related to the topic they have studied.
Henri Boudet’s passionate investigation of
his
own
region did not pre-
vent him from taking an interest in others.
Much
to the detriment of fans of secret treasures,
personal papers, which
still
Abbe Boudet’s
exist, testify to a lifetime of intellectual
labor and research. Their consultation successively shows that this learned priest had thrown himself into the etymological study of a
number
great
of villages
and
So Rennes-les-Bains was not an isolated case.
A
yet-unpublished
Boudet did not regard ings
Aude region
locales in the
introduction
his theories as
But the fact
found
is this:
.
.
.
again
reveals
that
nonsense and that
Abbe
his writ-
in their search for
9 .
Since the launching of the
Abbe Boudet has been made
into the inspirer
Abbe Sauniere
unlikely assumptions, aberrations,
and
story,
and accomplice of the
from Rennes-le-Chateau, and La Vrai Langue
priest
.
8 .
were not cryptograms for mystics to use
loot waiting to
.
stupidities, has
celtique,
with
its
become merely
a
gigantic rebus that provides the key Sauniere used to enter the cave
where the treasure was
stored.
The book
is
no longer The True Language
of the Celts, but instead “the true language of the birds,” a to designate traditional hermetic language. All that
7.
La
Vraie
Langue
celtique (Nice: Editions Belisane, 1984). This
and complete republication of the original 1886 8. P.
text.
Jarnac, Histoire du tresor de Rennes-le-Chateau, 28.
9. Ibid.,
289.
is
name used
required to find
is
the only authentic
The Mystery of the Cursed Treasure
248
the solution to the mystery of the cursed treasure that
is
on the inside”
This certainly
to decipher
is
and the famous “door
Abbe Boudet’s work
how Abbe Boudet has been not how he imagined it would
is
10 .
presented to posterity, which
Now why
be.
we throw
should
ourselves into the dangerous adventure of decoding a text that
jumble of cliches drawn from
Why
add more absurdities
his linguistic theories are highly eccentric.
treasure,
La
looking.
The
we wish
eccentricities. If
Vraie
Langue
celtique
is
Nothing useful
This
and
its interior,
contains
if
Abbe Sauniere had wished
know whether
we do
not
would
necessarily be one all
irritating
it
to
interpre-
hidden within
is
Abbe Sauniere
affair;
Abbe Sauniere wished
it
it.
would not that
is
message. There
left a
from a man who had discovered certain
about the Sauniere
first
surround-
its
the real anomalies
that others have attributed to his finding. This
he
examine the
viewed otherwise. The problem
or not
the
in fact, a secret.
is,
to leave a message, he
is
things,
what
is
so
only some pieces of the puzzle have
been put into place, but the whole picture
moment
The more
no shortage of
odd ornamentation and
Its
have been better served to have
but not
there
lead us to believe that something
all
Therefore,
if
for here too there has been
and speculation.
tation
—
Rennes-le-Chateau, both
in
to the
simply one more
is
from which
the appropriate perspective
is
Church of Mary Magdalene ings
the secret
is
in
absolutely the last place to start
intoxicated manipulation to divert the attention of seekers.
curious are sent astray, the safer
even
gained
is
way back
to find our
emphasis on Boudet’s book
insistent
to the
man
ones that already exist in the text? Abbe Boudet was an honest
adding to these
only a
is
kinds of nineteenth-century works and
all
embellished by an adulterated sauce?
if
is
to restore
still
remains hidden.
and refurbish
arrived in Rennes-le-Chateau.
his
He
church from the
did so and for a
new dimension to his parish while at own mark and leaving a memorial, both per-
highly laudable purpose: to give a the
same time making
human
fectly
desires.
his
But
in the
course of his activity he found himself
embroiled, willy-nilly, in events he had not foreseen.
10. In
L’Or de Rennes, Gerard de Sede devoted some time
rather
some other people did
then his
many
own
it
for
others have followed
opinions,
I
prefer not to
him or whispered
him down
to this
in his ear
this trail.
Because
He made
little
decoding game, or
what he needed I
discov-
to do. Since
believe everyone
is
free to
mention any names or cause anyone any problems.
The Door
eries that certainly
Is
249
on the Inside
allowed him to move his project forward, but which
nonetheless were not intentional. seen, the decoration of Sauniere’s church
As we’ve
bizarre due to the fact,
it
is
unusual and
seems, that he did not have a very developed
sense of aesthetics. Yet there are certain constants that can be found in the church’s ornamentation.
The
first is
an exultant
baroque poor
style of
Everything
taste.
is
completely disordered and overloaded, including the inscriptions, the decorations, and the statuary.
seems that the mind that conceived
It
all
i
sought to include the
this
imum amount
maximum amount
of space, leaving no
simple reason for Sauniere suffered
empty
The church
this:
of information in the min-
places.
There could be a very
structure itself
is
Abbe
small and
of grandeur. His attempt to
somewhat from delusions
rebuild a triumphal porch leading to the cemetery
is
revealing.
wanted something grandiose but lacked the means, hence
He
this pale,
miniature copy of the famous porches on the parish grounds of Nord-
we can wonder
But
Finistere.
Perhaps the worthless rubbish
if
this excess
—worthless
might not be
artistically
justified:
speaking
— serves
to conceal important information.
The second constant opposite of what
is
usual.
Our Lady
statue of
The
Abbe
full
well that the one depicted
take,
up the
A
priest
is
quite characteristic of this.
Sauniere, accustomed to the shape of the cross,
mean one
of
two
on
this pillar
things: Either
would know
was displayed upside down.
one of
his
workers made a mis-
and Sauniere did not dare or was unable to make him
error, or else this position.
way
so-called Visigoth pillar that holds
of Lourdes
like
This can
toward the reverse or the
a kind of bias
is
it
was on
Which
command
his explicit
of these
two
solutions
to say. This preference for the reverse
ment of the Stations of
the Cross.
of the altar, even though
it
is
The
first
that the pillar be placed in
is
is
rectify his
the right one? There
is
no
again found in the arrangestation
is
placed to the
usually placed to the right. There
is
left
the
Mary and Saint really Jesus?). And what rea-
opposition on either side of the altar of the Virgin Joseph, each accompanied by a child
son
is
behind the unusual presence of the devil at the entrance to the
church? The site
(is it
devil, as
we know,
is
the very
symbol of
reversal, the
oppo-
of good. This apparent justification for the devil’s presence here
is
The Mystery of the Cursed Treasure
250
and holding up the holy water
the punishment of bending his knee
stoup with an expression of great suffering on his face, thereby ing to his servitude.
even
may
if it
tomed
could be more orthodox
somewhat
true that
“This place
is
we
are
terrible.”
“My
On
time: Terribilis est locus
But
borrowed from the story of
this phrase,
coeli,
“Here
is
vault
on which
is
oratorionis
11 as a house of prayer.”
the house of
This more reassuring inscription
iste,
nevertheless tempered
Domus mea domus
it:
known
will be
is
Hie domus Dei
the vaulting of the porch another phrase appears:
porta
est et
house
are accus-
warned ahead of
by the inscription that frames vocabitur,
who
church?
in
Genesis and displayed prominently,
in
in this portrayal,
surprising to the faithful,
more peaceful atmosphere
to a
It is
Jacob
be
What
testify-
God and
the
Door
of Heaven.”
arranged around a keystone of the
are carved the coats of
arms of Monsignor
bishop
Billard,
of Carcassonne, and Pope Leo XIII, bearing the words lumen in coelo, “light in heaven.” is
The
triangular
by an inscription
a cross at the top surrounded
a horseshoe, in hie signo vinees,
which
statue
is
tion of
literally
tympanum
triumph.” In the center of the
Magdalene holding
tympanum above
the snake uncoiling
upon her
dress.
Mary Magdalene and seems more
Virgin Mary.
Above
the statue
is
there
amavi
in
scorned the kingdom of because of
my
world and
this
lord Jesus Christ,
and loved.” The word
dilexi
is
whom
I
dilexi,
saw,
I
least that
can be said about
matic.
We
that
should
which means,
loved, in
But
this
phrase spoken by Jesus
line that follows
it:
is
Middle Ages
incomplete.
“But you have changed
it
this
whom
means
dilexi,
have
“I
I
century believed
generally “I
which
is
the
And
supposed to have spoken. The
and cathedrals,
is
it
omnem
have taken pleasure.”
I
tympanum
recall that in the
ining the facades of churches
11.
this
is
et
Christi quern
adornment of
all
whom
Mary Magdalene
words
Mary
detail in a depic-
Regnum mundi
have loved,” but with a significant subtlety: quern
these are
will
strange element in the
quite ambiguous, for
usage that appears here, means “in
you
appropriate to a statue of the
the inscription
quern credidi quern
shape of
a statue of
is
ornatum soeculi contempsi propter amorem domini mei ]esu vidi quern
odd. There
“in this sign
an odd
It is
fairly
laid out in the
means
The one
a cross in her arms.
it is
that it
it
is
was by
somewhat carefully
enig-
exam-
especially the stylobates
Why
didn’t
Abbe Sauniere
into a den of thieves”?
and
include the
tympanums,
that the master builders, the
the alchemists,
What
and other
most
is
The Door
Is
members
of the brotherhoods,
what they were
“initiates” discovered
striking inside the church
is
on the Inside
251
seeking.
the double representation
of the infant Jesus; he appears both with Joseph and with Mary.
It
could
be that what was intended in this dual portrayal was a depiction of the exoteric path (Joseph) and the esoteric path (Mary), or even, as the
Cathars would interpret
it,
a real Jesus
and
a mystical Jesus.
Another
doubling occurs with Saint Anthony. The depiction of Saint Anthony the
Hermit
refers to
who was tempted
he
Anthony of Padua,
saint, Saint
the one to
is
searching for something that has been
Other oddities
in the desert, but the other
whom we
pray when
lost.
church are the scene over the confessional, one
in the
of the shepherd looking for his lamb in an underground landscape; and
on the back wall portraying Christ on the Mount of
the large fresco
Blessings. If Beranger Sauniere
commissioned
he did so
this painting,
obviously to display the goal of his ecclesiastical vocation. The inscription beneath
it is
“Come
quite revealing:
and overwhelmed, and
I
will ease
to
your pain.”
which
justifies the
those
who the
It is
are suffering
most
ineffable
install this evangelical depic-
kind of bounty that inspired Sauniere to tion,
me
expenses incurred in building the tower and the
when he was still only envisioning the construction, already knew what its final purpose would be: to pro-
Apparently,
villa.
Abbe Sauniere
vide a shelter for the poor and underprivileged, resources.
We know
into a retirement
in fact that
home
make
he wanted to
for aged
and infirm
all
priests
the Rennes estate
12 .
those without
There can be no
question that this was his intention. Sauniere
named
associated with
his villa
Bethania and his tower Magdala, two names
Mary Magdalene.
fresco
we can
town
of Magdala.
Interestingly, in different areas of the
see symbolic representations of the It
would be hard
to get
town of Bethany and
any more
explicit.
We
the
know,
however, that religious images often have double meanings. What, then,
is
the significance of the ruined Corinthian capital to the right at the foot of the hill? Couldn’t this painstakingly depicted landscape bring to the area surrounding Rennes-le-Chateau?
12.
P.
And
mind
couldn’t the mountain of
Jarnac, Histoire du tresor de Rennes-le-Chateau, 162.
The Mystery of the Cursed Treasure
252
flowers over which Christ
triumphing be a discreet allusion to the
is
Rosicrucian knight de Fleury, son-in-law of Marie de Negri d’Hautpol?
How are On the
we
know? There
to
are definitely
some curious
coincidences.
the other hand, the path of the Stations of the Cross, over
which
most audacious and wildly varying analyses have been made,
absolutely no significance. There
nothing original about
is
of
is
This was
it.
an achievement of the Giscard House of Toulose and there are similar
examples throughout the region, notably identical
one has been found
was inaugurated up
in
1887
—
in other
Rennes-le-Chateau.
in
Mouthoumet. An absolutely
Rocamadour
most popular pilgrimage
the second
set
in
in
site in
words,
Lot region, which
is
France after Lourdes, and
it
in the
Sauniere had one
just before
perfectly useless, then, to consider the
It is
Stations of the Cross a catalog of clues, as has been repeatedly said in
As
quarters.
whether the Stations here are of Masonic inspiration
to
(because of certain distinctive scenes), that before it
we
interpret as
would be
we
is
another matter
please a traditional
work
better for us to question Mr. Giscard
Jr.’s
MM.
in the
member
of the
according to the
bill
Rennes-le-Chateau
are
in
is
Whoever can
is
tion will
in the
it
and that the
it is
was
the
regular If
there
in the
surely not due to Beranger Sauniere.
Masonic checkerboard
it
common
—the black-and-white
in a
lodge than a church.
beyond banal decoration must be
really a checkerboard,
would have only
show
Toulouse,
path of the Stations of the Cross
apparently more
If it
in
of allegedly artistic religious objects.
discern anything in
exceedingly clever.
symbolism,
The Giscard House was
1887.
true of the
—which
Colonne
la
2,310 francs that was sent to the priest of
Saint Magdalene,
The same flooring
for
Abbe Sauniere
Masonic symbols
Church of
Manufaturing
Giscard and Son, whose “establishment and large stu-
dios” had their “main entrance” on 25 rue de
provider to
But
membership
jury of the School of Fine Arts, “owner-producer” of the
of
entirely.
of frightful banality,
Freemasons. Giscard the younger was a prizewinner and
House
all
with
all
the attendant
sixty-eight squares, but simple
that there are quite a few
more than
installation of this flooring has nothing
examina-
this in the
church
whatsoever to do
with some kind of esoteric concern. As for the presence of Blanche de Castille’s
coat of arms above the tabernacle, this can be explained by the
fact that the
Church of Saint Magdalene was expanded during the time
The Door
253
on the Inside
Is
of Saint Louis and that the renovation benefited from a personal dona-
made by
tion
the queen mother,
who,
we have
as
seen,
took a close per-
sonal interest in the Razes.
We
could
discuss the light effects that occur at certain times in
still
the church, mainly
phenomena
these are architects
magnify the
on January 13 and
at the beginning of April
that can be noted almost everywhere, because the
and master stained-glass makers knew how
work and
their
symbol of
— but
at the
divinity. Isn’t
same time remind people that the sun
Lumen
it
to use sunlight to
Cbristi
mentioned
is
in the Christian
liturgy of Easter Eve? This kind of play with light, quite frequent in
numerous
who
sanctuaries, has always intrigued the fans of the mysterious,
are always ready to ask,
Chateau
it
mean?”
this
means nothing. Sunlight was simply made
and
liturgy,
“What could
most orthodox fashion
in the
no message,
if
we would
of the theme of
would prove
Mary Magdalene. We can
exist: the
in fact
to be extremely
Abbe Sauniere had
be apt to accept that
one other constant did not
to take part in the
possible.
In short, then, the interior of this church
disappointing, and
In Rennes-le-
left
permanent presence
count the references to
tympanum on the church’s porch, the extremely Saint-Sulpician on the right when facing the altar, a stained-glass window above
her: the
statue
the altar, a painting beneath the altar table, in the large fresco all,
aren’t
we
in a
on the back
wall.
and
finally the allusion to
These add up to quite a few. But
church dedicated by name to Saint
it
after
Mary Magdalene?
Yet these multiple occurrences within the church, in conjunction
with the abbe Sauniere’s exterior
—
if
not profane
—
structures, Villa
Bethania and the Magdala Tower, do prompt a justified curiosity.
should also note that
when
We
Sauniere built his grotto in the church gar-
den with stones brought from the Stream of Colors, he had, according to local testimony, placed in prayer,
a small statue of
which has since disappeared.
find a statue of
Our Lady
another anomaly and
There are certain will catch the eye of
we
We
Mary Magdalene
should recognize
it
On
the
we can
is
as such.
details in this “invasion” of
an observer.
in
might rather have expected to
of Lourdes in this grotto. Here, then,
with the uncustomary serpent, vessel.
it
Mary Magdalene
that
tympanum, where she appears
see that
Mary Magdalene
is
on
a
This depiction conforms with the tradition that maintains that
The Mystery of the Cursed Treasure
254
Mary Magdalene
and disembarked on the shores of southern
traveled to
somewhere
France, either at Marseilles, Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer, or else
much
one hand and a cross
in
cup could be the Christ, but
around
seen in the picture; she
a table is
clothes, kneels
is
a fairly
is
weeping to the
and
his
also be
is
right of Jesus.
in the fresco
beneath the
dressed in extremely beautiful
a cross
in a grotto
Outside the grotto there
the
The round
jar.
Mary Magdalene can
presence by far
and prays before
into the ground. She
is
is
Mary Magdalene,
it
feet of
the altar depicts Jesus
talking.
The
bent over the feet of Christ as she washes them.
saint’s strangest
In
and
Mary Magdalene
In the large fresco,
altar table.
skull at her feet.
perfume with which she anointed the
jar of
window behind and above
disciples sitting
But the
human
with a
in the other,
cup
statue portrays her holding a
looks more like a chalice than a perfume
it
stained-glass
some
The
closer to the Corbieres.
made
and there
is
of tree branches stuck a
human
skull nearby.
melancholy natural landscape with
ruins that can be distinguished in the background. This painting
work
of an
unknown
artist
from Carcassonne, but we do know
Abbe Courtauly helped Abbe Sauniere touch up the with some “improvements” to the original outline, which
that in his youth
painting leads this
13.
me
work and wished
While
Carcassonne
it
to have
a particular
in
this painting.
On
image of Mary Magdalene
in the grotto.
The
a curious experience
a topographical
department that indicated the area’s highest altitudes with black a slide of the
appears that Jacques
it
Le Fabuleux Tresor de Rennes-le-Chateau, had 1981 with regard to
fondness for
some importance. 13
presence of a former bishop of the diocese,
in the
Riviere, author of in
Abbe Sauniere had
to believe that
result
map
lines, Riviere
was
of the
projected
that the black lines
exactly reproduced the contours of the saint in meditation, with the city of Carcassonne sitting
atop her like a crown. This information
du tresor de Rennes-le-Chateau.
is
provided by Pierre Jarnac
In a footnote he adds:
“But
this
is
in Histoire
not the most dis-
turbing thing! In fact, at the exact point where the branches of the cross intersect, the
point at which
Capendu.
Mary Magdalene
In the
church
in this
is
staring, reads the
commune
there
is
name
Puicheric, a small village of
a stained-glass
window
that displays
the exact replica, though reversed, of the Rennes-le-Chateau bas-relief portraying
Magdalene!” claims that
Pierre Jarnac, recopying the layout
Mary Magdalene’s
eye
is
proposed by Jacques Riviere, further
not on Rennes-le-Chateau
at a point called “les Justices,” near Leuc.
While
it
is
itself
but right next to
Riviere’s experience with
it,
sometimes permissible to laugh
openly at the attempts at sacred geography that currently flood the public,
acknowledged that
Mary
Mary Magdalene’s image
is
it
must be
rather strange.
The Door
Mary Magdalene
is
JESU.
is
further
MAGDALENAE. LACRYMAS
explicitly stated in the Latin
tears of
+
UNA. PENITENTIUM. PER PECCATA. NOSTRA. DILUAS— in wounds, sole hope for those who dissolve 15 our sins.”
While she
is
the
in a certain Christian tradition, she
is
not
Magdalene
symbol of the repentant sinner
altar table:
+ SPES.
other words, “J esus > remedy of
by the
and
bottom of the grotto painting beneath the
MEDELA. VULNERUM
regret , 14
255
on the Inside
certainly the patron saint of the parish in
Rennes-le-Chateau. Her role inscription at the
Is
necessarily playing that role in this painting. So
Sauniere’s opinion of this very special saint?
It
what was Beranger
would be
interesting to
know, because the famous key bestowing access to the cursed treasure of Rennes-le-Chateau
is
there in the grotto
where Magdalene
not the legendary grotto of the Holy Balm
16 ,
is
kneeling—
but a symbolic portrayal
that responded to the priest of Rennes-le-Chateau’s intention in every detail.
Who,
then,
is
this
Mary Magdalene who
apparently haunted the
waking and sleeping hours of Father Beranger Sauniere?
14. Penitentes
means “to its
15.
is
regret.
the present participle of the impersonal verb paenitet,
The modern word penitent has
a
much more
literally
meaning than did
Latin predecessor.
The word
dissolve here
means
literally
“lave” [the French
Translator ], which forms a double allusion: Initially
it
refers to
but one also calls to mind the fact that she washed Christ’s 16.
precise
which
The word haume or balm
is
a pre-Indo-European
word
for
“wash”
Mary Magdalene’s
feet.
word meaning
“grotto.”
tears
9
That Odd Mary Magdalene
I
adorn myself
as
for a ball;
if
entrance into the banquet
«
*»*(«*.
>£>.
JlMIto.
jjfc
perfume myself as
I
room caused
all
for bed.
My
to cease;
the
if
talk
Apostles rose up in great alarm at the fear of being infected from a
touch of as
if I
my
dress; in the eyes of these
of good,
I
was
as
impure
were continuously bleeding. God alone remained lying on the
leather bench.
bone by
the
men
worn down
instinctively recognized those feet
I
all his
walking over every path of our
to
hell; that hair
inhabited by a vermin of stars; those vast, pure eyes like the sole
morsels of his heaven remaining to him! he was as dirty as
ing,
sin.
I
to
fell
my
He was
as ugly as suffer-
knees, swallowing
my
spit,
incapable of adding any sarcastic rejoinder to the horrible weight of
Godly
this
distress.
he would not
nakedness of
my
memories.
the gates of
flee
my I
I
saw immediately
from me.
I
transgression;
undid I
realized that this
dawn one morning,
that
my
I
could seduce him, for
hair to better cover the
emptied before him the phial of
outlaw
God had
leaving behind
him
slipped through the other
mem-
bers of the Trinity, astonished at finding themselves only two.
found food and shelter himself to passersby
in the inn of days;
who
refused
him
He had
He
had given unsparingly of
their soul but
demanded
of
him
all
dits,
contact with lepers, the insolence of policemen. Like me, he
tangible pleasures.
256
tolerated the
company
of ban-
That
Odd Mary Magdalene
consented to the atrocious fate of being available to everyone.
my
placed on
head
We
empty of blood.
moment
This
is
Salut
the
how
his large
demons
257
He
cadaverous hand that seemed already
only change our enslavement; at that very left
me and
became possessed by God.
I
Marguerite Yourcenar, in her book Marie-Madeleine ou
(Mary Magdalene or
le
Salvation), speaks of Magdalene’s first meeting
who really was the person who spoke these magnificent love? Mary Magdalene remains an enigma because she, an
with Jesus. But
words of
enchanting and far from ordinary individual, has been removed, seemingly deliberately,
from the
official texts
of Christianity, though
that she played a starring role in the
We
life
we can
guess
of Christ and his preaching.
are familiar, of course, with the scene of the repentant sinner.
Mary Magdalene appears in Luke 7, the chapter in which Jesus is a dinner guest at the home of a Pharisee named Simon. All at once a woman,
who
appears to be of
ill
repute, enters the house seemingly to seduce the
“prophet.” But touched by grace, she instead washes Jesus’ feet with her tears, dries
them with her
forgives her
all
her sins.
and pours perfume over them, and Christ
hair,
It is
a touching story, although
it
appears to have
been fabricated to show that Jesus forgave prostitutes. The other three Evangelists are ilar incident,
home
this episode,
which, they
in the villa of
the
mute on
Simon
say,
but they recount a somewhat sim-
took place
in
Bethany before the Passion,
the Leper (according to
Matthew and Mark)
of Lazarus shortly after Jesus brought
ing to John). In both
who came and
Matthew and Mark’s
anointed the
feet of Jesus,
on eyewitness testimony, there are
him back
to
versions, there
(accord-
life
was
or in
a
woman
but in John 12, plausibly based
precise
and exact
details that provide
us with additional valuable information:
Six days before Easter Jesus arrived in Bethany,
Lazarus,
made
whom
that
Mary took
he had resurrected from the dead.
Martha a
served,
pound of nard perfume
hair
matic fragrance.
and the
A
meal was
and Lazarus was among the that
entire
guests.
was pure and
expensive and anointed the feet of Jesus with
them with her
where he found
house was
it.
quite
She then dried
filled
with an aro-
The Mystery of the Cursed Treasure
258
This clearly resembles the scene in Luke involving a prostitute, but here there
mentioned
what may be
Mary, Martha’s
prostitute, only
of Lazarus. This
sister is
no
is
is
not Mary’s
first
appearance
and therefore the
in the
Gospels; she
connection with the resurrection of Lazarus, in
earlier in
most mysterious passage
the
sister,
Gospel of John.
in the entire
Indeed, Lazarus appears to have been a friend of Jesus, but at the
announcement of
his illness,
then of his death, Jesus presents a facade of
complete indifference. Yet “J esus loved Martha and her sister and Lazarus” (John 11: 5). It was four days following the burial of Lazarus
when
A
Jesus arrived in Bethany.
Martha
is
disturbing scene then takes place:
brought to meet Jesus and vehemently reproaches him for not
coming sooner.
“If
you had been
(John 11:21). Jesus reassures her and
no hurry
again, but he seems in
then goes off to find for
you”
still
far
there
—which
from
must be
manifestly
is
their
Mary and
tells
brother would not
tells her,
is
in
But
dead”
lie
her that her brother will
to put action behind his words.
false.
house and
my
here,
“The Master
Mary
a large lapse of time here, for
Martha
here and he calls
is
races before Jesus,
no apparent hurry
Martha
is
live
who
is
to arrive. In fact
able to return to
who then has time to make the same jourdirection. What happened next everyone knows. On
the house to speak to Mary,
ney
in the opposite
reaching Jesus, she throws herself at his feet and scolds him in terms identical to those of her sister.
to be led to the to
life.
tomb
It is
then that Jesus decides to
binding cloth and the shroud
who
this
is
He
asks
of Lazarus, where he brings Mary’s brother back
“The dead man emerges, with
Exactly
act.
still
Mary,
his feet
and hands
still
wrapped
in
covering his face” (John 11:44).
sister
of Lazarus?
We
see her again
on
Golgatha, during the crucifixion of Jesus: “Near the cross of Jesus stood mother, and the
his
Mary Magdalene” this
sister
of his mother, Mary, wife of Cleophas, and
(John 19:25). The other Evangelists remain mute on
female presence at the Crucifixion.
story of
Mary
takes
on
its
embalm
at Jesus’ resurrection that the
true significance. In the Gospel of Luke, three
women, who have “come from to
It is
Galilee with Jesus,”
the corpse. According to
Luke 24:10
show up
their
names
at his
are
tomb
“Mary
Magdalene, Joanna, and Mary, the mother of James.” In the Gospel of
Mark
it is
only two
who, Mark
16:1
women
tells us,
(Mary, mother of Jesus, being oddly absent)
witness the placement of Jesus in the
tomb by
Odd Mary Magdalene
That
Joseph of Arimathea. The two of James
—return the day
—Mary Magdalene and Mary, the mother
after the following
day to tend to the body (they
could not return the following day because
panied
women who come
only two
other Mary.
to
embalm
was
In
Jesus:
the orthodox exegetes
Even more admirable
who
Matthew
Mary Magdalene and
another issue altogether;
—and
is
In the Gospel of
absurdities that can be found
is
dogma. No,
this
the issue, because the message of
message
—
not
Abbe
Mary
concerns
specifically
is
concealed behind that name.
John
(20:1),
which
apparently the most reliable
is
based on eyewitness testimony (that of John himself or of
people close to him),
she has
it
he did have a
Magdalene, whoever
it is
the sugary dialectic of
is
as being the unshakable foundation of Christian
tomb, but
the
—those recognized by the Roman Catholic Church
in the canonical texts
because
18:1 there are
achieve stunning feats of language to explain
monumental contradictions and notable
Sauniere
the Sabbath), accom-
We can admire in passing the alleged concordances of the so-
called synoptic Gospels.
the
it
woman, Salome.
time by a third
this
259
we
in this version she
come with
Magdalene came dark, and she
saw
alone,
is
the purpose of
to the
Mary Magdalene
find the figure of
tomb
at Christ’s
and John does not say whether
embalming the corpse. “Mary
early in the morning, although
that the stone
had been
rolled
away from
it
was
still
the tomb.”
She refuses to enter the tomb and instead goes straightaway to find
Simon
Peter
and “the other
(19:2).
Both
disciples rush to the
ner,
is
the
first
disciple beloved
to see that Jesus’
by Jesus,” meaning John
tomb, but John,
who
is
body has vanished. The
the faster run-
disciples return
home then, firmly convinced of Jesus’ resurrection. Mary Magdalene, however, does not follow them. 11-13 her attitude
is
at first mysterious.
It
would seem
In
John 20:
that she should
be rejoicing. Instead:
Mary remained
next to the tomb, standing and her eyes
tears. Still crying, she leaned
over the
tomb and saw two
full
of
angels
dressed in white seated at the top and bottom of the bench upon
which
Jesus’
“why do you off
my
body had been placed. “Woman,” they asked
her,
cry?” She answered, “Because someone has carried
Lord and
I
do not know where they put him.”
The Mystery of the Cursed Treasure
260
Apparently she does not believe enemies have carried off
his it,
a
was then customary.
as
man
that
his
It is
at all in Jesus’ resurrection, only that
body
to prevent people
from worshipping
at this point that she turns
around and
sees
standing close by. She does not recognize Jesus and thinks instead
We must recall that the scene takes place on the prop-
a gardener.
it is
erty of Joseph of Arimathea, in the garden
structed for his
own
where he had
personal use but which he offered as a sepulcher for
whose teachings he had been following
the person
tomb con-
a
in secret (for
Joseph of
Arimathea was a high-ranking figure among both the Jews and the
Romans).
The man asks her why she
1
Magdalene grows angry, but
in a
way
intimate feelings for Jesus: “Lord, tell
me where you
put him, and
I
if
and
crying,
is
at
Mary
this
own
that speaks volumes about her
you are the one who carried him
will take
off,
him away” (John 20:15). There
could be no more direct expression of amorous passion. This
the beginning of a scene with a marvelous wealth of possi-
is
ble interpretations (John 20:16-18):
Jesus called out to her,
“Mary!” She turned around and
said in
Hebrew, “Rabbouni,” which means Teacher. Jesus added, “Do not touch me, 2 for tell
my
have not gone back up to
I
brothers that
I
am
ascending to
my
my
father.
father, to
your God.” 4 Mary Magdalene thus went to
tell
3
Rather, go
my God
and
the disciples that
she had seen the Lord and he had told her of this and that. 5
1.
He must have been
of very high rank to obtain Pilate’s consent to take possession of
lesus’ body, because this did not
the crucified rot 2.
This
ing
is
famous
the
of this
law,
which stipulated that
cross.
noli
me
fully
quite obscure.
is
sis” of Jesus,
meaning
tangere. This exclamation
must mean that Mary
rush-
is
The most
plausible explanation
his “fulfillment” in the
form of
is
that the
“metamorpho-
a “glorious” body,
had not been
completed.
This
is
not the Ascension, for Jesus will later appear to the disciples before his
ascension and
tell
“twin,” for this 5.
Roman
at all with
toward him.
3. All
4.
on the
comply
The use of
is
this
Doubting Thomas to touch the
his
wounds.
In reality,
Thomas
final
is
the
meaning of Thomas’s other name, Didyme.
expression indicates that Jesus said
than the few phrases recorded
in the
Gospel of John.
much more
to
Mary Magdalene
That
That
is
There
all.
nothing
is
Magdalene, though what
is
there
Odd Mary Magdalene
261
canonical texts on
Mary
else in the is
both a
lot
and
a
little.
One
question
What do the three Mary Magdalenes depicted in the common? (They are the sinner who is won and forgiven
arises immediately:
Gospels have
in
by Jesus; Mary of Bethany, the
Mary
of
Magdala
come from
sister
of
Martha and Lazarus; and
Mary Magdalene), who, according to Luke, has with Jesus.) It is known that divine figures were
(thus
Galilee
often depicted in the form of triads in ancient times.
can be seen
finally
in the Christian doctrine of the Trinity. It
A
remnant of
was
the Celts
this
who
placed a special emphasis on the three faces of a god or hero. This
why we ary, or
often finds groups of “three mothers” in
statu-
even three-headed gods such as the Cernunnos of Reims. In the
mythic epics of Ireland, the Triple Brigit
is
often cited or the
names and
ure can be recognized under three different aspects.
cannot be said that
It
nevertheless,
much
Gallo-Roman
is
affinity
Marys of
is
it
this
makes
same
three different
for simplified understanding;
part of a logical system that simply does not have
with the Latin. Could the same be true for the three
the Gospels,
who
lore in the legend of the
In the Gospels, then,
can also be seen beneath a varnish of folk-
Holy Marys of the
we have
sea?
three female figures
who
can be com-
mingled and identified as one and the same woman: the sinner Jesus forgives;
fig-
Mary
of Bethany, the sister of
whom
Martha and Lazarus; and
Mary Magdalene, whom Luke says has come from Galilee with Jesus. Can the chaste Mary of Bethany be identical to the prostitute who made her way into the house of Simon the Pharisee with the intention of seducing Jesus, about whom she had heard so much? If we are to go by the
words of John
(11:2) at the beginning of the story of Lazarus’s res-
— “This Mary was she who anointed the Lord with perfume with her hair” — there would seem to be no doubt dried
urrection
and
about
his feet
this.
But because John does not mention the episode of the pros-
titute at the
house of Simon the Pharisee, which
Luke’s account,
some
hesitation
is
is
included only in
permissible. Luke, however, specifies
that the incident takes place in Bethany,
where Lazarus
lived.
This cre-
ates a strong case that the prostitute (a high-class one, of course,
could very well be a rich
woman
leading a so-called
without consideration of financial remuneration)
life
is
who
of pleasure
the
sister
of
The Mystery of the Cursed Treasure
262
Mary of Bethany. But Bethany Luke that Mary Magdalene came from Lazarus,
Luke
Galilee).
also adds that she
followed Jesus." Thus there
is
is
in
Judea, and
(Magdala
Galilee
But there are rich
is
more:
Mary
members of high
one of the
first disciples
text in
which
Could
society.
this
when he was
of Jesus
this
is
in Galilee?
still
she
would have
for
anyone
not
fact,
but
takes the
Jacques de
whom
goods and properties, includ-
inherited a vast fortune in
sister,
Martha, and
She might even have inherited the stronghold of
Lazarus.
Magdala (hence her name), ity.
who
real,
born to a noble family of royal lineage from
ing the house in Bethany that she shared with her brother,
is
a hagiographic
from the
difficult to distinguish the fantastic
is
This
the opinion of Jacques de Voragine,
time to strip them out of the superfluous text. In
Mary
can-
Mary Magdalene mysterious Mary have been
which provides useful pieces of information
Voragine’s
we
woman.
famous Legende doree (Golden Legend),
it is
in fact in
of Bethany, the sinner, and
absurd or impossible. Indeed, the author of the
is
nothing specific to suggest that
not identify the three Marys as one and the same
from
learn
women “who had
one of a group of
is
we
a place with a
wide reputation for immoral-
She was therefore wealthy, but devoted to hedonism, which the scene
recounted in Luke clearly shows. Christ then forgives her and chases out the seven refuses
demons
no grace
that have been possessing her.
to
Mary Magdalene.
Voragine and
we must admit
by Luke
which
8:1,
that
refers to the
panied him, as well as several
it
This
is
From
this
point on Jesus
the story told by Jacques de
holds up well.
It is
even corroborated
entourage of Jesus: “The twelve accom-
women
.
.
.
cured of
evil spirits,
of
whom
Mary, nicknamed the Magdalenian, was purged of seven demons.”
The
Mary Magdalene,
triple face of
disciple of Jesus,
can therefore
be accepted without great reservation, along with the fact that she, with the help of her sister
and brother,
of Jesus. She had the means, after
in all.
some way sponsored
We
the activities
should keep in mind that dur-
ing the three years of his preaching, Jesus did not work. Yet he certainly
required food and lodging, as did his disciples. Even the Son of
cannot
live off
the spirit of the age. Jesus
was
a
man; he
ate,
God
drank, and
slept, as did his disciples. It
role.
even seems that
Why,
among
then, did the
totally erase her role
1
Jesus disciples,
Roman
Mary
Catholic Church
and almost
entirely
played a privileged
feel
obliged to almost
remove her presence?
Is
it
Odd Mary Magdalene
That
now
because of the misogyny,
263
conclusively proved, that existed at the
heart of the Church from the early Middle Ages?
The Christian con-
ception of femininity, which has certainly greatly evolved in the
world, especially since Vatican
II,
modern
due to both the Greco-Roman
is
legacy and the Hebraic alternatives. Excepting the female characters in Genesis,
who
are gripping figures, to say the least, the scribes of the
Bible have lowered a sacerdotal role.
Woman
The
by making her impure and
idea that
Mary Magdalene
ineligible to play
enjoyed total equality
with the apostles was a claim that has never crossed any theologian’s
mind. Because priests are the legitimate heirs of the apostles,
make Mary Magdalene
a priestess
—how
foundations for the apostolic sacerdotal
And
yet the scene in
horrible!
—and
this
would
one of the
filiation.
which Mary of Bethany washes
and
Jesus’ feet
anoints him with expensive perfume, which Judas, the group’s treasurer, feels
could be put to a more profitable use,
What
royal ordination.
forms the
Is it
ritual;
she
more, in
who
moments spent
and grasped
it
a kind of sacerdotal
and
Mary who
per-
this instance
it
is
the priestess.
is
forbidden to think that
those long said
it is
is
is
Mary
of Bethany, over the course of
at the feet of the
in its entirety, or at least
Lord, heard what he sensed the
full
scope
of Christ’s mystery? Jesus persistently tried to get his disciples to realize this
—
their hearts
if
only in the brilliance of the Transfiguration! But
remained curiously closed
Mary, however, did perceive and accept the
moment had come
Through
the
all it.
On
way
to the end.
that day she
to manifest this mystery in chiaroscuro.
a kind of prophetic intuition,
Mary
anointed the head of
Jesus, recognizing
and displaying him
anointed his
Messiah and as one sent from God. 6
feet as
This obviously involves a
knew
rite
as king
and
priest,
and
of enthronement that can be performed
only by a person symbolically vested with sacerdotal powers. Jesus fully
aware of
Mary “had
6.
this
when he answers Martha’s reproaches by
is
saying that
the best part.”
Georgette Blaquiere, La Grace d’etre
Femme
(Paris: Editions Saint-Paul, 1981),
163.
The Mystery of the Cursed Treasure
264
In Israel there are
two
sites
named Bethany:
town two
a
miles east of
Jerusalem, where Mary, Martha, and Lazarus lived; and a place on the left
bank of the Jordan,
Dead
just before the
Sea, a ford
was
Baptist baptized. This place by the gates to the desert
own
Bethabara, “the house of passage.” Each in his or her
Mary
later
granted baptism, initiation
Magdalene extends
Baptist.
long
the
man
of hair.
The
One
mane
is
also called
way, John and
to say, the right of pas-
is
The two Bethanys seem
sage, the crossing of the threshold. other.
—that
where John the
to mirror each
the echo of the precursor of Jesus,
and the other
clad in hides
chief difference
is
the
between them
within a harsh and terrible place, screaming the
call to
John the
woman
is
that
with her
John
repent and launch-
ing curses (an example of Essenian rigor), whereas in the Bethany
opposing shore, where
all is
blooming and
gay,
stays
on the
Magdalene speaks of love
and forgiveness and the transition from one world
to the next. Jesus
received the baptism of water from John, but unlike the ancient kings, he
did not receive an anointing or consecration by Passion, however, and his “baptism by spirit
he received the perfumed
oil
me
repeat, can be
The unction
in
in the life of Jesus.
always more or that in fact this
according to
Gospel
is
woman
Mark
is
in his
words
edgment of
—or
priestess.
most important events
to his disciples,
who
are
toward the whims of Woman, he declares
truly did
“what she had
14:9: “In truth,
I
to do,”
and even adds,
declare to you, everywhere the
to be spread, throughout the
recount, in
priest
surely one of the
Furthermore,
less hostile
fire” (the Crucifixion),
to Jesus. But this royal unc-
performed only by a
Bethany
Just before the
from the female Mary Magdalene/ The old
and ancient notion of the priest-king applies tion, let
and
oil.
whole world, one
will also
memory of her, the deed she has done.” This is acknowlan uncommon power possessed by Mary that may seem out
of proportion
—and
this
is
what the
first disciples clearly
thought
—with
a gesture that could pass for female vanity. This statement underscores
Mary Magdalene in his very words. Mary Magdalene relegated to such a minor
the importance Jesus gave
Why,
then,
is
this
the evangelical tradition as revised Is
7.
the Christian sacerdotal class
Jacqueline Kelen,
Un Amour
role in
and corrected by the Church Fathers?
ashamed
infini (Paris:
to
owe
so
much
to a
Albin Michel, 1983), 52-53.
woman?
Odd Mary Magdalene
That
And I cannot
Church done
the
What
forbear from asking myself: to these
to be explored there?
words of Jesus?
And wouldn’t
has the
memory
265 of
something yet
Isn’t there
something be the conse-
this
cration of a specifically female ministry of a prophetic and charis-
matic
nature
would himself have recognized and
that Jesus
proclaimed as existing in tandem with the apostolic and sacerdotal
ministry?
What
a unique place
heart of the Church,
The question has been
if
this
was
woman would
the case! 8
clearly raised.
And
it
seems that Abbe Sauniere
may have answered it in his own way in the church The
hold in the very
of Rennes-le-Chateau.
fathers of the Church, followed by the “philosophers” of the
Middle Ages, “this hatred of
beholden to the Church, only
all
women,
a hatred that in fact
and codified
justified
came from
a fear of
women
taken to delirious proportions, that was hung from the most minor physiological details, which were exploited in such a
them impassable
prohibitive barriers.”
9
It is
way
as to
make
true that in everything they
undertook, Christian theoreticians were slaves of the famous verse in
when
Genesis after the transgression,
draw you
will
ble for
many
to
man, and he
is
Lord
tells
Eve: “Your desire
you” This premise is responsi“Christian dogma has no fear of going
will rule
misunderstandings.
to absurd lengths, as
the
shown by
its
declaration that the mother of
Christ conceived without any sexual intervention, thereby the Savior to being simply a half
man,
just
revenge of things would have
the
Virgin Mary,
absolutely beyond It
Paul
would
II,
after
Bacchus.” 10
in Christian
all
common
just require a little
And
yet, as the
worship the place of
mother of God and consequently
a
woman,
is
measure. impetus, though. The text of Pope John
published on the occasion of the Marian year 1988, contains a
proposition that goes In fact,
it,
like
condemning
John Paul
II
much
we might think at first glance. homage to Mary Magdalene, and
further than
pays a sustained
reminding us that according to the Gospel of John she was the
Femme
8.
Georgette Blaquiere, La Grace d'etre
9.
Andre de Smedt, La Grande Deesse nest pas morte
10. Ibid., 225.
The author of
these lines
is
(Paris: Editions Saint-Paul, (Paris:
a Catholic priest.
1983), 165.
first
1981), 165.
The Mystery of the Cursed Treasure
266
person to have seen Christ after he emerged from the tomb, he adds, for this very reason that she
is
Magdalene was, before the Apostles, eyewitness and
was
for that reason, she
Mary
called the Apostle of Apostles.
is
“It
to Christ’s resurrection,
also the first to testify to
it
in the
presence
of the Apostles.” This observation has the merit of considering the
importance of the very circumstances that surrounded the event.
you think about
it,
in fact,
seems “enormous.” Jesus,
it
a preeminently patriarchal society,
who
exclusively male apostles, chose the a
woman — and What
is
the
first
not his mother, but a
read between the
is
who
When
belonged to
depicted as leading a troop of
witness of his resurrection to be
woman with whom he
seems,
if
we
have shared a privileged relationship.
lines, to
meaning of
this scene at the
tomb?
A
historically based
reading, such as the kind practiced by the official commentators of the
Church
for
twenty centuries, does not cast any doubt as to the
reality
of the facts. Yet through an event that can be accepted as authentic, the
presence of
most
Mary Magdalene
reliable witness
—
is
—especially alone, according to John, the
quite odd.
Marian year 1988, John Paul
In his address concerning the
dentally a highly talented and dramatic author
nizant of the problems faced by definitely
warrants our
A woman
is
always and
entrusted by
mean
perfectly cog-
observation that
strong because of her awareness of this entrusting,
in every
crimination in which she is
this
is
inci-
interest:
strong because of the fact that her,”
women, made
who
II,
God
to
God
way, even
may
If
in a particular
them
human
being to
in the situations of social dis-
find herself. ...
women
that Christ looks to
“entrusts the
for the
the
human
being
way, does not
this
accomplishment of the
“royal priesthood?” 11
A
“royal priesthood”
come
to
is
what
truly
involved here. Without trying to
any conclusion about the question of
symbolic meaning of the scene addresses
11.
is
Mary Magdalene,
John Paul
II,
it
Mulieris Dignitatem,
in
faith,
if
we
consider the
which Jesus comes back to
can be seen that
Rome, 1988.
this scene
is
life
and
of mytho-
Odd Mary Magdalene
That
and of course
logical, alchemical, metaphysical, all
267
religious significance,
wonderfully combined in an image that can be engraved into collec-
memory. The tomb
tive
the earth’s
is
primordial deity). The dead Jesus die
.
.
.”)
of death, then decomposition
the
placed therein (“if the seed does not
is
an
inert
body
— but by virtue of
emerge from the athanor
forty-eight hours),
womb
of
presiding over
it?
crucible (or the
woman,
Mother Earth,
subject to the rigidity
but
it is
Mother
—that
Earth). This
is
certainly not the
It is
not his mother.
It is
He
that, to purification.
end of a symbolic gestation period of three days
will, at the
is
(that of
so that he can ripen and be re-created and regenerated like the
prima materia of alchemists. His
who
is
womb
(in fact,
the alchemical
is,
a veritable birth, but
Roman
Juno.
It is
a
an Other.
In short, in this “symbolist” version of the story of Jesus’ resurrection Jesus
Hebrew
who
the equivalent of the
is
Jehovah’s role)
(like the
royal priesthood.
Mary Magdalene the
words, the
in other
void moon, for several days)
of the unconscious,
life,
—
moon god
who
If this
be
if
the
lies in
embodiment of
full
moon man
is still
was
in his
he
as
Magdalene,
leaves
who
the
is
woman,
of an
what would
the dispenser of
warmth and
who
causes this
night?
moon Mary
carries a
num-
ber of characteristic solar aspects. takes place at the
undifferentiated
here holds the role of the
dawn
All of this brings to
We
New Mother,
should remember too that
mind
some people, but
majority of
doomed
a certain parallel
between
I
cannot put
it
I
this evangelical
know
this
might
otherwise. Yseult and the
heroines in tales of Celtic origin represent aspects
sometimes adopted by the Goddess of Beginnings, the sun
whom
this
of the third day.
scene and the legendary tale of Tristan and Yseult. scandalize
his
accepted, then
and complete awareness
tomb
tomb,
in thrall to the night
consciousness to surge into the unconscious awareness of the Jesus
the
shadows of the nonrealization of
identification
not the sun
(originally this
woman with-
moon man cannot gain awareness of his existence and his royal priesthood. Mary of Magdala, the mysterious Magdalene, like the Virgin Mary for whom she is only the new image, rejuvenated and rejuvenating, is the sun woman in all her intensity, splendor, and burnout
the
ing power. In this role she permits Christ to establish
on the earth an era where mind
fulfill
the Scriptures, to
will prevail over matter
The Mystery of the Cursed Treasure
268
which
only an emanation of mind, as
is
Mary Magdalene,
we
often
to
fail
like all the traditional Celtic heroines,
is
remember. she
Andre Breton, under the pretext of defining beauty, described vulsive, veiled erotic,
ing at
of
as “con-
magic circumstantial,” under penalty of not
exist-
otherwise. Indeed, no one can deny the eroticism and magic
all
Mary Magdalene washing
ing
whom
them with her long
urrected Jesus appears
But the
New
the feet of Christ with her tears and dry-
hair. It is perfectly
res-
to her.
first
fate of
Mary
“dared love Jesus.” This was the
start-
Testament ultimately grows mute on the
from Magdala, the
woman who
ing point for the legend, the cult,
of the Church,
understandable that the
and the controversy.
In the early days
Gnostic writings and even certain Church Fathers
acknowledged Mary Magdalene
power of sacred
as a
seduction. She
was
even extolled by Saint Augustine. Her worship intensified toward the tenth century,
when Odon
end expanded further
new
hymn
a
in the thirteenth century.
It
to her.
The
leg-
did not matter that a
generation of theologians was casting doubt on the identification of
the three Marys.
Those
sinner.
in
To popular
A
Baume.
piety she
became the image of the repentant
Provence believed she had made a journey, landed
Marseilles, and, as legend
the
composed
of Cluny
had
it,
from there
retired to a grotto in Sainte-
Burgundian legend recounts her departure from Palestine
company
of Martha, Tazarus, and
the shores of Provence. This
Maximin on
same legend
in
tells
us
in
a boat that sank off
how Maximin
preached
how Martha settled in Arles, where she how Mary Magdalene retired into a grotto; and
the Gospel in the Cote d’Azure;
tamed the Tarrasque; primarily
how
the very precious relics of this saint ended
up
in Vezelay,
thanks to Girard de Roussillon, a semilegendary, semi-historical figure,
who was At
this
or
more
a hero in several
same
in the
Charlemagne
cycle.
time, however, the basilica of Exeter in southern England
exactly in the ancient realm
ancient metropolis of the relics.
chansons de geste
Dumnonii
Dumnonia
— boasted
of the British
Isles,
of possessing the
the
same
The worship of Mary Magdalene spread throughout Europe, but
took hold particularly
in Occitania,
where not only churches are conse-
crated to her, but also
hills,
grottos,
and mountains. Under these condi-
why would it be surprising that the church should bear the name of Saint Mary Magdalene? tions,
of Rennes-le-Chateau
Odd Mary Magdalene
That
269
Mary Magdalene has undergone many transformations. It could not be otherwise, for we have absolutely no concrete information about her life after the essential moment of the Of
course, the tradition of
The course
Resurrection.
is
thus clear for speculation to develop at will.
Mary Magdalene
In addition, the mystery that already surrounds
Gospels lays the groundwork for It is
incontestable that she
kinds of hypotheses.
all
was
in the
in love
with Jesus. Saying so cannot
shock anyone, because the canonical events offer
sufficient
proof of
While not one of the Gospel writers says one word concerning a son” between
Mary Magdalene and
want: The seeds of their plot John, and here
One
theory
is
that
Mary Magdalene was
plexities in this regard.
Wedding
first
According to the
famous wedding
action of his public
life),
in the
behaves
gives orders to the servants, telling
that he can turn
it
into wine.
The
oddities throughout the Gospels: to bear that
title
unless he
imagine what they
already existed in the Gospel of Saint
lines
ulous analysis of the story of the
invited to this
free to
where one guarantee
a case
is
“liai-
Jesus of Nazareth (or rather, Jesus
and filmmakers are
the Nazarene), novelists
it.
is
as
in
Cana
text, Jesus,
company like the
them
as another.
the wife of Jesus.
to
reveals
A metic-
some
who was
of his mother
per-
allegedly (it is
the
master of the house and
fill
servants obey
A
worthy
the jars with water so
him
12 .
There are other
rabbi would not have had the right
was married.
Jesus maintains close relations
with Martha and Lazarus. The house in Bethany seems to serve Jesus as a residence in
between
Mary Magdalene lowing
who
and preaching. According to John,
present at Jesus’ crucifixion and immediately fol-
Then
his resurrection.
Mary,
at
is
his travels
there
is
the noli
me
tangere that Jesus
seemingly wants to rush to him. There
is
no lack of
grounds for presumption of a wedded relationship. But there
Of
proof.
course, nor
is
fires
is
no
there any strictly historical proof that Jesus
actually existed.
12. See
M.
Baigent, R. Leigh, H. Lincoln,
Press, 1982).
It
Holy Blood, Holy Grail (New York: Delacorte
goes without saying that while
I
consider these authors’ arguments con-
cerning the Wife of Jesus to be extremely interesting, as
I
hold
many
its
do not share
their conclusions, just
reservations based on the mentality that animates this book. Although
completely impassioned, because of
I
it
is
quite suspect from a variety of perspectives, particularly
problematic ideology.
The Mystery of the Cursed Treasure
270
The the
so-called apocryphal gospels certainly
do not
fail
to testify to
bonds uniting Jesus to Mary Magdalene. For example, we can read
in the
gospel attributed to Philip a passage that could not be any
more
explicit:
The
companion was Mary from Magdala. The Christ
Savior’s
loved her above
all
mouth. The other
the other disciples disciples
and often kissed her on the
took offence
at this
and made no
attempt to hide their disapproval and asked Jesus: love her
“Why
more than any of us?” And
wouldn’t
I
What we must keep
mind, however,
Gnostic text in which everything sertation ity
is
is
that the Gospel of Philip
symbolic.
is
It
God
is
a
also includes a long dis-
on the nuptial chamber that has nothing
of a Jesus,
Jesus
the Savior answered them:
more than you?”
love her
in
“Why do you
to
do with the
real-
incarnate. But this text does contain one constant:
always accompanied by three
women
—
his mother, his sister,
and Mary Magdalene. 13 All of this is
is
hypothetical, of course, but
no more than hypothesis
required to prompt the hatching of speculation that
as historical fact,
which
is
thrust
is
upon
us
occasionally embellished by miraculously
rediscovered documents that actual analysis reveals to be forgeries. This is
the case with the story of
Mary Magdalene disembarking on
the
shores of Occitania with her family and the children she had with Jesus.
These descendants of Jesus are said to have
and taken root
there, so that
today
it is
settled in the
south of Gaul
possible to rub shoulders with
authentic descendants of Jesus Christ.
The
story
grew more absurd when
a fusion
was created with
the leg-
end about Magdalene and another legend circulated by the Merovingian chronicler Fredegar. (In fact,
it
is
an apocryphal
text,
which another
chronicler of the time, Gregory of Tours, did not even mention because
he considered origin of the ticed both
13. See Pierre
it
stupid). This story involves the
mythic
—hence divine
Merovingian dynasty, those “long haired” kings
magic and war. But then,
who
prac-
in so-called primitive societies, all
Crepon, Les Evangiles apocryphes
(Paris: Retz,
1983).
That
war ily
is
magical, and
when men
Odd Mary Magdalene
271
learn to handle weapons, they necessar-
learn feats of magic to be used to best adversaries.
The myth
is
as follows:
Merovech, founder of the dynasty
had two
certain he actually existed),
fathers, for after his
(it is
not
mother had
been impregnated by the Frankish king Clodion the Long-Haired, she
was
carried off while bathing by a mysterious creature that Fredegar
describes as a bestia Neptuni Quinotori similis. This “beast similar to a
Quinotaur of Neptune” mythology.
Now
recalls
another fabled animal from Greek
“beast” sexually assaults the queen, making her
this
pregnant again, so that when she gives birth to a son, the famous
Merovech, he possesses two
and one of
a fantastic
from over the
different bloodlines,
— and divine, of course—creature who has come
This theme
sea.
one of a Frankish king
from two conceptions are not
is
from
far
original
at all rare in Celtic
and
births resulting
mythology. 14 It
that Fredegar found this legend in an old mythological source to both Celts
likely
common
and Germans. Whatever the actual source, great men have
always been the product of a birth or conception that
Romulus was
nary:
is
the son of a vestal virgin
is
out of the ordi-
and the god Mars; the
Irish
hero Cuchulainn was given two fathers and experienced two births in
Gwyon Bach
before
being eaten by the goddess Ceridwen and being reborn from her
womb.
succession; the great
We
can guess
and
Taliesin
at the significance of
on the
floating
Welsh bard
was
Pharaoh’s daughter finding Moses
Nile. Every ruling family has
Julius Caesar
went
first
needed mythic ancestors,
to great pains to spread the legend that he
a descendant of Iulius Ascanius,
son of Aeneas,
who was
was
himself son of
Venus. This prompted Julius’s successor Augustus to encourage the poet Virgil to
compose
his
Aeneid for the glory of
Rome
—and the imperial
And the Plantagenets claimed descent from who were of the line of Melusine.
family, the gens iulia.
or the Lusignans,
In the recent past
—and
legend with that of
concerns the Rennes-le-Chateau affair
it
certain authors have thought
it
made
Mary Magdalene,
sense to
combine the Merovingian
wife of Jesus and mother of
children. In doing so they explain that the sea monster
of a
man who came from
14. See
and
J.
J.
a fairy
is
many
only a symbol
across the sea, but with a divine connotation.
Markale, Epic Myths of Celtic Ireland (Rochester, Vt.: Inner Traditions, 2000),
Markale, VEpopee celtique en Bretagne, 3rd Edition
(Paris: Payot, 1985).
The Mystery of the Cursed Treasure
272
As you may
guess, this sea monster
a son of Jesus
actually symbolically designating
is
and Mary Magdalene, meaning, consequently, that the
Merovingian kings are the descendants of Jesus. They are not merely kings by divine right; they are divine kings. This leads to propping up the theory of those
who
claim that legitimate and pure-race descendants
meaning that there are today descen-
of the Merovingians
still
dants of Dagobert
a genuinely historical king
circa
II,
exist,
who was
assassinated
678 under ill-explained circumstances, but probably through the
impetus of Pippin of Heristal, true founder of the Carolingian dynasty.
Any
of Dagobert’s
power
restored to a cadet branch of the Merovingians
would be an
illusory power, however, for at the time of his death the
real levers of
command were
already in the hands of the Pippins. This
era of the Slothful Kings remains obscure
speculation,
enough
to permit
any kind of
and unfortunately any invention.
As an example,
claimed that Dagobert
it is
II
wed
Gisela of Reddae,
daughter of a Visigoth princess. At the time of Dagobert IPs murder, his son, Sigibert IV,
was
allegedly rescued
hiding place in the Razes at the
home
and
led
by
his sister
Irmine to a
of his grandfather Bera, count of
Reddae. Sigibert would have succeeded Dagobert and given birth to a kind of clandestine dynasty, authentically Merovingian, whose obviously enthusiastic offspring (the plant-ard are
recognized today
still
at least in certain self-styled esoteric milieus.
The sad riage
truth of the matter
between Dagobert
II
is
that
nowhere
is
there record of a mar-
and Gisela of Reddae. In addition,
at the
time
of Dagobert’s death his son, Sigibert (whose existence has not been
would have been only
proved),
three years old, while his sister Irmine,
who
allegedly took
four.
Obviously a very precocious family!
of Christ
is
him
to the Razes, could not have been It
must be
first
is
no record of him, and
count of the Razes was William of Gellone
historical figure
who
entered into legend under the
of William of Orange,
We
are thus pretty far
umentation
true that the blood
mixed with that of the Franks! The same obscurity hovers
over the so-called Bera, count of Reddae. There the
more than
exists
descent: “These
named
to this position in
— Saint Guilhem— more
familiar
name
781 by Charlemagne.
from the Merovingians. Yet we are told that doc-
that could prove the contention of
documents that could
Merovingian
reestablish the truth are those dis-
That
Odd Mary Magdalene
covered by Abbe Sauniere in Rennes-le-Chateau.
ments was one bearing the that
seal of
Blanche de
Among
Castille,
we
273
these parchare told,
and
15 proves the Merovingian descent through Sigibert IV.” But yet
it
another unfortunate fact emerges: “|T]he documents of Abbe Sauniere
have never been seen by anyone.
Why
not
make them
16 content has been revealed for decades?” This
and one
which we are
for
We
a pertinent question,
waiting to receive an answer.
still
all,
aren’t the
are living today the descendants of Jesus
and Mary
can always expect a miracle, of course. After
Merovingians
Magdalene?
who
It is
true that the present time
miracles, however.
descendants
we
is
public, for their
may
Though
Jesus
— as
arithmetical progression
far
is
not a propitious one for
was an authentic thaumaturge,
not be. Finally, today
trace our ancestry
is
back as
is
we know possible
established so that
less
from the same
that the farther back
—a well-known law of
we
be those of millions of people. In other words,
more or
his
find our ancestors to
human
beings are
all
family.
—which very well orchestrated, by the way, and echoed by talented authors — and without having to resort to In
all this
phantasmagoria
a “fabulous race” that
tudes and undeniable Saint
Magdalene
in
is
came from elsewhere,
realities.
Among these
is
there
do
exist
some
certi-
the existence of a church,
Rennes-le-Chateau, a strange church whose entire
ornamentation seems to have crystallized around Mary Magdalene.
That
15.
is
the
most important
reality.
Richard Bordes, Les Merovingiens a Rennes-le-Chateau, 15.
16. Ibid., 27.
The Shepherds of Arcadia
It is
by chance that we find on the Arques road through the
certainly not
tomb
area of Peyrolles an isolated
that
an exact replica of the one
is
depicted in Poussin’s painting The Shepherds of Arcadia. is
that Poussin did not
road because
tomb
this
model
his
tomb on
the one found
scene. But then another question arises:
built after
Why
is
yet another
is
anomaly
is
of note
the Arques
We must
Poussin painted his
the countryside depicted
in Poussin’s painting identical to the very real
tomb? Here
on
did not exist in the seventeenth century.
acknowledge that the tomb was
clearly
What
landscape behind this
in a region that
has more than
its
share of inspiration for incessant speculation and keen polemic.
The tomb and the
is
not ancient.
It
from the time of Father Sauniere,
dates
precise circumstances surrounding
1902, the grandson of an industrialist
who
chased the property on which the tomb ulcher
on
a small rise located
some
its
construction are known. In
twenty years
sits
earlier
had decided
sixty yards
to
away from
had pur-
make
a sep-
the road. In
order to achieve this he turned to a master mason, a Mr. Bourrel of Rennes-les-Bains. eral
members
The tomb was used
to
house the mortal remains of sev-
of the owner’s family. In 1921, however, the deceased were
exhumed from
their graves
and transported
cemetery. Shortly afterward, the property
to a vault in the
was put up
for sale
Limoux and pur-
—an American named Mr. Lawrence. The was then and today — that empty.
chased by another industrialist
tomb remained
as
it
can be seen, half hidden by the
still is
trees,
274
on
is
a
mound
to say,
at the
It
edge of a sheer
The Shepherds
now
drop, near a small bridge that spans a small,
Nicolas Poussin’s landscape
tomb
the landscape behind the
This
commissioned the tomb knew chosen
this site or
Poussin
if
motives
his
was too
it
vanished.
made
was not
this
knew what noted,
late to
The mystery
a
tomb
one
it
work.
in the painting.
He would
why
who
not have
one imagined by
in imitation of the
the case. But
If
can be seen that
certain that the person
It is
this painter’s
did he do so?
No
one ever
may have been, and when the similarity was ask the man responsible, for he had long since
therefore remains intact.
had taken
plausible that Poussin
It is
identical to the
is
well worth considering.
is
dry streambed.
committed to memory,
is
275
of Arcadia
his inspiration for his paint-
not quite right.
But something in
this
notion
Nicolas Poussin was born in Andelys, but
left
France at an early age to
ing
from
this landscape.
take up residence in
who
Poussin,
Rome.
“It
would be an extraordinary occurrence two years
stayed in France for only
1640, to September 25, 1642
months or more
that
—could
have
If
if
— from December 17,
left
would have been necessary
the Corbieres region.
is
Paris for the three
to paint a landscape in
Poussin had visited this area, some unambigu-
ous clues and testimonies would certainly have remained. To the contrary,
it
can be proved that he did not leave
Paris,
entrusted with an official mission and where
him.” Another point 1
the Louvre,
is
is
where he had been
work was heaped upon
that Poussin’s painting, currently
on display
not the only one he composed on this theme. There
at
is
a
second painting with a different composition that has been housed for
two
the last
centuries in the Gallery of the
England. Further, Poussin was not the
first
Dukes of Devonshire
in
painter to use this subject
matter; a Guercino painting dating from around 1618
may have
served
Poussin as a model.
What distinguishes
these three paintings
herds reading the inscription on a
Arcadia ego meaning “Even
in
attracted a great deal of attention
which
painting,
1.
tomb and
Arcadia [am]
both the depiction of shepthe inscription I.”
itself:
Et
in
This enigmatic phrase
“I,
too, have been in Arcadia”) has
from
analysts, as has the posture of the
(which can also be translated as
figures,
is
clearly reflects notions of symbolism. In the
two shepherds leaning on
their
Guercino
crooks are looking at a tomb
R. Descadeillas, Mythologie du tresor de Rennes, 141-42.
set
The Mystery of the Cursed Treasure
276
in a fairly
tormented landscape.
head, which has a hole in rituals
its
On
skull that
the is
tomb
intended to prevent the deceased from reincarnating. Poussin’s
of despondent posture while the other
A
kind of trepidation.
exposed
is
in the
ratio, 1.6 18,
2
is
Louvre, however,
artistic
honored
make
arranged to
is
ter of the entire
by
The
head is
is
he
is
air close to indifference.
the one that
is
most pol-
the
composition to the extent that every-
in the
the inscription the fictitious but absolute cen-
a
tomb. The shepherd on the
tomb with an expression
Another shepherd on the
third shepherd
his staff,
a
harmony, the Golden Mean. This famous
grouped around
on the ground; he seems ger.
tomb with
composition. The painting consists of three shepherds
a shepherdess
his face.
seated in a kind
also considered to be an exceptional
It is
leaning on both his staff and the
on
is
are viewing the
and bears an
left
ished and worthy of interest.
example of perfect
two
whom
shepherdess with her right breast almost entirely
standing on the
The painting
and
an impressive death’s
reminiscent of ancient Germanic
English painting depicts three shepherds, one of
thing
is
is
to be is
left is
on the
of curiosity
kneeling with his
drawing the inscription with right. Slightly
left is
left
knee
his right fin-
stooped and supported
pointing at the inscription with his
hand while
left
turned back toward the shepherdess with a questioniong
air.
his
She
standing with her hands on her hips, her face leaning slightly for-
ward, with an expression that suggests she knows the meaning of the inscription while the shepherds
do
not.
The landscape
somewhat tormented. Mountain peaks appear against a sky that the
left
as
if
is
sunset
is
in
is
mysterious and
background
the
blue on the right, cloudy in the center, and red on
approaching.
This painting has been the subject of a wide variety of interpretations.
The
art experts of course see
nothing mysterious about
he painted The Shepherds of Arcadia, Poussin was gravely
2. Poussin’s
painting
structed according to
length to
its
is
considered to be a “golden rectangle” because
what Pythagoras
called the “divine proportion”
When
and knew
ill
it is
it.
entirely con-
—the
ratio of the
width equals the marvelous number 1.618003399. In ancient times
been observed that
this
number was
the ratio between the first
and second
finger
it
had
and the
second and third finger on the hand, and that the navel divided the body according to this
same proportion. The golden number, which
results
from extremely precise mathe-
matical calculations, has always been cloaked with a sacred, even magical virtue.
277
The Shepherds of Arcadia
his
He had
days were numbered.
theme
way
as a
midst of
and the
to translate the idea of death
flight of
time in the
His personal drama was therefore made one with a uni-
life.
human
versal
availed himself of this preexisting
known
reality. It is also
that this painting
was executed on
who had
behalf of Cardinal Rospligosi, the future pope Clement IX,
asked Poussin to paint him a work that could express a “philosophical truth.”
Hence
the subject of the
Geographically, Arcadia the Peloponnesus.
crown
a
is
in fact a
It is
of mountains, a
well-known myth of Arcadia.
mountainous and
kind of amphitheater surrounded by
somewhat remote region became
forested for a long time. This region
Arkas, the
name
of the hero
who was
was heavily
that
as a derivation of
the son of the
nymph
Callisto.
According to the myth:
Zeus seduces the nymph Artemis. She
some,
in
is
Callisto
who
is
a hunting
companion of
changed into a bear by Zeus himself, according to
order to hide her from the eyes of his wife, Hera, and by
Artemis, according to others, as punishment for breaking her chastity. Callisto
herself shoots
save her
life,
is
at her at the instigation of a jealous
Zeus picks her up and
as the Big Dipper.
4 ancestor of the Arcadians. This
myth
comes from the Indo-European root
is
revealing.
Hera. To
The
3
Dipper supposedly represents either a dog or the son of
Little
Callisto, the
The name Arkas
which means “bear.”
orks,
has engendered the Greek arktos, the Irish
art,
and the Breton
as well as the Latin ursus. This implies that Arcadia
with bears, but when the bear’s symbolic value
is
was
It
arz,
a place rife
taken into account,
can easily be seen that Arcadia has become a kind of Other World,
a parallel
and sometimes underground world
unknown. Winter to
of
where she
raises her into the sky,
becomes the constellation known
it
vow
then hounded by Artemis’s pack, while Artemis
arrows
is
in fact the
emerge when the sun
known
3.
[The Big Dipper
4.
Michel Praneuf, L’Ours
is
is
time
when
et les
in
which death
shining again. This brings to
hommes
(Paris:
is
the bear hibernates, only
as the Big Bear in French.
a
a mythological place in
The name Arcadia was explained
ancient times.
wild area of
fairly
— Translator
]
Imago, 1989), 37-38.
mind
the
The Mystery of the Cursed Treasure
278
myth of Arthur, who
is
hibernating on the
isle
of Avalon. Arcadia
can be considered as the Greek mythological equivalent to the
Isle
of
Avalon and even the Celtic Other World of underground mounds,
where dwell the gods and heroes of ancient
We know
that Nicolas Poussin
was
times.
greatly attracted to hermetic
known
doctrines and that he spent time with people
more or a
less secret
member
in Italy
know
“brotherhoods.”
No
for belonging to
doubt the painter was himself
of one of these “initiatory” societies that were proliferating
and even
that he
was
France during the seventeenth century.
in
a protegee of Nicolas
sent his brother Father Louis Foucquet to
sion of acquiring art
Foucquet and that the
As minister of finances
interacted with the painter.
works intended
We
Rome
for the
also
latter
1655, Foucquet
in
“with the secret mis-
adornment of
Belle-Ile,
Saint-Mande, and the castle of Vaux-le-Vicomte.” Louis Foucquet obviously turned to Nicolas Poussin for assistance. But sion” intended to traffic only in works of art?
by Louis to
A
was
this “secret mis-
letter sent
his brother the minister casts significant
from
doubt on
Rome this. It
includes this very curious passage:
He
[Poussinl
and
I
have projected certain things that
you
ease be able to explain to
in detail
—things that
I
shall
with
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
come.
What
is
nobody
more,
it
else will ever discover in the centuries to
would not occasion much expense and
could even be turned to a profit, and these are things that are so keenly sought after that greater fortune
Obviously
that exists
on the earth could not have
and perhaps not even equal
this letter
methods of procuring in other letters
all
it.
could concern bribes and graft and other shady
art at a
from Louis to
cheap
price.
There are references to these
his brother, but the
terms used here seem
disproportionate to a simple deal involving paintings. They clearly
appear more ities
significant.
Of
we can imagine all may be referring to,
course,
regarding what this passage
sorts of possibil-
but one thing
is
279
The Shepherds of Arcadia sure: Shortly after the time of this letter, Nicolas
to
why
Following Foucquet’s imprisonment,
many
searches of the archives of the Razes?
The imbroglio As
is
and never divulged.
secret he held
imprisonment because of a
life
Foucquet was sentenced
did Colbert undertake so
What was
he looking for?
complete and the mystery continues to thicken.
happens, Nicolas Poussin chose a rather curious personal
it
one depicting a
man
holding a boat or an ark, with the inscription: tenet
confidentiam, translated as “he holds the secret.” Given
we make
should
seal,
what
this,
posthumous work, Le Mystere en
of Maurice Barres’s
pleine lumiere (The Mystery in Full Light), a collection of several studies
some
of painters in which the author gives vent to
rather strange
observations? Barres informs us that numerous painters belonged to tiatory brotherhoods, the chief
which he
one being the mysterious Angelic
Society,
associates with Delacroix, taking a particular interest in the
He makes a more better known as Claude
with
“angelic aspect of his work.”
explicit reference
regard to Claude Gellee,
Lorrain, saying of
that
we
“clearly feel that he
was not born
This means that Claude Gellee was a dictated
know
some of
Gellee,
it is
same “brotherhood?”
member
was prepared. ”
of a spiritualist group that
most worthy companion of this that
Still
one truly wishes to
his friend Poussin.”
Nicolas Poussin was a
member
on
to say,
Angels were not holding his hand,
if
“He would be nothing
he was not a
of the
whom
speaking about Claude Lorrain,
likens to Poussin, Barres goes
member
if
he the
of celestial
he drew away from what enchants him, supports him, and
him.
uplifts
at once, but
him
necessary to have the drawing by Sandrart in which he
Should we conclude from
if
all
his inspirations. Barres adds, “If
reveals himself to be a
society,
ini-
He knows
his
poem
,
outside of that he
knows
nothing.
”
There could be no clearer reference to the existence of an Angelic Society to
which the majority of painters (and authors) of any era belong. Even
better,
Barres goes on to openly reveal the password: “It
we manage famous If
to contrive in
inscription:
anyone
still
Et
in
some corner of our work Arcadia ego.
a
is
necessary that
tombstone with the
”
doubts the existence of
this
Angelic Society whose
lying or recognition sign appears to be the phrase inscribed
painted by Poussin, then he or she should read a
letter
ral-
on the tomb George Sand
wrote to Gustave Flaubert, dated November 17, 1866. Here
is
what
the
The Mystery of the Cursed Treasure
280
“good lady of Nohant” has is
down my
setting
any event,
to say: “In
all
I
am good
epitaph! Et in Arcadia ego, you know.”
know” speaks volumes more than any
for
The “you
discourse would. Before she
became the “good lady of Nohant,” George Sand took part
movements of utopian
inspiration
today
and was
fully
in all the
aware of where things
stood in those “brotherhoods” that were the heirs of the Bavarian Illuminati
and certain clandestine orders of the Middle Ages. Before
La Mare au
writing
Consuelo
diable (The Devil’s Pool), she wrote a
which she makes
in
brotherhood she
war or
entitled
several revelations about a mysterious
of the Invisibles: “They are the instigators
calls the Sect
of every revolution; they are at
decide
book
work
in the courts, guide all business,
peace, redeem the unfortunate, punish the scoundrels, and
cause kings to tremble on their thrones.”
We
cannot help but
recall
Nicolas Foucquet,
cause to tremble on his throne before giving
who
way
XIV
gave Louis
himself, probably
because Nicolas betrayed the “brotherhood” to which he belonged. Acts of betrayal are not forgiven by these kinds of associations, and the
where they need
Invisibles are
where they
many ing
stay,
to be: “It
known
not
is
but they are everywhere ...
travelers yet also lend a
hand
It is
if
there
they
a place
is
who murder
to others against brigands, depend-
on whether they have deemed these
travelers
worthy of
their pro-
tection or deserving of punishment.”
This cannot help but bring to mind Father Gelis,
who was mur-
dered in the Coustaussa presbytery for no apparent motive. In will recall that the inscription written his
body
said:
Viva Angelina.
Who
on the
could
cigarette paper
still
the presence of this Angelic Society that
fact,
we
found near
harbor any doubts about
had
as a
member
Nicolas
Poussin and as a mythic country Arcadia?
The ances.
Illuminati are a reality, even
Louis
Blanc praises them
if
masked by
discreetly
in
his
spiritual appear-
de
Histoire
Revolution:
Solely through the attraction of mystery tion, they
to
compel thousands of people
move with
a
single will
and the force of associa-
in nations
around the world
and breathe with one breath
.
.
.
Gradually and slowly they educate these people to become entirely
la
281
The Shepherds of Arcadia
new
beings;
who
ers
make them
and unknown; with such
are invisible
upon
secretly
abolished,
is
a legion,
weigh
the courts, envelop the sovereigns, direct govern-
ments and even Europe tion
irrationally obedient to the death to lead-
all
at their will to the point that all supersti-
monarchy torn down,
all
by birth
privilege
declared unjust, the very right of property abolished. All this
is
was
the grandiose plan of the Illuminati.
Louis Blanc had cause to rejoice because at bottom this was his desire as well.
We now know
Russian Bolshevik Revolution,
Germany, were long incubated
that the French Revolution
just like the establishment of
in
advance within secret
and the
Nazism
in
societies that
dared not speak their names but clearly displayed philanthropic and spiritualist objectives.
Marx, which ity.
What The
is
We
must remake the world! This phrase of Karl
also that of Arthur
Rimbaud,
ideology should be used in remaking the world?
early Christians constituted a
more or
from the time that Christianity became the of the
fraught with ambigu-
is
Roman Empire
and maintained trive its fall.
What
is
is
official
that the scales were tipped
in obscurity,
That
less secret sect. It
the
way
and unique
and other
religion
of the world.
truly unnerving in Louis Blanc’s expose
his expression
is
Here we find ourselves
plunged straight back into the Razes and the Father Sauniere priest
affair.
from Rennes-le-Chateau have been a member of the
Angelic Society, or was he merely is
born
sects,
sought to destabilize Christianity and con-
“solely through the attraction of mystery
Could the
was
its
pawn and
no possible answer, though we can
Father Sauniere because the mystery
is
finally
its
victim? There
feel invisible
presences around
effective. In a
posthumous work
published in 1910, Saint- Yves d’Alveydre described an underground
kingdom he In this
He could just have easily called it Arcadia. an unknown people who live in cavities in the
called Agartha.
shadowy land
are
earth and are ruled by the King of the World, the overworld,
whose envoys
are sent to
where they pass unseen and run governments. This sim-
ply recycles a conception developed earlier in a novel by
George Earle Bulwer-Lytton that appeared
The Coming Race. Bulwer-Lytton
is
best
in English
known
for his
Edward
under the
title
book The Last
The Mystery of the Cursed Treasure
282
Days of Pompei, but here Illuminati
beings
the theme
Beneath the ground dwells a race of strange
tradition:
— the Anas —who are clearly
rior to the
openly borrowed from the
is
spiritually
and technologically supe-
poor humans on the surface of the earth. They have long
moved beyond
social problems,
have formed a
have an incredible energy source called
Vril.
classless society,
and
Their world can be entered
only by means of a mine that connects to “a gulf whose walls are jagged
and scorched,
as
this
if
abyss had been uncovered in some remote age
by a volcanic eruption.” The power of the Anas their civilization
quite mysterious
will
who
and even
a
little
ultiis all
alarming. it is
the
Anas them-
claim to have descended from a Celtic race. True, Bulwer-
(1803-1873) was
Lytton
because
one day allow them to rule the world. This
But the Anas merit further study. In the novel selves
irresistible
superior to our own. Further, they possess an
is
mate weapon that
is
under Queen Victoria, an
minister
a
member of that astounding brotherGolden Dawn, which has been implicated in the
Englishman, a Rosicrucian, and a
hood known
as the
development of some
sects that
gave birth to Nazism. Bulwer-Lytton was
himself the descendant of a famous seventeenth-century alchemist and
was well versed Irish texts that in
were
Great Britain.
mythology, at
in Celtic
It is
just
least the traditional
then beginning to be translated and published
not hard to identify the Anas. They are the
of Armorican Brittany, the departed souls the
moors and riverbanks
in other
at night. In
Britain
who
(sidhs), the
Anaon
can be seen wandering
Wales they are the sons of
words, the ancient, magical gods of the druidic
Ireland they are the Tuatha de
mounds
Welsh and
Don
religion. In
Danann, the ancient gods who
live in
huge megalithic cairns scattered throughout Great
and Ireland that are
really the
Other World, the marvelous
underground world of Faery. The Tuatha de Danann, the “people of the goddess Dana,” have extraordinary powers: Most leave their will.
They
tellingly,
they can
mounds, mingle with humans, and manipulate them
as they
are a real part of Celtic daily
Not an
life in
folk tradition.
Irishman alive would deny the sneaking presence of the banshee
(liter-
“woman of the mound”), a mysterious fairy or deity who influences human destiny. The Irish word sidh means “peace.” Thus the under-
ally,
ground world described by the Celts
is
the “peaceful world,”
where time
283
The Shepherds of Arcadia
no longer there
exists
and space
and anything
infinite.
is
Magic, fantasy, and the marvelous are
possible.
is
There are no logical limitations
given free rein in this evocation of the underground kingdom.
We
can
easily see Bulwer-Lytton’s considerable debt to ancient Celtic tradition
but he has integrated
it
new
into a
context, that of the Illuminati of
Bavaria, the Rosicrucians, and the Golden
work
of fiction
more
intellectual milieus of
All of this
is
what was
revealing of
Dawn, which makes
this
actually transpiring in the
Great Britain at the end of the Victorian
connected to the Grail myth, which
era.
phenomenally
is
fer-
«
tile
in all
novel called
is
its
The energy
various incarnations.
Vril in Bulwer-Lytton’s
nothing other than the green ray Jules Verne describes in a book
The Green Ray. Given
green ray’s scientific explanation
logical, his
nomenon.
that everything Jules Verne writes that
is
it is
very
is
a natural phe-
In other science-fiction novels of that time, the green ray
nothing other than the ultimate energy, and whether
depends upon the person using
it.
In this
the Grail as Chretien de Troyes describes
it is
and other ways
good or
it is
is
evil
similar to
a mysterious vessel emitting
it:
by comparison, or even the chalice
a light that causes the sun to pale
carved from the emerald that tumbled from the forehead of Lucifer (the Light Bearer)
when he
fell
into the abyss of eternal darkness
ing following the revolt of the rebel angels. this force is
what
is
atomic energy, but
it is
I
am
is
absolute energy.
is
only a receptacle.
Given
Norman, the
news
this
strive ceaselessly strive to track
information,
that hidden
somewhere
in
her
in
It
the green sees
by
down.
wouldn’t a sect that
or Viking rather, or even the
tablets of a very specific kind?
describes
why
It is
Welshman
ray emanating from the sacred vessel that Perceval the
chance and must then
suffer-
not so bold as to claim
quite close. Vril
the Grail holds, for the Grail
and
calls
Church of Odin seek
itself
to spread
Rennes-le-Chateau are emerald
These tablets are what Fanny Cornuault
book La France des
sectes:
“Each of these old
Visigothic tablets contains a large emerald capable of harnessing the
cosmic rays from the planet Vega.
Norman
initiates
knew how
to then
direct with destructive force these green or violet radiations (the violet
are the
5. F.
most carcinogenic) against an enemy.
Cornuault La France des sectes
(Paris:
s
Tchou, 1978).
The Mystery of the Cursed Treasure
284
Don’t worry, we are not digressing too
far
from Nicolas Poussin.
In
fact, he:
.
.
entered the secret crypt where the Visigoth kings had once
.
amassed an immense war
treasure.
booty then gradually transported
They had inventoried it
their
another crypt located
to
between the Black Mountain and the Corbieres range. But Poussin feared that in the
coming centuries the guards of
succeeded him in this duty would lose
Rome
much
at a
later date
Shepherds of Arcadia,
in
which
somewhere
that
in reference to a
is
in the
esoteric filiation.
its
he painted his famous
woman,
a
a
Halowyn, 6
who
So
in
work The seeing to
is
on an ancient tomb. 7
the deciphering of an inscription
All of this
this treasure
very
world there
common
exists
tradition maintaining
an emerald tablet capable of
concentrating cosmic energy, a kind of dreadful condenser that under certain conditions could
become
the ultimate
weapon. In Maurice
Leblanc’s LTle aux trente cercueils (The Island of the Thirty Coffins),
Arsene Lupin uncovers the secret of an amazing emerald that can burn
and
flesh
kill,
but can also provide power and
life
—
treasure with a dual nature, similar to radioactivity.
good or
evil; all
This
depends on the way a power
is
a kind of cursed
Nothing
either
put to use.
also reminiscent of the Tabula Smaragdina, that
is
is
famous
Emerald Tablet attributed to Hermes Trismegistus that serves hermeticists as a
mits
all.
to be
kind of bible or book of initiation that contains
The
found
origin of this tradition, in so-called
beyond
all
shadow
all
and per-
of a doubt,
is
apocryphal gospels that mention the famous
emerald that shines from Lucifer’s forehead and serves as a kind of
prima materia end.
“holy” Grail, at least in certain versions of the
in the
The green color
is
quite mysterious
leg-
and has been the subject of
6.
A
7.
“Hin Heilaga Normanniska Kirkja.” Tribune des Nationalistes normands catholique
priestess of the
god Odin-Wotan.
et odinistes et Jesuites (title
vouched
cle, it is better fit
for),
panscandinaves restes
March
to simply
1,
fideles a la doctrine raciste
1965. Rather than citing the
name
de saint Ignace
of the author of this arti-
denounce again the diversion of European myths
of the most dubious ideologies.
for the bene-
285
The Shepherds of Arcadia countless studies demonstrating
function of chlorophyll inspiration
—
not the invention of some poet with heavenly
Too bad
real.
it is
is
The
essential role in plant growth.
its
if
legends almost everywhere mention
precious stones that have strange properties either to engender illnesses or to bring about healing. There are even stones that can be bearers of
good or
evil.
In short, the Grail, in
version of the story, ers that
nothing other than a stone with marvelous pow-
is
can be as dangerous as they are beneficial.
But where can
we
find such stones? Assuredly
we can
face of the earth, but
that
is
Wolfram von Eschenbach’s German
find
them within,
we cannot on in
some
secret cavern
of course guarded by extremely vigilant, invisible powers. Here
find ourselves back again in Arcadia, that “land that
we
the sur-
that Other World,
the Razes.
As
lies
elsewhere,”
which appeared particularly smiling and luminous
early as the seventeenth century, certain authors
pointed to the Razes as the equivalent of the Greek Arcadia. But
should avoid be taken in by appearances. There
is
mind another novel by
Scotland. In
it
Jules Verne,
the author recounts, with
adventures of a young engineer
doned mine
in
exploited. This
is
and
side world.
They
who
who
we
it.
This
may
which
Indies,
many Masonic
is
bring set in
allusions, the
descends to the bottom of an aban-
which he hopes to find a seam that has not yet been
for the hero
girl
The Black
had
always a hidden face
behind the visible one, and not everyone can discern to
in
the opening of a series of extraordinary adventures,
his
companions become
lost
and cut
off
from the out-
are saved thanks only to the intervention of a
lives in this
underground world with her
father, a
young
mysterious
and misanthropic man. After numerous ups and downs, everything
works
out, except that the father loses his
of the
myth
life
— but
this fits the
template
— and the hero weds the young woman when they return to
the earth’s surface. In short, the hero
returns with Eurydice.
makes
his descent into hell
More cunning than Orpheus, however,
and
he does
not look back before returning to the light of day.
We
are, then, fully within the
domain of myth
—
as
is
Rennes-le-
Chateau. The stories told about caches hidden throughout the region are variations
on
this
same theme.
Gilgamesh; of Lancelot of the Lake, the infernal
myth of Orpheus and of
It is
the
who
strives to free
kingdom of Meleagant; and of
all
Guinivere from
those young peasants in
286
The Mystery of the Cursed Treasure
folktales
who
free a
a well or beneath a
le-Chateau lends
we can
young
girl
somewhat
itself
held prisoner by a monster in a cave or
diabolical fortress.
marvelously as the
The region of Rennes-
site for this
see in the unlikely crystallization of traditions
can be found
in this area. Yes,
must not forget that
it is
Arcadia
is
kind of myth, as
from
here beneath our
all
over that
feet,
but
we
necessary to have the key that opens the door
leading underground, where the shepherd tried to find the lost lamb.
Beranger Sauniere
knew
this well, for
he secured for his church a depic-
tion of this scene.
We
ask whether something
moot, for myth
know what we
is
history
are seeking
the Other World.
is
history or myth.
and history
when we
is
The question
myth. Most important
is
is
to
enter the underground corridors of
11
The Queen’s Gold
When
comparison
Chateau and
underground one of those
and
its
whether
The
in a cave or a
or even
emerging from
numerous versions of the primal myth,
terrifying.
It
own has
womb blood.
all
gives birth to
The maternal
all
fifth
and
both com-
book of Pantagruel,
entirely to Rabelais but does in
which may not be due
is
and
that of
living things
womb
its
the ambiguity of the Sacred, the chill of
and the warmth of the sun. In the
the tomb,
mark
man-made chamber
interior of the earth easily charges the imagination
nourishes them with her
the
hidden
something
for the arrival of spring before
Mother Earth whose generous and
is
clear that
is
it
Rennes-le-Chateau could be Arcadia, for example,
serves as a support for
forting
the tales or analyses of Rennes-le-
all
fairy realms endlessly extolled in folktales as lands of peace
where the bear waits sleep.
of
cursed treasure,
there,
prosperity.
deep
made
is
any case show
of an esoteric filiation, the priestess Bacbuc, after having led
her illustrious visitors Pantagruel, Panurge, and Father John to the Holy Bottle,
makes
appearances,
a speech to them. In
all life, all
creation,
“Once you have returned to the great treasures
Then
after
become of skies?
and
all
tells
them
movement
that contrary to
arises
from below.
to your world,” she tells them, “bear witness
and admirable things that
lie
under the earth.”
an allusion to the myth of Proserpine she adds, “What has the art of calling the thunder
You have
in use here
she
it
certainly lost
it; it
has
beneath the earth.”
287
and
left
fire
of heaven out of the
your hemisphere but
is still
The Mystery of the Cursed Treasure
288
For Rabelais and the tradition that enwrapped him,
world below was the holder of the
testable that the
was incon-
it
secrets of the uni-
verse just like the prima materia of the alchemists that held within itself exclusively
all
the
components of the philosopher’s
testable that the priestess
who approach
Bacbuc
is
stone.
It is
incon-
welcoming those
quite disposed to
her and to revealing these secrets by having her visitors
drink the water from a divine spring. In
fact,
we may
recall that a little
to the south of Rennes-les-Bains flows the stream Trinque-Bouteille,
which merges with the Blanque before becoming part of the Trinck! [drink] the
Isn’t
word spoken by
the
word, according to the pompous interrogation
Most
assuredly, the water of this spring
ication,
when we
is
Holy
initiated
is
fusion.
—the
only
by Panurge?
capable of causing true intox-
are possessed by the Spirit.
Again, this Spirit should not be thought of as that
Bottle
Sals River.
the chief characteristic of the world
evil.
below can
The obscurity
easily lead to con-
Gerard de Nerval was not fooled, however. At one point
story Aurelia he shares a strange vision that possessed the symbolic history of the Creation
in his
him concerning
from the time of the Seven Elohim
of the beginning. Eventually the Elohim
fell
into a relentless
war among
themselves.
I
have no idea for
the
how many
thousands of years these wars stained
world with blood. Three of the Elohim, along with the
Spirits
of their races, were finally relegated to the middle of the earth,
where they founded vast kingdoms. With them they took the secrets of the
Holy Kabbalah
they gained their
power from
that connects the various worlds
the worship of certain stars, to
and
which
they continue to correspond. These necromancers, banished to
imprisonment within the earth, had agreed among themselves to transmit their power to each other. Surrounded by slaves,
each of their sovereigns had taken steps to assure them-
selves rebirth within the
one thousand years.
would shut them on
women and
elixirs
form of
When
their children. Their
life
span was
death approached, powerful kabbalists
into heavily guarded tombs,
and strong preservatives. For
would maintain an outer semblance of
a
where they existed
long period of time they
life;
then, like the chrysalis
The Queens Gold
that spins
own
its
cocoon, they would
from which they would be reborn
would
Now Here
later
here
it is
longing
into a forty-day sleep
fall
in the
289
form of a young child who
be called to take up the reins of empire.
something truly worthy of the name cursed treasure.
is
nothing other than necromancy, even
if it is
capable of pro-
or of transmitting one body into that of another.
life
Meanwhile
vivifying
the
resources
of the
earth
were being
exhausted in order to nurture these families whose blood, never
renewed, coursed through generation upon generation. In vast
underground chambers hollowed out beneath catacombs and pyramids, they had amassed
all
the treasures of vanished races as well
as certain talismans that protected
them from the wrath of the gods.
This clearly describes a parallel humanity that escapes the
These “necromancers” survived earth, all wars,
underground ness.
and
lairs,
all
floods:
all
common
law.
cataclysms, every upheaval of the
“The necromancers huddled
in their
gloating over their treasures in silence and in dark-
Sometimes they emerged
stealthily
from
their retreats in order to
among the living or spread the deadly teachings of their sciences among the wicked.” It is known that Nerval ceaselessly skirted this world below as strike terror
much
in his frequenting of certain
“brotherhoods” as
in his
madness.
This descent into underground chambers where magicians performed
was one he personally experienced and whose dangers he
their deeds
measured. The characteristic feature of the cursed treasure
who
vince those
lay hold of
it
that they have the
power
world. The poet added in a kind of sob: “I shuddered as
I
is
to con-
to rule the
depicted the
hideous features of these cursed races. Everywhere the suffering image of the Eternal
There
is
Mother continued
no need
to languish, weep, or die.”
to stress Nerval’s idea of the Eternal
simultaneously mother, virgin, and prostitute;
and Mary;
who
is
and Aphrodite; Cybele
own mother, whom he never knew and whom women he met. She is also Aurelia, that radiant
as well as his
he looked for in figure
Isis
Mother; she
all
the
shed light on his nightmares and stirred up the burning need
The Mystery of the Cursed Treasure
290
in his
life.
Mother
showed
In the text of Aurelia, however, he
as a victim of the struggle
among
this Eternal
the Elohim.
Three of the Elohim had found refuge on the highest peak of the
mountains of Africa. They began to
my memory grows
hazy and
disheveled she
a
I
themselves. Here
can
still
see
woman
a
is
this
they
peak lapped by the waves; shrieking and with hair
was
struggling for her
brothers,
life.
Was
out above the roar of the waves.
The gods, her
among
do not know the outcome of
I
supreme combat. The only thing
abandoned on
fight
she saved?
had condemned
shone over her head, raining
This magnificent evocation
its
Her forlorn I
upon her
rang
do not know. Evening Star
her; but the
fiery rays
cries
face.
reminiscent of the unusual image that
is
we can see on the tympanum of the church of Rennes-le-Chateau: that of Mary Magdalene on a sort of boat, with a snake against her robe and a cross
crowning her head. For here Mary Magdalene
is
truly taking the
place and posture normally taken by the Virgin Mary. She could even
be the Virgin’s double. This
is
surely the case, but there
we may
the light cast by Nerval’s vision,
is
more: From
glean a completely different
understanding of the distinctive decor of the Rennes church and the
omnipresence of
Mary Magdalene
despite appearances,
all
that
is
in
it.
in the
We
should certainly admit that
church hardly conforms with
orthodoxy. To the contrary, the decor plunges us into an entirely Gnostic context in which also represents
Eternal ers,
what
Mother
the Elohim,
can recover
is
Mary Magdalene,
while
being
who
she
also this Soul of the World, driven
away by
her broth-
and lamenting while she awaits the moment when she
fullness.
The Soul of
the
World separated from
above her head;
it is
hope and
still
light.
the world
circular journey of the
contains a
celestial Virgin (the
and
is
Amma Mundi would
Pleroma of the Gnostics)
little
of the
cleaved in two.
Widowed and
in
be as follows: the
falls
is
But the Evening
divine light that once flooded her.
The
is,
the Gnostics called the Soul of the World. Nerval’s
only a prostitute desperately seeking a sign of Star shines
still
into the
world
mourning, she awaits her
The Queens Gold missing portion. Then she
is
291
and murdered
scattered, hidden,
beneath the various faces of the Prostitute. Through the meeting with the
One
these trials
—
mystics, in love and silence she
all
(crown of thorns and wheel of
circle
to the limitless land of Immortality
Now we num
The
objects
1
Mary Magdalene on
meaning the chest
is
this treasure
in
if
we
which
a treasure
We
Mary
as
cosmetics.
call
note that the snake is
is
any event,
In
and the snake
is
not trampled here
usual in depictions of the Virgin Mary,
or of other saints such as Marguerite de Cortone. serpent seems friendly to
stored. But for
is
could be a vessel of perfumes and other
we today
there to confirm this role.
on
believe the legend as well as
the guardian of something, ship or chest,
or held underfoot by
the tympa-
ship or ark could also represent the boat
containing what
Magdalene
the
.
which she crossed the Mediterranean,
Mary Magdalene,
fulfills
which allows her return
fire),
return to the depiction of
of the church.
the archou,
experienced
solitude, the death of those dear to her, humilia-
mockery. Like
tion,
the Virgin of the
Mary Magdalene
Original Garden, Light undivided. all
Yahweh,
she again becomes Bride of
Mary Magdalene and
On
there
the contrary, this is
no sign of any always the
visible struggle in the image.
The
guardian of treasure hidden
in the earth, generally in a cave. In addi-
tion,
serpent, or the dragon,
from the alchemical point of view,
the fact that the snake purified
is
the
its
is
role as guardian stems
symbol of mercury that has not yet been
and therefore contains the seed of the philosopher’s
addition,
we should
knowledge
(this is
recall that the serpent
what
it
stone. In
has always been a symbol of
symbolizes in Genesis) because
way everywhere and knows
from
it
winds
its
every secret, even those that are the best
accompanied by a certain
guarded
in the entrails of the earth. This
amount
of ambiguity, which Nerval emphasizes by the necromancers
who
could prolong their
lives at will,
but
is
who
used their powers, their
knowledge, for malefic purposes. In the entrails of the earth: This
is,
in fact, the location of the sanc-
tuary in which, tradition maintains, the treasure
1.
Jacqueline Kelen,
Un amour
infini (Paris:
lies.
Among
Albin Michel, 1983), 116.
the Greeks,
The Mystery of the Cursed Treasure
292
the master of the hells (that
ground realm) Pluto, a
is
god Hades, “he who
the
name connected
of the world below
is
therefore the seer
who
become
and the wealthy one. This
King from the romances of the Holy
is
rem-
Grail, the
pretends to rule over the kingdom of the Grail, which has
men and
Mounds were
especially
by the king,
who
thus performed a major
This Fisher King, who, according to certain tales in the
sacrilege.
Arthurian cycle,
is
ancient Welsh god
named
Pelles,
which
tion of a divine
Melisande
named Pwyll Penn Annwfn,
woman, who
is
is
is
a remarkable
nothing without the interven-
(in
which
Pelleas
and the enigmatic horsewoman Rhiannon
Pelles);
First
man and
the Grail Bearer in the medieval story;
Maurice Maeterlinck’s play
in
merely a “courtly” form of an
is
uncle of Perceval-Parzival. But this king
from the
is
The master
as ploutos, “rich.”
a sterile desert since the time the Fairies of the
raped by
than
whose other name
sees all,”
same root
to the
iniscent of the rich Fisher
lame king
world below, the dark under-
to say, a
is
Branch of the Mabinogion.
It
in the
so happens that
is
no other
Welsh story
Rhiannon
is
a figure of the utmost importance. This horse-riding goddess, often incor-
porated into the Gallo-Roman Epona, Pwyll Penn
Annwfn
annwfn
annwyn)
(or
where the
secrets of
who, according
is is
life
literally
is
in fact the
Great Queen, whereas
Pwyll, “chief of the abyss.”
a designation of the dark,
and death are
held.
2
underground world
We know
to one version of the Grail legend,
“nigromancie” and could take on any form,
which he protects
in a castle that
The word
that
King
Pelles,
was an expert
in
the guardian of the Grail,
is
everyone passes by without seeing. The
only ones capable of entering this castle are those whose eyes are opened, the eye symbolizing knowledge, inspiration, It
is
around
this figure of the
story of Rennes-le-Chateau
is
is
who came
initiation.
Great Queen, then, that the entire
organized. But
Popular tradition maintains she
end of a white queen
and
who
is
this
Great Queen?
Blanche de Castille, but the local
leg-
to take the waters does not really
involve the mother of Saint Louis. Instead
it
concerns an alleged
who came “to take the waters” at the spring known as the Bains de la
Spanish queen
Rennes-les-Bains, in
particular at
Reine (Baths of the
Queen), with
2.
all
the
wordplay that the name
suggests.
We
should also
See Jean Markale, L' Epopee celtique en Bretagne (Paris: Payot, 3rd edition, 1985), 27-42.
The Queens Gold
293
not overlook that Rennes-les-Bains was called the Bains de Regnes (Baths of the Kingdoms) for a long time. it
was transcribed by Louis
help but surprise us.
We
we summarize
If
the legend as
Fedie, there are certain details that cannot
in fact see the
Spanish queen depicted there
“seated beneath an old weeping willow whose branches lean over the crystalline waters,”
where “she spent many long hours giving vent to
her laments of exile and weeping over her fate as a
husband and
a
queen without a crown.” Strange.
woman It
without a
should
first
be
pointed out that this queen, through a series of unfortunate circumstances that took place in the fourteenth century, according to historical tradition,
was the wife of
abandoned her three days
Pierre
II
after their
the Cruel, king of Castille,
wedding
mistress. Incarcerated in a fortress, the
to the castle of Peyrepertuse.
fable
we can
myth
of Rhiannon:
see the
murdering
As the
This
dess).
is
with his
constructed
(specifically
result of a series of circumstances,
Penn Annwfn
and condemned by him
where she would serve fortress (hence
this historically
broad outlines of the Celtic
their child)
live
queen was freed by Pierre the
Through
rejected by her husband, Pwyll
was
order to
Count Henri de Trastamare, and was taken by
Cruel’s natural brother,
him
in
who
as a
mount
for
all
to
Welsh)
Rhiannon
(he accused her of
remain
at a
mound
those traveling to the royal
Rhiannon’s incorporation into Epona, the mare god-
certainly
no coincidence, and the famous White Queen,
more mythological than
real, is the
very soul of a
new myth,
that of the
treasure of Rennes-le-Chateau. In fact, based
with an litter
illness
to the
on the
queen was stricken
while staying in Peyrepertuse. She had herself taken by
Locus de Montferrando
than Rennes-les-Bains her.
local legend, this white
et Balneis
—which
is
nothing other
—a thermal spa whose merits had been praised to
She remained there for a period of time and was cured of her
ill-
memory of her and her cure that the spring in which she bathed bears the name Bains de la Reine. But there is another detail in this traditional tale that should command our attention: This queen
ness.
It is
who wept rolled
in
while taking the waters one day dropped a silver goblet that
away
into an abyss.
Some
versions of the story say a shepherd
retrieved the goblet. Others declare that entrails
of the earth.
it
still
lies
somewhere
in the
The Mystery of the Cursed Treasure
294
Legends are always a blend of fantasy and
known
spring in Rennes-les-Bains
much is
called Source de la
ical
to bathe there in 1871, a time
when
verification for a piece of information. But
older
name
word gode
of this spring
or gote
made even more
is
is
a
another
and the Blanque, that
Sals
Madeliene (Magdalene Spring). Those of an empir-
mind-set will say that this spring takes
came
While there
as Bains de la Reine, there
between the
farther south of the village,
reality.
Fontaine de
is
means “cup”
its
it is
Code.
in Occitan,
of the famous Goudils,
who
carnival-like parades of
Limoux and
a
will be fooled, for the
so happens that the
It
which
quite revealing.
is
word reappears
are figures in
woman who
possible to find objective
nobody
la
so by the fact that this
name from
makeup
in the
It is
name
that take part in the
the surrounding area
accompanied
by masked Fecos, as well as on Ash Wednesday accompanied by the hermits of Bugarach. Further, the promontory that hangs over this spring
name
bears the
We up
Goundill, in which the term gode
clearly recognizable.
should not overlook that the territory of Rennes-les-Bains has given
number
a certain
of archaeological objects from the
most of which are representations of in the remotest past Rennes-les-Bains
tuary. In short, the Celtic in the
middle of the
a female deity.
Gallo-Roman
It is
must have served
nemeton was located
era,
quite clear that
as a regional sanc-
there near the springs
within a sacred clearing. But what
forest,
end concealing? What are
ing
is
is
and
this leg-
Mary Magdalene? Not far from this spring, in a place called Cap de l’Homme, mean“man head,” on the prominence named Plas de la Coste that over-
looks
the
valleys
that
archaeological discovery
which, as
we know,
Rennes-les-Bains.
is
It is
its
connections to
converge toward Rennes-les-Bains, another
was made:
now
a head,
no doubt that of
a deity,
displayed in the garden of the presbytery of
head of a female
clearly the
deity,
with a deep
perforation in the top of the skull.
There
is
no need
answer can be found church
in
and was
to look far afield for the explanation for this. in the skull discovered in the cellar of the
Rennes-le-Chateau
ritually pierced.
soul of the deceased
—a
This
rite
skull that
is
(a
Magdalene
presumably Merovingian
was observed not only
from reincarnating
Germanic
to prevent the
belief),
but also to
protect a treasure or a valuable hoard from any kind of defilement.
we
recall
that at the feet of
The
Mary Magdalene
Now
inside the Rennes-le-
The Queens Gold
Chateau church, both on the statue and lower part of the
Abbe
there
altar,
is
Sauniere’s message
Chateau and nowhere
is
to be
found
same
ritual hole.
church
at the
Mary Magdalene
else: It is
adorns the
in the painting that
a skull with this
295
in Rennes-le-
herself.
The parish
church of Rennes-le-Chateau had certainly borne her name since the ninth century, but Beranger Sauniere
made
image: the statue, the fresco beneath the wall, the stained-glass side,
not to mention
window
Villa
My I
altar,
the fresco
in the choir, the
on the back
tympanum on
the out-
Bethania and the Magdala Tower. There are
many, many depictions and nificent
every effort to multiply her
As Gerard de Nerval
clues.
said in his
mag-
and inimitable way:
forehead
is still
have dreamed
The gold
red from the kiss of the Queen.
in the grotto
of the Queen, with
where swims the
all its
Siren.
play on words,
Certain treasures lead us on a veritable “Queste” that
is
is
not far away:
undertaken
one day for no conscious reason and never ends, a queste through nature, people, history, art, a queste that is
the reason such an approach
that the gold one hunts for
material gold that spirit
may
There
is
may
is
total
and
and absolute. This it
could well prove
a spiritual as opposed to
be everywhere and nowhere, in each place
no question that
wholly support
eternal,
much more
breathe, each step that
pieces of jewelry,
is
is
human knowledge
3 takes forward.
in addition to a treasure of old coins
Abbe Sauniere found some documents. The
this conclusion.
What,
then,
witnesses
became of these famous
parchments? Those that have reappeared are authentic fakes.
became of the parchments he discovered Saint
and
What
in the pillar of the altar of the
Magdalene Church of Rennes-le-Chateau?
No
one has ever been
able to answer this question. Beranger Sauniere never supplied an
answer. Marie Denarnaud never spoke of them.
been respected.
3.
Gerard Lupin, Le Tresor d’Alaric, unpublished.
The law of
silence has
The Mystery of the Cursed Treasure
296
But pay heed, whispers the author of Aurelia, Gerard de Nerval,
who knew a street not);
ter
much on
matters like these and was found hanging from
lamp on the rue de
la Vieille
who
down
in Paris (suicide? surely
to us in truncated form, either distorted by time or
benefit
from our ignorance;
or the effaced sign,
let
But especially
in
let
us but rediscover the lost
us recompose the dissonant scale,
shall gain in strength in the spirit
it is
Lanterne
pay heed. “|T]he magical alphabet and the mysterious hieroglyphs
have come those
too
is
not always easy to reconstruct an entire puzzle
have been
priceless; this
let-
and we
world.”
our time, when confusion
of the pieces are missing.
by
spread intentionally,
when
three quarters
The documents discovered by Sauniere must a certainty, for
is
someone made sure of
their
whom would
they
disappearance. This brings up another question: For
have value beyond price? Here again we can come up with no answer, or at least the answer cannot be expressed. For as Nerval again says:
And
twice I have victoriously crossed the Archeron:
Modulating
The
in turn
on the
sighs of the Saint
and
lyre
of Orpheus
the cries of the Fairy. 4
Nerval says he crossed twice victoriously. Yes, but the third crossing took place
And what
on the rue de
if
Lanterne. Don’t be fooled.
la Vieille
Sauniere was only what secret agents call a “goat,”
meaning someone intended
to attract attention while other events
of great interest were transpiring elsewhere?
And what
if
Rennes-
le-Chateau was a single tree concealing an immense forest? least the smallest
Or
at
outcropping of a colossal iceberg? Or even a kind
of noise intended to psychologically prepare us for something that
would put
into question centuries of certitude? 5
The question has been
raised,
and
emerge from the unconscious, where
4.
G. Nerval, El Desdichado.
5.
Gerard Lupin, Le Tresor d’Alaric.
this
it
is
enough
for the
answer to
has been dazed by centuries of
The Queens Gold
297
hibernation, like the bear of Arcadia or like Arthur of Celtic legend, or
even
Mary Magdalene, whom
like
because she scared them. Mary, in presence, causes us to question
Her challenge
how
its
not to
is
its
the Evangelists mentioned only
fact, solely
some twenty
through her enigmatic
centuries of Christianity.
foundations, which remain the same, but to
message has been transformed
—
in other
words, to
betrayal
its
of the message of love, beauty, knowledge, and serenity. If
we truly
tion to find life.
seek Beranger Sauniere’s message,
Mary Magdalene who
it. It is
For contrary to
malicious souls
in this direc-
the key to the priest’s entire
that has been said about him, contrary to
all
who
is
we must go
seek to cast
him
as a priest
all
who had
those
illegally
returned from banishment, as a heretic, and even as an adept of some rather disquieting
and
definitely negative brotherhoods,
was an
that the priest of Rennes-le-Chateau
inspired man. Certainly he
by whom, no one knows. But the
was muzzled following
his discoveries;
parchments discovered
in the altar pillar
Beranger Sauniere never said a word on his
still
exist
somewhere
this subject, if
Sauniere had the good gold.
must have had
.
.
And
if
he refused to give
Whether
this
is
—or
bad
his reasons.
— fortune to discover the
cursed treasure.
We
customs, rules, and
This
set is
a
interests.
We
we can
be satisfied with following the
by John the Baptist and preach little bit like
what Sauniere
in the desert.
did.
But he never forgot that fulfill
toward oth-
folded before adversity, defended himself poorly, and every day
wondered what new setback was waiting in Paris to
have
his
He was
never
Emma
he was the lover of Marie Denarnaud. a
He never set foot an expert. He never knew
to greet him.
documents analyzed by
the Satanist Jules Bois.
He was
its
cannot preach with impunity against
he was a priest and that as a priest he had a duty to
He
could be only a
cannot disturb with impunity a society that has
the prevailing ideology unless
example
it
Queens
knowledge
real gold or only the treasure of
changes nothing about the matter. In either event
the
.
bishop an explanation for the funds he had at his disposal in order to
realize his construction, then he
ers.
can be stated
it
He
Calve’s lover,
no more than
never trafficked in Masses.
monarchist and a fundamentalist, certainly, but was hardly
only one in his time.
Denarnaud. Her
Sauniere died a pauper,
as
heirs never discovered the royal treasure,
did
Marie
whether
it
The Mystery of the Cursed Treasure
298
was
The legend con-
that of the Visigoths, the Templars, or the Cathars.
structed around Beranger Sauniere
whatever might be
better hide
What
is
sully post
visible
mortem
one to boot.
6 .
Certainly Sauniere
Sauniere exists.
It is
knew
never able to divulge
that he could transmit
when
visible.
primarily the dignity of a
is
He was
things simple
a vast, intoxicated undertaking to
is
it
a secret,
others sought to
and an important
but arranged matters so
it,
why
by the simplest means possible. But
they can be complicated? visible. It is
erates today as there
man
were
even
legible.
The work of Beranger
Are there
many
just as
illit-
Why
decadent era around 1900?
in the
leave
is
there a need to distort history for the benefit of a kind of ideology of
dubious taste?
The cursed gold of Rennes-le-Chateau, which can Rennes-les-Bains,
Sacred its
is
is
terrifying.
also be that of
stained with malediction only to the extent that the
We
tremble before the Lord;
word, Yahweh never showed
his face to the
if
we
take the Bible at
prophets without plac-
and humans. Ever since the time
ing a screen between himself
chased out of the earthly Paradise, an angel holding a
been keeping watch over the entrance to a world
fiery
now
man was
sword has
buried in the
shadows of the Unconscious. For the Garden of Eden, whatever holds a lost treasure, and
is,
crystallized
all
it
the energy of the Creature of
toward the rediscovery of
this treasure,
even
if
really
God
is
this absolute
quest skirts the dangerous precipices from which the odors of
fire
and
brimstone emanate.
But what treasure do claims
is
we
Razes, in the middle of the
woods
undiscovered caves? Could
am
or on
it
do so
man was
always a model of
human
funds the
—odd—
arid plateau riddled with
my own
spiritual father,
Abbe Henri
about him have circulated, despite the
dignity
the audacity to take an interest in things that
own
buried somewhere in the
some
because of
Gillard. Since the time of his death, inane stories
with his
to reach
this material treasure lie in the grotto of
in a perfect position to assert this
that this
gold that legend
a material treasure, the sacred
it
Rome and
from
I
this
from the Temple of Jerusalem or the Sanctuary of Delphi that
Alaric’s Visigoths carried
6.
is
who manage
cursed, perhaps because those
at the risk of losing their souls? Is
objects
what
seek? Just
were
and
priestly devotion. Yet he also
better not stirred
restoration of the church of
up and
which he was the
fact
had
to carry out rector.
The Queens Gold
Mary Magdalene,
or that of the Gode, with
strange
its
was
the primordial chalice in which Christ’s blood that according to one of the Gospels, Jesus’ descent
name
299
that recalls
We know
collected?
Mary Magdalene was
there at
from the cross and shrouding, and thus witnessed Joseph
of Arimathea’s collection of Christ’s blood in the Grail.
But
is
the treasure truly a material one? Wouldn’t
it
secret that could not sensibly be divulged yet because
instead be a great it
poses a serious
challenge to centuries of history and a certain conception of Christian
No
spirituality?
one ever learned what the manuscripts discovered by
Sauniere actually contained. They have disappeared. But that does not
mean
that they might not reappear one day
not be denied that Sauniere did
knew, though a
man who
and be acknowledged.
know what became
has devoted his
life
It
can-
of them. But only he
to a
work, even one so
debatable and odd as the church of Rennes-le-Chateau, could not carry his secret to the grave
Now,
without leaving behind some
signs are always symbolic
and are generally drowned
flood of details intended to mislead those
what they
clear idea of all
the great myths of
seek. This
humanity
Close inspection of Sauniere’s If
he
left
message
a
— and
it
only in the image he gave
is
who do
where the
not have in mind a
virtue of the test appears;
work
leads to a very simple conclusion:
appears undeniable that he did
Mary Magdalene, one
Her ubiquitous presence
is itself
Mary Magdalene’s
for the Virgin
where. This
is
—
it
could be
was too strong
that
until the present.
an indication, even
reason for this presence in a parish dedicated to
noted,
in a
stress this essential aspect of the quest.
and blinding to be taken into consideration
ical
signs.
if
there
her.
is
a log-
As we have
depiction takes the place ordinarily reserved
Mary, and she
is
not in this church depicted as she
is
else-
which Mary Magdalene
especially true of the scene in
is
kneeling in a cave, facing a rustic cross with a perforated skull at her feet,
a revealing detail.
The presence of
admission: The death’s-head
ment
in
some way
traditionally placed near a treasure.
cave, but light
woman.
“I
this
a symbolic It
is
forms an
and magical
ele-
quite dark inside this
from the outside floods the face of the meditating
despised the
the century”
Does
is
this pierced skull
kingdom of
the world and
—these are the words recorded
as
all
the
adornment of
spoken to Magdalene.
imply that the treasure she appears to be guarding does not
The Mystery of the Cursed Treasure
300
belong to
this
world and
will thereby acquire exceptional
The serpent of knowledge
the overall message of Christianity?
Mary Magdalene’s robe on
crawls up
and the ark, or
reinforces this idea, signify her sea
voyage to Gaul as
importance
the
tympanum
in
that
of the church only
chest, at her feet
can
just as easily
could the preservation of a precious
it
object hidden from the eyes of others.
Mary Magdalene sion. She
is
the image of the Feminine in
its
highest expres-
the “revealer” of the resurrected Jesus. She performs the
is
royal anointing of Christ. She Jesus loves above
other
all
women,
and the body of
that of the Spirit
who loves Jesus and whom who gave him the Second Life,
the one
is
she
glory.
Hers
is
a
message of a love that
can transform the world. The Occitan troubadours knew ing ceaselessly that
Magdalene
it
was through woman
that one attained
meaning the generator of an
toward Perfection. For the moment, however,
in a
God. But
which can
also symbolizes “convulsive” beauty,
“explosive-fixed,”
this, repeat-
also be
becoming
eternal
world that
not yet
is
capable of understanding this supreme message, Beauty conceals within a cave. Gerard de Nerval phrases
Do
it
thus:
you recognize the temple with the immense
And
peristyle
the bitter lemons holding the imprint of your teeth
And Where from
the cave , fatal to imprudent guests
the vanquished dragon sleeps the ancient seed? 7
In the final analysis, perhaps the cursed gold of
Rennes
is
the sleep-
ing seed of that vanquished dragon. Perhaps Sauniere’s message to
awaken
dangerous, tion.
We
itself
the Dragon. This fatal
is
where the quest can reveal
even for one not prepared for
must dare
this
from Les Chimeres). This ing not for the gold of
is
is
more holy
to
my
itself to
not be
kind of confronta-
to enter this cave, for as Nerval (himself
admits: “the Saint of the Abyss
is
an
initiate)
eyes” (“Artemis,”
without question an invitation to go hunt-
Rennes but
for the gold of the
Queen
[Reine]
buried in the same cave where the ancient dragon sleeps, in a coffer that
Mary Magdalene
7.
holds precisely between her fairylike hands.
“Delfica,” from Odelettes.
Index
Aereda the serpent, 69
Archangel of Light, 28-29
Aer-Red, 69
Archives of the Aude, 117
21-22
Arene, Paul, 4
Agartha, 281-82
Arkas, 277-78
aesthetics,
Alaric
II,
Ar Pen of
232-33
77, 78,
Arques
Albigensian Crusade, 77-78,
91-92
River,
64
Arthur and Arthurian legend,
Alet (town), 30-31, 65-66, 74,
Alpha
(village),
Artemis, 49
83-84, 87-88, 238
81,
216
Brittany,
24,
222
Aryanism, 76
64
Alveydre, Saint-Yves
d’,
Asmodeus, 20, 40
281-82
Guillaume
Amberlain, Robert, 5-6
Assalit,
Amiel, Pons, 84
Atrebates, 72
Anas, 282-83
Aurelia,
Angelic Society, 279-80
Axat, 152
d’,
38
289-90
animals, 3-4, 69, 271-72, 291 Aniort, Jordane
Aniort,
Ramon
Aniort,
Uduat d
d’, d’, 1
,
47
90
Baal,
88
Bacbuc, 287-88 Bahier, Pierre,
90
215-17
Aniort family, 86-87, 89-90
Baigent, Michale, 12
Annwfn, Pwyll Penn, 292
Bain de
Anthony, Saint, 42-43
Barres, Maurice,
Aphrodite, 289-90
Baths of Rennes, 26-27
Apollo, 49
Beausejour, de (Monsignor),
la
Reine, 55-56
279
137-41, 158, 181, 183
Arabs, 79
Beauty, 22
Arcadia, 64, 277-78
301
8,
302
Index
Bedd, 48-49
Bouillon, Godefroy de,
47
Bel,
196-97
Bel-Belenos, 50
Boullan (Abbe), 120-21
Belcaire, Escot de, 88
Bouthon, Henri, 209
Epoque, 26
Belle
146-47
Boyer, Georges,
Benedictine Order, 80-81
Bozas, Marquise of, 167-68
Berthou-Kerverziou, Erwan, 6
Bozon, 84-85
Bezu
(village),
Bible, Bieil
37-38, 47-48
257-61, 268
Brennus, 237 Breton, Andre, 14, 28-29
(Abbe), 117, 118
Broceliande Forest, 19
Big Dipper, 70
Brotherhood of the Holy
Bigou, Antoine, 95-96, 113,
236-37
Sacrament, 92 Brunehaut, Queen, 7
Billard, Felix, 101,
Bugarach, 51-55
107-8,
116-17, 154-56, 157-58 Blanc, Louis,
280-81
Bulgaria and Bulgarians, 51
Bulwer-Lytton,
Blanche, Francis, 13-14, 211
Earle,
Edward George
281-82
Blanchefort, Alix de, 90 Blanchefort, Bertrand de, 87
Caesar, Julius, 271
Blanchefort Castle, 227
Caillois, Roger,
Blanchefort family, 48
Callisto,
Boi'ens,
72
240, 241-42
277-78
Calvat, Melanie, 123-24, 164
119-21, 123, 297
Bois, Jules,
Bonhomme,
Emma, 122-24,
138, 144,
171-74
196
Pierre,
Calve,
Book of Constitutions, 196-97
Capet family, 82, 202
Bot, Elie, 112, 114
Carcassonne diocese, 51, 76
Boudet, Edmond, 160
Carolingian, 44
Boudet, Father Henri
Casteillas (village),
Celtic language and, 57,
69
cromlech and, 52 death
of,
Blanche de
documents and, 179
142
legend about, 11-12, 27, 55-56,
Marie Denarnaud and, 109-11 parish church of,
Castille,
37
61-62
Sauniere and, 104-7, 115,
159-63, 243, 247-48 writing of, 27-28,
244-47
58-59, 238, 292-93 treasure and, 202-3,
222-23
Trencavel and, 88-89 Castle of the Templars,
Catalonia, 82
47
Index
Christ
Cathars Bulgarians as ancestors
dualism
of,
51
43
on Razes
influence
of,
region, 11,
and
Hare 61-62
the
,
Church of Mary Magdalene description of,
39-44
ornamentation
of,
20-23,
248-55, 295
26, 29
found
Occitania and, 82
skull
Roman
See also
Catholic Church and,
at,
294-95
Mary Magdalene;
Sauniere, Beranger
83, 86
Church of Odin, 283-84
238-39
treasure of,
Cathelin, Jean, 14
Cimbrians, 73
Catholics and Catholicism
city of glass,
48
Cathars and, 83
Clement IX, 277
Mary
clergy,
and, 262-63
payment
for
politics of,
Masses and, 181-87
100-101, 148
83
Clodion the Long-Haired, 271 Clovis, 77-78,
232-34
caverns, 42, 53
Cocteau, Jean, 13, 197
Cazemajou, de (Marquis), 147-48
Colbert, 92
Celestin V, Pope, 125
Colomban,
Celts
and
Celtic
influence
mythology
on Rennes-le-Chateau,
language of,
of,
69-70, 244-47
271-72, 282-83
cemeteries, 38-39, 62-64, 128
Champagne, Thibaud
Company Conrad
Saint, 81
of Jesus, 170
(Cardinal), 85
Corbiere, Tristan, 4
45-46, 50, 72
myths
303
de,
202-3
Chapuzot of Tremblay-le-Vicomte,
216
Corbieres region, 16-17
Corbu, Neil, 144 Corbu, Noel, 198-209 Cornuault, Fanny, 283-84
Cortone, Marguerite de, 291 Costes (Madame), 16
Charlemagne, 79
Costes, Fernand, 16
Charroux, Robert, 14, 206-7
Coume Sourde
Chaumeil, Jean-Luc, 6-7, 13,
Courtauly (Abbe), 160-61,
120-21, 206-7, 211
road, 46
212-13
Chefdebien family, 168-69
cromlech, 52, 53
Cherisey, Philippe de, 198-99,
Crusades, 77-78
210-11 Christians and Christianity, 77,
264-65, 281
Cucugnan, 4 curses,
227-31
Cybele, 289-90
304
Index
Dagobert
II,
44, 78, 80, 209,
213-14, 221, 222, 272
Elohim, 288-89
emerald
283-85
tablets,
Dark Ages, 7-8
Ermengarde, Countess, 82
Daudet, Alphonse, 4
Eternal Mother,
Debussy, Claude, 13, 122, 123,
Eucharist,
197
290
44
Eurydice, 285
Decadents, 120, 122
53
extraterrestrials,
Defagot, Pierre, 196 Delaval, Jean, 196
faidits,
85-86
Denarnaud, Marie
fairies,
56, 58
after death of Sauniere,
199-200
arrival in Rennes-le-Chateau,
109-11
Fallavaux, 164 False Valley, 164
Fanfan, 216
position in household, 112, 136
fecos,
property ownership
Fedie, Louis, 58-59, 68, 75, 101,
of,
134
Sauniere and, 126, 156-57,
191-94
tomb
176, 212-14
Flamel, Nicolas, 197 Flaubert, Gustave,
229-30, 249-50
279-80
Fleury, Paul-Francois-Vincent de,
Diana, 49
97
Diancecht, 50
Fleury, Paul-Urbain de, 61-63,
d’Indy, Vincent,
Doinel, Jules,
123
Fontaine de
217-19
la
Gode, 294
278-79, 280
the Depths,
28-29
Fountains of Love, 60-61
druidism, 30, 72
Franks, 77-78, 234
Dujardin-Beaumetz, Henri,
Fredegar,
150-52
Dupanloup of
Dupont
97
Foucquet, Nicolas, 92, 125,
dolmens, 68
Dragon of
292
Flagstone of the Knight, 114
Descadeillas, Rene, 60, 68, 95,
devil,
293 Fisher King,
24
of,
58
270-71
Fredegonde, Queen, 7 Sion,
216
of Avignon, 216
earldom of Razes, 67-98 Egalite, Philippe,
148
elm of Gisors, 13, 197
Freemasons, 120, 122, 151, 163,
218
Gablaes, 72 Galibert, Louis,
63-64
Gallia Togata, 73
Index
69-70
Gallic language,
Hani, Jean, 5
Hautpoul, Pierre-Raymond
Garin (Abbot), 81 Garin de Monglane, cycle
of,
Hautpoul
d’,
Gauls, 56, 60, 73, 237-38
Abbe Jean-Antoine-
Maurice, 127, 131-32,
Head
family, 38, 93-97,
Saint,
Man, 60 71-72
Henri V, Count of Chambord, 148, 152-53, 163-67
Gellone, William of, 80-81
Germain,
of
Helvetians,
187-91, 280
heretics,
88
Heristal, Pippin d’, 78,
42
Hermes
Germans, 87 Gillard, Henri, 5, 19,
23-24
Trismegistus,
211-12
284
Her Red, 69 8-9
Giraud, Maximin, 164
history,
Giscard House, 252
Hoffet, Emile, 117, 119, 221,
Gisela of Reddae, Gisors, 6, 13,
224
272
Holy Balm, 42
197
Givry, Grillot de, 22, 153
gloomy
clericalism,
163-64
Gobseck, Esther, 106
Gode,
93
178-80, 211-12, 237
80
Gelis,
305
the,
Holy Blood, Holy Grail 12-15 ,
288
Holy
Bottle,
Holy
Grail, 8, 13, 87, 239, 283,
284-85, 292
57
Golden Bough, 227
hot springs, 204
Golden Dawn, 283
Hugo,
Golden Mean, 276
hunting, 3-4
Victor,
197
gold of Delphi, 237-38 Vilaine, 71
Gospels, 12, 261-65
Ille et
goudils, 58
Illuminati, 120,
Goupil of Gatinais, 216
Indy, Vincent d’,
Gourdon Granes
(doctor), 46,
(parish),
47
49
initiation,
280-81, 283 123
63
Inquisition,
82-83
289-90
Grannus, 49-50
Isis,
Grassaud, Eugene, 126-27
Isolde the Fair,
Great Queen, 292-93
Iv,
50
Bera, 81
Gregory IX, 85 Gregory of Tours, 270
Jamet, 190
Guaita, Stanislas de, 120-21
Jarnac, Pierre, 63, 174
Guercino, 275-76
Jean XXIII, 143-44
306
Index
Jesus
LeBlanc, Maurice, 122, 136,
depictions of, 23, 41-42, 43, 60,
251
172-73, 284
Le Brigant, 69, 244
Holy Grail and, 13
le
Mary Magdalene
Le Clat, 152
and, 257,
269-70 267
leprosy,
Jews and Judaism, 76, 86-87, 153, 223, 232
257-60
of,
John Paul
Pope, 265-66
Carnival, 58
Lincoln, Henry, 12
John-Salvator of Hapsburg.
linguistics,
68-70
Lobineau, Henri, 196, 198,
213-14, 220
See Orth, Jean Baptist, Saint,
60
Limoux, 74-75
Limoux
John, Gospel
John the
45
Leigh, Richard, 12
resurrection of,
II,
Casteillas,
42
279
Lorrian, Claude,
John XXII, Pope, 91
Louis, Saint, 11-12
Joseph, Saint, 43
Louis IX, 88-89, 222-23 Louis the Pious, 80
Kazantzakis, 13
Louis XIV, 125, 280
Kings of the Black Mountain, 93
Luke, Book
Knight of the Anguipede, 69
Lupin, Arsene, 173
of,
257-58
Knights Templar
Bezu and, 37-38, 235-37 politics of,
89-91
Maeterlinck, Maurice, 122
Magdala Tower,
Priory of Sion and, 13,
216-18
relationship to Cathars,
86-88
13, 17-18, 135,
141, 251
Magdalene,
the,
57
Magdalene Spring, 294 Lamerliere, Constance de, 164
Maghrebi, 79
Lamy, Michel, 15
magic. See occult activities
Languedoc, 73
Mallarme, Stephane, 122
Laplanders, 3
Maquis, 206
Lasserre (Father), 65
Marie, Franck, 43, 57-58
La Tour d’Auvergne, Theophile-
Mark, 257-58
Malo Coret Lavaldieu,
de, 69,
244
46-47
Lawrence, Louis Bertram, 64 Lebesgue, Phileas, 6 Leblanc, Georgette, 122
Martel, Charles, 79
Martin, Henri, 246
Mary Magdalene Biblical discussion of,
268
256-65,
Index
depictions of, 42, 290-91,
neo-druidism, 6 Nerval, Gerard de, 288-90, 296
299-300 Jesus and,
307
Newton,
269-70
as patron saint,
Niel, Fernand,
184
See also Church of
Mary
197
Isaac,
52
Nodier, Charles, 197
Nogaret, 91
Magdalene Masons, 148-49, 285 Matthew, 257-58
objective chance, 5
Mauclerc, Pierre, 203
Occitania and Occitains, 11, 15.
Maunoir,
Julien,
See also Razes
40
Mazieres (Father), 47
occult activities,
118-25
Meleagant, 48
Ollier, Jean, 92,
118
Melisande, 292
ophidian worship, 69
Melusine, 69
Orable, 80
menhirs, 63, 68
Orpheus, 285
Merovech, 271
Orth, Jean, 136, 174-77
Merovingians and Merovingian
Our Lady
Era, 7-8, 44, 78, 130, 221,
of Alet abbey, 81, 85,
91-92
223, 270-73
Michael of Cuxa, Saint, 81
Padua, Saint, 42-43
mining, 87, 92
Pandard of Rennes-le-Chateau,
Mirepoix, Roger de, 88 Montfort, Simon de, 82, 84, 89
Montsegur,
7,
15-16, 52-53
216-18 Pantagruel,
287
Panurge, 287
Moors, 79
Paray-le-Monial, 165-66
Morgana, 23
Pascal, Blaise,
Morganwg,
Iolo,
Paul, Vincent de,
30
Pavilion, Nicolas,
Moschefol, Jules, 216
Mouthoumet
(town),
20
32-34
Pelles,
92-93
292
Pelletan, Camille,
myth, 8-9
92-93
164
Perceval, 84
Napoleon
III,
148-49
Perella,
Ramon
Narbonnaise, 73
Perfects, 88
Narbonne, 73
Peyro Dreto, 63
necromancers, 289
Philip,
Negri d’Ables, Marie de, 38, 93,
Philip the Bold,
95,
128-30
Gospel
de, 88
of,
270
90
Philip the Fair, 38, 82,
90-91, 203
308
Index
Pibouleau, 112
Religious Wars, 91
Picollec, Jean, 6
Rennes Castle, 88
Pierre
II,
Pieta,
61-62
293
88,
Rennes-le-Chateau author on, 3-4, 25-26, 31-32
Pious X, 153
description of, 17-19
Plantard, Pierre, 159-60, 196,
excavation
198-99, 204, 210-11, 214
205-7
at,
view
historical
of, 9
Pole Star, 70
legends of gold and,
Poussin, Nicolas, 31-32, 63-64,
linguistics of,
92, 124-25, 222, 274-80,
Priory of Saint-Samson,
219
Priory of Sion, 13-14, 196-98,
209-10, 215-17, 219-21 Proserpine,
287
284
residents of, strategic
227-30
68-70
215
importance
of,
36-37
treasure of, 77
See also Razes; Sauniere,
Beranger Rennes-les-Bains
Queen’s Bath, 57
cemetary
Quillan (town), 35
parish church of, 61-62, 105
of,
62-64
thermal waters Rabelais, 60,
287-88
treasure and,
229
rationalism,
25-29, 55-56
11-12
Rennes springs, 60
Raymond-Beranger, 82
Raymond
of,
203
VII, 85,
Razes
Republicans, 100-101, 102-3,
106-8 Reznikov, Nicolas, 15
Bulgarach, 51-55 description of, first fortress in,
linguistics of,
Reznikov, Raymonde, 15
35-37 45
Riviere, Jacques, 179, 189,
68-70
treasure legends of,
Rhiannon, 292
226-30
See also earldom of Razes
Reccared, King, 76
Robin, Jean, 197-98
Roch,
Saint,
Roman
42
Catholic Church. See
Catholics and Catholicism
Red, 68-69
Romanesque House, 65
Reddae, 68-69, 74-76
Roman
Redones, 70-72
Romans, 56-57,
Reine Blanche, 56, 221, 238,
292-93 religions, 20,
254
Peace, 12-13 60, 73-74,
237-38 Romantics, 170
21-22
Rosicrucians, 62, 120, 122, 283
Index
Rospligosi (Cardinal),
Rouget of
277
216
Lille,
confessors of, 126-27, 143-44
death
Roussillon, Girard de,
268
143-44
of,
Dujardin-Beaumetz and, 150-52
149-50
Royalism, 152-53, 164
education
royal lineage, 13
Emma
Ruins of Albedun, 47-48
family of, 146-47
of,
Calve and, 171-74
finances of, 133-38, finds of,
Sacre-Coeur, 165-66
Gelis and, 131-32,
sacred geography, 50-51, 53,
Henri
V
Saint Benedict of Aniane,
80-81
Saint-Clair, Pierre Plantard de,
159-60, 196, 198-99, 204,
84-85
Saint-Ferreol, de,
Saint-Guilhem of the Desert, 80
Cuxa, 81
81-82
Saint Polycarp abbey, Saissac, Bertand de, Salette operation,
84
Jean Orth and, 174-77
Magdala Tower and, 17-18 manuscripts and, 118, 124-25, 210, 295-96
politics of,
111-12, 116, 134
shadow
of Alfred,
life of,
symbolism
164
in
167-68
135-36
Church of Mary
Magdalene and, 40-41
Sand, George, 279-81
temptation
Saracens, 79
time period
Satan, 43
tomb
Sauniere, Alfred, 126,
167-70
aesthetics and, 13,
21-22,
151-52, 153-54, 219 of,
assignment
152-57
of,
of,
of,
Tomb
of,
118-25
of,
148-49
24-25
of Arques and, 63
tombstones and, 128-30, 178-80
Sauniere, Beranger
behavior
106-8
restoration of church and, 109,
social
Samhain, 58
ambitions
109-11
of,
message from, 296-300
210-11, 214
Saint Michael of
187-91
and, 163-67
household
Sacred Heart of Jesus, 165-66
141-44
113-16
Sabarthes (Father), 46
58-59
309
101-4
112-15, 127-31,
Masses and,
139-41, 181-87 treasure and, 239-42,
296-300
See also Denarnaud, Marie; treasure
Schrauben, Philippe, 246-47
150 Billard and, 107-8,
trafficking of
157-58
Boudet and, 104-7, 159-63
scientism, scrofula,
229
59
310
Index
sea monsters,
271-72
Templars’ Castle, 47
Second Empire, 148
Temple of Jerusalem, 232
Second Manifesto of Surrealism,
Termes, Olivier de, 85
28-29
Teutons, 73
Sede, Gerard de, 6-7, 199,
Theodulfe (Bishop), 79
209-10, 213-14
Theosophical Society, 122
Seminary of Saint-Sulpice, 118 serpents,
291
61-62, 204, 293-94
The Shepherds of Arcadia, 63-64, 124-25, 274-80 Sigibert IV,
thermal waters, 49-50, 55-56,
Thierry,
Amedee, 246
Thierry, Augustin, 7
272
Thiers, Adolph, 165
simony, 139-41, 181-87
Three Marys, 58
solar aspect
Three Mother Goddesses, 57
of Grannus, 50
Titus,
232 of Arques, 63-64,
Solomon’s treasure, 234
Tomb Tomb
Soul of the World, 290
tourism, 35
of the
Montsegur
castle,
spiritualistic activity.
52-53
See occult
activities
of Taliesin, 49
Trastamare, Henri de, 293 treasure
Spring of the Gentle Bath, 60
of Antoine Bigou,
Spring of the Skinflints, 60
of Blanche de Castille,
Stations of the Cross, 21, 44, 122,
of the Cathars,
249, 252 statues,
274-80
237 238
238-39
conclusions about, 296-300
42-43, 116, 249
finding of,
239-42
Stone of the Knight, 44-45
gold of Delphi, 72, 237-38
Streams of Color, 253
Holy
Stublein, Eugene, 161, Sul,
212
50
239
Knights Templar and, 235-37
myth
Symbolists, 122
Grail,
of,
226-30
possible location of,
291-92
Razes and, 231-34 Taliesin,
271
Solomon’s treasure, 234
Tarttarin of Tarascon-sur-Ariege,
216 Taxil, Leo, 153,
Visigoths and, 77
warnings about, 146-47,
219
telescoping, 79
Templars. See Knights Templar
229-31 See also Castille, Blanche de; Sauniere, Beranger
Index
*4
Tree of Life, 44
Vivien,
*»
Trehorenteuc church, 19, 22, 44
Vivisci,
Trencavel, Roger, 55, 82, 84-86,
\^isins,' Pierre de,* 88,
Tristan,
• * 89-90
Vofques Tdctosages, 71-72
88-89 Trismegistus, Hermes,
71
284
von Eschenbach, Wolfram,
285
267-68
Troyes, Chretien de, 48, 84, 283
84,
Vril,
282-83
True Cross, 81 Truth, 20
Wagner, Cosima, 123
Tuatha de Danann, 282-83
Welsh, 70
Wemba, Urban
II,
Pope, 82
Ursus, King, 221-23
White
King, 76
Fortress, 48,
49
White Ladies, 57-59 White Queen, 56, 221, 238,
Valley of God, 46-47
Verne, Jules, 15, 53-55, 172-73,
283, 285
292-93 William of Orange, 80, 272 Willy, Renee, 5
Vichy, 56
Woman
Villa Bethania, 18, 135, 141,
Wouivre, 69
of the
Mounds, 58
200-201, 251 Vinci,
Leonardo da, 197
Yann-Ber Kerbiriou, 14
Viollet-le-Duc, 31, 150
Yourcenar, Marguerite, 257
Virgin Mary, 43
Yseult,
267-68
Visigoth pillars, 38-39, 113, 249 Visigoths, 7, 25, 67, 74, 76-77,
232-35
Zeus, 277-78
311
%
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Celtic Origins of the Sacred Icon
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RELIGION / HISTORY
$ 18.95
CHURCH OF MARY MAGDALENE THE
T
he small Church ol Mary Magdalene Chateau
in southern France
may
remote
in the
village
well hold the key to the
of Rennes-le-
proof of Mary
Magdalene’s marriage to Jesus and the bloodline they founded. In 1885 the of Rennes-le-Chateau
welcomed
he ordered and oversaw
But where did
this
a
new
a substantial
modest
priest,
—and
Abbe
expensive
—
priest get the funds for this
discovered something during the
initial
During
Sauniere.
his time there
restoration of the church.
work?
renovations that
village
It is
made him
thought that he a very rich
man
and brought him to the attention of various power brokers of the time both from within the Church and from esoteric ery was have ranged treasure brought
circles in
Pans. Theories of what this discov-
from the gold pillaged from Delphi
from Jerusalem by the Templars
in
and
are the
fell.
church renovations themselves
ambiguous portrayal of Mary Magdalene. This depiction could shake the
their
very foundations of the Church with priestess
who
its
suggestion that Mary’s role was that of the
anoints the priest-king in preparation for his spiritual duties.
Poet, philosopher, historian,
and
storyteller,
Jean Markale has spent a lifetime
researching pre-Christian and medieval culture and spirituality.
more than
forty books, including Montsegur and
Treasure at Gisor, The Celts,
at the
times and the
to the Cathar treasure said to have
been spirited away from Montsegur days before that fortress
Even more curious and compelling, however,
Roman
Sorbonne and
and Women
lives in
of
the Celts.
the
He
Mystery of
was
He
the
is
the author of
Cathars, The Templar
a specialist in Celtic studies
the Brittany region of France.
ISBN
INNER TRADITIONS Rochester, Vermont Cover
design by Peri
Champine
78 0892 811991