Adam Weishaupt
Adam Weishaupt was born in 1748 of Jewish parents but grew up in   the Catholic faith. When his father, George Weishaupt, died in   1754, young Adam was turned over to be     raised by the Jesuits by his godfather, Baron Ickstatt,   who was curator of the university of Ingolstadt in Bavaria. 
He converted   to Protestantism when studying law at Ingolstadt. 
He had also studied   classic religion and theology and the Eleusian and Mithrian   mysteries, and also the works of Pythagoras. We don't know   much about his childhood or his early life, and even his name itself is   somewhat of a mystery. 
Adam means "the first man", "Weis" means "to know" and "haupt" means "leader", which makes Adam Weishaupt's name mean "the first man to lead those who know". He graduated from the University of Ingolstadt in 1768, and was made a tutor and catechist. In 1772 he was made a professor of Law.
He was   initiated as a Freemason in 1774 in either Hanover or       Munich, but   found that no one in his order truly understood the occult significance   of the ceremonies. He decided to found his own organization, which he   did on the first of May 1776. This organization was first known   as "The Order of Perfectibilists" but became famous as the "Ordo   Illuminati Bavarensis", or the Illuminati for short.
Munich, but   found that no one in his order truly understood the occult significance   of the ceremonies. He decided to found his own organization, which he   did on the first of May 1776. This organization was first known   as "The Order of Perfectibilists" but became famous as the "Ordo   Illuminati Bavarensis", or the Illuminati for short. 
 Munich, but   found that no one in his order truly understood the occult significance   of the ceremonies. He decided to found his own organization, which he   did on the first of May 1776. This organization was first known   as "The Order of Perfectibilists" but became famous as the "Ordo   Illuminati Bavarensis", or the Illuminati for short.
Munich, but   found that no one in his order truly understood the occult significance   of the ceremonies. He decided to found his own organization, which he   did on the first of May 1776. This organization was first known   as "The Order of Perfectibilists" but became famous as the "Ordo   Illuminati Bavarensis", or the Illuminati for short. 
Only   five people were present at the first meeting of the order, but it grew   rapidly and only a few years later it had chapterhouses all over   Germany, Austria, France, Italy, Hungary and Switzerland. Weishaupt   and his co-conspirators, notably Baron Knigge and a lawyer named  Zwack, had soon established a network of agents around Europe   that infiltrated courts and other places of power and reported back   useful gossip and information to Weishaupt. 
The Illuminatis true   goals were shrouded in mystery. Because of Weishaupt's strong   anti-clerical and anti-royalistic views, some have assumed that the   Illuminati were some sort of proto-communistic organization dedicated to   bringing about a proletarian revolution. 
Others have seen them as   anarchists, or descendants of the Cathars, or the Knights   Templar and the Assassins of Hassan En Sabbah, the "Old Man   on the Mountain", with whom the Knights Templar were rumored to be in   contact with. 
Yet others have seen them as Satanic agents dedicated to   nothing less than the domination of the planet and the bringing   about of the Kingdom of Satan on Earth.
It is true that Weishaupt's   plans certainly was hostile to the Church of Rome and the monarchies of   Europe, and that he seemed to harbor what would today be called   "socialistic" leanings, but Weishaupt wasn't an atheist or agnostic.   There is little doubt that Weishaupt was a deeply religious man   in his own way. 
Weishaupt said in a speech held shortly before the   French revolution:
"Salvation does not lie where strong thrones are defended by swords, where the smoke of censers ascend to heaven or where thousands of strong men pace the rich fields of harvest. The revolution which is about to break will be sterile if it is not complete."
This statement has often   been taken as to mean that Weishaupt was in fact a sort of communist,   and in a sense perhaps he was. One could think the above quote a   statement by Trotsky. However, as the Illuminati's true goals has always   been disputed it is difficult to find out what exactly was the   political, if such a dirty word may be used, or ideological raison   d´etre of the order. 
Of course, the easiest way to be able to make an   educated guess is to study the actions of the order, as we will here. In   the year 1784 the Illuminati attempted a coup against the   Hapsburgs, but the plot was revealed by police-spies that had   infiltrated the order on orders from the king. 
This led to the total ban   of all secret societies in Bavaria, and membership was punishable by   death. This edict was signed in June 1784. Weishaupt was forced   to flee to a neighboring province in February 1785 and in March another   edict was passed, this one specifically outlawing the Illuminati. 
The Illuminati was forced to  go underground in Bavaria and had to move its revolutionary   efforts elsewhere. Disaster again struck for the order when in July 1785   lightning struck an Illuminati courier, a man named Lanz, and   killed him and the horse he was riding. It is said that both Lanz and   the horse was charred to coal, but the saddlebags were almost intact.    
In   them was found extensive documents that outlined the Illuminati's plans   for world domination and revolution, and also named several high ranking   Illuminati members, among them Zwack and Weishaupt.    
Zwack   was arrested and his home raided in October 1786. Weishaupt's activities   after 1790 are disputed, several different versions of his life after   1790 exists. In Robert Anton Wilson and Robert Shea's   famous    trilogy Illuminatus!, for instance, it is suggested that Weishaupt traveled to America and assumed the role of George Washington.   
Others claim that   Weishaupt died in obscurity in 1830. I have chosen to continue to   try and trace the alleged influence of the Illuminati in the following   years as it is possible, however unlikely it may seem to those who take   a conventional view of history, that Weishaupt was directing things from   behind the scenes. 
The French revolution of 1789 has been widely   attributed to the machinations of the Illuminati, and it's role has been   described as everything from "negligible" to "sole cause". Both   statements are an exaggeration, but it cannot be denied that several   persons who were intensively involved in the revolution was active   members, among others the Comte de Mirabeau, famous author,   orator, Freemason and arch-enemy of the Marquis de Sade. 
Mirabeau is reported   to have said in a speech at the international Freemason convention in   Wilhelmsbad in 1782 that he was a member of an organization that was   influenced by the Knights Templar, and that their goal was to   destroy the Church and the monarchy so that the "Religion of Love" could   be established in France. 
Of course, the Illuminati was not the only   secret revolutionary conspiracy around. There were plenty of others in   these turbulent years just before the revolution. 
For instance, the  Marquis de Luchet, who were opposed to the Illuminati but   supportive of the revolution, said in a speech:
"There exists a conspiracy in favor of despotism, against liberty, of incapacity against talent, of vice against virtue, of ignorance against enlightenment. This society aims to govern the world."
These inner conflicts among   those who supported the revolution was also seen in other secret   societies in France during this period. By the year 1788 almost every   lodge of Freemasons in Europe, as well as all courts, been infiltrated   by the agents of the Illuminati. 
Despite this many of the   established lodges in France remained loyal to the king, and only a few   took part in the revolution. It is interesting to note that the very   first time anyone saw revolutionaries wearing the Phrygian cap,  supposed symbol of the Illuminati and the Phrygian mysteries, was   at the forced interruption of a theatrical performance of Le Suborneur   by the Marquis de Sade on Monday the 5th of March 1792. 
Oddly   enough, no-one (except for a brief passage in Wilgus´ Illuminoids) has   to my knowledge suggested that the infamous Marquis was a member of the   Illuminati. Sometimes it seems that every famous person throughout   history has been pointed out as a member. 
It is like Ambrose Bierce   wrote about the Freemasons in his The Devil's Dictionary:
"An order with secret rites, grotesque ceremonies and fantastic costumes, which originating in the reign of Charles II, among working artisans of London, has been joined successively by the dead of past centuries in unbroken retrogression until now it embraces all the generations of man on the hither side of Adam and is drumming up distinguished recruits among the pre-Creational inhabitants of Chaos and the Formless Void.The order was founded at different times by Charlemagne, Julius Caesar, Cyrus, Solomon, Zoroaster, Confucius, Tothmes and Buddha. Its emblems and symbols have been found in the Catacombs of Paris and Rome, on the stones of the Parthenon and the Chinese Great Wall, among the temples of Karnak and Palmyra and in the Egyptian Pyramids -always by a Freemason."
The history of the   Illuminati, or it's supposed history as traced by various people, is   much like Bierce's´ satirical comment. 
   
Ludwig XVI, the French king, wasn't unaware of the revolutionary   activities and general displeasure among the populace. In June 1789 he   tried to introduce some social reforms that he hoped would calm the   populace. 
The king's greatest mistake was when he demanded that the   monarchy would be preserved and that the nobles were to retain the right   of veto in all future reforms. This led to minor rebellions that spread   and finally culminated in the taking of the Bastille. 
Mirabeau   said in a speech shortly thereafter:
"The idolatry of the monarchy has received a death blow from the sons and daughters of the Order of the Templars."
This statement suggests that   the Illuminati had ties to both the Cathars and the Knights   Templar. Under the later period of the revolution the influence of   the Illuminati becomes marked. The red Phrygian caps are used as symbol   of the revolutionaries, the symbol of the Illuminati, the eye in the   triangle, is present on many revolutionary documents printed in these   days. 
Two years after Ludwig XVI failed escape attempt, on the 21st   of January 1793, he was executed, and it is said that when the   kings head fell an old man cried from the crowd:
"De Molay, thou art avenged!"
De Molay was the leader of the Knights Templar who   was burned at the stake for witchcraft in March 1314 by the machinations   of Philip the Fair and Pope Clement V. 
It should perhaps be   mentioned that before his execution De Molay was held prisoner in   the Bastille, the first "victim" of the Revolution. After the French   revolution the Illuminati faced new difficulties, partly because   of the confused political and social situation in France, and partly   because the rest of the royal houses of Europe panicked when they   realized what had happened in France and banned all secret societies.    
Persecutions of Freemasons and Rosicrucian's began, and in 1792 an   ex-grandmaster of a Knights Templar inspired organization was lynched in   Versailles by an angry mob. Suspicion of all secret societies was   widespread, and increased when Robinson's     Proofs of a Conspiracy   was released in 1798. This volume contained an outline of the orders   supposed survival after it's suppression as the German Union, and how it   had engineered the Revolution. 
The book caused widespread   fear in Europe and New England, and was one of the main reasons for the   ban against secret societies in most of Europe.    
After the rise of Napoleon Bonaparte the days of the Illuminati in France were   numbered. Most of the existing Lodges of Freemasons and other secret   societies were infiltrated by the agents of Napoleon, who made sure to   remove all possible subversive organizations in order to consolidate his   power. Most conventional historians will argue that the Illuminati,   if it survived at all after the events of 1785-86, now was utterly   crushed.    
Historians of the more unconventional kind have argued that the Illuminati continues to thrive and influence the world even today.   
 
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