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Patrick Bernauw

The Rennes-le-Château hoax

April 10, 2009 | Comment icon 11 comments
Image Credit: Wikipedia
Rennes-le-Château, a small medieval village in southwestern France, is internationally renowned for being in the middle of what probably may be the Greatest Conspiracy Theory of the 20th Century. A local restaurant owner wanted to increase business and spread some rumours of a lost treasure... And this was the origin for the non-fiction bestseller The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail or Dan Brown's historical faction thriller The Da Vinci Code. But the Rennes-le-Château Hoax was inspired by the facts that took place at the end of the 19th century, in the Chapel of the Holy Blood of Bruges…

Father Bérenger Saunière arrived in Rennes-le-Château in 1885. He soon was spending large sums of money, funding several building projects, such as the Church of Mary Magdalene. According to the rumours spread by Noël Corbu, who had opened in the fifties a restaurant in L'Hotel de la Tour, the former estate of Saunière, the source of his wealth was a treasure, hidden inside a pillar in his church.

An elaborate hoax
His story attracted Pierre Plantard, who wanted to play a vital role in the history of France and concocted an elaborate hoax, planting fake documents in the Bibliothèque Nationale de France, that implied Plantard was a descendant of a royal dynasty. In 1967, Gérard de Sède published a book about his friend's claim to fame. They chose the area and history of Rennes-le-Château as their setting.

The next step was The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail, in 1982 published by Michael Baigent, Richard Leigh and Henry Lincoln. They said Saunière found documents implying that the descendants of Jesus and Mary Magdalene were connected to the French royalty. Saunière found them in his church, in a Visigothic pillar, in 1891.

Saunière had been a teacher in the seminary of Narbonne, but being undisciplined, he was appointed in 1885 to Rennes-le-Château. He renovated his church, built a grand estate for himself (the Villa Bethania) and a personal library which resembled the Tower of David in Jerusalem (the Tour Magdala). In 1896, the bishop of Carcassone investigated how Saunière had been able to fund these building projects. The bishop relocated him to a different parish, but Saunière refused and resigned. In 1910 he was tried for fraud; he had been selling masses he never performed. In 1917, Saunière died in proverty.

Some theories developing around Rennes-le-Château and Bérenger Saunière said that Catholic Church was paying the priest vast sums to buy his silence, because he knew all about The Holy Blood - also known as The Holy Grail (Sang Royal, San Greal, Saint Grail) -, being "the bloodline of Christ". He might even have discovered the grave in which Christ had been buried. Arch-heretics such as the Templars and the Cathars once were the safekeepers of the Secret. It was also the reason why Saunière lost his belief and got involved with trendy occultist and maybe even satanist circles in Paris, featuring the famous composer Claude Debussy, the Belgian symbolist playwright Maurice Maeterlinck or that other "decadent" writer, Joris-Karl Huysmans. Saunière also knew Emma Calvé, the Maria Callas of her age, who was a high priestess of a Parisian esoteric sub-culture.
And nothing more?
The Mystery of Rennes-le-Château is probably a hoax, made out of facts and fiction, and inspired by hard facts that had nothing to do with southern France, but with the Dutch speaking part of Belgium, Flanders. I even strongly believe that the hoax was made up to turn the attention of the public away from the real secret that was kept in Bruges.

In 1891, the year Saunière allegedly "found" something in his church, Joris-Karl Huysmans - born in Paris from a Dutch father - published his novel Là-Bas (translated as Down There or The Damned) and was the cause of a public scandal because of his depiction of satanist circles in Paris. The novel had a very vivid Black Mass scene, calling Jesus Christ an "Artisan of Hoaxes", a "do-nothing King", a "coward God".

The "abominable truth" was that the Canon Docre, Huysmans' black mass celebrant, could be identified as the Flemish priest Louis Van Haecke, Chaplain of the Holy Blood Chapel in Bruges. He was reputed to have the tattoo of a cross on the soles of his feet, so that he could walk continually upon the symbol of the Saviour. Huysmans said that Van Haecke paid three visits to Paris, where he moved in occultist circles. He was seen in an establishment known for "its clientèle of renegade priests".

Huysmans stated that the Chaplain of the Holy Blood, keeper of the Holy Grail, lost his faith because Jesus, “the Artisan of Hoaxes”, didn't die at Golgotha... And who brought the one and only Holy Blood - or Holy Grail - in the 12th century to Bruges? The Knights Templar, together with a Count of Flanders, whose son later would commission Chrétien de Troyes to write the first Grail romance...

Copyright by Patrick Bernauw / Full Story: Rennes-le-Château and the Holy Blood of Bruges

Read also:
The Holy Blood of Bruges, a new Jerusalem
The Mysteries of the Mystic Lamb Comments (11)


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Recent comments on this story
Comment icon #2 Posted by Your Favorite Ghostwriter 15 years ago
I read "The Tomb of God: The Body of Jesus and the Solution to a 2,000-Year-Old Mystery" by Richard Andrews and Paul Schellenberger about 8 years ago. The authors claimed that Jesus' grave is in a farm field in France where the land owner will not let anyone investigate. Though the authors do use the Abbe Sauniere's discovery of the parchments; they support their claim further with secret geometric codes in the painting of that time and area. Interesting, intricate, and lengthy read. I am surprised it wasn't sited in this article. The article and the links provided are fully concentrating on "... [More]
Comment icon #3 Posted by Sunne 15 years ago
"Rennes le Chateau, The lost treasure" http://www.unexplained-mysteries.com/forum...t=0&start=0
Comment icon #4 Posted by HollyDolly 15 years ago
I don't think all of Holy Blood Holy Grail is a hoax. I do think Sauniere found something, but what I don't know. And since he went to Paris and met people like DeBussey and Emma Clavel, it is also possible he met Louis Van Haeck, the Canon Dorce of La Bas. Dover Publications has reprinted the book, I'll have to see if its still in print. If the two did met, we probably will never know what was discussed. Now, I believe it was last year on the American tv show,Nightline, on ABC they had Ben Hammot on talking about his findingf some bottles with messages in then in Rennes Le Chateau.The handwri... [More]
Comment icon #5 Posted by Dr. D 15 years ago
Image credit: Wikipedia Patrick Bernauw: Rennes-le-Château, a small medieval village in southwestern France, is internationally renowned for being in the middle of what probably may be the Greatest Conspiracy Theory of the 20th Century. A local restaurant owner wanted to increase business and spread some rumours of a lost treasure... And this was the origin for the non-fiction bestseller The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail or Dan Brown's historical faction thriller The Da Vinci Code. But the Rennes-le-Château Hoax was inspired by the facts that took place at the end of the 19th century, in the... [More]
Comment icon #6 Posted by Siara 15 years ago
He was reputed to have the tattoo of a cross on the soles of his feet, so that he could walk continually upon the symbol of the Saviour. *sigh* Maybe he walked across a hot iron grate barefoot during the summer (Paris had metal grates at that time) and burned the bottom of his feet. This rumor reminds me of something that happened after 9-11... someone noticed a cross in the Trade Center's wreckage ( The WTC contained zillions of perpendicular steel girders) and announced that it was a religious miracle. Sounds like yet another lurid piece of religious gossip.
Comment icon #7 Posted by Your Favorite Ghostwriter 15 years ago
Sorry but your scenario is more unbelievable that what I found in Holy Blood, Holy Grail or in my visit to Rennes les Chateau. If you prefer to call facts "unbelievable", I guess you're right.
Comment icon #8 Posted by Your Favorite Ghostwriter 15 years ago
*sigh* Maybe he walked across a hot iron grate barefoot during the summer (Paris had metal grates at that time) and burned the bottom of his feet. This rumor reminds me of something that happened after 9-11... someone noticed a cross in the Trade Center's wreckage ( The WTC contained zillions of perpendicular steel girders) and announced that it was a religious miracle. Sounds like yet another lurid piece of religious gossip. It's a fact that this fin de siècle "lurid piece of religious gossip" brought thousands of "satanist tourists" to Bruges (called "Bruges-la-Morte" by then) to see the Ch... [More]
Comment icon #9 Posted by Dr. D 15 years ago
If you prefer to call facts "unbelievable", I guess you're right. According to the rumours . . . . Some theories developing . . . . .He might even have . . . . is probably a hoax . . . . I even strongly believe . . . . He was reputed to have . . . . I guess we have different ideas about what is fact.
Comment icon #10 Posted by Your Favorite Ghostwriter 15 years ago
According to the rumours . . . . Some theories developing . . . . .He might even have . . . . is probably a hoax . . . . I even strongly believe . . . . He was reputed to have . . . . I guess we have different ideas about what is fact. The book "Là-Bas" is a fact, as is the resignation of Louis Van Haecke, chaplain of the Holy Blood Chapel, because of the allegations made in this book. The satanist circles of the late 19th century in Paris are well documented and were visited by Van Haecke and Saunière. Of course there are theories and rumours surrounding these facts. RLC is made out of fact... [More]
Comment icon #11 Posted by CausticGnostic 15 years ago
If the French have anything to do holy relics of any kind, then God is even more perverse than I thought. First the Jews, then the Romans, now the French. . . . If I were the French, I'd be worried. Yeah, yeah, I know, the Belgians don't consider themselves French, but they speak French. That's good enough for me--or I should say, bad enough. . . .


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