Corner Mystery - For many conspiracy theorists, the Illuminati  is the ultimate secret  society, a  group that stretches its tentacles of control  to encompass  the entire world. According  to these theorists, the members of the  Illuminati  are the real rulers of the world, and they  have been  pulling the strings from behind the  political scenes for centuries.  They have infiltrated  every government and every aspect of  society  around the planet—and some say that  their ultimate goal is to  accomplish a satanic  New World Order, a one-world government,  that  will prepare Earth’s citizens for the coming  of the Antichrist.  Although such paranoid claims make for  exciting reading, the Illuminati  of history,  rather than legend, was a secret society formed  in  Bavaria in 1776 with the political goal of  encouraging rebellion of the  people and the  abolition of the established monarchies.  
Structuring the society along the lines  of the  classes and orders of the Freemasons, the Illuminati  included  levels of enlightenment that  could be achieved by undergoing initiation   through various mystical rites and ceremonies.  Although the society’s  founder, a professor of  religious law named Adam 
Weishaupt, sought  to establish a new world order in  the late eighteenth-  century, the Illuminati was destroyed  within 15  years of its founding. 
The term “Illuminati” was  first used by  Spanish occultists toward the end of the fifteenth  century to signify those alchemists and  magicians who appeared to  possess the “light” of  spiritual illumination from a higher source.The  term may have originated in the Gnostic dualism   of the forces of Light and Darkness, and  many individuals who claimed  to be Illuminati,  those enlightened by a higher wisdom, joined  the  Rosicrucians and took refuge in France to  escape the fires of the  Spanish Inquisition.  The secret society known as the Order of  the  Illuminati was founded in the city  of Ingolstadt  in the southern German monarchy of  Bavaria on May 1,  1776 by Adam Weishaupt,  a 28-year-old professor of religious law.  Beginning  with only five members, Weishaupt’s  order grew slowly,  numbering about 60 in five  cities by 1780. The professor deliberately   blended mysticism into the workings of the  brotherhood in order to make  his agenda of  republicanism appear to be more mysterious  than a  political reform group. He joined the  Masons in Munich in 1777 and  adopted many  of their classes and orders and promised his initiates   that they would receive a special communication  of occult knowledge as  they  advanced higher in the ranks of the Illuminati.Weishaupt’s society had little effect on the  German  political structure until 1780 when  he attracted the interest of Adolf  Francis, the  Baron Von Knigge, a master occultist and a  man who had  risen to the highest levels in  many of the secret societies that  preceded the  Illuminati, including the Masons. Knigge had  no problem  melding his interest in the supernatural  with Weishaupt’s goal of  political revolution,  and the two men quickly established  branches of  the Illuminati throughout all of  Germany.
A few months after  Knigge had  joined Weishaupt’s cause, membership in the  Illuminati  swelled to 300.  Weishaupt had taken great care to enlist as  many young  men of wealth and position as possible,  maintaining that philanthropy, as well as  mysticism,  was a principal goal of the society.  He had also managed to create  around himself  a great aura of mystery, permitting himself to be  seen  by none but those in the highest ranks of  the society, encouraging the  myth that he was  an adept of such great power that he existed  largely  as an invisible presence. Initiates into  the ranks of the Illuminati  underwent secret  rites, wore bizarre costumes, and participated in   grotesque ceremonies that were designed to  give complete obedience to  Weishaupt. Soon  the Illuminati became a force to be reckoned  with  behind the scenes in Germany’s political  life, and its members worked  secretly to overthrow  both church and state.As their influence as a secret society grew,   Weishaupt and Knigge became concerned that a  good many authorities were  beginning to take  seriously the rumors of the existence of the  Illuminati.  If it should be proven that the society  existed in fact,  certain of the more powerful German  princes would take immediate steps  to suppress  it. To hide the society even more completely  from the  scrutiny of public view, the leaders  implemented Weishaupt’s original  plan of grafting  the Illuminati  onto the larger brotherhood of  the Freemasons. The Illuminati were  already utilizing  the classes and grades of Freemasonry, so  the  initiates of the Illuminati would easily amalgamate  with the more  established society. To  appear to become one with the Freemasons  would  allow Illuminism to spread more widely  and rapidly, and Weishaupt and  Knigge had great  confidence that they would soon attain complete   control over the blended organizations.
The hierarchy within the  Freemasons were  not long in discovering that the two interlopers  had  joined the fraternal brotherhood with  less than honorable motives, and  in 1782, a  group within the Masons called the Strict  Observance  demanded that a council be held  at Wilhelmsbad to examine the true  beliefs of  Weishaupt and the Illuminati. Knigge’s powers  of persuasion  effectively blocked the attempt  of the Strict Observance contingent to  expel  Illuminism from their society, and he managed  to enroll almost  all the members of the council  in the Illuminati.
By 1784,  Illuminati membership  had risen to 3,000, and the secret society   appeared on the verge of assuming control of  the entire Masonic  establishment. At the same time that their goals seemed  within their  grasp, Weishaupt and Knigge fell  into a sharp disagreement about the  correct  manner of proceeding with their master plan;  and in April  1784, Knigge withdrew from the  Illuminati, leaving Weishaupt the  supreme  commander of the increasingly powerful society.  Later in that  same year, a number of initiates  who had reached the highest level  within  the Illuminati became disillusioned when the  special  supernatural communication from a  higher source that Weishaupt had  promised  had still not manifested after eight years of  membership in  the society. It now became  obvious to them that Weishaupt had only   sought to use them as blind instruments for  the achievement of his  political ambitions.
The Illuminati was denounced as a subversive   organization by many of its former members,  some of whom informed the duchess dowager  Maria Anna of  Bavaria and the Bavarian  monarch, Carl Theodore, that the society   sought the overthrow of church and state.  In June 1784, Carl Theodore  issued an  edict outlawing all secret societies in his  provinces. In  March 1785, another edict  specifically condemned the Illuminati.   Weishaupt had already fled to a neighboring  province in February, 1785,  where he hoped to  inspire the loyal members of the Illuminati to   continue as a society. In 1787, the duke of  Bavaria issued a final edit  against the Order of  the Illuminati, and Weishaupt apparently  faded  into obscurity. Although he never realized  his goal of a German  Republic and the  overthrowing of the European  monarchies,  the sparks that he had ignited with the Illuminati  would  soon burst into the flames of the French  Revolution in 1789.
 
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