St. Germain’s identity has shifted from French courtier to Freemason and Rosicrucian to prophet, Hidden Master, and a citizen of the planet Venus

The Many Incarnations of St. Germain:

  • A member of the Illuminati and the Masons
  • A conspirator in the French Revolution of 1789
  • Rasputin (1769-1916)
  • An Alchemist
  • A Knights Templar (Active from c. 1119 – c. 22 March 1312)
  • Christian Rosenkreuz (1378-1484)
  • In psychic contact with Madame Blavatsky (1831-1891)
  • One of the Seven Masters of Wisdom for Theosophists
  • The son of Prince Francis Rákóczy of Transylvania (1676–1735)
  • The bastard son of Queen Anna Maria of Spain (1606-1646)
  • The grandson of King James II of England (1633-1701 )
  • His real identity was made secret by the courts he worked, including Louis XV (1710-1774) and his mistress Marquise de Pompadour, of France (1721-1764)

The Real St. Germain?

In 1745, St. Germain turned up in London, where his music was published and performed. Twelve years later he was introduced into the Versailles court by Carechal de Belle-Isle (1684-1761) and remained in France from 1758 to 1760. St. Germain has also gone by the names of Surmont, Count Tsarogy and Count Welldone.

St. Germain was supposedly the pupil of Johan Georg Schrepfer (1738-1774) in Leipzig, who claimed to be a Mason, though he was not. Cagliostro (1743-1795) was rumored to be a pupil of St. Germain and also possessed the secret to immortality. St. Germain died, at least on one account, on February 27, 1784, from pneumonia. St. Germain was later sighted in Paris in 1835, and Napoleon III (1808-1873) kept a dossier file on him. Theosophist C.S. Leadbeater, in his Masters and the Path (1925), claimed to have met St. Germain in Rome. Theosophists claimed St. Germain was the incarnation of the goddess Venus, and Guy Ballard (1878-1939) of the I AM Movement claimed that St. Germain introduced him to visitors from Venus.

The Church Universal and Triumphant, led by theosophists Mark and Elizabeth Clare Prophet, produced a biography on St. Germain, claiming that he was the incarnation of an Atlantean, Merlin, Roger Bacon (c. 1220-1292), Francis Bacon (1561-1626), and Christopher Columbus (1451-1506).


Further Reading

The Bizarre True Story of The Count St. Germain” – website

mountshastamyths
Author: mountshastamyths

Lurking around here with more questions than answers