So the main thought of the Illuminati Order is the work of Tadeusz Grabianka. The thought of taking power in
Russia was a central idea guiding the Polish underground from the 80s of the 18th century until 1917. The first
step to limit Russia to its ethnic territory was made by Jozef Sulkowski, then Adam Mickiewicz, and Israel Parvus from Berezina. The continuator of the main thought of Tadeusz Grabianka about taking power in the tsar state - in the Russian Empire - was the political movement of Jozef Pilsudski.
Remember here on connections:
Jozef Pilsudski - Andrzejak - Karol Zbieranowski - Marshal Marian Spychalski - Miezonka - Konstantynowicz, and
then Moscow:
General Franciszek Paszkowski - Armand - Demonsi of Kazan - Apolon Konstantynowicz + Anna Konstantynowicz
nee Armand - LENIN;
and further Breguet - Duflon - Piotr Maleszewski - Michal Poniatowski - Venture de
Paradise - and we return to Jozef Sulkowski; here, Marshal Murat and Napoleon Bonaparte;
again from Marshal
Jozef Pilsudski we have lines to Aldona Dzierzynski + Feliks Dzierzynski and Pilar Pilchau of Parnu / Parnawa -
Oziemblowski and Terlecki.
And again, we return to Wojciech Paszkowski + Franciszek Paszkowski, but this time we
are going to Sebastian Bystrzanowski in Trzebniow and the Templars in Scotland. We're joining Br. Bystrzanowski
with George Washington. We similarly connect General Franciszek Paszkowski - General Tadeusz Kosciuszko -
General Stanislaw Fiszer - and then Mielzynski of Chobienice - von Unruh / Niepokojczycki of Sluck and Kargowa -
Oppeln-Bronikowski of Kunowo {Kiedrzynski}; Wojciech Paszkowski + Artur Potocki and again the Templars.
Artur Potocki with a network of connections to Cracow / Krakow, Berezina / BEREZYNA, and Lubuszany
close to Miezonka. And Miezonka: Zarako Zarakowski, Malkiewicz, Oskierka, Prozor, Stafania Radziwill, and
Chrapowicki of Swolna. And Chrapowicki of Swolna - this line leads to Wankowicz from Kaluzyca and to
Konstantynowicz from Miezonka, Swolna, Tallinn, and Moscow.
The structure of the Illuminati was taken over as a whole in the Spring of 1937 in the Soviet Union by Stalin and our
enemies. This network of multi-country intelligence underwent degeneration and it transformed around 1961 into a
globalist movement.
The main role is currently played - after 2015 - by Russia and China as the heirs of this globalist
movement and Soviet ideology - currently the main enemies of Donald Trump, the USA and contemporary anti-
Communist Poland.
Pierre-Augustin Caron / Beaumarchais, b. 1732, d. 1799, watchmaker, inventor, diplomat, spy [see BYSTRZANOWSKI and Tadeusz Kosciuszko in 1776], arms dealer, and
revolutionary;
born to Andre-Charles Caron, a watchmaker from Meaux. The family had converted to Roman Catholicism.
Beaumarchais in 1753, invented an escapement for watches that allowed them to be made substantially more
accurate;
Jean-Antoine Lepine / L'Pine / Jean-Andre Lepaute, the royal clockmaker in France became interested his
invention.
Jean-Antoine Lepine was born as Jean-Antoine Depigny, son of Philibert Depigny; beginning his horological career
under the direction of Mr. Decroze, manufacturer of Saconnex watches, in the suburbs of Geneva (Switzerland).
He moved to Paris in 1744 serving as apprentice to Andre-Charles Caron (1698 - 1775), at that time clockmaker to
Louis XV.
In 1756 he married to Caron's daughter; 1762, he became master horologist and
he was teacher of Abraham-Louis
Breguet, to whom he had a business relation over many years (by Wikipedia). Lepine's work influenced particularly
Abraham Louis Breguet; Breguet almost always used Lepine calibres and then modified them. Along with Ferdinand
Berthoud, Lepine was master of Breguet.
In 1747 Abraham-Louis Breguet was born, son of Jonas-Louis Breguet / John Louis (more inf. at my webpages!) and
Suzanne-Marguerite Bolle in Neuchatel. 1758 died his father; his wife remarried in 1759 with a first cousin of her
husband, Joseph Tattet, holding the watchmaking profession. Led by his stepfather, the young Abraham-Louis was
introduced to watchmaking. 1762 Breguet arrived in France, began his apprenticeship with a clockmaker of Versailles;
Breguet had two great masters: Ferdinand Berthoud and Jean-Antoine Lepine.
"...Ca. 1792 the Duke of Orleans went to England and met John Arnold, Europe's leading watch and clockmaker. The
Duke showed Arnold a clock made by Breguet, who was so impressed that he immediately travelled to Paris and
asked Breguet to accept his son as an apprentice.
As Breguet's fame gradually increased he became friendly with revolutionary leader Jean-Paul Marat, who also hailed
from Neuchatel.
Salomons' biography records that Marat and Breguet were at the house of a mutual friend one day
when an angry crowd gathered outside, shouting "Down with Marat!", but Breguet contrived their escape by
disguising Marat as an old woman, and they left the house arm in arm, unmolested. In 1793 Marat discovered that
Breguet was marked for the guillotine, possibly because of his friendship with Abbe Marie, and his association with
the royal court; in return for his own earlier rescue, Marat arranged for a safe-pass that enabled
Breguet to escape to
Switzerland, from where he travelled to England. He remained there for two years, during which time he worked for
King George III. When the political scene in France stabilised, Breguet returned to Paris.
In 1795 Breguet returned to Paris with many ideas for innovations in watch and clock making..."
[all above copyright by Wikipedia].
At present the Montres Breguet SA is a member company of the Swatch Group of western Switzerland in L'Abbaye
(L'Abbaye is a municipality in the canton of Vaud, Switzerland; around 30 km north - west of Lausanne). It was
founded by
Abraham-Louis Breguet in Paris in 1775.
Abraham-Louis Breguet or Bréguet b. 10 January 1747 and died on 17 September 1823, born in Neuchātel,
Switzerland. Originally Prussian Abraham Louis Breguet began his career as a watchmaker but also a physicist.
His son Louis-Antoine Breguet. His ancestry was French but his family were Protestants so they fled to Switzerland
after Edict of Nantes in 1685. Abraham Breguet met
Abraham-Louis Perrelet and Xavier Gide.
In 1795 Breguet returned to Paris.
Circa 1807 Breguet brought in his son, Louis-Antoine (born 1776) as a business
partner, and from this point the firm became known as Breguet et Fils. He sent his son to London to study with the
great English chronometer maker,
John Arnold.
Abraham-Louis Breguet died in 1823 and it was carried on by Louis-Antoine to 1833 (he died in 1858), and after the
business continued under Abraham-Louis' grandson
Louis Franēois Clément Breguet born on 22 Dec. 1804
in Paris.
And now you will finally see, after 200 years, on the ideological and personal connection between the Illuminati of
Tadeusz Grabianka and the Konstantynowicz family from Moscow and Miezonka - Tallinn - Swolna.
So at the beginning of this discussion, let's go back to visit of Tadeusz Grabianka in London in 1785/1786, and
see who he met with.
Then where did these people live and who they and their closest friends were.
Hindmarsh mentions the visit of Count Grabianka, who arrived in London on 7 December 1785. During his stay,
lasting until the end of 1786, Grabianka became a visitor at DUCHE's Asylum in Theosophical Society.
Tadeusz Grabianka kept in touch with them until at least 1789, acc. to M. L. Danilewicz, ed. 1968.
Grabianka "had his own Masonic Lodge". "Grabianka was affiliated with the revolutionary Masons in
Avignon".
Robert Hindmarsh (1759-1835) was an English printer and the founder of Swedenborgianism.
"... His father, James Hindmarsh, was one of John Wesley's preachers, and was in 1777 under training by Wesley in
London".
Robert Hindmarsh "got an apprenticeship as a printer in London, and he later opened his own print shop, setting up
for himself at 32 Clerkenwell Close".
32 Clerkenwell Close is situated ca 400 metres north-west to The Priory Church of the Order of St John! The
Crown Tavern of LENIN - 190 metres west to The Priory Church of the Order of St John, and 200 m. south
to above Robert Hindmarsh shop!
The offices of the Lenin's Iskra were at 37a Clerkenwell Green, that is 250 m. south to 32 Clerkenwell
Close.
Note:
James Brown, at 24, Noble-street (south-east, ca 1200 m from the Lenin's 'Iskra'), that is Clerkenwell
(Barbican) in 1828, and at 3, Newcastle place, Clerkenwell-close (900 m south of the Lenin's 'Iskra'.
The BROWN family was living merely 70 m. south to named Robert Hindmarsh (1759-1835)!
"About 1781 Robert Hindmarsh met with one of Anthoinette Bourignon's works, and afterwards with those of Hans
Engelbrecht; ... He first discovered Emanuel Swedenborg's theology when he read Heaven and Hell and Intercourse
between the Soul and the Body in 1782. He was instantly converted.
In December 1783 Robert Hindmarsh formed a society (originally consisting of five members) for the purpose of
studying Swedenborg's works. ... Peter Prow, William Bonington, and John August Tulk. They organized a public
meeting ... on December 5, 1783 at the 'London Coffee House' on Ludgate Hill. They were joined by one other
member, William Spence. ... were joined by Henry Pickitt and James Glen.
...
In January 1784 they formed 'The Theosophical Society' ... Rooms were taken for the society in New Court,
Middle Temple. Among the members were John Flaxman, William Sharp, ... and Hindmarsh's father ...
Hindmarsh printed for this society Swedenborg's Apocalypsis Explicata (1785-1789)
... and
in 1786 ... on 31 July
sixteen worshippers met at the house of Thomas Wright, a watchmaker, in the Poultry.
...
five, including Robert Hindmarsh, were baptised into the 'new church' ...".
Above
John Flaxman (1755 - 1826) was a British sculptor;
he worked as a modeller for Josiah Wedgwood's pottery. He spent several years in Rome, where he produced his
first book illustrations.
And
William Sharp (1749 - 1824), was an English engraver and artist.
Hindmarsh printed Swedenborg's Apocalypsis Explicata (1785-1789), and in 1786 he issued his own abridgment
of Bourignon's Light of the World.
Mentioned
Thomas Wright was a clockmaker and watchmaker; scientific instrument maker; active in 1770
- 1792.
He was a close person in relation to John Arnold (1736 - 1799), an English watchmaker and inventor.
"John Arnold was the first to design a watch that was both practical and accurate, and also brought the term
'chronometer' into use in its modern sense, meaning a precision timekeeper. His technical advances enabled the
quantity production of marine chronometers for use on board ships from around 1782. ...
he and Abraham Louis Breguet largely invented the modern mechanical watch.
Certainly one of his most important
inventions, the overcoil balance spring is still to be found in most mechanical wristwatches to this day".
"... in 1783, Earnshaw - through another watchmaker, Thomas Wright - took out a patent that included
Earnshaw's pattern of integral compensation balance and spring detent escapement in the multiple specification.
However, both of these were undeveloped and compared to Arnold's were of little use, the balance especially having
to be redesigned. ... the Board of Longitude granted Earnshaw and Arnold awards for their improvements to
chronometers. ... John Arnold's son, John Roger Arnold, received £1672. ...
Earnshaw is also generally regarded as one of the pioneers of chronometer development ...".
"The important French watchmaker Abraham Louis Breguet became a great friend of Arnold. In 1792, the Duke of
Orleans met Arnold in London and showed him one of Breguet's clocks. Arnold was so impressed that he immediately
travelled to Paris and sought permission for Breguet to take on his son as his apprentice.
Arnold appears to have
given Breguet carte blanche to incorporate or develop any of Arnold's inventions and techniques into his own
watches
... Arnold's pattern first appeared in 1783, on the enamel dials Arnold designed for his small chronometers,
and the proportions and layout of their figuring is identical to that of the classic 'Breguet' type of engine turned
metal dials which appeared around 1800, and which were quite unlike anything else made in France or Switzerland at
the time...".
The Breguet family cooperated also with Chambrier, V. Foy, the French government (dial telegraph in 1845),
the Telegraph Company in 1863 (electric telegraph - Breguet System, late 19th century), in Britain in the 1860s and
1870s with Wood;
Edward George b. in Clerkenwell, Islington, January 1812, died in 1896 in London, who was
friend of Thomas Cooper, the Chartist (galvanic telegraph, Crossley's Telegraph in Halifax);
d'Arlincourt
(transmitter).
Breguet patented a Telegraph Communicator - Breguet Alphabetical Type, circa 1870; manufactured the telephone
transmitter (Boudet, Laborde, Breguet, Ader, Du Moncel, and others) and telephone receivers (Bell, Breguet, and
others).
Note: Winnie Buller b. in Bacton, Norfolk, receives pilot's license from Breguet School at Douia, France.
Watch maker, William Brown
[compare: James Brown, at 24, Noble-street (south-east, ca 1200 m from the
Lenin's 'Iskra'), that is Clerkenwell (Barbican) in 1828, and at 3, Newcastle place, Clerkenwell-close (900 m
south of the Lenin's 'Iskra'
[compare the Duflon and Konstantynowicz Company in Russia].
The BROWN family was living merely 70 m. south to named Robert
Hindmarsh (1759-1835)]
was dad of Edward Brown (born abt 1829). He was a watch maker, too.
William Brown b. ca 1800, acc. to me; it was mistake - 1819. Elizabeth Brown maybe was a wife.
On the Clerkenwell district in London:
Izydor Jakub Gudak / Isadore Jacob Gudak / Irving John Good / I. J. or Jack Good b. 1916, a British mathematician
who worked as a cryptologist at Bletchley Park with Alan Turing; from a Polish-Jewish family in London. His father
Mosheh Oyved / Morris Edward Good or Moshe Oved alias Edward Good b. in Poland in 1885 - 1958, was a
watchmaker, artist, sculptor (also from Jacob Epstein and Ben Uri; friend of John Ringling), the owner of a jewelry
shop (Cameo Corner in Museum Street near the British Museum; on cameos, antique watches and clocks; Jewish
ritual objects), poet, Zionist and the founder of the Ben Uri Society / Ben Uri Gallery / Museum in London, a Yiddish
writer, a dealer in antique jewellery.
He learnt the trade of a watches ca 1900, but in 1902 or 1903 emigrated to
England. Mother Sophia Polikoff. Mosheh Oved / Moshe Gudak in London set up an antique jewellery shop. Sophia
Polikoff was born in Russia and came to London at age eight with her parents. Morris and Sophia met in London.
The
Cameo Corner was founded in 1908 in New Oxford Street (No 1, close to Kingsway Str., and ca 1700 meters to
west-south-west of Clerkenwell in London, by the Theobalds Road to the west) by Moshe Oved and in 1939 moved
to its permanent home in Museum Street, Bloomsbury (1200 to 1400 meters to the west of Clerkenwell).
Cameo
Corner was the principal centre for the sale of jewellery in London for the first half of the twentieth century.
On the other side of this mirror, in 1904 Sir Charles Hardinge, the British ambassador in St Petersburg, discovered
that a servant had been offered 1000 pounds to steal the embassy's main cipher. And after 1917, the Okhrana became
the first modern intelligence service to make one of its major prorities the theft of foreign ciphers. Dmitri
Aleksandrovich Bystroletov, Hans or Andrei, born 1901, the son of a Kuban cossack mother and novelist Aleksei
Tolstoy, conquest for the OGPU in Prague in 1927, a codenamed Laroche from the French embassy. Acc. to The
Sword and the Shield: The Mitrokhin Archive and the Secret History of ..., by Christopher Andrew, Vasili Mitrokhin.
In 1902, Vladimir Lenin moved the publication of the Iskra (Spark, issues 22 to 38) to London at 37a Clerkenwell
Green. At that time Vladimir Lenin resided on Percy Circus, less than half a mile north of Clerkenwell Green. In
1903 the newspaper 'Iskra' / 'Iskry' was moved to Geneva.
In summer 1904 - Lenin and Krupskaya / Krupska left Geneva for longer holiday; Lenin and Krupskaya settled first
in Lausanne, then changed it to Montreux in 1904 (Kropotkin, Konstantynowicz), the starting point of a multi-week
trip to the mountains, chose the wildest trails, climbed into the wilderness, away from people; their journey was very
interesting: from Montreux (with Clarens, here Konstantynowicz, Breguet, Rey, Duflon, Kropotkin, Bakst),
Villeneuve, to Aigle - 11 km south of Villeneuve (Duflon), then tens of kilometers along the river Rhone (to south and
south-east), stay in Loiche - les - Bains / Leukerbad - ca 29 / 34 km south-east of Gstaad, Saanen and Turbach
(Fraucci or Frautchi - Artuzow), walk down through the Gemmipass - 28 km south-east of Gstaad, in the mountains
of the Bernese canton - 30 to 40 km east of Saanen and Turbach (Frautchi), visit to the Jungfrau / Jungfraujoch - ca
55 to 60 km east of Saanen, again stay at Izentale (or Iseltwald) on Brienzersee - 60/70 km east-north of Saanen, next
the way back into the Canton of Geneva (back home on west from Spiez, Saanen, Villeneuve, Montreux or from
Chateau d'Oex, Montbovon, Les Avants to Montreux some on a railway.
The last of the Breguets, "... looked around for someone suitable to make a partner and continue the Firm after his
time. He knew a first-class mechanician in Clerkenwell named Edward Brown, who was induced to go to Paris to look
after the factory. Eventually he became a partner, and later the owner and the head of the Breguet Firm. Edward
Brown died, aged 66, in 1895, and was succeeded by his two sons Edward and Henry, of whom Edward retired, ...
1920.
Thus Monsieur Henry Brown became the Head of Breguet's Firm ... The general information I have gained by
consulting certain books such as ... Mr. Hull, of the Firm of Messrs. Le Roy, in London, Mr. Henry Brown ... and his
son, Mr. George Brown... Mr. Desoutter, of London, who has made a life- long study of Breguet's work...",
acc. to THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, LOS ANGELES, ,BREGUET 1747 - 1823',
BY SIR DAVID LIONEL SALOMONS.
The Brown family and others in Clerkenwell:
James Brown, at 24, Noble-street (south-east, ca 1200 m from Lenin 'Iskra'), Clerkenwell (Barbican) in 1828, and at
3, Newcastle place, Clerkenwell-close (900 m south of Lenin 'Iskra').
The Baume Brothers, Importers of Geneva Watches, at 9, Ashley street, Northampton square, Clerkenwell, and at
Aux Bois, Canton of Berne, Switzerland.
BROWN Sophia b. 1859 in Clerkenwell, London, parent James Brown.
Antoine-Louis Breguet drove the prestigious business into bankruptcy. "His son, Louis-Clement Breguet, eventually
took over. He invented the first electric clocks but decided to leave and concentrate on electric telegraphs and
telecommunications. The business was sold to the English watchmaker, Edward Brown".
Above
Thomas Wright, was the watchmaker to King George III.
In 1781 Thomas Earnshaw invented the spring detent escapement and Thomas Wright, watchmaker to King George
III, agreed to pay.
Thomas Wright, Poultry, London, who was 'Watch-maker to the King'. Thomas Wright: 6 Poultry,
London was admitted to the Clockmakers Company in 1770 as 'Maker to the King' signed on a bracket clock.
"Another inventor of improvements in the chronometer was Thomas Earnshaw, who was born at Ashton-under-
Lyne in 1749. After serving his apprenticeship to a watchmaker, he came to London and worked for some time as a
finisher of verge and cylinder watches; he also taught himself watch-jewelling and cylinder-escapement making,
making use of ruby cylinders and steel wheels. Earnshaw worked for John Brockbank, Thomas Wright of the Poultry,
and other makers, and in 1781 improved the chronometer ...
After showing a watch with his new device to Brockbank, it was agreed that Wright should patent it, but the latter
kept the watch for a year to observe its going, and did not procure the patent till 1783. Meanwhile John Arnold had
registered a patent specification claiming the device as his own invention ...
In 1795 Earnshaw set up in business for himself at 119, High Holborn, one door east of what is now Southampton
Row. ...
He died at Chenies Street in 1829, but the business was carried on by his son Thomas in Holborn, and afterwards at
87, Fenchurch Street. There is a portrait of Earnshaw engraved by Bullin from a painting by Sir Martin Archer
Shee...".
Hindmarsh was the founder of Theosophical Society in England.
Together with De Thome;
Count Cagliostro;
with the member Chastanier - he was also the member of "illumine
d'Avignon"
[with H. JONES in England; Marquis de THOME in Avignon; Thomas Duche - the son of Jacob
Duche in 1785/1786].
Chastanier was a supporter of a Plan for a Universal Society [with JACOB DUCHE] of SWEDENBORG
[Richard Brothers, too].
Richard Brothers (1757 - 1824)
"was an early believer and teacher of British Israelism, a theory concerning the
Lost Ten Tribes of Israel. Brothers was born in Port Kirwan, Newfoundland (earlier known as Admiral's Cove). He
was educated in Woolwich, England. He entered the Royal Navy and served under Keppel and Rodney. ...
He then travelled on the continent of Europe and later married Elizabeth Hassall in 1786.
...
Brothers believed that he could not serve the King as head of the Church of England.
...
Brothers claimed to hear the voice of an attending angel which proclaimed to him the fall of Babylon the Great,
which was in fact London. ...
In 1793 Brothers declared himself to be the apostle of a new religion. He began to see
himself as possessing a special role in the gathering of the Jews back into Palestine, in particular, the 'Jews' who
were hidden amongst the population of Great Britain. In similarity to modern British Israelists, Brothers asserted that
the 'hidden Israel' had no notion of its biological lineage and that part of his role would be to teach them of their true
identity and lead them to the land of Canaan. Brothers proclaimed himself to be Prince of the Hebrews ...".
All this was declared in the first British Israelist publication in 1794.