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Dominique Clairembault - A False Portrait of Martines de Pasqually

The portrait claimed to be of Martines de Pasqually that circulated was likely taken from a 1911 work by Arthur Edward Waite, who obtained it from the unreliable Léo Taxil. [2] Taxil included the portrait in one of his books from the 1890s but provided no information on its origin because it was false, as there is no known real portrait of Martines de Pasqually. [3] Léo Taxil was a master of creating false information to ridicule freemasonry and Catholicism for fame and notoriety, and the portrait has been known as fake since the 1960s. No authentic portraits of Martines exist, and the only description is from

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
140 views4 pages

Dominique Clairembault - A False Portrait of Martines de Pasqually

The portrait claimed to be of Martines de Pasqually that circulated was likely taken from a 1911 work by Arthur Edward Waite, who obtained it from the unreliable Léo Taxil. [2] Taxil included the portrait in one of his books from the 1890s but provided no information on its origin because it was false, as there is no known real portrait of Martines de Pasqually. [3] Léo Taxil was a master of creating false information to ridicule freemasonry and Catholicism for fame and notoriety, and the portrait has been known as fake since the 1960s. No authentic portraits of Martines exist, and the only description is from

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A false portrait of Martines de Pasqually

A drawing circulates, purported to be that of Martines de Pasqually, taken from a work of


Arthur Edward Waite published in 1911: The Secret Tradition of Free-Masonry. This
author most likely took it from the not recommendable Léo Taxil whose work he knew.

The portrait was indeed in one of his books, Le Diable au XIX siècle [The Devil in the
19th century] (Paris, Delhomme et Briguet, s.d. [1893]), with this legend: “Martines de
Pasqually, Founder of the Rite of the martinist Illuminates”. Léo Taxil does not mention
its origin for a good reason, because it is an imposture, since there is no portrait of the
first master of the Unknown Philosopher.

Léo Taxil, whose real name is Gabriel Jogand (1854-1907), had become the master of the
art of creating false information. He remains one of the most famous anti-Masonic
writers. The critic of Free-Masonry was his business. He used the Christian anti-Masonic
circles to gain fame, which he would never have had through is mediocre writing talent.
Provocative and opportunistic, this Freemason expelled by the Grand Orient succeeded to
utilize the anti-Masonic and anti-Semitic prejudices of his era to ridicule both, the
catholic superstition and those whom he nicknamed “Brethren of the Three-Points”. Thus
we should be surprised that some websites present this portrait as Martines! It is even
more astonishing as the mentioned portrait already has been denounced as fake, almost
forty years ago, by Robert Amadou, in the periodical l’Initiation (Nr. 4, December 1965).

Let us recall that there is no portrait of Martines, the only information we possess about
his physical appearance is what has been mentioned on a certificate of catholicity dated
April 29th 1772. On this document on which Martines had had registered before
embarking on the Duc de Duras, the ship on which he left France to go to Saint
Domingue, it can be read: “Medium size, black hair, wearing a wig”. (see Gérard van
Rijnberk, un Thaumathurge au XVIIIeme siècle, Martines de Pasqually, sa vie, son
oeuvre, son ordre [A Thaumathurgist of the 18th century, Martines de Pasqually, his life,
his work, his order], Lyon, P.Derain-L. Raclet, 1938, p.8)

Note: The false portrait of Martines we present here has been slightly colored and placed
on a color graduated-background.

Dominique Clairembault

Note: The texts, documents and illustrations published on this site (www.philosophe-
inconnu.com) are protected by a copyright; their reproduction, partial or integral, is
forbidden.

Translated by Chantal Bassiouni in 2009 with the permission of the author


Published on www.martinism.com with the permission of the translator

Source: http://www.philosophe-inconnu.com/Maitres/martines_portrait.htm
Additional Information:

Cover of Léo Taxil's - Le Diable au XIXe siècle


Page 377 from Léo Taxil's - Le Diable au XIXe siècle

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