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Congress of
Vienna
In 1802, Europe
was made up of several hundred states, which were dominated by England,
Austria, Russia, Prussia and France, which was the most powerful
country. In 1804, when Napoleon Bonaparte took over France, his military
exploits had led to the complete control of virtually all of Europe.
Even today, France has more land than any other country in western
Europe. In 1812, when Napoleon moved against Russia; England, Spain and
Portugal were already at war with France. They were later joined by
Sweden, Austria; and in 1813, Prussia joined the coalition to end the
siege of Europe, and to "assure its future peace by the re-establishment
of a just equilibrium of the powers." In 1814, the coalition defeated
France, and in March of that year, marched into Paris. France's borders
were returned to their original 1792 location, which had been
established by the First Peace of Paris, and Napoleon was exiled to
Elba, a small island off the Tucson coast of Italy.
After the Napoleonic Wars, the Illuminati thought the world would be
tired of fighting, and would accept any solution to have peace. Through
the Congress of Vienna (1814-15), the Rothschilds hoped to create a sort
of League of Nations.
From September, 1814 to June, 1815, the four powers of the allied
coalition, winners of the Napoleonic Wars, met at the Congress of
Vienna, along with a large number of rulers and officials representing
smaller states. It was the biggest political meeting in European
history. Representing England, was Lord Robert Stewart, the 2nd Viscount
Castlereagh; France, with Foreign Minister Charles-Maurice Talleyrand de
Perigord; Prussia, with King Friedrich Wilhelm III; and Austria, with
Emperor Franz II.
Other representatives were: Frederick VI, King of Denmark; Maximilian
Joseph, King of Bavaria; Friedrich I, King of Wurttemburg; Napoleon II,
King of Rome; Eugene de Beaurharnais, Viceroy of Italy; King Friedrich
August I of Saxony; Count Leowenhielm of Sweden; Cardinal Consalvi of
the Papal States; Grand Duke Charles of Baden; Elector William of Hesse;
Grand Duke George of Hesse-Darmstadt; Karl August, Duke of Weimar; the
King of Bohemia; the King of Hungary; and emissaries from Spain,
Portugal, Denmark, Holland, and other European States.
The main concern of the Congress was to redistribute conquered
territories, create a balance of power, restore the pre-Napoleonic order
through King Louis XVIII, return the power to families who were ruling
in 1789, and to return the Roman Catholic Church to its former power.
Discussion revolved around the creation of a Federation of Europe that
would establish a group of independent kingdoms which would be tied
together through an administrative governing body that would, among
other things, provide military defense. In their plan, Switzerland was
made a neutral state that served as a repository for their finances.
In March, 1815, Napoleon left Elba, because the pension promised him by
King Louis XVIII was discontinued, and he believed that Austria was
preventing his companion, Marie Louise, and his son, the former King of
Rome (who became the Duke of Reichstadt in Vienna) from being able to
join him. Plus, he was made aware of the growing discontent with the
King. Thus Napoleon returned, began the Hundred Days War, and was
immediately labeled a "public enemy." The coalition at the Congress put
aside their diplomatic business, and joined in the battle.
Shortly before Napoleon's defeat at Waterloo, negotiations at the
Congress of Vienna were completed, and the treaty was signed on June 9,
1815. The Second Peace of Paris, in November, exiled Napoleon to St.
Helena, an island 1,000 miles off the African coast, where he died in
1821. The Russian czar saw through the planned European Federation,
recognizing it as an Illuminati ploy, and would not go along with it. On
September 26, 1815, the Treaty of Holy Alliance was signed by Alexander
I of Russia, Francis II of Austria, and Frederick William III of
Prussia, while the allies were negotiating the Second Peace of Paris.
The Treaty guaranteed the sovereignty of any monarch who would adhere to
Christian principles in the affairs of State. The Treaty made them a
"true and indissoluble brotherhood." Alexander claimed he got the idea
from a conversation with Castlereagh. Castlereagh later said that the
Alliance was a "piece of sublime mysticism and nonsense." Prussia and
Austria claimed they went along with it, out of fear of Russian
retaliation. Although the Alliance had no influence on matters, it did
indicate to other countries that they had banded together against them,
and it succeeded in temporarily crushing Europe's growing liberal
movement.
Austrian Minister of Foreign Affairs, Prince Klemens Furst von
Metternich, the most influential statesman in Europe, and a Rothschild
agent, said that the purpose of his idea for a European Federation was
only to preserve the social order, and he was convinced that Alexander
was insane.
In actuality, the reason for the Congress of Vienna, was for the
Illuminati to create a Federation, so they would have complete political
control over most of the civilized world. Many of the European
governments were in debt to the Rothschilds, so they figured they could
use that as a bargaining tool. The Illuminati, in their first attempt,
had come terrifyingly close to gaining control of the world. The head of
the family, Nathan Rothschild, awaited the day that his family would get
revenge by destroying the Czar and his family, which they did in 1917.
In 1916, the Senate Congressional Record (pg. 6781) reproduced a
document known as the "Secret Treaty of Verona" which had been signed in
November 22, 1822 by Austria (Metternich), France (Chateaubriand),
Prussia (Bernstet), and Russia (Nesselrode); and was partially the
reason for the establishment of the Monroe Doctrine. Its purpose was to
make some changes to the treaty of the Holy Alliance, and Article One
stated: "The high contracting powers, being convinced that the system of
representative government is equally as incompatible with the
monarchical principles as the maxim of the sovereignty of the people
with the divine right, engage mutually, in the most solemn manner, to
use all their efforts to put an end to the system of representative
governments, in whatever country it may exist in Europe, and to prevent
its being introduced where it is not yet known." Without a doubt, this
document represented the intentions of the International bankers as they
planned increasing domination over a growing world.
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