May this help
Who is Comte St GermainIt is said that as early as the third century AD, he took a keen interest in Freemasonry. At that time he was known as Albanus the son of a noble Roman family who were living in England, in the Roman town of Verulamium at the time of his birth.
While still a young man he went to Rome to join the army. It was in Rome that he was initiated into Freemasonry. He was also proficient in the Mithraic Mysteries, which were also closely associated with Freemasonry.
Some time after this he returned to his hometown of Verulamium where he held position of “ The master of the Works”. He was also the Imperial Paymaster.
Albanus introduced Freemasonry to England and it is said that he brought from France certain ancient charges, which are practically identical with those we use today.
In the year 303 he was beheaded by the Emperor Diocletain and 500 years later St Albans Abbey named after him was build over his remains.
His next incarnation was in Constantinople in 411 and went by the name of Proclus. He was a great exponent of Neo-Platonism and his influence overshadowed the mediaeval Christian church.
We next hear of him as Roger Bacon a Franciscan Friar born in 1211 during this incarnation he was a reformer of theology.
An English philosopher and pioneer scientist in 1268 He sent a copy of his “Opus Minus” and “Opus Magnus” a compendium on all branches of knowledge to his friend Pope Clement IV, in 1277 he was condemned by the Church and imprisoned for “certain novelties”, he was released in 1292. He was one of the most original and bold thinkers of the Middle Ages. He foresaw the magnifying property of the convex lense, the extensive use of gunpowder, and the possibility of mechanical boats and flying machines.
In 1375 he was born as Christian Rosenkreutz. It was during this lifetime that he founded the Rosicrucian Society.
The next incarnation of note was that of Francis Bacon in 1561, during that particular lifetime he wrote a secret cipher story in the many works he published
In 1618 he was appointed Lord Chancellor and raised to the peerage as Lord Verulum and in 1621 he was created Viscount St Albans.
In the 17th Century he was born as Jozsef Rakoczi, a prince of Transylvania however not much us known about this lifetime.
It was in the 18th Century that he was known as the Comte St Germain, it is said that he was a handsome, elegant man apparently in his 40’s and a favorite at the French court of Louis XV, in the ornate aristocratic salons. In the murky inns they discussed with awe and considerable relish the man who was “amazing as a witch” and whom all France knew as the “Deathless One”.
He claimed to have made an elixir that had kept him alive for 1000 years, that he could remover the flaws from diamonds and increase the size of pearls. There is certainly a lot of mystery and intrigue around him.
One day 1758 whilst talking with Madame La Pompadour she asked him if Francis the First was a man she could have loved? To which the Comte replied that he – Francis was a good sort of fellow but too fiery and that he would not listen to his advice. Nothing strange about this conversation you may say, until we realize that they were discussing King Francis who had been dead for 300 years when the conversation took place.
It is claimed he had been jailed by the English for his alleged sympathies with Bonnie Prince Charlie in 1745.
Fifteen years later in 1760 he gave an interview with the London Chronicle. On 1762 he held an important office in Russia and in 1770 he appeared in Naples in the uniform of a Russian General.
Count Orloff, Commander in Chief of the Russian Armies, a man not given to compliments paid public tribute to the work Comte St Germain had done in Russia.
In 1790 he was back in Paris, not looking a day older, here he met the Countess Adhemen, who mentioned the meeting in her memories which were published in 1820.
It was during the French Revolution that many stories of his exploits abound – about sightings of him at many differed locations as he aided France, about how he was able to avoid capture. The stories of the Scarlet Pimpernel by the Baroness Emmuska Orczy. Are based on his exploits during the French Revolution.
During the war with Prussia, King Louis XV sent the Comte to The Hague to make arrangement with his personal friend Duke Louis of Brunswick for a separate peace with Prussia.
There is no record of his death.
Reports say that he went to Venice to make artificial silk out of flax.
It is also reported that Annie Besant claimed to have met him once in London.
C W Leadbeater had a long conversation with him in 1901.
Just who was the Comte St Germain?
Natural son of the King of Portugal
A member of the Spanish Royal Family
An Italian
An Ascended Master
Chohan of the Seventh Ray
It is for you to decide.