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Les Dossiers Secrets

A collection of documents and genealogies, deposited anonymously in the Bibliothèque Nationale de Paris between 1964 and 1967. The various documents are written under pseudonyms or attributed to people later found to be deceased. Pierre Plantard and Philippe de Chérisey are believed by some to be the authors although they denied any association. Fake or not, les Dossiers Secrets have been a katalyst for turning a local mystery into what is the Rennes-le-Château enigma today. The Dossiers Secrets were the foundation for the book Holy Blood, Holy Grail and many others

January 1964

Généalogie des rois mérovingiens et origine de diverses familles françaises et étrangères de souche mérovingienne, by Henri Lobineau (pseudonym), presumably named after the rue Lobineau near St. Sulpice in Paris or Dom Lobineau, the 18th century benedictine historian who lived and worked in Rennes (Bretagne). Dated Geneva, 1956

August 1965

Les descendants mérovingiens ou l’énigme du Razès Wisigoth, by Madeleine Blancasall (pseudonym), presumably named after Mary Magdalene and de the rivers Blanques and Sals that flow through Rennes-les-Bains. The document states that it is translated from the German by Walter Celse-Nazaire (pseudonym), presumably named after the patron saints of the church of Rennes-les-Bains

May 1966

‘Un trésor mérovingien à Rennes-le-Château’, by Antoine l’Ermite (pseudonym). presumably named after the saint who’s statue is in the church of Rennes-le-Chateau. It consists of 9 pages taken out of the book ‘Trésors du Monde enterrés, emmurés, engloutis‘. by Robert Charroux in 1962. It introduces Abbé Joseph Courtaly of Villarzel-du-Razès, allegedly a friend of Saunière who died in November 1964.

May 1966

Addendum to the first document by Serge Roux. The document consists of an article by,  Lionel Burrus take from ‘Semaine Catholique Genevoise’, a magazine that never existed and in which Burrus defends Henri Lobineau, which he claims is in fact Leo Schidlof. It also claims Schidlof was given the genealogies by Emile Hoffet.

June 1966

‘Engraved Stones of the Languedoc’, by Eugène Stüblein. The engravings in this book include the two tombstones of Marie de Nègre d’Ables and the Dalle des Chevaliers, which is captioned ‘Stone from the sepulchre of the princes Sigebert IV, Sigebert V and Béra III in St Magdalene’s church‘. Eugène Stüblein was a respected astronomer and meteorologist, who wrote some works on the history and antiquities of the Aude. However, his published works are well known, and there is no record of one called Engraved Stones of the Languedoc. The document in the Dossiers Secrets is a summary by Abbé Joseph Courtaly of Villarzel du Razès from 1962.


17th January 1967

Le Serpent Rouge, by Pierre Feugère, Louis Saint-Maxent and Gaston de Koker, who are real people that died between 15th February and 20th March 1967. It is a curious, symbolic prose-poem, with 13 stanzas named after the signs of the zodiac (with an extra sign, Ophiuchus the Serpent-Bearer, inserted between Scorpio and Sagittarius). It also contains a series of plans and diagrams relating to the seminary of St Sulpice and the nearby church of St Germain des Pres in Paris.

April 1967

‘Les Dossiers secrets de Henri Lobineau’, by Philippe Toscan du Plantier. It includes the infamous list of Grandmasters of the Priory of Sion from 1200 to the 20th century. Plantier was a real person that was arrested for possession of LSD 16 days before the deposition of the document and most probably had nothing to do with the whole thing.

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3 Responses to Les Dossiers Secrets

  1. Raven

    You can contact the Bibliotheque Nationale in Paris to get copies or go there to look at the originals.

  2. Princess Sophie

    Would it be possible to have a version of these documents where we might view them better and use translator helps as in a PDF file or Word document or otherwise collected together so we may enlarge them to actually read it all?

  3. Tea

    I there any way I could download this in a PDF file?

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