Secrets of the
Bank of England Revealed at Last!!
"Give
me control of a nation's money
and I care not who makes her laws"
Meyer Rothschild
The
Jesuit founded Bank of England was the driving force behind the separation
of England from her colonies in the New World:
"The
American Revolution, like nearly all revolutions in history, was an
uprising not against a king and his ministers, but against a system
and a state of mind. Nor was the system the work of George III, Hillsborough,
Townshend, or Lord North, for they were its products not its creators.
It was the result of the Revolution of 1688, which
gave power to the men of the landowning and monied classes of England.
They, although they bore titles of nobility and constituted the county
aristocracy, were of middle-class origin and under their rule were
fashioned those rigid and sinister ideas of power and government
which permeated the whole official world of king, ministries, parliament,
council, departments, and boards, all having, to do with administration
at home and abroad" (Andrews,
Colonial Background of the American Revolution, p. 218).
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King William
of Orange (1650-1702). He chartered the usury Bank
of England in 1694.
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The
Bank of England was chartered in 1694 in order to wrest the
New World from the mother country and create a RIVAL power to
Great Britain. This was to implement the Bull of Pope Alexander
VI.
King William
III (king from 1688 to 1702) was a moneychanger from Holland.
During the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, England spent a hugh
amount of money helping the Hollanders to throw off the Spanish
yoke. Their reward was the Bank of Rome controlled
William of Orange.
King William's
wife, Queen Mary, died in 1694 the very year that the Bank was
chartered. Was it another timely demise like King Henry VII??
The Bank
of England's strategy was to completely control the British
Government. Then they could apply pressure on the colonies and
force them to rebel. Lastly, they would impose a Bank
of England type bank on the Colonies. This they did in the year
1791. It was called the Bank of the "U.S." General
Jackson refused to renew the bank charter and it died an unnatural
death in1836. The corrupt bank was re-chartered in 1913 under
the name "Federal" Reserve Bank of the "U.S." |
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Bank
Underground station is named after the Bank. |

All roads
and rails lead to the Bank.
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Bank
headquarters on Threadneedle St. is also the British Government's
Headquarters since 1694. |
The first banks
were moneychangers' benches.
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This
picture of an evil spirit or demon directing the banker is from
The English Usurer or Usury Condemned by John Blaxton,
preacher of God's Word, London, 1634.
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"The
term BANK is derived from banco, the Italian word for
bench, as the Lombard Jews in Italy kept benches in the
market place, where they exchanged money and bills, When a banker
failed, his bench was broken up by the populace; and from this
circumstance sprang the term bankrupt "(Francis, History
of the Bank of England, p.15). |
The Bank of England
kept the hangman working day and night!!
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This is
a copy of the famous Bank
Restriction Note that helped end the death penalty for forging
the counterfeit money!! |
The
philosophy of the Bank or any bank is: LET THE MONEY DO THE
WORK. However, the bankers worked the hangman to death
because forging the counterfeit money was
punishable with death. Men and women by the hundreds
were hanged and even after the repeal of the law, the punishment
was exile for life to Australia. If thebankers had lived at
the time of
Edward VI, they would have been the ones behind
bars!!
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A British Member
of Parliament said this about the Bank of England in 1810.
"There
is something so consummately ridiculous in the idea of a nation's
getting money by paying interest to itself upon its own stock, that
the mind of every rational man naturally rejects it. It is, really,
something little short of madness to
suppose, that a nation can increase its wealth; increase its means
of paying others; that it can do this by paying interest to itself.
When time is taken to reflect, no rational
man will attempt to maintain a proposition so shockingly absurd"
(William
Cobbett, M.P., Paper Against Gold, p.83).
This monetized debt
scam that the Bank of England started in 1694 was copied exactly by
the "Federal" Reserve Bank system in the U.S. It seems that the usurers
have absolutely no originality or creativity even with all the brains
their ill-gotten gains enables them to buy.
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King
James VI & I. |
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James
VI of Scotia Minor, and I of England, founder of the British
Empire. He sent the Pilgrim Fathers to America. The King
James Bible is named after him.
James Charles
Stuart was born on June 19, 1566 at Edinburgh Castle in Scotland.
His father, Lord Darnley, was murdered in early 1567 before
young James was 1 year old. His mother, Mary Queen of Scots,
subsequently ascended to the Scottish throne. Her reign, however
was short lived and she was forced to abdicate in favor of her
son on July 24, 1567. Little James was crowned King James VI
of Scotland five days later at the tender age of 13 months.
Reformation leader John Knox preached the sermon at his coronation.
A close
alliance has ALWAYS existed between the Scots and the French.
The mother of Queen Mary and grandmother of King James was French
by birth. |

The Pilgrim
Fathers faced a great howling wilderness when they reached North
America. |
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In
1620, the Pilgrim Fathers landed at Plymouth Rock, Massachusetts,
They were Protestant Christians sent out by that great Scot
-- King James VI & I. They were the CHOSEN PEOPLE and God
gave them the best land in the world because He always saves
the best for last and as
a heritage because they came to seek GOD . . . not GOLD.
Most of
the Pilgrims were poor and brought very little money with them
from the Old World. |
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Henry
Frederick Stuart, Prince of Wales. |
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Prince
Henry (1694 -1612), was the oldest son of King James and first
in line to the throne.
Like his
father, he was a devout Protestant Christian and a very unlikely
candidate to charter a bank. For that reason, he was given the
poison cup at the young age of 18 years.
Cape
Henry in Virginia is name after him.
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The English Civil
War was caused by the Jesuits
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King
Charles I was beheaded in 1649. |
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Charles Stuart (1600-1649) was the second son
of king James and succeeded his murdered brother.
During his
reign, civil war broke out in England between Parliament and
the king.
Oliver Cromwell
led the Parliamentary army (Roundheads) against the king's army
(Cavaliers) and soundly defeated the king's forces.
The king
was arrested and beheaded in 1649 - the ONLY king of England
ever to be subjected to such an ordeal.
Wars always
incur huge debts and of course the moneylenders were just waiting
for their Bank to be officially chartered before they would
lend at usury to repay the debts. |
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King
Charles II (1660-1685) was the second son of the beheaded Charles
I.
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King
James II (1633-1688), was the third son of King Charles I.
He was forced to abdicate in 1688. He was the last male Stuart
to sit on the throne of England.
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None of the Stuart
monarchs would grant a charter to the Bank of England!!
None
of the Stuarts would grant the fervent desire of the Jesuits and charter
an English national bank. That is why murder, civil war, and religious
conflicts plagued their reigns. The Jesuit worked behind the scenes
to get them to charter the Bank. Nothing succeeded however and finally
King James II was deposed and Dutchman William of Orange was invited
to take the throne. William was a tool of the powerful Wisselbank
of Amsterdam:
"Central
to the success of the Dutch was the Amsterdam Wisselbank, which had
been founded in 1609. It provided the motive power for the Dutch economy
by lending to the City of Amsterdam, the State in the form of the
Province of Holland and trade in the shape of the Dutch East India
Company as well as being responsible for coinage and, of course, exchange.
Much later, in 1683, it was empowered to lend to private customers.
Payments over a certain amount had to pass through it and it therefore
was convenient for the important finance houses to hold accounts with
it. Thus not only was it in a position to oversee the Dutch financial
scene, it was also able to act as a stabilising influence on it"
(The Bank
of England).
The
King and Queen of Usury — the inglorious Revolution!!

King William
of Orange (1650-1702).
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Queen
Mary (1662-1694), wife of William of Orange.
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The Charter
of the Bank of England (1694) with the Great Seal of William
and Mary. The first usury central bank to be incorporated
in England.
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The Threadneedle
Street front of the Bank in 1797
The
First Bank of the U.S., 2nd Bank of the U.S. and the "Federal"
Reserve Bank are all copied from this Bank.
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After
the incorporation of the Bank, peace and quiet returned to merry old
England. No more royal heads rolled and no more civil wars. After
that it didn't matter what was the religious beliefs of the monarchs.
The Jesuits preferred that they were "Protestants" as they
could take the blame for the wars, poverty and pauperism which inevitably
followed usury and money lending.
Since
the king was also head of the "Church" of England, this
gave legitimacy to USURY and silenced most of the sermons against
that diabolical practice. A Catholic monarch would not have been able
to charter the Bank because officially the Vatican was still
against usury.
Before
the American Revolution, the Bank financed 4 wars with France known
in America as the French and Indian wars
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(1) King William's War: 1698 - 1697. |
(2)
Queen Anne's War or the War of the Spanish Succession: 1702-1713. |
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(3) King George's War or the War of the Austrian Succession: 1744-1748
. |
(4)
French and Indian War or the Seven Years' War in Europe: 1754-1763.
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England
lost the colonies thanks to the Bank of England!!
As
was previously stated, the colonists were very poor and took little
money with them from England. The settlers bartered their goods and
services with each other. Later, Indian Wampum, black and white shells,
tobacco etc., etc were used as currency. Eventually a circulating
medium called Colonial Scrip was printed by the Governors of the various
Colonies. With this release of purchasing power, great prosperity
came to the Colonies since they had an abundance of produce and goods
available.
The
greedy banksters of the Bank of England soon took steps to destroy
the U.S. even before it was born:
"III.
And be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, That if any
governor or commander in chief for the time being, in all or any of
the said colonies or plantations, shall, from and after the said first
day of September, one thousand seven hundred and sixty four, give
his assent to any act or order of assembly contrary to the true intent
and meaning of this act, every such governor or commander in chief
shall, for every such offence, forfeit and pay the sum of one thousand
pounds, and shall be immediately dismissed from his government, and
for ever after rendered incapable of any public office or place of
trust." (Currency
Act of 1764).
Editor's Note
Many
of the powerful Roman Catholic lords in the English Parliament had
money in the Wisselbank which was used to finance the inglorious (usury)
Revolution of 1688
"Amongst
those thought to have "provided for a retreat" in this
way were members of the English Commonwealth Parliament and the
Danish court, the Prince Palatine and the Republic of Venice. The
Wisselbank was also used by the Spanish crown to pay subsidies to
Sweden in the 1660's. To this extent the Wisselbank was not only
a public bank for Amsterdam and its citizens but also a secure haven
for other European governments and political interests. Its success
continued well into the eighteenth century, even after Amsterdam's
ascendancy was coming to an end, and it survived until 1820."
(Edwin Green, Banking An Illustrated History, p.33).
Vital links
Historic
Documents of the U.S.
Patrick
Henry's Great "Give Me Liberty Or Give Me Death" speech
The
Bank of Ireland is also a clone of the Bank of England.
worldhistory.com
Henry
Stuart, Prince of Wales
King
Charles I.
King
Charles II
King
James II
Mary
Queen of Scots
William
of Orange
References
Andrews,
Charles, M. The Colonial Background to the American Revolution,
Yale University Press, New Haven, Conn, 1924.
Andréadés,
A., History of the Bank of England, 1640 to1903, Reprinted
by Augustus M. Kelley Publishers, New York, 1966.
Cobbett,
William, M.P., Paper Against Gold, or, The History and Mystery
of the Bank of England, of the Debts, of the Stocks, of the Sinking
Fund, and of all the other tricks and contrivances, carried on by
the means of paper money, John Doyle, 12 Liberty St., New York
City, 1834. (Originally published in London in 1828 as a series of
letters by William Cobbett while serving a prison sentence in Newgate
Prison).
Blaxton,
John, English Usurer, or Usury Condemned, London, 1634.
Clapham,
Sir John, The Bank of England: A History, in 2 volumes, The
Macmillian Company, New York 1945.
Francis,
Joseph Hume, History of the Bank of England, Euclid Publishing
Co., Chicago, Illinois, 1888.
Giuseppe,
John, The Bank of England: A History from its Foundation in 1694,
Evans Brothers Limited, London, 1966.
Green,
Edwin, Banking An Illustrated History, Rizzoli Pub., New
York, 1989.
Vieira,
Edwin Jr., Pieces of Eight, The Monetary Powers and Disabilities
of the U.S. Constitution, Old Greenwich, Conn., 1983.
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