Johann Adam Weishaupt
It’s the group at the center of major conspiracy
theories.
They’ve been accused of pulling the strings
of major governments around the world, for
inserting secret symbols in such prominent
places as the U.S dollar bill.
And conspiracy theorists have claimed that
everyone from The Beatles to Tom Brady to
Kanye West are more recent members of the
centuries-old society…
There’s no doubt the Illuminati have impacted
world affairs...even if just by being at the
center of conspiracy theories.
But where did the group get its start?
Let’s take a look at the man behind the
secret society...Johann Adam Weishaupt
Early Life
Johann Adam Weishaupt was born into an academic
household in Bavaria.
He came into the world on February 6, 1748,
as the son of a law professor.
When Weishaupt was only five years old his
father passed away, leaving him to be raised
by his grandfather.
Also a law professor, Weishaupt’s grandfather
kept the boy engaged in scholastic activities.
His grandfather was a proponent of the enlightenment
movement, and the thoughts and philosophies
promoted by enlightenment thinkers came to
greatly influence Weishaupt.
During the 17th and 18th century enlightenment
movement, intellectuals emphasized the importance
of reason and individualism over tradition.
You might also hear the Enlightenment referred
to as “The Age of Reason.”
Among the movements most famous thinkers were
John Locke and Isaac Newton.
When he was seven years old, Weishaupt’s
education expanded beyond his grandfather’s
teaching.
The family was Catholic, and Weishaupt began
attending a Jesuit school.
He was a voracious reader, and by the time
he was twenty years old had earned his doctorate
in law.
He began teaching law, but within a year became
the beneficiary of the dissolution of the
very religious order that had educated him.
Political maneuvering coupled with cultural
changes made the Jesuits a threat to the power
of some European leaders, at least in their
eyes.
The order was suppressed in several countries,
and even the Pope issued a brief suppressing
the Jesuits.
Because of the order’s suppression, in 1773
Weishaupt was able to move from being a professor
of secular law to being a professor of canon
law at the University of Ingolstadt.
Before the suppression, only Jesuits taught
canon law.
Now, Weishaupt could be a professor, but he
nonetheless found himself as the only non-clergy
member servings as a professor.Although the
order had been suppressed, they still wielded
considerable power at the university, and
Weishaupt and his enlightenment-influenced
ideas hit roadblocks.
As a result, Weishaupt grew to dislike clerics.
He was frustrated, and he wanted a way to
spread the words of the enlightenment without
being stonewalled by the church.
Founding of the Illuminati
So he decided to start his own society.
And the goal?
“This is the great object held out by this
association; and the means of attaining it
is illumination, enlightening the understanding
by the sun of reason which will dispel the
clouds of superstition and of prejudice.”
Initially, Weinshaupt didn’t want to start
his own secret society.
He had wanted to join the Freemasons, a group
that he thought would line up nicely with
his passion for reason over religion.
But ultimately he decided that the Freemasons
weren’t quite what he wanted, and so he
took the leap to start his society.
He did look to the Freemasons for inspiration
in rituals and organizational structure, though.
Over time, especially after Weishaupt ended
up joining the Freemasons, the two groups
have become linked in the minds of many - especially
conspiracy theorists.
To start his society, Weishaupt began reaching
out to like-minded men he had befriended at
the university.
But they had to be young men - anyone over
thirty was just too unlikely to be influenced
by new ideas.
And Weishaupt wanted the men who joined to
be true believers in the Enlightenment, ready
to start spreading the ideals of reason - and
spreading them as high up as they could.
The group first met in May of 1776.
Only five of them arrived in the forest the
first night, carrying torches and ready to
embark on their quest to spread their ideas
to the world.
To be initiated into the Illuminati, Weishaupt
wanted his members to experience being reborn.
This way, they would be leaving behind their
lives before joining the Illuminati and be
able to fully immerse themselves in their
commitment to the new secret society.
The initiation rite included sacrifices and
mystical elements.
Hooded men, unknown identities, and darkened
rooms are hallmarks of such rites.
Claims have been made that the illuminati
initiation rites have taken the sacrifice
element to its most extreme stage - the sacrificing
of an actual human being.
To be initiated and reborn, the idea is that
the new member would have to experience death
to be reborn - and actually killing someone
would give them a keen insight into the experience
of death.
But the initiation rite is also said to have
given members the experience of death and
rebirth through the killing of an animal.
The Illuminati would put an animal on top
of the new member, kill the animal, and just
let it bleed to death on top of the new member.
Soaking in the animal’s blood encouraged
rebirth and the understanding of life, death,
and knowledge overall.
Weishaupt did not want the Illuminati to remain
just a small academic society that operated
in its echo chamber.
He wanted it to reach the highest echelons
of society, with members both influencing
political leaders and even becoming political
leaders themselves.
But he also didn’t want the society to grow
full of men he couldn’t trust and who weren’t
truly dedicated to the cause.
So the men who met that first night would
have to be agreed to by the five members present
that night, as well as prove themselves to
be from families of high standing and wealth.
The latter two requirements would help with
Weishaupt’s goal to get his ideas moving
up the societal ladder and into the minds
of the influential families of society.
The order’s now-famous name didn’t come
to Weishaupt right away.
The first name for his secretive group was
“The Perfectibilists,” a name that stuck
for at least two years.
The idea that man is perfectible was part
of the group’s ideals.
Even American Founding Father Thomas Jefferson
appreciated this trait of Weishaupt and his
ideas:
“Wishaupt [sic] seems to be an enthusiastic
Philanthropist.
He is among those (as you know the excellent
[Richard] Price and Priestley also are) who
believe in the indefinite perfectibility of
man.
He thinks he may in time be rendered so perfect
that he will be able to govern himself in
every circumstance so as to injure none, to
do all the good he can, to leave government
no occasion to exercise their powers over
him, & of course to render political government
useless.”
Before the name Illuminati was officially
adopted, Weishaupt also thought about naming
the group the “The Bee Order.”
But Illuminati was ultimately decided upon,
and Weishaupt took the owl as the group’s
symbol.
And the significance of the owl?
Minerva, the goddess of wisdom, was accompanied
by an owl.
The owl was a way for Weishaupt to indicate
the intellectual basis for the secret society,
while still keeping its symbolism a bit coded.
The new name was a callback to occult beliefs
within the spanish culture.
During medieval times, alchemists and magicians
were believed to be imbued with a light that
signified the presence of a higher power within.
Within the society, the members took on nicknames.
Weishaupt, as the head of the order was Spartacus,
while other adopted names for members included
Ajax and Tiberius.
In 1777, Weishaupt found a new avenue for
recruiting.
He was accepted into a Freemasons group in
Germany, and used their society as a place
to find well-connected society men who were
already acquainted with, and interested in,
secret societies.
The men who were welcomed in were told the
following:
“Should you seek might, power, false honor,
excess — seek that we would work for you
to provide your temporal advantages — we
will bring you as close to the throne as you
wish, and then turn you over to the consequences
of your folly, but our inner sanctuary remains
closed to such.
But should you want to learn wisdom — want
to learn to make mankind more clever, better,
free and happy — then be thrice welcomed
by us.”
The men who joined Weishaupt’s new order
found themselves a part of a group that was
split into distinct levels.
As much as Weishaupt professed the principles
of rationalism and individualism related to
the Enlightenment movement, the men who were
a part of his fold were restricted in their
knowledge about what was going on within their
own organization.
The Illuminati had a hierarchy within the
structure, and the members at the bottom reported
to those at the top.
There were three ranks of men - novice, minerval,
and illuminated minerval.
Illuminated minerval were at the top of the
Illuminati’s pecking order; their name inspired
by the Roman goddess of wisdom.
They spied on each other and on the political
and economic goings-on in society; bringing
news back to the order and helping the Illuminati
move forward in its goals of influencing the
top tiers of society.
“Do you realize sufficiently what it means
to rule—to rule in a secret society?
Not only over the lesser or more important
of the populace, but over the best of men,
over men of all ranks, nations, and religions,
to rule without external force, to unite them
indissolubly, to breathe one spirit and soul
into them, men distributed over all parts
of the world?”
In its first years, the Illuminati didn’t
grow by leaps and bounds.
Initially, they found only a few dozen interested
and qualified men to join.
They numbered just 60 by 1780.
But that year, Weishaupt added a member to
the Illuminati who proved himself to be especially
helpful in gaining new members - and a new
level of respect - for the secret society.
The new, influential member came from Weishaupt’s
recruiting ground of the Freemasons.
Baron Adolf Knigge had been a member of the
Freemasons, but he had risen as far as he
could within their ranks.
So when he heard of Weishaupt and his new,
smaller group, he saw an opportunity to have
real sway over what was going on in the organization.
He also liked the Illuminati’s relationship
with mysticism.
In forming the order, Weishaupt had relied
in part on mystic texts.
He read the Mysteries of the Seven Sages of
Memphis and the Kabbala, and the two texts
made an impact on how he viewed the world
around him.
Baron Knigge was also a student of such ideas,
and liked that Weishaupt had brought their
influence into the Illuminati.
When he joined, Knigge eagerly read the texts
required of members.
Most consisted of works that were banned in
the conservative, Catholic Bavaria.
In fact, Knigge read the texts so quickly
that Weishaupt had to stall for time.
He didn’t want Knigge to reach the Illuminated
Minerval level so quickly.
So he put off Knigge while he tried to come
up with new ideas for readings and required
actions, but Knigge figured out that Weishaupt
was trying to delay his achievement of the
highest level.
When he brought this up to Weishaupt, Weishaupt
was willing to listen.
He was also willing to listen to Knigge’s
new ideas for the order.
For one, Knigge said, the order needed a rearrangement
of its hierarchy.
He suggested bringing in new levels under
the existing three levels.
The end result was thirteen ranks of Illuminati
members, each subdivided within the original
three levels.
The three new overarching levels had the names
of the Nursery, the Masonic grades, and the
Mysteries.
Knigge also used his influence to change Weishaupt’s
strong messaging about the church and about
religion.
He realized that such a strong stance might
be hampering the group’s ability to grow
and recruit new, powerful members.
After all, the church wielded much power in
Bavaria in the 18th century and even the promise
that a society was secret might not be a strong
enough assurance for men from powerful families
to risk joining.
Weishaupt listened to Knigge, and he and the
Illuminati benefitted.
From an organization of just 60, they grew
to 200 by 1782.
Then, the group grew to 3,000 members by 1784.
The Illuminati had also spread beyond Bavaria
- membership now included Hungary, Poland,
and Italy.
But having that many members spread throughout
a number of countries made it harder and harder
to keep things quiet.
And, if their very purpose was to infiltrate
and influence political thought and actions,
then of course the upper echelons of society
would start to notice them.
Banishment
In 1784, their growth became a problem.
Members of the Illuminati were sending correspondence
back and forth, and the government had their
eye out for it.
Writings with internal Illuminati ideas and
policies were intercepted in Bavaria.
It’s also been thought that this interception
was set up - Weishaupt had some disgruntled
members within his ranks.
When he started the Illuminati, he told some
of the first members that there would be “supernatural
communication” if they achieved the highest
level within the society.
But plenty of people had achieved it by 1784
- and there was no supernatural communication
to be had.
Baron Knigge and Weishaupt had a major disagreement.
They didn’t have the same idea about some
of the society’s rituals, and their arguments
culminated in Knigge leaving the secret society.
The same year he left the Illuminati, the
Bavarian government banned all secret societies.
That was in 1784 - the same year the membership
had explored.
By the next year, the Bavarian government
took it a step farther - they banned the Illuminati
specifically.
As part of the Illuminati’s banishment,
the government began raiding the documents
of known Illuminati.
Documents started to be published, and the
secret society and its membership wasn’t
so secret anymore.
Public officials became known as members,
putting their livelihoods and societal rankings
on the line.
The Illuminati simply couldn’t function
with its membership known.
Throughout all of this society-building and
government-influencing, Weishaupt had still
been working as a professor at the University
of Ingolstadt.
But when the government banned the Illuminati,
he was forced to flee his home and leave behind
his job.
Weishaupt wasn’t kind to the government
- to government of any sort, not just Bavaria,
so it is not surprising that they were not
pleased with his writings.
How did he feel about government?
Take this quote:
““When man lives under government, he
is fallen, his worth is gone, and his nature
tarnished.”
When the Illuminati were banned from Bavaria,
Weishaupt was forced to flee to Gotha, another
part of Germany.
There, Weishaupt was protected by a sympathetic
Duke.
Duke Ernest not only provided political protection
for Weishaupt, but he also gave him a pension
that allowed him to live without working.
Even though the Illuminati had been disbanded
in Bavaria, Weishaupt kept pushing the ideas
he had that had led him to start the secret
society in the first place.
He began writing, ultimately publishing four
books about the history of the Illuminati
and defending its existence.
The books were intended both to defend himself,
and to perhaps encourage new growth for the
Illuminati in the province of Gotha.
But when Weishaupt passed away in 1830, the
Illuminati had all but disappeared from the
world stage.
It’s not easy to operate - even as a secret
society - when major world powers want you
gone.
While the Illuminati may have disappeared
at least in membership in Europe, the group
by no means disappeared from the world’s
imagination and conversations.
Based on today’s conspiracy theories and
the prevalence of the Illuminati in pop culture,
it can be argued that Weishaupt succeeded
in creating a secret society that had an influence
on the world.
Dan Brown’s massively popular novels feature
the Illuminati.
In Angels and Demons Brown pits the Illuminati
against the Catholic Church in a modern setting.
Throughout the book they use churches and
artwork to commit atrocities, relying heavily
on coded symbolism.
Then there’s the Illuminatus Trilogy - books
that claim George Washington was actually
replaced by a member of the Illuminati.
The impostor actually ran the United States,
they claim.
Just look to the pyramid with the eye on the
American one dollar bill - that’s an indication
of illuminati influence in the American government.
Weishaupt and the Illuminati are also used
in video games and comic books and even rap
songs.
They’re a regular feature on History Channel
shows and mysterious shows about conspiracies
around the world.
When major events happen - think the JFK assassination
and 9/11- the Illuminati name still gets tossed
around as a possible cause.
And, there’s even a theory that the modern-day
Illuminati is now headquartered not in the
Bavaria of its founding, but right in the
heart of the United States of America.
Not in Washington DC, not in New York, not
in Los Angeles...but in Denver.
Hidden beneath the airport in the Colorado
city is said to be the headquarters for the
modern day incarnation of the most powerful
secret society in the world.
Everything from the airport’s runway design
to its underground tunnels have been pointed
to as evidence for why it’s a perfect site
for the society’s operation.
It seems that 250 years after Weishaupt first
launched his idea for a secret society, his
influence is still felt.
From pop culture to events of historic magnitude,
the Illuminati is still a factor - at least
in terms of people bringing up their name.
It might not be exactly what he was planning
- or is it?
Do we really know how a secret society operates
and has influence?
Weishaupt did plan for the Illuminati to operate
in the background after all...
