Francis Bacon, 1st Viscount St Alban,[a] 1st Lord Verulam, PC (/ˈbeɪkən/;[5] 22 January 1561 – 9 April 1626) was an English philosopher and statesman who served as Attorney General and Lord Chancellor of England under King James I. Bacon argued the importance of natural philosophy, guided by scientific method, and his works remained influential throughout the Scientific Revolution.
Francis Bacon - Wikipedia
Name of European Renaissance manifestation of the Mahachohan (qv), born Jan. 22, 1561, allegedly died from hilarious incident occurring on April 1st (All Fools’ Day) 1626, taking its “final toll” of England’s Lord Chancellor that Easter Sunday (Day of Resurrection).
The account of his ostensible “death” is such a patently false concoction of Baron Verulam himself that indeed only a Fool could believe it—which is why, of course, scholars accept it as gospel to this day, and encyclopedias solemnly repeat the playwright’s greatest Comedy as if it were tragic fact...despite the fact that, when years later exhumation of his body from its “burial place” in Saint Michael’s Church, St. Albans, was attempted, nothing whatever was found, Lord Bacon having long left for Germany to become, among other contemporary marvels, Valentine Andrea (below image) author of Fama Fraternitatis, the Rosicrucian Manifesto.
Fama Fraternitas – Library of Rickandria
Fama Fraternitas – Library of Rickandria
(V for Verulam and Viscount, A for Albans: Baron Verulam, Viscount St. Albans.
In honor of this fact, a modern author/compiler has assumed a pseudonym using these very initials thus com- From National Portrait Gallery, London memorating his eternal love, Worship and respect of the Renaissance Mahachohan.)*
In honor of this fact, a modern author/compiler has assumed a pseudonym using these very initials thus com- From National Portrait Gallery, London memorating his eternal love, Worship and respect of the Renaissance Mahachohan.)*
As the true author of the “Shakespeare” plays and many other works attributed to pseudonymous contemporaries, (see The Mother Book) the challenge Bacon presents to the modern sensibility makes of his whole refractory Being a monumental Heresy (seeing that the myth of “Shakespeare”, though easily punctured, has taken on the sacrosanct character of that of a secular “Christ”, supported by “authorities” who’ve never answered the charges, though they claim to, but have quietly buried the evidence—far better than the Lord Chancellor was ever buried—and look continuously the other way in the hopes they persuade all others to do so).
See Mahachohan.
See Mahachohan.