Rennes-le-Château is a small village perched on a hilltop near Couiza in
the Aude
département. It has become world famous in the last few
years following the publication of a series of books dealing with a mystery concerning
a nineteenth century priest who lived in the village. It is not far away from a spa town called Rennes-les-Bains

At the heart of the mystery is the fact that the priest (abbé Bérenger
Saunière) suddenly become immensely rich during the 1880s.
![]()
There are a few interesting aspects of the mystery, such as where his money came from, but improbable theories have been built on a few known facts and shorn up by mass of demonstrable falsehoods. Over the last twenty years a series of best-selling books have been published, each proposing a more fantastic theory than its predecessors.
|
|

![]()

Attractive
as the simple "treasure" theory is, there are
much more interesting elaborations, namely that Saunier:
- discovered a cache of treasure from Solomon's Temple in Jerusalem, including the Menorah or the Ark of the Covenant, or both, taken from Jerusalem by the Romans (true - see right) and later from the Romans by the Visigoths (not as absurd as it sounds - the Visigoths did sack Rome in 410 and bring their loot back to Toulouse).
- discovered a cache of treasure hidden by the Cathars
who escaped from the Château
of Montségur (
Montsegùr)
in 1244. - discovered treasure buried by the Knights Templar when
the Order was attacked by the French King in 1309.


- discovered treasure of the Lords of Rennes-le-Château (who are said to have used the crypt as grave tomb). The priest supposedly found documents and valuables hidden there since the time of the Saracen occupation.
- discovered treasure of the Kingdom of Majorca.


- discovered some hidden item of inestimable value (such as the Holy Grail or Charlemagne's sword).
- discovered documents so damaging to the Roman Church that the Vatican paid a fortune to suppress them.
- was financially assisted by space aliens.

Many
of the theories revolve around a supposition that the artist Nicolas Poussin was party to some great secret, and that
he encoded information about it in his paintings - notably
the painting known as the Shepherds in Arcadia, shown here
on the right. According to some the painting was done in
the Languedoc, with Rennes-le-Château in the background.
A local farmer near Arques had the misfortune to have a
(recent) tomb on his land which looked vaguely like the
one in the painting. He got so sick of visiting treasure
hunters tramping over his fields that he acquired some explosives
and blew it up. It didn't work. Now treasure hunters turn
up to see the site where it once stood.

If you are interested in the mystery, Click one of the links below or read The
Holy Blood and the Holy Grail, the first book in English to discuss the mystery. Be
warned that it starts off well and becomes increasingly unlikely, and that one
of the principal sources (Pierre Plantard) is a well known fantasist.
On the other hand many of its improbably assertions turn out to be true. For example, there really is an ancient tradition that the family of Jesus Christ came to live in the Languedoc, and that Mary Magdelene was the wife or concubine of Jesus. (For the first see the page on Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer. For the second see a page of original accusations against the Cathars)
Gérard de Sède was the French historian who originally
popularised the mystery of Rennes-le-Château (well
before the Holy Blood and the Holy Grail). For his
obituary from the Independent, 24 June 2004, by Marcus
Williamson, click here

Richard Leigh was one of the co-authors of The Holy
Blood and the Holy Grail. For his obituary from the
Independent, 29 November 2007, by Marcus Williamson,
click here


Click
on the following link to read an article about Rennes-le-Château
Click on the following link for recommended
Books on the mystery of Rennes-le-Château
The following are links to external sites, which will open
in a new window.
www.cathar.info/rennes.htm/
Rennes-le-Chateau and the Mysteries of the Languedoc
www.renneslechateaubooks.info/languedocrennes
Recommended books

www.connectotel.com/rennes/
Excellent site on Rennes-le-Château
www.rlcresearch.com
Another excellent site on Rennes-le-Château, with
lots of good links
smithpp0.tripod.com/psp/idx.html
Serious critical site by Paul Smith.
www.andrewgough.com/
Excellent site featuring news, articles and interviews with
RLC researchers like Jean-Luc Robin, Henry Lincoln and Philip
Coppens.
www.rennes-discovery.com/index.html
www.rennes-le-château.co.uk/
www.rennes-le-château.fr/
www.benhammott.com/ research website by Ben Hammott investigating the Mystery of Berenger Sauniere.
Some more books on Rennes-le-Château and its mysteries:
US:
UK:
France:





