Fluctuat nec mergitur (“[she] is rocked [by the waves], but does not sink”; French: Il est agité par les vagues, et ne sombre pas) is the Latin motto of the city of Paris.
Fluctuat nec mergitur (“[she] is rocked [by the waves], but does not sink”; French: Il est agité par les vagues, et ne sombre pas) is the Latin motto of the city of Paris.
sub rosa
sic semper tyrannus
This is to be read to all new recruits of the Order
The wisdom of our creed is revealed through these words. We work in the dark to serve the light. We are assassins. Nothing is true everything is permitted.
Our Creed
“Stay your blade from the flesh of an innocent.”
“Hide in plain sight, be one with the crowd.”
“Never compromise the Brotherhood
Torquemada: “There is only once crime I am guilty of… being too merciful! When you were my prisoner, I should have spent more time with you in the torture chamber… so you could really understand the meaning of pain.”
The Most Evil Men in History Torquemada
https://www.dorjeshugden.com/letters/transcript-the-most-evil-men-in-history-torquemada.pdf
In 1482, in a monastery in Central Spain, a Catholic monk was appointed to the Spanish
Inquisition. From this day, Friar Tomas de Torquemada would begin a career renowned for
its cruelty of persecution.
As head of the Spanish Inquisition, Torquemada was responsible for the deaths of thousands
of innocent Spaniards. Known as The Black Legend, he spread fear throughout Spain.
Thousands were arrested, interrogated and mercilessly tortured. Many more were burned
alive at the stake.
“Torquemada wasn’t evil. He was worse than evil. He was the Satan par excellence.”
In the name of his religion, Torquemada forced almost every Jew out of Spain, destroying
their lives forever.
Tomas de Torquemada was born in Valladolid in Central Spain in 1420. As a young man, he
became a Dominican monk, a Catholic order known for their extreme devotion to the Church.
“Many of the first Inquisitors were Dominican friars. They seemed to have been regarded as
the sort of shock troops, as it were, of the Catholic Church, and of the Papacy in particular.”
“Torquemada was a theologian and therefore a very exact and faithful product of his
Dominican order.”
At the time, Spain was a series of kingdoms with their own rulers, racked by civil wars
throughout the 15th century. An uneasy stability arrived in the 1470s with the marriage of
Isabella of Castile and Ferdinand of Aragon.
“They wanted to unite religions in Spain and of course the power was in the hands of the
Christians but cultural union wasn’t achieved and religious union wasn’t achieved either
because there were three religions in Spain. The Christians, the Muslims and the Jews.”
By the time Ferdinand and Isabella came to power, Torquemada was Prior of the Monastery
of Santa Cruz in Segovia. Evidence of the relationship between Torquemada and the crown