Birr Castle , Co
Offaly, ancestral home of
- 1st Earl of
Rosse, Richard Parsons
- James Worsdale
, painter.
- Colonel St
Ledger from Grange Mellon near Athy .
- Old Bagenal ,
( Bagenalstown was obviously named after him
or his kin; a hotbed for Satanic activity in
these present times)
- Buck Whaley

Witches
engaged in pagan ritual dance
Satanists,
the gentry and Freemasons
Human sacrifice has been
practiced by the evil elites for possibly as long as
man has existed on this world! The upper classes have
brainwashed the naive and gullible masses into
believing that these sort of things only happen in
books and myths. History shows us that the
aristocracy, especially those with old Norman roots,
have been the pioneers and subsequently those with
the greatest knowledge in the studies of these dark
arts and forbidden knowledge! The old Norman Knights
Templars, are believed to have been aristocratic
devilworshippers. The Templars went to the Holy lands
during the Crusades wars between the European
Christians and the Saracens to search for "The
Arch of the Covenent". They believed that the
Arch held magical powers and those who had possession
of it would be the recipients of great power and
knowledge. In the middle ages the Templars were seen
as heretics and worshippers of the devil and were
persecuted by the Spanish Inquisition and were
bannished from most European countries for the
exception of Portugal and Scotland. It is believed
that the Knights Templars resurfaced in Scotland in
its new guise of the Freemasons. In later years many
prominent Lords and gentry, again descendents of the
old Norman aristocracy, became leading figures in the
Freemasons! One prime example was Richard Parsons -
the 1st Earl of Rosse. In 1725 he was Grand Master of
Ireland's Freemasons and at the same instance,
Richard Parsons was also one of the founder members
of Ireland's aristocratic Satanist cult The Hellfire
Club! Co-incidence?? I don't think so!!!!
Controversial book -
"Disappeared off the face of the earth"!
Human sacrifice is still a
regular event in modern Ireland!
Ireland's most
controversial book!