Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Ragoczy or Ragocy or Rakoczy?

I did some internet research of Prince Ragocy last night and saw that only I was spelling Prince Ragocy this way. The more ancient and I believe more correct spelling is Ragoczy which is what Madame Blavatsky called him. It is one of the names that refers to the Comte De Saint Germain. Another name associated with him is Francis Bacon which is what some people believe that both Prince Ragoczy(Ragocy) and the Comte de Saint Germain was born as. However, if he was born as Francis Bacon, he was supposedly born January 22nd 1561. And since the Comte de Saint Germain was a regular guest of King Louis the sixteenth and Marie Antoinette we know he was still alive in 1790 which would then make him 229 years old which is why on the 1970s program "In Search of" in "The Man who never died" episode Leonard Nimoy called The Comte de Saint Germain "The man who never died." The Comte De Saint Germain was commonly called "The man who never died" by 18th Century nobility throughout Europe and England.

Since when Francis Bacon's body was dug up only rocks were found in his coffin this also added to Francis Bacon's feigned death and becoming Prince Ragoczy(Ragocy) of Transylvania and the Comte de Saint Germain of France.

I just found out that Ragoczy is the German spelling, Ragocy is my misspelling and Rakoczy is the Hungarian spelling. Hopes this clarifies it for those other researchers out there. And I just found one more spelling which is Ragotzy as in "The late exiled Prince Ragotzy of Siebeburgen of the time of Emperor Leopold" excerpt from page 19 of "The Comte de Saint Germain" by Cooper Oakley.

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