Jump to content

Draft:The Assassins Club (book)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Assassins Club is a historical fiction book based on Les Club des Hashischins[1]

The book dispells the false myths and inaccuracies around the club by proving the the known dates of its existence dating as early as 1843, when Theophile Gautier wrote the article story Hashisch published in La Presse, July 19, 1843 proving the club existed earlier than previously known.

New unknown information is presented in the book including:

The previous owner of the club was The Princess Grand Mademoiselle, cousin of Louis XIV

The Mental Asylum background of Jacques Joseph Moreau from 1831 to 1840 at Clarenton Hospital and psychiatric travels in Constantinople, Syria and Egypt. The existence and importance of unknown member Painter Fernand Broissard who hosted the meetings in his room The then new-owner of the Hotel Lauzun Jerome Pichon in 1842 that created apartments in the Hotel Lauzun and subsequently rented them to Fernand Broissard, Charles Baudelaire and much later, Theophile Gautier. The true dates of Charles Baudelaire's residence at Hotel Lauzun as 1843-1845, before the control of his inheritance was judicially taken by his mother and step father. The presence of Jeanne Duval, also known as Black Venus, who was Charles Baudelaire's lover and lived less than 5 minutes away. The stairwell of the club that entered and exited through a secret door in the wall. The location of Charles Baudelaire's actual room at the top of the house above the music room.[1]

This Article Page was submitted by the Author of the book.

  1. ^ a b Club des Hashischins Cite error: The named reference "LoC" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).