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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Taxil_hoaxTaxil hoax - Wikipedia

    As Dr. Bataille's tale unfolds, he introduces Diana Vaughan, a former high priestess of Palladism who has converted to Catholicism and is in grave danger of assassination from vengeful Freemasons. In 1897, Taxil called a press conference at which he promised to produce Vaughan.

  2. Vaughan, Diana. The mythical figure in a famous nineteenth-century occult hoax initiated by Leo Taxil, pseudonym of Gabriel Jogand-Pagés, a French journalist.

  3. Feb 6, 2019 · Two years had passed since Diana allegedly escaped from a secret Satanic temple on the coast of South Carolina, finding safety in the confines of a French cloister.

  4. Nov 4, 2013 · According to Diana Vaughan’s so-called memories (fabricated by Taxil in a series of instalments from July 1895 through to April 1897), she was a noble-minded lady who abandoned the misguided worship of Lucifer, converted to Roman Catholicism, and revealed the secret satanic inner workings of Freemasonry.

  5. View the profiles of people named Diana Vaughan. Join Facebook to connect with Diana Vaughan and others you may know. Facebook gives people the power to...

  6. May 18, 2018 · She was Diana Vaughan, said to be a descendant of the seventeenth-century alchemist Thomas Vaughan. She had been chosen as a high priestess of Lucifer to overthrow Christianity and win the world over to Satanism, Jogand wrote.

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  8. Oct 15, 2003 · A.E. Waite's DevilWorship in France, rather than being an infernal howto book or even a history of what the title purports, is in fact an examination of a most sensational hoax perpetrated by Parisian journalist, Leo Taxil.

    • A. E. Waite
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