Engraved Stones of the Languedoc
by Eugene Stublein
This document, 10 pages, falsely attributed to Eugene Stublein, was filed
National Library June 20, 1966 and was registered as document 8 L6J
849. In many ways, its realization was not happy for the forger
because he helped greatly to demystifying the case as Pierre
Plantard had determined lines.
Engraved stone Languedoc has indeed inconsistencies. Published, we
told, in 1884 in Limoux, however, it is illustrated with a drawing of the stone itself
"Knight" (Plate XXIII) discovered by Saunière after he took
official function in Rennes-le-Chateau on June 1, 1885.
Moreover, the drawing, although slightly different in some details almost
imperceptible, draws heavily from the one made in 1927 by Mr. Ourtal,
painter in Carcassonne, and presented by Henry Guy, Narbonne, on page 197
Volume XXXI of the Bulletin of the Scientific Society of the Aude:
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We also note that this document, the numbering of its
pages (181-190), indicates that they are extracted from a larger work
nearly 200 more pages. Work he was never allowed
found despite meticulous research.
Finally, the very signature of Eugene Stublein, who will initial the boards
presented, is not consistent with that of the person as noted
rightly Pierre Jarnac, including a documentary produced and directed
by William Cran and circulated in October 1996 on the English channel BBC 2. this
same author also made aware of the Carved Stone in the Languedoc
Mixtures of Sulphurous first part published by CERT in 1994.