Bérenger Saunière
Abbé François Bérenger Saunière (1852-1917) François Bérenger Saunière was born on 11th April 1852 in Montazels, a small village not far from Rennes-le-Château in the department of the Aude in the South of France. The house of his birth is still there today on the village square (La Place) behind an 18th century dolphin fountain. He was the eldest of the 7 children of Marguerite Hugues and Joseph Saunière. He had two brothers (Alfred, Martial and Joseph jr.) and three sisters (Mathilde, Adeline, and Marie-Louise). His father Joseph, nicknamed le Cubié, was a busy man at the same time being a grocer, Mayor of Montazels, manager of the local flour mill and steward to the Marquis de Cazemajou. Joseph was a quick-tempered man and his marriage to Marguerite wasn't always a happy one. 
Bérenger was a healthy and athletic child of the country and spent much time playing in the fields and mountains of the region. He went to the school of St. Louis in Limoux. Being the eldest son almost automatically meant that young Bérenger was destined for a career in the clergy. So in 1870, at the age of 18 he entered the Grand Seminary of the city of Narbonne. His brother Alfred would follow in his footsteps some time later. Bérenger was ordained priest in july of 1879. After having served as a curate in Alet-les-Bains for three years, he became the parish priest (Abbé) in the humble village of Le Clat in June 1882. Le Clat was situated on the lands of the De Negre d'Ables family that would come to play a big part in his later life. After two months he was asked by his old professor in Narbonne to become a teacher at the Seminary of Narbonne. It was there that he got a reputation for being a headstrong insolent man. On June 1st 1885 it resulted in him being assigned to the tiny and utterly unimportant parish of Rennes-le-Château, a community of not more than 300 souls. He was to succeed Abbé Croc, who had died after just a year of service. In his journal the new priest wrote: 'La croix du milieu existe, mais il n'y a pas d'allées'. He was 33 years old and effectively exiled. The first suspension It took Saunière only three months to attract the attention of his superiors again by making a fierce anti-Republican speech on the eve of the 1885 French elections. He urged his parishioners to vote for the 'Union of the Right', dedicated to the reversal of the anticlerical legislations of the Republican Government and towards the restoration of the French 
church, in which he had to say mass, had practically fallen into ruins and the presbytery was in no state to live in. Since Saunière was now classified as a militant reactionary, the French state didn't pay his stipend for a long time, forcing the priest from an already humble existence into poverty. He stayed with the Dénarnaud family, who lived close to the village church. He lived from the small gifts his parishioners gave him and the gain he brought back from his many hunting and fishing trips. 
Feur in Bordeaux. The old altar was a very rudimentary construction consisting of two pillars, one blank the other one sculpted, supporting a heavy marble slab. The money for the new altar was donated to him by the rich Marie de Cavailhé of Coursan. The stories about Saunière having discovered parchments in the sculpted altar support pillar have never been confirmed and seem very unlikely given the fact that there was no cavity in it large enough to hold anything larger than a ring. The support pillar was sculpted with, what is called a Visigoth design even though today it's argued that the carving more likely dates from the Carolingian period. judging by it's Christian depiction of a cross with jewels and branches. Somewhere between July 1887 and 1890, Antoine Captier, the bellringer of the church, just when he wanted to close the church and go home, noticed a small glass vial, sticking out of the Wooden Baluster that supported the old pulpit. It had been taken down to be removed. He gave it to the priest, who allegedly discovered some parchments in it that either held a secret or led to parchments with a secret. The accounts don't agree. The only thing that is beyond doubt here is that in Antoine Captier's family it is told that Abbé Saunière found a treasure and that it all started with this finding.
Soon after this, Saunière requested permission from the village council to refurbish the public square in front of his church. As one of the first things he had a stone wall and fence with lock installed. In June 1891, the gardens in the square were finished and inaugurated by Bishop Billard and 24 children of the village celebrating First Communion. A statue of the Virgin of Lourdes was carried around the village in a Tour de Mission. At the end the statue was erected on top of the pillar of the old altar, be it upside down and inscribed Mission 1891, Pénitence! Pénitence!. In September 1891, Saunière wrote in his journal: découverte d'un tombeau, le soir pluie (discovery of a tomb, rain in the evening). One day later, during the work in the church a pot was found containing golden coins. Saunière told the workmen that it was just some worthless Lourdes Medals but locked the church, and sent the workmen home. Straight after the priest travelled to Carcassonne and visited some confrères (colleague priests), four of which returned the visit in Rennes-le-Château on 6th October. Work on the church remained suspended until October 14th, when we read in his journal that new(!) masons have started, indicating he replaced the crew that was present at the discovery. From this moment onwards, Saunière's spending started to increase considerably. At the same time he was seen digging in the graveyard with his maid Marie Dénarnaud at night to such extent that the villagers filed a complaint with the community council. Witnesses say he appeared to dig holes randomly, some as deep as three metres. It would take until March 1895 until Saunière was officially summoned by the authorities to end his nightly adventures in the cemetery. Witnesses have testified that Saunière offered antique jewellery to Marie Dénarnaud which would imply that perhaps by his digging, the priest had forced access into the old crypt beneath the church and was pillaging the Tombs of the Lords there. According to Gérard de Sède, but impossible to confirm, in 1892 Saunière travelled to Paris to have his parchments decoded by Emile Hoffet, the young nephew of Abbé Bieil who then led Saint Sulpice. He allegedly returned armed with three copies of paintings from the Louvre: The Shepherds of Arcadia by Nicolas Poussin, the Temptation of St. Anthony by Teniers and a portrait of Pope Celestine V from an unknown painter. This story is unlikely as the Louvre didn't sell reproductions at the time and no records have been found of any Saunière visit to the Seminary of Saint Sulpice. What is certain is that Saunière undertook a number of trips for longer periods of time around that time. Oddly, he left a supply of notes with is maid, stating since I am in a hurry to leave for visiting one of my confrères, for now I will just inform you I have received your letter and thank you for your message.. All Marie had to do was put a date on them and send them to the writer of any letter that arrived. This way it would appear the priest had been present at the time it was received. Saunière actively hid his absence from his parish. Clearly, he didn't want anyone to know where he was and for how long. In 1894 Saunière installed an iron gate, blocking access to the cemetery. With his study and library being installed next to it, he now had complete control over who visited there. The behavior of the priest was becoming more peculiar. On 14th July 1895, the Abbé refused access to the pump and well beneath his study to the villagers that wanted to use it to fight a fire in a nearby house. There are stories that the priest had hidden bags below his study with whatever he had brought back from his journeys.
In the following years, the restoration of the village church was finished to its current state. It was officially inaugurated by Bishop Billard on 6 July 1897. Some months later, Antoine Gélis, priest of the neighboring village of Coustaussa was murdered in a most violent way. In 1898 Saunière visited Lyon where he rented a house and visited a Martinist gathering. Saunière was leading an a-typical life for a priest. When Bishop Billard nominated him for the function of 'Personnat', the diocese refused after an investigation into the priest's life. In Saunière's journal we read that the 50 liters of rum he ordered from Jamaica are late. In May 1901, Saunière owned pretty much all of the hilltop in Rennes-le-Château. On these lands that he had bought in name of Marie he started the construction of a luxurious villa. He claimed this Villa Bethania was destined to become a retirement home for old priests. At the end of that year, Bishop Billard suddenly died to be replaced by Bishop de Beauséjour. The death of Billard is shrouded in scandal. He died while being under investigation for having administered the assets of his diocese in the most irregular fashion and for having contracted staggering debts, which were completely unjustified. The construction work continued steadily even though the priest had some trouble to pay his bills around August 1903. That didn't stop him from starting yet another project. On a corner of his terrain, he had a neo-gothic tower erected. After first calling it Tour du Midi and Tour de l'Horloge, he eventually settled for Tour Magdala. Magdala, being the birthplace of Mary-Magdalene, patron saint of his church. Saunière spent his time lavishly entertaining an endless line of guests in his Villa Bethania. They were treated to the best food and wines. He had tropical plants and animals in his garden. Marie Dénarnaud, by now baptized 'La Madonne' by the jealous women of Rennes-le-Château was seen wearing the latest fashion from Paris that was delivered to the domain by postal order. 


On 17 January 1917, Marie Dénarnaud found Saunière lying prostrate on his Belvédère just outside the Tour Magdala. With the help of some villagers he was carried to the presbytery where he was laid to rest in bed. He died 5 days later after Abbé Jean Rivière of Espéraza had heard his confession. This event has led to enormous speculations. Some claim Rivière never smiled again or that he refused to administer the last rites. None of this can be confirmed. After his death, Saunière lay in state for a day in a room on the ground floor of the Villa Bethania. He had been put in a big chair covered in a purple table cloth with red pumpkins hanging from it. The cloth had been put there to cover the priest's night dress. He was kept company by pretty much the whole village for the entire night as was the custom at the time. Every woman in the village cut one of the pumpkins and took it home out of respect for the deceased.
It's ironic Saunière called one of his two dogs Pomponnet (little pumpkin). He called the other one Faust...