Willehalm: King Of The Jews?
Introduction To The Fourth, British Edition, Including
The Kardeiz Saga To Recall The Anthroposophical Society
How The Grail Sites Were Found – Wolfram von Eschenbach And The Reality Of The Grail has been presented this summer of 2001 in various private and public (town) libraries in North America (Montreal, Canada and New England) and is now, God willing, to be launched in a fourth edition (with British spelling) in Great Britain in the Rudolf Steiner House in London on October 26. In the previous introduction to the third, North American edition we have already prepared English-speaking readers for the somewhat surprising, if not startling fact that a 9th century King Arthur is located by Werner Greub on the bank of the Birs river (Wolfram’s Plimizoel) flowing into the Rhine near Basle, Switzerland.* Another minor culture shock for the British reader may well be that he or she will search in vain for any actual Grail sites specifically related to Wolfram’s Parzival and Willehalm in the United Kingdom and Ireland – these sites are all to be found, as he or she might say, “on the continent”. Yet, this does not by any means signify that “exports” from Great Britain play no role in this book, on the contrary.
Alcuin
To mention just three that come to mind as having something to do with Great Britain and the English and Celtic spirit: first of all there is the great scholar Alcuin, the representative of Celtic, Scottish-Irish Christianity, who was born in York and who, as the real spiritual leader of the Carolingian empire of Charlemagne, was also the teacher of Willehalm, the historical William of Orange and Toulouse. It was Alcuin who prepared Willehalm for his Grail quest and his ultimate role as spiritus rector of the Grail events of the 9th century as described in this book.
Count Cagliostro
Then there is the Italian-born, cosmopolitan Count Cagliostro, by many –unjustly –considered to be just a charlatan, who in these pages is portrayed as coming from London in 1782 with his wife, the beautiful Serafinia Feliciana, and his friend the painter Lauterburg to help with the design and laying of the English Garden in the Arlesheim Hermitage in Switzerland, including a Freemason meeting hall in the “Cave of Death and Resurrection”, that Werner Greub identifies as the cave of the hermit Trevrizent, located not far from the Grail castle Munsalvaesche on the Hornichopf Hill.
Walter Johannes Stein
Finally, the anthroposophist and personal student of Rudolf Steiner, Walter Johannes Stein deserves to be mentioned in this context, for Stein, although born in Austria (Vienna, 1891), lived the latter part of his life in London where he was advisor to his friend, the well-known industrialist, writer and anthroposophist D.N. Dunlop and, to a lesser extent, to Winston Churchill during the war. Werner Greub quotes from Stein’s book The Ninth Century – World History in the Light of the Holy Grail in order to illustrate his point that Rudolf Steiner, the founder of anthroposophy or science of the Grail, was the first one to distinguish between the microcosmic Christianity of the French Perceval by Chrétien de Troyes and the macrocosmic Christianity of Parzival by Wolfram von Eschenbach, a distinction that is much enlarged upon and deepened in this book.
The Spear Of Destiny
There is of course another English connection mentioned briefly in appendix V entitled “Beyond Truth and Reality – Two Misleading Books For Grail Seekers” of this English translation. In this appendix an attempt has been made to refute the allegations made by the anthroposophical historian and (deceased) critic Christoph Lindenberg in his review by that name that this book by Werner Greub is “beyond truth and reality”.
The other “misleading” book in this review by Lindenberg is namely the bestseller The Spear Of Destiny (first published in Great Britain in 1973) by a student of Walter Johannes Stein, Trevor Ravenscroft. His book is largely based on inside information from his deceased teacher Stein, in which he juxtaposes Adolf Hitler against Rudolf Steiner, claiming that his book was the continuation of Stein’s standard work on the Ninth Century. Contrary to Greub’s work, which supplies detailed geographical evidence in order to prove that Wolfram von Eschenbach was describing factual conditions that can be corroborated by on the spot inspection, Ravenscroft’s book was apparently written as a historical novel and only afterwards, in order to boost sales, promoted as depicting real history, something that Lindenberg did not know or at least did not point out. As such, it is not surprising that, as Lindenberg takes pains to show, many details in Ravenscroft’s dramatic novel are false. He indicates, for example, that many blank spaces in Hitler’s biography that at the time of Ravenscroft’s writing were still unknown, have in the mean time been filled in. Yet this oversight applies to Lindenberg as well, in the sense that at least one of his point-blank denials that Ravenscroft was telling the truth must, on the basis of what since then has become known, be retracted or at least modified. This concerns, as Lindenberg writes in his review, “one of the especially grave, false claims [that Ravenscroft makes] namely the statement that the deceased Chief of the General Staff [of the German army] von Moltke would have relayed – through the tongue of his wife, who supposedly possessed the gift of speaking in tongues – messages to friends of the family of von Moltke concerning the further course of the 20th century, is a fabrication.” However, as the second volume of post-mortem documents on von Moltke’s life and work, published by Thomas Meyer in 1993 * show: The deceased General von Moltke did indeed send post-mortem letters to his wife on the future course of the 20th century, only the medium in this case was not his clairvoyant wife, but Rudolf Steiner.
Be that as it may, Lindenberg’s scathing review of The Spear of Destiny did not prevent it from becoming a best-seller, while his dismissal of How The Grail Sites Were Found, being a book originally written in German, had more success: It prompted many anthroposophists, for whom it was primarily (but not exclusively) written, to dismiss it as well. – including for a while the writer of these lines. Moreover, as already referred to in the first introduction, it apparently prevented the leadership of the Goetheanum from publishing, as originally announced in the first volume, the two remaining ones of Werner Greub’s projected Grail trilogy Willehalm Kyot – Wolfram von Eschenbach ‘s Source and From Grail Christianity to Rudolf Steiner’s Anthroposophy, which were then later published as manuscripts by the Willehalm Institute in Amsterdam (see appendix 7) and in 2003 and 2004 by his son Dr Markus Greub.
Holy Blood and the Holy Grail
An even bigger best-seller than The Spear Of Destiny in England and elsewhere was of course Holy Blood and the Holy Grail by Baigent, Leigh and Lincoln, first published in the United Kingdom on 1982 and republished with a postscript in 1996. In our previous introductions as well as in the footnotes to appendix III The Arlesheim Hermitage as Grail Landscape we have already referred to this book as well as to the multitude of sequels that it spawned or for which it set the stage, such as the books by Michael Bradley and Sir Lawrence Gardner.
In our first introduction How This Publication Came About credit was given to the astrosopher Robert Powell “who in the summer of 1979 published an extract from this present volume entitled The Pre-Christian Grail Tradition of the Three Kings in his (now defunct) Mercury Star Journal vol. 5, no. 2, that was mentioned in the bestseller Holy Blood and the Holy Grail in connection with Willehalm-Kyot.” Indeed, Willehalm plays a prominent role in the Holy Blood and the Holy Grail where he is usually called Guillem of Gellone, but also given other titles such as Comte de Razès and even King of the Jewish principality Septimania in the south of France, the Languedoc. The reference to Guillem occurs in chapter 11 The Holy Grail in the section The Story of Wolfram von Eschenbach on page 317. This occurs after it is claimed, without any evidence or footnote – not altogether untypical for this book –that “the [Grail] Castle [Munsalvaesche] itself is situated in the Pyrenees”, suggesting that this is somehow to be gleaned from Wolfram’s third (unfinished) work Der Junge Titurel, which it is definitely not.
Then the passage continues:
In addition to Der Junge Titurel, Wolfram left another work unfinished at his death – the poem known as Willehalm, whose protagonist is Guillem de Gellone, Merowingian ruler of the ninth-century principality straddling the Pyrenees. Guillem is said to be associated with the Grail family.
Here there is a footnote: “Greub, ‘The Pre-Christian Grail Tradition’, p. 68.” In the bibliography under Greub, W., it is then mentioned that this article from the Mercury Star Journal is an extract from Wolfram von Eschenbach und die Wirklichkeit des Grals. This extract is probably taken from the Chapter Kyot the Provençal, long after Kyot has been identified by Greub as Willehalm or Guillem of Gellone, something which apparently the authors of the Holy Blood… overlooked or did not see fit to mention. In the Postscript to the 1996 edition of the Holy Blood…(on p. 475) Wolfram himself is given as the source, again without any reference, for something, which as Werner Greub does indeed show to be the case, but for which no or even wrong evidence is given:
Guillam (sic) was also cited by Wolfram von Eschenbach as a member of the Grail family.
After devoting a sub-section to “Prince Guillem, Comte de Razès” in the chapter “The Long-haired Monarchs”, the Holy Blood and the Holy Grail relates the following about Willehalm in the one to last chapter “The Grail Dynasty”:
Despite subsequent attempts to conceal it, modern scholarship and research have proved Guillem’s Judaism beyond dispute. Even in romances – where he figures as Guillaume, Prince of Orange – he is fluent in both Hebrew and Arabic. The device on his shield is the same as that of the Eastern ‘exilarchs’ – the Lion of Judah, the tribe to which the house of David and subsequently Jesus, belonged. He is nicknamed ‘Hook-Nose’. And even amidst campaigns, he takes pains to observe the Sabbath and the Judaic Feast of the Tabernacles…He was not only a practicing Jew, however. He was also a Merowingian. And through Wolfram von Eschenbach’s poem, he and his family are associated with the Holy Grail.

