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			THE IMPERIAL 
			AND ROYAL  
			
			
			DRAGON COURT 
			AND ORDER 
  
			
			  
			
			
			
			The 
			Egyptian Academy 
			 
			The original fraternity, which was resurrected in the 15th 
			century to become the Hungarian Court of the Dragon, can 
			first be identified as the Dragon Court of ancient Egypt 
			under the patronage of the priest-prince 
			
			Ankhfn-khonsu in about 2170 BC. 
			It was later established more formally as a pharaonic institution 
			by the 12th-dynasty 
			
			Queen Sobeknefru (c.1785-82 BC) 
			and its operation was much like that of a present day royal academy, 
			being a unique assembly of science and scholarship. 
			 
			The Court provided a foundation for priestly pursuits associated 
			with the teachings of Thoth, which had prevailed from the 
			time of King Raneb, a pharaoh of the 2nd dynasty 
			and grandson of the biblical Nimrod (Genesis 10:8-10). 
			Raneb reigned c.2852-13 BC, about three centuries before the 
			Gizeh pyramids are reckoned to have been built. 
			
			  
			
			
			
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			The Dragon and 
			the Grail 
			 
			In those far-off times, the priests and temples were not solely 
			associated with religion as were their later successors in 
			other lands, but rather more with the duties of preserving and 
			teaching the old wisdom. The temples were, therefore, places of 
			work-ship, rather than of worship in the modern sense, and they 
			incorporated the 'al-khame' (alchemical) workshops of the 
			Master Craftsmen. It was the obligation of these Masters and the 
			temple priests to maintain the spiritual welfare of the pharaohs, 
			while preserving the heritage of a royal bloodline which progressed 
			through the Dragon Queens of the matrilinear Grail 
			succession. 
			 
			It transpired, however, that much of the old wisdom was lost 
			as the great empires of Persia, Macedonia and Rome 
			took their successive holds in the Mediterranean world. Around a 
			million valuable documents were destroyed by fire when Julius 
			Caesar invaded Egypt in 48 BC, and many more hundreds of 
			thousands were lost in AD 391 when the Christians destroyed the 
			great Library of Alexandria. 
			
			  
			
			
			
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			The Hungarian 
			Court and Order 
			 
			Long afterwards, on 13 December 1408 (when Britain was in her 
			Plantagenet era), the fraternal aspect of the Dragon Court 
			was formally reconstituted by King Zsigmond von Luxembourg of 
			Hungary at a time of wars and general political turmoil. Having 
			inherited the ancient legacy in 1397, he drew up a pact with 
			twenty-three royals and nobles who swore to observe 'true and 
			pure fraternity' within the 'Societas Draconis' (Society 
			of the Dragon) - a style which later became "Ordo Dragonis" 
			(Hungarian: Sárkány Rend - Order of the Dragon), although the Court 
			was by no means a conventional Order in the recognized chivalric 
			sense. 
			 
			Along with Zsigmond (Sigismund), other officers of the Court 
			were his second wife Barbara Cilli (daughter of Duke Hermann 
			II of Styria) and their daughter Elizabeth, thereby achieving 
			an traditional overall standard of twenty-six members. Others 
			prominent in the Societas Dragonis were, 
			
				
					- 
					
					King Vladislav Jagello of 
					Poland  
					- 
					
					King Alfonse V of Aragon 
					 
					- 
					
					Grand Prince Vitovd of 
					Lithuania  
					- 
					
					Duke Ernst of Austria 
					 
					- 
					
					Christopher III, Duke of 
					Bavaria and King of Denmark, Sweden and Norway 
					 
					- 
					
					Later, in 1439, Thomas de 
					Mowbray, England's Duke of Norfolk, was admitted to the 
					Court  
				 
			 
			
			
			
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			Dracula 
			 
			In popular terms, the Hungarian Court of the Dragon is 
			perhaps best known for its association with Vlad II, 15th-century
			Prince of Wallachia, and his son Dracula. In this 
			regard, the story begins in 1431 at the fortress of Sighisoara in 
			Romania, where Vlad III was born into the Wallachian princely
			House of Barsarab the Great (1310-52). His father, Prince 
			Vlad II, was the appointed military governor of Transylvania and, on 
			8 February in the year of his son's birth, he was inducted into 
			the Dragon Court by King Zsigmond of Hungary. 
			 
			This installation was directly responsible for Vlad II's style of 
			Lord Dragonis, from which derived his sobriquet Dracul 
			(the Dragon), while his son Vlad III (who inherited the 
			Dragon office at his father's pledge) became known as Dracula 
			(son of the Dragon). In later times, the Irish author Bram 
			Stoker made use of Prince Vlad's nickname in his 1897 Gothic 
			romance, 'Dracula', although creating an entirely fictitious 
			character for his legendary Count (see 'Realm 
			of the Ring Lords' by Laurence Gardner).  
  
			
			
			
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			Constitution 
			 
			The founding document of 'Zsigmondus dei rex Hungaraie' 
			confirmed that members of the Court might wear the insignia of a 
			dragon incurved into a circle, with a red cross - based upon the 
			original emblem of the 'Rosi-crucis' (the Cup of the 
			waters) which, in its various forms, had identified the Holy 
			Grail from the 4th millennium BC. This original 
			Insignia is still in use, along with a black mantle bearing a red 
			cross design on centre back and front, while a customary gold dragon 
			brooch is worn upon braid on left shoulder. 
			
			  
			
			Shortly after this foundation, 
			Zsigmond was crowned Holy Roman Emperor in 1411 
			and, although the Court's ancient origins were steeped in 
			pre-Christian lore, Pope Gregory XII was obliged to approve 
			his Emperor's establishment, for the nature of the Dragon is 
			such that its princely tradition surmounts the mundane constraints 
			of denominational dispute. After all, King David, Solomon 
			and even Jesus were all pre-Christian dynasts of 
			the line. 
  
			
			
			
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			Religion 
			 
			In those days, the main concern of the Dragon Court was to 
			help protect regional Europe against the invading sultans of the 
			expanding Ottoman Empire. Modern historical writers are often 
			inclined to perceive these Turkish invasions as being a matter of 
			Muslims against Christians, but that was not the crux of 
			the matter. The reality was that the Turks, like others 
			before and after them, were building an 'empire' and their greatest 
			obstacle was the long-existing Byzantine Empire established 
			by Rome, to which much of the Balkan region had been in some way 
			affiliated. In practice, the religious differences were of secondary 
			consequence and, in any event, Christianity was by no means 
			supreme in countries like Hungary and Romania, which 
			supported a strong pagan contingent. 
			 
			It is in this tradition of weighing governmental and religious 
			balances that The Imperial and Royal Dragon Court and Order 
			persists today. It provides a fraternal rallying standard for those 
			of all creeds and cultures who are dedicated to preserving the 
			rights and values of others. 
			
			  
			
			
			
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			The Dragon 
			Court Today 
			 
			The non-joining Court and Order of Sárkány Rend 1408 is a 
			closed establishment of selected 'invitees' who pursue the ancient 
			virtues of chivalry, traditionally known as The Five Holy 
			Obligations.  
			
			  
			
			They are: 
			
				
					
						
						1. Protection of the Earth 
						2. Upholding of Peace 
						3. Support of the Downtrodden 
						4. Defense of the Feminine 
						5. Pursuit of Knowledge 
					 
				 
			 
			
			It is recognized that an increasing 
			number of people are searching for the original, uncluttered roots 
			of their faith and for their purpose in society. They are seeking 
			more effective forms of administration to combat the all too 
			apparent slide into social and moral decline. They are, in fact, 
			questing for the Holy Grail. This quest for new enlightenment is 
			considerably heightened by the new millennium and there is a 
			widespread feeling that this should also present a new Renaissance - 
			an era of rebirth wherein the precepts of the Grail Code are 
			acknowledged and practiced - the precepts of liberty, 
			fraternity and equality. 
			 
			It is in these respects that the Court of the Dragon is most 
			active - supporting at all times the sovereignty of the individual 
			and the responsibilities to protect life and liberty which are 
			inherent within that sovereignty, while pursuing avenues of hitherto 
			suppressed knowledge for the benefit of all.  
			
			  
			
			The primary aspects of the Order's 
			constitution are:  
			
				
					
						
							
								
							 
						 
					 
				 
			 
			
			
			
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