
Abstract
This article re-examines the contested life and activities of Abbé Bérenger Saunière, parish priest of Rennes-le-Château (1885–1915), by integrating documentary, architectural, financial, and historiographical evidence. While popular narratives attribute his wealth to a spectacular treasure discovery or elaborate conspiracies, recent primary-source analyses—including account books, correspondence registers, oral testimonies, and architectural interventions—suggest a more complex chronology. This article argues that Saunière’s early behaviour (1887–1895) indicates systematic searching motivated by a perceived discovery, while his later wealth (1896–1907) derived primarily from complex networks of donations, mass intentions, and patronage, not solely mass trafficking. The study proposes a new synthesis reconciling the early search phase with the later financial phase and reassesses the plausibility that Saunière’s initial discoveries involved documents, relics, or a small hoard, rather than a mythical treasure.
The figure of Abbé Bérenger Saunière has occupied a unique place in modern French cultural and historical imagination. Since his death in 1917, he has been cast variously as a treasure-hunter, fraudster, mystic, royalist intermediary, and conspiratorial guardian of explosive secrets. Scholarship since the mid-20th century has been polarized between mystification (e.g., de Sède 1967; Plantard 1960s-80s) and demystification (Descadeillas 1974; Jarnac 1985), yet newly examined primary material—including the notebooks of Saunière, financial records studied by Buchholtzer (2006), and oral testimonies documented by Saussez (2004–2010)—complicates both camps.This article integrates the multiple lines of evidence into a coherent historical analysis. Two central research questions guide this study:
(1) Did Saunière’s early activities constitute a deliberate search triggered by a discovery?
(2) Can the later income (1896–1907) be explained solely by mass trafficking, or does the evidence imply additional financial mechanisms?
By applying interdisciplinary methods combining documentary criticism, architectural analysis, financial reconstruction, and oral-history assessment, this article argues for a two-phase model:
Phase I (1887–1895): a period of searching, secrecy, and architectural interventions triggered by a probable discovery in the church.
Phase II (1896–1907): a period of rapid income growth, largely but not exclusively tied to mass intentions, donations, and systematic solicitation networks.
The late 19th-century French rural priesthood lived within stringent financial and canonical constraints. Priests’ stipends averaged 900 francs annually (Choloux 2010), making supplementary income through stipendia missarum (fees for celebrating Masses) common (Marie 1977). Canon law permitted acceptance of mass intentions but limited priests to three Masses per day and required surplus stipends to be passed to the diocese. Simultaneously, church renovations often produced finds—relics, documents, family tomb markers—especially in medieval parishes where altars and columns had been reused over centuries. Episcopal visitations from 1856 and 1876 at Rennes note the presence of relics and documents stored within altars, making later discoveries during Saunière’s renovations plausible.
Oral testimony preserved by the Saunière and Dénarnaud families, later reported by Saussez (2008), describes the discovery of a glass phial containing a parchment inside or atop a discarded church baluster circa 1887. Although no diary entry corroborates the event directly, the discovery aligns with:
The absence of a written note by Saunière is not probative: the diaries were personal working tools, never intended as a complete historical record and demonstrably incomplete in other respects (Buchholtzer 2006).
Following the alleged discovery, Saunière undertook several actions (1889–1894) which are difficult to explain as ordinary renovation:
These actions represent deliberate, multi-year spatial interventions, consistent with an attempt to locate an underground feature such as a crypt, ossuary, or repository.
Immediately after the 1891 discovery, Saunière visited:
The network consists of priests with antiquarian or architectural knowledge or ties to the Legitimist/ultra-Catholic circles surrounding Count de Chambord.
In 1891–1892, Saunière also received a 1,000-franc donation routed through Carrière, whose cousin served as Chambord’s personal physician (Saussez 2008). This pattern suggests that something unusual—not routine repairs—was communicated up this clerical-royalist chain.
Buchholtzer’s and Bedu's study of the original accounting registers (1897–1915) documents:
Critically this concludes:
“Mass trafficking cannot have been the sole source of income” (Buchholtzer 2006).
Descadeillas (1974) claimed Saunière received 100–150 postal orders daily. This is not supported by primary documents. Corbu & Captier’s publication of the mass registers (1990) shows that Saunière received approximately 110,000 mass intentions during his career, corresponding to 100,000–125,000 francs total. This is substantial, but represents less than 20% of Saunière's total expenditure documented by Corjan de Raaf (2010). Thus the “mass trafficking as sole cause of wealth” hypothesis is untenable.
Sizable donations were received from:
Saunière himself reported 82,800 francs in “gifts” in his 1911 defence.
This is the central enigma: what was his “selling point”? Neither mass trafficking nor standard pious solicitation explains:
This suggests Saunière’s relationship with donors involved a message, claim, or perceived possession that distinguished him from ordinary priests.
Using De Raaf (2010) and Buchholtzer (2006) and Bedu (1990):
Even generously calculated, the total remains insufficient to explain ≈700,000 francs in expenditure. Thus at least one of the following must be true:
This article evaluates the last possibility not as sensationalism but as a historically plausible mechanism.
Multiple sources—parish traditions, the 1876 Leuillieux report, Saunière’s correspondence, and village testimony—refer to:
Cholet’s later excavation found steps consistent with Saussez’s hypothesis of a corridor leading beneath the nave.
Several architectural choices make sense if Saunière was attempting to rediscover an underground chamber:
These actions are too targeted to be decorative. They reflect locational knowledge—possibly derived from the alleged phial/ parchment/Parish Register.
Romanticised, based on forged documents, but grew from genuine village rumours that predate the 1960s.
Accurately identifies mass trafficking but exaggerates its financial magnitude and dismisses oral tradition a priori.
This group introduces documentary precision and rejects extreme claims on both sides. Their findings support a hybrid interpretation.
Based on the interdisciplinary evidence, the following scenario best fits the known data.
Saunière probably found:
This triggered:
The discovery granted Saunière a story, a mission, or a claim to special knowledge. This transformed him into a figure who could solicit:
Saunière then implemented a system combining:
The trial revolved around mass income because:
The bishop himself (per Count Fondi de Niort’s testimony) did not believe the trafficking alone explained the affair.
This article demonstrates that the long-standing binary between “treasure discovery” and “mass trafficking” is historically inadequate. The combined documentary, architectural, financial, and oral evidence supports a two-phase model:
The Rennes-le-Château mystery does not require a fabulous treasure. It requires recognition that a modest but meaningful discovery could generate:
The unresolved question is not whether Saunière found a treasure, but what symbolic or documentary value his early discoveries held—and why so many donors across France were willing to support a remote priest with unprecedented generosity.
Jean-Jacques Bedu, 1990. 'Rennes-le-Château - Autopsie d'un mythe' (1990)pp 115-148.
Buchholtzer, Laurent. 2006. Interview with Johan Netchacovitch, Sept. 30, 2006.
Captier, Antoine, and Corbu, Claude. 1990. L’Héritage de l’Abbé Saunière. Perpignan: Editions Bélisane.
Choloux, Jérôme. 2010. Saunière: Étude des archives financières. Manuscript collection.
Descadeillas, René. 1974. Mythologie du trésor de Rennes. Carcassonne: Société d’Études Scientifiques de l’Aude.
De Raaf, Corjan. 2010. “Mass Trafficking and the Finances of Bérenger Saunière.” RLC Research Papers.
De Sède, Gérard. 1967. L’Or de Rennes. Paris: Julliard.
Jarnac, Pierre. 1985. Histoire du trésor de Rennes-le-Château. Nice: Les Presses du Midi.
Marie, Franck. 1977. Rennes-le-Château: Critical Studies. Paris: Éditions Pégase.
Saussez, Paul. 2004–2010. Conferences and CDs on Rennes-le-Château Archaeology. Brussels.
Tomatis, Mariano. 2010. “Saunière’s Trial and the Vatican Appeals.” RLC Studies Archive.