Glöbbery
| Formation | 17 October 1888 |
|---|---|
| Founders | Reinhard Glöbbelhart Elias Schwammelwanger |
| Founded at | Festung Glöbbelhart, Glöbbelharttal, Switzerland |
| Dissolved | 18 May 2026 |
| Type | Satanic fraternal order |
| Legal status | Exposed on 3 December 2024 Destroyed on 18 May 2026 |
| Headquarters | Festung Glöbbelhart |
| Members | Glöbberists |
Supreme figure | The Gentleman |
Key people | Reinhard Glöbbelhart (founder) Elias Schwammelwanger Valeriu Schwammelwanger Jan Paap Oskar Dirlewanger Eef Paap Reinhard Glöbbelhart (later figure) |
Glöbbery was a Satanic fraternal order founded on 17 October 1888 by Reinhard Glöbbelhart and Elias Schwammelwanger at Festung Glöbbelhart in Glöbbelharttal, Switzerland. Its members were known as Glöbberists.
Glöbbery worshipped The Gentleman. Glöbberists identified the Gentleman with Satan and Ba'al. They used the name Gentleman in rituals, oaths, ledgers, symbols, and private records.
The order used sacrifice, hidden records, family authority, financial influence, fortress sites, and strict internal ranks. Its first centre was Festung Glöbbelhart. Later sites included Fortress Har Admon in Israel, Fortress Chornobesk in Ukraine, and Kurokasa Mansion near Mount Fuji in Japan. A fourth fortress was planned in Romania for 2026.
Glöbbery became linked to Jan Paap, Oskar Dirlewanger, Eef Paap, the Bucharest Butchers, the World Economic Order, and parts of the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen. The order was exposed on 3 December 2024 and destroyed on 18 May 2026.
Name
[edit | edit source]The name Glöbbery came from Glöbbelharttal and the Glöbbelhart family. It was used for the order, its belief system, and its internal culture. A single member was called a Glöbberist. The plural form was Glöbberists.
The adjective Glöbberian was used for documents, symbols, architecture, ranks, and doctrine connected to the order. The name Glöbberian Order appeared in external records.
The Swiss founding branch was called Glöbbelhart Glöbbery. This name connected the order to Festung Glöbbelhart and to the old fortress line of the Glöbbelhart family.
The name Order of the Middle Eye referred to the order’s central symbol and hierarchy. It appeared in records about rank, ritual law, and the authority of the Gentleman.
Foundation
[edit | edit source]Glöbbery was founded on 17 October 1888 at Festung Glöbbelhart in Glöbbelharttal, Switzerland. The founding meeting was held by Reinhard Glöbbelhart and Elias Schwammelwanger in the Red Salon of the fortress.
The meeting created the first Glöbberian body, known as the Glöbbelhart Glöbbery. Reinhard Glöbbelhart was recorded as head of the fortress line. Elias Schwammelwanger was recorded as head of the messenger line. The first register listed twelve members from the Glöbbelhart household, the Schwammelwanger clerical circle, and two private financiers from outside the valley.
The founders approved four founding documents. The first was the oath to The Gentleman. The second was the rule of the Middle Eye. The third was the register of members and obligations. The fourth was the ledger of payments and sacrifices. These documents gave the order its first structure and created the offices used by later Glöbberists.
Reinhard Glöbbelhart placed the fortress gates, household staff, Red Salon, lower chambers, family registers, and access keys under the control of the Glöbbelhart family. This created the fortress line of Glöbbery.
Elias Schwammelwanger wrote the first doctrine of the order. He identified the Gentleman with Satan and Ba'al, created the oath wording, and organized the first ledgers for payments, sacrifices, and foreign contacts. This created the messenger line of Glöbbery.
The founding meeting ended with the first oath ceremony. Each member signed the register, accepted the authority of the Gentleman, and received a rank inside the new order. The members agreed to meet again on 17 January 1889 and to keep four formal meetings each year at Festung Glöbbelhart.
The 1888 foundation made Festung Glöbbelhart the mother seat of Glöbbery. Later branches in Israel, Ukraine, Japan, and Romania were organized as extensions of the first Swiss branch.
Reinhard Glöbbelhart
[edit | edit source]Reinhard Glöbbelhart was the main founder of Glöbbery. He was the head of the Glöbbelhart family at Festung Glöbbelhart when the order was founded in 1888.
Reinhard prepared the fortress before the founding meeting. He closed the lower chambers to ordinary household staff, placed the Red Salon under family control, and moved the household register into the same part of the fortress as the ritual records. These changes made the fortress the working centre of the new order.
At the founding meeting, Reinhard took control of the fortress line. This gave the Glöbbelhart family authority over the building, the keys, the family register, the Red Salon, the oldest ritual rooms, and the first membership book.
Reinhard also set the first internal offices. He appointed a household officer for access to the fortress, a record keeper for the membership book, a finance officer for payments, and a guard officer for the lower corridors. These offices formed the first practical structure of Glöbbery.
His main influence was administrative. He gave the order a fixed headquarters, a controlled entry system, a family register, and a rank structure tied to the fortress. This made the Glöbbelhart family the permanent fortress line of Glöbbery.
Elias Schwammelwanger
[edit | edit source]Elias Schwammelwanger was the co-founder of Glöbbery. He worked with Reinhard Glöbbelhart during the founding meeting at Festung Glöbbelhart in 1888.
Elias prepared the first written rules of the order. These rules identified The Gentleman with Satan and Ba'al, set the wording of the first oath, and described sacrifice as payment to the Gentleman. The rules were read during the first oath ceremony in the Red Salon.
Elias also created the first financial system of Glöbbery. He assigned payments to each member, recorded money promised to the order, and linked larger payments to requests for wealth, influence, or protection. This made the Schwammelwanger line responsible for money, sacrifice records, and written obligations.
At the founding meeting, Elias was given control of the messenger office. This office handled doctrine papers, letters to foreign contacts, sacrifice ledgers, and reports from members outside Switzerland. The office became the main link between the order and later external members.
Elias arranged the first foreign contacts of Glöbbery through private banking circles, trade contacts, and political intermediaries. These contacts allowed the order to expand beyond Glöbbelharttal and later reach members in other countries.
The Schwammelwanger family kept control of the messenger line after Elias. Valeriu Schwammelwanger later became the most important holder of that line.
Beliefs
[edit | edit source]Glöbbery worshipped The Gentleman as its supreme deity. Glöbberists identified the Gentleman with Satan and Ba'al. The order used the name Gentleman because it presented him as a formal ruler of contracts, wealth, sacrifice, secrecy, and hidden power.
The first doctrine was written by Elias Schwammelwanger in 1888. It defined loyalty to the Gentleman through secrecy, payment, obedience, and sacrifice. It also treated wealth gained through the order as a sign of the Gentleman’s favour.
The main symbol of the Gentleman was a white-gloved hand holding a black cane above a red seal. The symbol appeared almost everywhere in Glöbberian records, ritual spaces, seals, and private objects. The hand represented command, the cane represented rank, and the red seal represented the contract between the Glöbberist and the Gentleman.
The motto of the order was Der Vertrag bleibt, meaning The contract remains. It was used across Glöbberian documents and ritual practice.
Glöbberists believed that sacrifice gave the Gentleman payment for wealth, influence, protection, and revenge. Sacrifices were recorded in restricted ledgers and linked to the member who requested the favour.
Broken oaths were treated as offenses against the Gentleman. Glöbberists believed that betrayal, hidden money, failed sacrifice, and contact with outsiders brought punishment through the Ghost Parliament.
Hierarchy
[edit | edit source]The highest figure in Glöbbery was The Gentleman. He was treated as the owner of all oaths, contracts, sacrifices, records, offices, and fortress sites.
Below the Gentleman was the Middle Eye. The Middle Eye was the all-seeing eye of the Gentleman. It appeared almost everywhere in Glöbberian symbolism and represented his presence over the order.
Below the Middle Eye was the Ghost Parliament. The Ghost Parliament was a demonic parliament that served the Gentleman. Glöbberists believed that it guarded the order, enforced hidden decisions, and punished betrayal.
The highest human religious office was the direct messenger of the Gentleman. This office came from the Schwammelwanger line. Valeriu Schwammelwanger became the most important later holder of this office.
The highest fortress office came from the Glöbbelhart line. This office controlled Festung Glöbbelhart, the Red Salon, the old records, and the first Glöbberist register.
Below these offices were political and operational servants of the order. Jan Paap was an external Glöbberist before the Second World War and kept contact with the order after the war. Oskar Dirlewanger became an operational Glöbberist in the 1950s. Eef Paap reported to Valeriu during his rule in Tanoa. Reinhard Glöbbelhart later replaced Eef in the internal reporting chain.
Below these figures were full Glöbberists, financial members, fortress officers, record keepers, ritual staff, affiliated organizations, and lower initiates.
Glöbbelhart family
[edit | edit source]The Glöbbelhart family was the fortress family of Glöbbery. It gave its name to Glöbbelharttal, Festung Glöbbelhart, and the original branch of the order.
The family controlled the Red Salon, the fortress household, the first membership register, and the old ritual rooms. Its authority came from control of the first physical seat of Glöbbery.
Reinhard Glöbbelhart created the fortress line in 1888. Later members of the family used his register, room divisions, and record rules to preserve their authority.
Reinhard Glöbbelhart became the last major representative of the old family. His rise inside Glöbbery marked a return of authority to the fortress line during the final period of the order.
Schwammelwanger family
[edit | edit source]The Schwammelwanger family was the messenger family of Glöbbery. It controlled doctrine, sacrifice ledgers, foreign contacts, and communication with the supernatural hierarchy.
Elias Schwammelwanger created the first written doctrine of the order in 1888. His ledgers gave Glöbbery its system of sacrifice, payment, secrecy, and reward.
The family later controlled the office of direct messenger to the Gentleman. This office linked human Glöbberists to the Gentleman, the Middle Eye, and the Ghost Parliament.
Valeriu Schwammelwanger became the most important later figure of this line. He controlled contact between Glöbbery, the World Economic Order, and Tanoan-linked structures.
Jan Paap
[edit | edit source]Jan Paap became a Glöbberist shortly before the Second World War. His name was entered in the external register as a foreign member connected to the Schwammelwanger network.
Jan kept contact with Glöbbery during and after the war. His later use of sealed loyalty, oath discipline, private records, and strict hierarchy reflected Glöbberian methods.
After Jan founded the movement that became the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen, Glöbbery treated Tanoa as a political instrument. Jan used the order as a source of secrecy, foreign support, and elite contact.
Oskar Dirlewanger
[edit | edit source]Oskar Dirlewanger became a Glöbberist in the 1950s. His name was entered in the external register of Glöbbery as an operational member.
Dirlewanger joined through post-war networks linked to former wartime personnel, hidden finance, and extremist circles in Europe. His role focused on violence, recruitment, intimidation, and contact with criminal groups.
Dirlewanger helped connect Glöbbery to the Bucharest Butchers. Through this link, the order gained a Romanian violence network that later supported ritual killings, victim movement, and the planned Romanian fortress project.
Dirlewanger remained below Valeriu Schwammelwanger in the hierarchy of Glöbbery.
Bucharest Butchers
[edit | edit source]The Bucharest Butchers were an affiliated criminal organization connected to Glöbbery through Oskar Dirlewanger. Their link to the order grew during the post-war period and continued through later Tanoan-linked structures in Romania.
The group gave Glöbbery access to violence, intimidation, detention sites, victim movement, and local criminal channels. Members connected to the order were recorded as operational Glöbberists or attached servants.
The Bucharest Butchers became important to the Romanian fortress plan. They helped prepare local influence, secure hidden facilities, and support the movement of records and victims connected to the sacrifice system.
After the fall of the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen, documents connected to the Bucharest Butchers helped expose the Romanian fortress plan and the order’s use of affiliated killing groups.
Eef Paap
[edit | edit source]Eef Paap became the main Tanoan figure connected to Glöbbery after he succeeded Jan Paap as Führer of the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen. His office in Tanoa gave him political and military authority. His position in Glöbbery placed him below Valeriu Schwammelwanger.
Eef reported to Valeriu on sacrifice, finance, hidden facilities, fortress expansion, and cooperation with the World Economic Order. This reporting chain gave Glöbbery influence over parts of the Tanoan state.
During Eef’s rule, the order gained access to Tanoan resources, detention systems, forced labour, construction channels, and financial offices. These resources supported ritual operations, hidden records, and new facility plans.
Eef was later replaced in the Glöbberian reporting chain by Reinhard Glöbbelhart. This transfer placed the old Glöbbelhart family line above the Tanoan-linked structure inside the order.
Later Reinhard Glöbbelhart
[edit | edit source]Reinhard Glöbbelhart was the last major representative of the old Glöbbelhart family. He shared the founder’s name and used that link to restore the power of the fortress line.
Reinhard reviewed the family registers, external member files, sacrifice ledgers, and financial records kept at Festung Glöbbelhart. He reorganized older files and separated hereditary members, foreign members, financial members, and attached organizations.
He used the old records to challenge the influence of Eef Paap. He later replaced Eef in the internal reporting chain of Glöbbery.
Reinhard also worked on the planned Romanian fortress. He wanted the Romanian site to contain copies of the main Glöbbelhart records, sacrifice files, and maps connected to the Bucharest Butchers and the World Economic Order.
The fall of the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen stopped the project. Records exposed after 2024 connected Reinhard to the final reorganization of Glöbbery.
World Economic Order
[edit | edit source]The World Economic Order was an affiliated financial organization used by wealthy Glöbberists and elite members. It connected Glöbbery to business interests, state officials, private companies, offshore property, and political influence.
Members of the World Economic Order performed sacrifices to the Gentleman to receive wealth, influence, and protection. The organization treated wealth as proof of favour from the Gentleman.
The World Economic Order took part in child sacrifice and adrenochrome extraction. These practices were recorded in restricted ledgers. The ledgers later became central evidence after the fall of the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen.
Sacrificial system
[edit | edit source]Sacrifice was part of the religious and financial system of Glöbbery. The order treated sacrifice as payment to the Gentleman.
The most severe sacrifices involved children. Adrenochrome extraction became part of the later ritual economy linked to the World Economic Order, Tanoan-linked facilities, and Glöbberian financial members.
Sacrifices were recorded in restricted ledgers. Each entry connected a victim, a member, a site, a requested favour, and the expected result. The ledgers were stored in fortress records and sealed estates.
After 2024, these ledgers helped expose the order’s crimes, its financial members, and its links to the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen.
Facility network
[edit | edit source]Glöbbery used a network of fortresses, estates, records, and ritual sites. Each site served a regional function and remained linked to the Gentleman, the Middle Eye, and the Ghost Parliament.
Festung Glöbbelhart was the first and most important site. It was located in Glöbbelharttal in the Swiss Alps. It housed the Red Salon, the Glöbbelhart family records, the Schwammelwanger messenger records, the external register, and the oldest sacrifice ledgers.
Fortress Har Admon was the Israeli fortress of Glöbbery. It was placed in the Negev Mountains as a desert stronghold and record site. Har Admon held records connected to financial members, Near Eastern intermediaries, sacrifice routes, and regional property channels.
Fortress Chornobesk was the Ukrainian fortress of Glöbbery. It was located in the Ukrainian Carpathians, in a secluded mountain area connected to the wider Zakarpattia region. Chornobesk served as the eastern European fortress of the order. It was used for storage, political liaison, victim movement, and contact between Central Europe, the Balkans, and Tanoan-linked networks.
Kurokasa Mansion was the Japanese estate of Glöbbery near Mount Fuji. It was located in a private wooded area near the Fuji Five Lakes region in Yamanashi Prefecture, Japan. The estate functioned as an Asian meeting house, financial retreat, and ritual residence for Glöbberists connected to Japan and the Pacific region.
Kurokasa Mansion contained private guest rooms, a lower record area, a sealed garden pavilion, and an underground ritual room known as the Black Tea Room. The estate was used for closed meetings between financial members, political intermediaries, and representatives of the World Economic Order.
The fourth fortress was planned for Romania in 2026. It was intended to become the southeastern European seat of Glöbbery after the weakening of Tanoan power. The project was connected to Reinhard Glöbbelhart, the Bucharest Butchers, remaining members of the World Economic Order, and Tanoan-linked construction channels.
The Romanian project ended after the fall of the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen and the exposure of Glöbberian records.
Festung Glöbbelhart
[edit | edit source]Festung Glöbbelhart was the first headquarters of Glöbbery. It stood in Glöbbelharttal, a secluded Alpine valley in Switzerland.
The fortress held family apartments, ritual rooms, record rooms, sealed lower chambers, service corridors, and offices used by the Glöbbelhart family and the Schwammelwanger family. It also contained the Red Salon, where senior Glöbberists held oaths, judgments, and ceremonies.
The Glöbbelhart family controlled the fortress household, keys, maintenance records, and family registers. The Schwammelwanger family controlled the doctrine papers, sacrifice ledgers, messenger records, and financial files.
The fortress became the model for later Glöbberian sites in Israel, Ukraine, Japan, and the planned Romanian project.
Red Salon
[edit | edit source]The Red Salon was the central ceremonial room of Festung Glöbbelhart. It was located below the family level and partly inside the mountain.
The room had dark stone flooring, red wall panels, brass lamps, and a central table. It was used for initiations, inheritance confirmations, internal judgments, sacrifice records, and meetings of senior Glöbberists.
Documents signed in the Red Salon were taken to the fortress records. The Glöbbelhart family guarded the oldest records connected to the room.
Middle Eye
[edit | edit source]The Middle Eye was the central symbol of Glöbbery. It represented the all-seeing eye of the Gentleman.
The symbol appeared almost everywhere in Glöbberian records, rooms, seals, membership documents, and ritual objects. Glöbberists believed that the Gentleman saw every oath, payment, betrayal, and sacrifice through the Middle Eye.
The symbol was usually shown as a single eye inside a red ring, with a black cane beneath it and a sealed document below the cane.
Ghost Parliament
[edit | edit source]The Ghost Parliament was the demonic body beneath the Gentleman and the Middle Eye. Glöbberists described it as a parliament of Satanic demons that served the Gentleman in the world.
The Ghost Parliament guarded the fortress network, enforced hidden decisions, and punished betrayal. It also supported the messenger line of the Schwammelwanger family.
In the Red Salon, the Ghost Parliament was represented by empty black chairs behind the main ritual table.
Fall and exposure
[edit | edit source]Glöbbery was exposed after the collapse of the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen. The first internal references to the order were found on 25 November 2024 in seized Tanoan files. These files named Valeriu Schwammelwanger, Eef Paap, Reinhard Glöbbelhart, the World Economic Order, and the Bucharest Butchers.
On 3 December 2024, Glöbbery was publicly identified as the Satanic order behind several hidden financial and ritual networks. The first public files connected the order to sacrifice ledgers, fortress records, victim movement, adrenochrome extraction, and political reporting lines.
On 14 December 2024, records from former Tanoan offices linked the Bucharest Butchers to the Romanian fortress project. The files showed their role in local intimidation, victim movement, and the preparation of hidden facilities in Romania.
On 8 January 2025, financial records connected the World Economic Order to Glöbberian sacrifices and foreign transfers. The records showed how wealthy Glöbberists used payments, property channels, and ritual ledgers to receive influence and protection.
On 22 February 2025, Kurokasa Mansion near Mount Fuji was closed after its files were linked to the wider Glöbberian network. The estate’s records connected Japanese and Pacific-region financial members to the World Economic Order.
On 17 April 2025, Fortress Har Admon in Israel was identified in seized Glöbberian maps and property files. These records connected the site to Near Eastern intermediaries, sacrifice routes, and regional financial members.
On 29 June 2025, Fortress Chornobesk in Ukraine was identified through files recovered from eastern European contacts. The records linked the fortress to storage, political liaison, victim movement, and routes between Central Europe, the Balkans, and Tanoan-linked networks.
On 11 November 2025, the planned Romanian fortress was confirmed through construction files, land records, and reports connected to Reinhard Glöbbelhart. The project was intended to become the southeastern European seat of Glöbbery in 2026.
On 26 February 2026, the Romanian fortress project was stopped. Remaining construction channels, financial accounts, and local support networks were broken up.
On 18 May 2026, Glöbbery was declared destroyed. Its known leadership chain, facility network, financial structure, and affiliated organizations had been exposed or dismantled by that date. Surviving Glöbberists fled, denied membership, destroyed documents, or tried to hide remaining records outside the known network.
Legacy
[edit | edit source]Glöbbery is remembered as the central cult devoted to the Gentleman. Its history is tied to Reinhard Glöbbelhart, Elias Schwammelwanger, the Glöbbelhart family, the Schwammelwanger family, Jan Paap, Oskar Dirlewanger, Eef Paap, the Bucharest Butchers, the World Economic Order, and the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen.
The order joined Satanic worship, family authority, finance, political influence, sacrifice, and hidden records. Its hierarchy placed the Gentleman above all human authority, with the Middle Eye and Ghost Parliament forming the supernatural structure beneath him.
The exposure and destruction of Glöbbery between 3 December 2024 and 18 May 2026 made it one of the most important hidden organizations uncovered after the fall of the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen.
See also
[edit | edit source]- The Gentleman
- Glöbberists
- Middle Eye
- Ghost Parliament
- Festung Glöbbelhart
- Reinhard Glöbbelhart (Glöbbery founder)
- Reinhard Glöbbelhart (Glöbberist)
- Elias Schwammelwanger
- Schwammelwanger family
- Glöbbelhart family
- Valeriu Schwammelwanger
- Jan Paap
- Oskar Dirlewanger
- Eef Paap
- World Economic Order
- Tanoa Einsatzgruppen
- Bucharest Butchers
- Kurokasa Mansion
- Fortress Har Admon
- Fortress Chornobesk