Rosicrucianism

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Teophilus Schweighardt Constantiens
, 1618

Rosicrucianism is a

Rosy Cross or Rose Cross. There have been several Rosicrucian (or Rosicrucian-inspired) organizations, since the initial movement was founded, including the Order of the Golden and Rosy Cross (1750s–1790s), the Societas Rosicruciana in Anglia (1865–present), and the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn
(1887–1903).

History

Between 1610 and 1615, two anonymous manifestos appeared in early modern Germany and soon after were published throughout Europe. The Fama Fraternitatis Rosae Crucis (The Fame of the Brotherhood of the Rosy Cross) was circulated in manuscript among German occultists since about 1610, and published at Cassel in 1614. Johannes Valentinus Andreae has been considered the possible author of the work.[1] A literal reading narrates the travels and education of "Father Brother C.R.C." and his founding of a secret brotherhood of similarly prepared men. Names, numbers, and other details have Qabalistic allusions, in which the cognoscenti of that era were well-versed. The Confessio Fraternitatis (The Confession of the Brotherhood of RC), published in Frankfurt in 1615, responded to confusions and criticisms and elaborated the matter further.[2] Many were attracted to the promise of a "universal reformation of mankind" through a science "built on esoteric truths of the ancient past", which, "concealed from the average man, provide insight into nature, the

physical universe, and the spiritual realm",[3] which they say had been kept secret for decades until the intellectual climate was ready to receive it.[4][5] The manifestos elaborate these matters extensively but cryptically in terms of Qabalah, Hermeticism, alchemy, and Christian mysticism, subjects whose methods, symbolism, and allusions were ardently studied by many intellectuals of the period.[6]

In 1617 a third anonymous volume was published, the Chymical Wedding of Christian Rosenkreutz. In his posthumously published autobiography, Johann Valentine Andreae acknowledged its origin in a romantic fantasy that he wrote before he was 16 years old (1602), among other likewise forgotten juvenilia, and which he elaborated in response to the Fame and Confession, and said of it that "the Chymical Wedding, with its fertile brood of monsters, a ludibrium which surprisingly some esteem and explicate with subtle investigations, is plainly futile and betrays the vanity of the curious" (Nuptiae Chymicae, cum monstrorum foecundo foetu, ludibriu, quod mireris a nonullis aestimatum et subtili indagine explicatum, plane futile et quod inanitatem curiosorum prodat).[7] He called Rosicrucianism a "ludibrium" (a lampoon or parody) during his lifetime, in writings advocating social and religious reform through a sectarian Christian organization of his design.[8] Some scholars of esotericism suggest that Andreae disowned Rosicrucianism to shield his clerical career from the wrath of the religious and political institutions of the day.[citation needed] "[I]t is clear from his "Turris Babel", "Mythologia Christiana", and other works, that he considered the manifestos a reprehensible hoax."[9] This augmented controversies as to whether they were a hoax, whether the "Order of the Rosy Cross" existed as described in the manifestos, or whether the whole thing was a metaphor disguising a movement that really existed, but in a different form.

The promise of a spiritual transformation at a time of great turmoil, the manifestos influenced many figures to seek esoteric knowledge. Seventeenth-century occult philosophers such as Michael Maier, Robert Fludd, and Thomas Vaughan interested themselves in the Rosicrucian worldview.[4] In his work "Silentium Post Clamores" (1617), Meier described Rosicrucianism as having arisen from a "primordial tradition", saying "Our origins are Egyptian, Brahminic, derived from the mysteries of Eleusis and Samothrace, the Magi of Persia, the Pythagoreans, and the Arabs".[citation needed]

In later centuries, many esoteric societies claimed to derive from the original Rosicrucians. The most influential of these societies was the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, which derived from Societas Rosicruciana in Anglia and counted many prominent figures among its members. The largest is the Rosicrucian Order, AMORC, a multinational organization based in Rosicrucian Park, San Jose, California, US. Paul Foster Case, founder of the Builders of the Adytum as a successor to the Golden Dawn, published The true and invisible Rosicrucian Order,[10] elaborating the Qabalistic basis and interpretation of the Fame and Confession.

Rosicrucian manifestos

Origins

Between 1614 and 1617, three anonymous manifestos were published, first in Germany and soon after throughout Europe:[11] the Fama Fraternitatis RC (The Fame of the Brotherhood of RC, 1614), the Confessio Fraternitatis (The Confession of the Brotherhood of RC, 1615), and the Chymical Wedding of Christian Rosicross anno 1459 (1617).

The Luther rose, an early symbol of both Protestantism and Rosicrucianism

The Fama Fraternitatis presents the legend of a German doctor and mystic philosopher referred to as "Father Brother C.R.C." (later identified in a third manifesto as Christian Rosenkreuz, or "Rose-cross"). The year 1378 is presented as being the birth year of "our Christian Father," and it is stated that he lived 106 years. After studying in the Middle East under various masters, possibly adhering to Sufism,[12] he was unable to spread the knowledge he had acquired to prominent European scientists and philosophers. Instead, he gathered a small circle of friends/disciples and founded the Rosicrucian Order (this can be deduced to have occurred around 1407).

During the lifetime of C.R.C., the order was said to comprise no more than eight members, each a doctor and "all bachelors of vowed virginity."[13] Each member undertook an oath to heal the sick without accepting payment, to maintain a secret fellowship, and to find a replacement for himself before he died. Three such generations had supposedly passed between c. 1500 and c. 1600: a time when scientific, philosophical, and religious freedom had grown so that the public might benefit from the Rosicrucians' knowledge, so that they were now seeking good men.[14]

Rose Cross

Reception

The manifestos were, and continue to be, not taken literally by many but rather regarded either as hoaxes or as allegorical statements. They state: "We speak unto you by parables, but would willingly bring you to the right, simple, easy, and ingenuous exposition, understanding, declaration, and knowledge of all secrets."[15]

The first Rosicrucian manifesto was influenced by the work of the respected hermetic philosopher Heinrich Khunrath, of Hamburg, author of the Amphitheatrum Sapientiae Aeternae (1609), who was in turn influenced by John Dee, author of the Monas Hieroglyphica (1564).[4]: 51  The invitation to the royal wedding in the Chymical Wedding of Christian Rosenkreutz opens with Dee's philosophical key, the Monas Hieroglyphica symbol. The writer also claimed the brotherhood possessed a book that resembled the works of Paracelsus. Adam Haslmayr a friend of Karl Widemann wrote him a letter about Rosicrucian people who revealed the Theophrastiam[clarification needed] 24 December 1611.[16]

In his autobiography,

Johann Valentin Andreae (1586–1654) claimed that the anonymously published Chymical Wedding of Christian Rosenkreutz was one of his works, and he subsequently described it as a ludibrium. In his later works, he makes alchemy an object of ridicule and places it along with music, art, theater, and astrology in the category of less serious sciences. According to some sources, his role in the origin of the Rosicrucian legend is controversial.[17] But according to others, it was generally accepted.[18]

Rosicrucian Enlightenment

The publication of the Fama Fraternitatis Rosae Crucis (1614)

In the early 17th century, the manifestos caused excitement throughout Europe by declaring the existence of a secret brotherhood of alchemists and sages who were preparing to transform the arts and sciences, and religious, political, and intellectual landscapes of Europe. Wars of politics and religion ravaged the continent. The works were re-issued several times, followed by numerous pamphlets, favorable or otherwise. Between 1614 and 1620, about 400 manuscripts and books were published which discussed the Rosicrucian documents.

The peak of the "Rosicrucianism furore" was reached when two mysterious posters appeared on the walls of Paris in 1622 within a few days of each other. The first said "We, the Deputies of the Higher College of the Rose-Croix, do make our stay, visibly and invisibly, in this city (...)", and the second ended with the words "The thoughts attached to the real desire of the seeker will lead us to him and him to us."[19]

The legendary first manifesto,

Henricus Madathanus, Gabriel Naudé, Thomas Vaughan and others.[20] Rosicrucianism was associated with Protestantism (Lutheranism in particular).[21]

In Elias Ashmole's Theatrum Chimicum britannicum (1650) he defends the Rosicrucians. Some later works impacting Rosicrucianism were the Opus magocabalisticum et theosophicum by

paracelsian inspiration – and the Aureum Vellus oder Goldenes Vliess by Hermann Fictuld
in 1749.

Michael Maier was appointed Pfalzgraf (

esoteric knowledge
related to the "Path of Initiation".

In his 1618 pamphlet, Pia et Utilissima Admonitio de Fratribus Rosae Crucis, Henrichus Neuhusius wrote that the Rosicrucians departed for the east due to European instability caused by the start of the Thirty Years' War. In 1710, Sigmund Richter, founder of the secret society of the Golden and Rosy Cross, also suggested the Rosicrucians had migrated eastward. In the first half of the 20th century, René Guénon, a researcher of the occult, presented this same idea in some of his works.[22] Arthur Edward Waite, an eminent author of the 19th century, presented arguments contradicting this idea.[23] It was in this fertile field of discourse that many Rosicrucian societies arose. They were based on the occult, inspired by the mystery of this "College of Invisibles".

Some modern scholars, for example Adam McLean and Giordano Berti, assume that among the first followers of the Rose Cross there was also the German theologian Daniel Cramer, who in 1617 published a bizarre treatise entitled "Societas Jesus et Rosae Crucis Vera" (The True Society of Jesus and the Rosy Cross), containing 40 emblematic figures accompanied by biblical quotations.[24]

Frater C.R.C. – Christian Rose Cross (symbolical representation)

The literary works of the 16th and 17th centuries were full of enigmatic passages containing references to the Rose Cross, as in the following (somewhat modernized):

For what we do presage is not in grosse,
For we are brethren of the Rosie Crosse;
We have the Mason Word and second sight,
Things for to come we can foretell aright.

— Henry Adamson, The Muses' Threnodie (Perth, 1638).

The idea of such an order, exemplified by the network of astronomers, professors, mathematicians, and natural philosophers in 16th-century Europe promoted by such men as Johannes Kepler, Georg Joachim Rheticus, John Dee and Tycho Brahe, gave rise to the Invisible College. This was the precursor to the Royal Society founded in 1660.[25] It was constituted by a group of scientists who began to hold regular meetings to share and develop knowledge acquired by experimental investigation. Among these were Robert Boyle, who wrote: "the cornerstones of the Invisible (or as they term themselves the Philosophical) College, do now and then honour me with their company...";[26]

Pansophia
, 1604

John Wilkins and John Wallis, who described those meetings in the following terms: "About the year 1645, while I lived in London (at a time when, by our civil wars, academical studies were much interrupted in both our Universities), ... I had the opportunity of being acquainted with divers worthy persons, inquisitive of natural philosophy, and other parts of human learning; and particularly of what hath been called the New Philosophy or Experimental Philosophy. We did by agreements, divers of us, meet weekly in London on a certain day and hour, under a certain penalty, and a weekly contribution for the charge of experiments, with certain rules agreed amongst us, to treat and discourse of such affairs..."[27]

Legacy in esoteric orders

Rose-Cross Degrees in Freemasonry

18° Knight of the Rose Croix jewel (from the Masonic Scottish Rite)

According to Jean Pierre Bayard,[28] two Rosicrucian-inspired Masonic rites emerged toward the end of 18th century, the Rectified Scottish Rite, widespread in Central Europe where there was a strong presence of the "Golden and Rosy Cross", and the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite, first practiced in France, in which the 18th degree is called Knight of the Rose Croix.

The change from "operative" to "speculative" Masonry occurred between the end of the 16th and the beginning of the 18th century. Two of the earliest speculative Masons for whom a record of initiation exists were Sir

Comenius (1592–1670) the ideal of the newly born English Masonry before the foundation of the Grand Lodge
in 1717. Comenius was in England during 1641.

The

Breslau under the pseudonym Sincerus Renatus[29] in Prague in the early 18th century as a hierarchical secret society composed of internal circles, recognition signs and alchemy treatises. Under the leadership of Hermann Fictuld the group reformed itself extensively in 1767 and again in 1777 because of political pressure. Its members claimed that the leaders of the Rosicrucian Order had invented Freemasonry and only they knew the secret meaning of Masonic symbols. The Rosicrucian Order had been founded by Egyptian "Ormusse" or "Licht-Weise
" who had emigrated to Scotland with the name "Builders from the East". In 1785 and 1788 the Golden and Rosy Cross group published the Geheime Figuren or "The Secret Symbols of the 16th and 17th century Rosicrucians".

Led by

Ferdinand, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg
and all other Freemasons to submit to the Golden and Rosy Cross, without success.

After 1782, this highly secretive society added Egyptian, Greek, and Druidic mysteries to its alchemy system.[30] A comparative study of what is known about the Gold and Rosenkreuzer appears to reveal, on the one hand, that it has influenced the creation of some modern initiatory groups and, on the other hand, that the Nazis (see The Occult Roots of Nazism) may have been inspired by this German group.

According to the writings of the Masonic historian E.J. Marconis de Negre,

Egyptian mysteries with the new higher teachings of early Christianity.[33]

According to Maurice Magre (1877–1941) in his book Magicians, Seers, and Mystics, Rosenkreutz was the last descendant of the Germelshausen, a German family from the 13th century. Their castle stood in the

Albigensian doctrines. The whole family was put to death by Landgrave Conrad of Thuringia, except for the youngest son, who was then five years old. He was carried away secretly by a monk, an Albigensian adept from Languedoc
, and placed in a monastery under the influence of the Albigenses, where he was educated and met the four Brothers later to be associated with him in the founding of the Rosicrucian Brotherhood. Magre's account supposedly derives from oral tradition.

Around 1530, more than eighty years before the publication of the first manifesto, the association of cross and rose already existed in Portugal in the

Order of Christ. Three bocetes were, and still are, on the abóboda (vault) of the initiation room. The rose can clearly be seen at the center of the cross.[34][35] At the same time, a minor writing by Paracelsus called Prognosticatio Eximii Doctoris Paracelsi (1530), containing 32 prophecies with allegorical pictures surrounded by enigmatic texts, makes reference to an image of a double cross over an open rose; this is one of the examples used to prove the "Fraternity of the Rose Cross" existed far earlier than 1614.[36]

Modern groups

The Well of Initiation (27 m high; 9 levels/strata) located in Quinta da Regaleira, Sintra, Portugal. It was built 1904–1910. At the bottom of the "well" is seen the Rose of the Winds (8-point compass rose: 4 cardinal and 4 ordinal directions) placed upon the Templar Cross (Cross pattée/Alisee: with the ends of the arms convex and curved, a variant used by the Knights Templar in Portugal): the Rose Cross.[37]

During the late 19th and early 20th centuries, various groups styled themselves Rosicrucian. The diverse groups who link themselves to a "Rosicrucian Tradition" can be divided into three categories:

SRIA, Societas Rosicruciana; and initiatory groups such as the Golden Dawn and the Ancient Mystical Order Rosae Crucis
(AMORC).

Esoteric Christian Rosicrucian schools provide esoteric knowledge related to the inner teachings of Christianity.[38]

subtle bodies, and to provide safe guidance in the gradual awakening of man's latent spiritual faculties during the next six centuries toward the coming Age of Aquarius.[40]

Several Russians of a mystical mind took advantage of the Edict of Toleration of religion in 1905 to form or resurrect what they considered the ancient forms of esoteric Orders. These were the new Rosicrucians. Their inspired mentors compiled volumes of mystic philosophy which they combined with their personal notions of what the ancient Orders were, and so formed groups. The three principal neo-Rosicrucian Orders of early Soviet Russia were Emesh Redivivus, the Orionist-Manicheans, and the Lux Astralis. Due to suppression by the Soviets they had disbanded by 1933.[41]

According to Masonic writers, the Order of the Rose Cross is expounded in a major Christian literary work that molded the subsequent spiritual beliefs of western civilization:

The Divine Comedy (ca. 1308–1321) by Dante Alighieri.[42][43][44]

Other Christian-oriented Rosicrucian bodies include:

Centro de Estudios Rosacruz (Zaragoza)

Freemasonic Rosicrucian bodies providing preparation either through direct study and/or through the practice of a symbolic initiatory journey.

Initiatory groups which follow a degree system of study and initiation include:

Related groups

Many of these groups generally speak of a linear descent from earlier branches of the ancient Rosicrucian Order in England, France, Egypt, or other countries. However, some groups speak of a spiritual affiliation with a true and invisible Rosicrucian Order. Note that there are other Rosicrucian groups not listed here. Some do not use the name "Rosicrucian" to name themselves. Some groups listed have been dissolved or are no longer operating.

18th and 19th centuries

Society Founded Status
Order of the Golden and Rosy Cross 1750s Dissolved
Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite
1776 Active
Fraternitas Rosae Crucis 1861 Active
Societas Rosicruciana in Anglia (SRIA) 1860s[46] Active
Societas Rosicruciana in America
1878[46] Active
Societas Rosicruciana in Civitatibus Foederatis
(SRICF)
1878[46] Active
Cabalistic Order of the Rosicrucian
1888 Dissolved
Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn 1888[46] Dissolved
Order of the Temple & the Graal and of the Catholic Order of the Rose-Croix 1890[46]

20th century

Society Founded Status
Rosicrucian Society
Rosicrucian Society 1763 in New Orleans as the Loge de Parfait -Rose Croix Active
Rosicrucian Fellowship 1909[47] Active
Anthroposophical Society 1912 Active
Builders of the Adytum 1922 Active
Order of the Temple of the Rosy Cross 1912[46] Dissolved
Ancient Mystical Order Rosae Crucis 1915[48] Active
Fellowship of the Rosy Cross
1915 Active
Rosicrucian Order Crotona Fellowship 1924 Dissolved
Lectorium Rosicrucianum 1924[46] Active
The Saint Paul Rosicrucian Fellowship 1929 Active
The Saint Paul Rosicrucian Fellowship 1929 Active
Fraternitas Rosicruciana Antiqua 1932 Active
Archeosophical Society
1968 Active
Fraternity of the Hidden Light 1982 Active
Confraternity Rosae + Crucis 1989[46] Active

21st century

Society Founded Status
Order of the Hermetic Gold and Rose (RSOHGR) 2022 Active
Sodalitas Rosae+Crucis 2003 Active

See also

Notes

  1. . Retrieved 26 January 2023.
  2. .
  3. ^ Lindgren, Carl Edwin, The way of the Rose Cross; A Historical Perception, 1614–1620, archived from the original on 8 November 2012. Journal of Religion and Psychical Research, Volume 18, Number 3:141–48. 1995.
  4. ^ a b c Yates, Frances A. (1972), The Rosicrucian Enlightenment, London
  5. S2CID 144766713
  6. ^ Waite, A. E. (1924). The Brotherhood of the Rosy Cross: Being Records of the House of the Holy Spirit in its Inward and Outward History. London: William Rider & Son Ltd. p. 226..
  7. ^ Waite, A. E. (1924). The Brotherhood of the Rosy Cross: Being Records of the House of the Holy Spirit in its Inward and Outward History. London: William Rider & Son Ltd. pp. 231–242.
  8. ^ Waite, A. E. (1924). The Brotherhood of the Rosy Cross: Being Records of the House of the Holy Spirit in its Inward and Outward History. London: William Rider & Son Ltd. p. 240.
  9. .
  10. .
  11. ^ "Nthposition online magazine: Lusus serius: The Rosicrucian manifestos and the 'serious joke'". Archived from the original on 13 May 2008. Retrieved 30 January 2009.
  12. ^ Fama Fraternitatis RC
  13. ^ Gorceix, Bernard (1970), La Bible des Rose-Croix, Paris: a work of reference, containing translations of the three Rosicrucian Manifestos, recommended in Accès de l'Ésoterisme Occidental (1986, 1996) by Antoine Faivre (École Pratique des Hautes Études, Sorbonne)
  14. .
  15. .
  16. ^ Cf. Yates, Frances A. (1972), The Rosicrucian Enlightenment, London & Edighoffer, Roland (I-1982, II-1987), Rose-Croix et Société Idéale selon Johann Valentin Andreae, Paris
  17. ^ Cf. Dickson, Donald R. (1996), "Johann Valentin Andreae's Utopian Brotherhoods", Renaissance Quarterly 22 December 1996
  18. ^ Cited by Sédir in Les Rose-Croix, Paris (1972), pp. 65–66
  19. ^ Sédir (1972), Les Rose-Croix, Paris, pp. 59–68
  20. ^ "Review of The Origins of the Freemasonry: Scotland's Century 1590–1710" (PDF). Contra Mundum. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 July 2008. Retrieved 1 December 2009.
  21. ^ Guénon, René, Simboles de la Science Sacrée, Paris 1962, pp. 95ff
  22. ^ Waite, Arthur E. (1887), The Real History of the Rosicrucians – founded on their own Manifestos, and on facts and documents collected from the writings of Initiated Brethren, London, p. 408
  23. ^ See. Adam McLean (editor), The Rosicrucian Emblems of Daniel Cramer: The True Society of Jesus and the Rosy Cross (Edinburgh, 1991), and Giordano Berti (editor), The Sibyl of the Heart (Boves, 2015).
  24. ^ "The origins of the Royal Society lie in an 'invisible college' of natural philosophers who began meeting in the mid-1640s to discuss the new philosophy of promoting knowledge of the natural world through observation and experiment, which we now call science." http://royalsociety.org/about-us/history accessed 2 May 2014
  25. ^ Cited by R Lomas (2002) in The Invisible College, London
  26. ^ Cited by H. Lyons (1944) in The Royal Society 1660–1940, Cambridge
  27. ^ Jean-Pierre Bayard, Les Rose-Croix, M. A. Éditions, Paris, 1986
  28. ^ Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke, The Occult Roots of Nazism, p. 59
  29. ^ Bayard, Jean-Pierre, Les Rose-Croix, M.A.Édition, Paris 1986
  30. ^ de Negre, E.J. Marconis (1849), Brief History of Masonry
  31. ^ Nesta Webster's, Secret Societies and Subversive Movements Archived 28 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine, London, 1924, p. 87 and note 37
  32. ^ Further research in Legend and Mythology: Ormus Archived 13 January 2010 at the Wayback Machine by Sol, The Book of THoTH, 2004
  33. , p. 55
  34. ^ Gandra, J. Manuel (1998), Portugal Misterioso (Os Templários), Lisbon, pp. 348–349
  35. ^ Stanislas de Guaita (1886), Au seuil du Mystère
  36. ^ Anes, José Manuel, PhD, 33º. Scottish Rite, Os Jardins Iniciáticos da Quinta da Regaleira, Ed. Ésquilo, Lisbon, Nov. 2005
  37. ^ Skogstrom, Jan (2001), Some Comparisons Between Exoteric & Esoteric Christianity Archived 9 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine, a table comparing exoteric and esoteric Christian beliefs
  38. ^ The Rosicrucian Interpretation of Christianity by The Rosicrucian Fellowship
  39. ^ The Rosicrucian Mysteries by Max Heindel. Accessed 29 March 2006
  40. ]
  41. ^ Albert Pike, Morals and Dogma of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry, "XXX: Knight Kadosh", p. 822, 1872
  42. ^ René Guénon, El Esoterismo de Dante, pp. 5–6, 14, 15–16, 18–23, 1925
  43. : The Fraternity of The Rose Cross, p. 139, 1928
  44. ^ Salus, Incruce (4 April 2016). "W.Bro. Colonel William James Bury MacLeod Moore". S.R.I.C. - Societas Rosicruciana in Canada. Retrieved 4 May 2020.
  45. ^ a b c d e f g h Frater Melchior. "Manifestations of the Neo-Rosicrucian Current"
  46. ^ 8 August 1909, in Seattle, Washington, at 3:00 p.m; cf. http://mount_ecclesia.tripod.com/chronology_about_max_heindel.htm
  47. ^ Not 1909: a Charter forming this organization is dated from 1 April 1915 in New York, after a previous document titled "American Pronunziamento Number One" or "First American Manifesto" by H. Spencer Lewis issued in February, 1915; cf. parareligion.ch

References

Old editions

Publications

Essays

Fictional literature

Conspiracy literature

External links