The Spear of Destiny (Ravenscroft)

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The Spear of Destiny
OCLC
476732400

The Spear of Destiny: the occult power behind the spear which pierced the side of Christ is a 1972 occult book by the

Walter Stein given to Ravenscroft by his widow.[2][3] Ravenscroft originally claimed to have met Stein, but later only claimed contact through a medium with Walter Stein's spirit.[4]

Court case

In 1979 Ravenscroft sued James Herbert for copyright infringement in Herbert's 1978 novel The Spear. The defendant declined to pay Ravenscroft damages and eventually removed the offending content.[5][6][7][8]

Second book

After Ravenscroft's death, Tim Wallace-Murphy published The Mark of the Beast: The Continuing Story of the Spear of Destiny, citing Ravenscroft as co-author in 1997.

References

  1. ^ Miller, Ian (25 September 2008). "Neville Armstrong". The Guardian.
  2. .
  3. ^ "Trevor Ravenscroft -".
  4. ^ According to Wynants, Ravenscroft admitted during their interview that he had never actually met W.J. Stein, but "talked to him only via a medium". Alec Macellan, The Secret of the Spear – The Mystery of The Spear of Longinus p.116
  5. ^ Nick Freeman (2006) 'A decadent appetite for the lurid'?: James Herbert, The Spear and 'Nazi Gothic'. Gothic Studies Volume 8 (2). 80-97.
  6. ^ 193 |No. 7] 8 May 1980 - Reports of Patent, Design and Trade Mark rpc.oxfordjournals.org/content/97/7/193.full.pdf May 8, 1980 - The plaintiff, Trevor Ravenscroft, was the author of a book called "The Spear of. Destiny". The first defendant, James Herbert, was an author of"
  7. ^ Ravenscroft v Herbert (1980) RPC 193
  8. .


External links