(1865 – 1916 e.v.) by T. Apiryon Gérard Encausse, usually known by his pseudonym “Papus,” was a Spanish-born French physician, hypnotist, and popularizer of occultism. Encausse’s pseudonym “Papus” was taken from Lévi’s “Nuctemeron of Apollonius of Tyana” (supplement to Dogme et Rituel de la Haute Magie) and means “physician.” Papus is primarily remembered as an
Eugène Henri Paul Gauguin(1848-1903 e.v.) by T. Apiryon French painter, leader of the post-impressionist school and the synthesist movement. Gauguin resigned from a successful career as a Parisian stock broker to devote himself to painting, though he had little formal training therein. He was extremely unsuccessful at first, and rapidly lost all his money as
(1821-1890 e.v.) by T. Apiryon English explorer, orientalist, scholar, linguist, sexologist, mystic and spy. He was raised in France and Italy and studied at Oxford. He served as a Captain in the Bombay Native Infantry in what is now Pakistan from 1843 to 1848. He travelled the world in service to the British government, and
(1751-1824 e.v.) by T. Apiryon English antiquarian, philologist, numismatist, free-thinking Deist philosopher, expert on Greek literature, member of the Radical (Whig) Party of Parliament and the Society of Dilletanti, friend of Lord Byron, patron of art and learning, and country gentleman. Knight was born at Wormsley Grange in Herefordshire to a parson, Thomas Knight, and
(1824 – 1904 e.v.) by T. Apiryon Major-General J.G.R. (James George Roche) Forlong was a Scottish military engineer in the Anglo-Indian Army, who received acclaim from the governments of England and India for his brilliant feats of road-building in the jungles of the Indian subcontinent during the Mahratta and Burmese wars. Forlong’s lifelong hobby was
33° 90° 96° X° (1850 – 1905 e.v.) The Spiritual Father of Ordo Templi Orientis by T. Apiryon Carl Kellner was an Austrian paper chemist and an avid student of Freemasonry, Rosicrucianism and Eastern mysticism, and traveled extensively in Europe, America and Asia Minor. During his travels, he claims to have come into contact with
(c. 1817 – 1890 e.v.) by T. Apiryon Author of The Rosicrucians, Their Rites and Mysteries (1870), which is included in Section 2 of the A:. A:. reading list. By profession, Jennings was the secretary to Col. Mapleson, the operatic manager. He was a correspondent of Bulwer-Lytton, a student of the writings of Jacob Boehme,
(1844-1900 e.v.) by T. Apiryon German poet, composer, classical scholar and philosopher. Famed for development of the idea of the “Superman,” the individual who exceeds the limitations set by cultural norms, and for his theory of civilization as resulting from the conflict and resolution of two human tendencies: the Apollonian, representing the rational desire for
(1810-1875 e.v.) by T. Apiryon Usually known by his pseudonym “Eliphas Lévi Zahed,” which is a translation of his name into Hebrew, this Parisian was almost single-handedly responsible for the popular resurgence of the Secret Traditions in the 19th Century. Lévi synthesized Christianity, Judaism, Hinduism, Qabalism, Gnosticism, Masonry, Rosicrucianism, Alchemy, Tarot, Mesmerism, Spiritism, along with