Author Archive

Wolfgang von Goethe

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832 e.v.) by T. Apiryon German novelist, playwright, poet, critic, journalist, painter, theater manager, statesman, educationalist, lawyer, scientist, philosopher, alchemist, mystic and Freemason. He was a true Renaissance Man, a success at all of his vocations and avocations, but he was indisputably one of the greatest authors and poets of all

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Adam Weishaupt

(1748-1811 e.v.) by T. Apiryon German educator, freemason and founder of the Order of Illuminati. Crowley considered him to be a Master of the Temple. Weishaupt was educated by the Jesuits, but later became their bitter enemy. He was given the position of professor of Canon Law at the University of Ingolstadt, Bavaria in 1775,

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Molinos

Miguel de Molinos(1640- 1697 e.v.) by T. Apiryon Spanish priest and mystic, the chief exponent of Quietism. He studied theology at Valencia, moving to Rome after his ordination. Quietism is a form of religious mysticism, influenced by Neoplatonism, which requires extinction (quieting) of the personal will, and passive contemplation to allow infusion of the Divine

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Elias Ashmole

(1617-1692 e.v.) by T. Apiryon English antiquarian, historian, alchemist, astrologer and Freemason, founder of the what is now the Ashmolean Collection of the British Museum at Oxford, founding member of the Royal Society, and author of Theatrum Chemicum Britannicum (1652) and The Institution, Laws and Ceremonies of the Most Noble Order of the Garter (1672).

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Thomas Vaughan

(1622-1665 e.v.) by T. Apiryon Welsh alchemist, Qabalist, and Rosicrucian apologist. He was born at Llanaintffraid on the Usk, the brother of the well-known poet, Henry Vaughan. Thomas Vaughan translated the Fama Fraternitatis and Confessio Fraternitatis into English and wrote a number of important magical and alchemical works under the pseudonym “Eugenius Philalethes.” He was

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Sir Edward Kelly

(1555-1595 e.v.) by T. Apiryon Irish alchemist and magician. Kelly is best known for his travels with John Dee and work his work for Dee as a “skryer” or visionary medium; but he was also a noted alchemist on his own right, publishing three alchemical works: The Stone of the Philosophers, The Humid Way, and

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Johannes Dee

Johannes (John) Dee(1527-1608 e.v.) by T. Apiryon English alchemist, mathematician, astronomer, astrologer, philosopher and magician. Dee was the court astrologer to both Queen Mary I and Queen Elizabeth I, and, according to legend, conjured a windstorm which resulted in the defeat of the invading Spanish Armada. Dee was the editor of the first English translation

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Giordano Bruno

(1548-1600 e.v.) by Sabazius Giordano Bruno, born Filippo Bruno in Nola, Campania, was an Italian philosopher, priest, Copernican cosmologist, occultist, mnemonicist, and iconoclast. Bruno’s philosophical and scientific views were profoundly influenced by the ideas of Arab astrological magic, Neoplatonism and Renaissance Hermeticism. His 35 published works include Ars Memoriae (The Art of Memory, 1582), De

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Robertus de Fluctibus

(1574-1637 e.v.) by T. Apiryon Robert Fludd was a Kentish Anglican alchemist, Paracelsist physician, mathematician, astronomer, cosmologist, Qabalist, and Rosicrucian apologist. Fludd was considered by Crowley to be an Adeptus Exemptus. Fludd was a prolific writer, and many of his works on alchemy, Rosicrucianism, occult medicine, the “magnetic” philosophy and various scientific theories survive. The

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Andrea

(1586-1654 e.v.) by T. Apiryon Johann Valentin Andreae was a Lutheran pastor, and the author of The Chymical Wedding of Christian Rosencreutz (1616), a light and sometimes humorous allegorical fantasy of the marriage of the Sun and Moon. Some skeptical authors credit Andrea with the authorship of the “Fama Fraternitatis” and the “Confessio Fraternitatis,” and

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