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The Caretaker
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The Golden Dawn - 26/nov/2024

THE GOLDEN DAWN


Founded March of 1888, emerged from the soup of para masonic sects and groups. 


Its basically paramasonic structure + the doctrine of western esotericism.


OUTLINE


Basically, the HOGD is what brought magic into the 20th century


SECTION 1 DA EARLY YAERS


Nobody would let Kenneth Mackenzie practice magic. The world was full of secret societies and esoteric fraternities that promised the inner secrets of the world. So, he became a freemason and worked his way up the ranks. No dice. So, he joined the Societas Rosicruciana in Anglia, the biggest baddest secret society there was. It was closer. The SRIA were an esoteric order, but they were still very christian. You could read about magic to your heart’s content, but practicing magic was explicitly forbidden. Nobody would let Kenneth Mackenzie practice magic. So he decided to figure it out himself. 


Kenneth Mackenzie shopped around. He met with different organizations, ones with wonderfully 1882 names like the Royal Oriental Order of Sikha, and the Sat B’hai, to research their structures. He was looking for a magic school. A system with graded tiers like the SRIA, but for learning magic. He did not find that. But he took extensive notes on what his ideal organization would look like. He also took these notes in code, specifically a Trithemius cipher, as in Johannes Trithemius, who supposedly taught both Paracelsus, and Heinrich Agrippa. 


Then, on 3 July 1886, Mackenzie died. End of Act 1.


William Wynn Westcott was a London coroner, and a prominent member of the SRIA. He had just taken over as leader of a small Masonic body known as the Swedenborgian Rite. Among his predecessors' papers, he discovered the Cipher Manuscripts. Curious, he identified the cipher (Trithemius’s Polygraphae) and translated the document. It is clear that Westcott knew he was holding the opportunity of a lifetime, and he knew just how to play it. 




ASIDE

So what does the HOGD actually do?


SECTION 2 DA TROUBLE STARTS


FALLIN APART



DEATH AND REBIRTH




NOTES


Starts on 576




OH THATS WHAT HAPPENED. HOW HAS THIS NEVER COME UP BEFORE? THATS INCREDIBLY IMPORTANT. HE WAS THE ONE WHO TRANSLATED THEM.



HOLY SHIT


The Societas Rosicruciana in Anglia or S.R.I.A, studies, but does not practice, magic. This was a problem for one Kenneth Mackenzie. He wanted to get practical. He wanted to light the candles and say the chants and actually really properly try to talk to the angels. Unfortunately for him, while the S.R.I.A were leading the pack on the study and preservation of the doctrine of Western Esotericism, they had no ritual structure. Nobody in the S.R.I.A. wanted to put on cloaks and chant while waving around a ritual dagger. This could not do. Mackenzie needed to explore some other societies. So, near the turn of the century, he got together with some likeminded friends, and went a-hunting.

They called themselves The Society of Eight, and they would join orders with delightfully 1875 names like “The Royal Oriental Order of Sikha” and the “Sat B’hai.” Mackenzie took notes. When Mackenzie died on July 3rd, 1886, he left behind a manuscript, written entirely in a 15th century cipher. Its contents were an outline for how to combine the S.R.I.A.’s doctrine with the ritual structure of an honest-to-god mystical society.


This Cipher Manuscript would fall into the hands of fellow S.R.I.A member William Wynn Westcott, one of the few people on earth who could recognize and decode the manuscript. (If you are curious, it was written in Trithemius’s Polygraphiae cipher.) 


When Westcott realized what he had, he got to work building one of the most influential ritual systems in western history. And by got to work, I mean he called Samuel and Moira Mathers and asked them to design most of the rituals and structures. Crucially, he would not tell Mathers where he got the manuscript. He would say he received the manuscripts from a masonic historian named A.F.A. Woodford, implying that the text was far older and more historically significant than it actually was. This was a gamble. If Mathers ever questioned the veracity of the manuscripts, he could easily speak to Woodford, and the whole jig would be up. Luckily, Woodford would die barely two months later. His claim to the core document of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn was now set in stone. 


Then Westcott got really clever. He included a note in the manuscript, written in the same cipher, from one Fräulein Sprengel, otherwise Soror Sapiens dominabitur astris – ‘a chief among the members of die goldene dammerung’ and established a mail correspondence. Writing as Frau Sprengel, Westcott would weave a fantastic and mythical history for the Hermetic order of the Golden Dawn, and give himself the authority to found a new lodge in her name. 


This new Golden Dawn lodge would be based on SRIA’s structure, and a SRIA lodge needed three chiefs to run. Westcott was one, Mathers was two (whether he believed it or not), their third would be an accomplished hebraist and kabbalist named William Robert Woodman, who happened to be the current Supreme Magus of the S.R.I.A. By their powers combined, they would found their new order. On March 1st, 1888, they would consecrate the Isis-Urania Temple No. 3, of the Order of the G.D. in the Outer’


The order is structured in ranks. Each rank corresponds to a different sephirot, with Neophyte, the lowest rank, being situated below the tree. 




The “Outer order” was structured like this: 

Neophyte 0=0, 

Zelator 1=10 (Malkuth)

Theoricus, 2=9 (yesod)

Practicus, 3=8 (Hod)

Philosophus, 4=7 (Netzach)


Above this was this second, Inner Order, the order of Adepts, but they wouldn’t build out those ranks until 1891. 


Within a year of founding, they would have more than 60 members and two additional lodges.


Blavatsky forbade members of the esoteric sector from joining other orders but Westcott was able to assuage her worries. This would give us two more lodges, one in edinburgh and one in Paris. 


By 1894, they had 331 members


“As initiates progressed, so they were expected to become increasingly familiar with the Hebrew alphabet, the meaning of kabbalistic [→ Jewish Influences], alchemical [→ Alchemy] and → tarot symbolism, the technicalities of → astrology and other forms of divination [→ Divinatory Arts], and the names and natures of the Elemental Beings – in all of which areas of study they were duly examined. In addition, they were required to meditate and to become proficient in the Rituals of the Pentagram, but this was the sole activity that could possibly be construed as magical, everything else provided for members of the Golden Dawn in the Outer being a part of traditional Western esotericism.”


“This Order comprised the three Adept Grades that corresponded to the three sephiroth in the kabbalistic World of Briah. These were the 5=6 Grade of Adeptus Minor, corresponding to the sephira Tiphereth; the 6=5 Grade of Adeptus Major, corresponding to Geburah; and the 7=4 Grade of Adeptus Exemptus, corresponding to Chesed.”


“Neither Westcott nor Woodman had shown any great enthusiasm for a working Second Order, but Mathers was eager to develop rituals for the Adept Grades and to construct a “Vault of the Adepts” around and within which the ceremonies could be worked.”


Yeah that sounds like Mathers


“Mathers was a ritualist of genius and in the Golden Dawn system they were transformed into spectacular dramas of death and resurrection, worked within a Vault that he designed and constructed”


Westcott carefully grew the ranks, placing cryptic comments in the appropriate journals. This attracted the literary and artistic avante-garde of the 1890s.

The first of these was Mina Bergson, who joined and became the first to enter the second temple. She also married Mathers. 


MINA MATHERS SWEEP


THE EIGHTY-PERSON ORDER


“By this time there were some eighty members of the Order, but only three others who would play any significant role in its affairs: Annie Horniman, the daughter of a tea magnate; the actress Florence Farr; and the poet → W.B. Yeats”


Then you had the professionals like scientists, biologists, mathematicians, etc. 


And A.E. Waite; the Egyptologist M.W. Blackden; and the magician and farceur → Aleister Crowley


In 1981, woodman dies. Things go smoothly for a bit. More people hit the Second Grade. They have acess to the ritual vault, and the library, this makes them start questioning Mathers leadership. Mathers was strictly orthodox. 


“In 1893 he had suspended, and later expelled, Theresa O’Connell, one of the earliest initiates of the Order, over a minor dispute, while Westcott attempted (probably at Mathers’s instigation and

ultimately without success) to limit the activities of female adepts in the Isis-Urania Vault. These attempts to impose discipline were followed by a more serious affair that brought to light signs of real discontent among the adepts.”


“Annie Horniman, who had been providing regular funds for Mathers and his wife, expressed increasing unease at both the unorthodox sexual doctrines of a fellow adept, Dr. Berridge, and his behaviour towards the lady adepts. But when, in 1896, she complained of this to Mathers he reproved her and accused her of mental imbalance, later adding accusations of insubordination and incompetence.”


Further proof that the women were the real powerhouses behind the GD


This is when Mathers published that weird letter. He was clearly slipping and mad with power. 


Well, Anne Horniman was a large chunk of the temple’s funding


“This was further inflamed in 1897 by the sudden withdrawal of Westcott from any active role in the Golden Dawn in response to pressure from the civil authorities, who objected to a Crown official (Westcott was a coroner) being involved in a magical Order.”


HERE


So now mathers was the only guy in charge. People were so disasttisfied with how he ran things, that some lodges considered closing down the temples. 


“Mathers’s response, in a letter of March 1900 to Florence Farr, was to deny their request and to make an extraordinary claim about Westcott that undermined the integrity of the Golden Dawn and threatened to destroy the Order. Mathers claimed that he alone had ever been in communication with the Secret Chiefs and that Westcott had forged the original correspondence with Anna Sprengel. What he seems to have failed to recognise is that if the members of the Order believed him then they would realise that the Golden Dawn was an utter sham, based upon forgery and deceit.”


Obviously, Farr immediately went to Westcott to ask him about he allegations. But Mathers had no proof, and Westcott had to be evasive. 


“He had made the mistake of trusting Aleister Crowley and of admit- ting him to the Second Order in Paris, even though Crowley had been denied such advancement in London.” 


LOL


“In April 1900, Crowley arrived in London as Mathers’s representative, charged with reclaiming the Order for its erstwhile Chief.” 


LOL


So, Mathers also claimed he met the real Anna Sprengel, in the form of a woman named Madame Horos, who turned out to be a con artist, stole the golden dawns books, fled to london, and started her own spurrious version of the order.She and her husband were eventually arrested, tried, and jailed for criminal fraud and rape. The trial was DISASTROUS for the GD. 


Several of their rituals were made public. This made many of the members just outright leave.


The remaining members were split between Farr’s desire to do small informal ceremonies among cadres of adepts, while Mathers wanted to do the rigorous orthodox shit. No compromise was reached. The order disbanded in 1903.


Waite managed to scrape together the orthodox mystics, and took control of the Isis Urania temple, founding the “Independent and Rectified Rite” on July 8th 1903. The new rite was now explicitly Christian, and attracted some members that otherwise would have balked at magic.


They would attract some other stragglers from the shattered order, eventually naming the new temple the Alpha Et Omega. 


Mathers would eventually die, in 1918 and Mina would take over. 


“Her management of the Order was no less idiosyncratic and authoritarian and she alienated the most able members, among them most of her American followers and the young → Dion Fortune, who left to found the Fraternity of the Inner Light.”

We love womens wrongs


Waite eventually became increasingly skeptical of the Cipher Manuscripts. One of his co-chiefs, Blackden, insisted that they were of Egyptian origin.






581






Comments

Typo spotted, you put 1981 instead of 1891

AutisticCatnip


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