# THE REAL HISTORY OF THE R O S I C R U C I A N S FOUNDED ON THEIR OWN MANIFESTOES, AND ON FACTS AND DOCUMENTS COLLECTED FROM THE WRITINGS OF INITIATED BRETHREN. BY ARTHUR EDWARD WAITE, AUTHOR OF “THE MYSTERIES OF MAGIC: A DIGEST OF THE WRITINGS OF ELIPHAS LEVI,” ETC. WITH ILLUSTRATIONS. LEEDS: CELEPHAÏS PRESS. 2008. First published London: George Redway, 1887. This electronic edition created by Celephaïs Press, somewhere beyond the Tanarian Hills, and mani(n)fested in the waking world in the year 2005 of the common error. This work is in the public domain. Last revised Feb. 2008. Please report errors to [email protected] citing revision date. ANALYSIS OF CONTENTS. ———————— PAGE Preface—Influence of the Secret Societies—Romantic Associations connected with the Rosicrucian Fraternity—Universal ignor- ance concerning it—Extent of the Rosicrucian literature— Pretensions of this History . . . . . . . . 1 INTRODUCTION. Derivations of the name Rosicrucian—Derivation from the supposed founder, Christian Rosencreutz—Derivation from Ros and Crux —History of the term Ros in Alchemy—Derivation from Rosa and Crux—On the Rose in symbolism, the Cross in Symbolism, and on the significance of their union, with special reference to the Romance of the Rose and the Paradise of the Divine Comedy . . . . . . . . . . . 5 CHAPTER THE FIRST. On the state of Mystical Philosophy in Germany at the close of the Sixteenth Century—Perpetuation of Neo-Platonic traditions —Revolution in Religion, Science, and Philosophy—Paracelsus and his successors—Rise of the Spiritual Alchemists . . . 27 CHAPTER THE SECOND. The Prophecy of Paracelsus and the Universal Reformation of the Whole Wide World . . . . . . . . . 34 CHAPTER THE THIRD. The Fama Fraternitatis of the Meritorious Order of the Rosy Cross, addressed to the learned in general and the Governors of Europe . . . . . . . . . . . 64 vi ANALYSIS OF CONTENTS PAGE CHAPTER THE FOURTH. The Confession of the Rosicrucian Fraternity, addressed to the learned of Europe . . . . . . . . . 85 CHAPTER THE FIFTH. The Chymical Marriage of Christian Rosencrteuz . . . . 99 CHAPTER THE SIXTH. On the Connection of the Rosicrucian Claims with those of Alchemy and Magic—Fanaticism and Follies of the Rosicrucian Mani- festoes—Discrepancies between the Universal Reformation and the Fama Fraternitatis—Religious Opinions of the Society— Scientific and Philosophical Pretensions—Doctrine of the Ma- crocosmos and of the Microcosmos—Theory of Elementals— Doctrine of Signatures—Physical Transmutations—The Great Elixir . . . . . . . . . . . 197 CHAPTER THE SEVENTH. On the Antiquity of the Rosicrucian Fraternity—Absence of his- torical traces before the seventeenth century—Researches of Semler—The Militia Crucifera Evangelica—Absurd pretensions of Mr. Hargrave Jennings—The Templars and the Rosi- crucians . . . . . . . . . . . 210 CHAPTER THE EIGHTH. Theories as to the authorship of the Rosicrucian Manifestoes—The story of Christian Rosencreutz not historically true—Claims of Taulerus, Joachim Junge, and Ægidius Guttmann—Case of Johann Valentin Andreas—Sketch of his Life—Predilection for Secret Societies—Digest of the Evidence adduced to prove that Andreas wrote the Rosicrucian Manifestoes—Examination of this Evidence—Futility and Repulsiveness of Professor Buhle’s hypothesis—Facts of the Case—A tenable hypothesis—Charac- ter of the Rosicrucian Mystery . . . . . . . 217 CHAPTER THE NINTH. Progress of Rosicrucianism in Germany—Andreas Libavius—His hostile criticism—Echo of the God-illuminated Brotherhood R. C.—The Open Letter or Report of Julianus de Campis— Fama Remissa ad Fratres Roseæ Crucis—Confessio Recepta —Vicious attack by Johann Valentin Alberti—Other pamphlets of the Period . . . . . . . . . . 246 ANALYSIS OF CONTENTS vii PAGE CHAPTER THE TENTH. Rosicrucian Apologists: Michael Maier—His importance in the controversy—Publication of Silentium Post Clamores, Symbola Aureæ Mensæ, and Themis Aurea—Curious Colloquy and Echo Colloquii on the Rosicrucian Society—Was Michael Maier the founder of a pseudo-Rosicrucian Society?—Reappearance of the Order—Laws of the Brotherhood as published by Sincerus Renatus . . . . . . . . . 268 CHAPTER THE ELEVENTH. Rosicrucian Apologists: Robert Fludd—Grandeur of the Kentish Mystic—Genealogy and Life—Bibliographical matter—Fludd’s Defence of the Rosicrucians—Analysis of this publication— Hostile criticism of Mersenne—Fludd’s Rejoinder—Epistle from the Rosicrucian Society to a German Neophyte—Cosmi- cal philosophy of Robert Fludd . . . . . . . 283 CHAPTER THE TWELFTH. Rosicrucian Apologists: Thomas Vaughan—The mystery which sur- rounds him—List of his Writings—His translation of the Fame and Confession—His opinion concerning the Order, of which he was not a member . . . . . . . . . 308 CHAPTER THE THIRTEENTH. Rosicrucian Apologists: John Heydon—Autobiography—Talbot’s Life of Heydon—Bibliography—“The Rosie Cross Uncovered” —The Rosicrucians in England—“True narrative of a Gentle- man R. C.”—John Heydon encounters the spirit Euterpe— Voyage to the Land of the Rosicrucians . . . . . 315 CHAPTER THE FOURTEENTH. Rosicrucianism in France—Gabriel Naude’s “Information on the truth of the Rosicrucians”—Strange manifesto placarded on the walls of Paris—“The Unknown and Novel Cabala of the Brethren of the Rose Cross”—“Frightful Compacts between the devils and the so-called Illuminati” . . . . . 387 CHAPTER THE FIFTEENTH. Connection between the Rosicrucians and Freemasons—Futility of Professor Buhle’s hypothesis—The Rose-Cross degree in Free- masonry—Its modern origin . . . . . . . 402 viii ANALYSIS OF CONTENTS PAGE CHAPTER THE SIXTEENTH. Modern Rosicrucian Societies—Migration of true Rosicrucians eastward—Copy of the admission of Sigismund Bacstrom into the Rosicrucian Brotherhood—The English Rosicrucian Society —Its Laws and Objects—Harmless nature of the association— Incompetency of its members—The Rosicrucians in Literature and Legend . . . . . . . . . . 408 Conclusion . . . . . . . . . . . 431 ————————— Additional Notes . . . . . . . . . . 434 Appendix of Additional Documents—Preface to the Fama Frater- nitatis—Curious Apologue—Rosicrucian Prayer to God . . 440 PREFACE. B ENEATH the broad tide of human history there flow the stealthy undercurrents of the secret societies, which frequently determine in the depths the changes that take place upon the surface. These societies have existed in all ages and among all nations, and tradition has invari- ably ascribed to them the possession of important know- ledge in the religious scientific or political order according to the various character of their pretensions. The mystery which encompasses them has invested them with a magical glamour and charm that to some extent will account for the extravagant growth of legend about the Ancient Mysteries, the Templars, the Freemasons, and the Rosi- crucians, above all, who were the most singular in the nature of their ostensible claims and in the uncertainty which envelopes them. “A halo of poetic splendour,” says Hackethorn,1 “sur- rounds the Order of the Rosicrucians; the magic lights of fancy play round their graceful day-dreams, while the mystery in which they shrouded themselves lends additional attraction to their history. But their brilliancy was that of a meteor. It just flashed across the realms of imagina- tion and intellect, and vanished for ever; not, however, without leaving behind some permanent and lovely traces of its hasty passage. . . . Poetry and romance are deeply 1“Secret Societies of all Ages and Countries.” 2 HISTORY OF THE ROSICRUCIANS. indebted to the Rosicrucians for many a fascinating crea- tion. The literature of every European country contains hundred of pleasing fictions, whose machinery has been borrowed from their system of philosophy, though that itself has passed away.” The facts and documents concerning the Fraternity of the Rose Cross, or of the Golden and Rosy Cross, as it is called by Sigmund Richter,1 are absolutely unknown to English readers. Even well-informed people will learn with astonishment the extent and variety of the Rosi- crucian literature which hitherto has lain buried in rare pamphlets, written in the old German tongue, and in the Latin commentaries of the later alchemists. The stray gleams of casual information which may be gleaned from popular encyclopædias cannot be said to convey any real knowledge, while the essay of Thomas De Quincey on the “Rosicrucians and Freemasons,” though valuable as the work of a sovereign prince of English prose composition, is a mere transcript from an exploded German savant, whose facts are tortured in the interests of a somewhat arbitrary hypothesis. The only writer in this country who claims to have treated the subject seriously and at length is Hargrave Jennings, who, in “The Rosicrucians, their Rites and Mysteries,” &c., comes forward as the historian of the Order. This book, however, so. far from affording any information on the questions it professes to deal with, “keeps guard over”2 the secrets of the Fraternity, and is 1 “Die Warhaffte und vollkommene, Bereitung des Philosophischen Steins, der Bruderschaft aus dem Orden des Gulden-und-Rosen Creutzes.” 1710. 2 “No student of occult philosophy need fear that we shall most carefully keep guard—standing sentry (so to speak) over those other and more recondite systems which are connected with our subject.”
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