
The
History of the Golden Dawn
Copyright
© 1997 by Chic & S. Tabatha Cicero
The
story of the Golden Dawn, like that of any human organization, is replete with
high points and low points—with human achievements and human failings. There
is no need for us to try to whitewash or sugarcoat the faults of some of the
individuals who contributed to the Order’s colorful history. Nor should we
place them on lofty pedestals and worship them as if they were infallible gurus.
They were not. The founders of the Golden Dawn were intelligent creative
individuals who came together to craft a unique system of magical teachings and
initiatory rites.
In
spite of the shortcomings of some of its founding members, the accomplishments
of the Golden Dawn have benefited many people as is evidenced by just how much
of the system has been borrowed by other magical groups. Teachings and rituals
that were originally created by the Golden Dawn are now standard fare in many
esoteric organizations. This is because the teachings themselves are valid and
useful. And for those whose first love is the Golden Dawn tradition, there is no
question about its value. In fact, when Golden Dawn magicians are able to come
to terms with the mixed bag of the Order’s history, they are less likely to
fall into the trap of egotism—the scourge of magical Orders and religions
alike. Instead, they are more likely to concentrate on what is really important
in the Order—spiritual growth. The Great Work.
The
Years before the Golden Dawn
In
the mid-1800’s Europe was experiencing a huge growth of interest in general
occultism, and the Hermetic Tradition in particular. This interest was seen in
England and especially in France. By the mid-1850’s the French Occult Revival
led by Alphonse Louis Constant, better known as Eliphas
Levi, was well underway.
In 1854 Levi wrote The Dogma and Ritual of
High Magic which would become a cornerstone of the Western Magical Tradition.
Levi was the first person to point out the correspondences between the Tarot and
the Qabalah—a theory that would later become an important part of Golden Dawn
teachings.
This
was a time of discovery as England continued to explore the farthest reaches of
the world. There was much interest in ancient Egypt, as well as the archaic
traditions of the Celts, and the mysticism of the Far East. However most occult
studies at the time were strictly theoretical. But there was definitely a change
in the air in regards to spiritual beliefs. Many people were dissatisfied with
the status quo of the orthodox religions. They were hungry for something new and
stimulating. The Spiritualist movement evolved to satiate this hunger.
Spiritualism
was established as an alternative form of religious belief in America in the
late 1840’s. Founded in 1848 by the Fox sisters (Margaretta, Leah, and Kate),
the focus of Spiritualism was on communication with the dead. A deceased person
was said to speak through a medium in order to give information to the living.
This was sometimes accompanied by certain physical manifestations such as
rapping on table, the moving of objects around the medium, and the
materialization of the deceased spirit.
Spiritualism
caused great excitement and attracted many followers when it came into being,
because it provided direct and
personal experience with the spiritual. It was dynamic and exhilarating,
especially when compared to the tamer, dogmatic experiences of the orthodox
churches. However, the limitations of spiritualism were many. It seemed to offer
contact with only the lowest levels of the spiritual world—the shells and
spirits of the dead. (Magicians have a saying about Spiritualism—“Just
because someone has died, doesn’t mean they’ve gotten any wiser.”)
Spiritualism was also intellectually unsophisticated, and had no tradition to
back it up. In addition, there was a disturbing number of mediums who were
frauds.
In
the 1860’s and 1870’s there was also an increased interest in Freemasonry, a
world-wide fraternity of men, supposed to have been founded at the building of King Solomon’s
Temple.[1]
Freemasonry taught basic morality and required a belief in God as the divine
architect of the cosmos. Because of an influx of men who wished to become
Masons, there were many new lodges formed during the later part of the 1800’s.
In
1875, an organization known as the
Theosophical Society was founded in New York City by a group of
Spiritualists, Qabalists, Freemasons, and Rosicrucians. It was headed by Madame
Helena Petrova Blavatsky and Colonel Henry Olcott. Theosophy
(meaning “Divine Wisdom”) was welcomed by many educated people in America
and in Britain, because it offered a vital and stimulating alternative to the
religion of the masses. It also offered an alternative to material science,
which was busy destroying all spiritual ideas of the universe. Theosophy was
spiritually and intellectually satisfying to people who were looking for a new
kind of spirituality. Instead of dead relatives, the Theosophists sought the
advice of enlightened Masters—higher spiritual beings. Theosophy also made an
intriguing claim to represent an archaic secret tradition. Its aim was to bring
the esoteric knowledge of the ancients to the modern world, and to study
comparative religions, the laws of nature, and humanity’s spiritual faculties.
In addition to promoting the idea of brotherly love, Theosophists also
popularized the idea of an esoteric wisdom-teaching that was common to all
humanity.
It
is interesting to note that there was not a single representative of the Eastern
Mystical Tradition among the founders of the Theosophical Society. At this early
stage, Madame Blavatsky (or HPB as she was often called) identified her
inner contacts, or Secret Chiefs
as non-physical masters from an Egyptian Order that was carrying on the work of
Zoroaster and Solomon. In other words, the Theosophical Society was founded as a
Western esoteric society. Blavatsky’s western
masters were called Serapis Bey, Polydorus Isurenus, and John King.
It
was years later that Blavatsky and Olcott converted to Buddhism. The
Theosophical Society then shifted to an Eastern orientation. Blavatsky gave up
her Western Secret Chiefs for three oriental Masters:
Koot Hoomi, Morya, and Djwal
Khul. If HBP and Olcott had not become Buddhists and changed the focus of the
Theosophical Society, it is possible that the Golden Dawn might never have
developed. But there was still a need for a group that emphasized the Western
Esoteric Tradition.
Another
important figure who influenced the creation of the Golden Dawn was Anna
Kingsford. Along with her spiritual partner, Edward Maitland, Mrs. Kingsford
revived the idea of esoteric Christianity.
Both Kingsford and Maitland were mystics who were said to have frequent
spiritual visions. They called their work Christian
Pantheism, which explored the Bible in terms of esoteric symbolism, Qabalah,
and the mythologies of Egypt, Greece, and Rome. Their doctrine had similarities
to certain Neo-Platonic, Gnostic, and Alchemical ideas.
In
the early 1880’s Kingsford and Maitland were members of the Theosophical
Society, and by 1884 they were the heads of the London Theosophical Lodge.
However, they resigned when they realized that the Eastern focus of the society
could never truly be reconciled with their own Western beliefs.
In
1885, they formed the Hermetic Society
which attracted people like S. L. MacGregor Mathers and Dr. W. Wynn Westcott,
the founders of the Esoteric Order of the Golden Dawn. There is no doubt that
Anna Kingsford impressed both Mathers and Westcott with the idea that men and
women should work together on the spiritual quest, as did the Theosophical
Society.
The
Founders of the Golden Dawn
In
1888, three Qabalists, Freemasons, and Rosicrucians founded the Esoteric Order
of the Golden Dawn, to carry out the work that was abandoned by the Theosophical
Society. These founders of the Golden Dawn intended that the Order should serve
as the guardian of the Western Esoteric Tradition—keeping its knowledge
intact, while at the same time preparing and teaching those individuals called
to the initiatory path of the mysteries.
The
primary creator of the Golden Dawn was
Dr. William Wynn
Westcott. A London
coroner who was interested in occultism, Westcott was a Master Mason and
Secretary General of the Societas
Rosicruciana in Anglia or the Rosicrucian
Society in England (also called the SRIA). Westcott, along with two others
founded the Esoteric Order of the Golden Dawn in 1888. However, the Golden Dawn
was definitely Westcott’s brainchild.
Westcott’s
colleagues in this endeavor were
Dr. William Robert Woodman and
Samuel Liddell
MacGregor Mathers. Dr. Woodman was a retired physician and a leading member of
the SRIA. Along with Mathers, Woodman was asked by Westcott to become one of the
leaders of his new Order in 1887. Woodman was an excellent Qabalist who had
probably had a leading role in developing in the Qabalistic studies of the
Golden Dawn. However, he died in 1891, before the Order was fully developed.
The
true magician of the Golden Dawn, S.L. MacGregor Mathers, was an accomplished
ritualist. Of the three founding members of the Order, Mathers was the one most
responsible for making the Golden Dawn a truly magical and initiatory Order.
The
Cipher Manuscript
No
history of the Golden Dawn can be given without some reference to the Cipher
Manuscript—the enigmatic document upon which the rituals and Knowledge
Lectures of the Golden Dawn are based. According to Westcott, some sixty pages
of a manuscript written in cipher were given to him in 1887 by the Reverend A.
F. A. Woodford, an elderly Mason who, it was claimed, received the manuscript
from “a dealer in curios.” The manuscript, which seemed to be old, was
quickly deciphered by Westcott using the cipher found in Abbot Johann Trithemius’
book Polygraphiae. The manuscript
proved to be a series of ritual outlines of an occult Order. Westcott
fleshed-out the outlines into full working rituals.[2]
Shortly after the grade rituals from Neophyte through Philosophus were
completed, Westcott, asked Mathers and Woodman to join him as chiefs of his new
Order.
There
continue to be many questions about where the Cipher Manuscript came from. Some
people tend to think that Westcott created them. Others think that they were
written by Lord Edward Bulwer-Lytton, the author of an occult novel called
Zanoni, A Strange Story, or by
Frederick Hockley, a famous Rosicrucian “seer” and transcriber of occult
manuscripts. There have been several other theories put forth as possible
sources of the Cipher Manuscript, including a Masonic Lodge in Frankfort called
the “Loge zur aufgehenden Morgenrothe” (with an offshoot Lodge supposedly
founded in London), and a “Qabalistic College” in London headed by an
influential Qabalist by the name of Johann Friedrich Falk. Both of these groups
have been suspected by some to have been tied to the enigmatic second
Hermanoubis Temple of the Golden Dawn. However,
there is no evidence to support any of these theories.
The
real truth about the Cipher Manuscript is probably as follows. It now seems
certain that the Cipher Manuscript was written by Kenneth Mackenzie, the author
of The Royal Masonic Encyclopia and a leading member of the SRIA.
Mackenzie had known Eliphas Levi, and was a friend of Frederick Holland, another
high-grade Mason. Leading Golden Dawn historian R.A. Gilbert suspects that the
real Hermanoubis Temple was a Golden Dawn prototype founded in 1883 founded by
Holland.[3] This group was known as
the “Society of Eight.” Mackenzie wrote the ritual outlines of the Cipher
Manuscript for Holland’s order, a group which never fully manifested, or for
the Sat B'hai which admitted both men and women. Westcott acquired the papers
after Mackenzie’s death.
With
such a strong Masonic background, Westcott was familiar with the notion of
organization through hierarchy. Masonic lodges could not exist without a
legitimate charter from the Grand Lodge. Westcott must have felt the need to
provide evidence that the Golden Dawn was not something that was merely created
out of thin air—that it had a written history. He needed a “pedigree” of a
sort to prove that the G.D. had legitimate hierarchical succession from some
distant authority. Since such no hierarchical authority existed for the Golden
Dawn, Westcott fabricated one. Why did he do this? It was probably the only way
he could attract Freemasons and other serious occultists to his new Order.
An
additional paper, written in cipher, was inserted into the manuscript by
someone—more than likely Westcott himself. This was a letter containing the
credentials and address of a woman in Germany named Fraulein Sprengel, Soror
Sapiens Dominabitur Astris.[4]
According to Westcott, he wrote to Fraulein Sprengel and was informed that she
was an Adept of an occult Order (Die
Goldene Dammerung, or the Golden Dawn.) She supposedly authorized Westcott,
through a series of letters, to establish a new temple in England and gave
Westcott permission to sign her name on any document that was needed. And in the
spring of 1888 Westcott produced a Charter of Warrant for the Isis-Urania Temple
#3 of the Esoteric Order of the Golden Dawn in London.[5]
While
the Cipher manuscripts are genuine, it is certain that Westcott made up the
story about Anna Sprengel and her letters. By making her a high-ranking official
in an obscure German Order, Westcott made her authoritative, credible, and
unreachable. And once the mythical Soror SDA had served her purpose, she
conveniently died.
By
the end of 1888, Isis-Urania Temple in London had thirty-two members, nine women
and twenty-three men. That same year, two more temples were established. These
were the Osiris Temple #4 at Weston-Super-Mare, and the Horus Temple #5 at
Bradford. Amen-Ra Temple #6 in Edinburgh, Scotland was not founded until 1893.
The Osiris Temple was active until 1895, but the Horus Temple at Bradford
prospered until 1900.
The
R.R. et A.C.
During
its early years from 1888 to 1891, the Golden Dawn was primarily a theoretical
school which performed the initiation ceremonies of the Outer Order, and taught
its members the basics of
Qabalah, astrology,
alchemical symbolism, geomancy,
and tarot, but no practical magic other than the Lesser Banishing Ritual of the
Pentagram. In the later part of 1891, Isis-Urania Temple had over eighty
initiates, while other temples had a couple of dozen members.
In
December of 1891, Dr. Woodman died and no one was chosen to take his place. Around
this time, Mathers finished a magnificent ritual for the 5=6, (the Adeptus Minor
grade), the first grade of the Second or Inner Order of the Ordo
Roseae Rubeae et Aureae Crucis, also
called the R.R. et A.C., or the “Order of the Rose of Ruby and the
Cross of Gold.” With the creation of a functional Second Order, Mathers
accomplished a restructuring of the Order and became its primary Chief.
The 5=6 ritual was based upon the legend of Christian
Rosenkruez (or CRC) and the accidental discovery of his burial chamber one
hundred and twenty years after his death. The story, as described in the
Fama
Fraternitatis[6] is as follows: The great
spiritual teacher and founder of the Rosicrucian fraternity, Christian
Rosenkruez, died and was secretly buried. Years later, members of the Order
chanced upon the tomb, which was hidden behind some masonry. The tomb they found
was a seven-sided room inscribed with elaborate symbolism. Each wall of the tomb
was eight feet high by five feet wide. In the center of the room was a circular
altar over a sarcophagus, in which lay the perfectly preserved body of CRC.
For the 5=6 ritual, Mathers and his wife, Moina, created
an elaborate full-size version of CRC’s tomb, known as the Vault of the Adepti,
which displayed the strong Rosicrucian element that was woven into Golden
Dawn’s Inner Order.
Moina
Mathers was an
accomplished artist, a gifted clairvoyant, and MacGregor’s personal “skryer.”
Her visionary experiences may have greatly influenced her husband in the writing
of the Second Order rituals and gradework. Moina painted most of the wall
decorations, godforms, and temple furnishings for the mother temple, Isis-Urania,
in London. Since the Fama
did not give many details on the symbolism of the room, the Matherses were
able to draw upon their own formidable creativity to produce this impressive
chamber. (Anyone initiated in such a Vault could testify to its potent psychic
impact.)
Admission to the secret Second Order was gained by
invitation as well as examination.
And the work of the Second Order was
also extensive. Whereas the First Order of the Golden Dawn was a basically
theoretical, the Second Order of the R.R. et A.C. was where magical theory was
put into practice. Members were required to make and consecrate several magical
implements. MacGregor Mathers also created a curriculum and a series of eight
examinations which led up to the subgrade of Theoricus Adeptus Minor. Few
members had the time or stamina to complete the gradework and all eight
examinations. Those who did could rightly profess to have obtained a complete
education in nearly every facet of Western Hermetic magic (It was comparable to
a university degree in magic.)
In
the spring of 1892, the Matherses moved to Paris and sent up the Ahathoor Temple
#7. Dr. Westcott became the Chief of the Order in England. Through his
correspondence with Mathers, he received additional material for the
ever-expanding Second Order curriculum. The Order continued to thrive from 1892
to 1896. Shortly
after this, a handful of American temples were chartered by the A.O.: Thmé
Temple No. 8 in Chicago, 1897; Thoth-Hermes No. 9 in New York, 1897; Ptah No. 10
in Philadelphia, 1919; and Atoum No. 20 in Los Angeles, 1920.[7]
Problems
Trouble
in the Order began 1895 when MacGregor Mathers’s relationship with his
financier,
Annie
Horniman, began to deteriorate. Horniman, a long time member of the Order, was the daughter of an
affluent tea importer. She was a close friend of Moina Mathers when the two
attended art school together. After their move to Paris, Horniman supported the
Matherses financially from England with a generous subsidy. In return, she
expected Mathers to dedicate all of his time to the work of the Order. But
instead he become increasingly distracted by Jacobite politics and other
pursuits.
MacGregor
Mathers was a talented magician, but also a demanding, eccentric, and autocratic
Chief. In the spring of 1896, a disagreement erupted between Horniman and
Mathers over the matter of his politics taking time away from his Order
responsibilities. Mathers accused his benefactress of trying to weaken his
authority, and she in turn withdrew her financial support from him.
Increased
restlessness on the part of the Second Order Adepts in London, resulted in swift
action from Mathers. In the fall of 1896, he sent each of them a copy of a
manifesto demanding complete obedience to him on everything related to the First
and Second Orders. All but Horniman submitted to the demand. Mathers promptly
expelled her from the Order, which shocked many of the members and only added to
their discontent.
Another
problem developed in March of 1897, when Westcott’s association with the
Golden Dawn become known to the authorities. Westcott resigned from all offices
within the Golden Dawn and the R.R. et A.C.
Florence
Farr, the famous stage
actress, then became the head of the London branch of the Order. But without
Westcott’s enthusiastic supervision and propensity for orderly paperwork, the
extensive gradework and examination system of the Second Order in London began
to decline.
A
major crisis for the Golden Dawn occurred in February of 1900. Mathers was
governing the Order from a distance, and he was increasingly out of touch with
the English temples. Florence Farr was growing tired of Mathers’s personal
quirks and domineering behavior. In a letter to Mathers, she suggested that the
Order should be dissolved. Mathers suspected that this was part of a scheme to
bring back Westcott and replace him as head of the Order. Consequently, Mathers
revealed to Farr that the letters from Fraulein Sprengel had been forged by
Westcott.
This
bombshell shook the trust of the London members. Even more exasperating was the
fact that Westcott declined to give any explanation or even defend himself
against Mathers’s accusations. To make matters worse, an individual named
Aleister Crowley, who had been in the Order for approximately one year, became
eligible for initiation into the Second Order in December 1899. Florence Farr,
along with several of the London Adepts, saw Crowley as a questionable initiate,
and rejected his initiation. Crowley immediately went to Paris and was initiated
into the Second Order by Mathers. This did not sit well at all with the London
Adepts, who refused to acknowledge Crowley’s initiation. A full-blown
rebellion was at hand. The Second Order members in London formed a committee to
investigate the allegations of fraud. In April of 1900, Mathers declared the
Second Order committee annulled. He sent Crowley to London as his emissary in
order to take possession of Second Order’s private rooms and implements.
However, this plan was foiled by the diligence of William Butler Yeats and some
of the other London Adepts, who promptly expelled both Mathers and Crowley.[8]
In
the ensuing confusion, Yeats took control and became Imperator of Isis-Urania
Temple. The committee attempted to restructure the Order along more democratic
lines. The result was only more confusion. Meanwhile, Annie Horniman had been
reinstated into the Order. But she found to her dismay that many of the rituals
had been meddled with, and the examination system had been virtually abandoned.
Even worse, some of the Adepts, including Florence Farr, had created a separate
secret group without the approval of Yeats
and some of the other Adepts. This group, called the “Sphere,”
specialized in astral visualization, astral traveling and communications with
“Masters.” Because of these abuses, Horniman began to argue with nearly
everyone in the Order. Yeats tried to maintain peace for a while, but finally
resigned from office in February of 1901.
Another
blow to the Order was on the horizon in 1901. This problem was named Madame
Horos. And in 1901, she was responsible for bringing unwanted publicity to the
Golden Dawn. Mr. and Mrs. Horos were a couple of charlatans and con-artists who
had somehow managed to convince MacGregor Mathers that Madame was actually the
real Anna Sprengel. Mathers was fooled for a while, but when he started to get
suspicious, they stole some copies of the Golden Dawn’s rituals and fled to
London.
Once
in London the Horos couple set up their own personal Order—The
Order of Theocractic Unity which—unknown
to its members—featured fraud, extortion, and sex. Mr. Horos was eventually
arrested for rape. When charged by the authorities, the Horos couple claimed to
be the leaders of the Golden Dawn. The result was that many of the most arcane
secrets of the Order were made public. The initiation rituals of the Golden Dawn
were printed in the London newspapers. The Order was scandalized by the whole
episode.
The
original Order now began to split apart. Florence Farr resigned from the Golden
Dawn which changed its name to the Hermetic
Society of the Morgenrothe. A small group of initiates gave their allegiance
to Mathers and consequently formed the Order of the
A.O., the Alpha et Omega. In 1903
a schism occurred within the Order. The remnant of the original Isis-Urania
Temple was taken over by Arthur
Edward Waite, a mystic, occultist, and prolific writer
who studied several branches of esoteric wisdom. Many of the remaining Golden
Dawn members went with Waite’s group. However, Waite did not care for magic.
Mysticism was more to his taste. In his new Order, The
Independent and Rectified Rite, Waite reduced the emphasis on ritual magic
in favor of the mystical path that he preferred. The more magically-inclined
members of the original Order, including Dr. Robert William Felkin and John
William Brodie-Innes, formed the Order of
the Stella Matutina.[9]
Felkin’s main temple in London was called Amoun.
Aftermath
In
addition to the Paris temple, the supporters of MacGregor Mathers established A.O.
temples in London (1900, 1913, 1919), and Edinburgh (1912). There was also a
hybrid group known as the Cromlech Temple
(1913) which was a joint effort created by the Edinburgh A.O. temple and some
Anglican clergymen.
Some
individuals who were initiated into the A.O. would later establish new magical
groups. Dion Fortune, a student of psychology, left the Order in 1922 to form
the Fraternity of the Inner Light. Paul Foster Case would later go on to
create his own organization, the Builders
of the Adytum.
Meanwhile,
Dr. Felkin established the Smaragdum
Thalasses[10]
Temple of the Stella Matutina in New Zealand in 1912. The New Zealand Order
became known by the Maori name of Whare Ra
or “the House of the Sun.” Back in England, Felkin established three more
temples of the S.M. in 1916.
These included the Hermes Lodge in Bristol, the Merlin
Lodge, and the Secret College in
London. The primary focus of Felkin’s group was on astral traveling.
Felkin’s
abilities as the leader of a magical Order were somewhat lacking compared to
Mathers. He went searching all over Europe for the Secret Chiefs of the Order in
physical form. The teachings of the Order suffered as a result from public
exposure by Miss Stoddart.[11]
In
the 1930’s
Israel Regardie came upon the scene. Regardie had been Aleister
Crowley’s secretary from 1928 to 1930. In 1932 he had written a book on magic
called The Tree of Life and had
earlier published a study of the Qabalah, A
Garden of Pomegranates. These books caused quite a stir in the temples of
both the Stella Matutina and the Alpha et Omega. Regardie joined the Hermes
Temple of the Stella Matutina in 1933 and became an Adept in 1934.
Unfortunately, the Stella Matutina was dying a slow death.
The leaders of the group were claiming to hold highly exalted grades with little
understanding of the basic material. Many of the Knowledge Lectures had been
changed or dropped altogether. In 1937 Regardie made the decision to publish
most of the Order's lectures and rituals in his book,
The Golden Dawn, thus keeping the
teachings from being forever lost.
Regardie is often credited with keeping the traditions of the Golden Dawn alive
by insuring that everyone who is interested has access to the teachings.
The
Adepts of both the Stella Matutina and the Alpha et Omega were unable to deal
with a very different approach to secrecy, now that most of their arcane
teachings were in the public domain. In the next couple of years, most temples
of the A.O. and the S.M. (with the exception of an offshoot temple in New
Zealand) stopped doing group work.
Renewal
Did Israel Regardie do the right thing by publishing the
documents of the Golden Dawn? We believe he did.[12]
We personally believe that he was carrying out the work of the Order by helping
to preserve it. There are very many magicians who owe Regardie a huge debt of
gratitude. Several magical organizations, also, have been enriched by the
availability of the Golden Dawn’s material, primarily through Regardie’s
efforts. By and large the Order teachings have survived and regained popularity
in recent years because Regardie had the foresight to save them through
publication.
Golden
Dawn Time Line
1887
Westcott
decodes the Cipher
Manuscript. He asks Mathers and
Woodman to join him in setting up the new Order.
March
1, 1888
Isis-Urania
Temple #3 is chartered. Westcott,
Woodman, and Mathers are the Three Chiefs. Mina Bergson (Moina Mathers) is the
1st initiate.
(The
numbering system marks the mythical Anna Sprengel’s temple in Germany, Licht,
Liebe und Leben as #1. Hermanoubis
Temple #2 in London, was supposedly chartered but never active.)
1888
Osiris Temple # 4 at
Weston-Super-Mare is chartered. All members are Masons.
Horus Temple # 5
at Bradford is chartered.
Fall, 1891
The
R.R. et A.C. is established.
December, 1891
Dr. Woodman
dies. No one is appointed to take his place.
Dec. 7,
1891
Annie Horniman
is the first initiate into the R.R. et A.C.
May 21, 1892
The
Matherses move to Paris.
1893
Amen-Ra Temple #6
is chartered in Edinburgh. Members included J.W. Brodie-Innes and Dr. Felkin.
Westcott’s
resigns as Praemonstrator. Florence Farr
takes on the position. Annie Horniman
is made Sub-Praemonstrator.
January, 1894
Mather’s
Ahathoor Temple #7 is consecrated in
Paris. Famous French occultist Papus
(Dr. Gerard Encausse) is a member.
1896
Florence
Farr begins the “Sphere Group,” a separate group of skryers within the
Golden Dawn.
Spring, 1896
Annie
Horniman and MacGregor Mathers have a falling out.
Oct. 29, 1896
Mathers
issues manifesto demanding written submission of Second Order members to his
authority.
Dec. 3, 1896
Annie
Horniman is expelled from the Golden Dawn for insubordination.
Spring,
1897
Westcott’s
association with the Order is made public. He resigns from office in the Golden
Dawn and the R.R. et A.C. Florence
Farr takes over his position as head of the Order in England.
1897
Thmé Temple No. 8 is established in Chicago. Ill.
Thoth-Hermes Temple No. 9 is established in New York.
Jan. 16, 1900
Mathers
initiates Aleister Crowley into the
5=6 Grade in Paris after London Adepts refuse to initiate him. The London Adepts
refuse to recognize Crowley’s initiation.
January, 1900
Florence
Farr writes to Mathers. He accuses her of attempting to bring back Westcott as
head of the Order. She resigns.
February, 1900
Mathers
introduces Madame Horos as Anna
Sprengel at Ahathoor.
Feb.
16, 1900
Mathers
refuses Ms. Farr’s resignation. He accuses Westcott of forging the Anna
Sprengel letters.
March
, 1900
Second
Order committee members in London investigate charges of fraud and expel
MacGregor and Moina Mathers. Annie Horniman is reinstated.
April,
1900
Schism.
Mathers annuls Second Order committee
and sends Aleister Crowley to take control of R.R. et A.C.’s property in
London. The take-over fails.
1900
Isis Temple #11
is created by Dr. Berridge in London. It remains loyal to Mathers. (This temple
is also called Alpha et Omega 1)
1901
Internal battles over
Florence Farr’s “Sphere Group.” Horos
Trials and unwanted publicity.
January, 1902
Florence
Farr resigns from the Golden Dawn, which changes its name to the Hermetic
Society of the Morgenrothe.
1902
Horus
Temple at Bradford gradually pulls away from G.D. teachings. Eventually turns
from G.D. to SRIA ideals, and accepts only Master Masons.
Spring,
1903
Schism.
Brodie-Innes, Felkin, and the magically-inclined members form the
Stella Matutina. Their Mother temple is called Amoun.
Waite,
Blackden, Rev. Ayton, and the more mystically-inclined members take over the
remnants of Isis-Urania #3. Waite forms the Independent
and Rectified Rite of the Golden Dawn (and the later Fellowship of the Rosy Cross in 1916).
Temples loyal to Mathers
take on the name Alpha et Omega.
1912
Alpha et Omega 2
(temple) is formed in Edinburgh as a daughter temple to Amen-Ra. Brodie-Innes is
its chief, (after having made peace with Mathers and broken off with Felkin).
Felkin
establishes Smaragdum Thalasses Temple
of the Stella Matutina in Havelock North, New Zealand. The Order in New Zealand
became known by the Maori name of Whare Ra
or “The House of the Sun.”
1913
Amen-Ra
also sires a spin-off hybrid called Cromlech
Temple or the Solar Order—a
collaboration between Alpha et Omega 2
and Anglican clergymen.
Brodie-Innes,
establishes an A.O. temple in London as a southern branch of his revived Amen-Ra
Temple in Edinburgh. (It functions separately from Moina Mathers’s Alpha
et Omega 3.)
1916
Felkin
establishes the following temples of the Stella Matutina: Hermes Lodge in Bristol, The
Secret College in London (open only to SRIA members), and Merlin
Lodge in London.
Felkin
establishes another Order, the Guild of
St. Raphael — a guild of the Anglican Church.
1918
Paul Foster Case is initiated into the 0=0 grade at Thoth-Hermes Temple No. 9 in New York (November).
1919
Moina
Mathers returns to London after MacGregor’s death and establishes the Alpha
et Omega 3.
Dion Fortune
joins Broddie-Innes’ A.O. temple in London.
The A.O. establishes Ptah Temple No. 10 in Philadelphia.
1920
The
Amoun Temple of the Stella Matutina in London is closed down due to the paranoid
behavior of its chief (Mrs. Stoddart).
The A.O. establishes Atoum Temple No. 20 in Los Angeles.
1922
In
January Moina
expels Paul Foster Case from the
Golden Dawn. Case goes on to create his own Order, the Builders of the Adytum or BOTA.
Dion
Fortune leaves the Alpha et Omega Lodge to form the Fraternity of the Inner Light.
[Spinoff
groups from the Fraternity of the Inner Light included The Guild of the Master Jesus (London - 1925) Helios (Gareth Knight —Toddington —1956), the Enochian
Temple (London 1969) and the Servants of
the Light (W.E. Butler).]
1923
The
Stella Matutina is close to collapse. Yeats resigns.
1926
Israel
Regardie was initiated into the SRIAm (Societas Rosicruciana in America)
1933
Israel Regardie
into the Hermes Temple of the Stella Matutina in Bristol.
1937
Israel
Regardie begins to publish the Order’s teachings as The Golden Dawn.
1939
Most temples of the A.O.
and the Stella Matutina become dormant (with
the exception of the Hermes Temple in Bristol which worked sporadically until
1970 and the Whare Ra temple in New
Zealand which lasted into the late 1970’s).
1977
Chic Cicero and his wife start a Golden Dawn Temple in Columbus, Georgia.
1982
Israel Regardie
consecrates the Vault of the Adepti in Columbus, Georgia, and performs
initiations into the 5=6 grade, re-establishing the Golden Dawn's Second Order in America.
A couple in New Zealand (Pat
and Chris Zalewski) found a Golden Dawn temple there.
2000
More people than ever
before have access to Golden Dawn teachings. Numerous individuals now actively
refer to themselves as practicing Golden Dawn magicians.
Endnotes
[1] Masonic tradition states that the fraternity is ancient, however, it can be traced to no earlier than 1717 A.D.
[2] Most believe that Mathers was responsible for writing the Golden Dawn’s initiation ceremonies, however R.A. Gilbert has found evidence which suggests that it was Westcott, not Mathers, who developed the rituals from the Cipher Manuscript. See R.A. Gilbert’s article, “From Cipher to Enigma: The Role of William Wynn Westcott in the Creation of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn,” from Carroll Runyon’s book Secrets of the Golden Dawn Cypher Manuscript.
[3] See R.A. Gilbert’s article, “From Cipher to Enigma.” According to Gilbert, Kenneth Mackenzie, John Yarker, and Francis Irwin were all members of the “Society of Eight.”
[4] Meaning, “The wise person shall be ruled by the stars”
[5] The Soror SDA’s fictitious temple in Germany was known as Licht, Liebe, und Leben (temple #1 in Westcott’s order of succession.) The second temple was supposedly called Hermanubis in London. According to Westcott’s fanciful history, this temple was chartered to two Englishmen, but never really got off the ground.
[6] One of three important texts which form the basis of the Rosicrucian tradition. It was published in Europe in 1614 by an unknown author (possibly Lutheran scholar Johann Valentin Andreae).
[7] None of these American temples seemed to last very long.
[8] Crowley left the Order to form his own group which borrowed the name of the Golden Dawn's Third Order, the Argenteum Astrum or the A.A. He went on to join Theodor Reuss's Ordo Templi Orientis (or the Order of the Temple of the Orient), and later become the head of the British branch of that Order.
[9] “Morning Star.” Yeats joined the Stella Matutina and was a member of that group for twenty years.
[10] “Emerald Seas”
[11] Her two books, written under the pseudonym of "Inquire Within" were entitled Lightbearers of Darkness (1930) and The Trail of the Serpent (1936).
[12] Regardie did take some flak for publishing the Golden Dawn materials. But according to R.A. Gilbert, the Adepts of the Order were secretly grateful to Regardie for ending the need for tedious hand-copying of the materials. In the Introduction to the Second Edition of The Golden Dawn, Regardie stated that, “Some approved of the publication of these books; a very few disapproved.”
Sources
Gilbert, R.A., The Golden Dawn and the Esoteric Section, London: Theosophical History Centre, 1987.
Gilbert, R.A., The Golden Dawn Scrapbook. York Beach, ME: Samuel Weiser, Inc., 1997
Gilbert, R.A., The Golden Dawn, Twilight of the Magicians. Great Britain, The Aquarian Press, 1983.
Greer, Mary K., Women of the Golden Dawn, Rochester, VT: Park Street Press, 1995.
H.O.G.D. private archives.
Howe, Ellic. The Magicians of the Golden Dawn, New York, Samuel Weiser, Inc., 1972.
King, Francis, Modern Ritual Magic. Great Britain: Prism Press, 1989.
Kuntz, Darcy, The Complete Golden Dawn Cipher Manuscript. Edmonds, WA: Holmes Publishing Group, 1996.
Regardie, Israel. The Golden Dawn, St. Paul, MN: Llewellyn Publications, 1997
Runyon, Carroll, Secrets of the Golden Dawn Cypher Manuscript, Pasadena, CA: C.H.S., Inc, 1997
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