The Rosicrucian
Manifestos
The
manifestos caused immense excitement throughout
Europe: they declared the existence of a secret
brotherhood of alchemists and sages who were
preparing to transform the arts, sciences, religion,
and political and intellectual landscape of Europe
while wars of politics and religion ravaged the
continent. The works were re-issued several times and
followed by numerous pamphlets, favourable and
otherwise. Between 1614 and 1620, about 400
manuscripts and books were published which discussed
the Rosicrucian documents.
The peak of the so-called "Rosicrucianism furor" was
reached when two mysterious posters appeared in the walls
of Paris in 1622 within a few days of each other. The first
one started with the saying "We, the Deputies of the
Higher College of the Rose-Croix, do make our stay, visibly
and invisibly, in this city (...)" and the second one
ended with the words "The thoughts attached to the real
desire of the seeker will lead us to him and him to
us".
[7]
The legend inspired a variety of works, among them the
works of Michael
Maier (1568–1622) of Germany, Robert
Fludd (1574–1637) and Elias
Ashmole (1617–1692) of England, Teophilus
Schweighardt Constantiens, Gotthardus Arthusius,
Julius Sperber, Henricus
Madathanus, Gabriel
Naudé, Thomas
Vaughan, and others.
[8] In Elias Ashmole's
Theatrum Chimicum britannicum (1650) he defends the
Rosicrucians. Some later works with an impact on
Rosicrucianism were the Opus magocabalisticum et
theosophicum by George
von Welling (1719), of alchemical
and paracelsian
inspiration, and the Aureum Vellus oder Goldenes
Vliess by Hermann Fictuld in 1749.
Michael Maier was ennobled with the title
Pfalzgraf (Count Palatine) by Rudolph
II, Emperor and King of Hungary
and King of Bohemia.
He also was one of the most prominent defenders of the
Rosicrucians, clearly transmitting details about the
"Brothers of the Rose Cross" in his writings. Maier made
the firm statement that the Brothers of R.C. exist to
advance inspired arts and sciences, including alchemy.
Researchers of Maier's writings point out that he never
claimed to have produced gold, nor did Heinrich Khunrath
nor any of the other Rosicrucianists. Their writings
point toward a symbolic and spiritual alchemy, rather
than an operative one. In both direct and veiled styles,
these writings conveyed the nine stages of the
involutive-evolutive transmutation of the threefold
body of the human being, the threefold soul
and the threefold spirit, among other esoteric
knowledge related to the "Path of Initiation".
In his 1618 pamphlet, Pia et Utilissima Admonitio de
Fratribus Rosae Crucis, Henrichus Neuhusius writes that
the Rosicrucians left for the East due to the instability
in Europe caused by the start of the Thirty
Years' War, an idea afterwards echoed in 1710 by
Samuel Ritcher, founder of the secret
society of the
Golden and Rosy Cross. More recently René
Guénon, a researcher of the occult,
presented this same idea in some of his
works.
[9] However, another
eminent author on the Rosicrucians, Arthur
Edward Waite, presents arguments that contradict
this idea.
[10] It was in this
fertile field of discourse that many "Rosicrucian"
societies arose. They were based on the occult tradition
and inspired by the mystery of this "College of
Invisibles".
The literary works of the 16th and 17th centuries are
full of enigmatic passages containing references to the
Rose
Cross, as in these lines (somewhat modernised):
“ |
For what we do presage is riot in
grosse,
For we are brethren of the Rosie
Crosse;
We have the Mason Word and second
sight,
Things for to come we can foretell
aright.
|
” |
—
Henry Adamson, The Muses'
Threnodie (Perth, 1638).
|
The idea of such an order, exemplified by the network of
astronomers, professors, mathematicians, and natural
philosophers in 16th century Europe and promoted by men
such as Johannes
Kepler, Georg
Joachim Rheticus, John
Dee and Tycho
Brahe, gave rise to the Invisible
College, a precursor to the Royal
Society formed during the 17th century. It was
constituted by group of scientists who began to hold
regular meetings in an attempt to share and develop
knowledge acquired by experimental
investigation. Among these were Robert
Boyle, who wrote: "the cornerstones of the
Invisible (or as they term themselves the Philosophical)
College, do now and then honour me with their
company...";
[11] and John
Wallis, who described those meetings in the
following terms: "About the year 1645, while I lived
in London (at a time when, by our civil wars, academical
studies were much interrupted in both our Universities),
... I had the opportunity of being acquainted with
divers worthy persons, inquisitive natural philosophy,
and other parts of human learning; and particularly of
what hath been called the New Philosophy or Experimental
Philosophy. We did by agreements, divers of us, meet
weekly in London on a certain day and hour, under a
certain penalty, and a weekly contribution for the
charge of experiments, with certain rules agreed amongst
us, to treat and discourse of such
affairs..."
[12]