The American
Rosae Crucis was the first magazine of AMORC
created by its founder, Harvey Spencer Lewis.
As subtitle
it says: “Monthly magazine dedicated to science, philosophy and religion. It is
the official publication of the Ancient and Mystical Rose-Cross Order”.
You can
download all the volumes of this magazine in this link.
It was
published in New York by the Culture Publishing Company, and its main
publishers were Spencer Lewis, Thor Kiimalehto and Alfred H. Saunders.
It began to
be published monthly from January 1916, but due to delays in its elaboration it was not
published in March, April and May 1917, continuing the publication in June 1917
until December 1917.
In 1918
Lewis was very busy, first because he moved his "Temple" to another
building in New York, and later because the accusation of fraud that several
members of AMORC made against him and forced Lewis to move to California, so it
is logical that during that year and the following he stopped publishing this
magazine.
In these two
years Lewis limited himself to publishing seven pamphlets entitled Cromaat "exclusive to members of
AMORC".
And finally
Lewis briefly revived this magazine by publishing three more volumes in April,
May and June 1920.
Lewis then
stopped publishing magazines for a year and resumed publishing in March 1921
with his new magazine called The Triangle.
THE ASSOCIATED EDITORS
In the first
volumes of this magazine, The American
Rosae Crucis, Lewis put the following list of publishers who he pointed out
were in different parts of the world and were supposedly associated with his
magazine:
·
Wm. P. M. Sims, U. S.
A.
·
Luke Boctor, Lower
Egypt.
·
Emanuel S. Camilleri,
Upper Egypt.
·
Prof. C. Magala Desai, Bombay,
India.
·
Chavakar Annasame Rao,
Madras Presidency, India.
·
Mohamed Ismail,
I.G.O.H, Ceylon.
·
Sir N.
Irnathellickerjo Lemindar, Bengal.
·
Prof. George Brown,
New Zealand
·
Miss M. Earsman,
Australia.
·
Lady Ida Brooks,
China.
·
Miss Anna Brew, South
Africa.
·
Mr. Thomas Hahn, West
Africa.
·
Sir William Samuel
Grant, East Africa.
·
Jacobus Muir, Germany.
·
Raynaud E. de
Bellcastle-Ligne, France.
·
Lady Florence
Burgess, England, UK.
·
Mary A. Baker,
Scotland, UK.
·
John José de Macedo,
Y;B.S, Spain and Portugal.
·
Miss Louise Aitcheson,
British West Indies.
·
Miss C. ArrhenIns,
Central America and Mexico
·
Mme.
Ellen Clemenston, Panama and Costa Rica.
But later
Lewis stopped publishing that list.
For what reason?
The
newspaper The Sun in the article
published on June 18, 1918, gave the answer to this question, explaining the
following:
« The monthly magazine called
"The American Rosae Crucis," carries on the first page the names of a
number of associate editors in various parts of the world. These, it is
represented, make up the Supreme World Council of the Order.
Among the dozen or more are such
names as these: Emanuel S. Camilleri, Upper Egypt; Prof. C. Magala Desa, Bombay;
Mohamed Ismail, I.G.O.H., Ceylon; Sir N. Irnathellickerjo Lemindar, Bengal;
Lady Brooks, Shangai, China; Sir William Samuel Grant, Natal, East Africa; Lady
Florence Burgess, London, England; Raynaud E. de Belcastle-Ligne, Toulouse,
France, and several others.
A more definite address is not given
in the copy of the magazine, but THE SUN reporter yesterday saw a dozen of more
such letters that had been sent to addresses furnished by a former member of
Lewis's organization, all of which came back with the notation "No such
person known," or "No such address". »
(p.14)
_ _ _
Spencer Lewis invented all these fictional characters
simply to impress his readers, and this is one more example of the enormous
charlatanism that the founder of AMORC had.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
January 1916
·
Introduction
1
·
The Ancient and
Mystical Order Rosae Crucis 2
·
History
of the Order 3
·
The Secret of the
Sphinx 14
·
Mrs.
May Banks-Stacey 16
·
Is
Theology Teaching Christianity? 18
·
Occult Sciences of
Ancient Egypt 20
·
Woman's
Work 22
·
Nature
and Numbers 24
·
The Significance of
the Zodiac 25
·
Romances as Seen in
Nativities — Byron 26
February 1916
·
Editorial
3
·
A Rosicrucian
Interpretation of the Genesis 5
·
American Place in the
Sun in 1920 7
·
Rosicrucian Map of
the World 8
·
The Planetary
Influence on Human Life 9
·
In
Lighter Vein 11
·
Romances and Seen in
Nativities 13
·
H.
Spencer Lewis, F.R.C. 16
·
The
Constitution of Matter 19
·
Nature
and Numbers 20
·
History of the Order
Rosae Crucis 21
·
America's
First Inhabitants 24
·
The
Truth in Verse 25
·
The Burden of the
Cross 27
·
Work
of Order 28
·
Questions
and Answers 30
·
A Civilization 11’500
Years Ago 31
·
Book
Review 32
March 1916
·
Foreword
3
·
The True Key to
Self-Development 5
·
Reincarnation
in Barbaric Egyptian Splendor 7
·
First
Rosicrucian Temple in America 9
·
The Planets'
Influence on Human Life 10
·
The Brahman and the
Three Rogue 12
·
A Rosicrucian Temple in
Egyp 13
·
Rosicrucian
Hymns 15
·
Alfred
H. Saunders 16
·
The Butterfly and the
Caterpillar 18
·
New Year's Greeting from
Our Imperator 20
·
History of the Order
Rosae Crucis 21
·
A Study of the
planets Uranus and Neptune 26
·
Questions
and Answers 30
·
Publisher's
Notes 31
(I'll
complete it later)
OBSERVATIONS
This
magazine shows how tremendously liar was Harvey Spencer Lewis, because apart the
example I gave you above with the fake associate editors, there are many others
examples of his quackery.
For example,
in the January 1916 issue, Lewis introduced his readers to Mrs. May
Banks-Stacey, supposed be co-founder of AMORC, but it turns out that she is a
fictional character invented by Lewis as I show you in this other article (see link).
In the July
1916 issue, Lewis reported that he had received a Manifesto from the French
Rosicrucian Order legitimizing AMORC, but this document turned out to be
completely fraudulent as I show you in this other article (see link).
In the
September 1916 issue, Lewis claimed that the World Rosicrucian Supreme Council
had reorganized the world's territories by giving AMORC great privileges, but
in reality this is an imaginary institution also invented by Lewis (see link).
In the
November 1917 issue, Lewis published a photo of a street where a French
Rosicrucian Lodge was supposedly located, but an analysis shows that this photo
was manipulated by Lewis (see link). [later I put
the link]
~*~
And so there are many more examples that demonstrate how
an immense liar, manipulator and charlatan Spencer Lewis was.
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