The Masonic Magician: The Life and Death of Count Cagliostro and His Egyptian Rite

by Philippa Faulks

Hardcover, 2008

Status

Available

Call number

366.1092

Collection

Publication

Watkins (2008), Edition: 0, Hardcover, 368 pages

Description

Miracle-worker or man of straw? Count Alessandro Cagliostro was a cult figure of European society in the tumultuous years leading to the French Revolution. An alchemist, healer and Freemason, he inspired both wild devotion and savage ridicule - as well as novels by Alexandre Dumas, a drama by Goethe and Mozart's operaThe Magic Flute. Count Alessandro Cagliostro's sincere belief in the magical powers, including immortality, conferred by his Egyptian Rite of Freemasonry won him fame, but made him dangerous enemies, too. His celebrated travels through the Middle East and the capitals of Europe ended abruptly in Rome in 1789, where he was arrested by the Inquisition and condemned to death for heresy. The Masonic Magician tells Cagliostro's extraordinary story, complete with the first English translation of his Egyptian Rite of Freemasonry ever published. The authors examine the case made against him, that he was an impostor as well as a heretic, and find that the Roman Church, and history itself, have done him a terrible injustice. This engaging account, drawing on remarkable new documentary evidence, shows that the man condemned was a genuine visionary and true champion of Freemasonry. His teachings have much to reveal to us today, not just of the secrets of the movement, but of the mysterious hostility it continues to attract.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member vlmr
Miracle-worker or man of straw? Count Alessandro Cagliostro was a cult figure of European society in the tumultuous years leading to the French Revolution. An alchemist, healer and Freemason, he inspired both wild devotion and savage ridicule – and novels by Alexander Dumas, a drama by Goethe and
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Mozart’s opera The Magic Flute.

Cagliostro’s sincere belief in the magical powers, including immortality, conferred by his Egyptian Rite of Freemasonry won him fame, but made him dangerous enemies, too. His celebrated travels through the Middle East and the capitals of Europe ended abruptly in Rome in 1789, where he was arrested by the Inquisition and condemned to death for heresy.

The Masonic Magician tells Cagliostro’s extraordinary story, complete with the first English translation of the Egyptian Rite ever published. The authors examine the case made against him, that he was an impostor as well as a heretic, and finds that the Roman Church, and history itself, have done him a terrible injustice.

This engaging account, drawing on remarkable new documentary evidence, shows that the man condemned was a genuine visionary and true champion of Freemasonry. His teachings have much to reveal to us today not just of the mysteries of Freemasonry, but of the mysterious hostility the movement continues to attract.
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LibraryThing member awholtzapple
After completing 'The Masonic Magician', I must say I am a bit disappointed. Perhaps I had expected it to be more biographical in nature, instead, it contained documentation of some important moments in the counts' life, much detail of the Egyptian rite, and the history of Freemasonry in general. I
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found it to be well-researched, but perhaps a bit dry and scholarly - not exactly a 'fun' or 'hard to put down' read. It's a book that requires the reader to have an extreme interest in the subject matter, otherwise, it will be shelved in two chapters. If Cagliostro's Egyptian Rite is of interest to you, then definitely check out this book. If you are searching for an enthralling biography of the man, I'd recommend looking elsewhere.
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Language

Physical description

368 p.; 9.2 inches

ISBN

1905857829 / 9781905857821

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