Arthur Cherep-Spiridovich
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Arthur Cherep-Spiridovitch (1858-October 22, 1926). Count (ennobled by the Vatican[citation needed]), Major General in Imperial Russian Army, author. He was also a publicist for, and promoter of, the notorious Protocols of Zion, early advocate of conspiracy theory, of the secret "world government," and the notion of the "hidden hand." In fact, he is the author of the 1926 notorious text, The Secret World Government: or, "The Hidden Hand", which is currently available in print.
Cherep-Spiridovich also wrote for the anisemitic weekly Plain English edited by Lord Alfred Douglas (1919-21)[citation needed]. His writing exhibits a paranoid belief that Jews had poisoned Alexander III of Russia, caused the First World War, the Bolshevik Revolution, and that Jews were constantly following him in the streets, threatening to kill him[citation needed].
[edit] Works
The Secret World Government: or, "The Hidden Hand": The Unrevealed in History: 100 Historical "Mysteries" Explained
- (New York: The Anti-Bolshevist Publishing Association, 1926)
- 195 pp., ill., 24 cm.
- LC Classification: DS141 .C45
- Other System No.: (OCoLC)538569
[edit] References
The Non-Existent Manuscript
- by Cesare G. De Michelis
- (University of Nebraska Press: Lincoln and London, 2004)
- pp. 146, 161
- ISBN 0-8032-1727-7
[edit] External Link
"COUNT SPIRIDOVITCH GIVES A LUNCHEON":[1]