Guido von List

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Austrian mystic  'Der Meister'  Guido von List in 1910 from the book "Guido v. List - Der Wiederentdecker Uralter Arischer Weisheit] - Sein Leben und sein Schaffen' ." by Johannes Balzli, publised in Leipzig and Vienna by the Guido-von-List-Gesellschaft in 1917.
Austrian mystic 'Der Meister' Guido von List in 1910 from the book "Guido v. List - Der Wiederentdecker Uralter Arischer Weisheit] - Sein Leben und sein Schaffen' ." by Johannes Balzli, publised in Leipzig and Vienna by the Guido-von-List-Gesellschaft in 1917.

Guido Karl Anton List, better known as Guido von List (October 5, 1848 , in Vienna, – May 17, 1919, in Berlin), was a highly respected Austrian/German (Viennese) poet, journalist, writer, businessman and dealer of leather goods, mountaineer, hiker, dramatist, playwright, and rower, but, was most notable as an occultist and völkisch author who is seen as one of the most important figures in Germanic revivalism, Germanic mysticism, Runic Revivalism and Runosophy in the late 19th century and early 20th century, and continues to be so today.

He is the author of Das Geheimnis der Runen (The Secret of the Runes), which is a detailed study of the Armanen Futharkh, his intellectual world-view (as realised in the years between 1902 and 1908), an introduction to the rest of his work and is widely regarded as the pioneering work of Runology in modern occultism of which Dr. Stephen E. Flowers Ph. D. has stated in his introduction to the English translation that "The runes became the cornerstone of List's ideology, and no other work so clearly and simply outlines his ideas on them."

Contents

[edit] Biography

Guido von List was born in Vienna in the Austrian Empire to Karl Anton List, a prosperous middle class leather goods dealer, and Maria List (née Killian). He grew up in the Leopoldstadt district of Vienna. Like the majority of his fellow Austrians at that time, his family was Roman Catholic, and he was christened "Guido Anton List" as an infant in St Peter's Church in Vienna on October 8 1848.

In 1862 a visit to the catacombs beneath the Stephansdom (St. Stephen's Cathedral in Vienna) made a deep impression, and List regarded the catacombs as a pagan shrine. As an adult he claimed he had then sworn to build a temple to Wotan when he grew up. This he recounted in volume 2 (page 592-593) of his book Deutsch-Mythologische Landschaftsbilder:

It was in the year 1862 - I was then in my fourteenth year of life - when I, after much asking, received permission from my father to accompany him and his party who were planning to visit the catacombs [under St. Stephen's Cathedral in Vienna] which were at that time still in their original condition. We climbed down, and everything I saw and felt excited me with a kind of power that today I am no longer able to experience. Then we came - it was, if I remember correctly, in the third or fourth level - to a ruined altar. The guide said that we were now situated beneath the old post office (today the Wohlzeile House No. 8). At that point my excitement was raised to fever pitch, and before this altar I proclaimed out loud this ceremonial vow: "Whenever I get big, I will build a Temple to Wotan!" I was, of course, laughed at, as a few members of the party said that a child did not belong in such a place… I knew nothing more about Wuotan than that which I had read about him in Vollmer's Wörterbuch der Mythologie.
"Runic Circle of the Armanen Futharkh.
"Runic Circle of the Armanen Futharkh.

Despite these artistic and mystical leanings, Guido was expected, as the eldest child, to follow in his father's footsteps as a businessman. He appears to have fulfilled his responsibilities in a dutiful manner, but he took any and all opportunities to develop his more intense mystical and naturesque interests. These trips that List had to make for business purposes gave him the opportunity to indulge himself in his passion for hiking and mountaineering. This activity seems to have provided a matrix for his early mysticism.

His father died in 1877 when List was 29 years old. It appears that neither he nor his mother appear to have had his fathers keen sense of business, and as economic times became difficult List quit the family business to devout himself fulltime to his writing. At this time his writing continued to be of a journalistic kind. Because he had to take over his fathers business as its head, he was deprived of his ability to travel and wander as he had before.

During this time List wrote articles for newspapers, such as the Neue Welt (New World), Neue deutsche Alpenzeitung (New German Alpine Newspaper), Heimat (Homeland), and the Deutsche Zeitung (German Newspaper), which dealt with his earlier travels and mystical reflections on the Loci (land spirits). Many of these written newspaper articles were anthologised in 1891 in his famous Deutsch-Mythologische Landschaftsbilder. He also had articles appear in the Leipziger Illustrierte Zeitung and on a regular basis in the newspaper Ostdeutsche Rundschau (East German Review), owned by the powerful publicist and parliamentary deputy Karl Heinrich Wolf. At this time he also came to know well Georg von Schonerer, a leading political figure and Pan-German member of the Imperial Parliament.

He also had many articles appear in periodicals such as Laufers Allgemeine Kunst-Chronik, Der Sammler, Das Zwanzigste Jahrhundert, Die Gnosis, Der Deutsche, Neue Metaphysische Rundschau, Die Nornen, Österreichische Illustrierte Rundschau and Johannes Balzli's occult magazine Prana.

In 1878 List married his first wife, Helene Föster-Peters. However, the marriage was not to last through the difficult years of this period.

Various Armanenschaft jewellery/ritual items distributed throughout England, including the Armanen runes and ring and stick, Fyrfos pin, Schwarze Sonne earings and pin (and Zierscheiben ‘Schwarze Sonne necklace), Mjollnir earings and necklace, Wolfsangel pin, Unicursal Hexagram necklace and Sidereal Pendulum.
Various Armanenschaft jewellery/ritual items distributed throughout England, including the Armanen runes and ring and stick, Fyrfos pin, Schwarze Sonne earings and pin (and Zierscheiben ‘Schwarze Sonne necklace), Mjollnir earings and necklace, Wolfsangel pin, Unicursal Hexagram necklace and Sidereal Pendulum.

Through the years 1877-1887 List was also working on his first book-length (two-volume) effort, Carnuntum, an historical novel based on his vision of the Kulturkampf between the Germanic and Roman worlds centred at the location of Carnuntum around the year 375 CE that was publised in 1888 by the Wannieck family's organisation and publishing house Verein "Deutsche Haus" ("German House" Association) [1] [2] in Brno, where List made the acquaintance of the industrialist Friedrich Wannieck. This association was to prove essential to List's future development.

Throughout this period in Lists life he devoted himself to writing more neo-romanticism prose, such as Jung Diethers Heimkehr ("Young Diether's Homecoming") in 1894 and Pipara in 1895. The anthology of earlier journalism Deutsch-Mythologische Landschaftsbilder was published in 1891, and List developed his writing skills in poetic and dramatic genres as well.

In 1892 he delivered a lecture on the ancient Germanic cult of Wuotan to the Verein Deutsche Geschichte (German History Association), and it is said that numerous other associations that allied with this one proliferated in Austria at this time. Another group, the Bund der Germanen (Germanic League), sponsored a performance of List's mythological dramatic poem, Der Wala Erweckung ("The Wala's Awakening") in 1894. In another performance of this drama in 1895, which was attended by over three thousand people, the part of Wala was read by Anna Wittek von Stecky, a young actress who in August of 1899 became List's second wife.

During the years 1888-1899 List was involved with two important literary associations. In May of 1891 Iduna, which had the descriptive subtitle of "Free German Society for Literature", was founded by a circle of writers around Fritz Lemmermayer. Lemmermayer acted as a sort of "middle man" between an older generation of authors (which included Fercher von Steinwand, Joseph Tandler, Auguste Hyrtl, Ludwig von Mertens, and Josephone von Knorr) and a group of younger writers and thinkers (which included Rudolf Steiner, Marie Eugenie delle Grazie, and Karl Maria Heidt). The name Iduna was provided by List himself and is that of a North Germanic goddess of eternal youth and renewal. Richard von Kralik and Joseph Kalasanz Poestion, authors with specifically neo-Germanic leanings, where also involved in the circle. The other organisation List was involved with was the Literarische Donaugesellschaft (Danubian Literary Society), which was founded by List and Fanny Wschiansky the year the Iduna was dissolved in 1893. In this time List met Rudolf Steiner and Lanz von Liebenfels but in regard to Liebenfels their interaction wasn't until Lanz had left the Heiligenkreuz monastery in 1899.

In August of 1899, List married Anna Wittek von Stecky.

[edit] Mountaineering

Scenic view of the  'Großes Höllental' from Deutsch-Mythologische Landschaftsbilder 2nd volume - Page 523.
Scenic view of the 'Großes Höllental' from Deutsch-Mythologische Landschaftsbilder 2nd volume - Page 523.

In 1871, Lists writing talents were given vent as he became a correspondent of the Neue deutsche Alpenzeitung ("New German Alpine Newspaper"), later called the Salonblatt. He also began to edit the yearbook of the Österreichischer Alpenverein (Austrian Alpine Association), of which he became secretary in that year.

List was an ardent, enthusiastic mountaineer and hiker. On one of these adventures List came very close to losing his life. While climbing a mountain on May 8, 1871 in the Großes Höllental (Larger Valley of Hell) leading up to the Rax mountain in Lower Austria, a mass of ice gave way under his feet and he fell some distance. He was apparently saved only by the fact that he had landed on a soft surface covered by a recent snowfall. In memory of his good luck and to help others, out of his own expense List had the track equipped with a chain put up and officially opened by him on June 21 1871. It was also named (now called Gaislochsteig) after him the "Guido-List-Steig"[1]

Heidentor (pagan gate), at Carnuntum.
Heidentor (pagan gate), at Carnuntum.

On June 24, 1875, List was camping with four friends near the ruins of Carnuntum. As the 1500th anniversary of the Germanic tribes defeat over this Roman garrison in 375, the evening carried a lot of weight for List. Carnuntum became the title of List's first full-length novel, published in two volumes in 1888. After its success, it was followed by two more books set in tribal Germany; Jung Diethers Heimkehr ("Young Diether's Homecoming", 1894) and Pipara (1895). These books led to List being celebrated by the pan-German movement. Around the turn of the century, he continued with several plays.

[edit] Nobility and title

Between 1903 and 1907, he began using the noble title von on occasion, before finally settling on it permanently in 1907. As this was only permitted for members of the aristocracy, he was put before an official enquiry. Here he produced evidence supporting his claim, which was accepted by the officials heading the inquiry.[2]

[edit] Death

In late 1918 List was in poor health during the final stages of World War I in which the naval blockade of the Central Powers created food shortages in Vienna. This caused poor health in the now 70 year old von List.

In the spring of 1919, at the age of 71, List and his wife set off to recuperate and meet followers at the maner-house of Eberhard von Brockhusen, a List society patron who lived at Langen in Brandenburg, Germany.

On arrival at the Anhalter Station at Berlin, List was too exhausted to continue the journey. After a doctor had diagnosed a lung inflammation, his health deteriorated quickly, and he died in a Berlin guesthouse on the morning of May 17, 1919. He was cremated in Leipzig and his ashes laid in an urn and then buried in Vienna Central Cemetery, Zentralfriedhof, in the gravesite KNLH 413 - Vienna's largest and most famous cemetery (including the graves of Beethoven, Brahms, Schubert and Strauss.) in Vienna's 11th district of Simmering.

Philipp Stauff, a Berlin journalist, good friend of list and Armanist, wrote an obituary which appeared in the Münchener Beobachter called "Guido von List gestorben" on May 24, 1919, p. 4.

[edit] Ideology

Guido von List in 1878 from the book Guido v. List. Der Wiederentdecker uralter arischer Weisheit by Johannes Balzli publised in  1917.
Guido von List in 1878 from the book Guido v. List. Der Wiederentdecker uralter arischer Weisheit by Johannes Balzli publised in 1917.

List was strongly influenced by the Theosophical thought of Madame Blavatsky, which he blended with his own Wotanist religion and Germanic Paganism to allegedly develop the direct precursor of occult Nazism.

Guido von List called his doctrine “Armanism” (after the "Armanen", supposedly the heirs of the sun-king, a body of priest-kings in the ancient Ario-Germanic nation). Armanism was concerned with the esoteric doctrines of the gnosis (distinct from the exoteric doctrine intended for the lower social classes, Wotanism).

According to The History Channel's Decoding the Past episode "The Nazi Prophecies," Guido von List, and not Lanz von Liebenfels, was the founder of Ariosophy. Ariosophy has been termed a theoretical precursor of the Nazi genocide.

The foremost expert on Guido von List in the English-speaking world, Stephen E. Flowers, refuses to connect that the theories of List and other early 20th century rune magicians led directly to the excesses of Auschwitz. One German academic, Stefanie von Schnurbein, in commenting on Flower's introduction to The Secret of the Runes, in Religion als Kulturkritik [(Winter, 1992), p. 136], states "Dabei erwähnt [Flowers] an keiner Stelle, daß List und die anderen Ariosophen Vordenker des Rassenwahns des Nationalsozialismus waren..." ("In this work [Flowers] nowhere mentions that List and the other Ariosophists were intellectual predecessors of the racial madness of National Socialism...").

Although it is now considered conventional wisdom, although Flowers states that this is “with little to no actual critical investigation", that the ideas of List, Lanz, and others were directly implemented in the Nazi genocide, it has been argued that because the very term "Ariosophy" was analogous to its predecessor, "Theosophy", that the racial ideas in Ariosophy can be traced to Theosophy. Flowers states that “no one has ever shown that racial policies of the NSDAP are based on so-called Ariosophical ideas."

It has further been stated that even the writing of the most "extreme" of the Ariosophists, Lanz von Liebenfels (cited several times by List in The Religion of the Aryo-Germanic Folk: Esoteric and Exoteric), cannot be definitively linked to the applied anti-Semitism of the Nazis. Apologists for Lanz state that Lanz did not write unfavorably about the Jewish race, that he cooperated with Jewish scholars in many of his publications, and while it can be argued that individual Nazis became familiar with the mystical racism of Theosophy through the works of List and Lanz, it does not necessarily follow that List and Lanz were culpable in the crimes of the Nazis.

An 'Armanist pilgrimage' to the Heidentor (pagan gate), Carnuntum, June 1911 from the book by Guido von List called Deutsch-Mythologische Landschaftsbilder. List is third from left.
An 'Armanist pilgrimage' to the Heidentor (pagan gate), Carnuntum, June 1911 from the book by Guido von List called Deutsch-Mythologische Landschaftsbilder. List is third from left.

Defenders of List and Lanz claim that the Anti-Semitism that drove Nazi policies was much older and more deeply rooted among the peoples of central Europe than can be credited to the "fringe works" of mystics and rune magicians. It has been alleged, for example, that the roots of Nazi Anti-Semitism can be traced to the Lutheran and Roman Catholic Churches as it was the Roman Catholic Church Fathers who first invented ideas about the Jews being an inferior "race", and who drove Anti-Semitic policies right up to and all during the Second World War. (see David Kertzer, Popes Against the Jews (2001).

List claimed that the Hermionen mentioned in Tacitus was a Latinized version of the German Armanen, and named his religion the Armanenschaft, which he claimed to be the original religion of the Germanic tribes. His conception of that religion was a form of sun worship, with its priest kings (similar to the Icelandic Godi) as legendary rulers of ancient Germany.

List claimed that the dominance of the Roman Catholic Church in Austria-Hungary constituted a continuing occupation of the Germanic tribes by the Roman empire, albeit now in a religious form, and a continuing persecution of the ancient religion of the Germanic peoples and Celts.

This conception bears strong resemblance to many other 19th-century romanticised ideas of ancient polytheistic religions in Europe; a comparatively similar text in the thematic elements and overall textual bias is the famous Oera Linda forgery from the Lowlands region of western Europe.

He also believed in magical powers of the old runes. In 1891 he claimed that heraldry was based on the magic of the runes. In April 1903, he had sent an article concerning the alleged Aryan proto-language to the Imperial Academy of Sciences in Vienna. Its highlight was a mystical and occult interpretation of the Runic alphabet. Although the article was rejected by the academy, the article would later be expanded by List and become the basis for his entire ideology.

Among his ideological followers was Lanz von Liebenfels. List's racial religious beliefs would strongly influence Heinrich Himmler, the head of the SS in Nazi Germany. List's concept of renouncing Christianity, a Semitic religion intertwined with Judaism, and returning to the pagan religions of the ancient Europeans would in turn influence Neo-Nazism and White Nationalism strongly. Germanic paganism has, as a result, been linked to Nazism since the early twentieth century.

[edit] Runic revivalism

Das Geheimnis der Runen (The Secret of the Runes) by Guido von List, publised in  1908.
Das Geheimnis der Runen (The Secret of the Runes) by Guido von List, publised in 1908.

The row of 18 so-called "Armanen Runes", also known as the "Armanen Futharkh" came to List while in an 11 month state of temporary blindness after a cataract operation on both eyes in 1902. This vision in 1902 allegedly opened what List referred to as his "inner eye", via which he claimed the "Secret of the Runes" was revealed to him. List stated that his Armanen Futharkh were encrypted in the Hávamál (Poetic Edda), specifically in stanzas 138 to 165, with stanzas 146 through 164 reported as being the 'song' of the 18 runes. It has been said this claim has no historical basis.

The Armanen runes are still used today by some Ásatrú adherents who consider the Armanen runes to have some religious and/or divinatory value.

[edit] Futharkh spelling

List noted in his book, The Secret of the Runes, that the "runic futharkh (= runic ABC) consisted of sixteen symbols in ancient times.".

As a side note to this, in the English translation of the work, Stephen Flowers notes that "(the designation futharkh is based on the first seven runes it is for this reason that the proper name is not futhark -- as it is generally and incorrectly written -- but futharkh, with the h at the end; for more about the basis of this, see the Guido von List Library number 6, The primal language of the Aryan Germanic people and their mystery language)".

[edit] Influence

Friedrich Wannieck in München from the book "Der Wiederentdecker Uralter Arischer Weisheit" by Johannes Balzli
Friedrich Wannieck in München from the book "Der Wiederentdecker Uralter Arischer Weisheit" by Johannes Balzli

A look at the signatories[3] of the first announcement concerning support for a Guido-von-List-Gesellschaft (Guido von List Society), circa 1905, reveals that List had a following of some very prestigious people and shows that List, his ideology and his influence had widespread and significant support, including that amongst public figures in Austria and Germany.

Among some 50 signatories which endorsed the foundation of the List Society (which had an official founding ceremony on March 2, 1908).

The register shows that List's ideas were acceptable to many intelligent persons drawn from the upper and middle classes of Austria and Germany.

So impressed were they that these men were prepared to contribute ten crowns as an annual society subscription. The main part of the Society's assets derived from the Wannieck family, which put up more than three thousand crowns at the Society's inauguration.[4]

[edit] Hexagonal Crystal and the Armanen Runes

List's system was allegedly based around the structure of a Hexagonal Crystal. You can shine light through a crystal at different angles and project all 18 of the Armanen runes.

List's rune row was rather rigid while the runes of the past had had sharp angles for easy carving, his were to be carefully and perfectly made so that their shape would be a reflection of the 'frozen light', a pattern that he had found in his runes. All of his runes could be projected by shining the light through a hexagonal crystal under certain angles. Rune Hagal is so-called 'mother-rune' because its shape represents that hexagonal crystal.

Karl Hans Welz states that the "crystalline structure of quartz is the "hexagonal system" which is also one of the bases of the Runic symbolism (the hexagon with the three inscribed diameters)." and that "The hexagonal cross section of quartz and the fact that all of the 18 Sacred Futhork Runes are derived from the geometry of the hexagon is the basis of an enormous increase in crystal power when it is associated with Rune images."

[edit] Quotes by List

  • "One must flee those places where life throbs and seek out lonely spots untouched by human hand in order to lift the magic veil of nature" (Deutsch-Mythologische Landschaftsbilder, 1st volume, p. 125.)
  • "Now, because men of our contemporary age are caught up in the ascetic view of a life-denying religious system, but in spite of this cannot deny the primal laws of nature, a distorted morality had to be developed, which spreads hypocritical appearances over hidden actions. This has brought to a head all those outward forms of modern life, whose vacuousness and corruption are now beginning to disgust us." (Das Geheimnis der Runen)
  • "A star is extinguished, another will begin to shine - thus it is written in the Book of Nature" (Der Unbesiegbare)

[edit] Written works

For more information on the works of Guido von List see the section entitled "The Works of Guido von List" at the Guido von Lost website

  • Das Geheimnis der Runen (The Secret of the Runes (book), 1908)
  • Der Unbesiegbare
  • Götterdämmerung (1893)
  • Von der Wuotanspriesterschaft (1893)
  • Die deutsche Mythologie im Rahmen eines Kalenderjahres (1894)
  • Der deutsche Zauberglaube im Bauwesen (1895)
  • Mephistopheles (1895)
  • Carnuntum
  • Jung Diethers Heimkehr (1894)
  • Der Wala Erweckung (1894)
  • Walkürenweihe (1895)
  • Pipara: Die Germanin im Cäsarenpurpur (Pipara: the Germanic Woman in the purple of the Caesars, 1895)
  • König Vannius (1899)
  • Sommer-Sonnwend-Feuerzauber (1901)
  • Das Goldstück (1903)
  • Kunstmärchen anthology: Alraunenmaren: Kultur-historische Novellen und Dichtungen aus germanischer Vorzeit (Mandrake-Tales: Cultural-historical Novellas and Poetry from Germanic Prehistory, 1903)
  • Eine Zaubernacht
  • Guido-List-Bücherei (a series of works)
  • Die Armanenschaft der Ario-Germanen (The Armanism of the Aryo-Germanic People, 1908 and 1911, 2 volumes)
  • Die Rita der Ario-Germanen (The Rita of the Aryo-Germanic People, 1908)
  • Die Namen der Völkerstämme Germaniens und deren Deutung (The Names of the Tribes of the People of Germania and their Interpretation; GvLB no. 4, 1909)
  • Die Religion der Ario-Germanen in ihrer Esoterik und Exoterik (The Religion of the Aryo-Germanic People in its Esoteric and Exoteric Aspects, 1909 or 1910)
  • Die Bilderschrift der Ario-Germanen: Ario-Germanische Hierogyphik (The Pictographic Script of the Aryo-Germanic People: Aryo-Germanic Hieroglyphics; GvLB no. 5, 1910)
  • Der Übergang vom Wuotanismus zum Christentum (The Transition from Wuotanism to Christianity, 1911)
  • Die Ursprache der Ario-Germanen und ihre Mysteriensprache (The Primal Language of the Aryo-Germanic People and their Mystery Language; GvLB no. 6, 1914)
  • Armanismus und Kabbala

[edit] TV documentaries

The life of von List has featured in many TV documentaries on his life, occultic Germanic revivalism and the occult roots of Nazism. Some of these are as follows:

[edit] Popular culture

[edit] Further reading

  • Balzli, Johannes - 'Guido v. List - Der Wiederentdecker Uralter Arischer Weisheit - Sein Leben und sein Schaffen' (Leizig and Vienna, 1917)
  • Goodrick-Clarke, Nicholas (2003). The Occult Roots of Nazism: Secret Aryan Cults and Their Influence on Nazi Ideology. Gardners Books. ISBN 1-86064-973-4. ; originally published as Goodrick-Clarke, Nicholas (1992). The Occult Roots of Nazism: Secret Aryan Cults and Their Influence on Nazi Ideology; The Ariosophists of Austria and Germany, 1890-1935. New York University Press. ISBN 0-8147-3060-4. 
  • Goodrick-Clarke, Nicholas (2003). Black Sun: Aryan Cults, Esoteric Nazism and the Politics of Identity. New York University Press. ISBN 0-8147-3155-4. 
  • Flowers, Stephen (aka Edred Thorsson) (1988). The Secret of the Runes. Destiny Books. ISBN 0-89281-207-9. 
  • von List, Guido The Religion of the Aryo-Germanic Folk, Translated by Stephen E. Flowers.
  • Szanya, Anton Armanen, Templer, Theosophen. Die religiöse Subkultur Österreichs zwischen 1870 und 1938 ISBN 3-7065-1662-4

[edit] Biographical

The following books have detailed accounts of List' life:

[edit] References

  1. ^ Page 19 of Johannes Balzli Guido v. List: Der Wiederentdecker Uralter Arischer Weisheit - Sein Leben und sein Schaffen; the second volume of List's Deutsch-Mythologische Landschaftsbilder, page 469 and image page 523 and the introduction to the English translation of Das Geheimnis der Runen.
  2. ^ ‘Der Meister' Guido von List and the Controversy of ‘von' by Victor Ordell L. Kasen; Balzli, pages 11-12 of Guido v. List: Der Wiederentdecker Uralter Arischer Weisheit - Sein Leben und sein Schaffen and Balzli, op. cit, p. 11f. The old Germanic chronicle was Gabriel Bucelinuss, Germania Topo-Chrono-Stemmato-Graphica (Nuremberg, 1655-78); The Occult Roots of Nazism by Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke, pages 41-42 and notes on page 232; and the English translation of Das Geheimnis der Runen, Flowers, page 10.
  3. ^ A list of the signatories is printed in GLB (Guido-List-Bücherei) 3 (1908), [p.197f]. GLB is a series (eight in total beginning in 1908) of "Ario-Germanic research reports" which were based upon his occult interpretations of ancient national Germanic culture. Six of these volumes were published by the Guido von list Society itself. The two exceptions were first published by Adolf Burdeke in Switzerland and Leipzig.
  4. ^ Membership lists are printed in GLB 2 (1908), pp. 71-4 and GLB 5 (1910), pp. 384-9. The articles of the List society are printed in GLB 1, second edition (1923), pp. 68-78. Karl Herzog joined the society circa 1912. Karl Herzog to Philipp Stauff, letter dated February 3rd 1912, Bundesarchiv, Koblenz, NS26/512a

[edit] See also

[edit] External links