Alexandre Saint-Yves d'Alveydre
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Marquis Alexandre Saint-Yves d'Alveydre (1842 - 1909) was a French occultist who adapted the works of Fabre d'Olivet and, in turn, had his ideas adapted by Papus. He developed the term Synarchy - the association of everyone with everyone else, into a political philosophy, and his ideas on this form of government proved highly influential in politics and the occult.
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[edit] Biography
[edit] Early Years
Born in Paris the son of a doctor, he started as career as a physician at a naval academy in Brest which he soon abandoned after becoming ill. In 1863 he moved to Jersey. In 1870, he returned to France to fight in the Franco-Prussian War during which he was injured.
He then began a career as a civil servant. In 1877 Saint-Yves met and married Countess Marie de Riznitch-Keller, a relative of Honore de Balzac, and friend of the Empress Eugénie de Montijo, a move which made him independly wealthy. He dedicated the rest of his life to research and had a large number of influential contacts including Victor Hugo. Saint-Yves later knew many of the major names in French occultism such as Marquis Stanislas de Guaita, Joséphin Péladan and Oswald Wirth and was a member of a number of Rosicrucian, and Freemason style orders. Saint-Yves supposedly inherited the papers of one of the great founders of French occultism, Antoine Fabre d'Olivet (1762 - [1825]]). [1]
In 1877 he published the "Lyrical Testament", a collection of poetry, and "Keys of the Orient". In the latter book, he presents a solution (based on developing a religious understanding between Jews, Christians and Muslims) to the "question of the Orient", brought about by the decay of the Ottoman empire which led to tensions in the Near and Middle East.
He also undertook the development of industrial applications of marine plants ( "Utilising extracts from seaweed" was published in 1879) but he could not carry out the operation for lack of capital. In 1880, he received the title of Marquis of Alveydre.
His book the Mission des Juifs 1884 was favourable to Jews, but material from this was used for The Secret of the Jews an anti-semitic tract attributed to Yuliana Glinka.
[edit] Development of Synarchy
Saint-Yves used the term Synarchy in his book La France vraie to describe what he believed was the ideal form of government.[2] In reaction to the emergence of anarchist ideologies and movements, Saint-Yves had elaborated a more conservative political-theological formula over a series of 4 books from 1882 onwards which he believed would lead to a harmonious society by viewing it as an organic unity. This ideal was partially based on his idealised view of life in medieval Europe and also on his ideas about successful government in India, Atlantis and Ancient Egypt. He defended social differentiation and hierarchy with co-operation between social classes, transcending conflict between social and economic groups: Synarchy, as opposed to anarchy. Specifically, Saint-Yves envisioned an European society with a government composed of three councils, representing economic power, judicial power, and scientific community, of which the metaphysical chamber bound the whole structure together.[3] These ideas were also influenced by works such as Plato's The Republic and by Martinism.
As part of this concept of government Alexandre Saint-Yves d'Alveydre, gave an important role to secret societies or, more precisely, esoteric societies, which are composed of oracles and who safeguarded the government from behind the scenes. He saw the Knights Templar as having fulfilled this role in medieval Europe and was involved with a number of Freemason and other groups who claimed descent from the Templars.
[edit] Contact with Agartha
In the year 1885 Saint-Yves was supposedly visited by a group of Eastern Initiates, one of them being named prince Hardjij Scharipf. It was then he associated synarchy with "ascended masters" based in subterranean caverns of Agartha, who supposedly communicated with him telepathically.. He wrote about this secret location in his "Mission de l'Inde en Europeä" published in 1886. Worried he revealed too much he destroyed all but two copies of this book it did not become available again till 1910.
Saint-Yves believed that an ancient synarchist world government was transferred to Agartha within a hollow Earth at the start of the Kali-Yuga era, around 3,200 B.C.[4] Saint-Yves d'Alveydre was the man who really introduced the concept of Agartha to the Western world.
[edit] Final Years
After Saint-Yves's death, portions of the writings he left behind were compiled by a group of his friends and devotees into a volume entitled l'Archéomètre. The title is Saint-Yves's name for a color-coded diagram he developed, showing symbolic correspondences between elements in astrology, music, alphabets, gematria, and other areas. This book has been translated into Spanish, and was translated into English for the first time in 2007 (publication pending).
[edit] Influence
Saint-Yves main disciple was the prominent occultist Papus who established a number of societies based on Synarchist ideas. Other notable followers included Victor Blanchard (1878-1953), Philippe Nizier, René A. Schwaller de Lubicz and Emille Dantinne. Saint-Yves' works were also utilised in the development of Theosophy and Rudolf Steiner used Synarchy as a major influence in developing his political thought.
Saint-Yves' ideas came directly into play in the turbulent French politics of the early twentieth century where they served as a model for a number of right-wing groups and also in Mexico where synarchist groups have had a major political role. Theories concerning Synarchcist groups also have become a key element in a number of conspiracy theories.
[edit] Saint-Yves on The Great Sphinx of Giza
One of Saint-Yves most influential theories today was a minor point in his work. This is his claim that the Great Sphinx was far older than Egyptologists thought being created around 12,000 B.C. He believed the Sphinx was created by escapees from the destruction of Atlantis. He based this claim on no physical evidence. Saint-Yves' follower René A. Schwaller de Lubicz was thus inspired to investigate the age of the Sphinx and as a result inspired an ongoing Great Sphinx controversy over the age of the monument.[5]
[edit] Bibliography
- Le Retour du Christ, 1874
- Clefs de l'Orient, 1877
- Testament lyrique, 1877
- Le Mystère du Progrès, 1878
- De l'utilité des algues marines, 1879
- Mission des Souverains, 1882
- Mission des Ouvriers, 1882
- Mission des Juifs, 1884
- Mission de l'Inde, 1886
- Les funérailles de Victor Hugo, 1885
- La France vraie ou la Mission des Français, 1887
- Voeux du syndicat de la Presse économique, 1887
- Les Etats-généraux du suffrage universel, 1888
- Le centenaire de 1789 - Sa conclusion, 1889
- L'ordre économique dans l'Electorat et dans l'Etat, 1889
- Le poème de la Reine, 1889
- Maternité royale et mariages royaux, 1889
- L'Empereur Alexandre III épopée russe, 1889
- Jeanne d'Arc victorieuse, 1890
- Des brevets pour des applications de l'Archéomètre en 1903 et suivantes.
- Théogonie des Patriarches, 1909, édition posthume.
- L'Archéomètre - Clef de toutes les religions et de toutes les sciences de l'Antiquité - Réforme synthétique de tous les arts contemporains, 1910, édition posthume.
[edit] Notes and references
- ^ Crystalinks - Alexandre Saint-Yves d'Alveydre
- ^ Saint-Yves d'Alveydre, La France vraie (Paris: Calmann Lévy, 1887).
- ^ André Nataf, The Wordsworth Dictionary of the Occult (Wordsworth Editions Ltd; 1994).
- ^ Joscelyn Godwyn, Arktos: The Polar Myth - in Science, Symbolism, and Nazi Survival, p.84 (Adventures Unlimited Press, USA; 1996).
- ^ Crystalinks - Alexandre Saint-Yves d'Alveydre