Birth of a Concept: Secret Societies During the 18th Century
This contribution will approach its elusive subject by first looking at the emergence of the expression "secret societies" in publications of the 18th century. This will then allow us to discuss the different social phenomena the term referred to at the time, in order to move on to their functions and development up to the 20th century. The expression "secret societies" in its alliterative and often plural form – also found in French (sociétés secrètes) and German (geheime Gesellschaften) – dates back to the final quarter of the European 18th century. This is paradoxically documented by what looks like its first appearance in a monograph title, De secretis societatibus litterariis, written by the philosopher Johan Bilmark (1728–1801) at the Royal Academy of Åbo (Turku) in 1772. Although the author illustrated his argument with a series of historical examples, his main aim was to applaud the recent birth of Aurora. This name refers to a literary-musical association in Åbo that like its model, the Swedish society Utile Dulci, was not an open organisation, but initiated members into a number of degrees.1 In other words, Bilmark's title should be translated as "On secret literary societies" rather than as "On literary secret societies".2
The real beginnings of the modern term probably go back to the Berlinische Monatsschrift of the mid-1780s. At that time, the journal, published by Friedrich Nicolai (1733–1811), pointed its arrows at the Jesuit order. Even though the Societas Jesu had been suppressed in the Bourbon-governed countries and abolished by Pope Clemens XIV (1705–1774) in 1773, it was suspected to survive underground and to combat Protestantism and the Enlightenment through "eine Menge geheimer schädliche[r] Gesellschaften".3 The ensuing discussion soon encompassed the fate of the Order of the Illuminati which had been founded in 1776 by Adam Weishaupt (1748–1830). He was a professor of canon law at the University of Ingolstadt who took his inspiration from both the Jesuits and the Masons. His "geheime Gesellschaft", as Weishaupt labelled it, sought to win members among the elite and to conquer good positions in order to influence government. In 1785, however, it was closed down by the Bavarian Elector Karl Theodor (1724–1799), to the delight of the Catholics and the indignation of their enemies.4
These matters raised a lot of dust. Since the 1750s, opponents of the Jesuits had been reprinting the infamous Monita secreta, a collection of falsified "secret instructions" of the order that first appeared in Kraków in 1614, and the Jesuit fathers had retaliated by repeating their accusation of a Jansenist conspiracy which had supposedly been planned at Bourgfontaine in 1621.5 The Bavarian government published compromising documents of the Illuminati, to which some members responded in defence: In the five years following 1785, no less than 50 publications in Germany and abroad discussed the nature of the group.6 By then, the revolutionary events in France had begun to create even more favourable conditions for spreading the concept of "secret societies".
Ever since the French Revolution had been studied and interpreted, some had sought to identify certain groups that could be held responsible for its course. These individuals were not only thought of as more or less unwitting abettors – such as the Calvinists and philosophes in many a Catholic's eyes – but also as determined long-time plotters. The originators of these theories had very diverse backgrounds. One of them, Jacques Le Sueur, was better known as the prolific dramatist Beaunoir (actually Alexandre-Louis-Bertrand Robineau (1746–1823)). He, who himself was a defrocked priest and a Mason, published the novelistic work Les Masques arrachées ("The Masks Removed") in which he accused a certain number of Freemasons and Jesuits of having started the revolutions in France and Brabant. Charles-Louis Cadet de Gassicourt (1769–1821), who was a bastard of Louis XV (1710–1774) and would later become the apothecary of Napoleon I (1769–1821), also was and always remained a Mason. In Le Tombeau de Jacques Molai ("The Grave of Jacques Molai", 1796), he proposed a genealogical line from the Templars and Assassins through the Jesuits and Freemasons to the Illuminati. John Robison (1739–1805), the author of Proofs of a Conspiracy against all the Religions and Governments of Europe (1798), was not only a Mason but also a friend of the inventor James Watt (1736–1819) and a professor of philosophy at the University of Edinburgh. By contrast, Lorenzo Hervás y Panduro (1735–1809), a celebrated Spanish linguist who wrote Causas de la revolución de Francia ("Causes of the French Revolution") in 1794, was also a Jesuit priest. So was Augustin de Barruel (1741–1820), whose Mémoires pour servir à l'histoire du Jacobinisme ("Memoir Providing a History of Jacobinism", 1798–1799) most famously described the "conspiracy theory" about the French Revolution. All these and quite a few other authors cemented the idea that numerous secret societies existed and constituted unseen, yet powerful tools of subversion.7
Besides, the German Bundesroman, the English Gothic novel, and a mass of popular literature both stimulated and reflected the fascination of noble or sinister brotherhoods.8 Ever since the late 18th century, such books spread entertaining knowledge about the secret societies' workings. Sometimes it was not easy to tell fact from fiction, as in Charles Nodier's (1780–1844) tale of anti-Bonapartist conspiracies, but his Histoire des sociétés secrètes de l'Armée ("History of the Secret Societies of the Army", 1815) portrayed organisations that had a positive image at the moment of publication, after the fall of Napoléon Bonaparte.9 In many places, however, secret societies were considered to be bad regardless of their political role: In Prussia, for example, the Tugendbundstreit, a debate in 1815–1816 concerning the semi-clandestine Tugendbund ("League of Virtue"), raised the suspicion of conspiracy in spite of the members' impeccably patriotic attitude during the French Wars.10
At the same time, the suggestion that secret societies had caused the end of the monarchy in France did nothing to belittle their reputation among reformers. The Americanos who took up the struggle for independence from Spain were among the first to embrace the model.11 And when the outlines of post-Napoleonic Europe became clear, it would seem to many as if liberals and democrats were involved in a pas de deux with autocracy, in which conspiracy also played a major role. In 1819, after the theology student Karl Ludwig Sand (1795–1820), a member of the secret Unbedingten ("Uncompromising Ones"), had murdered the writer August von Kotzebue (1761–1819), the German Confederation held a conference at Carlsbad (Karlovy Vary) which issued a series of decrees against "demagoguery" and established a Central Commission of Investigation in Mainz.12
In 1820, a military conspiracy in Spain reinstated the liberal Constitution of Cádiz, which had already been proclaimed in 1812 but abolished two years later. This encouraged the Carbonari in the Two Sicilies and a clandestine group of Portuguese liberals to rise in demand of constitutions as well. Piedmont followed this example in 1821.13 In response, Russia, Prussia, and Austria decided at the congresses of Troppau (Opava, 1820), Laibach (Ljubljana, 1821), and Verona (1822) to begin a military intervention in Italy and Spain, in the latter case with French troops. But in 1822, these troops themselves showed signs of being subverted by the Charbonnerie ("Charcoal Burners"), as we can see in the case of the four sergeants of La Rochelle, who were executed for conspiracy and then became popular heroes.14 Meanwhile, the Philiki Etairia ("Friendly Society") had started the Greek War of Independence (1821–1829). And during the Decembrist uprising of 1825, Russian officers inspired by Freemasonry and the Tugendbund revolted in St Petersburg.15 By that time, the "secret societies" were to all intents and purposes a household word, and special police forces to combat them were being created in consequence.16 The 1830 revolution in France, with its echoes in Belgium, Germany, Poland, and Italy, further enhanced the societies' prestige.17
Expansion: Secret Societies Outside Europe
The "secret societies" now had also acquired a history, first of all as a result of their being closely associated with Freemasonry. Indeed, in The Constitutions of the Free-Masons (1723), James Anderson (ca. 1680–1739) connected Masonic history with Adam, following the craft guilds in linking their origins to the oldest suitable Biblical figure.18 All through the 18th century, Masonic and para-Masonic associations created genealogies with varying degrees of probability, involving the 17th-century Orden des Rosenkreutzes ("Rosicrucian Order") as well as the Knights Templars suppressed in the 14th century.19 In the 1780s, some French and German Masons attempted to clarify their origins, but could not reach a conclusion before their efforts were ended by the French Revolution.20 The historical works on Freemasonry that started to be produced after the Napoleonic era usually encompassed non-Masonic "secret societies", if only to emphasize that these were different and Masonry ought not to suffer from the repressive measures taken against them.21 Since the mid-19th century, all major European languages were endowed with one or more multi-volume works that searched history for possible forerunners and established a canon which continues to inspire most present-day overviews of the field.22
One result of this search was the "discovery" of secret societies outside Europe. In 1818, Joseph von Hammer-Purgstall (1774–1856), a pioneering Austrian Orientalist, used newly-found documents to suggest significant parallels between European secret societies and the Persian Assassins.23 In 1821, William Milne (1785–1822), a Protestant missionary, coined the term Triads for certain Chinese associations he likened to Freemasonry; and in the 1830s, the Thugs or Stranglers of India, suspected of heinous cultish crimes, started their long journey into Western popular culture.24 Soon the young discipline of ethnography found a startling number of "secret societies" all over the world, and at the beginning of the 20th century felt confident enough to deliver its first general theories.25 Thus, Europeans not only shaped the perception of indigenous associations in their colonies, but were shaped by them in turn.26
With the emergence of the new science of religion, the term "secret society" was increasingly applied to non-political organisations as well. Various debates on new and not-so-new questions – for example, on the disciplina arcani ("Discipline of the Secret") of the early Christian Church – kindled an interest in the "mystery religions" of Antiquity, whose cult associations were now reexamined.27 At the same time, the middle of the 19th century saw what has been called the Occult Revival or the Theosophical Enlightenment, which resuscitated or inspired the sort of esoteric organisations that had proliferated in the 18th century.28 Meanwhile, across the Atlantic, more and more white American men were joining what were openly called "secret societies", especially after the Civil War. Some of these associations had been imported from Europe, but others were newly founded, as in the case of the Order of the Iroquois of the anthropologist Lewis Henry Morgan (1818–1881) or the Improved Order of Red Men, both inspired by Native American initiation rituals. At the end of the 19th century, almost one out of every five adult men in the United States had joined one of the tens of thousands of lodges belonging to hundreds of fraternal orders. From the mid-1890s onwards, these were all neatly listed in an annual statistical manual, which conveniently specified the conditions of the insurance packages that many associations offered.29 Many Europeans now considered secret societies to be an almost natural phenomenon "of all ages and countries", for better or for worse.30
The Age of Associations: Secret Societies in the 19th Century
From a more restricted perspective, the European secret society may be seen as one among many types of voluntary associations that emerged from the 17th century onwards. Building on a tradition shaped by guilds, confraternities, and congregations, the new organisations usually had selective admission procedures, often including initiation rituals, and retained a more or less "closed" character. In this context, Freemasonry was not as exceptional as has sometimes been suggested. In Britain, it differed from other associations more by its respectability than by anything else and was "never in any real sense a secret society". Thus, it was exempted, though only just, from the Unlawful Societies Act of 1799.31 Likewise, in pre-revolutionary Provence, Masonry was above all an attractive alternative for elite circles who wished to get organised apart from the more inclusive confréries. Masonic lodges made up 77 of the 301 Aufklärungsgesellschaften ("Enlightenment Societies") found in 18th-century Central Germany, as against 15 self-styled "secret societies" with much stronger political opinions, all dating from the last quarter of the century. After the American Revolution, Masons in the United States were for fifty years regarded as decency incarnate.32
In spite of this, Freemasonry acquired the image of the secret society par excellence. One important reason was the early and long-lasting opposition of the Roman Catholic Church, which first condemned the "liberi Muratori seu Francs Massons" in the bull In eminenti (1738). After the French Revolution, this attitude hardened, only to find itself vindicated when political developments in Italy, France, and Spain in the second half of the 19th century made many Catholics feel that semi-Masonic governments had declared war on organised religion. In the fight against republican secularism, which continued well into the 20th century, few cared to differentiate between Freemasonry and the "secret societies", and the terms became virtually synonymous.33
Another problem the Craft had to face was that – at times – it was in fact used for subversive purposes. Already in the 1770s, rumour had it that many German lodges were steered by the hidden hand of the Jesuits; and when it turned out that it was the Illuminati who actually had tried to do just that, the possibility of the existence of "unknown superiors" could no longer be denied. Indeed, at around the same time, Count Honoré-Gabriel de Riquetti de Mirabeau (1749–1791) advocated that French lodges should be secretly taken over and reformed.34 The Illuminati were intertwined with Freemasonry to an extraordinary degree, but many founders of 19th-century secret societies such as Filippo Buonarroti (1761–1837), Louis-Auguste Blanqui (1805–1881), Giuseppe Mazzini (1805–1872)[], and Michail Bakunin (1814–1876)[] were or had been Masons, or had a disproportionate number of Masons among their acquaintances, and used this network for their endeavours.35
Early 19th-century Polish Freemasonry actively promoted national independence, later to be followed by lodges in other countries, most notably Italy.36 Persons in political exile often constituted irregular lodges, and unorthodox currents like the French Martinists37 clearly articulated political aims. Even without the "Satanist" mystifications of Léo Taxil (1854–1907) at the end of the century, it cannot have been easy for outsiders to discern what represented the Masonic mainstream and what did not.38 This is even more true for the lodges created by contemporaneous reformers on the periphery of Europe to further their modernist projects.39 In the American colonies belonging to Spain and Portugal, the patriotic societies that helped win independence were similarly identified with Freemasonry for a long time.40
Several of these cases illustrate that the fundamental weakness of Freemasonry in the face of its critics was precisely its strength as an organisational model which was well-suited for clandestine purposes. Its graded structure, which was protected by oaths and initiations, proved enormously attractive. Even opponents such as Ferdinand de Bertier's (1782–1864) Catholic Chevalerie or the political police of various countries adopted these and other principles – including the guise of compartmentalization (division into isolated units) and the distribution of knowledge on a need-to-know basis. Established institutions like the Compagnonnage, the brotherhoods of French journeymen, did not escape the influence of Masonry, either.41 Yet nowhere was it felt as strongly as in the secret societies, ever since the days of the Illuminati.
Mostly, the appearance of Masonic characteristics in an association is not due to unmediated borrowing, but rather to the fact that such characteristics had been widely disseminated from the beginning – the first of innumerable "revelations" about Freemasonry was printed less than a decade after Anderson's Constitutions – and were easily assimilated by men to whom they looked familiar. In this way, the founders of secret societies usually avoided the so-called "liability of newness", the introduction of entirely new types of organisation with the "high costs in time, worry, conflict, and temporary inefficiency" that come with the new roles members have to learn.42 Throughout the 18th century, Masonic lodges had demonstrated their great elasticity by accommodating a broad variety of individuals and aims. In the 19th century, this model was adopted and copied on a large scale. Migrants also tend to prove this rule when they take associational customs with them. As an example, the Molly Maguires, a secret society of Irish miners in Pennsylvania in the 1870s, drew directly on the traditions of their Irish home counties, albeit in the framework of local lodges of the Ancient Order of Hibernians, an Irish-American brotherhood that normally followed the "fraternal" model imported from Britain.43
As this example shows, several traditions may fuse and be adapted to local circumstances. Here the most famous case is the Carboneria, which appeared in the Kingdom of Naples after its occupation by the French in 1806 and later radiated throughout Italy, attracting many tens of thousands of members. Its similarities to Freemasonry on the one hand and to the Charbonniers of the Franche-Comté on the other have been the subject of long-lasting debate.44 Although these similarities are undeniable, efforts to trace them back to a single source are ineffective. Even if a particular "founding moment" were established to everybody's satisfaction, it would be unlikely to account for the Carbonari's many peculiar features and the numerous differences among the buoni cugini ("good cousins", i.e. members) in the various towns and regions of Italy. Many vendite ("lodges", i.e. assembly places) soon became an intrinsic part of the social texture, following existing fault lines in the local communities. Their differences, however, would probably have been even greater without the unifying pressure of the Masonic model.
Webs of Deceit: Internal Structures and Cooperations
The impact of traditional forms of organisation is partly explained by the fact that secret societies are normally created on the basis of pre-existing social networks. This is related to the crucial importance of trust among their members, who are after all selected on the supposition that they can keep a secret. It would seem that the structure of the older networks and the degree to which the leadership controlled the necessary resources both exert considerable influence on the level of centralisation and hierarchisation of the new organisation.45 Since the societies are typically caught between hierarchy (some members know more secrets than others) and equality (the shared secret creates a bond), problems of decision-making may ensue. This in turn may support or produce a special type of charismatic leadership that acts as a "substitute for authority in anti-authority organisations".46
The demands of secrecy are an obvious impediment to the growth of secret societies and the degree of cooperation between them. One consequence is that more than the usual caution is needed when assessing claims about their size and mutual relations. Such claims frequently overstate the case as a result of a natural complicity between supporters and detractors, who both have grounds to exaggerate the possible impact of the organisations. As an example, the Austrian Chancellor Klemens von Metternich (1773–1859) was convinced that the European secret societies were all united under a comité directeur ("head committee") with its seat in Paris. As if to prove him right, Gioacchino Prati (1790–1863), a lieutenant of Buonarroti's, wrote that he had been a member of "the centre with which … all political events which took place on the continent have been connected".47 Yet even if this putative centre had indeed existed, one would be hard put to name even a single goal it might have achieved, except, that is, for bolstering Austrian efforts to improve the police forces of Europe. Powerful headquarters "vseznajušego i nikomu neizvestnogo" ("knowing everything yet known to none") 48 were a phantasy – a dream to some and a nightmare to others.
What did exist, born from the chronic instability of the Restoration, was an informal network of networks that has been termed a "liberal International".49 It had largely been fostered by the Continental governments themselves when they forced their opponents into exile at a limited number of safe havens such as Geneva, London, Brussels, or at times Paris. Unsurprisingly, the concentration of more or less like-minded refugees in a tolerant or even sympathetic environment gave rise to an exchange of news and ideas, and occasional cooperation in practical matters. Since political exile was a permanent condition in Europe throughout the period, the refugee networks sometimes changed – liberals and nationalists were followed by socialists and anarchists –, but suspicion remained constant. The appearance of cross-border organisations of workers, in a context of class conflict which was violently illustrated by the Paris Commune of 1871, renewed accusations of conspiracy. The International Working Men's Association, founded in 1864, was declared a secret society in various countries. In fact, though, institutions like the trade unions at the basis of the IWMA, even when they had clandestine beginnings, signalled the gradual transition from predominantly closed to open forms of organisation.50
In spite of Metternich's misgivings – or those uttered by Benjamin Disraeli (1804–1881) in Britain51 – it would seem that coordination, as it existed between secret societies, took place ad hoc between individual organisers, and never or only very rarely under the aegis of anything resembling an interorganisational structure. After all, building a secret society is in itself a formidable task, and keeping it alive is difficult. Apart from the question of funding, founders face the problem of maintaining interest among its members, especially if their aims are long-term; and losing members is inherently risky.52 As a rule, therefore, the secret society is an ephemeral structure. It is not surprising that the documented attempts to coordinate two or more organisations (like Mazzini's Giovine Europa ("Young Europe"), founded in 1834 to unite the national liberation movements of various European countries) hardly got off the ground.53
This state of affairs is not incompatible with the fact that knowledge and networks could be conveyed from one conspirator to the next, leaving an impression of continuity and expansion. Consider the case of Bakunin, whose life as a wandering person in exile was not untypical among the organisers of secret societies. Born in a Russian family that counted several prominent Decembrists among its members, in his youth he fell for the ideas of Johann Gottlieb Fichte (1762–1814) about the "vocation of the scholar",54 which shaped his own conception of the duties of a moral elite. In the 1840s, he met representatives of virtually all major conspiratorial traditions in Germany, Switzerland, Italy, Poland, Belgium, and France; he even went on a walking tour in the Swiss Alps with August Follen (1794–1855), the former Burschenschafter (member of a German student fraternity). Bakunin organised secret societies in 1848–1849 and, after his return from Siberia in 1861, until the mid-1870s. He had become a Freemason and used his Masonic contacts, notably in Sweden and Italy, when he tried to create an underground international organisation from 1863 onwards. Having absorbed much of the living history of these societies, he in turn inspired groups in Spain, Italy, and Russia that followed his example for many years to come. In this way, Bakunin was part of a chain that linked practices rather than organisations.
Ways of Hiding: Associations and Their Strategies
All in all, secrecy would seem to be the only common denominator discernible among secret societies, yet even this is not a simple matter. Organisations may hide their aims, their rules, their rites, their members, a combination of this, or their very existence. They can do so under external pressure or following their own free will. And this can change over time, or at any rate be perceived in a different light by changing observers, for the definition of secrecy itself was in constant flux in much of Europe since the waning of the Middle Ages. The increasing profitability of commercial secrets as well as of their disclosure, the secularization of political thought, the religious struggles with consequences as diverse as Nicodemism (i. e., pretending to have another religion in order to avoid prosecution) and the Baroque, the meandering rise of modern science, the birth of public opinion – all of these developments were incessantly tugging at the borders of public and private secrecy and openness.55
In this confusing context, it helps to distinguish between two different modes of secrecy in associations. The first, which might be labelled "clandestinity", is a condition usually imposed by the prohibitions or hostility of powerful outsiders, even if this may have been provoked by the victim itself, as in the case of a criminal gang. Minority groups anywhere often are or have been involuntarily clandestine for some time. By contrast, the second mode, proper "secrecy", is defined from the inside. Here, the organisation possesses privileged knowledge it wants to hide from those deemed unfit or unworthy, for its ideas "patiuntur … iacturam cum loquacibus et incredulis animis ingeruntur".56 Indeed, some associations would even consider themselves not as in possession of, but as giving limited access to an inexpressible secret.57
This distinction translates into another loose classification which was first suggested with regard to the evolution of Buonarroti's secret societies. A course from a "French" to a "German" type of secret society can be distinguished. The first, so named because of its "tipica confluenza di un elemento giacobino e di un elemento militare" ("typical accordance of a Jacobinical and a military element"), followed the model of the "vera e propria cospirazione politica" ("true and proper political conspiracy"). It found its expression in the 1796 Conjuration des Égaux ("Conspiracy of Equals") founded by François Noël (Gracchus) Babeuf (1760–1797). The second and later type, resembling the concept of an association that "non è più solo meccanismo di urto, ma anche sviluppo e palestra di quella 'filosofia' che deve render possibile la riforma della società", demanded a quasi-permanent, semi-professional activity that might be called "metapolitica per la netta distinzione che vi si introduce fra la società civile sulla quale agire e il gruppo settario liberatosi dalla corruzione e dall'ignoranza".58 In the terms of our earlier differentiation, the "French" type tended towards clandestinity, the "German" type towards secrecy.
Although the differences between "clandestine" and "secret", "French" and "German" can be easily overstated, two ideal types are unmistakably recognizable among the political secret societies of 19th-century Europe. Organisations of the "French" type were aiming at the conquest of political power in the short run, if necessary through a pronunciamento.59 Accordingly, in France, Spain, and Italy, liberal officers were for a long time overrepresented in secret societies, and all-military conspiracies were far from rare. Of course, these associations – from the Charbonnerie to the Blanquists and from La Giovine Italia ("Young Italy") to the Fenians60 – held strong political ideas, but their programmes were practical rather than philosophical. Their membership was always larger, and often much larger than that of the "German"-type associations. They were in many ways still-clandestine forerunners of the modern political parties, but also symbols of national independence and unity over much of Europe.61
"German"-type associations were smaller and rarer. The London-based Communist League, founded by Karl Marx (1818–1883) and Friedrich Engels (1820–1895) in 1847, was among them. So were the post-1863 organisations of Bakunin, who like Buonarroti evolved from a "French" to a "German" model. Nor would it be too bold to include the Bolshevik party created by Vladimir I. Lenin (1870–1924) in 1903.62 All of them were not so much conceived for the short-term goal of insurrection as for the strategic leadership of a long revolutionary process that was not expected to be completed during their founder's lifetime. On the contrary, it was supposed to continue for a considerable time after the insurrectional moment. They had a fundamentally international, universalist perspective, which substantiated their claim to be the vanguard of a vast historic movement. In this respect, it seems that their origins coincide more or less with the birth of artistic and intellectual avant-garde groups, at the same time marginal and elitist, with a similarly universalist outlook.63
Towards the Margins: Secret Societies After 1900
In spite of the continuous acerbic polemics surrounding the secret societies, there can be little doubt that by the last quarter of the 19th century the phenomenon had begun to decline, at least in Western Europe. With the extension of the right to vote, the improvement of education and the growth and acceptance of open associations, secret societies became less attractive to the radical liberals and socialists who had been their most ardent organisers. Secrecy began to follow a path already implied by Immanuel Kant (1724–1804) when he wrote that the existence of secret societies is an indicator of a lack of freedom.64 Where representative democracy was absent or slow to appear, clandestinity could be a rational response to a repressive state; indeed, the very existence of the clandestine condition was an indictment of that state and an argument in favour of the opposition.65 It is true that political secret societies continued to be created on the margins of Europe, but from the late 19th century onwards they began to reject the label. Paradoxically, in 1914, when their power seemed to reach its zenith as a member of Smrt ili Život ("Death or Life") fired the bullet that would kill Franz Ferdinand of Austria (1863–1914), triggering the First World War which would bring down four empires, the halcyon days of the secret societies were over.
Jaap Kloosterman
Appendix
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Notes
- ^ Degrees are ranks reflecting a member's personal development.
- ^ Bilmark, De secretis societatibus 1772. The text was written for the examination of Carl Christopher Ekman (1747–1818), later a mayor of Nystad (Uusikaupunki). On Bilmark, see Brusiin, Bilmark-Studien 1971.
- ^ "a number of secret harmful societies" ([Anonymous], Proselytenmacherei 1785, p. 65; quoted in Hippchen, Verschwörung und Verbot 1998, p. 55).Note that the term occurs already, also in an anti-Jesuit context, in Adolph von Knigge's (1752-1796) pseudonymous pamphlet Ueber Jesuiten 1781, p. 7, and see pp. 32f.
- ^ For the extensive literature on the Illuminati from 1784 to 2006, see Markner / Schüttler, Bibliographie 2006. An interesting addition is Gregory, Wissen und Geheimnis 2009.
- ^ Pavone, Astuzie dei Gesuiti 2000; Grassl, Aufbruch zur Romantik 1968; Van Kley, Jansenists 1975; Klausnitzer, Poesie und Konspiration 2007, chap 1.3. Anti-Jesuit accusations of conspiracy continued throughout the 19th century; see Leroy, Mythe jésuite 1992; Cubitt, Jesuit Myth 1993; Healey, Jesuit Specter 2003; Franco, Mito dos Jesuítas 2006. See also Fabre / Maire, Antijésuites 2010.
- ^ Agethen, Geheimbund und Utopie 1984, p. 81.
- ^ Le Sueur, Masques arrachées 1790; Cadet de Gassicourt, Tombeau de Jacques Molai 1796; Robison, Proofs of a Conspiracy 1797; Hervás, Causas de la Revolución 1807; Barruel, Mémoires 1803. See also the pamphlet by Barruel's English translator (Clifford, Application of Barruel's Memoirs 1798). On Barruel, see Schaeper-Wimmer, Augustin Barruel 1985; Riquet, Augustin de Barruel 1989. – The literature on conspiracy theories is vast; among historical studies directly relevant to our topic, see Roberts, Mythology 1972; Bieberstein, These von der Verschwörung 1976; Wood, Conspiracy 1982; Lemaire, Origines françaises 1985; Porset, Hiram sans-culotte? 1998; Coward / Swann, Conspiracies and Conspiracy Theory 2004; Révauger, Franc-maçonnerie et politique 2006; Cazzaniga, Complotto 2006; Campbell / Kaiser / Linton, French Revolution 2007.
- ^ Thalmann, Romantik des Trivialen 1970; Voges, Aufklärung und Geheimnis 1987; Schings, Brüder des Marquis Posa 1996; Müller-Seidel / Riedel, Weimarer Klassik 2002; Wagner, Turmgesellschaft 2006; Hogle, Gothic Fiction 2002. For an example of an English "bluebook" or "penny dreadful", see [Anonymous], Mysterious Spaniard 1807.
- ^ Nodier, Sociétés secrètes de l'Armée 1815. See Guillon, Complots militaires 1894, chapter VIII; Oliver, Charles Nodier 1964, pp. 78–81; Lund, Nodier et le roman de l'histoire 1981.
- ^ Kraus, Schmalz 1999, pp. 189–242. The Tugendbund (short for Sittlich-Wissenschaftlicher Verein, i.e. "Moral and Scientific Association") was part of the reform movement that sprang up in the wake of Prussia's defeat against Napoleon in 1806. Formally approved of (1808) and later disbanded (1810) by Friedrich Wilhelm III (1770–1840), it propagated civic virtue in the open, while secretly trying to organise resistance against the French.
- ^ Their activities were most notable in what would later become Mexico and Argentina; see for instance Guedea, Mexican Independence 2000.
- ^ Luys, Anfänge der deutschen Nationalbewegung 1992. – Unbedingte was the name of a group of students at the University of Gießen inspired by Carl (1796–1840) and August Follen (1794–1855); they were among the most radical elements of the Burschenschaften, the student unions that had supplied many fighters to the struggle against Napoleon.
- ^ Arnabat, Sociedades secretas 2006; Valín, Masonería y revolución 2008; Castells, Constitución gaditana 1989; Pascual, Circolazione di miti politici 2007; Mogarro, José da Silva Carvalho 1990; Berti / Della Peruta, Carboneria 2004.
- ^ Spitzer, Old Hatreds 1971; Lambert, Charbonnerie 1995. – The French Charbonnerie, an underground merger of various groups, brought together some 30,000 opponents of the Bourbon Restoration in 1821–1823.
- ^ Clogg, Struggle for Greek Independence 1973; Bokova, Epocha tajnych obščestv 2003. The Philiki Etairia, founded in Odessa in 1814, consisted largely of diaspora Greeks; its leader Alexandros Ypsilantis (1792–1828) started the insurrection of 1821.
- ^ On the political police, see Liang, Rise of Modern Police 1992; Napoli, Naissance de la police 2003; Emerson, Metternich 1968; Siemann, Deutschlands Ruhe 1985; Nolte, Demagogen und Denunzianten 2007; Pegenaute, Trayectoria 1978; Monas, Third Section 1961; Squire, Third Department 1968.
- ^ As illustrated by Perreux, Au temps des sociétés secrètes 1931.
- ^ Schmidt, Symbolische Konstituierung 2007, p. 127. At the same time, Anderson removed other traditions from the story (see Schuchard, Restoring the Temple 2002; Schuchard, Emanuel Swedenborg 2012).
- ^ On the Templar myth, see Partner, Murdered Magicians 1981. On the first Rosecrucians, see Dickson, Tessera of Antilia 1998; Edighoffer, Rose-Croix 1998; Tilton, Quest for the Phoenix 2003.
- ^ Schüttler, Intervention des deutschen Illuminatenordens 1992; Bode, Journal 1994; Porset, Philalèthes 1996. Johann Joachim Christoph Bode (1731–1793) was an important member of the Illuminati.
- ^ See, for example, [Thory], Acta Latomorum 1815; Lenning, Encyclopädie der Freimaurerei 1822–1828; [Anonymous], Catalogue 1834; Bègue-Clavel, Histoire pittoresque 1843; Kloss, Bibliographie der Freimaurerei 1844.
- ^ Zaccone, Histoire des sociétés secrètes 1847–1849; De Castro, Mondo secreto 1864; Heckethorn, Secret Societies 1875, vol. 1–2; De la Fuente, Historia de las sociedades secretas 1870–1871; Deschamps, Sociétés secrètes 1874–1876; Schuster, Geheime Gesellschaften 1906. For more on these authors and their books, see Kloosterman, Hidden Centres 2009.
- ^ Hammer-Purgstall, Geschichte der Assassinen 1818. On Hammer, see Galter / Haas, Joseph von Hammer-Purgstall 2008; Fichtner, Terror and Toleration 2008. The Assassins, in fact the Shi'i community of Nizari Isma'ilis that came into being in 1094–1095, suffered from the combined hostility of Sunni Islam and the Christian Crusaders, who first learned about them in the 12th century and knew their leader as the Old Man of the Mountain. See Daftary, Assassin Legends 1995.
- ^ Murray, Origins of the Tiandihui 1994; Singha, Despotism of Law 1998; Van Woerkens, Voyageur étranglé 1995; Wagner, Thuggee 2007. Whereas the Triads were mostly migrant organisations, the Thugs took to a form of often kin-based seasonal banditry patronized by local rulers. Both groups became a source of fascination in the West. Ever since the Confessions of a Thug (1839) by Philip Meadows Taylor, the Indian highwaymen have figured in novels and movies, most notably perhaps in Steven Spielberg's (*1946) Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom (1984). And since the Buddhist monastery of Shaolin is significant for the foundation myth of the Chinese societies, these have been associated with the sort of martial arts made popular by the actor Bruce Lee (1940–1973). Sax Rohmer (1883–1959) combined the Chinese and Indian villains in his stories of Fu Manchu from 1912 onwards.
- ^ See, for example, Schurtz, Altersklassen 1902. See also Webster, Primitive Secret Societies 1908; Van Gennep, Rites de passage 1909.
- ^ See also Johnson, Criminal Secrecy 1991; Anderson / Johnson, Revealing Prophets 1995, chapter 1; Wedgwood, Nature and Functions 1930; Herdt, Secret Societies 1990.
- ^ Martin, Secrecy in Hellenistic Religious Communities 1995, p. 118, speaks of "the sensationalizing of secrecy as a category of religious explanation". See also Bowden, Mystery Cults 2010.
- ^ McIntosh, Eliphas Lévi 1972; Godwin, Theosophical Enlightenment 1994. For the older tradition, see Frick, Erleuchteten 1973; Frick, Licht und Finsternis 1975–1978; Le Forestier, Franc-maçonnerie templière 1987; Viatte, Sources occultes 1979; Faivre, Accès de l'ésotérisme 1986–1996.
- ^ Carnes, Secret Ritual 1989; Gist, Secret Societies 1940; Clawson, Constructing Brotherhood 1989.
- ^ Cf. Heckethorn, Secret Societies 1875, vol. 1–2.
- ^ Clark, British Clubs and Societies 2000, p. 312; Prescott, Unlawful Societies Act 2002; Beaurepaire, William Pitt 2005.
- ^ Agulhon, Pénitents et Francs-Maçons 1968, pp. 206–211; Zaunstöck, Sozietätslandschaft 1999, p. 99; Bullock, Revolutionary Brotherhood 1996.
- ^ In general, see Ferrer Benimeli, Masonería, Iglesia e Ilustración 1976–1977; Clark / Kaiser, Culture Wars 2003; Porset / Révauger, Franc-maçonnerie et religions 2006; Borutta, Antikatholizismus 2011. For Southern Europe, see Poulat / Laurant, Antimaçonnisme catholique 2006; Jarrige, Antimaçonnerie en France 2006; Pruneti, Sinagoga di Satana 2002; Cazzaniga, Massoneria 2006; Ferrer Benimeli, Contubernio judeo-masónico-comunista 1982; Martín, Arquitectos de la República 2007; Gomes, Catolicismo e tradicionalismo 2009. It should be noted that this debate contributed to the creation of a false dichotomy in which Masons and Illuminati represent Enlightenment values against various forms of presumed irrationality; but see for instance Neugebauer-Wölk, Esoterische Bünde 1995; Neugebauer-Wölk, Aufklärung und Esoterik 1999; Mulsow, Weishaupt als Philosoph 2002.
- ^ Agethen, Geheimbund und Utopie 1984 (pp. 279–287 for the rumours on the Jesuits); Porset, Mirabeau 1996.
- ^ Saitta, Buonarroti 1972; Eisenstein, First Professional Revolutionist 1959, chapter 3.2; Combes, Franc-Maçonnerie et Blanquisme 1986; Damiani, Bakunin 1977; Polo Friz, Michele Bakunin 1989.
- ^ Bieberstein, Bedeutung der Freimaurerei 1980; Polo Friz, Massoneria italiana 1998; Novarino, All'Oriente di Torino 2003.
- ^ The Martinists were an order established in the 1880s which claimed to build on the occult ideas of Martinès de Pasqually (died 1774) and Louis-Claude de Saint-Martin (1743–1803).
- ^ Bossu, Loge de proscrits 1958; Galtier, Maçonnerie egyptienne 1989; Harvey, Beyond Enlightenment 2005; Weber, Satan Franc-Maçon 1964. See also Conti, Massoneria e radicalismo 2005. For a Masonic complaint, see Baylot, Voie substituée 1985.
- ^ Lambton, Secret Societies 1958; Landau, Prolegomena 1965; Zarcone, Secret et sociétés secrètes 2002.
- ^ Vázquez, Masonería en México 2011; Vázquez, Imagen pública 2011; Ferrer Benimeli, Aproximaciones 2012. The debate about the Lautaro lodge and its role in the struggle for independence in Argentine, Chile and Peru is typical; for a summary, see Castro Olivas, Libertadores 2011, chapter 1.2.
- ^ Bertier, Souvenirs inédits 1990; Truant, Rites of Labor 1994.
- ^ Stinchcombe, Social Structure and Organizations 1972, p. 148.
- ^ Kenny, Molly Maguires 1998. See also Lause, Civil War 2011. For another example, see Cohen, Politics of Elite Culture 1981, which shows how Sierra Leone politics in the 1970s pitted (imported) elite Creole Freemasonry against (indigenous) non-elite Poro societies. On the British "export" of Masonry, see Harland-Jacobs, Builders of Empire 2007.
- ^ Starting with Luzio, Massoneria 1925, and Leti, Carboneria e Massoneria 1925; see the relevant chapters in Berti / Della Peruta 2004. On the Charbonniers, see Merlin, Bons cousins charbonniers 2005; on their possible role in Naples, see Mastroberti, Pierre Joseph Briot 1998, chapter 6. See also the recent regional studies of De Cristofaro, Carboneria in Basilicata 1991; Gin, Sanfedisti 2003; Dicara, Elite di periferia 2004.
- ^ Erickson, Secret Societies and Social Structure 1981; Fidel, Military Conspiracy 1980.
- ^ Ellis, Charismatic Leadership 1991, p. 314. See also Douglas / Wildavsky, Risk and Culture 1982, chapter 6.
- ^ Sked, Metternich 2008, p. 130; Prati, Autobiography 1837–1839, here 10 February 1838.
- ^ Bakunin, K oficeram russkoj armii 1870, p. 5.
- ^ Isabella, Risorgimento in Exile 2009.
- ^ For the general development, see Hoffmann, Geselligkeit und Demokratie 2003.
- ^ Disraeli told the House of Commons in 1856: "It is useless to deny, because it is impossible to conceal, that a grand part of Europe … is covered with a network of these secret societies, just as the superficies of the earth are now being covered with railroads"; see Her Majesty's Stationery Office, Hansard 1803–2005, 3rd series, vol. 143, p. 774. His words were later used as an epitaph by Webster, Secret Societies 1924, p. IV.
- ^ Buonarroti considered meetings to be essential, even though they courted danger. He insisted that they had to be not just useful but "agréables et intéressantes" ("pleasant and interesting"); he also organised festivities and wrote, "On ne doit pas négliger de parler aux sens; le raisonnement ne suffit pas toujours, et souvent un geste, un mouvement, un chant, un tableau font sur le cœur humain surtout jeune plus d'impression durable que les discours les mieux conçus et les plus remplis de vérité" ("One must not neglect the stimulation of the senses; reason is not always sufficient, and often a gesture, a movement, a song, or a painting leaves a greater impression on a human heart, especially on a young one, than the best and most truthful speeches", Saitta, Buonarroti 1972, vol. II, pp. 157–160). Andryane, Souvenirs 1839, contains sketches of some such meetings.
- ^ For a positive view, see Mastellone, Progetto politico 1994.
- ^ Cf. Fichte, Bestimmung des Gelehrten 1794.
- ^ Long, Openness, Secrecy, Authorship 2001; Eamon, Science and the Secrets of Nature 1994; Senellart, Arts de gouverner 1995; Snyder, Dissimulation 2009; Zagorin, Ways of Lying 1990; De la Flor, Pasiones frías 2005; Burke, Social History of Knowledge 2000; Shapin, Social History of Truth 1994; Habermas, Strukturwandel 1962; Engel, Geheimnis 2002. On secrecy in general, see Hölscher, Öffentlichkeit und Geheimnis 1979; Tefft, Secrecy 1980; Assmann / Assmann, Schleier und Schwelle 1997–1999; Petitat, Secret et formes sociales 1998; Cavaillé, Mensonge 2010.
- ^ Agrippa, De occulta philosophia 1992, p. 406 ("suffer loss, when they are poured into prating and incredulous minds"; translation: James Freake (1651)). As Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900) said in 1886, "Man liebt seine Erkenntnis nicht genug mehr, sobald man sie mittheilt" ("One no longer loves one's knowledge sufficiently after one has communicated it", translation: Helen Zimmern; Nietzsche, Jenseits von Gut und Böse 1886, chapter IV, maxim 160).
- ^ See Guénon, Aperçus sur l'initiation 1946.
- ^ Saitta, Buonarroti 1972, vol. II, pp. 149, 112f. ("that is no longer only a mechanism of force but also creates a room for the philosophy which must make social reform possible", "metapolitics because of the straight distinction which is made between the civil society in which to act and the sectarian group liberated from corruption and ignorance").
- ^ See Castells, Utopía insurreccional 1989.
- ^ Dommanget, Blanqui 1960; Mastellone, Mazzini 1960; McGarry / McConnell, Black Hand 2009. – After Blanqui's death in 1881, his followers formed a political party that would eventually be absorbed in the French socialist party. La Giovine Italia was Mazzini's political organisation from 1831 till 1848; from 1834 onwards it was conceived as a part of Giovine Europa. Fenians was the name given to the members of the Irish Republican Brotherhood founded in 1858 to bring about a democratic republic; they would play a major role in the struggle for Irish independence.
- ^ MacKenzie, Violent Solutions 1996; Schieder / Dann, Nationale Bewegung 1978; Bieberstein, Geheime Gesellschaften 1979; Reinalter, Politische Vereine 2005.
- ^ Hund, Geschichte des Bundes der Kommunisten 1993; Scheibert, Bakunins Entwurf 1968; Rudnickaja / D'jakov, Rukopis M.A. Bakunina 1974; Furlani, Bakunin e la sua associazione segreta 1977; Mervaud, Société internationale secrète 1979; Kun, Tournant décisif 1980; Geyer, Lenin 1962.
- ^ Much of the analysis in Poggioli, Teoria dell'arte d'avanguardia 1962, applies to the "German"-type secret societies. See also Kreuzer, Boheme 1971; Eßbach, Junghegelianer 1988; Morowitz / Vaughan, Artistic Brotherhoods 2000; Heinich, Elite artiste 2005.
- ^ Kant, Über den Gemeinspruch 1978, p. 163.
- ^ See also Simmel, Soziologie 1908, chapter 5, for a discussion of the relation between private and public secrecy.