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Exploring
alchemy in the early 20th century
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The
BPH holds the complete though short-lived runs of two alchemical
periodicals published in England and in Germany within a few
decades of each other: the Journal of the Alchemical Society
(1913-15) and the Alchemistische Blätter
(1927/28-30).
II
The
Alchemistische Blätter. Erstes deutsches Fachblatt
für alle Gebiete der Alchemie, (1)
was first published in 1927 as a monthly magazine for the ‘hermetic
sciences past and present’. It also advertized itself
on the cover as the organ of ‘various alchemical societies,
lodges and schools’ – which societies, lodges and
schools remained undisclosed, but the Alchemistische
Blätter were apparently the domain of spagyrical
alchemists and alchemical theosophists, as is evident from the
book advertisements, presenting the Kleines mystisch-magisches
Bilderbüchlein für fleissiger übende A.B.C. Schüler
der Fraternität vom Rosenkreutz, edited by Heinrich
Tränker (2),
or the modern alchemist Max Retschlag’s Von der
Urmaterie zum Urkraft-Elixier (Der Weg zum wahren Stein).
The second issue featured an advertisement for Hermetic medicine
produced in the spagyrical laboratory of Oskar Weiss in Karslruhe
.(3) Other spagyrical
advertisements concerned publications from the ‘Deutsches
Verlagshaus für Naturopathie’ or elixirs by the ‘famous
occultist and alchemist’ Franz Buchmann-Naga,
(4) who was praised as ‘Theophrastus Paracelsus Redivivus’.
Cover of the Alchemistische Blätter,
1927
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Advertisement for the Geheime Figuren,
1927 |
Modern
Germans and historical Britons
Unlike the British Journal of the Alchemical
Society, which was mainly dedicated to historical research
of alchemy, the objective of the Alchemistische Blätter
was rather to focus on the ‘overwhelming significance
of alchemical thought for the thorough reformation of economy,
culture and life’ – in a sense recalling the ‘Allgemeine
Reformation’ of the Rosicrucian Manifestos. Interestingly,
a new publication of the 18th-century compendium Die geheime
Figuren der Rosenkreuzer was announced on the back cover
of the first three issues.
(5) This edition, which does not appear to have found enough
subscribers for publication, was offered to the public by Otto
Wilhelm Barth, editor and publisher of the Alchemistische
Blätter
(6). O.W. Barth, the son of a Leipzig bookseller, had founded
a publishing house in Munich in 1924 together with Fritz Werle
(1899-1977), formerly an editor for the Wolkenwanderer Verlag
in Leipzig. Three years earlier, Barth had been one of the co-founders
of the Lotus-Gesellschaft, instituted by Heinrich Tränker
in Munich in 1921. (7)
In
the programmatic address to the reader, Barth announced that
the periodical was to be divided into sections, relating to:
1) exact, scientific alchemy, 2) philosophical aspects of alchemy
(Hermetic philosophy) and 3) mystical alchemy. The focus, however,
was decidedly on the latter two approaches. Other areas of investigation
would include alchemical symbolism and allegory, alchemical
astrology, alchemical kabbalah and alchemical magic. The first
issue opened with the text of the Tabula smaragdina;
another Hermetic contribution was ‘Poimandres’,
the first treatise of the Corpus Hermeticum,
which was printed in instalments in the first three issues of
the Alchemistische Blätter. The text
was based on the German translation of the Corpus Hermeticum,
first published in 1706 as Erkäntnüss der
Natur; the edition used was the more readily available
19th-century edition Hermetis Trismegisti Einleitung in's
höchste Wissen: von Erkenntnis der Natur und des darin
sich offenbarenden grossen Gottes, published by J. Scheible
in Stuttgart in 1855. (8)
The French alchemical connection part 2
The first issue also contained a contribution on transmutational
experiments by François Jollivet Castelot, president
of the Alchemical Society in France. The text had been translated
by ‘Tartaros’. In March 1928, Otto Wilhelm Barth
announced the foundation of the ‘Alchemical Society of
Germany’, with two initial seats, one in Berlin and one
in Hamburg. The Berlin group, which allegedly included physicists,
chemists and spagyrists, also announced it would set up a laboratory.
Results of experiments would be communicated in the future issues
of the Alchemistische Blätter, but no
such reports are to be found. The Alchemical Society of Germany
was incidentally followed the next year by a ‘Spagyrical
Society’, founded in Berlin on 11 October 1929. The latter
Society’s objective was to follow the spagyrical method
of Carl Friedrich Zimpel (1800-1878), an ardent student of Paracelsus
and Glauber. Nothing more is known of the fortunes of both the
Alchemistische Gesellschaft and the Spagyrische Gesellschaft.
Another new Society announced and warmly recommended in the
second volume of the Alchemistische Blätter
was more successful: the Paracelsus-Gesellschaft, which still
exists today.
Tp. Alchemistische Blätter, 1927
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Basilius Valentinus, Twelve Keys,
in Alchemistische Blätter, 1927
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A
motley crew
Apart from Jollivet Castelot, other major contributions, printed
in instalments, included an essay on the ‘Quinta essentia’
by ‘Elias Artista’, being an excerpt from a work
on alchemy in the perspective of the Hermetische Bruderschaft
des Lichts (9);
Karl von Eckartshausen’s Chemische Versuche über
die Radikal-auflösung der Körper besonders der Metalle
(10); and Basilius Valentinus’ Zwölf
Schlüssel, reprinted with the twelve engravings.
(11)The Austrian occult author Franz Spunda (1890-1963)
contributed a brief article on the Porta magica in Rome. (12)The
occult author Ferdinand Maack (1861-1930) was interviewed in
the first volume on the subject of ‘biological thought
in mathematics’.(13)Ernst
Darmstaedter, author of Die Alchemie des Geber (1922)
and one of the founders of the Paracelsus-Gesellschaft, contributed
on ‘Paracelsus und das aurum potabile’ in the same
issue. Darmstaedter was one of the few historical scholars contributing
to the Alchemistische Blätter; the majority
of the modern authors being, like Jollivet Castelot or Maack,
‘adepts’ of some sort. Another scholar one would
not expect to find in the Alchemistische Blätter
was Gershom Scholem, whose ‘Alchemie und Kabbala. Ein
Kapitel aus der Geschichte der Mystik’ was reprinted in
the first volume. (14)
Scholem’s essay was published in full, including his initial
humorously disparaging remark about the confusion wrought upon
the term ‘Kabbalah’ on the part of occultists like
Papus and Éliphas Lévi, whose works must have
been savoured in the circles of the Alchemistische
Blätter. (15)
How Scholem’s article came to appear in the Alchemistische
Blätter is unknown, but Scholem did refer to the
inclusion of his article in a letter to his mother of 8 November
1928. Speaking of a probable reprint of one of his essays by
his brother Reinhold, who continued father Scholem’s printing-house
in Berlin, he writes:
Und liegt sie in einer so schönen und stattlichen Form
vor, so kann ich … sie eventuell auch an den Utopia-Menschen
und ähnliche verkaufen, wie Alchemie und Kabbala.(16)
New
departure?
The first volume of the Alchemistische Blätter
appeared in the years 1927-1928 in a folio-format; the second
volume appeared in 1930 in a quarto-format and in a rather more
sober lay-out. Barth did not offer any explanation why the periodical
had not appeared in 1929. The full title now read: Archiv
für alchemistische Forschung (Alchemistische Blätter
II. Jahrgang). Back issues of the first volume were still to
be obtained from Barth. The new-styled periodical was to appear
in six bi-monthly issues, but apparently only two issues appeared,
and the second one consisted of only one quire of sixteen pages
(two of which were reserved for Maack’s obituary).
Another new departure manifested itself in the second issue
of the Archiv für alchemistische Forschung, which
according to the title-page was now asscoiated with the Zeitschrift
für Weltdynamismus, the official organ of the ‘Reichsarbeitsgemeinschaft
“Das kommende Deutschland”’. Otto Wilhelm
Barth was again the editor of this periodical, which was bound
in with the second issue of the Archiv. (17)‘Das
kommende Deutschland’ had been founded by ‘Johannes
Täufer’ (ps.) in Berlin on 11 March 1930, as was
noted in the Zeitschrift für Weltdynamismus, p.
15, to inform the German public of the possibilities offered
by ‘biotechnics’, a revolutionary universal energy.
Täufer was also the author of ‘Vril’. Die
kosmische Urkraft, published in 1930 by the Astrologischer
Verlag Wilhelm Becker. The mythic primal force of ‘vril’
had been the subject of a novel by Edward Bulwer Lytton (1803-1873),
The Coming Race (1870s).
(18)‘Vril’ as a primal
force was enthusiastically embraced by various occult and ariosophic
circles, and ‘Das kommende Deutschland’ was no exception.
In his inaugural address, Täufer appealed to
all
people of good will desirous of breaking away from the existing
untenable economical and ethical conditions … the new
technique (‘Bio-technik’) offers mankind total control
of nature. The primal force cannot be compared to any of the
currently known energies, as it represents the force of all
forces with which we are now working in the field of technology.
(p. 16)
Täufer also instituted a college of further education for
biotechnics (‘Volkshochschule für Biotechnik’),
which opened its doors in Berlin on 25 March 1930.
The new departure did not lead anywhere: no further issues are
known to have appeared of the Zeitschrift für Weltdynamismus,
and Barth’s Alchemistische Blätter,
too, discontinued publication.
Contents of the Alchemistische Blätter:
Vol. 1, nr. 1
Tabula smaragdina hermetis, p. 3
F. Jollivet Castelot, Der heutige Zustand der Alchemie I, pp.
4-5
Elias Artista, Quinta Essentia I, pp. 6-10
Alfred Müller, Alchemie, pp. 10-11
Karl von Eckartshausen, Chemische Versuche
I, pp. 12-14
Hermetis Trismegisti Pömander I, pp. 14-16
Vol. 1 (1927), nr. 2
F. Jollivet Castelot, Der heutige Zustand der Alchemie II, pp.
18-21
E. Darmstaedter, Vorstufen der Alchemie, pp. 22-24
Elias Artista, Quinta Essentia II, pp. 24-26
Sincerus, Ex alchemia practica I, pp. 26-27
Oskar Weiss, Eine Transmutation nach Paracelsus, pp. 28-29
Karl von Eckartshausen, Chemische Versuche
II, pp. 29-30
Hermetis Trismegisti Pömander II, pp. 30-31
Vol. 1 (1927), nr. 3
Franz Spunda, Die Porta magica in Rom, pp. 34-35
Alfred Müller, Sendschreiben an Herrn Dr. Franz Spunda,
pp. 35-38
Elias Artista, Quinta Essentia III, pp. 38-40
Sincerus, Ex alchemia practica II, pp. 41-42
Karl von Eckartshausen, Chemische Versuche
III, pp. 42-45
Hermetis Trismegisti Pömander III, pp. 45-46
Alfred Müller, Darstellung der Quint-Essenz I, pp. 46-47
Review section, p. 48
Vol. 1 (1927), nrs. 4-6
Zwölf Schlüssel Fratris Basilii Valentini,
pp. 50-65
Ferdinand Maack, Über biologisches Denken in der Mathematik,
pp. 65-70
Studien eines dänischen Chemikers und Alchemisten über
die Möglichkeit von Transmutationen pp. 71-73
Ernst Darmstaedter, Paracelsus und das Aurum potabile, pp. 73-75
Alfred Müller, Darstellung der Quint-Essenz II, pp. 76-77
Auszug aus Briefen mitarbeitender Naturforscher (with a note
by Recnartus, i.e. Heinrich Tränker), p. 79
Vol. 1 (1928), nr. 7
Alfred Müller, Eine kurze Anleitung über die Bereitung
des Universalsteines, pp. 81-83
Carl Friedrich, Über alchemistische Forschungen, pp. 83-85
Oswald Wirth, Über die Hermetische Heilkunde, pp. 85-88
Review section, p. 88
Vol. 1 (1928), nrs. 8-9
Gerhard Scholem, Alchemie und Kabbala I, pp. 89-92
F. Jollivet Castelot, Die Herstellung von Gold auf chemischem
Wege, pp. 92-96
Alfred Müller, Eine kurze Anleitung über die Bereitung
des Universalsteines, pp. 96-101
Albert Herba, Krankheit und Zahl, pp. 101-102
C. Beckensteiner, Studien über Elektrizität, pp. 102-104
Vol. 1 (1928), nrs. 10-12
Karl Wiedmann, Rationale Metamorphose, pp. 105-108
Karl von Eckartshausen, Chemische Versuche
IV, pp. 109-111
Alfred Müller, Ein Alchymistischer Test, pp. 111-115
Albert Herba, Werk und Zahl, pp. 115-119
Franz Spunda, Des Stein des Weisen (extract from his novel Baphomet),
pp. 119-121
Gerhard Scholem, Alchemie und Kabbalah, pp. 122-137
Review Section, pp. 138-140
Vol. 2 (1930), nr. 1
Karl von Eckartshausen, Ueber die Möglichkeit der Existenz
der Metalltinkturen (= Chemische Versuche
V), pp. 1-5
Konrad Wiedmann, Das philosophische Werk nachen den 12 Schlüsseln
des Basilius Valentinus, pp. 6-9
F.H., Die ‘prima materia’, p. 9
Albert Herba, Hermetischer Pfad, pp. 10-20
Albert Herba, ‘Alchemistisches Lexcion’, pp. 21-22
Ernst Hentges, Ein moderner Alchemist: François Jollivet
Castelot, pp. 23-29
Review section, pp. 30-32
Vol. 2 (1930), nr. 2
Obituaries Ferdinand Maack, pp. 33-35
F.H., Alchemie, pp. 35-36
Albert Herba, ‘Alchemistisches Lexcion’, pp. 36-38
Konrad Wiedmann, Kritische Beleuchtung der ‘Abhandlung
über den Stein der Weisen’ von thomas von Aquino,
pp. 38-40
August Strindberg, Das Seufzen der Steine, p. 40
Karl von Eckartshausen, Ueber die Möglichkeit der Existenz
der Metalltinkturen (= Chemische Versuche VI), pp. 41-44
Alfred Müller, Gespräch eines Meisters der hermetischen
Kunst mit seinen Schülern über das Universal und die
Partikulare, pp. 44-48
Review section, p. 48
Cis van Heertum
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Notes

1 Hermann Speckmann discussed the
contents of the Alchemistische Blätter in Hermes.
Informationsheft der Forschungskreis Alchemie 17 (2000) and 21
(2000).

2 One of the two copies
of the Alchemistische Blätter in the BPH belonged
to Heinrich Tränker (1880-1956), the founder of various occult societies,
amongst which the Ordo Templis Orientalis. Tränker edited and published
various (modern) Rosicrucian texts, including that of the 17th-century
alchemical author Daniel Stolcius.

3 Oskar Weiss was entered
in the Karslruhe address books as a magnetopath under the address Tullastraße
72 for the years 1926-1942. In the years 1926-1927, when Weiss advertised
in the Alchemistische Blätter, there is an additional
entry in the address book for Tullastraße 72, which now also housed
a ‘Naturheilinstitut’, an institute for natural medicine.
I am grateful to Ms Angelika Sauer of the Stadtarchiv Karlsruhe for the
above information. Weiss also contributed an article on Paracelsian transmutation
for the Alchemistische Blätter.

4 Franz Buchmann-Naga
is the author of Schlüssel zu den 72 Gottesnamen der Kabbala,
Leipzig 1925, re-issued in 1955 in an augmented edition as Schlüssel
zu den 72 Gottesnamen der Kabbala. Praxis der kabbalistischen Invokation.
Talismannische Theomagie.

5 There is no bibliographical
record of this edition, which was also to include the publication of the
‘as yet unpublished parts 4-9 with 12 coloured plates’. Interested
readers were requested to subscribe to the edition. The advertisement
announcing the Geheime Figuren is also printed on the
back cover of the following two issues.

6 The first issues of
the Alchemistische Blätter were published by ‘Tartaros’
in Berlin. Tartaros was in fact O.W. Barth, who enclosed an information
sheet in the March 1928 issue of the Alchemistische Blätter
announcing that the publisher (i.e. Barth) was now the sole proprietor
of the periodical.

7 Frick, Licht
und Finsternis, II, p. 309.

8 For Aletophilus’
edition of 1706, see Lamoen 67.

9 ‘Aus dem unveröffentlichten
Werk: Das “Grosse Werk” der Alchemie in der Beleuchtung der
“Hermetischen Bruderschaft des Lichts”, von Elias Artista’.

10 Instalments of the
Chimische Versuche über die Radicalauflösung der Körper,
first published in Regensburg in 1801 (Faivre 97) were printed in both
volumes of the Alchemistische Blätter. When the
periodical was discontinued, in 1930, the first 65 (of 96) pages of Eckartshausen’s
Chimische Versuche had been reprinted.

11 The engraving for
the tenth key is printed upside down, which was irritably noted in pencil
in the margin of the BPH copy once owned by Heinrich Tränker. The
engravings were based on the Latin edition of Basilius’ Twelve
keys (Practica cum duodecim clavibus et appendice), first printed
in Michael Maier’s Tripus aureus (Frankfurt 1618,
pp. 27-65) and reprinted in Musaeum Hermeticum reformatum et amplificatum
(Frankfurt 1678, pp. 393-425). The second volume of the Alchemistische
Blätter contained a ‘thorough explanation’ of
the Twelve keys by Konrad Wiedmann.

12 This article had
already appeared before, in another periodical with a similar title: Magische
Blätter, published in Leipzig (first volume 1920). The periodical
published a lot of the work of Bo-Yin-Ra (ps. of Joseph Anton Schneiderfranken).
Spunda’s article appeared in the 4th volume (1923), pp. 17-19. Four
years later, Alfred Müller wrote a lengthy reply to Spunda’s
account of the Porta magica in the Alchemistische Blätter.

13 Ferdinand Maack’s
death in 1930 was commemorated in a few obituaries in the second volume
of the Alchemistische Blätter (Band II, Heft 2).
One was signed by George Porges of the ‘xenologische Gesellschaft’
in Hamburg – Maack called himself a ‘xenologist’, as
well as a ‘Rhodostaurologist’ – he had published an
edition of Johann Valentin Andreae’s Chymische Hochzeit
in 1913 (Geheime Wissenschaften 1).

14 First published in
the Monatschrift für Geschichte und Wissenschaft des Judentums
(MGWJ) 69 (1925), pp. 13-30 and 95-110. The article was reprinted without
the ‘Nachbemerkung’, which appeared in the MGWJ 69 (1925),
pp. 371-374. The reprint of Scholem’s article in the Alchemistische
Blätter was not included in the bibliography of Scholem’s
published writings in Studies in mysticism and religion presented
to Gershom G. Scholem, eds. E.E. Urbach, R.J. Zwi Werblowsky, Ch.
Wirszubski, Jerusalem 1967.

15 ‘ Insbesondere
haben noch im 19. Jahrhundert die französischen Theosophen der martinistischen
Schule (Eliphas Lévy, Papus und viele andere) das Menschenmögliche
an allgemeiner Konfusion aller okkulten Disziplinen mit der “sainte
Kabbale” geleistet’, note 1 of the article. The first issues
of the Alchemistische Blätter also announced the
pending publication of the Kabbalistische Blätter,
being the first German periodical in the field of Kabbalah and kabbalistic
magic. Apparently this periodical never saw the light of day.

16 Betty Scholem-Gershom
Scholem. Mutter und Sohn im Briefwechsel 1917-1946, ed. Itta Shedletzky,
Munich 1989, letter 113. The Jerusalem National and University Library,
which holds the Scholem archive, does not have any correspondence between
Barth and Scholem.

17
The Zeitschrift für Weltdynamismus contained 16 pages. Bound
around it were 8 pages of another new periodical, Verinnerlichung,
printed on green paper.

18
Translated into German by Günther Wachsmuth as Vril oder eine
Menscheit der Zukunft and published by Der kommende Tag Verlag in
Stutgart in 1922. Vril was popular in occult circles: the founder
of one of the modern Rosicrucian societies, Max Heindel (ps. Of C.L.F.
Grasshoff) extolled the qualities of Bulwer Lytton’s novel in his
pamphlet ‘The coming force – Vril! Or what?’ (Rosicrucian
Christianity series 19), Seattle 1909.
Literature
The Journal of the Alchemical Society. Edited by Stanley H. Redgrove,
London, H.K. Lewis, 1913-1915.
Alchemistische Blätter. Erstes deutsches Fachblatt für alle
Gebiete der Alchemie. Monatschrift für das Gesamtgebiet der Hermetichen
Wissenschaft in alter und neuer Zeit. Organ verschiedener Alchemistischer
Gesellschaften, Logen, Schulen. Berlin, Otto Wilhelm Barth, 1927-28
and 1930
Faivre = Antoine Faivre, Eckartshausen et la théosophie chrétienne,
Paris 1969
Frick= Karl R.H. Frick, Licht und Finsternis. Gnostisch-theosophische
und freimaurerisch-okkulte Geheimgesellschaften bis an die Wende zum 20.
Jahrhundert, 2 vols, Graz 1975-78
Lamoen = Frank van Lamoen, Hermes Trismegistus. Pater philosophorum.
Tekstgeschiedenis van het Corpus Hermeticum, Amsterdam 1990.
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