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==Biography==
==Biography==
Moina, then named Mina, was born in Geneva, Switzerland to a talented Jewish family, moving to Paris when she was but two. Her father, Michel Bergson, achieved some musical success in composing the operas ''Louisa de Montfort'' and ''Salvator Rosa''. Her eldest brother [[Henri Bergson]] joined the faculty of the College of France, is best known for authoring ''Creative Evolution'', and also became the president of the British Society for Psychical Research. Many of her descendents through her youngest brother, John Leslie, still live in England; many of whom are musicians and artists today. <ref> Greenburg, Louis. (1976) “Bergson and Durkheim As Sons and Assimilators: The Early Years.” ‘’French Historical Studies 9’’ Issue 4 pg. 619-634</ref>
Moina, then named Mina, was born in Geneva, Switzerland to a talented Jewish family, moving to Paris when she was but two. Her father, Michel Bergson, achieved some musical success in composing the operas ''Louisa de Montfort'' and ''Salvator Rosa''. Her eldest brother [[Henri Bergson]] joined the faculty of the College of France, is best known for authoring ''Creative Evolution'', and also became the president of the British Society for Psychical Research. Many of her descendents through her youngest brother, John Leslie, still live in England; many of whom are musicians and artists today. <ref> Greenburg, Louis. (1976) “Bergson and Durkheim As Sons and Assimilators: The Early Years.” ''French Historical Studies 9'' Issue 4 pg. 619-634</ref>


Moina herself was a talented artist and joined the [[Slade School of Art]] at the age of fifteen. The Slade was known for encouraging young women in the Arts at the turn of the nineteenth century. Moina was awarded a scholarship and four merit certificates for drawing at the School. It was at the Slade in 1882 that Moina met her friend [[Annie Horniman]], who would become the major financial sponsor for the Matherses, as struggling artists and occultists, in backing the [[Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn]]. <ref> Greer, (1995), pp. 40-45 </ref>
Moina herself was a talented artist and joined the [[Slade School of Art]] at the age of fifteen. The Slade was known for encouraging young women in the Arts at the turn of the nineteenth century. Moina was awarded a scholarship and four merit certificates for drawing at the School. It was at the Slade in 1882 that Moina met her friend [[Annie Horniman]], who would become the major financial sponsor for the Matherses, as struggling artists and occultists, in backing the [[Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn]]. <ref> Greer, (1995), pp. 40-45 </ref>

Revision as of 00:12, 20 August 2007

Moina Mathers, born as Mina Bergson (February 28, 1865) was the sister of French philosopher Henri Bergson, the first man of Jewish descent to be awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1927. [1]She is, however, more known for her marriage to the English occultist Samuel Liddell MacGregor Mathers, one of the founders of the organization Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn and, after his death in 1918, for being the head of a successor organization called the Rosicrucian Order of the Alpha et Omega.

Biography

Moina, then named Mina, was born in Geneva, Switzerland to a talented Jewish family, moving to Paris when she was but two. Her father, Michel Bergson, achieved some musical success in composing the operas Louisa de Montfort and Salvator Rosa. Her eldest brother Henri Bergson joined the faculty of the College of France, is best known for authoring Creative Evolution, and also became the president of the British Society for Psychical Research. Many of her descendents through her youngest brother, John Leslie, still live in England; many of whom are musicians and artists today. [2]

Moina herself was a talented artist and joined the Slade School of Art at the age of fifteen. The Slade was known for encouraging young women in the Arts at the turn of the nineteenth century. Moina was awarded a scholarship and four merit certificates for drawing at the School. It was at the Slade in 1882 that Moina met her friend Annie Horniman, who would become the major financial sponsor for the Matherses, as struggling artists and occultists, in backing the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. [3]

Moina met her husband, Samuel Liddell MacGregor Mathers, in 1887, while studying at the British Museum where Samuel was a frequent patron. A year later, her husband founded the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, one of the most influential organizations in the Western Mystery Tradition. Moina was the first initiate of this Order in March, 1888. Her chosen motto in the Golden Dawn was ‘’Vestigia Nulla Restrorsum’’ meaning “I leave no traces behind.” A year later in 1890, they were wed and Mina Bergson became Moina Mathers. In their occult partnership, her husband was described as the "evoker of spirits" and Moina as the clairvoyant "seeress" who often illustrated, as an artist, what her husband “evoked”. [4] In March of 1899, they performed the rites of the Egyptian goddess Isis on the stage of the Theatre Bodiniere in Paris. [5]

In 1918, when her husband died, Moina took over the Alpha et Omega, a successor organization to the Golden Dawn, as its Imperatrix. [6]

Notes

  1. ^ Wasson, Tyler. (1987) ‘’Nobel Prize Winners: An A.H. Wilson Biographical Dictionary.’’ H.W. Wilson Co. Pg. 90 ISBN 0-82420-756-4
  2. ^ Greenburg, Louis. (1976) “Bergson and Durkheim As Sons and Assimilators: The Early Years.” French Historical Studies 9 Issue 4 pg. 619-634
  3. ^ Greer, (1995), pp. 40-45
  4. ^ Greer, 1995, pp.40-47
  5. ^ Greer, 1995, pp. 222-225
  6. ^ Greer, 1995, pp. 348-358

Reference

  • Greer, Mary K. (1995) ‘’Women of the Golden Dawn: Rebels and Priestesses.’’ Rochester, Vermont: One Park Street. ISBN 0-89281-607-4