Jump to content

Frederick Eckstein: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
VIAFbot (talk | contribs)
m Added the {{Authority control}} template with VIAF number 3268293.
Addbot (talk | contribs)
m Bot: Migrating 2 interwiki links, now provided by Wikidata on d:q86581
Line 37: Line 37:
{{Austria-hist-stub}}
{{Austria-hist-stub}}
{{Jewish-hist-stub}}
{{Jewish-hist-stub}}

[[de:Friedrich Eckstein]]
[[eo:Friedrich Eckstein]]

Revision as of 07:15, 11 March 2013

For the German philologist and educator, see Friedrich August Eckstein

Frederick Eckstein

Friedrich Eckstein (February 17, 1861, in Perchtoldsdorf, Lower Austria - November 10, 1939, in Vienna) was an Austrian polymath, theosophist and a friend and temporary co-worker of Sigmund Freud.

Also the husband of fellow theosophist and writer Bertha Diener, Eckstein's penchant for occultism first became evident as a member of a vegetarian group which discussed the doctrines of Pythagorus and the Neo-Platonists in Vienna at the end of the 1870s. His esoteric interests later extended to German and Spanish mysticism, the legends surrounding the Templars and the freemasons, Wagnerian mythology and oriental religions. In 1886 , in the week after the tragedy at Mayerling , in which Crown Prince Rudolf of Austria, and his mistress were found dead in mysterious circumstances, he and his friend, the composer Anton Bruckner (for whom he also served as private secretary) traveled to the monastery of Stift Heiligenkreuz to ask the abbot there for details of what happened.[1]

References

  1. ^ Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke The Occult Roots of Nazism: Secret Aryan Cults and Their Influence on Nazi Ideology, NYU Press, 1993

Template:Persondata