Penn Museum (Phil.) Hosts Lecture on Victorian Archaeology and Aleister Crowley 10/25

Penn Museum (Phil.) hosts “Unwrapping Egyptology and the Occult: The Curious Case of Battiscombe Gunn and Aleister Crowley” 10/25
Ancient Egypt was one area in which modern scholarship and esotericism overlapped, and even converged. It is not often remembered today that in the late Nineteenth and early Twentieth Centuries, a number of mainstream scholars of antiquity were interested in esoteric or occult subjects. One very interesting case is that of Battiscombe Gunn (1883-1950), still remembered as one of the most insightful Egyptologists of his generation. What is less well known is that Gunn was associated, apparently in more than a casual way, with Aleister Crowley. Crowley, of course, was and remains the most notorious British occultist of the late Nineteenth and early Twentieth Centuries – an individual who was known to his detractors as the “wickedest man in the world,” and who proudly proclaimed himself to be the “Beast 666.” Lecturer Steve Vinson will first lay out the evidence for the “friendship” – if that is what it was – between Gunn and Crowley. We will go on to discuss how and why Gunn, and a number of his scholarly contemporaries, were interested in the esoteric and the occult. And Vinson will discuss the reasons why esotericism and mainstream Egyptology eventually went their separate ways.

http://www.arce-pa.org/

Aleister_Crowley,_Golden_Dawn

Frater Lux Ad Mundi

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