Rosicrucian Order
According to claims in the Rosicrucian archives, a particular movement began in the Initiatory Schools of the XIV century and the Rosicrucian technique is derived from this, as related in the Fama Fraternitatis, the Confiessio Rosae Crucis, and other publications and manifestos of the Order. There are many references to the Rosicrucian (or Rosicrucian) Order and its establishment in many of the countries of Europe in the XVII and XVIII centuries, and many celebrated and great benefactors of humanity have belonged to the Rosicrucian Order.
>> The Rosicrucian Order
Fludd Robert
(1574-1637)
De Quincey “The immediate Father of Freemasonry was the author of the Summum Bonum, the work of a Friend of Fludd.” Robert Fludd being one of Francis Bacon’s fieldworkers propagating Rosicrucian Principles. According to Alfred Dodd, Fludd “lived for a time at Stratford and was responsible for the Stratford Monument with its Rosicrosse Signals in conjunction with Francis Bacon’s intimate friend, George Carew, whose influence in Stratford was paramount, and his cousin, Sir Anthony Cook, who also lived in the neighbourhood."
>> Alfred Dodd's The Personal Poems of Francis Bacon, 1930
Who Fludd Was
Albert G. Mackey: Encyclopaedia of Freemasonry, 1874 Robert Fludd, or, as he called himself in his Latin writings, Robertas de Fluctibus, was in the seventeenth century a prominent member of the Rosicrucian Fraternity. He was born in England in 1574, and having taken the degrees of Bachelor and Master of Arts at St. John’s College, Oxford, he commenced the study of physic, and in due time took the degree of Doctor of Medicine. He died in 1637. In 1616, he commenced the publication of his works and became a voluminous writer, whose subject and style were equally dark and mysterious.
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