Order of the Golden and Rosy Cross
The Order of the Golden and Rosy Cross was a German Rosicrucian organization founded in the 1750s by Freemason and alchemist Hermann Fichtuld. Candidates were expected to be Master Masons in good standing. Alchemy was to be a central study for members. Much of the hierarchical structure for this order was used in Societas Rosicruciana in Anglia and from there, the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn.History
The fraternity was founded in the 1750s, but it is not certain when it came into existence. Many documents and books mention it from the eighteenth century. For instance, Frater U.D. believes that in 1710, the idea for the order was born with the publication of Sigmund Richter's The perfect and true preparation of the Philosophers Stone according to the secret of the Brotherhoods of the Golden and Rosy Cross.
By the 1770s, the order had centers in Berlin, Hamburg, Frankfurt am Main, Regensburg, Munich, Vienna, Prague, Poland, Hungary, and Russia.
The order slowly began to decline after the death of King William II.Structure and governance
The order is subdivided into:
- Grade I - Juniorus
- Grade II - Theoricus
- Grade III - Practicus
- Grade IV - Philosophus
- Grade V - Adeptus Minor
- Grade VI - Adeptus Major
- Grade VII - Adeptus Exemptus
- Grade VIII - Magister
- Grade IX - Magus
Known members
- King Friedrich Wilhelm
- Georg Forster
- Johann Christoph von Wöllner
- Nikolay Novikov
- Ivan Lopukhin
- Ivan Dmitrevsky
- Ivan Petrovich Turgenev
- :de:Hans Rudolf von Bischoffwerder|Hans Rudolf von Bischoffwerder