Product Code Database
Example Keywords: dress -tetris $3-168
barcode-scavenger
   » » Wiki: Ur Group
Tag Wiki 'Ur Group'.
Tag

UR Group was an Italian esotericist association, founded around 1927 by intellectuals including , and Giovanni Colazza for the study of Traditionalism and Magic. They published monthly series of issues in UR (1927–28) and KRUR (1929) journals, reprinted in the three volumes of the book Introduzione alla Magia quale Scienza dell'Io Introduction in 1955 and 1971.Wouter J. Hanegraaff ed., Dictionary of Gnosis & Western Esotericism'', Brill, 2006, p. 743.


History
The UR Group was founded by . His original purpose was to use magical means in an attempt to influence to abandon and instead create an regime based on ancient Roman virtues. Among the first collaborators were the freemason , follower of the neo-Pythagoreanism of the 's "Schola Italica", his pupil Giulio Parise, and the Giovanni Colazza, a disciple of , belonging to the tradition of Christian esotericism. They gathered various seekers devoted to asceticism, united by the sharing of similar studies, to revitalize the perennial tradition of the ancient .

Julius Evola was the first editor of the magazine UR. The size of the Group has remained hidden but it is estimated between twelve and fifteen people. (2009), Against the Modern World: Traditionalism and the Secret Intellectual History of the Twentieth Century, p. 103, Oxford University Press. Evola rapidly expanded his influence on the Group's magazine, to the point of ousting Arturo Reghini and his disciple Giulio Parise from the management at the end of 1928. Strong personal disagreements with Parise had in fact led to a split in the group itself, after which, in January 1929, Evola founded a new magazine called KRUR. Reghini's support for would prove a bone of contention for Evola, who accused him of wanting to put the magazine under the direct control of the Grand Orient of Italy.

The UR Group declared itself independent of esoteric schools or tendencies formed in modern and contemporary times, referring, if anything, to a universal Tradition prior to particular doctrinal forms. In addition to and , were also accepted within it some and a significant component of , whose undoubtedly inspires most of the members of the Group.Peter Staudenmaier (2014), Between Occultism and Nazism: Anthroposophy and the Politics of Race in the Fascist Era, p. 271, BRILL, 2014.

Operating branches of the Group were established in and in other cities of , the so-called "chains", Instructions magical chains, chapter X, in Ur 1927. based on common intentions and practices, mainly employing the exercises taught by Steiner for spiritual development, as well as techniques from , and rare Hermetic texts. (2004), The Dictionary of the Esoteric: 3000 Entries on the Mystical and Occult Traditions. Motilal Banarsidass Publ., p. 96.


Name
The name of the group comes from the phonetic expression u-r, existing in the Chaldean and in the with the meaning of fire and bull or ram respectively, as well as a prefix "ur-" in to indicate something primal, ancestral.Hugh B. Urban, Magia Sexualis: Sex, Magic, and Liberation in Modern Western Esotericism, p. 152, University of California Press, 2006.


Magazines
In the magazines, expressions of the works within the Ur Group, the authors of the articles signed themselves with a , because they preferred to spread their thought rather than advertise their own person. The magazine's director was Julius Evola as it appears on the 1927 cover; together with the "curators" Pietro Negri (alias Arturo Reghini) and Giulio Parise in the cover of 1928; again and only Evola in 1929, when the magazine's name was changed to KRUR.

Each of the three publication years corresponds to one of the three volumes of the work Introduction to Magic as Science of the Ego reprinted in 1955 and 1971.

Several hermetic-alchemical texts such as the Turba philosophorum, or Gichtel's Theosophia practica were published in the journals of UR and KRUR, and others of a philosophical and ritual nature from various sources.


Members
The behind which the members of the Ur Group hid were partly revealed by the researches of Gianfranco de Turris, and Renato Del Ponte.; cf. Below a list of those who collaborated with the magazines of UR and KRUR (in brackets their symbolic name used to sign, according to the idea of 'active impersonality'):
  • Giovanni Colazza (Leo, and possibly Breno and Krur), , direct disciple of .
  • Giovanni Antonio Colonna (Breno and Krur, or Arvo),
    (2026). 9788827218310, Edizioni mediterranee.
    anthroposophist.
  • Girolamo Comi (Gic), Catholic poet, friend of Arturo Onofri.
  • Guido De Giorgio (Havismat), Catholic, first close to the thought of René Guénon, then follower of Pius of Pietrelcina.
  • Aniceto Del Massa (Sagittarius), friend and disciple of Arturo Reghini, Pythagorean, later anthroposophist.
  • (Agarda, Arvo,"Arvo" may have been used by both Colonna di Cesarò and Evola. Ea, Iagla).
  • Nicola Moscardelli (Sirio, Sirius), Catholic poet inspired by Onofri's poetics.
  • Roggero Musmeci Ferrari Bravo (Ignis), whose name does not appear in magazines, however.
  • Arturo Onofri (Oso), poet, anthroposophist.
  • Giulio Parise (Luce), Freemason.
  • Ercole Quadrelli (Abraxa, Tikaipos), Kremmerzian.
  • (Pietro Negri, once Henìocos Àristos), Pythagorean and Freemason.
  • Corallo Reginelli (Taurulus), first anthroposophist, then .
  • Domenico Rudatis (Rud), and esotericist.
  • Massimo Scaligero (Maximus), anthroposophist, direct disciple of Giovanni Colazza.
  • Emilio Servadio (Es), , poet.
Other people, whose identity is unknown, signed with the pseudonyms of: Alba, Apro, Arom, Nilius, Primo Sole, Zam. Another enigmatic name, Ekatlos, is attributable to a lady, or perhaps to . In the magazine Krur also wrote Agnostus, behind which the French esotericist René Guénon is probably hidden.


Works

English translations


See also
  • Amedeo Rocco Armentano
  • Hermeticism (poetry)
  • Neopythagoreanism
  • Roman Traditional Movement
  • Pietas Comunità Gentile


Notes


Further reading


External links

Page 1 of 1
1
Page 1 of 1
1

Account

Social:
Pages:  ..   .. 
Items:  .. 

Navigation

General: Atom Feed Atom Feed  .. 
Help:  ..   .. 
Category:  ..   .. 
Media:  ..   .. 
Posts:  ..   ..   .. 

Statistics

Page:  .. 
Summary:  .. 
1 Tags
10/10 Page Rank
5 Page Refs
1s Time