Lucifer (magazine)
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Lucifer was a journal published by Helena Blavatsky. The first edition was issued in September 1887 in London. The journal published articles on philosophical, theosophical, scientific and religious topics. It also contained book reviews, for example of Friedrich Nietzsche's Thus Spoke Zarathustra.[1]
History
The journal was first published by Blavatsky. The first issues were co-edited with Mabel Collins. From 1889 until Blavatsky's death in May 1891 Annie Besant was a co-editor. Besant then published the journal until September 1895, when George Robert Stowe Mead became a co-editor. The journal appeared twelve times a year and was 80 to 90 pages long.[1] The last of twenty volumes was published in August 1897. More than 2800 articles were published in this journal between 1887 and 1897.[2] Then the journal was renamed to The Theosophical Review.[3]
See also
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- "Is Theosophy a Religion?"
- "Philosophers and Philosophicules"
- "The Esoteric Character of the Gospels"
- The Theosophist
References
Sources
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External links
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- Pages with broken file links
- Articles needing translation from foreign-language Wikipedias
- Religious magazines published in the United Kingdom
- Defunct magazines published in the United Kingdom
- Helena Blavatsky
- Magazines published in London
- Magazines established in 1887
- Magazines disestablished in 1897
- Mythology magazines
- Theosophy
- Western esoteric magazines
- Occult stubs