Arturo Reghini (12 November 1878 – 1 July 1946) was an Italian mathematician, philosopher and esotericist.
Biography
Arturo Reghini was born in
Florence on 12 November 1878.
In 1898, he became a member of the
Theosophical Society for which he founded a section in Rome. In 1903, he published in
Palermo
Palermo ( , ; scn, Palermu , locally also or ) is a city in southern Italy, the capital (political), capital of both the autonomous area, autonomous region of Sicily and the Metropolitan City of Palermo, the city's surrounding metropolitan ...
the first books of the editorial series named ''Biblioteca Teosofica'' (Theosophical Library) and later ''Biblioteca filosofica'').
In the same year, he was initiated in the Memphis' rite, a Masonic spiritual path that is derived by the ancient Egyptians and in Italy is uniquely practised in Palermo.
In 1907, he was admitted to the regular
Scottish Rite Masonic Lodge "
Lucifero" in
Florence, affiliated to the
Grand Orient of Italy. Subsequently, Reghini adhered for a short period to the
Martinism of
Gérard Encausse and started to report the errors of the lawyer and Grand Master Sacchi about his administration of the Italian Freemasonry, also confuting his publications.
In 1907,
Amedeo Rocco Armentano
Amedeo Rocco Armentano, pseudonym ARA (6 February 1886, in Scalea – 14 September 1966, in São Paulo), was an Italian esotericist and musician. Armentano was, together with Arturo Reghini, one of the main creators of the pagan revival in Italy.
...
introduced Reghini to the knowledge of the
Pythagoreanism.
In 1912, Reghini was in directorate of the Italian Freemasonry (in Italian: ''Supremo Consiglio Universale'' of the ''
Rito filosofico italiano Rito may refer to:
*Rito (language) also called Luto and Lutos, language of people in the southwestern part of Chad and across the border in the northern part of the Central African Republic
*A male equivalent for the given name Rita
* Rito (''The L ...
'') from which he resigned in 1940 with a strongly negative judgement about the national brotherhood.
In 1921, he was initiated to the 33rd and highest degree of the Scottish Rite. Then he was elected as effective member of the
Supremo Consiglio d'Italia of which he became the Great Commendor and the General Secretary. In 1925, Reghini signed the internal decree No 245 related to its termination.
On May 19, the Italian Parliament had approved the law of reform for the freedom of association, banning the masonic lodges out of the country.
Reghini edited the journals ''Atanór'' (1924) and ''Ignis'' (1925) devoted to initiate studies, covering topics such as
Pythagoreanism,
yoga, Hebrew
Cabalism and the
Freemasonry of
Alessandro Cagliostro. A circle of esotericists formed around these journals and adopted the name ''
Gruppo di Ur
UR Group was an Italian esotericist association, founded around 1927 by intellectuals including Julius Evola, Arturo Reghini and Giovanni Colazza for the study of Traditionalism and Magic.Joscelyn Godwin (2010)''Atlantis and the Cycles of Time: Pro ...
''. The group's members included
Julius Evola and the
anthroposophists Giovanni Colazza Giovanni may refer to:
* Giovanni (name), an Italian male given name and surname
* Giovanni (meteorology), a Web interface for users to analyze NASA's gridded data
* ''Don Giovanni'', a 1787 opera by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, based on the legend of ...
and
Giovanni Antonio Colonna di Cesarò
Giovanni Antonio Francesco Giorgio Landolfo Colonna Romano (1878–1940) was an Italian noble and politician who was the leader of the Social Democracy. He also served as the minister of post and telegraphs between 1922 and 1924 in the Mussolin ...
. From 1927 to 1928 the group published the monthly journal ''UR''.
Reghini fell out with Evola and the ''Ur'' group in 1928; a major reason was Reghini's support for Freemasonry, which was not in line with the direction the journal had taken. Reghini left the editorial board and ''UR'' was discontinued. It was briefly replaced in 1929 by a journal named ''Krur'', without Reghini's involvement.
Reghini was opposed to Christianity, which he associated with
modernity and
egalitarianism, and sought to establish a form of
modern Paganism
Modern paganism, also known as contemporary paganism and neopaganism, is a term for a religion or family of religions influenced by the various historical pre-Christian beliefs of pre-modern peoples in Europe and adjacent areas of North Afric ...
he called "''magia colta''", "cultured magic", which he drew from
Hermeticism and
Platonism.
A critic of democracy and an advocate for the
ancient Roman aristocracy, Reghini welcomed the rise of
Italian Fascism, which he associated with the ancient world. He wrote in ''Atanór'' in 1924 that he had anticipated the emergence of such a regime in Italy 15 years prior.
From the second half of the 1920s, he wrote critically about
clerical fascism and the increasing fascist hostility towards non-Catholic religious views. He adopted an ironic writing style associated with the
anti-clericalism
Anti-clericalism is opposition to religious authority, typically in social or political matters. Historical anti-clericalism has mainly been opposed to the influence of Roman Catholicism. Anti-clericalism is related to secularism, which seeks to ...
of the era before
World War I and the
Risorgimento.
Reghini died in
Budrio
Budrio ( Eastern Bolognese: ) is a town and ''comune'' in the Metropolitan City of Bologna, in Emilia-Romagna, Italy; it is east of Bologna.
Budrio is the birthplace of Giuseppe Barilli, better known under his pseudonym of Quirico Filopanti, an I ...
on 1 July 1946.
Legacy
Reghini was an important influence on Evola during the years 1924 to 1930. He introduced Evola to the major texts on
alchemy, which became the basis for Evola's book ''The Hermetic Tradition'' (1931).
It was also through Reghini that Evola came in contact with
René Guénon, whose
Traditionalism would have a profound impact on his thinking.
Reghini's journals and the works of the
''Ur'' group have influenced the development of Italic-Roman neopaganism and
Roman polytheistic reconstructionism.
Bibliography
* ''Le parole sacre e di passo dei primi tre gradi ed il massimo mistero massonico'', Atanor, Rome, 1922.
* ''Per la restituzione della geometria pitagorica'' (1935); new edition Il Basilisco, Genoa, 1988, which also includes ''I numeri sacri nella tradizione pitagorica''; new title ''Numeri sacri e geometria pitagorica.''
* ''Il fascio littorio, ovvero il simbolismo duodecimale e il fascio etrusco'' (1935); new edition Il Basilisco, Genoa, 1980.
* ''Dei Numeri pitagorici (Libri sette)'' (1940) – Prologo – Associazione culturale Ignis, 2004.
* ''Dei Numeri Pitagorici (Libri sette)'' – Parte Prima – Volume Primo – Dell'equazione indeterminata di secondo grado con due incognite – Archè/pizeta, 2006.
* ''Dei Numeri Pitagorici (Libri sette)'' – Parte Prima – Volume Secondo – Delle soluzioni primitive dell'equazione di tipo Pell ''x''
2 − ''Dy''
2 = ''B'' e del loro numero – Archè/pizeta, 2012.
* ''Dizionario Filologico'', ("Associazione culturale Ignis"), 2008.
* ''Cagliostro'', ("Associazione culturale Ignis"), 2007.
* ''Considerazioni sul Rituale dell'apprendista libero muratore'', Phoenix, Genoa, 1978.
* ''Paganesimo, Pitagorismo, Massoneria'', Mantinea, Furnari (Messina), 1986.
* ''Per la restituzione della Massoneria Pitagorica Italiana'', introduction by Vinicio Serino, Raffaelli Editore, Rimini, 2005,
* ''La Tradizione Pitagorica Massonica'', Fratelli Melita Editori, Genoa, 1988,
* ''Trascendenza di Spazio e Tempo'', "Mondo Occulto", Napoli, 1926, reprint Libreria Ed. ASEQ 2010.
Selected translations with introductions and annotations:
*''De occulta philosophia'' by
Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa (Alberto Fidi, Milan, 1926; two volumes); reprinted by Edizioni Mediterranee and I Dioscuri, Genoa, 1988.
*''Le Roi du Monde'' by
René Guénon (Alberto Fidi editore, Milan, 1927).
References
Further reading
*
{{DEFAULTSORT:Reghini, Arturo
1878 births
1946 deaths
Italian mathematicians
Italian philosophers
Italian occultists
Italian modern pagans
Italian magazine editors
Modern pagan philosophers
Italian fascists
Italian Freemasons
Writers from Florence