![]() ![]() Having an interest in "eccentrics", I wanted to learn more about Liebenfels but after reading this piece of regurgitated bile I quickly learned that I gleaned all I needed to know from Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke in his excellent "The Occult History of Nazism" and wasted 26.00 on a book which says mainly nothing about nothing. What interested me in this book was that the author says it's mainly about Liebenfels which is totally false. He was very eccentric to say the least and Hitler supposedly paid him a visit as a teenager in order to get back numbers of Ostara.Īre you writing up a review for here,, or somewhere else? He believed that humanity had fallen due to miscegenation with monkeys and "sodom apes" (see his book "Theozoology". He set up shop in an old castle he called "Burg Werfenstein". Lanz was a defrocked Cisterian monk who formed a group known as the Order of the New Templars at the turn of the last century. He refered to Lanz as the "man who gave Hitler his ideas", a boast that Adolf Lanz often made, despite the fact that Hitler had his periodical either censored or banned. Wilfrid Daim was the first serious biographer of Liebenfels back in the early 1960's. I hope it's serious and scholarly and not typical "pulp" tripe. Despite the title, the book appears to be about Lanz rather than Hitler. ![]() Author says he will illustrate his book's title through translations of articles of Lanz's periodical "Ostara". Forthcoming book which will highlight Lanz von Liebenfels (Adolf Josef Lanz) and his influence on Hitler. ![]()
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