Napoleon’s Sorcerers

By Darius A Spieth
Image of Napoleon's Sorcerers: The Sophisians
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This is a quirky book. I was surprised at how much material Spieth had managed to dig up about a very obscure subject, a secret society called The Sacred Order of Sophisians, which had connections to Napoleon’s Egyptian campaign as well as the world of the boulevard theatres. And in a time where censorship was still going strong it became a safe place for them to talk about what had happened in Egypt.

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In an interview on French Egyptomania

Interview Extract:

Your next book is all about secret societies. This is Napoleon’s Sorcerers by Darius A Spieth.

This is a quirky book. I was surprised at how much material Spieth had managed to dig up about a very obscure subject, a secret society called The Sacred Order of Sophisians, which had connections to Napoleon’s Egyptian campaign as well as the world of the boulevard theatres. During Napoleon’s rule, Freemasonic circles in France invented rituals that allegedly first took place in the temple structures of ancient Egypt. So what Spieth is doing in his book is looking at the cultural environment and intellectual background of one such pseudo-Egyptian secret society.

The Sophisians were founded by a playwright, Cuvelier de Trie, but for a number of years the society’s membership was dominated by veterans of Napoleon’s Egyptian campaign. And in a time where censorship was still going strong it became a safe place for them to talk about what had happened in Egypt, and what was happening, during and after Napoleon’s rise to power, which seemed to betray Republican ideals. This study is based on previously unpublished archival materials relating to the Sophisians, including the group’s so-called Golden Book at the Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris. A richly illuminated manuscript envisioned by Marie-Nicolas Ponce-Camus, a student of Jacques-Louis David, the Golden Book features underground mazes, cave settings, pyramids and temple structures as theatrical settings.

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About Diane Greco Josefowicz

Diane Greco Josefowicz has worked as a tour guide, cocktail waitress, housekeeper, arts journalist, and as an ESL teacher at a rural village school in the DDR. She teaches writing at Boston University, and lives in Providence, Rhode Island with her husband and daughter. Written with Jed Z Buchwald, The Zodiac of Paris is her first book.