List and
the Armanic Runes
by Justin
Kimberlin
Literature
and the Occult
Fall
2002
The
runes were the writing symbols of the ancient Germanic people. Runic writing was found as
far back as the 3rd
or 4th century B.C.E.
The
original runic system, according to the academic runologists was the
Elder
Futhark consisting of twenty-four runes.
This was Aexpanded by the
Anglo-Frisians to a futhorc of 33 runestaves.@(Rune Might p.3)[COMMENT1]
By the Viking Age, the Scandinavians were only using 16 runestaves. This system was known as
the Younger
Futhark. In
contrast to the accepted
academic belief, there exists a 4th system of 18
runes known as the
Armanic Futhork. This
last system is
the product of a German esoteric runologist, Guido Von List. [COMMENT2]
A new
revival of the Ancient Germanic religion has taken place in recent
years. [COMMENT3]Many
of Germanic decent have discovered a newfound belief in the old
Germanic
Gods. In Iceland,
the fervor was the
most prolific and many lobbied the government for a legitimization of
this religion. At
the time, only Christianity was official
there. Finally in
the 1970s, the
Icelandic government made the religion official.
One of the requirements for this was that the religion
must have
a name[COMMENT4]. The new name of Ásatrú
was given to
the religion. Ásatrú means the
loyalty or Troth [trú] of the Gods [Æsir[1]].
(Northern Magic p. 41) Though there were several Germanic Gods and
Goddesses,
the focus is often on one of two Gods.
The first is Odin (Ódhinn), the God of war,
poetry, magic, and[COMMENT5]
the runes. He was
known to the Germans
as Wotan or Wuotan and to the Anglo-Saxons as Woden.
The other is Thor (Thórr), the god of thunder
and justice. Known
as Donar to the Germans and Thunar to
the Anglo-Saxons, his weapon was the hammer Mjöllnir. Along with a renewed
interest in the old
Gods the movement has inspired many to study the holy books known as
the Eddas
and the Runes. This
renewed interest in
Runology has prompted some to look back to the Germanic occult revival
of the
late 19th and early 20th
centuries.
Guido
Karl Anton List was perhaps the most important figure of the runic
occultism
revival. (Rune
Might p.9) On
October 5, 1948, List was born into a
prosperous merchant family. He
was
raised as a Catholic and visited the catacombs beneath St. Stephen=s Cathedral in Vienna in
1862 with his father. The
then
fourteen-year-old knelt before an altar and proclaimed: AWhenever I get big, I will
build a Temple of Wotan!@(List quoted by Flowers p.2) In 1875, List visited the
Roman ruins of
Carnuntum, the site of a tribal German victory over the Romans in 375
C.E. In honor of
the 1500th
anniversary of this victory, he sought out the Heidentor[2]
where he performed Athe drinking of ritual toasts to
the memory of the local
spirit (genius loci) and the heroes of the past, the lighting of the
solstice
fire, and the laying of eight wine bottles in the shape of the Afyrfos@ (swastika) in the glowing
embers of the fire.@ (Flowers p.4)
It
is important to note that List had no knowledge of Theosophy or the
Theosophical
use of the swastika at that time.
The
Germans had used the symbol from early times either as a symbol of Odin
or
Thor. This trip to
Carnuntum inspired
him to eventually write his first full-length novel Carnuntum,
a
mythological work that became popular among many German nationalists in
Austria. List
eventually became a
celebrity among the Austrian Pan-Germans.
Following
an operation to remove cataracts, List went through and eleven-month
period of
enlightenment. During
this time he was
unable to see but claimed to have mystical inner sight.
Wotan himself lost vision in one eye to gain
knowledge from the well of Mimir in the Völuspá
(the Sybil=s Prophecy), with which
List was familiar. List
became very
interested in occult knowledge during this time, especially the runes.
The
newly inspired list Asent a manuscript about the
Aryan proto-language to the
Imperial Academy of Sciences in Vienna@ setting out the conception Aof a monumental
pseudo-science concerned with Germanic linguistics and symbology@ in April 1903.
(GC p.41)
This was his Afirst attempt to interpret, by
means of occult insight, the
letters and sounds of the runes and the alphabet on the one hand, and
the
emblems and glyphs of ancient inscriptions on the other.@
(GC p.41) The Academy was not interested in the document
and
returned it without any input on their part though it did become
popular among
the occultists. List
later had an
article published in the occult periodical Die Gnosis. This article showed the
Theosophical influence
that List was now under.
List
believed that the ancient Teutonic (Germanic) people had practiced the
religion
of Wotanism. This
was, according to
List, Aa gnostic religion
emphasizing the initiation of man into natural mysteries.@ (GC p.49) Unlike other
non-classical European religions, the Norse had left behind the Eddas. The Völuspá
and the Hávamál,
found in the Elder Edda, were the most valuable to List=s research.
The Völuspá
contains both the
creation of the world and the end of the world (the Ragnarök). The Hávamál
contains Wotan=s advice to his
followers. The end
of the Hávamál
is the story of Wotan hanging on the tree Yggdrasill for nine days and
nine
nights after have been mortally wounded with a spear.
Wotan dies and comes back to life with the knowledge of
the runes
and eighteen runic spells containing esoteric knowledge from the realm
of the
dead.
The
runes were more than just a writing system.
They were also used for divination.
Each of the runes had a unique name, magical property,
sound, and letter
representation. List
envisioned a runic
system that came to be known as the Armanic Futhork.
This system was completely different from the three
accepted
academic systems. List
matched up 18
runes with the 18 runic spells of Wotan from the Hávamál. In his publication The
Secret of the
Runes he gives the names and descriptions of each of the
runes and
adds Aoccult meanings and a summary
motto of the spell@ which Awere supposed to represent
the doctrine and the maxims of the rediscovered religion of Wotanism.@ (GC p.50) These mottoes
were along the lines of: AKnow yourself, then you will
know all!@[3] and AYour blood, your highest
possession.@[4]
Perhaps the most interesting of these runes is the 18th. List believed that the
incomplete form of
the 18th rune or the God-rune Gibor[COMMENT6]
was the swastika or fyrfos[COMMENT7].
It harkens back to this
sign in both name and meaningBwithout, nevertheless,
exhausting it. In this the
intention of the skalds to guard vigilantly the fyrfos as their
exclusive innermost
secret, and as the sigil of that secret, can be seen.
Only after yielding to certain pressures did they reveal
another
sign which partially replaced the fyrfos. (List p.64-65)
It was this very power
which most likely causes the Thule and the Nazis to adopt this symbol. The author of The
Rise and Fall of the
Third Reich attributes this symbol with motivating the German
people to
rally behind the Nazis.[COMMENT8]
List
began using the title von[COMMENT9],
at first only occasionally. In
1907,
List began to officially list his name as Guido von List prompting an
inquiry
by magistrates. He
argued that he was
of Lower Austrian and Styrian decent.
He claimed that an ancestor had given up use of the title
and also had a
coat-of-arms on a signet ring, which List produced as evidence. [COMMENT10]
List possibly was concerned with this title to establish him as one of
the Armanen
who List believed to be the priestly order of the ancient Germans. This priesthood was called
the Armenschaft
and list believed that this caste must be returned back to power.
Inspired
heavily be Theosophy, Freemasonry, and Rosicrucianism, he proposed a
system of
exoteric and esoteric teaching in the gnosis. (GC p. 57). The Exoteric doctrine of
Wotanism would
provide the mythology and parables to the lower social classes and the
esoteric
doctrine of Armanism would be concerned with the gnostic mysteries. The latter system would
have a lodge
hierarchy and would be an initiatory brotherhood.
This would provide a separation of the religious and the
occult practices
of the gnosis.
List=s Armanic rune system is
perhaps the most influential runic system in terms of magic. List believed that his
runic system was the
primeval system from which the other three systems developed. While academics tended to
scoff at this, the
rune magicians and esoteric philosophers of Germany did not. It was the basis for the
works of S.A.
Kimmer, Gorsleben, and Karl Spiesberger.
The only notable German runic occultist who did not employ
the Armanic
system in any way was F.B. Marby, who employed the 33-rune
Anglo-Frisian
system. (Rune Might
p.44-45) Marby
believed that the original runic system contained even more signs that
the
Anglo-Frisian Futhorc and that Athe runes originated in the
Mother-Land, which sank
below the waves of the North Sea some 12,000 years ago.@ (Rune Might p.5) The
Armanic runes and List=s ideas about race were
well-received by the völkisch
and Pan-German movements, the German Theosophists, Ariosophists, and
later the
Nazis. List was a
legend in his own time. There
was even a Guido von List Society who
made sure that his work was published until the outbreak of World War
I, a war
which List had predicted. List had made some other predictions
involving dates
and types of events that have come true.
The biggest one that did not was that of a
thousand-year-rule of the
Germans or the German Millennium.
This
reign in fact lasted only twelve years and did more to damage the
reputation of
the ancient Germanic religion and its symbols than Christianity had
ever been
able to. List
himself never lived long
enough to see its reign and probably would have been a threatening
presence to
Hitler if he had. Whether
or not List
would have agreed with their methodologies we will never know. One thing, however, is
clear. List was the
most influential occult
runologist of the 20th century.
Bibliography
Goodrick-Clarke,
Nicholas. The
Occult Roots of Nazism : Secret Aryan Cults and Their Influence On Nazi
Ideology : the Ariosophists of Austria and Germany, 1890-1935.
New York,
NY: New York University Press, 1992.
ISBN: 0-8147-3054-X, LOC Call: DD256.5.029 1992, DD Call:
320.5'33'0943Bdc20
List, Guido von. Translated, edited, and
introduced by
Stephen Flowers. The Secret of the Runes (Das Geheimnis der
Runen).
Rochester, Vermont: Destiny Books, 1988.
ISBN: 0-89281-207-9, (pbk.), LOC Call: BF1623.R89L5713
1988, DD Call:
133.3'3
Thorsson,
Edred. Northern Magic :
Rune Mysteries and Shamanism. St. Paul, MN: Llewellyn, 1998,
Second
Edition. ISBN:
1-56718-709-9 (pbk.),
LOC Call: BF1622.G3T483, DD Call: 133.4'3'0893-dc21
Thorsson,
Edred. Rune Might:
Secret Practices of the German Rune Magicians. St. Paul, MN:
Llewellyn,
1989. ISBN:
0-87542-778-2 (pbk.), LOC
Call: BF1623.R89T485, DD Call: 133.4'3--dc21
[1]The Æsir or Aesir in this case refers to the entire
Germanic pantheon.
[2]Heathen=s Gate
[3]Ur, the 2nd rune from The
Secret Of the Runes
[4]Ka, the 6th rune from The
Secret Of the Runes
[COMMENT1]Check
Quote
[COMMENT2]Marby
believed that the Anglo-Frisian system was the closest to the original
which
contained even more signs than the Anglo-Frisian system.
In
the 1960s Wicca was gaining popularity among many dissatisfied
Christians and
Atheists both in the United States and in Europe.
This new religion was a duotheistic or two deity religion
as
opposed to the Judeo-Christian monotheistic religions and was heavily
laden
with occult influences from various magical systems including the
Kabala. Many became
quickly disillusioned with the
occult and magical nature of this religion and began looking for
alternatives. Many
of these were of
either Germanic or Celtic decent.