Frederick Eckstein

Frederick Eckstein

Frederick (Friedrich) Eckstein (February 17, 1861 in Perchtoldsdorf, Lower Austria – November 10, 1939 in Vienna) was an Austrian polymath, theosophist and a friend and temporary co-worker of Sigmund Freud. Emil Molt states: 'He was the benefactor of Bruckner and Hugo Wolf, indeed the right arm of Bruckner, taking care that affairs went smoothly. He was a world traveller, had mastered Ju-jitsu and taught himself all sorts of difficult tricks. The story went around that he had trained himself to jump off a fast moving train without getting hurt. He too, was a highly gifted mathematician and a learned man in many respects.'

Also the husband of fellow theosophist and writer Bertha Diener, Eckstein's penchant for occultism first became evident as a member of a vegetarian group which discussed the doctrines of Pythagoras and the Neo-Platonists in Vienna at the end of the 1870s. His esoteric interests later extended to German and Spanish mysticism, the legends surrounding the Templars and the freemasons, Wagnerian mythology and oriental religions. In 1889, in the week after the tragedy at Mayerling, in which Crown Prince Rudolf of Austria, and his mistress were found dead in mysterious circumstances, he and his friend, the composer Anton Bruckner (for whom he also served as private secretary) traveled to the monastery Stift Heiligenkreuz to ask the abbot there for details of what happened.[1]

Eckstein was introduced to Theosophy by Franz Hartmann. In June 1886, he received a deed of foundation for the Vienna Lodge of the Theosophical Society personally signed by Helena Petrovna Blavatsky.[2] In 1887, he thus founded the first official lodge of this society in Austria, of which he became president. He was friends with Gustav Meyrink and associated with the Theosophist Henry Steel Olcott and, until he left Vienna, with Rudolf Steiner. The latter held him in high esteem personally and spent time with Marie Lang in the circle of Theosophists around 1890, but then rejected Theosophy as "weak-mindedness".

Eckstein's book on Anton Bruckner was published in 1923.[3]

  1. ^ Goodrick-Clarke, Nicholas (1992). The Occult Roots of Nazism: Secret Aryan Cults and Their Influence on Nazi Ideology. New York: NYU Press. ISBN 0-8147-3054-X.
  2. ^ www.foundationwebsite.org https://www.foundationwebsite.org/cgi-sys/suspendedpage.cgi. Retrieved 2024-06-05. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  3. ^ Erinnerungen an Anton Bruckner by Friedrich Eckstein, 1923, republished by Severus, 2013 ISBN 3863474961