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Emile Burnouf (dates??) was a leading nineteenth-century Orientalist and racialist whose ideas influenced the development of theosophy and Aryanism. Orientalism is the study of Near and Far Eastern societies and cultures, by Westerners. ...
Hitlers Nazi Germany: the epitome of 20th-century racialism Racialism is a term used to describe racial policy, in what is generally perceived to be a negative sense, as promoting stratification and inequality between racial categories (in themselves, often disputed). ...
Seal of the Theosophical Society Theosophy is a body of belief which holds that all religions are attempts by man to ascertain the Divine, and as such each religion has a portion of the truth. ...
Proto-Indo-European Indo-European studies The phrase Aryan race is sometimes used to translate Old Persian inscriptions and other Persian sources from c. ...
Emile was the cousin of Eugene Burnouf, the founder of Buddhist studies in the West. Following in his footsteps, Emile sought to connect Buddhist and Hindu thought to Western European classical culture. In so doing, he claimed to have rediscovered the early Aryan belief-system. Burnouf believed that only Aryan and Semitic peoples were truly religious in temperament. Eugène Burnouf (April 8, 1801 - May 28, 1852) was a French orientalist. ...
Statues of Buddha such as this, the Tian Tan Buddha statue in Hong Kong, remind followers to practice right living. ...
West is most commonly a noun, adjective, or adverb indicating direction or geography. ...
Western Europe is distinguished from Central Europe and Eastern Europe by differences of history and culture rather than by geography. ...
Aryan is an English word derived from the Vedic Sanskrit and Avestan term arya, meaning noble or lord. In the 19th century, the term was often used to refer to what we now call the Proto-Indo-Europeans. ...
Semitic is an adjective which in common parlance mistakenly refers specifically to Jewish things, while the term actually refers to things originating among speakers of Semitic languages or people descended from them, and in a linguistic context to the northeastern subfamily of Afro-Asiatic. ...
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- Science has proved that the original tendency of the Aryan peoples is pantheism, while monotheism proper is the constant doctrine of Semitic populations. These are surely the two great beds in which flow the sacred stream of humanity. But the facts show is, in the West, peoples of Aryan origin in some sort Semiticised in Christianity. The whole of Europe is at once Aryan and Christian; that is to say pantheistic by its origin and natural dispositions, but accustomed to admit the dogma of creation from a Semitic influence. (The Science of Religions).
Burnouf's work takes for granted a racial hierarchy that places Aryans at the top as a master race. His writings are also full of prejudicial and often deeply anti-Semitic statements. Burnouf believed that Semitic peoples were an inferior sub-group of the white race, and that the Hebrew peoples were divided into two races, worshippers of Elohim and worshippers of Yahweh. The latter were in fact Aryans, 'their headquarters were taken up north of Jerusalem, in Galilee' and they conflicted with the more powerful priestly faction. These ideas developed into the Nazi claim that Jesus was really an 'Aryan'. Hitlers Nazi Germany: the epitome of 20th-century racialism Racialism is a term used to describe racial policy, in what is generally perceived to be a negative sense, as promoting stratification and inequality between racial categories (in themselves, often disputed). ...
The master race (German: Herrenrasse, Herrenvolk) is a concept in Nazi ideology, which holds that the Germanic and Nordic people represent an ideal and pure race. It derives from nineteenth century racial theory, which posited a hierarchy of races placing African Bushmen and Australian Aborigines at the bottom of the...
Anti-Semitism (alternatively spelled antisemitism) is hostility towards Jews (not: Semites - see the Misnomer section further on). ...
Whites (or White) is a broad term used to describe people of ethnic European, Middle Eastern and North African descent, especially those with fair skin. ...
The word Hebrew can variously mean: The Hebrew language or Hebrew languages The ancient Hebrew people, or their descendants the Jews The New Testament book Hebrews The term Hebrew is sometimes used by certain Christian groups to distinguish the Jews in ancient times (before the birth of Jesus) from Jews...
Elohim (אלהים) is a Hebrew word related to deity, but whose exact significance is often disputed. ...
The Tetragrammaton in Phoenician (1100 BC to 300 CE), Aramaic (10th Century BC to 0) and modern Hebrew scripts. ...
The Nazi party used a right-facing swastika as their symbol and the red and black colors were said to represent Blut und Boden (blood and soil). ...
Burnouf was consulted by Heinrich Schliemann over his discovery of swastika motifs in the ruins of Troy. Burnouf claimed that swastika originated as a stylised depiction of a fire-altar seen from above, and was thus the essential symbol of the Aryan race. The popularisation of this idea by Schliemann and Burnouf was mainly responsible for the adoption of the swastika in the West as an Aryan symbol. Heinrich Schliemann (January 6, 1822 - December 26, 1890) was a German archaeologist, born at Neu Buckow, in Mecklenburg-Schwerin, the son of a poor pastor. ...
The Swastika in traditional Hindu form The swastika is an equilateral cross with its arms bent at right angles either clockwise or anticlockwise. ...
Walls of the excavated city of Troy This article is about the city of Troy / Ilion as described in the works of Homer, and the location of an ancient city associated with it. ...
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