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Follow on Google News | ![]() Scholarly Article Puts Forgotten Women Mystics, Leaders Back In SpotlightThe article's images include the author's portrait of Nefertiti, the great mystic and cultural revolutionary who co-ruled Egypt.
Published by the Rosicrucian Order (Ancient Mystical Order Rosae Crucis, or AMORC), an international community of philosophers studying natural laws in order to live in harmony with them and tracing its origins to ancient Egypt, the Rose+Croix Journal is an international, interdisciplinary, peer-reviewed online journal that focuses on topics related to science, history, the arts, mysticism, and spirituality. Nordhaus-Bike's article is, "Founders, Funders, Feminists: The Women Who Co-Founded, Co-Led, and Co-Inspired the Rosicrucian Order, AMORC." It reveals the often forgotten, overlooked, and untold stories of women—some of them very well known in their day—who played key roles in establishing the Rosicrucian Order in both ancient times and in the United States and Canada in the early 20th century. Deeply researched yet highly readable, the article, at https://artistanne.com/ Among the illustrations is a painting of the Egyptian Queen Nefertiti, painted by Nordhaus-Bike, an artist associated with Woman Made Gallery in Chicago, Illinois, USA. Some other women covered in the article, particularly from the late 19th and early 20th centuries, are Ella Wheeler Wilcox, an internationally bestselling poet and nonfiction writer; Marie Corelli, the wildly popular and bestselling novelist of her time; Marie Russak Hotchener, an internationally acclaimed opera singer, Theosophist, and international speaker; and Jill Jackson Miller, a radio and film actress whose stage name was Harlene Wood and who went on to become a peace activist after co-writing the song "Let There Be Peace On Earth." The article also focuses on the nearly forgotten stories of Canadian and African-American women instrumental in establishing the order in North America in the early 20th century. "Women played a critical role in co-founding AMORC in North America, and they continue to play central roles in leading the order in a tradition of female-male inclusivity dating to ancient Egypt," Nordhaus-Bike said, noting that they "endured social prejudice, legal restrictions, and other obstacles due to misogyny and discrimination 'on the basis of sex.'" Nordhaus-Bike is an artist and president of ANB Communications, a Chicago, Illinois, USA-based public relations and communications firm. She is a graduate of the University of Chicago. For more on Nordhaus-Bike and her art, go to https://artistanne.com/ End
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