Edmund William Berridge: Difference between revisions
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{{Era|Individuals|Hermeticists}} | {{Era|Individuals|Hermeticists}}{{WP-REAL}} | ||
{{WP-REAL}} | {{Character Infobox | ||
'''Edmund William Berridge''' (1843 – 1923) was an [[England|English]] doctor, homeopathist and occultist, as well as a member of the | |name = Edmund William Berridge | ||
|native = | |||
|image = Wiki noimage.jpg | |||
|birth = 1843 | |||
|death = 1923 | |||
|active = | |||
|species = [[Human]] | |||
|database = | |||
|affiliates = [[Hermeticists|Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn]] | |||
}} | |||
'''Edmund William Berridge''' (1843 – 1923) was an [[England|English]] doctor, homeopathist and occultist, as well as a member of the [[Hermeticists|Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn]]. | |||
==Biography== | ==Biography== | ||
Berridge was a member of the Inner Order in the Golden Dawn and a trusted adept of [[Samuel Liddell Mathers]], a leader of the Order. Along with Mathers and the latter's wife, [[Moina Mathers|Moina]], Berridge was for a long time the only member of the Order to know about [[William Robert Woodman]]'s continued mental existence after death. | Berridge was a member of the Inner Order in the Golden Dawn and a trusted adept of [[Samuel Liddell Mathers]], a leader of the Order. Along with Mathers and the latter's wife, [[Moina Mathers|Moina]], Berridge was for a long time the only member of the Order to know about [[William Robert Woodman]]'s continued mental existence after death.<ref name="PL">''[[Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy]]'' – [[Divine Science: Chapter 4 – Frater V.O.V.]]</ref> | ||
In 1896, upon learning of this knowledge that had been witheld, [[William Wynn Westcott]], another leader of the Order, planned to throw Mathers out of the Order. In this critical moment, Mathers turned to Berridge, one of the only acolytes that he implictly trusted. Eager to serve, Berridge left a set of papers inside a cab, revealing Westcott's involvement in occult practices to the public and forcing him to leave the Order. Woodman's posthumous entity observed Berridge as he left the incriminating evidence. | In 1896, upon learning of this knowledge that had been witheld, [[William Wynn Westcott]], another leader of the Order, planned to throw Mathers out of the Order. In this critical moment, Mathers turned to Berridge, one of the only acolytes that he implictly trusted. Eager to serve, Berridge left a set of papers inside a cab, revealing Westcott's involvement in occult practices to the public and forcing him to leave the Order. Woodman's posthumous entity observed Berridge as he left the incriminating evidence.<ref name="PL" /> | ||
== | ==Appearances== | ||
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy]]'' | *''[[Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy]]'' | ||
== | ==References== | ||
{{Reflist}} | |||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Berridge, Edmund William}} | {{DEFAULTSORT:Berridge, Edmund William}} | ||
[[Category:1843 births]] | [[Category:1843 births]] | ||
[[Category:1923 deaths]] | [[Category:1923 deaths]] | ||
[[Category:Individuals]] | [[Category:Individuals]] | ||
[[Category: | [[Category:English people]] | ||
[[Category: | [[Category:Londoners]] | ||
[[Category:Medical doctors]] | |||
[[Category:Occultists]] | [[Category:Occultists]] | ||
[[Category:Hermeticists]] | [[Category:Hermeticists]] | ||
Latest revision as of 02:43, 4 May 2026
Edmund William Berridge (1843 – 1923) was an English doctor, homeopathist and occultist, as well as a member of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn.
Biography[edit | edit source]
Berridge was a member of the Inner Order in the Golden Dawn and a trusted adept of Samuel Liddell Mathers, a leader of the Order. Along with Mathers and the latter's wife, Moina, Berridge was for a long time the only member of the Order to know about William Robert Woodman's continued mental existence after death.[1]
In 1896, upon learning of this knowledge that had been witheld, William Wynn Westcott, another leader of the Order, planned to throw Mathers out of the Order. In this critical moment, Mathers turned to Berridge, one of the only acolytes that he implictly trusted. Eager to serve, Berridge left a set of papers inside a cab, revealing Westcott's involvement in occult practices to the public and forcing him to leave the Order. Woodman's posthumous entity observed Berridge as he left the incriminating evidence.[1]