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:::30th Waiting. Evening. The first 400 copies of THE THEOSOPHIST were received. Welcome, stranger.
:::30th Waiting. Evening. The first 400 copies of THE THEOSOPHIST were received. Welcome, stranger.
:Oct. 1st. All hands busy, pasting and directing wrappers, making city and country lists, sending ''peons'' to deliver in the city, receiving congratulations, and taking new subscriptions.
:Oct. 1st. All hands busy, pasting and directing wrappers, making city and country lists, sending ''peons'' to deliver in the city, receiving congratulations, and taking new subscriptions.
:::3rd. Order about the paper received, signed by [[Serapis]]; first word from him in some time.<ref>Mary K. Neff, "The Hidden Side of The Theosophist," ''The Theosophist'' 51:1 (Ocboter, 19129), 66.</ref>
:::3rd. Order about the paper received, signed by [[Serapis]]; first word from him in some time.<ref>Mary K. Neff, "The Hidden Side of The Theosophist," ''The Theosophist'' 51:1 (October, 1929), 66.</ref>
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Revision as of 20:45, 12 December 2012

The Theosophist,
Centennial issue,
August, 1931
The Theosophist,
130th anniversary,
October 2009

The Theosophist is the monthly journal of the international Theosophical Society based in Adyar, India. It was first published on October 1, 1879 by Helena Petrovna Blavatsky in Bombay, and has been in production continuously since that date. The cover of the first issue stated that this was "A monthly journal devoted to oriental philosophy, art, literature and occultism: embracing mesmerism, spiritualism and other secret sciences." In February 1883 the journal moved from Bombay to Madras, where the Theosophical Society was establishing its new headquarters at Adyar. For the year 1930, the journal was published in Hollywood, California by Annie Besant and Marie Russak Hotchener, but it returned to Adyar in 1931.

Early days of the publication

Mary K. Neff wrote of the genesis of The Theosophist for its fiftieth anniversary, in the "Jubilee Number." She compiled a timeline of events using Colonel Olcott's diaries:

July 4, 1879. Consultation which decided us to issue THE THEOSOPHIST at once.
9th. Corrected proof of the Prospectus of THE THEOSOPHIST.
15th. Had visit in body of the Sahib!
31st. Wim made design for the cover of THE THEOSOPHIST.
Aug. 22nd. Evening. With H. P. B. revised articles for THE THEOSOPHIST.
Sept. 2nd. Wim began engraving heading for THE THEOSOPHIST.
11th. Workmen fitting up Theosophist Office in the new compound.
20th. Ran off first form (8 pages) to-day. Much pleased with the paper; think it will find public favour and secure many subscriptions.
27th. Made up last form to-day; and now, all difficulties having been surmounted - as it were - we will make our periodical bow to the world from our own rostrum.
38th. Up at 5:30, to find printer and make certain changes ordered by the revered Old Gentleman late last night.
29th. Preparing for the birth of the paper.
30th Waiting. Evening. The first 400 copies of THE THEOSOPHIST were received. Welcome, stranger.
Oct. 1st. All hands busy, pasting and directing wrappers, making city and country lists, sending peons to deliver in the city, receiving congratulations, and taking new subscriptions.
3rd. Order about the paper received, signed by Serapis; first word from him in some time.[1]

Involvement of the Mahatmas

Several of the Mahatmas watched over the development of the journal, including Serapis, Rishi Agastya, Morya, and Koot Hoomi. The former two showed interest at the inception of The Theosophist, and the latter two guided its development over several years. The journal is frequently mentioned in the Mahatma letters.

Index to the periodical

The Union Index of Theosophical Periodicals[1] provides a searchable index to this periodical online, listing article titles and authors in chronological sequence. The 1930 Hollywood edition has a separate index.

Issues available online

The Theosophist, January 2008

These are sources of past issues:

  • Volume 1: October 1879-September 1880 - available at Theosophical University Press
  • Volume 1-14 are available in facsimile PDF versions at Theosophy.Net
  • 2008-2010 - the Theosophical Society in Adyar, India has begun posting recent issues of the magazine online. There are also selected articles from earlier years.

Notes

  1. Mary K. Neff, "The Hidden Side of The Theosophist," The Theosophist 51:1 (October, 1929), 66.