Anna Bonus Kingsford
Anna Mary Kingsford (née Bonus, September 16, 1846 – February 22, 1888) was a prominent figure among mystics and theosophists in the 1880's.
According to Readers Guide to The Mahatma Letters to A. P. Sinnett:
Kingsford, Anna Bonus, 1846-88. English author and spiritualist whom with her co-worker, Edward Maitland, promoted a Hermetic approach to Christianity and metaphysics. She is best known for her book The Perfect Way, published in 1882. She was a strict vegetarian and anti-vivisectionist, and KH states that on this account her phenomena were more accurate and reliable than most. He was instrumental in having her elected President of London Lodge. In October 1883, she wrote to HPB sending her photograph and asking that it be forwarded to KH. HPB's reply to her was torn up by M and she complained bitterly about it to APS (LBS, pp. 30, 69, 73). HPB also complained about Mrs. Kingsford's being kept in the Presidency of London Lodge, telling APS that it was due to a request of the Maha Chohan (LBS, pp. 82, 90). HPB sometimes called her the "Divine Anna," and asked Mrs. Sinnett to get a picture of her and sent it to her at Adyar. In 1883, Mrs. Kingsford issued a circular letter to the London Lodge members which was critical of APS's book, Esoteric Buddhism TSR issued a reply in pamphlet form in January 1884. See biography HPB X: 438-40; ML index.[1]
Online resources
Articles
- Anna Mary Bonus Kingsford by Paradoxos Alpha
Books
- Anna Kingsford, Madame Blavatsky and the Theosophists by Edward Maitland
Additional resources
- Anna Kingsford Site
- Anna Kingsford's Natal Chart at Astrodienst
Notes
- ↑ George E. Linton and Virginia Hanson, eds., Readers Guide to The Mahatma Letters to A. P. Sinnett (Adyar, Chennai, India: Theosophical Publishing House, 1972), 237.