Robert Bowen

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Robert Bowen was a commander in the Royal Navy who was a personal pupil of Helena Petrovna Blavatsky and took detailed notes about how to read her masterwork The Secret Doctrine.

Personal life

Robert Bowen was born in 1815 at Cleady House, Kenmare, County Kerry, Ireland. His education was in Jesuit schools.[1]

Robert had to work to support his two elder sisters until they married. It was the usual custom for sons of the landed gentry to enter the Diplomatic Service until they themselves inherited their properties. But a researcher at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office verified he held no position in any capacity with them. Robert's father lived a long life and so Robert did not become the gentleman farmer until later in his own life, not marrying until he was in his fifties.[2]

He engaged in a naval career for some years, probably serving as a Purser. After leaving naval service, he returned to Kenmare as a gentleman farmer. In 1866 he married Elizabeth Ann Gillman Beamish and they had at least six children, including Patrick Gillman Beamish Bowen.[3] He engaged in a great deal of reading and writing during those years.

He died at home on March 1, 1908, and was buried two days later in Kenmare.[4]

Involvement in the Theosophical Society

Commander Bowen joined the Theosophical Society in the early 1880s after meeting Dr. Anna Kingsford.[5][6] Around 1889, he became a personal pupil of Helena Petrovna Blavatsky and "questioned her persistently about what attitude a student ought to take towards The Secret Doctrine. He made careful notes of the answers she gave him and subsequently read them over to her to make sure that he had not mistaken her meaning." These notes were published in the January-March, 1932, issue of Theosophy in Ireland after Bowen's son, Captain P. G. B. Bowen, a Dublin theosophist, brought them to light.[7] See Robert Bowen Notes.

In a letter to Dr. Wilks, dated June 1, 1935, P. G. Bowen stated:

I knew nothing of my father as a Theosophist until I came to England eight years ago, in my fiftieth year, and then came into possession of his papers. He had specified that I was not to read these until I had reached the half century.[8]

Another piece of biographical information about his father is found in a letter to Mr. MacKinnon, dated July 22, 1937:

He was, I should mention, close on 70 when I was born [1877]. I did not know much of him in my youth and discovered his occult connections only since leaving Africa and coming into possession of his papers.[9]

Involvement in ceremonial work

Robert's son, Capt. P. G. Bowen, claims that his father was "a member of the 'Club' mentioned by K.H."[10] in Mahatma Letter No. 11, which had been formed "for the practical teaching of magick" around the 1860s. P. G. Bowen continues to say that his father "was a very intimate friend of Anna Kingsford" and adds:

He states definitely that Anna Kingsford, in 1885 (I think) formed an Inner Group in her Hermetic Society, and in it were Wynn Westcott and MacGregor Mathers. There was another member whom my father often mentions as ‘X’, or ‘A-A’ and sometimes as ‘Druid friend X’ or simply ‘The Druid’, and this person it was who brought the ‘Club’ material to A[nna]. K[ingsford]. Westcott and Mathers were given access to it, and later made it the basis of the Golden Dawn rituals.[11]

According to P. G. Bowen, Robert was "connected with the Golden Dawn in the early 90’s" and all this information comes "directly from manuscripts left by my father."

See also

Notes

  1. Yvonne Burgess, Robert Bowen mystery - "The Secret Doctrine and its study" pamphlet by Robert Bowen, at the BlavatskyArchives.com website.
  2. Yvonne Burgess, Robert Bowen mystery - "The Secret Doctrine and its study" pamphlet by Robert Bowen, at the BlavatskyArchives.com website.
  3. Ireland, Select Marriages, 1619-1898 and Ireland, Select Births and Baptisms, 1620-1911.
  4. Ireland, Civil Registration Deaths Index, 1864-1958 and Ireland, Burial Index, 1600-1927.
  5. Yvonne Burgess, 3.
  6. Membership records for Bowen have not been located.
  7. Robert Bowen, "Madame Blavatsky on How to Study Theosophy". It is available online at Theosophical Publishing House.
  8. Kenneth Small personal archives.
  9. Kenneth Small personal archives.
  10. Letter to Mr. MacKinnon (July 22, 1937) preserved at Kenneth R. Small Archive of the Universal Brotherhood and Theosophical Society at Lomaland, 1874-1960 held in Special Collections University Archives, San Diego State University.
  11. Letter to Mr. MacKinnon (July 22, 1937) preserved at Kenneth R. Small Archive of the Universal Brotherhood and Theosophical Society at Lomaland, 1874-1960 held in Special Collections University Archives, San Diego State University.