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Magic Monday

The picture? I'm working my way through photos of my lineage, focusing on the teachers whose work has influenced me and the teachers who influenced them in turn. I'm currently tracing my Martinist lineage. That's rendered complex by the Martinist tradition that one does not name one's initiator, so we'll have to go back via slightly less evasive routes. Last week's honoree, Dr. Gérard Encausse, who wrote about magic under the pen name Papus, didn't act alone in reviving the Martinist tradition and founding the Martinist Order; he had the capable assistance of this man, Augustin Chaboseau. Papus and Chaboseau were medical students together, and were startled to discover that each of them had received the Martinist initiation by way of two different lineages. They each initiated the other, and thereafter worked together to preserve and transmit the Martinist tradition. Chaboseau's wife Louise was famous in her own right as a leading French feminist, and one of the first female pharmacists in France.
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***This Magic Monday is now closed. See you next week!***
Re: The Five Rites
The sixth rite is among the pieces of evidence for this; it's a straightforward borrowing of the uddiyana bandha exercise from hatha yoga, which (unlike most yogic practices) was well described in English language literature at the time.
That said, your basic thesis is correct: we're all working with very similar bodies, and with a series of traditions dating back very far into antiquity about what you can do with the body. The Five Rites were crafted by people who paid close attention to the effects of exercises, and who drew inspiration and ideas from many other people who could be described in the same terms. It's not at all surprising that similar practices should emerge all over the world under those circumstances.