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God-Men and Monsters: The Delusional Imperium of Jörg Lanz von Liebenfels
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8235542655
- EAN9798235542655
- Date de parution24/06/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurIoakim Ioakim
Résumé
Would you recognize the architects of history if they never stood at a military podium? For decades, mainstream historiography has spoon-fed us a sterile version of the past, attributing the horrors of the twentieth century solely to economic collapse and geopolitical treaties. But beneath the surface of treaties and battles lies a far more unsettling reality-a world where the political madness of empires was forged in the occult underground of pre-war Vienna.
To truly experience the past, we must willing to descend into the damp, candle-lit cells where madness was systematically codified into a holy crusade. In God-Men and Monsters: The Delusional Imperium of Jörg Lanz von Liebenfels, author Winston Maddox unearths the meticulously buried life of Adolf Joseph Lanz, the ex-Cistercian monk who traded his rosary for a swastika banner. This is not another superficial overview of WWII, but an uncompromising, granular deep dive into the very birth of Ariosophy.
Maddox reconstructs the eerie atmosphere of Castle Werfenstein, where Lanz established his New Templar Order, flying the first swastika over the Danube. You will trace the exact intellectual lineage of Theozoology-a blasphemous doctrine that merged pseudo-science with perverted scripture to declare an impending war between divine "god-men" and racial monsters. For the seasoned history buff who prides themselves on knowing the hidden mechanisms of the past, this narrative offers an invaluable missing piece of the puzzle.
Through rigorous historical analysis, Maddox charts the grim reality of Vienna's underbelly, where a destitute, angry young artist named Adolf Hitler regularly purchased Lanz's radical pamphlet, Ostara. The book systematically dismantles the post-war denials, exposing how Lanz's bizarre fringe mythology migrated directly into the structural DNA of the Third Reich's eugenics programs, before the regime ultimately suppressed Lanz to hide their eccentric pedigree.
This is an immersive, atmospheric historical journey that forces you to breathe the paranoid air of fin-de-siècle Austria. You will sit in the libraries where ancient Gnostic texts were weaponized, stand on the ramparts of a castle dedicated to solar worship, and witness the terrifying ease with which a single man's psychological delusions can infect a traumatized nation. Maddox writes with the sharp precision of a scholar and the narrative urgency of a thriller, offering a work that respects your intelligence and challenges your understanding of ideological history.
Are we brave enough to confront the occult monsters that birthed modern tyranny, or will we continue to settle for the sanitized myths of textbook history?
To truly experience the past, we must willing to descend into the damp, candle-lit cells where madness was systematically codified into a holy crusade. In God-Men and Monsters: The Delusional Imperium of Jörg Lanz von Liebenfels, author Winston Maddox unearths the meticulously buried life of Adolf Joseph Lanz, the ex-Cistercian monk who traded his rosary for a swastika banner. This is not another superficial overview of WWII, but an uncompromising, granular deep dive into the very birth of Ariosophy.
Maddox reconstructs the eerie atmosphere of Castle Werfenstein, where Lanz established his New Templar Order, flying the first swastika over the Danube. You will trace the exact intellectual lineage of Theozoology-a blasphemous doctrine that merged pseudo-science with perverted scripture to declare an impending war between divine "god-men" and racial monsters. For the seasoned history buff who prides themselves on knowing the hidden mechanisms of the past, this narrative offers an invaluable missing piece of the puzzle.
Through rigorous historical analysis, Maddox charts the grim reality of Vienna's underbelly, where a destitute, angry young artist named Adolf Hitler regularly purchased Lanz's radical pamphlet, Ostara. The book systematically dismantles the post-war denials, exposing how Lanz's bizarre fringe mythology migrated directly into the structural DNA of the Third Reich's eugenics programs, before the regime ultimately suppressed Lanz to hide their eccentric pedigree.
This is an immersive, atmospheric historical journey that forces you to breathe the paranoid air of fin-de-siècle Austria. You will sit in the libraries where ancient Gnostic texts were weaponized, stand on the ramparts of a castle dedicated to solar worship, and witness the terrifying ease with which a single man's psychological delusions can infect a traumatized nation. Maddox writes with the sharp precision of a scholar and the narrative urgency of a thriller, offering a work that respects your intelligence and challenges your understanding of ideological history.
Are we brave enough to confront the occult monsters that birthed modern tyranny, or will we continue to settle for the sanitized myths of textbook history?






















