The Spear of Destiny (Ravenscroft)

The Spear of Destiny: the occult power behind the spear which pierced the side of Christ is a best-selling 1972 popular occult book by the anthroposophist writer Trevor Ravenscroft (1921–1989), published by Neville Armstrong's Neville Spearman Publishers.[1] Ravenscroft claimed that the book was based on research "by using mystical meditation" and on the papers of the Austrian anthroposophist Walter Stein given to Ravenscroft by his widow.[2][3] Ravenscroft originally claimed to have met Stein, but later only claimed contact through a medium with Walter Stein's spirit.[4]

The Spear of Destiny
AuthorTrevor Ravenscroft
Original titleThe Spear of Destiny: the occult power behind the spear which pierced the side of Christ
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
SubjectHoly Lance
Published1972
PublisherNeville Spearman Publishers
Pages362
OCLC476732400

Court case

In 1979 Ravenscroft sued James Herbert for copyright infringement in Herbert's 1978 novel The Spear. The defendant declined to pay Ravenscroft damages and eventually removed the offending content.[5][6][7][8]

Second book

After Ravenscroft's death, Tim Wallace-Murphy published The Mark of the Beast: The Continuing Story of the Spear of Destiny, citing Ravenscroft as co-author in 1997.

gollark: I just don't have shoelaces.
gollark: I submitted mine ages ago.
gollark: ++data set_global "Sinth name" Romes Tamo
gollark: BRB, iterating through all possible letters.
gollark: "Sinth Orio", of course.

References

  1. Miller, Ian (25 September 2008). "Neville Armstrong". The Guardian.
  2. "Ravenscroft V. Herbert And New English Library Limited". Reports of Patent, Design and Trade Mark Cases. Intellectual Property Office. 97 (7): 193–212. 1980. doi:10.1093/rpc/1980rpc193.
  3. "Trevor Ravenscroft -".
  4. According to Wynants, Ravenscroft admitted during their interview that he had never actually met W.J. Stein, but "talked to him only via a medium". Alec Macellan, The Secret of the Spear – The Mystery of The Spear of Longinus p.116
  5. Nick Freeman (2006) 'A decadent appetite for the lurid'?: James Herbert, The Spear and 'Nazi Gothic'. Gothic Studies Volume 8 (2). 80-97.
  6. 193 |No. 7] 8 May 1980 - Reports of Patent, Design and Trade Mark rpc.oxfordjournals.org/content/97/7/193.full.pdf May 8, 1980 - The plaintiff, Trevor Ravenscroft, was the author of a book called "The Spear of. Destiny". The first defendant, James Herbert, was an author of"
  7. Ravenscroft v Herbert (1980) RPC 193
  8. Ravenscroft, Trevor (1982). The Spear of Destiny. Weiser Books. ISBN 978-0-87728-547-2.
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