The Real History of Secret Societies
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Narrated by:
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Professor Richard B. Spence
About this listen
Welcome to The Real History of Secret Societies, a historical look at the true-life groups which, if you believe the myths, are the unspoken power behind some of the world’s major turning points, from controlling the British crown to holding back the electric car and keeping Martians and Atlantis under wraps.
Prepare yourself. In this course brought to you in partnership with HISTORY®, you will be visiting some of history’s deepest rabbit-holes, across centuries and continents, in search of secret societies in all their varieties. You will journey to some very dark places, and frankly some odd and sometimes silly ones as well. During 24 eye-opening lectures, Dr. Richard B. “Rick” Spence, Professor of History at the University of Idaho, guides you through the fascinating, often mystifying - sometimes disturbing - world of brotherhoods, sisterhoods, orders, cults, and cabals that have influenced human culture from ancient times to the present.
You’ll understand how and why secret societies have attracted some of history’s most brilliant, and some of its most evil, minds. Often demonized by their enemies, many secret societies have become the stuff of myths and conspiracy theories. Why do they exist? And when they are invented or imagined, why would someone pretend they exist? What do secret societies believe? Who do they recruit? Most important, what influence do they have? Buckle up and get ready to find out.
PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying PDF will be available in your Audible Library along with the audio.
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What listeners say about The Real History of Secret Societies
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- J. D. Hanke
- 06-22-20
Great series of Lectures! A lot of info new to me.
As a member of a secret society so secret, that many of its own members aren't even aware of it's existence, first of all I'm glad we passed the test. No mention was made of us. Whoopty effin' do.
Anyway there was a ton of info on a ton of people involved in a ton of secret society stuff, that I didn't know, and I was quite impressed. . . not that there was stuff I didn't know; the stuff I don't know could fill several volumes... wait. Would that mean the volumes would be empty? then ANYONE could write ANYTHING in those volumes. .. Then again, so what?
No I must confess that I was just impressed that they could impress me and interest the Empress enough that she impressed upon me to address the press on the progress of the Empresses interest in the interests of the empire's inquiries into the conspiracy to silence the voiceless whispers of one clandestinely appointed orator of a conspiratory society, never knowing that it was indeed she.
-Behold the underwhelmed eye of the Indifferatti, for it sees all, and remains unamused... or something... I forget. Nevermind. good book. read it. or listen to it.
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9 people found this helpful
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- Constance A. Mosher
- 05-26-20
Thought provoking
Very thought provoking and well presented. I had not been aware of all these societies and the connections between them.
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1 person found this helpful
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- Efrain Jimenez
- 02-18-22
Thought provoking.
Its a good listen, its read well and it has a lot of information. Enjoyed it.
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- Tp
- 11-25-19
Far more politics than fraternity.
The Professor starts with a definition of secret society broad enough to include Lenin's Bolshevik movement.
So this is one part fraternal history, one part "here's how power hungry people work using secrecy," and one big part speculation - which he readily admits as such.
Far more politics than fraternity. Strikes me as more late night TV than university course material. Least impressive of the Great Courses item I've ever downloaded.
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87 people found this helpful
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- Ryan Elewaut
- 12-12-20
Excellent, almost too thorough
Think of this as an intro to secret societies and underground political groups. There is a lot to chew on in here, and Professor Spence has a lot to tell you about. Each of these lectures covers so much political history and intrigue that Spence could do another entire series for each one of these individual lectures. But overall, really good perspective here.
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- Justin
- 11-27-20
Just “OK”
Too many societies were discussed so getting in depth into any didn’t really happen. It was a good high level overview of secret societies in general with some historical context (mostly what could be found in the news). Nothing really groundbreaking, but overall it was interesting.
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- Ryan
- 09-22-21
Thought provoking
It was fascinating to find out how many secret societies there are in the world. They never die, the just mutate and take another form...
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- Steven Ray Hill
- 04-10-20
Not bad!
A very interesting look at things that people don't want you to know how cool!
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- laroygreen
- 07-01-23
Think museum tour instead of classroom
If you approach it more as a museum tour and less as a classroom, it is a fun and engaging listen.
Only thing I was left wanting was a discussion on how we can mitigate or minimize the impact of those societies that are clearly working against the best interest of humanity. How can we prevent these misguided people from cultivating distress to bring about some silly vision that is entirely of their own making?
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- B. Hayes
- 08-18-19
Terrific outline of secret societies in history
Well done Professor! Learned a few new things and could have listened to another 24 lectures.
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15 people found this helpful