For best experience please turn on javascript and use a modern browser!
You are using a browser that is no longer supported by Microsoft. Please upgrade your browser. The site may not present itself correctly if you continue browsing.
Situated within the Faculty of Humanities of the University of Amsterdam, the Centre for the History of Hermetic Philosophy and Related Currents (HHP) is the world’s leading institute for academic research and teaching in the field of esotericism. We are currently the only centre in the world providing a complete academic study programme in the history of esotericism, from the Bachelor to the PhD level.

Our international and interdisciplinary research group delivers cutting-edge research on esoteric currents from Mediterranean antiquity through the medieval world, the Renaissance, and into modern and contemporary times. Our students are invited to engage with ongoing research through teaching modules and tutorials in the MA programme.

About the HHP Centre

The HHP Centre was founded in 1999, and is currently well into its third decade of research and teaching in the field of esotericism. It did not emerge in a vacuum: since its inception, the centre has been part of a broader international network of scholars dedicated to establishing esotericism as an academic field of research in the Humanities. Before the HHP Centre was founded, there already existed a professorial chair dedicated to the “History of Esoteric Currents” at the École Pratique des Hautes Études in Paris, then held by Antoine Faivre. HHP became the first centre to offer a teaching programme to Bachelor and Master students. A number of other departments now offer similar modules and courses, but the HHP Centre at the University of Amsterdam remains the only centre with a complete programme.

  • Tenth anniversary

    In addition to the current staff, a number of notable scholars of esotericism have worked at the centre, including Jean-Pierre Brach (now Faivre’s successor at the Sorbonne), Kocku von Stuckrad (now at the University of Groningen), and Olav Hammer (now at the University of Southern Denmark).

    In 2009, the HHP Centre celebrated its tenth anniversary with a one-day conference in Amsterdam. Reminiscences, reflections, and impressions by the staff, students and other scholars can be found in the anniversary volume, Hermes in the Academy: Ten Years’ Study of Western Esotericism at the University of Amsterdam (ed. W.J. Hanegraaff and J. Pijnenburg; Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2009), which we are happy to offer you as a free download.

  • Twentieth anniversary

    In 2019, the HHP Centre celebrated its twentieth anniversary. In connection with this, the anniversary volume Hermes Explains: Thirty Questions about Western Esotericism was published. The volume was presented to Mrs. Drs. Rosalie Basten, the founder of the HHP Centre and mw. prof. dr. ir. K.I.J. MaexRector Magnificus of UvA at the ESSWE 7 Conference (July 2019) during the welcome reception at the Embassy of the Free Mind.

    This second anniversary volume seeks to make the modern study of esotericism known beyond specialist circles. Thirty major scholars in the field address a range of misconceptions, biases, and prejudices that are still associated with it, while showcasing the significance of esoteric currents in developing discourses on science, philosophy, religion and culture from antiquity to modern times.

What is Esotericism?

From ancient gnosis to contemporary occulture

The term “esotericism” covers a wide spectrum of currents in Mediterranean, Eurasian, and now global cultural history. As an umbrella term that intends to highlight connections and developments over a long period, from antiquity to the present day, Esotericism includes phenomena as varied as Gnosticism, Hermetism, Neoplatonism, theurgy, astrology, alchemy, natural magic, Christian Kabbalah, Rosicrucianism, Christian Theosophy and Illuminism, the currents of modern Occultism, Spiritualism, Traditionalism, the New Age movement, Neopaganism, ritual magical groups, and a host of contemporary alternative spiritualities and forms of popular “occulture.” In short, esotericism cuts through established boundaries of religion, science, art, and philosophy. As an academic field of study, esotericism is therefore a highly interdisciplinary enterprise.

  • Between, betwixt, and beyond religion and science

    One of the objectives of the academic study of esotericism is to rid it of the biases that have attached negative even pejorative connotations to all things esoteric and occult, emerging from the Age of Enlightenment’s paradigms of rationality that privilege Kantian intellectual individualism, Cartesian notions of natural sciences, empiricism, industrialization, and imperial incentives. The works of our staff have shown that much of what we now study under the rubrics of medieval and early modern esotericism and the occult sciences (alchemy, astrology, magic, and divination)—was challenged by the dominant intellectual canons and curricula in the wake of the “Scientific Revolution.” As a result, the focus had been given to esoteric currents active in the so-called West as encapsulated by the foundational works of Antoine Faivre and Wouter Hanegraaff who currently holds the chair of the department.

    The founding of the Centre for the History of Hermetic Philosophy and Related Currents, and the establishment of active scholarly networks—especially ESSWE—cemented a field under the name “Western esotericism,” generating a field-defining discourse. The success of the department and the field overall has opened the door for more historical and theoretical perspectives that are diversifying and globalising the study of Esotericism with exciting results. This has been most recently reflected in the addition of two positions for the medieval and ancient periods, including an emphasis on Islam. Organically, thus, HHP now expands to engage with esoteric and occult currents beyond the boundaries of “The West” and study esotericism and the occult sciences in terms of culturally divergent entanglements.

  • The quest for higher knowledge

    Esotericism is typically associated with special forms of revelatory knowledge. Esoteric practitioners are found searching for personal and transformative higher knowledge in the form of revelations, spiritual insights, or what some scholars refer to as gnōsis (Greek for “knowledge”). The attainment of revelatory knowledge has been associated with exalted visionary experiences, sometimes resulting in symbolic and mythical representations that have inspired provocative artistic and literary expressions. The quest for revelation can (and does!) take countless forms, from contemplative practices and intense textual study, to elaborate rituals and the sacramental ingestion of hallucinogenic substances in contemporary neoshamanic practices.

  • Secrecy, initiation, ritual

    Esotericism often involves practices of secrecy. Any history of esotericism deals in part with initiatory societies that seek to conceal their inner doctrines and rituals from the gaze of profane outsiders. Contrary to popular belief, such groups are not usually driven by a desire to form secret social bonds and engage in conspiracies. Rather, in many cases the practice of secrecy tends to be concerned with the pedagogical function of initiation and establishing reading and practice communities. Esoteric initiation rituals are aimed at inducing life-altering and transformative experiences in the practitioner and are typically connected to the quest for higher knowledge about the divine, the self, and the world.

  • The occult sciences

    Central to the study of esotericism are the occult sciences which typically include astrology, magic (natural, astral, and ceremonial), alchemy, and divination (geomancy, physiognomy, dream interpretation, etc.). To many esoteric currents the occult sciences are considered to be the application of esoteric wisdom. Hermes Trismegistus in particular has come to symbolize the intersection of the esoteric and the occult in the pursuit of self-divinization.

    Some Neoplatonic philosophers associated magic with the practice of “theurgy” and its aspiration of bringing the soul in communion with the divine. We emphasize in the department that within scientific, philosophical, and religious discourses, the occult sciences co-produce knowledge on nature (terrestrial and celestial), the divine, and the human and the application of such knowledge.

  • A unique opportunity

    Esotericism is a highly complex and intellectually challenging area of study. Scholars and students are asked to reconsider categories and narratives that are largely taken for granted in the established disciplines of the humanities. Studying the history of Esotericism leads us to question and deconstruct intellectual and religious canons by focusing on a wide range of figures, philosophies, movements and practices that occupy the contested margins of Mediterranean, Eurasian, and global culture. Plunging into the unknown depths of esoteric discourses throughout history provides a unique opportunity to gain new perspectives on our common history and culture.