thumb|325px|Werner von Bülow's World-Rune-Clock, illustrating the correspondences between List's Armanen runes, the signs of the [[zodiac and the gods of the months]]
thumb|325px|Werner von Bülow's World-Rune-Clock, illustrating the correspondences between List's Armanen runes, the signs of the [[zodiac and the gods of the months]]
Ariosophy and Armanism are esoteric ideological systems that were largely developed by Jörg Lanz von Liebenfels and Guido von List, respectively, in Austria between 1890 and 1930. The term 'Ariosophy', which translates to wisdom of the Aryans, was invented by Lanz von Liebenfels in 1915, and during the 1920s, it became the name of his doctrine. For research on the topic, such as Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke's book The Occult Roots of Nazism, the term 'Ariosophy' is generically used to describe the Aryan/esoteric theories which constituted a subset of the 'Völkische Bewegung'. This broader use of the word is retrospective and it was not generally current among the esotericists themselves. List actually called his doctrine 'Armanism', while Lanz used the terms 'Theozoology' and 'Ario-Christianity' before the First World War.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).