Secret society/Related Articles: Difference between revisions

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These groups are often considered and talked about in the context that they are secret societies:
These groups are often considered and talked about in the context that they are secret societies:
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Revision as of 11:01, 19 March 2024

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A list of Citizendium articles, and planned articles, about Secret society.
See also changes related to Secret society, or pages that link to Secret society or to this page or whose text contains "Secret society".

Topics

Note about the following lists

By their very nature, secret societies are difficult to track and document. The following purport to be lists of secret societies. But many members of such societies would deny that they are, in fact, secret societies. Such denials might be well-founded; in that case, the Citizendium is simply mistaken to assert that an organization might count as a secret society. But in many other cases, such denials are required as part of the very nature of secret societies: not only is certain information about the organization secret, the fact that there is such a society and such secret information is itself part of the secret, and so should be denied by members.

International or non-governmental organizations

These groups are often considered and talked about in the context that they are secret societies:

Student societies

  • Anak Society (1908) at Georgia Institute of Technology.
  • Berzelius (1848) at Yale University.
  • Bishop James Madison Society (1812) at the College of William and Mary.
  • Book and Snake (1863) at Yale University.
  • Cambridge Apostles (1820) at the University of Cambridge.
  • Flat Hat Club (1750) at the College of William and Mary.
  • Order of the Acropolis at University of Georgia.
  • Phi Beta Kappa (1776) at the College of William and Mary, began as a secret society, but eliminated secrecy in 1831 and is now national.
  • Quill and Dagger (1893) at Cornell University.
  • Scroll and Key (1842) at Yale University.
  • Seven Society at the University of Virginia.
  • Skull and Bones (1832) A fraternal organization at Yale University, many members of which have been extremely influential, as in six generations of the Bush family; sometimes called a secret society.
  • Society of the Pacifica House [r]: (1824) at Brown University [e]
  • Sphinx Head Society [r]: (1890) at Cornell University [e]

Fraternal organizations

Historical secret societies

Revolutionary or underground organizations

Secret society — alleged secret societies

Either existence, or secret society status, is subject to significant doubt.

Religious