Jonathan Bowden

Activist

Birthday April 12, 1962

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace Kent, England

DEATH DATE 2012, Berkshire, England (50 years old)

#39438 Most Popular

1962

Jonathan David Anthony Bowden (12 April 1962 – 29 March 2012) was an English far-right activist.

Initially a Conservative, he later became involved in far-right organisations such as the British National Party.

Bowden has been described as a "cult Internet figure" in the far-right, even after his death.

Bowden was born in Kent, England, and attended Presentation College in Reading, Berkshire.

His mother suffered from severe mental illness, and died when Bowden was 16 years old.

1984

In 1984, he completed one year of a Bachelor of Arts history degree course at Birkbeck College, London University, as a mature student, but left without graduating.

1988

He subsequently enrolled at Wolfson College, Cambridge University, in autumn 1988, but left after a few months.

He became a personal friend of Bill Hopkins during this time.

Bowden was otherwise largely self-educated.

Bowden began his political career as a member of the Conservative Party in the Bethnal Green and Stepney constituency.

1990

In 1990, he joined the Conservative Monday Club, and the following year made an unsuccessful bid to be elected onto its Executive Council.

1991

In 1991, he was appointed co-chairman with Stuart Millson of the club's media committee, and was also active in the Western Goals Institute.

1992

In 1992, Bowden was expelled from the Monday Club.

Bowden and Stuart Millson co-founded the Revolutionary Conservative Caucus in November 1992 with the aim of introducing "abstract thought into the nether reaches of the Conservative and Unionist party".

The group published a quarterly journal entitled The Revolutionary Conservative Review.

1993

In 1993, Bowden published the book Right through the European Books Society.

He was also reported to be a prominent figure in the creative milieu responsible for the emergence of Right Now! magazine.

Bowden then joined the Freedom Party, for which he was treasurer for a short time, and subsequently was a member of the Bloomsbury Forum, in company with Adrian Davies.

1994

By the end of 1994, Millson and Bowden parted company and the group dissolved.

2003

In 2003, Bowden joined the British National Party (BNP).

He was appointed Cultural Officer, a position its leader Nick Griffin created to give Bowden officer status within the organisation.

2005

It was launched on 16 January 2005 at a meeting in central London.

In March 2005, the group described itself on its Yahoo! Groups page as follows: "We are opposed to liberalism, democracy and egalitarianism and fight to restore the eternal values and principles that have become submerged beneath the corrosive tsunami of the modern world.

In June 2005, New Right announced that it would publish New Imperium, a quarterly magazine it described as an "intellectual journal".

Bowden was the organisation's press officer.

2007

In July 2007, Bowden resigned and left the BNP.

2010

Although he gave speeches at local BNP organised meetings, he never re-joined the party and cut all ties after the May 2010 general election.

Many of his speeches were recorded and have been transcribed.

Topics of his lectures included philosophers, politicians,and historical literary figures who were prominent in the far-right.

2011

In late 2011 and early 2012, Bowden made 14 appearances on Richard B. Spencer's Vanguard podcast.

The New Right Committee, or simply "New Right", was a United Kingdom-based pan-European nationalist, far-right think tank founded by Troy Southgate and Bowden.

The name was a reference to the French Nouvelle Droite and the group was otherwise unrelated to the wider British and American usage of the term "New Right".

2012

(archive accessed 27 April 2012)

In 2012, Bowden died of heart failure at his home in Berkshire at the age of 49, shortly after being released from the psychiatric ward of a hospital, where he was admitted after suffering a mental breakdown.

Bowden believed that some hierarchies are good for society, that "liberalism is moral syphilis" and that native Europeans are justified in asserting their cultural, ethnic, psychological and spiritual hegemony over Europe.

Bowden espoused pagan religious beliefs.