D&D General What’s the Hellfire Club?

Morrus

Well, that was fun
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I know we all know it’s the name of the D&D group on Stranger Things, and the new D&D starter set, but I thought it would be fun to take a look at the origin of the real-world Hellfire Club!


The Hellfire Club started by the Duke of Wharton in the 18th Century in London. Apparently the 4th Earl of Sandwich (yes, the guy who invented the sandwich) was a member. Unusually, it was a mixed club (not men only, as most private clubs were at the time). Members were usually high society and interested in ‘taboo’ activities.

The president of the club was said to be the Devil. The members were not devil worshippers, though. It was more tongue-in-cheek and they referred to themselves as devils.

Over the years the name actually referred to several clubs. The most notorious of these was the club known at the time as the Order of the Friars of St Francis of Wycombe and run by Francis Dashwood in the 1750s--it became known as the Hellfire Club later. The motto of that club was Fais ce que tu voudras (Do what thou wilt).

At one point meetings were held in the Hellfire Caves, near High Wycombe. Those caves still exist:

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The name is also used to refer to Brooke’s, a 'gentleman's' club founded in London in March 1764 and which exists to this day.
 

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I had no idea the name had real-world origins. I always thought it was an X-Men thing. At least now I know why Stranger Things never had any copyright issues with the name.

Speaking of Marvel Comics and the X-Men, here is their Hellfire Club.

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I had no idea the name had real-world origins. I always thought it was an X-Men thing. At least now I know why Stranger Things never had any copyright issues with the name.

Speaking of Marvel Comics and the X-Men, here is their Hellfire Club.

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The real world origin is the reason the X-Men version all dressed in faux 18th century costume (with bulging codpieces).

The original club had the stated aim to satirize and mock the rigid moral codes of 18th-century British society - they were hedonist and pornographers who existed to shock London society.
 



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