In the same year, he was initiated in the Memphis' rite, a Masonic spiritual path that is derived by the ancient Egyptians and in Italy is uniquely practised in Palermo.
In 1907, he was admitted to the regular Scottish Rite Masonic Lodge "Lucifero" in Florence, affiliated to the Grand Orient of Italy.
[2] Subsequently, Reghini adhered for a short period to the Martinism of Gérard Encausse and started to report the errors of the lawyer and Grand Master Sacchi about his administration of the Italian Freemasonry, also confuting his publications.
Reghini edited the journals Atanór (1924) and Ignis (1925) devoted to initiate studies, covering topics such as Pythagoreanism, yoga, Hebrew Cabalism and the Freemasonry of Alessandro Cagliostro.
[6] From the second half of the 1920s, he wrote critically about clerical fascism and the increasing fascist hostility towards non-Catholic religious views.
[7] Reghini's journals and the works of the Ur group have influenced the development of Italic-Roman neopaganism and Roman polytheistic reconstructionism.