Legends of Ancient Freemasonry
Freemasonry draws much
imagery from the building of King Solomons Temple (about 945 BC) by masons from
the Phoenician city of Tyre. Hiram Abiff was the Grand Master of the
masons who built King Solomons Temple.
Much of the symbolism of Freemasonry deals with Hiram Abiff and his
subsequent murder.
Legend also informs us that
Athelstan, having subjugated most of the minor kingdoms of England,
gathered together many skilled masons and established York Rite Masonry in 926
AD by granting them a Royal Charter. The
Charter enabled the stonemasons to meet in general assembly once a year. This seems to have been a catalyst for the
construction of many abbeys, castles and fortresses.
There
is evidence that Operative Masonic guilds existed in Scotland
as early as 1057 and possibly in England from 1220 when we know the
Masons Livery Company was in existence. Those guilds, associations or
Compagnonnage as they were known in France
and mainland Europe, were created to produce
sufficient masons of all qualities to satisfy the aspirations of Kings and the
Church in their respective building programs.
In
days where travel and communication for all but King and Church was highly
restricted, the guilds are believed to have developed their own methods of
introduction and secret modes of recognition when working on various projects
around the country. These were essential in order to distinguish a skilled
master from the aspiring apprentice. This was important because they were no
written credentials in those days because only top Master Masons could read,
let alone write letters of introduction on expensive parchment.
The
Knights Templar, an enigmatic and powerful military Order of fighting monks set
up by Hugues de Payens in 1118. Their illustrious history has been the subject
of numerous fascinating books and their effect upon the course of world
history, religion and commerce is much greater than generally recognised. They
were also responsible for the erection of many churches and the assembly of
numerous large estates and would themselves have employed a great many stone
masons.
Although
their effect upon Freemasonry is very uncertain, they had amassed considerable
wealth and influence in London, Scotland and throughout the United Kingdom
that cannot be overlooked. It is possible that the Knights Templars might have
shared some of their knowledge and rituals with their more senior stone masons
with whom they employed who later incorporated them into their own traditions.
The
Knights Templars ostensible purpose was the protection of pilgrims on their
journey from the coastal port of Jaffra to Jerusalem.
Initially however, there were too few of them to be an effective escort. In any
event, for the first nine years of their existence, they were far too busy
purposefully digging under the ruins of King Solomons Temple to be offering any
support to Pilgrims. It seems clear that during their excavations they
discovered something of immense spiritual or material value for they swiftly
became very rich and powerful and enjoyed this position for nearly two hundred
years until the fall of the Holy Lands. Evidence of Templar excavations was
found by Lieutenant Warren, Royal Engineers in 1867.
The
Knights established the first system of banking. Travel was very dangerous and travellers
often carried all of their worldly possessions with them when they
travelled. The Knights stored valuable
possessions and money for wealthy travellers and issued papers with coded
messages that could be read only by other Knights (the equivalent of modern-day
travellers checks).
This practice expanded their wealth and power. Many rulers feared the power of the Knights.
The
Knights Templars were effectively extinguished on Friday, October 13, 1307 by King Philippe of France who, broke at
the time, stole their lands and possessions and with collusion from the Pope,
instructed the Inquisition to torture any Templars he managed to round up to
gain evidence to legitimise his grand theft. Many of the fit and able Knights
(and their entourage) and most of their wealth managed to escape. It is from
their exodus from France and
other parts of Europe that much of Masonic
folklore stems.
Many Knights possibly
settled in the comparative backwaters of Scotland, a land ruled by the
excommunicated Robert The Bruce and therefore
considered comparatively safe, being largely beyond the reach of the Pope and
the Inquisition. No doubt they brought with them their treasures, relics,
knowledge and ceremonies as depicted on the ground floor South West window
stone carving at Roslin Chapel. Some knights are believed to have travelled
much further than the known lands of the times and even managed to find America.
Certain corn carvings at Roslin Chapel appear to confirm this. It is also widely believed that some of the
Knights escaped into Switzerland
and established the banking system that still thrives in Switzerland.
No
discussion on Masonic history would be truly complete without a reference to
Rosslyn Chapel, situated 5 miles south of Edinburgh
and built in 1446 by Sir William St. Clair whose family had deep Templar
ancestry and alleged family ties back to Hugues de Payens. Rosslyn Chapel took
40 years to build and is highly embellished with Templar, Enochian and possibly
some Masonic imagery. Given that it was constructed in an age when books could
be censored or burned, it seems that William St Clair was intent on leaving
permanent and peculiar encoded messages in the fabric of the chapel for
posterity.
The
chapel contains the astounding “Apprentice Pillar” and numerous other
intriguing stone carvings – one, on an external window even depicts some form
of initiation. Curiously, the official Rosslyn Chapel guidebook states that the
William St Clair, brother of Edward, was granted the Charters of 1630 from the
Masons of Scotland, recognising that the position of Grand Master Mason of
Scotland had been hereditary in the St Clair family since it was granted by
James II in 1441, the original charter having been destroyed in a fire. Whilst
the relevance of Roslin Chapel within Freemasonry is highly controversial, its
architectural features and carvings are outstanding and well worth a visit.
The
Scottish Rite was established by Chevalier Andrew
Ramsay (Ramsey’s Oration of 1737) and other exiled Stuart Scots in France
who were plotting the restoration of James II.
Facts
of Freemasonry
It
is acknowledged that the Regius Manuscript held in the British Museum
is the oldest genuine record of Masonic relevance and was written about 1390.
Its author was probably a priest and this manuscript takes the form of an
historical and instructional poem. Interestingly, the phrase “So Mote it be” is
first quoted from this text. Next, it is important to consider the Cooke
Manuscript (also in the British
Museum) written by a
Speculative mason in 1450. This is an important document because many current
Masonic usages have obviously borrowed heavily from its content, which includes
reference to the seven Liberal Arts and Sciences and the building of Solomons
Temple. There are approximately 100 manuscripts, collectively known as the Old
Charges, grouped together in four families held by various museums worldwide.
Next,
we know that the London Company of Freemasons were granted Arms in 1473 and
their coat included three castles and compasses and were incorporated within
Metropolitan Grand Lodge of London’s arms upon inauguration in 2003.
In
1583, a William Schaw was appointed by King James VI (later James I of England) as
Master of the Work and Warden General. In 1598 he issued the first of the now
famous Schaw Statutes which set out the duties its members owed to their Lodge.
It also imposed penalties for unsatisfactory work and prohibited work with
unqualified masons. Such was the profound significance of these statutes that
hey are found transcribed into the Minute book of Aitcheson Haven lodge, an
ordinary operative Scottish lodge which has minutes going back to January 9, 1599.
More
importantly for Freemasons today, Schaw drew up a second Statute in 1599. The
importance of this document lies in the fact that it makes the first veiled
reference to the existence of esoteric knowledge within the craft of stone
masonry. It also reveals that The Mother Lodge of Scotland, Lodge Kilwinning No. 0
existed at that time. His regulations required all lodges to keep written
records, meet at specific times and test members in the Art of Memory. As a consequence he is regarded by some as
the founder of modern Freemasonry as we know it today. On the right is a photo
of the ruins of the Chapter House, the site of Kilwinnings first Lodge
meetings.
The
earliest known record of a Masonic initiation anywhere is that of John Boswell,
Laird of Auchenleck, who was initiated in the Lodge of Edinburgh according to
the lodge minutes of June 8, 1600. That lodge was Operative and Boswell appears
to be an example of one of the earliest Speculative initiations and adds weight
to a case for the Transition Theory of Freemasonry, at least in Scotland. The
earliest records of an initiation in England include Sir Robert Moray in
1641 and Elias Ashmole in 1646. Abroad, the first native-born American to be
made a Mason was probably Jonathan Belcher, in 1704, who was then the Governor
of Massachusetts.
Ashmole
was a renowned author and scholar and knew contemporary Great Thinkers of the
day including Robert Boyle, Sir Robert Moray, Christopher Wren, Isaac Newton
and Dr John Wilkins – all early members of the Royal Society, which began its
life as the Invisible College, an organization at one time led by Francis
Bacon, before securing a Royal Charter from Charles II in 1662. It is
understood the Invisible College often met in the early years in the Compton
Room at Canonbury Tower in North London,
a room embellished with wood panel carvings of Masonic significance
commissioned by Bacon like the one below.
One can imagine the level of secrecy that must have surrounded the Invisible College in its early days and in the notoriously treacherous years before and after the Reformation – the consequences of taking the wrong sides or inviting criticism of any kind in those days was often fatal and is commented on frequently enough by Pepys in his famous diary. To get a flavour of the times in mid-Seventeenth Century England, bear in mind that slavery was still universal and the gunpowder plot was in recent memory. Galileo was in deep trouble with the Catholic Church by insisting that the earth revolved around the sun, Bacon’s works were banned by Rome and The Inquisition and the Courts, at least in Scotland, were still burning witches and heretics. These were still times of fear, state control and comparative intolerance. Personal safety therefore probably demanded that discussion of anything with an esoteric, moral or scientific flavour take place underground.
Despite
the risks, Freemasonry was spreading quickly. Dr Robert plot, not a freemason
(indeed, he was somewhat critical), but
a secretary of the Royal Society wrote in his book “The Natural History of
Staffordshire” in 1686, some forty years before Premier Grand Lodge was formed,
that Freemasonry was “spread more or less all over the Nation and to persons of
the most eminent quality …”.
So why
would Thinkers and educated classes quietly develop or promote the concept of
Freemasonry? Might it be possible that those opposed to intellectual and
political suppression went underground and retained their anonymity and safety
by clothing themselves with the appearance of an operative organization
afforded by an early Masonic Lodge structure?
Given
that non stone-masons (Speculatives) were clearly being initiated from this
time in England,
some historians believe that Freemasonry was in transition at this point from
pure Operative Masonry to Non-Operative or Speculative Freemasonry. Equally, it
could be argued that around this time, England copied the Scottish Masonic
structure and set up an entirely Speculative form of Freemasonry which merely
bore allegorical likeness to much earlier Scottish Operative lodges. This
opinion has value when one considers that a disproportionate number of early
Premier Grand Masters were Scottish and that the Constitutions were written by
a Scotsman, Anderson.
Little
is known of Masonic activity for seventy years after Ashmole’s initiation in
1646 except that general London Club life became very popular. In 1717, four
London lodges (the Apple Tree Tavern in Charles Street, the Goose &
Gridiron Ale-house in St. Pauls Churchyard (pictured opposite), Crown Ale House
near Drury Street and the Rummer & Grapes Tavern in Channel Row,
Westminster) formed The Premier Grand Lodge of England. The date was St. John the Baptists
Day, June 24, 1717. The Inaugural Festive Board was held at the Goose and
Gridiron, St Pauls.
Anthony
Sayer presided over this feast as Grand Master and Premier Grand Lodge took on
the Coat of Arms first granted to the London Company of Freemasons in 1473.
Interestingly, those founding lodges had a very small membership of 15
Freemasons each except for “Rummer & Grapes which had 70 members. In 1723
the Constitutions were written by Anderson whose
father was Past Master of a lodge in Aberdeen.
Clearly, our Scottish brethren had a lot to contribute towards the initial
development of English Freemasonry.
Interestingly,
it has been suggested that Premier Grand Lodge only came about as a result of
the threat by the Scottish Jacobite revolt in 1715. Anti-Scottish sentiment in
those days might have prompted nervous London Freemasons to disassociate
themselves from their Scottish roots, hide their history and strategically
create a governing body allied to the Hanoverian Crown. If so, little wonder
that Freemasonry now prohibits discussion of religion and politics at meetings!
In
1730, Masonic ritual having been learned parrot-fashion up until then was
widely published for the first time in Prichard’s
exposure entitled Masonry Dissected. Ritual prior to that point followed a
two-degree system and took the form of a combination of catechisms, some
simplified symbolism and the Old Charges (see Jones and Hamer's The Early
Masonic Catechisms edited by Henry Carr). Some historians believe that this two-tier
degree system was expanded when Desaguliers (Grand Master in 1719) wrote the
Third Degree and grew again when Laurence Dermott introduced the Fourth (Royal
Arch) Degree in 1752.
The
popularity of Freemasonry grew with great speed throughout the UK and
around the world from 1717 following in the wake of British settlers, merchants
and the military. In 1731 the first American Grand Lodge obtained its
Constitution, The Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania, making it the first Grand Lodge
in the United States of
America. Over the next 100 years,
Freemasonry attracted many leading lights forming the cream of the intellectual
and scientific establishment including Sir Robert Walpole, Robert Burns,
Mozart, Darwin, Frederick the Great and from the USA, Franklin, and Washington.
However, initial successes in the UK
were followed by a bad patch. This was caused by Premier Grand Lodge making
drastic changes to the ritual and passwords and the creation of a third degree
out of the previous two-degree ritual system. The reason for this change is
unclear. One explanation might be Premier Grand Lodge’s exasperation with
increasing requests for alms from poor and distressed immigrant freemasons arriving
in increasing numbers from Ireland
and Scotland
prompted by the Industrial Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars. Fraudulent
claims exploiting Masonic charity from information gleaned from the recent
media “exposures” probably also upset them. Either way, the changes in the
ritual effectively barred most Scottish and Irish Freemasons because they no
longer had the right passwords; however, what they saved in misappropriated
charity was lost in the goodwill of the established membership. Some traditionalists were so upset, they
broke away and set up splinter groups.
The
minor splinter groups included the “Grand Lodge of All England held at York”. They claimed roots
from the Saxon King Edwin who supposedly presided over masons meeting at York. Other freemasons
simply never recognised Premier Grand Lodge in the first place and remained on
their own.
The
next and much more significant group broke away in 1751 and was called The
Grand Lodge of England, nicknamed The Ancients, Those whom they left behind in
The Premier Grand Lodge of England
were nicknamed The “Moderns”. The break-away group called themselves “Ancients”
because they felt they were adhering more faithfully to the old ritual,
passwords and customs. They also welcomed and heard numerous charitable
petitions from Scottish and Irish Freemasons which contrasts markedly with
Premier Grand Lodge priorities.
The
Ancients met initially in the Turks Head Tavern, (in what is now Gerrard Street), Soho. Their Constitutions, predominantly written by their
Grand Secretary, Laurence Dermott, in 1756 were entitled Ahiman Rezon and it is
commonly believed that under his influential regime, the ritual was augmented
to include new esoteric texts now delivered by the three Principals. In 1775,
Freemasons Hall in London
was first built by Thomas Sandby. Freemasons Hall as we know it today was built
on the same, but enlarged site in 1932 and is dedicated to the Glorious Dead
who fought in the Great War.
From this time onwards,
new degrees and rituals proliferated which fuelled fierce argument between the
“Ancients” and the “Moderns”. Indeed,
French Freemason, JM Ragon estimated that at one point, there were over 1400
separate Masonic degrees complete with additional invented or regionalised
symbolism. Consequently, sixty years of bitterness followed after the Ancient
and Modern schism. An example of dispute between these two Grand lodges would
be that the Ancients worked a four-degree system whilst the Moderns only
recognised a three Degree system. To the irritation of the Moderns, they often
found their members sympathetic to the fourth or Royal Arch Degree, to the
point where it became regarded as an extension to the Third Degree.
Eventually
a compromise was negotiated and on St. John the Evangelists Day, December 27,
1813, United Grand Lodge of England was formed, largely though the combined
efforts of the Earl of Moira presiding over the Duke of Sussex (Moderns Grand
Master) and the Duke of Kent (Ancients Grand Master). The unification of these
two bodies had enormous consequences for the ritual which had to be hurriedly
reconciled, mainly in favour of the “Ancients”. Most of the regulations and
ritual determined then still apply to this day, with the exception that in
1832, the Triple Tau and new banners were introduced
into the Royal Arch degree as the symbols of that order.
More recently of course, certain colourful parts of Craft texts have been toned down to satisfy the politically correct lobby.
Further modernisation was undertaken in 2003 with the Inauguration of the Metropolitan Grand Lodge of London. This enabled some 50,000 London Freemasons to have a separate identity from United Grand Lodge of England and enabled UGLE to concentrate on its worldwide affairs and duties.
Further modernisation was undertaken in 2003 with the Inauguration of the Metropolitan Grand Lodge of London. This enabled some 50,000 London Freemasons to have a separate identity from United Grand Lodge of England and enabled UGLE to concentrate on its worldwide affairs and duties.
There is another aspect of the history of Freemasonry that should not be completely overlooked: The objection to Freemasonry by the Catholic Church.
Freemasonry has been banned by the Catholic Church several times beginning in 1738 by the Papal Bull issued by Pope Clement 12th; this was followed by another Bull in 1751 and again in 1884. Finally these Bulls were rescinded in 1974 and the Vatican has since adopted a more tolerant stance towards Freemasonry.
Freemasonry has been banned by the Catholic Church several times beginning in 1738 by the Papal Bull issued by Pope Clement 12th; this was followed by another Bull in 1751 and again in 1884. Finally these Bulls were rescinded in 1974 and the Vatican has since adopted a more tolerant stance towards Freemasonry.
The reasons the Vatican gave for their objections were varied. However, according to Matthew Scanlan (Freemasonry Today issue 25, 2003), the reason for the first Papal Bull was not based on any ideological objection to Freemasonry as is often supposed. Indeed in the wake of the 1738 Bull, the Popes brother, Cardinal Corsini wrote stressing that Freemasonry in England was merely an innocent amusement.
The main objection, according to Corsini, was that a lodge in Florence founded by Freemason Baron Von Stosch had become corrupt. Stosch, it should be noted, was employed by the Foreign Office in London and was possibly using Freemasonry as a cover to spy on the exiled Stuart cause in Rome, of whom Pope Clement was sympathetic. The ensuing ban caused widespread misunderstanding for centuries with the assumption being that it was based purely on theological grounds.
Indeed, it is recorded that such was the ill feeling towards Freemasons in some Catholic countries that in Portugal in 1810, for example, the Duke of Wellington had to curtail his officers’ public Masonic activities while stationed there for fear of public unrest (Yasha Beresiner MQ Magazine April 2004). In more recent times most dictatorships (including those of Hitler, Franco and Mussolini) and certain zealous politicians have shown aggression towards bodies of men, including Freemasons, who might frustrate their fanatical plans by upholding freedom of thought, law and order and tolerance for ones neighbour.
In modern times, it is therefore somewhat gratifying that the European Union has now drafted legislation that coincides with and to a degree protects Masonic principles, namely Articles 9 (right to freedom of thought), 10 (freedom of expression) and 11 (freedom of assembly and association) of the European Convention which are maintained by the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg.
Freemasonry has had significant influence in the United States. American Freemasons include nine signers of the Declaration of Independence, sixteen US Presidents, and numerous Supreme Court Justices, congressmen, inventors and business entrepreneurs. Symbols of Freemasonry exist on US currency and are found throughout US architecture.
Freemasonry is not a religion nor is it a cult, but is the most ancient fraternity in the world. If you have an interest in joining the brotherhood of Masonry, then ask a Freemason. The goal of Masonry is to take good men and make them better.
Source: Official freemason page
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