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  • July 1, 1795
  • Page 30
  • HISTORY OF MASONRY.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, July 1, 1795: Page 30

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Page 30

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History Of Masonry.

jo what port yoii please , where they may _ lie ready for your own men to transport them to Jerusalem . It would be a great obligation , after all this , to allow us such a provision of corn in exchange , as may stand with j'our convenience ; for that is the commodity we islanders want most . " Solomonto testify his great satisfaction from this answer of the

, Tyrian king , and in return for his generous offers , ordered him a yearly present of 20 , 000 measures of wheat , and zo , ooo measures of fine oil for his household ; besides a like quantity of barley , wheat , wine and oil , which he engaged to give Hiram ' s masons , who were to be employed in the intended work of the temple . Hiram was to send the cedars , fir , and other woods , upon floats to Joppa , to be

delivered to whom Solomon should direct , in order to be carried to Jerusalem . He sent him also a man of his own name , a Tyrian by birth , but of Israelitish descent , who was a second Bezaleel , and honoured by his king with the title of Father : in 2 Chron . ii . 13 . he is called Hiram Abbif , the most accomplished designer and operator upon earth * ; whose abilities were not confined to building only , but " extended to afi kinds of work , whether in gold , silver , brass , or iron ; whether in linen , tapestry , or embroidery ; whether considered as an

* In 2 Chron . ii . 13 . Hiram , King of Tyre ( called there Huram ) in his letter ¦ to King Solomon , says , I have sent a cunning man , el Huram Abbi ; which is not fo be translated , like the Vulgate Greek and Latin , Huram my father ; for his de ? scription , verse 14 , refutes it ; and the words import only Huram oj my father ' s , or the Chief Master-Mason of my father Abibalus . Yet some think' tliat King Hiram might call the architect Hiram his father , as learned and wise men were wont to be called by royal patrons in old times ; thus Joseph was called abrech , -or the

Icing ' s father ; and this same Hiram the architect-is called Solomon ' s father , 2 . Chron . iv . 16 . Gnasah Thuram Ahb ' fla Mclech Shelomoh . Did Hiram his father make to King Solomon . But the difficulty is over at once by allowing the word Abbif to be the surname of Hiram the artist , called above Hiram Abbi , and here called Huram Abbif , as in the Lodge he is called Hiram Abbif , to distinguish him from King Hiram : for

this reading makes the sense plain and compfete , viz . that Hiram , King of Tyre , sent to KingSolpmon the cunning workman Hiram Abbif . He is described in two places , 1 Kings VII . 13 , 14 , 15 . and 2 Chron . ii . 13 , 14 . in the first lie is called a widmii ' s son of the tribe of Naphtali , and in the other he is ¦ called the son of a woman of the daughters of Dan ; but in both , that his father was a ¦ nan of Tyre : that is , she ' was of the daughters of the city of Dan , in the tribe of Naphtali , and is called a widow of Napbtali , as her husband was a Naphtalite ; for he is not called a Tyrian by descent , but a man of Tyre by habitation , as Obed

Edom the Levite is called a Citlite , arid the apostle Paul a man of Tarsus . But though Hjram Abbif had been a Tyrian by blood , that derogates not from his vast capacity ; for Tynans now were the best artificers , by the encouragement of King Hiram : aiid those texts testify that God had endued this Hiram Abbif with wisdom , understanding , and mechanical cunning to perform every thing that Solomon required ' ; not only in building the temple with all its costly magnificence , but also in founding , fashioning , and framing all the holy utensils thereof , and to find out every device that shall be put to him ! And the scripture assures us , that he fully maintained his character in far larger works than those of Aholiab , and Bezaleel ; for which he will be honoured in Lodges till the end of time .

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1795-07-01, Page 30” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 17 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01071795/page/30/.
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Title Category Page
MASONIC DIRECTORY, NUMBER I. Article 1
Untitled Article 9
Untitled Article 10
Untitled Article 11
LONDON : Article 11
TO OUR READERS, CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 12
PRICES OF BINDING PER VOLUME. Article 12
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, OR GENERAL AND COMPLETE LIBRARY. Article 13
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 16
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 18
TO SIR GEORGE STAUNTON, BART. Article 19
HISTORY OF MASONRY. Article 24
THE FREEMASON. Article 33
THE STAGE. Article 35
THE MURDERER OF CHARLES I. Article 37
DISSERTATIONS ON THE POLITE ARTS. No. II. Article 37
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 42
HUMOUROUS ACCOUNT OF A RELIGIOUS CEREMONY, PERFORMED AT ROME. Article 45
BASEM; OR, THE BLACKSMITH. AN ORIENTAL APOLOGUE. Article 47
FRENCH VOYAGE OF DISCOVERY. Article 53
FEMALE CHARACTERS. THE DOMESTIC AND THE GADDER. Article 55
CHARACTER OF MECOENAS, Article 57
PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS. Article 59
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 67
POETRY. Article 69
MASONIC SONG *. Article 70
ANOTHER. Article 70
TO HOPE. Article 71
PROLOGUE TO WERTER, Article 72
TO A YOUNG LADY, CURLING AND POWDERING HER HAIR. Article 73
ON THE BENEVOLENCE OF ENGLAND. Article 74
THE SONG OF CONSTANCY. Article 74
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 75
PROMOTIONS. Article 81
Untitled Article 81
Untitled Article 81
BANKRUPTS. Article 82
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

History Of Masonry.

jo what port yoii please , where they may _ lie ready for your own men to transport them to Jerusalem . It would be a great obligation , after all this , to allow us such a provision of corn in exchange , as may stand with j'our convenience ; for that is the commodity we islanders want most . " Solomonto testify his great satisfaction from this answer of the

, Tyrian king , and in return for his generous offers , ordered him a yearly present of 20 , 000 measures of wheat , and zo , ooo measures of fine oil for his household ; besides a like quantity of barley , wheat , wine and oil , which he engaged to give Hiram ' s masons , who were to be employed in the intended work of the temple . Hiram was to send the cedars , fir , and other woods , upon floats to Joppa , to be

delivered to whom Solomon should direct , in order to be carried to Jerusalem . He sent him also a man of his own name , a Tyrian by birth , but of Israelitish descent , who was a second Bezaleel , and honoured by his king with the title of Father : in 2 Chron . ii . 13 . he is called Hiram Abbif , the most accomplished designer and operator upon earth * ; whose abilities were not confined to building only , but " extended to afi kinds of work , whether in gold , silver , brass , or iron ; whether in linen , tapestry , or embroidery ; whether considered as an

* In 2 Chron . ii . 13 . Hiram , King of Tyre ( called there Huram ) in his letter ¦ to King Solomon , says , I have sent a cunning man , el Huram Abbi ; which is not fo be translated , like the Vulgate Greek and Latin , Huram my father ; for his de ? scription , verse 14 , refutes it ; and the words import only Huram oj my father ' s , or the Chief Master-Mason of my father Abibalus . Yet some think' tliat King Hiram might call the architect Hiram his father , as learned and wise men were wont to be called by royal patrons in old times ; thus Joseph was called abrech , -or the

Icing ' s father ; and this same Hiram the architect-is called Solomon ' s father , 2 . Chron . iv . 16 . Gnasah Thuram Ahb ' fla Mclech Shelomoh . Did Hiram his father make to King Solomon . But the difficulty is over at once by allowing the word Abbif to be the surname of Hiram the artist , called above Hiram Abbi , and here called Huram Abbif , as in the Lodge he is called Hiram Abbif , to distinguish him from King Hiram : for

this reading makes the sense plain and compfete , viz . that Hiram , King of Tyre , sent to KingSolpmon the cunning workman Hiram Abbif . He is described in two places , 1 Kings VII . 13 , 14 , 15 . and 2 Chron . ii . 13 , 14 . in the first lie is called a widmii ' s son of the tribe of Naphtali , and in the other he is ¦ called the son of a woman of the daughters of Dan ; but in both , that his father was a ¦ nan of Tyre : that is , she ' was of the daughters of the city of Dan , in the tribe of Naphtali , and is called a widow of Napbtali , as her husband was a Naphtalite ; for he is not called a Tyrian by descent , but a man of Tyre by habitation , as Obed

Edom the Levite is called a Citlite , arid the apostle Paul a man of Tarsus . But though Hjram Abbif had been a Tyrian by blood , that derogates not from his vast capacity ; for Tynans now were the best artificers , by the encouragement of King Hiram : aiid those texts testify that God had endued this Hiram Abbif with wisdom , understanding , and mechanical cunning to perform every thing that Solomon required ' ; not only in building the temple with all its costly magnificence , but also in founding , fashioning , and framing all the holy utensils thereof , and to find out every device that shall be put to him ! And the scripture assures us , that he fully maintained his character in far larger works than those of Aholiab , and Bezaleel ; for which he will be honoured in Lodges till the end of time .

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