Skip to main content
Museum of Freemasonry

Masonic Periodicals Online

  • Explore
  • Advanced Search
  • Home
  • Explore
  • The Freemason
  • March 23, 1872
  • Page 1
  • FREEMASONRY AND ISRAELITISH;
Current:

The Freemason, March 23, 1872: Page 1

  • Back to The Freemason, March 23, 1872
  • Print image
  • Articles/Ads
    Article TABLE OF CONTENTS. Page 1 of 1
    Article FREEMASONRY AND ISRAELITISH; Page 1 of 2
    Article FREEMASONRY AND ISRAELITISH; Page 1 of 2
    Article FREEMASONRY AND ISRAELITISH; Page 1 of 2 →
Page 1

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Table Of Contents.

TABLE OF CONTENTS .

Freemasonry and Israelitism 179 General Grand Conclave of Knights of the Red Cross of Constantine 181 Presentation of Testimonial to Bro . J . Flynn , P . M . P . Z . 241 ; , Dublin 181

CORRESPONDENCE : Aids toStudy ,. 1 S 2 The Ancient and Accepted Rite 18 s Masonic Tidings—British , Colonial and Foreign j 8-j

Festival of Royal Masonic Institution for Boys 184 CRAFT MASONRY : — Metropolitan 186 Provincial ; 186 Instruction 187

RED CROSS OF CONSTANTINE : — Metropolitan 187 ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED . RITE : — Gibraltar . 171 Consecration of the Birchall Loclsre of "Mark Masters ,

No . 143 , at Preston 18 c , Consecration of a Royal Arch Chapter at Watford ... 189 POETRY : — Brotherley Love , Relief , and Truth 18 9 Advertisements 177 , 178 , 190 , 191 , 192

Freemasonry And Israelitish;

FREEMASONRY AND ISRAELITISH ;

AN EPITOME OF BRO . CARPENTER ' ARTICLES ON THIS SUBJECT . BY "VV . E . N „ No . 7 C 6 . CConlimiedfrom Page 149 . J

No . VIL , July 8 th , 1 S 71— On the lirst deportation ofthe ten tribes by Tiglath Pileser , B . C . 739 , the people of Gilead , on the east of Jordan , were carried into Ashur , Halah , Habor , and Gozan .

The second deportation was by Shalmenezer , but his name does not appear in the biblical account of the siege of Samaria . Sir J . Newton , Major llennel , and other authorities consider that Halah

and Habor are the present Georgia and Circassia , east of the Black Sea , and Herodotus says the people of that country practised circumcision . The country of Gozan is said to be iu Upper

Media . Philo says the Jews were very numerous in thc East , under the Persians , and Josephus states that multitudes of the descendants of the ten tribes were in his time beyond the Euphrates .

In Isaiah mention is made of Sargon , King of Assyria . His existence was doubted until M , Botta discovered in 1845 , on the walls of a palace at Khorsabad , about ten miles from the site of

Nineveh , various tablets •and in the ruins , clay cylinders , on which are recorded Sargon ' s exp loits in Samaria . One of these inscriptions , evidently by Sargon himself , says " I besieged

and took Samaria and carried away 27 , 280 persons who dwelt in it . " . He subsequently took Ashdod , and thus had command of tlie maritime route to Egypt . Sargon , who is stated to have

sent into Samaria colonists from Babylon , Cutliah and Sepharvaim , died B . C . 7 ° 4 > and was succeeded by Sennacherib , who took all the fenced cities of Judah , in Hezekiah ' s time , but by thc

miraculous destruction of his army , was driven back to Nineveh . As regards the captive tribes between the Casp ian and Euxine , it was not theDivine will that they

should rest and settle down in the land of their captivity . They were to " wander from sea to sea . " They were to " run to and fro , " and to

be " as chaff before the wind , " and " as smoke out of the chimney . " They accordingly appear to have migrated to China , India , and other

Freemasonry And Israelitish;

countries , and even to North America . Customs and traditions seem to identify these people in these countries . Some of the people , who were sent to Media , returned to Judea , with Judah and

Benjamin , under Zerubbabcl ancl Ezra . The bulk of the Israelites remained together , but made their way westward along the north shore of the Black Sea , until they reached tho

Danube , Ibis is not a mere assumption ; as the prophecies of Jeremiah p lainly point northwards and westwards , as the direction of Israel ' s wanderings . ( See Jeremiah iii . 12 , xvi . 14 15

xxxi . 9 10 . ) All these texts agree with the position ancl wanderings of the captive tribes . The migration and settlements of a people may be traced by the monuments they leave behind

them , and the customs they carry with them . The Beni-Israel scattered over the country near Bombay profess to belong to the tribe of Reuben . Allatius considers that the inhabitants of Iberia

who practised circumcision , were of Israelitish descent . In the supposed track of Israel ' s migration are found monuments ( places of sepulture ) of Israelitish origin . The country north of

the region occupied by the Israelites , ancl now forming part of Russia , consists of vast plains , capable , when cultivated , of supporting multitudes . Dr . J . Clarke gives a description of the tumuli or

burying places near the sea of Azov . The Russian Archaeological Society has found in this region many Israelitish relics , such as epitaphs from tombs , dated " from the year of our exile , " no

doubt meaning the Assyrian captivity . Dr . Clarke describes the remains of a very large fortress , and the tumuli found in the vicinity . One was opened , ancl two chambers , constructed

in masonry , were discovered . In them was found a golden serpent with two heads , studded with rubies and other gems . Similar tombs are found near the Bosphorus . The Beni-Israel of

India have in their •secret chamber a silver serpent , before which they burn incense . The ten tribes were carried away from Canaan , before Iiezekiah destroyed Moses' brazen serpent , because " the Children of Israel burnt incense to

it . ' ( II . Kings , XVIH . 4 . ) The names of rivers along the shores of thc Euxine are of Israelitish origin , in memory of the Jordan * thus we have the Don , the Danez ,

the Danube , the Dnepler , the Dniester , Sec . No . V III . J uly 15 th , 1871 . —Israel pushing north and west , colonized lvoumania , Hungary , Poland , ancl Bohemia . Are the Getos found by Darius , B . C .

507 , or 215 years after the deportation of Israel by the Assyrians , identical with the Israelites ? As an evidence of this identity , we learn from Herodotus that these Getae believed in an immortal life , and

one supreme God . They deplored the loss of their sacred books , left to them , as they alleged , by Zamoxis ( Moses ) . We learn from Herodotus that the Getie were first found in Asia , east of

the Araxes , in the seventh ancl eighth centuries , B . C . Diodorus gives the same account of them ancl says that increasing in numbers , ancl extending their boundaries , they became a great nation ,

and subdued many people between the Caspian , and Lake Maeotis , and migrated westward . Strabo , Pliny , and Ptolemy , all speak of them , but

know nothing of their ori g in . Herodotus states that the Getae are sometimes called Scythians , who declared that their first king lived about 1000 years

Freemasonry And Israelitish;

before Darius ( 507 B . C . ) . This carries us back to the time of Moses , who in Dcut . xxxiii . 5 , is called " King in Jeshurun . " The authors above referred to , know very little about the Getaj , but

they all concur in finding them about the Araxes between the Caspian ancl Euxine , soon after the time when Israel was carried there ; and they describe them as afterwards becoming numerous

and pushing westward , as the ten tribes did . As regards the internal evidence ofthe identity of the Anglo-Saxon branch of the Getae , with the Israelites , there are but few remains of literature .

The oldest Anglo-Saxon composition is the Voluspa , a poem including a mixture of fact and fable , blending tradition of the creation with some traditions of Israel's history , the incursions

of the Huns from the north , and the ravages of the Romans . The English language is a mixture of many languages , ancient and modern , but the

heart of the language is Anglo-Saxon . Sharon Turner has found 247 Saxon words whicli are derived from the Hebrew or Arabic . The Saxon

names of persons are given after the Hebrew fashion , and all have some striking signification , The Saxons , or Goths , in their invasions , destroyed the ancient government ancl political

system of the Romans , but introduced systems which were superior . In Britain these efforts were most beneficial . The Saxon institutions insured the liberty of the people—they chose ten

representatives for tythings , or parishes , ten of whicli formed a " hundred . " By the "Mosaic institution the people were p laced under rulers of thousands , of

hundreds , of fifties , ancl of tens . The Saxon " county , " corresponded to the tribe in Israel . The Saxons also had the Israelitish division of the

da )* , whereas the other ancient eastern nations reckoned their day as we do ours now . The Saxons , in common with the Israelites , had their great festivals . Easter corresponding to the

Passover , Whitsuntide corresponding to Pentecost . The third was the Wittenageonot , or general gathering of all the males . So in Israel , all the males were to present themselves to the Lord three times

a year . The priesthood among the Saxons was confined to certain families , and descended from father to son , as in Israel , and the Saxon priests were supported by tythes or tenths , with the possession of certain lands .

No . IX , July 22 , 1871 . ' —The two proceeding papers refer to such general external and internal evidence as will identif y the ancient Geto , and their descendants , the Goths ,

Saxons , and Germans , with the Israelites . The evidence is furnished by the similarity of customs and institutions ; much weight is attached to the way marks of Israel ' s migration westward ; to be

found on the shores of the Black Sea and about the Danube . Two questions now arise—If the Getae are the ten tribes , how did the latter lose their nam * ¦ * , and why were they called the Getae ?

They most likely called themselves Get-e for some sufficient reason . In Hebrew , get means e wine press in which the grapes are trodden . Now in various texts in Isaiah , Hosea , auel Jeremiah ,

Israel is said to be "trodden as in a wine press . The people in the time of their distress and wandering may , iii penitence , have called themselves

" the down-troclclen ones . " Diodorus speaks of a Scythian people in the region of the Caucasus as the Massagetcc . Here we have Getae again ;

“The Freemason: 1872-03-23, Page 1” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 1 April 2023, masonicperiodicals.org/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_23031872/page/1/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
TABLE OF CONTENTS. Article 1
FREEMASONRY AND ISRAELITISH; Article 1
CONSECRATION OF A ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER AT HERTFORD. Article 2
PRESENTATION TO BRO. J. FLYNN, P.M., AND P.Z., 245, DUBLIN. Article 3
KNIGHTS OF THE RED CROSS OF CONSTANTINE. Article 3
Original Correspondence. Article 4
THE ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 5
Masonic Tidings. Article 5
Untitled Article 6
Untitled Article 6
Untitled Article 6
Untitled Article 6
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS. Article 6
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 8
Red Cross of Constantine. Article 10
Ancient and Accepted Rite. Article 10
Poetry. Article 10
CONSECRATION OF THE ST. MARK'S CHAPTER, No. 857. Article 10
CONSECRATION OF THE BIRCHALL LODGE OF MARK MASTERS, No. 143 . Article 10
METROPOLITAN MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Page 1

Page 1

4 Articles
Page 2

Page 2

4 Articles
Page 3

Page 3

5 Articles
Page 4

Page 4

4 Articles
Page 5

Page 5

4 Articles
Page 6

Page 6

7 Articles
Page 7

Page 7

3 Articles
Page 8

Page 8

4 Articles
Page 9

Page 9

3 Articles
Page 10

Page 10

7 Articles
Page 11

Page 11

3 Articles
Page 12

Page 12

6 Articles
Page 1

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Table Of Contents.

TABLE OF CONTENTS .

Freemasonry and Israelitism 179 General Grand Conclave of Knights of the Red Cross of Constantine 181 Presentation of Testimonial to Bro . J . Flynn , P . M . P . Z . 241 ; , Dublin 181

CORRESPONDENCE : Aids toStudy ,. 1 S 2 The Ancient and Accepted Rite 18 s Masonic Tidings—British , Colonial and Foreign j 8-j

Festival of Royal Masonic Institution for Boys 184 CRAFT MASONRY : — Metropolitan 186 Provincial ; 186 Instruction 187

RED CROSS OF CONSTANTINE : — Metropolitan 187 ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED . RITE : — Gibraltar . 171 Consecration of the Birchall Loclsre of "Mark Masters ,

No . 143 , at Preston 18 c , Consecration of a Royal Arch Chapter at Watford ... 189 POETRY : — Brotherley Love , Relief , and Truth 18 9 Advertisements 177 , 178 , 190 , 191 , 192

Freemasonry And Israelitish;

FREEMASONRY AND ISRAELITISH ;

AN EPITOME OF BRO . CARPENTER ' ARTICLES ON THIS SUBJECT . BY "VV . E . N „ No . 7 C 6 . CConlimiedfrom Page 149 . J

No . VIL , July 8 th , 1 S 71— On the lirst deportation ofthe ten tribes by Tiglath Pileser , B . C . 739 , the people of Gilead , on the east of Jordan , were carried into Ashur , Halah , Habor , and Gozan .

The second deportation was by Shalmenezer , but his name does not appear in the biblical account of the siege of Samaria . Sir J . Newton , Major llennel , and other authorities consider that Halah

and Habor are the present Georgia and Circassia , east of the Black Sea , and Herodotus says the people of that country practised circumcision . The country of Gozan is said to be iu Upper

Media . Philo says the Jews were very numerous in thc East , under the Persians , and Josephus states that multitudes of the descendants of the ten tribes were in his time beyond the Euphrates .

In Isaiah mention is made of Sargon , King of Assyria . His existence was doubted until M , Botta discovered in 1845 , on the walls of a palace at Khorsabad , about ten miles from the site of

Nineveh , various tablets •and in the ruins , clay cylinders , on which are recorded Sargon ' s exp loits in Samaria . One of these inscriptions , evidently by Sargon himself , says " I besieged

and took Samaria and carried away 27 , 280 persons who dwelt in it . " . He subsequently took Ashdod , and thus had command of tlie maritime route to Egypt . Sargon , who is stated to have

sent into Samaria colonists from Babylon , Cutliah and Sepharvaim , died B . C . 7 ° 4 > and was succeeded by Sennacherib , who took all the fenced cities of Judah , in Hezekiah ' s time , but by thc

miraculous destruction of his army , was driven back to Nineveh . As regards the captive tribes between the Casp ian and Euxine , it was not theDivine will that they

should rest and settle down in the land of their captivity . They were to " wander from sea to sea . " They were to " run to and fro , " and to

be " as chaff before the wind , " and " as smoke out of the chimney . " They accordingly appear to have migrated to China , India , and other

Freemasonry And Israelitish;

countries , and even to North America . Customs and traditions seem to identify these people in these countries . Some of the people , who were sent to Media , returned to Judea , with Judah and

Benjamin , under Zerubbabcl ancl Ezra . The bulk of the Israelites remained together , but made their way westward along the north shore of the Black Sea , until they reached tho

Danube , Ibis is not a mere assumption ; as the prophecies of Jeremiah p lainly point northwards and westwards , as the direction of Israel ' s wanderings . ( See Jeremiah iii . 12 , xvi . 14 15

xxxi . 9 10 . ) All these texts agree with the position ancl wanderings of the captive tribes . The migration and settlements of a people may be traced by the monuments they leave behind

them , and the customs they carry with them . The Beni-Israel scattered over the country near Bombay profess to belong to the tribe of Reuben . Allatius considers that the inhabitants of Iberia

who practised circumcision , were of Israelitish descent . In the supposed track of Israel ' s migration are found monuments ( places of sepulture ) of Israelitish origin . The country north of

the region occupied by the Israelites , ancl now forming part of Russia , consists of vast plains , capable , when cultivated , of supporting multitudes . Dr . J . Clarke gives a description of the tumuli or

burying places near the sea of Azov . The Russian Archaeological Society has found in this region many Israelitish relics , such as epitaphs from tombs , dated " from the year of our exile , " no

doubt meaning the Assyrian captivity . Dr . Clarke describes the remains of a very large fortress , and the tumuli found in the vicinity . One was opened , ancl two chambers , constructed

in masonry , were discovered . In them was found a golden serpent with two heads , studded with rubies and other gems . Similar tombs are found near the Bosphorus . The Beni-Israel of

India have in their •secret chamber a silver serpent , before which they burn incense . The ten tribes were carried away from Canaan , before Iiezekiah destroyed Moses' brazen serpent , because " the Children of Israel burnt incense to

it . ' ( II . Kings , XVIH . 4 . ) The names of rivers along the shores of thc Euxine are of Israelitish origin , in memory of the Jordan * thus we have the Don , the Danez ,

the Danube , the Dnepler , the Dniester , Sec . No . V III . J uly 15 th , 1871 . —Israel pushing north and west , colonized lvoumania , Hungary , Poland , ancl Bohemia . Are the Getos found by Darius , B . C .

507 , or 215 years after the deportation of Israel by the Assyrians , identical with the Israelites ? As an evidence of this identity , we learn from Herodotus that these Getae believed in an immortal life , and

one supreme God . They deplored the loss of their sacred books , left to them , as they alleged , by Zamoxis ( Moses ) . We learn from Herodotus that the Getie were first found in Asia , east of

the Araxes , in the seventh ancl eighth centuries , B . C . Diodorus gives the same account of them ancl says that increasing in numbers , ancl extending their boundaries , they became a great nation ,

and subdued many people between the Caspian , and Lake Maeotis , and migrated westward . Strabo , Pliny , and Ptolemy , all speak of them , but

know nothing of their ori g in . Herodotus states that the Getae are sometimes called Scythians , who declared that their first king lived about 1000 years

Freemasonry And Israelitish;

before Darius ( 507 B . C . ) . This carries us back to the time of Moses , who in Dcut . xxxiii . 5 , is called " King in Jeshurun . " The authors above referred to , know very little about the Getaj , but

they all concur in finding them about the Araxes between the Caspian ancl Euxine , soon after the time when Israel was carried there ; and they describe them as afterwards becoming numerous

and pushing westward , as the ten tribes did . As regards the internal evidence ofthe identity of the Anglo-Saxon branch of the Getae , with the Israelites , there are but few remains of literature .

The oldest Anglo-Saxon composition is the Voluspa , a poem including a mixture of fact and fable , blending tradition of the creation with some traditions of Israel's history , the incursions

of the Huns from the north , and the ravages of the Romans . The English language is a mixture of many languages , ancient and modern , but the

heart of the language is Anglo-Saxon . Sharon Turner has found 247 Saxon words whicli are derived from the Hebrew or Arabic . The Saxon

names of persons are given after the Hebrew fashion , and all have some striking signification , The Saxons , or Goths , in their invasions , destroyed the ancient government ancl political

system of the Romans , but introduced systems which were superior . In Britain these efforts were most beneficial . The Saxon institutions insured the liberty of the people—they chose ten

representatives for tythings , or parishes , ten of whicli formed a " hundred . " By the "Mosaic institution the people were p laced under rulers of thousands , of

hundreds , of fifties , ancl of tens . The Saxon " county , " corresponded to the tribe in Israel . The Saxons also had the Israelitish division of the

da )* , whereas the other ancient eastern nations reckoned their day as we do ours now . The Saxons , in common with the Israelites , had their great festivals . Easter corresponding to the

Passover , Whitsuntide corresponding to Pentecost . The third was the Wittenageonot , or general gathering of all the males . So in Israel , all the males were to present themselves to the Lord three times

a year . The priesthood among the Saxons was confined to certain families , and descended from father to son , as in Israel , and the Saxon priests were supported by tythes or tenths , with the possession of certain lands .

No . IX , July 22 , 1871 . ' —The two proceeding papers refer to such general external and internal evidence as will identif y the ancient Geto , and their descendants , the Goths ,

Saxons , and Germans , with the Israelites . The evidence is furnished by the similarity of customs and institutions ; much weight is attached to the way marks of Israel ' s migration westward ; to be

found on the shores of the Black Sea and about the Danube . Two questions now arise—If the Getae are the ten tribes , how did the latter lose their nam * ¦ * , and why were they called the Getae ?

They most likely called themselves Get-e for some sufficient reason . In Hebrew , get means e wine press in which the grapes are trodden . Now in various texts in Isaiah , Hosea , auel Jeremiah ,

Israel is said to be "trodden as in a wine press . The people in the time of their distress and wandering may , iii penitence , have called themselves

" the down-troclclen ones . " Diodorus speaks of a Scythian people in the region of the Caucasus as the Massagetcc . Here we have Getae again ;

  • Prev page
  • You're on page1
  • 2
  • 12
  • Next page
  • Accredited Museum Designated Outstanding Collection
  • LIBRARY AND MUSEUM CHARITABLE TRUST OF THE UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND REGISTERED CHARITY NUMBER 1058497 / ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © 2023

  • Accessibility statement

  • Designed, developed, and maintained by King's Digital Lab

We use cookies to track usage and preferences.

Privacy & cookie policy