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Reviews

seek to move to the right or to the left , from that one narrow straig ht path of perfect toleration and absolute neutrality which dominates the profession , and ought ever to distinguish the practice , of English and Anglo-Saxon Freemasonry . We will therefore , as we only can , treat the work as an expression of autobiographical reminiscences , which for many reasons must have deep interest for us all ,

and we can safely repeat the judgment of the Times reviewer , which pronounces this work one of the most life-like and interesting and valuable autobiographical contributions which have appeared in this our generation . And then we may also take a wider survey , and extend our remarks and criticisms . Aluch of the personal history revealed is to a certain extent

general not sectional , cosmopolitan not national . The names of Cardinal Newman , John Keble Arnold , Archbishop Whateley , Cardinal Manning , Samuel Wilberforce , J . H . Rosc , Dr . Hook . and manymore , belong to all time . and as Freemasonry inculcates largeness of views , and emancipates us from the dull bigotry of fanatic cries and hates , we are on our right in these peaceful and uncontroversial

pages in dealing with works which give us biographical memories of the most intense interest , and bring us face to face with those who have played no inconsiderable part in the struggles and movements of the world in which we live . And so we recommend all our readers , who love biographical accuracy and revel in personal reality and identity , who wish as it were to be introduced in " propria

persona , " to individualities of whom they have read so much , whether favourably or unfavourably matters nothing , to peruse Mr . Mozley's life-like pages for themselves , and they will be rewarded for their industry and patience , and find their labour a very pleasant and profitable one . Indeed , of few two volume works can it be more fairly said that the writer continues to keep up the interest

unflagging almost to the last . Were it not for one little mistake we think the book would be perfect , a model ol what such volumes of rcminscences should be . The writer having modestly told us that he is " not much of a logician or of a metaphysician , or of a philosopher , least of all a theologian , " ought not to have jeopardized the success of

a very charming work by those disquisitions on abstract questions which are to be found between pages 330 and 3 S 5 , which have nothing very new in them , are somewhat heavy reading , and seem to contrast markedly with the lucidity and vivacity of preceding and subsequent pages . But let our readers judge for themselves ' .

KINGS' BRIEFS ; THEIR PURPOSES AND HISTORY , fey CORNELIUS WALFORD , F . R . Hist . Soc Printed for private circulation . This recent work of Mr . Cornelius Walford is both very interesting and very suggestive . It touches upon a point in our social and religious history which has been too much overlooked by most of our writers . The history of briefs ,

or collections , is a very curious one , and the fact of Royalty intervening points to clearly the early distrust and difficulties which arose between the religious and secular authorities . Papal briefs are very old , and as regards our Order , no doubt what are called the Papal Bulls are Brieves to form a Gild to restore a church , to build a bridge or a monastery , to collect alms . Air . Walford tells us in his very striking resume

of the history of briefs that the earliest Royal brief he has discovered is one of 1206 , which King John issued , ( about the only good thing he is known to have done ) , to collect alms for the redemption of Christian captives , a "patent of alms , " and protection to the "refugees of St . Thomas of Acre . " Air . Walford says the earliest church brief which he has met with is one of 1247 , from William ,

Bishop of Sabina , in the fourth year of Pope Innocent IV ., soliciting the alms of the faithful in favour of the Hospital of St . John the Evangelist , at Cambridge , which brief was circulated abroad as well as in England . In 1303 a grant of a patent of alms was made to the Prior of the Church of Holy Trinity , Dublin , to collect alms for repairing the church . On the 14 th May the same year a Royal licence was

granted to the Prior and Canons of the Holy Trinity to send Bro . Henry de Cork , one of their Canons , through the kingdom to collect alms for repairing their Church and Priory . If Mr . Cornelius Walford would give us the reference to this patent , we think it would be well to publish it in its exact verbiage , as it may throw light on the work and labours of the Operative Gilds . We all of us

remember the old " Queen's letter , " now some time abolished , justly , we thnk ; and most curious have been the uses and purposes to which "brieves" have been turned . On one point we cannot agree with Mr . Walford . In Yorkshire and Lancaster yet linger the "Dead Briefs , " which have to do with the funerals of the working classes . Air . Walford condemns them . We , from long

acquaintance with them , cannot conscientiously do so . The expenses of the humblest funerals constitute a severe tax on the resources of the labouring man , whose weekly wages are all forestalled ; and all that the dead briefs do in Yorkshire , the only one with which we are acquainted , is to find a certain sum to enable the working man ' 0 defray the expense of a funeral without having to

borrow money to do so . That they may be a little abused , m the tendency to spend all they receive in entertaining their friends and neighbours is true , but the abuse does not take away the real use . And surely the working Masses of this country , who are essentially reverential of old usages , are to be commended in their earnest desire to

pay proper respect to their dead relatives and children . We were ourselves a member of a "dead brief" for many years , and were always glad to keep up what we venture 'o think ( with all deference to Air . Walford ) , merely for the purpose of helping our humbler friends , a good usage and a useful association .

TRANSACTIONS OF THE SOCIETY OF BIBLICAL ARCH / EOLOGY . Vol . VII . Part III . . ' his is a most valuable resume of the interesting and important labours of a most useful society , of which our esteemed Bro . VV . H . Rylands is the able and esteemed secretary . The various subjects handled and the special

i ?" M- lptlons e ! i P'a'ne " « all have deep and lasting interest for "lulical and Egyptological scholars ; and as we hail this volume with pleasure , and have perused itwith much gratification , so we mention its appearance to many of our th if" " ' '' ourse , v , cs > have realised the light which e history of the great Aryan nations must throw , when carefull y studied , when honestly surveyed , alike on Biblical nistory and Alasonic archccology .

Reviews

TRANSACTIONS OF THE CUAIBERLAND AND WESTAIORLAND ANTIQUARIAN SOCIETY . Part I ., Vol . VI . This volume , edited by R . Ferguson , Esq ., F . S . A .. like the preceding ones , fully maintains the high character of

the published transactions of this useful and important society , lt is full of information for the archaeologist and antiquary , the lovers of heraldic curiosities , the searchers after the Roman and Runic remains , and will , in every sense , repay study and reward perusal . VVe have read it ourselves with -Treat attention and nleasure .

Masonic Notes And Queries.

Masonic Notes and Queries .

10 ] CHAP BOOKS . I came across , the other day , a curious little chap book , called the " Poetic Aluseum , " published at Warrington about 17 S 0 , and , it seems , there are many published at Manchester , Liverpool , Congleton , Preston , Warrington ,

Glasgow , and Edinburgh of that date . We have also seen a Alasonic chap book , of Glasgow , though somewhat later , termed the " Alasonic Word ; " and I shall be glad to know if any of my brethren have in their possession , or know of , Alasonic chap books of the present or last century . "Burn ' s Farewell " is often found . AIASONIC BOOK COLLECTOR .

n ] GODFREY OF V 1 TERBO . Can any of your readers tell me anything of -the " Pantheon , " a Universal Chronicle of Godfrey of Viterbo , AIS . Reg . 14 , xi ., British , Aluseum ? ls anything like a Masonic legend there ? ¦ — M . S .

12 J GERAIAN BAUHUTTEN . 1 am heartily glad to welcome a new contributor to your columns ( we can ' t have too many and at present have far too few ) , but must nevertheless indulge in a little criticism of his communications S and 9 . Bauhiitten still exist inCologne , Ulm , and elsewhere , true ; but are they the same thing as formerly ? I am afraid not . Four years ago I spent a couple of months at Cologne and made some enquiries , and

convinced myself that although they still retain the time honoured name of Bauhiitten , or lodges , they are only simple workshops . The Alaster is no longer the companion of the Fellows ; he is a contractor under the orders of the architect , superior to tbem in rank , wealth , education , S-o , but probably infinitely beneath them in technical skill . He is , in fact , an employer of labour , a manufacturer of carved stone work , and has possibly never handled a chisel in his

life . And what has become of his right to administer conjointly with his Fellows internal justice ? It has disappearedlikeHans Breitmann's Lager Bier ; indie Ewigkeit . Let us take the following articles Irom the Torgau ( 1462 ) Ordinances : 39 . And a Alaster may hold a general court in his lodge over his own Fellows , and he shall judge righteously by his oath , and not of hatred , or of friendship , or of enmity .

42 . And he shall every quarter day hold a hearing of lords ( i . e . his employers ) and Craftsmen , whether any offence were , whether they have wasted their time , lived riotously , gamed or otherwise acted disorderly , whence harm might come to Wardens or Alasters : that shall they make known to the Alaster that he may punish therefor as is meet , & c . And in article eleven the lodge is to be kept " pure

and undefiled as the seat of justice . " 1 think " J . XV . B . " will agree with me that of all this no trace remains . "J . VV . B . " further states that the Steinmetzen and thc Steinhauer are identical , and refers you to Heimsch as proving that their meetings did not take place in the lodge but in the house of call , and were presided over not by the Master but by a Fellow Craftsman . I am read y to grant that the two trades are now identical , and their usages

similar , but wish to point out that this was not formerly the case . As you have promised us a translation of Heimsch in the " Alasonic Monthly , " your readers will be able to convince themselves that these two crafts were formerly not only separate , but rivals , and even inimical . But Heimsch treats almost entirely of the Steinhauer , and as regards them "J . VV . B . " is right . Their meetings were held in the inn , and presided over by journeymen . The

fraternity itself was composed solely of such ; the Alaster retired from it on becoming Alaster , and joined the Alasters ' Gild . But with the stonemasons ( Steinmetzen ) it was different . The fraternity comprised all ranks , and the presiding officers were the Alasters . A glance at any of Constitutions—1459 , 14 C 2 , or 1563—will prove this ; and the articles quoted above are sufficient to show that the Alaster not only presided , but that he had the right to

invite the attendance of his employers , and that the meetings were held in thelodge itself . " J . W . B . " states that after being declared free of his trade , the apprentice was called brother ; and again refers to Heimsch . Now , unfortunately , although the societies of journeymen were undoubtedly called brotherhoods , the word brother is only once employed , either in the documents given by Heimsch , or in either of the Constitutions already cited . The Fellow is

always addressed as " Worthy Fellow " ( ehrbarer Gesell ) , never as brother . He concludes note 8 by the remark that Freemasonry has been grafted on the old trunk of operative Alasonry . If by operatives he means medi .-cval English builders , well and good ; few will now-a-days be found to deny this assertion , but if he alludes to the " Steinmetzen " I am unable to agree with him . My reasons , however , would be too

lengthy for a simple note . His letter on " Grand Alasters" ( No . 9 ) will , however , show one small difficulty . He admits that Freemasonry had none before 1717 ; but the "Steinmetzen" undoubtedly possessed one under thc title of " Oberster Meister " ( Over Master ) from 1459101707 , in the person of the Alaster of the Strassburg Lodge . In 1707 his authority was no longer acknowledged by

the State , but it was submitted to by at least one German lodge , that of Kochlitz , as late as 1725 , and probably as late as 17 G 0 , when Strassburg still claimed the tribute , although we do not know if successfully or not . If Freemasonry was derived from the " Steinmetzen ( there can scarcely be a doubt that it existed as a speculative branch in 1 C 46 , when Elias Ashmole was initiated at Warrington ) , why did we wait till 1717 before adopting tbe Steinmetz institution of a Grand Alaster ? G . WM . SPETH .

Masonic Notes And Queries.

13 ] RABBI LEON JAC JEHUDAH . It has been suggested to me by an esteemed brother student that I should make this matter a little more plain , as great doubt exists as to who this person really was . His name is not easily found , nor are his works traceable . Dermott calls him the learned Rabbi , architect , and Bro . Jacob Jehudah Leon , and declares that he exhibited a model of

the Temple , under a patent signed Killegrew , in the reign of King Charles 11 ., and that he ( Dermott ) had seen this model , and an account of the Temple by the Rabbi Leon dedicated to that king . Dermott is to a certain extent confirmed by a MS . history of Wells Cathedral , by Peter Chyle , secretary to Bishop Mew , just about 200 years ago , who mentions " a figure of the

Temple of Jerusalem , described in the preface to the Polyglott Bible ; " and also , "that model of Solomon ' s Temple , composed by Rabbi Leon , a Jew of the Hebrew nation , which has been , and still is , common to be scene in London ; and if we may believe their papers and report was seven years in contriving , making , finishing , doubtless very exact , and worth any inquisitive person ' s view and

contemplation . " This Rabbi Leon , in the preface to thc English Picart , is called the learned Rabbi Leone of Alodena , and is credited with the Jewish antiquities in GafTarelli ' s "Curiosites Inouies . " We are told that he wrote four treatises on the Tabernacle of Aloses , —two in Spanish , one in Dutch , and one in English , —from 1 C 53 to 1 O 75 , but we find so far no account of any work by him on the Temple , except the one Dermott alludes to

, but which has not yet been verified . In 1725 a book was published in London , called " The Temple of Solomon , " & c . j as also " The Tabernacle of Aloses ; " and at the same time a model of the Temple was shown in London , of which the proprietor was a Chevalier Gumprecht , and the designer a Counsellor Schott , of Hamburgh , with the assistance and advice

of the famous architect Erasmus , and other architects and learned men , " Gnevius , Fabricius , Stumius , & c . It may , therefore , be a question whether this is not the model which Dermott saw , and whether the account of the Tabernacle and of the Temple , ( of which the illustrations were ori ginally Dutch , ) may not have been thc works alluded to by the Rabbi Leon , translated one

hundred years earlier . The account of thc Tabernacle is dated 1724 . But what then about the patent to exhibit the model signed Killegrew , and the account of the Temple dedicated to king Charles II ? The dedication of this translated or original work about the Temple in 1725 is to the " benevolent reader . " Certain questions arise . What has become of Leon ' s model of the 'Temple ? Had he

a patent to exhibit it ? Is there any trace of such patent in the Patent Office signed Killegrew ? Or is this model thc same as Chevalier Gumprecht ' s , or are they two models ? and was Dermott in error in saying he saw Leon ' s model when he saw Gumprecht ' s ? And where is the account of the Temple dedicated to iKng Charles II . ? It has been always stated that King Charles II . was a Freemason .

Does anything turn upon this fact of Leon , who , as Dermott says , certainly was also a Freemason , and the possessor of the coat of arms impaled , which we now use in our English Grand Lodge ? I may add that a learned friend of mine has a panel with the same arms , carefully coloured , which came , curiously enough , from St . Albans , certainl y of 17 th century work . So that I hope your "benevolent readers " will also see that there are some curious points in this long-winded note . AIASONIC STUDENT .

Banquet To The Lord Mayor By The Alliance Lodge, No. 1827.

BANQUET TO THE LORD MAYOR BY THE ALLIANCE LODGE , No . 1827 .

'This flourishing lodge , which numbers among its members many of the officials of the Lord Mayors Court at Guildhall , has on several occasions distinguished itself by thc most generous hospitality , and it was a happy thought to

invite the Junior Grand Warden of the year , the Lord Alayor , to a banquet at the Guildhall Tavern , on the evening of the ball given by thc Lord Alayor to the Mayors of England . The associations of the Alliance Lodge , and the time and place , were all most fitting , and the result a most successful gathering . An emergency meeting was called for four o ' clock , at

which hour there was a Targe muster of the brethren and visitors , the latter of whom included in their number many of the most prominent members of Grand Lodge . The Chair was occupied bv the Worshipful Alaster of the lodge , Bro . FRANK GREEN , C . C , who was supported by Bros . L . V . Littell , I . P . AL ; H . VV . Writrht .

S . W . ; G . W . Brown , J . W . ; R . J . Pawley , Registrar of . the Lord Alayor ' s Court , Treas . ; J . E . Turner , P . AL : Sec ; C VV . Bowley , S . D . ; VV . H . Parnell , D . C ; E . Garnet Alien , I . G . ; F . A . Jewson , Org . ; J . Perkins and H . Squire , Stewards ; Sir J . Alonckton , 'Town Clerk , P . AI . ; G . N . Johnson , P . AL ; Col . Shadwell H . Clerke ,

orana sec . ; ftlaior 1 . Davies Sewell , P . G . Stewd . ; VV . N . Wild , E . C . F . Fitch , H . H . Cooper , J . P . Godfrey , J . C . Whiddington , Pearse Alorrison , Capt . N . J . Philips , P . G . D . ; Horace Jones , City Architect , Grand Supt . of Wks . ; VV . II . Cannon , B . Emanuel , B . Alonce , FrankS . lackson . Denutv Kcm ' strar nf thn I . nr < l

Alayor ' s Court ; and others . Alany distinguished brethren were invited to meet the Lord Alayor on the occasion , amongst whom were Bros . R . H . Giddy , D . G . AI . Griqualand ; R . G . Harrison , Q . C , P . M ., G . D . ; Rev . C VV . Arnold , P . G . C ; [ . A . Rucker . P . G . D .: Fran ! - Ki < -h :. r <* sr , r , P r . II .

} yZ 1 ' Howe , P . G . Pursuivant ; Peter de Lande Long , P . G . D . ; Sir Albert C Woods , ( Garterl G . D . C . ; rhomas Fenn , P . G . D . ; John Alessant , G . S . B . ; Alderman and Sheriff Hanson , Alderman Staples , Grand Master ' s Lodge , No . 1 ; VV . II . R . Skey , 0 97 ; S . Green , P . M ., ' 4 + 5 ; Arnold Birch , 129 S ; Hon . Mark F . Napier , 16 5 ; J . B . Glen , 3 ; W . J . Crump , -jS ; W . Alonckton . ioGt

G . Drysdale , W . AL , 222 ; F . Lane , S . W ., 7 SS ; E . Culver , S . W ., G 3 ; Deputy Edmeston , J . W . 1 O 35 ; VV . II . White , 55 ; E . Alasscy , P . AL , 1297 ; E . F . Baylis , S . W ., 259 ' J- M . Durand , 4 C ; Kenneth R . Alontgomery , 255 ; A . C Lewis , 457 ; Capt . Bedford Pirn , P . M ., 77 ; Alaior L . G . Dundas , W . M ., 570 ; T . A . Logan , S . D ., 91 ; Herbert j . Adams , P . AL , 509 ; S . P . Norris , P . AL , 21 , P . G . S ; . W . J . ColIcns ,-J . W ., 76 G ; Gcngc Evans , 1 S 70 ; L

“The Freemason: 1882-06-24, Page 5” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 27 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_24061882/page/5/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CONTENTS. Article 1
Untitled Article 1
ROYAL MASONIC BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION. Article 2
LODGE OF BENEVOLENCE. Article 2
THE PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF BERKS AND BUCKS. Article 3
North Africa. Article 3
Untitled Ad 4
Untitled Ad 4
Untitled Ad 4
Untitled Ad 4
To Correspondents. Article 4
Untitled Article 4
Original Correspondence. Article 4
REVIEWS Article 4
Masonic Notes and Queries. Article 5
BANQUET TO THE LORD MAYOR BY THE ALLIANCE LODGE, No. 1827. Article 5
CONSECRATION OF THE FIDELITY AND SINCERITY LODGE, No. 1966, AT WELLINGTON, SOMERSETSHIRE. Article 6
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 7
INSTRUCTION. Article 9
Royal Arch. Article 10
INSTRUCTION. Article 10
Mark Masonry. Article 10
Rosicrucian Society. Article 11
New South Wales. Article 11
FUNERAL OF THE LATE BRO. FRANCIS QUIN, 32°. Article 11
Births, Marriages, and Deaths. Article 11
THE THEATRES. Article 12
MUSIC Article 12
SCIENCE AND ART. Article 12
MASONIC AND GENERAL TIDINGS Article 13
METROPOLITAN MASONIC MEETINGS Article 14
MASONIC MEETINGS IN WEST LANCASHIRE AND CHESHIRE Article 14
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 14
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Reviews

seek to move to the right or to the left , from that one narrow straig ht path of perfect toleration and absolute neutrality which dominates the profession , and ought ever to distinguish the practice , of English and Anglo-Saxon Freemasonry . We will therefore , as we only can , treat the work as an expression of autobiographical reminiscences , which for many reasons must have deep interest for us all ,

and we can safely repeat the judgment of the Times reviewer , which pronounces this work one of the most life-like and interesting and valuable autobiographical contributions which have appeared in this our generation . And then we may also take a wider survey , and extend our remarks and criticisms . Aluch of the personal history revealed is to a certain extent

general not sectional , cosmopolitan not national . The names of Cardinal Newman , John Keble Arnold , Archbishop Whateley , Cardinal Manning , Samuel Wilberforce , J . H . Rosc , Dr . Hook . and manymore , belong to all time . and as Freemasonry inculcates largeness of views , and emancipates us from the dull bigotry of fanatic cries and hates , we are on our right in these peaceful and uncontroversial

pages in dealing with works which give us biographical memories of the most intense interest , and bring us face to face with those who have played no inconsiderable part in the struggles and movements of the world in which we live . And so we recommend all our readers , who love biographical accuracy and revel in personal reality and identity , who wish as it were to be introduced in " propria

persona , " to individualities of whom they have read so much , whether favourably or unfavourably matters nothing , to peruse Mr . Mozley's life-like pages for themselves , and they will be rewarded for their industry and patience , and find their labour a very pleasant and profitable one . Indeed , of few two volume works can it be more fairly said that the writer continues to keep up the interest

unflagging almost to the last . Were it not for one little mistake we think the book would be perfect , a model ol what such volumes of rcminscences should be . The writer having modestly told us that he is " not much of a logician or of a metaphysician , or of a philosopher , least of all a theologian , " ought not to have jeopardized the success of

a very charming work by those disquisitions on abstract questions which are to be found between pages 330 and 3 S 5 , which have nothing very new in them , are somewhat heavy reading , and seem to contrast markedly with the lucidity and vivacity of preceding and subsequent pages . But let our readers judge for themselves ' .

KINGS' BRIEFS ; THEIR PURPOSES AND HISTORY , fey CORNELIUS WALFORD , F . R . Hist . Soc Printed for private circulation . This recent work of Mr . Cornelius Walford is both very interesting and very suggestive . It touches upon a point in our social and religious history which has been too much overlooked by most of our writers . The history of briefs ,

or collections , is a very curious one , and the fact of Royalty intervening points to clearly the early distrust and difficulties which arose between the religious and secular authorities . Papal briefs are very old , and as regards our Order , no doubt what are called the Papal Bulls are Brieves to form a Gild to restore a church , to build a bridge or a monastery , to collect alms . Air . Walford tells us in his very striking resume

of the history of briefs that the earliest Royal brief he has discovered is one of 1206 , which King John issued , ( about the only good thing he is known to have done ) , to collect alms for the redemption of Christian captives , a "patent of alms , " and protection to the "refugees of St . Thomas of Acre . " Air . Walford says the earliest church brief which he has met with is one of 1247 , from William ,

Bishop of Sabina , in the fourth year of Pope Innocent IV ., soliciting the alms of the faithful in favour of the Hospital of St . John the Evangelist , at Cambridge , which brief was circulated abroad as well as in England . In 1303 a grant of a patent of alms was made to the Prior of the Church of Holy Trinity , Dublin , to collect alms for repairing the church . On the 14 th May the same year a Royal licence was

granted to the Prior and Canons of the Holy Trinity to send Bro . Henry de Cork , one of their Canons , through the kingdom to collect alms for repairing their Church and Priory . If Mr . Cornelius Walford would give us the reference to this patent , we think it would be well to publish it in its exact verbiage , as it may throw light on the work and labours of the Operative Gilds . We all of us

remember the old " Queen's letter , " now some time abolished , justly , we thnk ; and most curious have been the uses and purposes to which "brieves" have been turned . On one point we cannot agree with Mr . Walford . In Yorkshire and Lancaster yet linger the "Dead Briefs , " which have to do with the funerals of the working classes . Air . Walford condemns them . We , from long

acquaintance with them , cannot conscientiously do so . The expenses of the humblest funerals constitute a severe tax on the resources of the labouring man , whose weekly wages are all forestalled ; and all that the dead briefs do in Yorkshire , the only one with which we are acquainted , is to find a certain sum to enable the working man ' 0 defray the expense of a funeral without having to

borrow money to do so . That they may be a little abused , m the tendency to spend all they receive in entertaining their friends and neighbours is true , but the abuse does not take away the real use . And surely the working Masses of this country , who are essentially reverential of old usages , are to be commended in their earnest desire to

pay proper respect to their dead relatives and children . We were ourselves a member of a "dead brief" for many years , and were always glad to keep up what we venture 'o think ( with all deference to Air . Walford ) , merely for the purpose of helping our humbler friends , a good usage and a useful association .

TRANSACTIONS OF THE SOCIETY OF BIBLICAL ARCH / EOLOGY . Vol . VII . Part III . . ' his is a most valuable resume of the interesting and important labours of a most useful society , of which our esteemed Bro . VV . H . Rylands is the able and esteemed secretary . The various subjects handled and the special

i ?" M- lptlons e ! i P'a'ne " « all have deep and lasting interest for "lulical and Egyptological scholars ; and as we hail this volume with pleasure , and have perused itwith much gratification , so we mention its appearance to many of our th if" " ' '' ourse , v , cs > have realised the light which e history of the great Aryan nations must throw , when carefull y studied , when honestly surveyed , alike on Biblical nistory and Alasonic archccology .

Reviews

TRANSACTIONS OF THE CUAIBERLAND AND WESTAIORLAND ANTIQUARIAN SOCIETY . Part I ., Vol . VI . This volume , edited by R . Ferguson , Esq ., F . S . A .. like the preceding ones , fully maintains the high character of

the published transactions of this useful and important society , lt is full of information for the archaeologist and antiquary , the lovers of heraldic curiosities , the searchers after the Roman and Runic remains , and will , in every sense , repay study and reward perusal . VVe have read it ourselves with -Treat attention and nleasure .

Masonic Notes And Queries.

Masonic Notes and Queries .

10 ] CHAP BOOKS . I came across , the other day , a curious little chap book , called the " Poetic Aluseum , " published at Warrington about 17 S 0 , and , it seems , there are many published at Manchester , Liverpool , Congleton , Preston , Warrington ,

Glasgow , and Edinburgh of that date . We have also seen a Alasonic chap book , of Glasgow , though somewhat later , termed the " Alasonic Word ; " and I shall be glad to know if any of my brethren have in their possession , or know of , Alasonic chap books of the present or last century . "Burn ' s Farewell " is often found . AIASONIC BOOK COLLECTOR .

n ] GODFREY OF V 1 TERBO . Can any of your readers tell me anything of -the " Pantheon , " a Universal Chronicle of Godfrey of Viterbo , AIS . Reg . 14 , xi ., British , Aluseum ? ls anything like a Masonic legend there ? ¦ — M . S .

12 J GERAIAN BAUHUTTEN . 1 am heartily glad to welcome a new contributor to your columns ( we can ' t have too many and at present have far too few ) , but must nevertheless indulge in a little criticism of his communications S and 9 . Bauhiitten still exist inCologne , Ulm , and elsewhere , true ; but are they the same thing as formerly ? I am afraid not . Four years ago I spent a couple of months at Cologne and made some enquiries , and

convinced myself that although they still retain the time honoured name of Bauhiitten , or lodges , they are only simple workshops . The Alaster is no longer the companion of the Fellows ; he is a contractor under the orders of the architect , superior to tbem in rank , wealth , education , S-o , but probably infinitely beneath them in technical skill . He is , in fact , an employer of labour , a manufacturer of carved stone work , and has possibly never handled a chisel in his

life . And what has become of his right to administer conjointly with his Fellows internal justice ? It has disappearedlikeHans Breitmann's Lager Bier ; indie Ewigkeit . Let us take the following articles Irom the Torgau ( 1462 ) Ordinances : 39 . And a Alaster may hold a general court in his lodge over his own Fellows , and he shall judge righteously by his oath , and not of hatred , or of friendship , or of enmity .

42 . And he shall every quarter day hold a hearing of lords ( i . e . his employers ) and Craftsmen , whether any offence were , whether they have wasted their time , lived riotously , gamed or otherwise acted disorderly , whence harm might come to Wardens or Alasters : that shall they make known to the Alaster that he may punish therefor as is meet , & c . And in article eleven the lodge is to be kept " pure

and undefiled as the seat of justice . " 1 think " J . XV . B . " will agree with me that of all this no trace remains . "J . VV . B . " further states that the Steinmetzen and thc Steinhauer are identical , and refers you to Heimsch as proving that their meetings did not take place in the lodge but in the house of call , and were presided over not by the Master but by a Fellow Craftsman . I am read y to grant that the two trades are now identical , and their usages

similar , but wish to point out that this was not formerly the case . As you have promised us a translation of Heimsch in the " Alasonic Monthly , " your readers will be able to convince themselves that these two crafts were formerly not only separate , but rivals , and even inimical . But Heimsch treats almost entirely of the Steinhauer , and as regards them "J . VV . B . " is right . Their meetings were held in the inn , and presided over by journeymen . The

fraternity itself was composed solely of such ; the Alaster retired from it on becoming Alaster , and joined the Alasters ' Gild . But with the stonemasons ( Steinmetzen ) it was different . The fraternity comprised all ranks , and the presiding officers were the Alasters . A glance at any of Constitutions—1459 , 14 C 2 , or 1563—will prove this ; and the articles quoted above are sufficient to show that the Alaster not only presided , but that he had the right to

invite the attendance of his employers , and that the meetings were held in thelodge itself . " J . W . B . " states that after being declared free of his trade , the apprentice was called brother ; and again refers to Heimsch . Now , unfortunately , although the societies of journeymen were undoubtedly called brotherhoods , the word brother is only once employed , either in the documents given by Heimsch , or in either of the Constitutions already cited . The Fellow is

always addressed as " Worthy Fellow " ( ehrbarer Gesell ) , never as brother . He concludes note 8 by the remark that Freemasonry has been grafted on the old trunk of operative Alasonry . If by operatives he means medi .-cval English builders , well and good ; few will now-a-days be found to deny this assertion , but if he alludes to the " Steinmetzen " I am unable to agree with him . My reasons , however , would be too

lengthy for a simple note . His letter on " Grand Alasters" ( No . 9 ) will , however , show one small difficulty . He admits that Freemasonry had none before 1717 ; but the "Steinmetzen" undoubtedly possessed one under thc title of " Oberster Meister " ( Over Master ) from 1459101707 , in the person of the Alaster of the Strassburg Lodge . In 1707 his authority was no longer acknowledged by

the State , but it was submitted to by at least one German lodge , that of Kochlitz , as late as 1725 , and probably as late as 17 G 0 , when Strassburg still claimed the tribute , although we do not know if successfully or not . If Freemasonry was derived from the " Steinmetzen ( there can scarcely be a doubt that it existed as a speculative branch in 1 C 46 , when Elias Ashmole was initiated at Warrington ) , why did we wait till 1717 before adopting tbe Steinmetz institution of a Grand Alaster ? G . WM . SPETH .

Masonic Notes And Queries.

13 ] RABBI LEON JAC JEHUDAH . It has been suggested to me by an esteemed brother student that I should make this matter a little more plain , as great doubt exists as to who this person really was . His name is not easily found , nor are his works traceable . Dermott calls him the learned Rabbi , architect , and Bro . Jacob Jehudah Leon , and declares that he exhibited a model of

the Temple , under a patent signed Killegrew , in the reign of King Charles 11 ., and that he ( Dermott ) had seen this model , and an account of the Temple by the Rabbi Leon dedicated to that king . Dermott is to a certain extent confirmed by a MS . history of Wells Cathedral , by Peter Chyle , secretary to Bishop Mew , just about 200 years ago , who mentions " a figure of the

Temple of Jerusalem , described in the preface to the Polyglott Bible ; " and also , "that model of Solomon ' s Temple , composed by Rabbi Leon , a Jew of the Hebrew nation , which has been , and still is , common to be scene in London ; and if we may believe their papers and report was seven years in contriving , making , finishing , doubtless very exact , and worth any inquisitive person ' s view and

contemplation . " This Rabbi Leon , in the preface to thc English Picart , is called the learned Rabbi Leone of Alodena , and is credited with the Jewish antiquities in GafTarelli ' s "Curiosites Inouies . " We are told that he wrote four treatises on the Tabernacle of Aloses , —two in Spanish , one in Dutch , and one in English , —from 1 C 53 to 1 O 75 , but we find so far no account of any work by him on the Temple , except the one Dermott alludes to

, but which has not yet been verified . In 1725 a book was published in London , called " The Temple of Solomon , " & c . j as also " The Tabernacle of Aloses ; " and at the same time a model of the Temple was shown in London , of which the proprietor was a Chevalier Gumprecht , and the designer a Counsellor Schott , of Hamburgh , with the assistance and advice

of the famous architect Erasmus , and other architects and learned men , " Gnevius , Fabricius , Stumius , & c . It may , therefore , be a question whether this is not the model which Dermott saw , and whether the account of the Tabernacle and of the Temple , ( of which the illustrations were ori ginally Dutch , ) may not have been thc works alluded to by the Rabbi Leon , translated one

hundred years earlier . The account of thc Tabernacle is dated 1724 . But what then about the patent to exhibit the model signed Killegrew , and the account of the Temple dedicated to king Charles II ? The dedication of this translated or original work about the Temple in 1725 is to the " benevolent reader . " Certain questions arise . What has become of Leon ' s model of the 'Temple ? Had he

a patent to exhibit it ? Is there any trace of such patent in the Patent Office signed Killegrew ? Or is this model thc same as Chevalier Gumprecht ' s , or are they two models ? and was Dermott in error in saying he saw Leon ' s model when he saw Gumprecht ' s ? And where is the account of the Temple dedicated to iKng Charles II . ? It has been always stated that King Charles II . was a Freemason .

Does anything turn upon this fact of Leon , who , as Dermott says , certainly was also a Freemason , and the possessor of the coat of arms impaled , which we now use in our English Grand Lodge ? I may add that a learned friend of mine has a panel with the same arms , carefully coloured , which came , curiously enough , from St . Albans , certainl y of 17 th century work . So that I hope your "benevolent readers " will also see that there are some curious points in this long-winded note . AIASONIC STUDENT .

Banquet To The Lord Mayor By The Alliance Lodge, No. 1827.

BANQUET TO THE LORD MAYOR BY THE ALLIANCE LODGE , No . 1827 .

'This flourishing lodge , which numbers among its members many of the officials of the Lord Mayors Court at Guildhall , has on several occasions distinguished itself by thc most generous hospitality , and it was a happy thought to

invite the Junior Grand Warden of the year , the Lord Alayor , to a banquet at the Guildhall Tavern , on the evening of the ball given by thc Lord Alayor to the Mayors of England . The associations of the Alliance Lodge , and the time and place , were all most fitting , and the result a most successful gathering . An emergency meeting was called for four o ' clock , at

which hour there was a Targe muster of the brethren and visitors , the latter of whom included in their number many of the most prominent members of Grand Lodge . The Chair was occupied bv the Worshipful Alaster of the lodge , Bro . FRANK GREEN , C . C , who was supported by Bros . L . V . Littell , I . P . AL ; H . VV . Writrht .

S . W . ; G . W . Brown , J . W . ; R . J . Pawley , Registrar of . the Lord Alayor ' s Court , Treas . ; J . E . Turner , P . AL : Sec ; C VV . Bowley , S . D . ; VV . H . Parnell , D . C ; E . Garnet Alien , I . G . ; F . A . Jewson , Org . ; J . Perkins and H . Squire , Stewards ; Sir J . Alonckton , 'Town Clerk , P . AI . ; G . N . Johnson , P . AL ; Col . Shadwell H . Clerke ,

orana sec . ; ftlaior 1 . Davies Sewell , P . G . Stewd . ; VV . N . Wild , E . C . F . Fitch , H . H . Cooper , J . P . Godfrey , J . C . Whiddington , Pearse Alorrison , Capt . N . J . Philips , P . G . D . ; Horace Jones , City Architect , Grand Supt . of Wks . ; VV . II . Cannon , B . Emanuel , B . Alonce , FrankS . lackson . Denutv Kcm ' strar nf thn I . nr < l

Alayor ' s Court ; and others . Alany distinguished brethren were invited to meet the Lord Alayor on the occasion , amongst whom were Bros . R . H . Giddy , D . G . AI . Griqualand ; R . G . Harrison , Q . C , P . M ., G . D . ; Rev . C VV . Arnold , P . G . C ; [ . A . Rucker . P . G . D .: Fran ! - Ki < -h :. r <* sr , r , P r . II .

} yZ 1 ' Howe , P . G . Pursuivant ; Peter de Lande Long , P . G . D . ; Sir Albert C Woods , ( Garterl G . D . C . ; rhomas Fenn , P . G . D . ; John Alessant , G . S . B . ; Alderman and Sheriff Hanson , Alderman Staples , Grand Master ' s Lodge , No . 1 ; VV . II . R . Skey , 0 97 ; S . Green , P . M ., ' 4 + 5 ; Arnold Birch , 129 S ; Hon . Mark F . Napier , 16 5 ; J . B . Glen , 3 ; W . J . Crump , -jS ; W . Alonckton . ioGt

G . Drysdale , W . AL , 222 ; F . Lane , S . W ., 7 SS ; E . Culver , S . W ., G 3 ; Deputy Edmeston , J . W . 1 O 35 ; VV . II . White , 55 ; E . Alasscy , P . AL , 1297 ; E . F . Baylis , S . W ., 259 ' J- M . Durand , 4 C ; Kenneth R . Alontgomery , 255 ; A . C Lewis , 457 ; Capt . Bedford Pirn , P . M ., 77 ; Alaior L . G . Dundas , W . M ., 570 ; T . A . Logan , S . D ., 91 ; Herbert j . Adams , P . AL , 509 ; S . P . Norris , P . AL , 21 , P . G . S ; . W . J . ColIcns ,-J . W ., 76 G ; Gcngc Evans , 1 S 70 ; L

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