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  • July 1, 1875
  • Page 23
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The Masonic Magazine, July 1, 1875: Page 23

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    Article THE PALACE OF THE QUEEN OF SHEBA. Page 1 of 3
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Page 23

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

The Palace Of The Queen Of Sheba.

THE PALACE OF THE QUEEN OF SHEBA .

CARL MAUCH ' JOURNEYS IU SOUTH-EAST AFRICA . ( Continued from pa , ge 390 . )

WE all know the disappointment experienced by those AVIIO flocked to our shores expecting to find read y to their hand the riches Avhich the mineralogist had seen ,

Avith rather his mental than his bodily eyes . But Ave also believe that had Mauch confined himself to a less globing 'statement of Avhat he had actually seen , his words Avould haA * e failed to startle Eurooe

from her propriety , aud attract hither the expeditions which , under all the vicissitudes of failure or success , have been since then working out the problem , and some of which are now realising the truth of

Mauch ' s prophetic words . Hopeless , however , at the time of overcoming unaided the opposition of the natives and other difficulties in the way of further exploration , Mauch returned to Natal , and , with

such an equipment as his slender finances could supply , returned to the TransA * aal , Avhere , travelling eastward from Pretoria , he reached the sources of the Umkomati , or King George ' s River ; then , turning

north , he visited L ydenburg , and in July , noted a " probable goldfield on the north of Olipant ' s River ; " then , crossing the Limpopo , in latitude about 22 ° 10 ' , and longitude about 32 ° 15 ' , he turned

northwest , and , after along and weary pedestrian journey , Avorn out with fatigue , Avith hunger , and Avith thirst , he ( accompanied , we believe , by a fellow-countryman named Jebe , ) reached the Kraal of Mutigaau , a

principal induna of the Matabili , who , knowing that his Sovereign had granted no liberty of ingress to his dominions from the Transvaal Republic , detained him until the pleasure of the autocrat should be

known , sending out meanwhile to shoot a rhinoceros , that his prisoner might not perish from hunger . After some delay , permission Avas granted for Mauch ' s advance to the mission station of Inyati , Avhence

he had to return to the Transvaal , and make a second visit to the diamond helds . In February , 1870 , he again set out on a journey through Hew Scotland toward Delagoa Bay , where he suffered

The Palace Of The Queen Of Sheba.

from attacks of fever , and made his Avay back to the Republic . Later in the same year he undertook a daring and adventurous voyage down the Vaal River from near Potchefstroom to the diamond fields in a

flat-bottomed boat , Avhich occupied twentyone days , passing thirty-three rapids and cataracts , one of which was about twentysix feet high , during the voyage . The last and greatest of his journeys , hoAvever , in

Avhich he may claim to have struck out an entirely neAV , and in some parts an entirely untrodden trackAvay , commenced iu the year 1871 , Avith the express object of discovering ruins marked on the old

Portuguese maps as Zimbayo , knoAvn to the surrounding tribes as Mazimbaowa , described in the old legends as rivalling those of ancient Rome , and supposed , though on insufficient ground , to be the Queen of

Sbeba s palace . The Journey to the Ruins of Zimbabye , 1870-72 . — -About the end of January , ' 71 , Mauch prepared for his fourth great journey , intending to explore a district of the

Transvaal that was as yet unknown to him , and then to seek for the ruins to which tradition had long pointed between the Limpopo and the Zambesi . Clad in leathern garments , and provided with

firearms , ammunition , astronomical instruments , sextant , artificial horizon , quicksilver , prismatic and pocket compasses , a sti'ong Avatch , lantern for night observation , aneroid barometer and thermometer ,

botanical papers and geological hammer , and materials for Avriting and sketching , his personal equipment of instruments and weapons weighed 50 lb . or 6 b lb . His library AA'as limited to the nautical almanac ,

logarithmic tables , and a work or tAvo on botany and geology ; his " diky bag " contained needles , thread , awls , Avhetstone , and the most needful articles of the toilet , and beads , brass wire , neck rings , anklets

and armlets , and other goods for barter , packed in leather bags or Avaterproof mats of grass or palm-leaves bound with bark , and divided into convenient loads for the native porters provided by St . Albasini , the Portuguese Consul .

About the end of July and beginning of August , he passed through the fertile district of Spelonken , or " The Caves , " watered by the Limvuba , and other rivers coming from the Zoutpansbergen , and dotted over by huts and villages built under the shelter

“The Masonic Magazine: 1875-07-01, Page 23” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 2 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01071875/page/23/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
TO OUR READERS. Article 2
THE SAFE RETURN. Article 3
INDEX. Article 5
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 7
HELIOTROPE. Article 8
MURIEL HALSIF. Article 8
DR. DASSIGNY'S ENQUIRY. Article 11
AN ORIGINAL DISSERTATION ON PUBLIC SPEAKING. Article 15
CHRONOGRAMS AND CHRONOPHONS. Article 17
ASSYRIAN DISCOVERIES. Article 20
A SONG FOR THE CRAFT. —CONCLUDED. Article 22
THE PALACE OF THE QUEEN OF SHEBA. Article 23
LET'S WELCOME THE HOUR. Article 25
A MASON'S GRAVE. Article 26
Review. Article 26
THE YOUNG WIDOW. Article 29
HOTEL INCIDENT IN THE RIVIERA. Article 30
AN ORATION FIFTY YEARS AGO. Article 34
HENCKABY BUDGINTON'S LITTLE DINNER. Article 38
IMAGININGS. Article 40
THE MYSTIC ORDER. Article 41
CONVERSATION. Article 43
LIVE MASONRY AS WELL AS TEACH IT. Article 45
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Palace Of The Queen Of Sheba.

THE PALACE OF THE QUEEN OF SHEBA .

CARL MAUCH ' JOURNEYS IU SOUTH-EAST AFRICA . ( Continued from pa , ge 390 . )

WE all know the disappointment experienced by those AVIIO flocked to our shores expecting to find read y to their hand the riches Avhich the mineralogist had seen ,

Avith rather his mental than his bodily eyes . But Ave also believe that had Mauch confined himself to a less globing 'statement of Avhat he had actually seen , his words Avould haA * e failed to startle Eurooe

from her propriety , aud attract hither the expeditions which , under all the vicissitudes of failure or success , have been since then working out the problem , and some of which are now realising the truth of

Mauch ' s prophetic words . Hopeless , however , at the time of overcoming unaided the opposition of the natives and other difficulties in the way of further exploration , Mauch returned to Natal , and , with

such an equipment as his slender finances could supply , returned to the TransA * aal , Avhere , travelling eastward from Pretoria , he reached the sources of the Umkomati , or King George ' s River ; then , turning

north , he visited L ydenburg , and in July , noted a " probable goldfield on the north of Olipant ' s River ; " then , crossing the Limpopo , in latitude about 22 ° 10 ' , and longitude about 32 ° 15 ' , he turned

northwest , and , after along and weary pedestrian journey , Avorn out with fatigue , Avith hunger , and Avith thirst , he ( accompanied , we believe , by a fellow-countryman named Jebe , ) reached the Kraal of Mutigaau , a

principal induna of the Matabili , who , knowing that his Sovereign had granted no liberty of ingress to his dominions from the Transvaal Republic , detained him until the pleasure of the autocrat should be

known , sending out meanwhile to shoot a rhinoceros , that his prisoner might not perish from hunger . After some delay , permission Avas granted for Mauch ' s advance to the mission station of Inyati , Avhence

he had to return to the Transvaal , and make a second visit to the diamond helds . In February , 1870 , he again set out on a journey through Hew Scotland toward Delagoa Bay , where he suffered

The Palace Of The Queen Of Sheba.

from attacks of fever , and made his Avay back to the Republic . Later in the same year he undertook a daring and adventurous voyage down the Vaal River from near Potchefstroom to the diamond fields in a

flat-bottomed boat , Avhich occupied twentyone days , passing thirty-three rapids and cataracts , one of which was about twentysix feet high , during the voyage . The last and greatest of his journeys , hoAvever , in

Avhich he may claim to have struck out an entirely neAV , and in some parts an entirely untrodden trackAvay , commenced iu the year 1871 , Avith the express object of discovering ruins marked on the old

Portuguese maps as Zimbayo , knoAvn to the surrounding tribes as Mazimbaowa , described in the old legends as rivalling those of ancient Rome , and supposed , though on insufficient ground , to be the Queen of

Sbeba s palace . The Journey to the Ruins of Zimbabye , 1870-72 . — -About the end of January , ' 71 , Mauch prepared for his fourth great journey , intending to explore a district of the

Transvaal that was as yet unknown to him , and then to seek for the ruins to which tradition had long pointed between the Limpopo and the Zambesi . Clad in leathern garments , and provided with

firearms , ammunition , astronomical instruments , sextant , artificial horizon , quicksilver , prismatic and pocket compasses , a sti'ong Avatch , lantern for night observation , aneroid barometer and thermometer ,

botanical papers and geological hammer , and materials for Avriting and sketching , his personal equipment of instruments and weapons weighed 50 lb . or 6 b lb . His library AA'as limited to the nautical almanac ,

logarithmic tables , and a work or tAvo on botany and geology ; his " diky bag " contained needles , thread , awls , Avhetstone , and the most needful articles of the toilet , and beads , brass wire , neck rings , anklets

and armlets , and other goods for barter , packed in leather bags or Avaterproof mats of grass or palm-leaves bound with bark , and divided into convenient loads for the native porters provided by St . Albasini , the Portuguese Consul .

About the end of July and beginning of August , he passed through the fertile district of Spelonken , or " The Caves , " watered by the Limvuba , and other rivers coming from the Zoutpansbergen , and dotted over by huts and villages built under the shelter

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