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  • Nov. 1, 1879
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    Article THE SANCTUARY OF MEMPHIS, OR HERMES: Page 1 of 9 →
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The Sanctuary Of Memphis, Or Hermes:

THE SANCTUARY OF MEMPHIS , OR HERMES :

AN ABRIDGED HISTORY OF FREEMASONRY AND THE ORIGIN OF ALL ITS KNOWN RITES . Translated from the French of E . J . Maremvis de Negre , BY N . E . KENNY . THE recent publicationby Mr . John Murrayof Dr . Henry Brngsch-Bey ' s '

, , great work , " Egypt -under the Pharaohs , entirel y derived from the Monuments , " has led to new inquiries as to the origin of Freemasonry . The aim of the work of Dr . Brugsch is to interpret the stone records of a remote age by the light of recent investigations . NOAV , there is no doubt that the Egyptians ( whose Asiatic , not Ethiopio , descent , is indubitable ) were great artificersand that architecture held high place of honour—often a position

, nearest the throne—in the land of the Pharaohs . " The office of architect , " says Dr . Brugsch , " was the occupation of the noblest , men at the king ' s court . Pharaoh ' s architects ( the Mur-ket ) , who were often of the number of the king ' s sons and grandsons , were held in high honour , ancl the favour of their lord gave them his own daughters out of the women ' s house as wives . " And the feats of those mighty builders of old were worthy of all the honours paid

to the designers . Witness the erections of Khufu , of Khafra , and of Mengara ; the buildings of Heliopolis , the monuments at Karnak , the tombs at Beni Hassan , the unequalled ruins around Lake Mceris , the Grand Hall of Pillars , and those mystic miracles of stone—the Pyramids—on which M . Rouge , another famous Egyptologist , says : — " Architecture has here shown inconceivable perfection in the cutting- ancl placing of blocks of -vast

dimensions . The passages of the Great Pyramid remain a model of exactness in building which has never been surpassed . " On his stone monuments Dr . Brugsch finds recorded the name and apotheosis of the . monarch of E gyptian artificers , Martiser , who flourished forty-four centuries before the Christian era , and was the father of Usurtasen , and progenitor of a race of marvellous architects , only ajiproached by great artists like Mer , Rois , Amenemant , Amenhotep , etc .

I make this reference to the latest book on the storied region of Egypt , because it confirms the opinion of most learned writers , that the borne of architecture—the site of the greatest works ever erected by the hand of man ( and most- probabl y the wondrous ruins of Baalbec and Palmyra owed N

“The Masonic Magazine: 1879-11-01, Page 1” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 30 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01111879/page/1/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
THE SANCTUARY OF MEMPHIS, OR HERMES: Article 1
THE HEATHER-CLAD MOOR. Article 9
A VISIT TO THE ENGLISH LAKES. Article 10
THE DAY IS DYING. Article 15
MASONIC CRAM. Article 16
TRYING TO CHANGE A SOVEREIGN. Article 17
MASONIC HYMN. Article 25
JOTTINGS AT HIGH XII. IN THE HOLY LAND. Article 26
THE CARBONARI. Article 28
AUTUMN. Article 30
BEATRICE. Article 31
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 35
TWO PICTURES. Article 37
MASONIC READING. Article 38
CONDITION OF FREEMASONRY IN SPAIN. Article 40
MUSIC. Article 41
ANNIVERSARY OF ST. JOHN. Article 41
THE EMIGRANT. Article 42
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Sanctuary Of Memphis, Or Hermes:

THE SANCTUARY OF MEMPHIS , OR HERMES :

AN ABRIDGED HISTORY OF FREEMASONRY AND THE ORIGIN OF ALL ITS KNOWN RITES . Translated from the French of E . J . Maremvis de Negre , BY N . E . KENNY . THE recent publicationby Mr . John Murrayof Dr . Henry Brngsch-Bey ' s '

, , great work , " Egypt -under the Pharaohs , entirel y derived from the Monuments , " has led to new inquiries as to the origin of Freemasonry . The aim of the work of Dr . Brugsch is to interpret the stone records of a remote age by the light of recent investigations . NOAV , there is no doubt that the Egyptians ( whose Asiatic , not Ethiopio , descent , is indubitable ) were great artificersand that architecture held high place of honour—often a position

, nearest the throne—in the land of the Pharaohs . " The office of architect , " says Dr . Brugsch , " was the occupation of the noblest , men at the king ' s court . Pharaoh ' s architects ( the Mur-ket ) , who were often of the number of the king ' s sons and grandsons , were held in high honour , ancl the favour of their lord gave them his own daughters out of the women ' s house as wives . " And the feats of those mighty builders of old were worthy of all the honours paid

to the designers . Witness the erections of Khufu , of Khafra , and of Mengara ; the buildings of Heliopolis , the monuments at Karnak , the tombs at Beni Hassan , the unequalled ruins around Lake Mceris , the Grand Hall of Pillars , and those mystic miracles of stone—the Pyramids—on which M . Rouge , another famous Egyptologist , says : — " Architecture has here shown inconceivable perfection in the cutting- ancl placing of blocks of -vast

dimensions . The passages of the Great Pyramid remain a model of exactness in building which has never been surpassed . " On his stone monuments Dr . Brugsch finds recorded the name and apotheosis of the . monarch of E gyptian artificers , Martiser , who flourished forty-four centuries before the Christian era , and was the father of Usurtasen , and progenitor of a race of marvellous architects , only ajiproached by great artists like Mer , Rois , Amenemant , Amenhotep , etc .

I make this reference to the latest book on the storied region of Egypt , because it confirms the opinion of most learned writers , that the borne of architecture—the site of the greatest works ever erected by the hand of man ( and most- probabl y the wondrous ruins of Baalbec and Palmyra owed N

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