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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Oct. 1, 1855
  • Page 16
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Oct. 1, 1855: Page 16

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to Plutarch , the scaraboeus amongst fighting men was engraved on their signets . " * * " The same custom seems to have passed over into Italy , either having been first adopted in Sicily , where the usages of Egypt prevailed from the earliest ages , or through the doctrines of Pythagoras * f whose philosophy , being veiled by

symbols , was copied from that of the Egyptians . There is every reason to suppose that the warriors of Italy held this same opinion respecting the scaraboeus , since the figure of some hero was generally engraved on the flat surface of the stone j J and ifc was probably not only considered as an amulet , hut from , the image ¦ representing' some person connected with religious veneration , it was classed and

deposited amongst the household gods . Hence it follows , that as the style of engraving in many instances is exceedingly rude and unfinished , it is to be supposed that these scarabcei were in use with the soldiery of the lower grades , since such as are more delicately and highly executed are far less numerous , "

The earliest mention in the Old Testament of religious worship rendered to any divinity connected with an insect , occurs in the 1 st chapter of the 2 nd Book of Kings , 2 nd and 3 rd verses , where " Ahaziah king of Israel , having fallen down through a lattice in his

upper chamber , and having received some dangerous injury , sent to consult Baalzebub , the god of Ekron , to know whether he should recover of the disease . The name of this deity is translated in the $ eptuagint _ as _ " the god My of the Ekronites , " § who were the inhabitants of a district belonging to the Philistines , situated near the Mediterranean , and which was originally allotted to the tribe of

Judah . ( Josh , xv ., v . 45 , 46 . ) Calmet , in his dictionary , under the word Baalzebub , says ( and the same opinions are to be found in Buxtorf ' s Chaldee Dictionary under the word BaalV

/ 7 " This deity was called trie G-od of the Flies , either because he was supposed to defend the people from the flies which were attracted in great numbers by the sacrifices , or because the idol itself was represented by the figure of a fly or beetle , and thus became an object of adoration . "

According to Pliny , as before mentioned , the Egyptians , who lay so near the Philistines , paid divine honours to the beetle ; and it is observed that there are beetles in the pictures of Isis , on which Pignorius has a comment . ||

" The author of the Book of Wisdom having said that God sent flies and wasps to drive the Canaanites and Ammonites by degrees out of their country , adds , that

* De Iside et Osir , p . 355 . The scaraboeus was an emblem of the sun , because , no females being found in the species , the male enclosed the new germ , in a round ball , and then pushed it backwards , whilst he really advanced from east to west . Vide Kenrick ' s Ancient Egypt , vol . ii . p . 21 . + Plutarch , de Iside et Osir , p . 354 . X The name of Thothmes III . was held in high veneration by posterity ,

and is found on a great number of scarabcei used as amulets , many of which were probably engraved in subsequent times . Vide Kenrick's Ancient Egypt , vol . ii . p . 229 . § Baal , Beel , or Eel , signifying " Lord / ' or " Master , " and " Zebub or Zevuv" a fly . II Pignorius Laurentius of Padua , a canon of Treviso , died 1631 . He wrote the Mensa Isiaca , to illustrate Egyptian antiquities . Vide p . 43 .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1855-10-01, Page 16” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 22 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_01101855/page/16/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
METROPOLITAN. Article 35
ROSE CROIX. Article 34
PROVINCIAL. Article 35
GERMANY. Article 60
Obituary. Article 61
THE ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 34
CATHEDRAL CHURCHES. Article 14
MASONIC INSCRIPTION FOR A FOUNTAIN. Article 14
ON THE SCARABCEUS. Article 15
TRAVELS BY A FREEMASON. Article 18
PROFESSIONAL AUTHORITY. Article 1
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 23
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 32
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 30
IRELAND Article 58
COLONIAL. Article 59
AMERICA. Article 60
CORNWALL. Article 62
NOTICE. Article 63
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 63
NOTES ON ANTIQUARIAN RESEARCH Article 6
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Page 16

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

Untitled Article

to Plutarch , the scaraboeus amongst fighting men was engraved on their signets . " * * " The same custom seems to have passed over into Italy , either having been first adopted in Sicily , where the usages of Egypt prevailed from the earliest ages , or through the doctrines of Pythagoras * f whose philosophy , being veiled by

symbols , was copied from that of the Egyptians . There is every reason to suppose that the warriors of Italy held this same opinion respecting the scaraboeus , since the figure of some hero was generally engraved on the flat surface of the stone j J and ifc was probably not only considered as an amulet , hut from , the image ¦ representing' some person connected with religious veneration , it was classed and

deposited amongst the household gods . Hence it follows , that as the style of engraving in many instances is exceedingly rude and unfinished , it is to be supposed that these scarabcei were in use with the soldiery of the lower grades , since such as are more delicately and highly executed are far less numerous , "

The earliest mention in the Old Testament of religious worship rendered to any divinity connected with an insect , occurs in the 1 st chapter of the 2 nd Book of Kings , 2 nd and 3 rd verses , where " Ahaziah king of Israel , having fallen down through a lattice in his

upper chamber , and having received some dangerous injury , sent to consult Baalzebub , the god of Ekron , to know whether he should recover of the disease . The name of this deity is translated in the $ eptuagint _ as _ " the god My of the Ekronites , " § who were the inhabitants of a district belonging to the Philistines , situated near the Mediterranean , and which was originally allotted to the tribe of

Judah . ( Josh , xv ., v . 45 , 46 . ) Calmet , in his dictionary , under the word Baalzebub , says ( and the same opinions are to be found in Buxtorf ' s Chaldee Dictionary under the word BaalV

/ 7 " This deity was called trie G-od of the Flies , either because he was supposed to defend the people from the flies which were attracted in great numbers by the sacrifices , or because the idol itself was represented by the figure of a fly or beetle , and thus became an object of adoration . "

According to Pliny , as before mentioned , the Egyptians , who lay so near the Philistines , paid divine honours to the beetle ; and it is observed that there are beetles in the pictures of Isis , on which Pignorius has a comment . ||

" The author of the Book of Wisdom having said that God sent flies and wasps to drive the Canaanites and Ammonites by degrees out of their country , adds , that

* De Iside et Osir , p . 355 . The scaraboeus was an emblem of the sun , because , no females being found in the species , the male enclosed the new germ , in a round ball , and then pushed it backwards , whilst he really advanced from east to west . Vide Kenrick ' s Ancient Egypt , vol . ii . p . 21 . + Plutarch , de Iside et Osir , p . 354 . X The name of Thothmes III . was held in high veneration by posterity ,

and is found on a great number of scarabcei used as amulets , many of which were probably engraved in subsequent times . Vide Kenrick's Ancient Egypt , vol . ii . p . 229 . § Baal , Beel , or Eel , signifying " Lord / ' or " Master , " and " Zebub or Zevuv" a fly . II Pignorius Laurentius of Padua , a canon of Treviso , died 1631 . He wrote the Mensa Isiaca , to illustrate Egyptian antiquities . Vide p . 43 .

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