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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • May 2, 1868
  • Page 3
  • EARS OF WHEAT FROM A CORNUCOPIA.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, May 2, 1868: Page 3

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    Article THE ORDER OF ST. CONSTANTINE. ← Page 3 of 3
    Article EARS OF WHEAT FROM A CORNUCOPIA. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 3

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

The Order Of St. Constantine.

Since that period it has been considered as the second ; at present it is equally numerous ancl well composed . Sir William D'Arley , Captain of Marines in the service of his Britannic Majesty , is a Knight of

this Order . We are informed he commanded a company of that praiseworthy corps on board the ship which conducted their Sicilian Majesties from Naples to Palermo , and received this as a token of their princely gratitude .

Since this Order has been united to the crown of Naples , it is divided into four classes—those of Grand Crosses , Grand Commanders , Commanders , and Knights ; and these again into Cavalieri di Justizia , and Cavalieri di Grazia , or Knights

received in virtue of their being persons of ancient nobility , or in consequence of the favour of his Majesty . The Grand Crosses wear the Cross of the Order round the neck , pendant from a plain broad sky-blue ribbon . The Grand Commanders

and Commanders wear a similar Cross ; that worn by the latter is something smaller than the one worn by the former ; and so is that of a Grand Commander still less than that of a Grand Cross . Their ribbons are of a proportionate breadth

likewise . The Knights wear the small Cross from the button-hole of their coat ; it is attached to a narrow plain , sky-blue ribbon .

The dignity of Grand Prior is especially attached to the Archiepiscopal See of Nola , a city celebrated in history , since it was there that Augustus Cassar breathed his last .

Ears Of Wheat From A Cornucopia.

EARS OF WHEAT FROM A CORNUCOPIA .

Hy Bro . D . MURRAY LYON , A . M ., Masonic University of Kent % t , chj , JJ . S . ; Corresponding Member of the Union of German Freemasons , Leipsia ; one of the Grand Stewards in the Grand Lodge of Scotland ,- author of the " History of Mother Kilwinning , ! fc . LODGE JEWELS .

While retaining the first acknowledged badge of the Mason Craft , some of the symbolical lodges following the example of the head Masonic courts of Edinburgh and Kilwinning , inaugurated their erection by bedecking their officers with insignia distinctive of their rank and emblematic of the teachings of Masonry under the transformation its

constitution had undergone . In the jewel now shown—that of the Lodge Navigation ( No . 86 )—

manufactured in 1762-3 , are introduced emblems of a purely speculative import , viz ., the first in order of the " Greater Lights , " flanked on either side by one of the "Lesser Lights / ' the novelty oftlie system being further given effect to by the

introduction of the trowel and setting maul , the Masonic signification of which is well known to brethren who have . attained to the third degree . The lodge to which this jewel belongs is the second of those in Ayrshire which were originally

erected by the Grand Lodge of Scotland . Its charter , at first granted to Irvine , has also been worked in Monkton and Troon , but seems now to have left off its migratory habits and settled down in the latter place . No more prosperous lodge

exists in the province of Ayr , and for this position " Navigation , Troon" is mainly indebted to the judicious zeal and energy by which during the past ten years its leading office bearers have been characterised .

In the next illustration , which is taken from the jewel at present worn by the Master of the Troon Lodge , the insignia of Operative Masonry is less elaborately depicted than in the preceding onethe level and its companions having in this design

been replaced hy the sun in full glory , while the square rests on the letter G , which has for supports the silvery orb and blazing star . In addition to its value as a specimen of lodge jewels of

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1868-05-02, Page 3” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 14 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_02051868/page/3/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE ORDER OF ST. CONSTANTINE. Article 1
EARS OF WHEAT FROM A CORNUCOPIA. Article 3
(No. 7).—THE MASONIC TEMPLE, ST. HELIER. Article 4
THE KNIGHTS TEMPLARS. Article 8
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 10
MASONIC EXCHANGE. Article 10
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 11
THE ANCIENT EGYPTIANS. Article 11
THE TENDENCY OF SOME LATE CORRESPONDENCE. Article 11
MASONIC LIFEBOAT FUND. Article 11
MASONIC MEMS. Article 12
GRAND LODGE . Article 12
METROPOLITAN. Article 13
PROVINCIAL. Article 16
CHANNEL ISLANDS. Article 17
SCOTLAND. Article 18
ROYAL ARCH. Article 18
MARK MASONRY. Article 18
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 19
Poetry. Article 20
MASONIC LIFEBOAT FUND. Article 20
MEETINGS OF THE LEARNED SOCIETIES FOR THE WEEK ENDING MAY 9TH, 1868. Article 20
METROPOLITAN LODGE MEETINGS, ETC., FOR THE WEEK ENDING MAY 9TH, 1868. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Order Of St. Constantine.

Since that period it has been considered as the second ; at present it is equally numerous ancl well composed . Sir William D'Arley , Captain of Marines in the service of his Britannic Majesty , is a Knight of

this Order . We are informed he commanded a company of that praiseworthy corps on board the ship which conducted their Sicilian Majesties from Naples to Palermo , and received this as a token of their princely gratitude .

Since this Order has been united to the crown of Naples , it is divided into four classes—those of Grand Crosses , Grand Commanders , Commanders , and Knights ; and these again into Cavalieri di Justizia , and Cavalieri di Grazia , or Knights

received in virtue of their being persons of ancient nobility , or in consequence of the favour of his Majesty . The Grand Crosses wear the Cross of the Order round the neck , pendant from a plain broad sky-blue ribbon . The Grand Commanders

and Commanders wear a similar Cross ; that worn by the latter is something smaller than the one worn by the former ; and so is that of a Grand Commander still less than that of a Grand Cross . Their ribbons are of a proportionate breadth

likewise . The Knights wear the small Cross from the button-hole of their coat ; it is attached to a narrow plain , sky-blue ribbon .

The dignity of Grand Prior is especially attached to the Archiepiscopal See of Nola , a city celebrated in history , since it was there that Augustus Cassar breathed his last .

Ears Of Wheat From A Cornucopia.

EARS OF WHEAT FROM A CORNUCOPIA .

Hy Bro . D . MURRAY LYON , A . M ., Masonic University of Kent % t , chj , JJ . S . ; Corresponding Member of the Union of German Freemasons , Leipsia ; one of the Grand Stewards in the Grand Lodge of Scotland ,- author of the " History of Mother Kilwinning , ! fc . LODGE JEWELS .

While retaining the first acknowledged badge of the Mason Craft , some of the symbolical lodges following the example of the head Masonic courts of Edinburgh and Kilwinning , inaugurated their erection by bedecking their officers with insignia distinctive of their rank and emblematic of the teachings of Masonry under the transformation its

constitution had undergone . In the jewel now shown—that of the Lodge Navigation ( No . 86 )—

manufactured in 1762-3 , are introduced emblems of a purely speculative import , viz ., the first in order of the " Greater Lights , " flanked on either side by one of the "Lesser Lights / ' the novelty oftlie system being further given effect to by the

introduction of the trowel and setting maul , the Masonic signification of which is well known to brethren who have . attained to the third degree . The lodge to which this jewel belongs is the second of those in Ayrshire which were originally

erected by the Grand Lodge of Scotland . Its charter , at first granted to Irvine , has also been worked in Monkton and Troon , but seems now to have left off its migratory habits and settled down in the latter place . No more prosperous lodge

exists in the province of Ayr , and for this position " Navigation , Troon" is mainly indebted to the judicious zeal and energy by which during the past ten years its leading office bearers have been characterised .

In the next illustration , which is taken from the jewel at present worn by the Master of the Troon Lodge , the insignia of Operative Masonry is less elaborately depicted than in the preceding onethe level and its companions having in this design

been replaced hy the sun in full glory , while the square rests on the letter G , which has for supports the silvery orb and blazing star . In addition to its value as a specimen of lodge jewels of

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