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  • Dec. 8, 1860
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  • FREEMASONRY AMONG THE JEWS.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Dec. 8, 1860: Page 6

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Freemasonry Among The Jews.

it is supposed , is Spain , in the ships which Solomon sent out , ancl settled there . When , after Solomon's death , his son and successor , Eehoboam , lost ten parts of his kingdom by the imprudent answer which he gave to the people , when they appealed for relief from the heavy taxes ; he sent , not-Avithstanding , his collector , Adoram , into the provinces to enforce paymentand also to the newl-lanted colonies in

, yp Spain . There , howeA'er , the people , who it is supposed were not of the tribe of Judah , stoned him to death . It is a fact that there axe numerous tombstones , with old HebreAV or Samaritan inscriptions , in Seville or Toledo—we cannot positively say in Avhich of these two places—and among tbem is one which bears the name of Adoram , the collector of Solomon and his son Eehoboam .

Another tradition , and probably nearer to the truth than the former , is , that Jews emigrated to Spain in Phoenician ships , at the time when the land of Israel ivas groaning under the tyrannical yoke of the successors of Alexander the Great . This seems to he confirmed by a great many coins , which were recently dug from some ruins in the ancient city of Tarragona ; and also by another very

important circumstance , namely , that in the days of Herod and Pontius Pilate , the Jeivish community in Toledo wrote a letter to the high-priest Eliezer , and the high council , or Sanhedrim , to the effect , to beware of condemning Jesus of Nazareth to the penalty of death . HOAV much truth may be in any of these traditions , it would be A * ery hard , or perhaps altogether impossible , to ascertain ; this much ,

however , is certain , that JBAVS were the founders and builders of most of the ancient cities ol Spain , as Toledo , Seville , Barcelona , and others ; and also , that Jews were the inhabitants of those places at the time Avhen the Ostrogoths invaded the Peninsula , and planted , Avith the cross , oppression , persecution , and cruelty against all who Avouldnot bow their knees to it , and especially the Jews . Before Ave go further in the history of the Spanish and

Portuguese Jeivs , ivhich induced us to think that there are traces of Masonry having existed among them , we must mention another tradition , which lives in the mouth of almost every Jew in Bohemia , and particularly in Prague , the capital of that country . There is scarcely a traveller who goes to see the Avorld , and to study the different customs and habits of the nations , and see the rarities of

their cities , who on stopping a feAV days in Prague , Avould not also go to see the antiquities in the JeAvish quarter , and particularly the " Al-Tenai " * synagogue . It is a remarkable building , and pecviliar in its structure , which is neither altogether the Greek style nor the Gothic . No visitor over crossed tbe threshold of this building without feeling , as it were , nn ice-cold stream running through his veins , and

an involuntary A'eneration for a temple with AA'hich so many wonderful events are connected . The most ancient chronicle of Bohemia says , that this building Avas found there , ivhen tbe founder of the city of Prague laid the firstcomer-stone of it , and that he felt such a veneration for that strange edifice , that he suffered not his people to use it for any purpose . Soon after this , Jews came to settle there , and

claimed that building as a synagogue , which had been erected by their ancestors for a house of Avorship . The tradition of the origin of this synagogue is this : — The Jewish colonies—and perhaps also Israelitish , from the ten tribes—in several parts of the then inhabited parts of Europe , especially in Spain and France , known in the Scriptures as " Sephorod , " and " Tserophoth , " during the second le and

temp , were numerous wealthy , and often made pilgrimages to Jerusalem , in obedience to the command of God . Here , in the pleasant valley on the shores of the beautiful river Moldau , at that time the extreme point of habitation , they chose to meet at a place appointed , where they waited until all Avere gathered who intended to go , and then pursued their ivay eastwards , in a large body , without fear of the savage hordes who made those regions unsafe . As they had often to tarry for weeks and

even months , they agreed to build a substantial building , which should serve them not only for a house of worship , but also for a fort , in which a thousand people could be protected , should the savages of the forest at auy time dare to attack them , f There is , no doubt , a great deal of truth in this tradition , inasmuchas it is partly confirmed bytheBohemian chronicles .

This however , is evident , that Jews erected that building , and that they did it without the assistance of other hands than their OAVU . If this was the case , there must have been indeed skilful masters in the art of architecture among them , Avho formed an association like those of other nations . We now return to the Jews in Spain and Portugal . After

the downfall of the Ostro-Gothic empire , under the reign of the Onajades , or Moors , the Jews regained their former positions hi those countrie ts ; hey enjoyed perfect liberty , and had time , means , and opportunity to extend their knowledge and Avisdom in all branches of science and art .. "We find them in the highest stations at the courts , as ivell as in the institutes of learning . Even after the golden ago of Spain had passed away , —after the expulsion of the

Moors by popish kings , the Jews , though oppressed and often persecuted again , enjoyed high stations at the different courts of the Spanish monarchs for nearly a hundred years . In the middle of the fourteenth century , hoAvever , the sufferings of the despised race became intolerable ; and tens of thousands professed publicly a- religion which , in their hearts , they hated and abhorred to the uttermost . These

were called "Novos Christianos , " or New Christians ; or ; together with the new converts from the Moors , "Maranos ; " J and this latter name was more common among the people than the first . It is a well-knOAvn fact , that the Maranos , who were Jews in their hearts , held secret meetings on certain days ancl at certain places , to worship God according to their oivn

convict-ion . To these meetings none could obtain admission except members of a similar association , and this only after strict examinations . Generally they met in public houses , as taverns , hotels , & c ., kept by one for their own people , in order that their coming and going might not excite the attention and suspicion of their enemies , the spies of the devil ' s tribunal , the Inquisition . The room where they men had two entrances : one for the brethren of the same

congregation , which was never known to a visitor , although he gave satisfactory evidences that he was a member of the brotherhood ,, and in consequence of which he obtained admission . The other door was for the entrance of visitors . They appeared in a peculiar dress , mostly in monks' cowles . ; and the last rule of precaution which they employed was , that whenever visitors from other communities were

introduced among them , they appeared all masked , while the visitors were obliged to show their faces . In examining visitors who were not known to them personally , they used , like Freemasons , certain signs , grips , pass-words , which , together with the facts of their being skilled in geometry and architecture , makes it most probable that these communites practised a kind of Freemasonry

among themselves . But there are other circumstances which confirm us in that idea . The history of that persecuted race , thousands of ivhich ended in an "Auto da fe , " records of innumerable cases where brethren were delivered when in great distress ; from the most cruel death , even from the foot of the scaffold ; at once , a party of several hundred personsmenAvomenand childrenwho were

, , , , already sentenced to be burnt alive on the next morning , were carried out from the prison of the Inquisition in Lisbon , brought on board of two vessels which were waiting for them , and safely landed at Amsterdam . One fact more we ivill mention . There were often traitors among them , in spite of all the means of precaution which

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1860-12-08, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 2 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_08121860/page/6/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
GRAND LODGE. Article 1
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.—XXXVIII. Article 1
STRAY THOUGHTS ON THE ORIGIN AND PROGRESS OF THE FINE ARTS. Article 4
MASONRY IN NEW YORK. Article 5
FREEMASONRY AMONG THE JEWS. Article 5
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 7
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 8
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 9
MASONIC HALLS. Article 9
LODGE HERALDRY. Article 10
Untitled Article 11
SUPREME GRAND LODGE. Article 11
METROPOLITAN. Article 14
PROVINCIAL. Article 15
CHANNEL ISLANDS. Article 16
ROYAL ARCH. Article 17
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 18
Obituary. Article 19
THE WEEK. Article 19
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Freemasonry Among The Jews.

it is supposed , is Spain , in the ships which Solomon sent out , ancl settled there . When , after Solomon's death , his son and successor , Eehoboam , lost ten parts of his kingdom by the imprudent answer which he gave to the people , when they appealed for relief from the heavy taxes ; he sent , not-Avithstanding , his collector , Adoram , into the provinces to enforce paymentand also to the newl-lanted colonies in

, yp Spain . There , howeA'er , the people , who it is supposed were not of the tribe of Judah , stoned him to death . It is a fact that there axe numerous tombstones , with old HebreAV or Samaritan inscriptions , in Seville or Toledo—we cannot positively say in Avhich of these two places—and among tbem is one which bears the name of Adoram , the collector of Solomon and his son Eehoboam .

Another tradition , and probably nearer to the truth than the former , is , that Jews emigrated to Spain in Phoenician ships , at the time when the land of Israel ivas groaning under the tyrannical yoke of the successors of Alexander the Great . This seems to he confirmed by a great many coins , which were recently dug from some ruins in the ancient city of Tarragona ; and also by another very

important circumstance , namely , that in the days of Herod and Pontius Pilate , the Jeivish community in Toledo wrote a letter to the high-priest Eliezer , and the high council , or Sanhedrim , to the effect , to beware of condemning Jesus of Nazareth to the penalty of death . HOAV much truth may be in any of these traditions , it would be A * ery hard , or perhaps altogether impossible , to ascertain ; this much ,

however , is certain , that JBAVS were the founders and builders of most of the ancient cities ol Spain , as Toledo , Seville , Barcelona , and others ; and also , that Jews were the inhabitants of those places at the time Avhen the Ostrogoths invaded the Peninsula , and planted , Avith the cross , oppression , persecution , and cruelty against all who Avouldnot bow their knees to it , and especially the Jews . Before Ave go further in the history of the Spanish and

Portuguese Jeivs , ivhich induced us to think that there are traces of Masonry having existed among them , we must mention another tradition , which lives in the mouth of almost every Jew in Bohemia , and particularly in Prague , the capital of that country . There is scarcely a traveller who goes to see the Avorld , and to study the different customs and habits of the nations , and see the rarities of

their cities , who on stopping a feAV days in Prague , Avould not also go to see the antiquities in the JeAvish quarter , and particularly the " Al-Tenai " * synagogue . It is a remarkable building , and pecviliar in its structure , which is neither altogether the Greek style nor the Gothic . No visitor over crossed tbe threshold of this building without feeling , as it were , nn ice-cold stream running through his veins , and

an involuntary A'eneration for a temple with AA'hich so many wonderful events are connected . The most ancient chronicle of Bohemia says , that this building Avas found there , ivhen tbe founder of the city of Prague laid the firstcomer-stone of it , and that he felt such a veneration for that strange edifice , that he suffered not his people to use it for any purpose . Soon after this , Jews came to settle there , and

claimed that building as a synagogue , which had been erected by their ancestors for a house of Avorship . The tradition of the origin of this synagogue is this : — The Jewish colonies—and perhaps also Israelitish , from the ten tribes—in several parts of the then inhabited parts of Europe , especially in Spain and France , known in the Scriptures as " Sephorod , " and " Tserophoth , " during the second le and

temp , were numerous wealthy , and often made pilgrimages to Jerusalem , in obedience to the command of God . Here , in the pleasant valley on the shores of the beautiful river Moldau , at that time the extreme point of habitation , they chose to meet at a place appointed , where they waited until all Avere gathered who intended to go , and then pursued their ivay eastwards , in a large body , without fear of the savage hordes who made those regions unsafe . As they had often to tarry for weeks and

even months , they agreed to build a substantial building , which should serve them not only for a house of worship , but also for a fort , in which a thousand people could be protected , should the savages of the forest at auy time dare to attack them , f There is , no doubt , a great deal of truth in this tradition , inasmuchas it is partly confirmed bytheBohemian chronicles .

This however , is evident , that Jews erected that building , and that they did it without the assistance of other hands than their OAVU . If this was the case , there must have been indeed skilful masters in the art of architecture among them , Avho formed an association like those of other nations . We now return to the Jews in Spain and Portugal . After

the downfall of the Ostro-Gothic empire , under the reign of the Onajades , or Moors , the Jews regained their former positions hi those countrie ts ; hey enjoyed perfect liberty , and had time , means , and opportunity to extend their knowledge and Avisdom in all branches of science and art .. "We find them in the highest stations at the courts , as ivell as in the institutes of learning . Even after the golden ago of Spain had passed away , —after the expulsion of the

Moors by popish kings , the Jews , though oppressed and often persecuted again , enjoyed high stations at the different courts of the Spanish monarchs for nearly a hundred years . In the middle of the fourteenth century , hoAvever , the sufferings of the despised race became intolerable ; and tens of thousands professed publicly a- religion which , in their hearts , they hated and abhorred to the uttermost . These

were called "Novos Christianos , " or New Christians ; or ; together with the new converts from the Moors , "Maranos ; " J and this latter name was more common among the people than the first . It is a well-knOAvn fact , that the Maranos , who were Jews in their hearts , held secret meetings on certain days ancl at certain places , to worship God according to their oivn

convict-ion . To these meetings none could obtain admission except members of a similar association , and this only after strict examinations . Generally they met in public houses , as taverns , hotels , & c ., kept by one for their own people , in order that their coming and going might not excite the attention and suspicion of their enemies , the spies of the devil ' s tribunal , the Inquisition . The room where they men had two entrances : one for the brethren of the same

congregation , which was never known to a visitor , although he gave satisfactory evidences that he was a member of the brotherhood ,, and in consequence of which he obtained admission . The other door was for the entrance of visitors . They appeared in a peculiar dress , mostly in monks' cowles . ; and the last rule of precaution which they employed was , that whenever visitors from other communities were

introduced among them , they appeared all masked , while the visitors were obliged to show their faces . In examining visitors who were not known to them personally , they used , like Freemasons , certain signs , grips , pass-words , which , together with the facts of their being skilled in geometry and architecture , makes it most probable that these communites practised a kind of Freemasonry

among themselves . But there are other circumstances which confirm us in that idea . The history of that persecuted race , thousands of ivhich ended in an "Auto da fe , " records of innumerable cases where brethren were delivered when in great distress ; from the most cruel death , even from the foot of the scaffold ; at once , a party of several hundred personsmenAvomenand childrenwho were

, , , , already sentenced to be burnt alive on the next morning , were carried out from the prison of the Inquisition in Lisbon , brought on board of two vessels which were waiting for them , and safely landed at Amsterdam . One fact more we ivill mention . There were often traitors among them , in spite of all the means of precaution which

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