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  • March 9, 1861
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  • INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION OF 1862.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, March 9, 1861: Page 6

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    Article INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION OF 1862. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Page 1 of 3 →
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International Exhibition Of 1862.

that amount . The funds raised aro to be expended on the erection of such buildings as may lie necessary , and in the general expenses attending thc enterprise . Of the buildings to be raised , one acre only is to bo of a permanent character , and upon this portion the sum of £ ' 50 , 000 is to be expended in its erection and completion , should the Exhibition be attended with a profit , in which case the permanent

building is to be vested in the Society of Arts , and used by them for the purposes tending to promote arts , manufactures , and commerce : but iu case of a deficiency at the close ofthe Exhibition the Society of Arts is to have power to claim a lease ofthe some upon its undertaking to pay to thc Commissioners such sum as the buildings ivould be likely to realise if taken down ; but in case tho Society of Arts

shall not claim a lease , then the Commissioners aro to sell the one acre of permanent building , and to convert into money all properties and effects belonging to them , which can bo sold and converted , particularly all the buildings erected by them for the 2 mrposes ofthe undertaking . Should there , however , at the close of thc Exhibition , after thc payment of all liabilities , be a surplus of profit

remaining , then thc one acre of permanent building is to be completed and the land retained for thc purposes of future exhibitions by the payment of £ 10 , 000 to thc Eoi'al Commissioners of thc Exhibition of 1851 , on whose land the Exhibition of 1862 is to be held , and all further profits are to lie

applied to such purposes connected with tho encouragement of arts , manufactures , and commerce as shall be determined by the guarantors at a meeting to be called for that purpose . Such aro the general powers of tbe Commissioners under thc Charter , and the guarantors cannot , therefore , be called upon for contributions under any condition , except a deficiency remain after every description of property belonging

to the Commissioners has been converted into money . Since the Charter passed the Great Seal the Commissioners , in a letter addressed to Sir Thomas Phillips , Chairman of the Society of Arts , state that they gladly accept a Charter which conveys to them her Majesty ' s gracious assurance that she is earnestly desirous to promote the holding of an International Exhibition of Industry and Art

in 1802 , and they being unwilling to lose valuable time have taken such provisional steps as their position permitted , and have , therefore , considered the more pressing point , namely , tbe building required for the Exhibition ; and on Saturday last it is stated that they came to a final decision as to the character of tho building intended to bo erected for the Exhibition of 1862 , the liability of the Commissioners in respect

ofthe building being limited to the sum of £ 200 , 000 , and so soon as tho guarantee deed is signed , the Bank of England will be prepared , from time to time , to advance tho necessary funds , and Messrs . Kclk and Lucas , the eminent contractors , who sent in jointly the lowest tender , will proceed with the erection ofthe buildinc

It is also stated that the commissioners have received the assurance of the French Government of its support of the Exhibition , accompanied by a statement that it had been the intention of the Emperor to hofd an International Exhibition in Paris in 1862 had the project not been entertained in England .

The D like of Newcastle , Secretary of State for tbe Colonics , has addressed a communication to the governors of her Majesty ' s colonies , announcing the intention to hold the 'Exhibition . In England some of our largest manufacturers . ' . re already actively engaged in preparing for this second great world ' s fair ; ' and so soon as the Society of Arts shall have completed the guarantee deedthe signature of ivhich

, is progressing most rapidly , we may expect to sec tho building rise , and our great scats of industry actively engaged in preparing for thc competitive display of industry and art to be exhibited in 18 U 2 .

^ MASONRY A SCIENCE . —It is an admitted principle ofthe Order that- wealth and distinction , however valued in the world , can have no influence in procuring admission into a lod ge or in advanein" - a brother to its highest offices . Because Masonry is a science calculated to improve the understanding , to mend the heart , and to bind T . S more closely to one another , by ivhich we may attain the summit of the Masonic ladder—a house not made ivith hands , eternal in the . lei' . vcns .

Masonic Notes And Queries.

MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES .

MRS . M-lL / . OXl OX MEE-UASONItY IN EGYPT . In the last number of THE FHEEIIASOXS MAGAZINE there is the commencement of a paper entitled " Some Observations in Egypt , " which reminds me that Mrs . Belzoni , widow of Bro . Belzoni , the celebrated Egyptian antiquary , has had something to say about Freemasonry and the early Egyptians . This I think may be interesting to many of your readers ; and as I know of no better place to preserve it than among your " Mason ic Notes and Queries , " I have thrown the matter into the form of a Note , ivhich is at your

service : — About the year 1841-5 , Mrs . Sarah Belzoni presented to the Grand Orient of the Netherlands a copy of her husband ' s work , A Narrative of the Operations and Recent Discoveries within the Pyramids , Temples , Tombs , and Excavations in JUgt / pl and Nnbia , and the same was preceded by an Essay , written by Mrs . Belzoniherself , on " Antediluvian and Egyptian Freemasonry , " and dedicated to the Order in general . Mrs . Belzoni's Essay was

accompanied by sketches of the representations on the tomb of Pharoah Osivei , situated in the valley of Babeii-el-JIaloch , near Thebes , ivhich representations are supposed to be so many scenes in the initiation of that King as a Freemason , and they were considered of such importance by the Grand Orient of the Netherlands as to be made an appendix to their minutes , circulated through all the subordinate lodges , so that every lodge under its jurisdiction might obtain a knowledge of the instructive contents of the Essayand

, , therefore , form a better estimate of the value of the present thair would have been the case if it had but been simply acknowledged with thanks . The account , in the appendix before referred to , may be thus briefly condensed : —The relict of Bro . Belzoni found amonghis papers certain sketches . These describe the initiation of Pharaoh Osirei as a Freemason , and the hieroglyphics apply to three different periods iu the life of that Prince . The first period is that of his accession to the throneand at ivhich he is received

, by the Priesthood of the Royal Art . The second period consists of three scenes ; first , is a representation of the young King , in tbe lustre of his manhood , girded with the mystic apron of seipents , the symbol of the fall . The second shows the device of the nation , traversed by the name of the dynasty , under the Grand Symbol of Freemasonry . The third represents the reception in certain mysticdegrees , and shows the recipient , the High Priest , or Grand Master seated in a temple , on a throne of which the platform is inscribed

with Masonic hieroglyphics , the symbols of strength and power entwined by a serpent , and surrounded by a symbolical border of serpents and globes , bearing the following inscription , translated by llr . Young , — "To the Sacred Father of the Protecting Powers , Living , Unchangeable , Governing , and Administering . " In this , picture the King is presented , in the temple , by a member of the Order , clothed with an apron , and his right hand is upon the King ' s shoulder , while in his loft he bears the -Masonic key . Near the

Grand Master is the figure of a woman bearing a key , the secret meaning of which is lost . In the third period ive ' see the Kingpass through the fraternity , in the Masonic saloon of beauty , receiving the last and highest degree , the key , at the same time that he is invested with the three-cornered Masonic apron . In the samesaloon the King is seen clothed with the serpent , and the triangular . apron , giving costly presents to noble women assembled toenliven the festival . The foregoing are Mrs . Belzoni ' s lanations

exp , of the sketches , and they lead her to some remarks , as follows : — , The triangular or pyramidal form is the symbol of wisdom erected , on the vast platform of durability . The brethren , she says , should again adopt the old form of apron , and lay aside the unmeaningshoemaker ' s apron which they wear , for this article of clothing owes its existence to the apron of fig-leaves which our first parents woreafter the fall , and is tied with serpents to remind us of its lamentable origin . The triangular apron of the Egyptians is Masonic ,

Astronomic , and Symbolic . The King never wears it without the serpent apron , representing Typhon , the evil spirit , and thc Symbolic apron is worn as the emblem ofthe dynasty , and used without the oilier whenever the record alludes to State affairs only . Lastly , Mrs . Belzoni reminds the brethren , that the Masonic key should , open all the secrets of Egyptian wisdom , and that Masonry commenced with the fall , but became known only as Masonry after the building of the Tower of Babel . f * f

Tin ! LONDON LODGE - FUJIXITURE . I am told the furniture and jewels of the London Lodgo ( "No . 125 ) are exceedingly valuable , their worth being estimated at more than thousands of pounds . It' this be correct , perhaps some member of the lodge will favour me by a description of them P—11—w—p .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1861-03-09, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 10 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_09031861/page/6/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
GRAND LODGE. Article 1
THE BOYS' SCHOOL. Article 1
MEMOIRS OF THE FREEMASONS OF NAPLES. Article 3
INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION OF 1862. Article 5
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 6
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 8
Poetry. Article 8
THE POET'S PLEA. Article 8
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 9
UNITED GRAND LODGE. Article 9
PROVINCIAL. Article 11
ROYAL ARCH. Article 15
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 16
MARK MASONRY. Article 16
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 16
AMERICA. Article 16
WEST INDIES. Article 17
THE WEEK. Article 18
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 20
NOTES ON MUSIC AND THE DRAMA. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

International Exhibition Of 1862.

that amount . The funds raised aro to be expended on the erection of such buildings as may lie necessary , and in the general expenses attending thc enterprise . Of the buildings to be raised , one acre only is to bo of a permanent character , and upon this portion the sum of £ ' 50 , 000 is to be expended in its erection and completion , should the Exhibition be attended with a profit , in which case the permanent

building is to be vested in the Society of Arts , and used by them for the purposes tending to promote arts , manufactures , and commerce : but iu case of a deficiency at the close ofthe Exhibition the Society of Arts is to have power to claim a lease ofthe some upon its undertaking to pay to thc Commissioners such sum as the buildings ivould be likely to realise if taken down ; but in case tho Society of Arts

shall not claim a lease , then the Commissioners aro to sell the one acre of permanent building , and to convert into money all properties and effects belonging to them , which can bo sold and converted , particularly all the buildings erected by them for the 2 mrposes ofthe undertaking . Should there , however , at the close of thc Exhibition , after thc payment of all liabilities , be a surplus of profit

remaining , then thc one acre of permanent building is to be completed and the land retained for thc purposes of future exhibitions by the payment of £ 10 , 000 to thc Eoi'al Commissioners of thc Exhibition of 1851 , on whose land the Exhibition of 1862 is to be held , and all further profits are to lie

applied to such purposes connected with tho encouragement of arts , manufactures , and commerce as shall be determined by the guarantors at a meeting to be called for that purpose . Such aro the general powers of tbe Commissioners under thc Charter , and the guarantors cannot , therefore , be called upon for contributions under any condition , except a deficiency remain after every description of property belonging

to the Commissioners has been converted into money . Since the Charter passed the Great Seal the Commissioners , in a letter addressed to Sir Thomas Phillips , Chairman of the Society of Arts , state that they gladly accept a Charter which conveys to them her Majesty ' s gracious assurance that she is earnestly desirous to promote the holding of an International Exhibition of Industry and Art

in 1802 , and they being unwilling to lose valuable time have taken such provisional steps as their position permitted , and have , therefore , considered the more pressing point , namely , tbe building required for the Exhibition ; and on Saturday last it is stated that they came to a final decision as to the character of tho building intended to bo erected for the Exhibition of 1862 , the liability of the Commissioners in respect

ofthe building being limited to the sum of £ 200 , 000 , and so soon as tho guarantee deed is signed , the Bank of England will be prepared , from time to time , to advance tho necessary funds , and Messrs . Kclk and Lucas , the eminent contractors , who sent in jointly the lowest tender , will proceed with the erection ofthe buildinc

It is also stated that the commissioners have received the assurance of the French Government of its support of the Exhibition , accompanied by a statement that it had been the intention of the Emperor to hofd an International Exhibition in Paris in 1862 had the project not been entertained in England .

The D like of Newcastle , Secretary of State for tbe Colonics , has addressed a communication to the governors of her Majesty ' s colonies , announcing the intention to hold the 'Exhibition . In England some of our largest manufacturers . ' . re already actively engaged in preparing for this second great world ' s fair ; ' and so soon as the Society of Arts shall have completed the guarantee deedthe signature of ivhich

, is progressing most rapidly , we may expect to sec tho building rise , and our great scats of industry actively engaged in preparing for thc competitive display of industry and art to be exhibited in 18 U 2 .

^ MASONRY A SCIENCE . —It is an admitted principle ofthe Order that- wealth and distinction , however valued in the world , can have no influence in procuring admission into a lod ge or in advanein" - a brother to its highest offices . Because Masonry is a science calculated to improve the understanding , to mend the heart , and to bind T . S more closely to one another , by ivhich we may attain the summit of the Masonic ladder—a house not made ivith hands , eternal in the . lei' . vcns .

Masonic Notes And Queries.

MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES .

MRS . M-lL / . OXl OX MEE-UASONItY IN EGYPT . In the last number of THE FHEEIIASOXS MAGAZINE there is the commencement of a paper entitled " Some Observations in Egypt , " which reminds me that Mrs . Belzoni , widow of Bro . Belzoni , the celebrated Egyptian antiquary , has had something to say about Freemasonry and the early Egyptians . This I think may be interesting to many of your readers ; and as I know of no better place to preserve it than among your " Mason ic Notes and Queries , " I have thrown the matter into the form of a Note , ivhich is at your

service : — About the year 1841-5 , Mrs . Sarah Belzoni presented to the Grand Orient of the Netherlands a copy of her husband ' s work , A Narrative of the Operations and Recent Discoveries within the Pyramids , Temples , Tombs , and Excavations in JUgt / pl and Nnbia , and the same was preceded by an Essay , written by Mrs . Belzoniherself , on " Antediluvian and Egyptian Freemasonry , " and dedicated to the Order in general . Mrs . Belzoni's Essay was

accompanied by sketches of the representations on the tomb of Pharoah Osivei , situated in the valley of Babeii-el-JIaloch , near Thebes , ivhich representations are supposed to be so many scenes in the initiation of that King as a Freemason , and they were considered of such importance by the Grand Orient of the Netherlands as to be made an appendix to their minutes , circulated through all the subordinate lodges , so that every lodge under its jurisdiction might obtain a knowledge of the instructive contents of the Essayand

, , therefore , form a better estimate of the value of the present thair would have been the case if it had but been simply acknowledged with thanks . The account , in the appendix before referred to , may be thus briefly condensed : —The relict of Bro . Belzoni found amonghis papers certain sketches . These describe the initiation of Pharaoh Osirei as a Freemason , and the hieroglyphics apply to three different periods iu the life of that Prince . The first period is that of his accession to the throneand at ivhich he is received

, by the Priesthood of the Royal Art . The second period consists of three scenes ; first , is a representation of the young King , in tbe lustre of his manhood , girded with the mystic apron of seipents , the symbol of the fall . The second shows the device of the nation , traversed by the name of the dynasty , under the Grand Symbol of Freemasonry . The third represents the reception in certain mysticdegrees , and shows the recipient , the High Priest , or Grand Master seated in a temple , on a throne of which the platform is inscribed

with Masonic hieroglyphics , the symbols of strength and power entwined by a serpent , and surrounded by a symbolical border of serpents and globes , bearing the following inscription , translated by llr . Young , — "To the Sacred Father of the Protecting Powers , Living , Unchangeable , Governing , and Administering . " In this , picture the King is presented , in the temple , by a member of the Order , clothed with an apron , and his right hand is upon the King ' s shoulder , while in his loft he bears the -Masonic key . Near the

Grand Master is the figure of a woman bearing a key , the secret meaning of which is lost . In the third period ive ' see the Kingpass through the fraternity , in the Masonic saloon of beauty , receiving the last and highest degree , the key , at the same time that he is invested with the three-cornered Masonic apron . In the samesaloon the King is seen clothed with the serpent , and the triangular . apron , giving costly presents to noble women assembled toenliven the festival . The foregoing are Mrs . Belzoni ' s lanations

exp , of the sketches , and they lead her to some remarks , as follows : — , The triangular or pyramidal form is the symbol of wisdom erected , on the vast platform of durability . The brethren , she says , should again adopt the old form of apron , and lay aside the unmeaningshoemaker ' s apron which they wear , for this article of clothing owes its existence to the apron of fig-leaves which our first parents woreafter the fall , and is tied with serpents to remind us of its lamentable origin . The triangular apron of the Egyptians is Masonic ,

Astronomic , and Symbolic . The King never wears it without the serpent apron , representing Typhon , the evil spirit , and thc Symbolic apron is worn as the emblem ofthe dynasty , and used without the oilier whenever the record alludes to State affairs only . Lastly , Mrs . Belzoni reminds the brethren , that the Masonic key should , open all the secrets of Egyptian wisdom , and that Masonry commenced with the fall , but became known only as Masonry after the building of the Tower of Babel . f * f

Tin ! LONDON LODGE - FUJIXITURE . I am told the furniture and jewels of the London Lodgo ( "No . 125 ) are exceedingly valuable , their worth being estimated at more than thousands of pounds . It' this be correct , perhaps some member of the lodge will favour me by a description of them P—11—w—p .

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