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  • Feb. 16, 1859
  • Page 47
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Feb. 16, 1859: Page 47

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Page 47

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

To Correspondents.

TO CORRESPONDENTS .

" AV . M . " and "P . JI . "—There havo been many ingenious theories promulgated in reference to the Avord " JIason ; " but the true origin , unless ifc has come from the HebreAV DDI 7 , massang , or "Masan , " cannot bo found . The Avord must bo taken in its ordinary signification of a worker in stone , and thus it indicates tho origin of the Order from a society of practical artificers . AA e learn that Niiina Pompilius ( B . C . 714 ) , among his laws for the government of the people , instituted colleges of

artisans , collegia artifichvm , Avhose members were originally Greeks , brought by this lawgiver to Rome for the purpose of embellishing the city over ivhich lie reigned . These associations existed in Rome in the time of the Ctcsars . They ivere eiidoived AA'ith certain privileges peculiar to themselves , and held their meetings iu private . They wero divided into three classes , corresponding- Avith the three degrees of Freemasonry , and admitted into their ranks as honorary members

persons AA'ho Avere not operative Jlasons . They used a symbolic language draivn from the implements of JIasonry , and were in possession of a secret mode of recognition . In course of timo the collegia arliftcium became the repository oj the rites brought to Rome from other countries , and thus tho HebreAV mysteries or Temple JIasonry may have been introduced Avhen the Avhole empire embraced Christianity . The priests patronised the institutionand under their guidance the

, artisans devoted themselves to the building of churches ' and monasteries . Iu the tenth century they AA'ere established as a freehold or corporation iu Loinbardy . From Lombardy they advanced into all tho countries AA'hore Christianity , but recently established , required churches . For the erection of religious edifices they

had a monopoly ; they ivere independent of all sovereigns in lvhoso dominions they might temporarily reside , and subject only to their OAA ' private laAvs . In one ofthe papal decrees on the subject of these artisans tho pontiff declares "that these regulations have been made" after the example of Hiram , King of Tyro , Ai'hen he sent artisans to King Solomon for the purpose of building the temple of Jerusalem . These travelling Masons afterwards passed into England , and raised many splendid structures . Somo AA'ent to Scotland and established themselves at

Kil-Avinniug (\ . T > . 1140 ) , where thoy erected a stately abbey , and here ivas the germ of Scottish Freemasonry , which has regularly descended through the Grand Lodge to this timo . Iii Elias Ashmole ' s MS . in the British Museum , Ave have an account of a charter granted to the Jlasons by King Athelstano in 926 , upon the application of his brother Prince Edwin ; he says , 'Accordingly Princo Edivin summoned all the Jlasons in the realm to meet him in a congregation at Y ork , ivho came

and composed a general Lodgo of which ho was the Grand Master ; and having brought with them all the writings and records extant , some in Greek , some in Latin , some in French , aud other languages from the continents thereof , that assembly did form the constitution and charges of an English Lodge . " Thus , about the same period , similar guilds were instituted in Italy and in Britain ; Ave have in some of our ancient parish churches , specimens of tho skill of

Anglo-Saxon architects . Presuming Ashmole ' s to he a true statement , it Avas doubtless the first formation of a guild of the Craft of Masonry ; and hence the ivord Free , in connection AA'ith Mason , originally signified that the person so called was free of the

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1859-02-16, Page 47” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 21 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_16021859/page/47/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
THE MASONIC CHARITIES. Article 1
MASONIC RECORDS. Article 2
FREEMASONS' HALL IN IRELAND. Article 5
THE CHEMISTRY OF COMMON THINGS. Article 7
A MODEL MASTER. Article 13
FREEMASONRY IN NEW SOUTH WALES. Article 14
NOTES ON MASONIC BIBLIOGRAPHY. Article 19
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 23
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 26
METROPOLITAN. Article 28
PROVINCIAL. Article 32
MARK MASONRY. Article 36
ROYAL ARCH. Article 37
IRELAND. Article 37
COLONIAL. Article 38
SOUTH AMERICA. Article 40
THE WEEK. Article 40
Obituary. Article 46
NOTICES. Article 46
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 47
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

To Correspondents.

TO CORRESPONDENTS .

" AV . M . " and "P . JI . "—There havo been many ingenious theories promulgated in reference to the Avord " JIason ; " but the true origin , unless ifc has come from the HebreAV DDI 7 , massang , or "Masan , " cannot bo found . The Avord must bo taken in its ordinary signification of a worker in stone , and thus it indicates tho origin of the Order from a society of practical artificers . AA e learn that Niiina Pompilius ( B . C . 714 ) , among his laws for the government of the people , instituted colleges of

artisans , collegia artifichvm , Avhose members were originally Greeks , brought by this lawgiver to Rome for the purpose of embellishing the city over ivhich lie reigned . These associations existed in Rome in the time of the Ctcsars . They ivere eiidoived AA'ith certain privileges peculiar to themselves , and held their meetings iu private . They wero divided into three classes , corresponding- Avith the three degrees of Freemasonry , and admitted into their ranks as honorary members

persons AA'ho Avere not operative Jlasons . They used a symbolic language draivn from the implements of JIasonry , and were in possession of a secret mode of recognition . In course of timo the collegia arliftcium became the repository oj the rites brought to Rome from other countries , and thus tho HebreAV mysteries or Temple JIasonry may have been introduced Avhen the Avhole empire embraced Christianity . The priests patronised the institutionand under their guidance the

, artisans devoted themselves to the building of churches ' and monasteries . Iu the tenth century they AA'ere established as a freehold or corporation iu Loinbardy . From Lombardy they advanced into all tho countries AA'hore Christianity , but recently established , required churches . For the erection of religious edifices they

had a monopoly ; they ivere independent of all sovereigns in lvhoso dominions they might temporarily reside , and subject only to their OAA ' private laAvs . In one ofthe papal decrees on the subject of these artisans tho pontiff declares "that these regulations have been made" after the example of Hiram , King of Tyro , Ai'hen he sent artisans to King Solomon for the purpose of building the temple of Jerusalem . These travelling Masons afterwards passed into England , and raised many splendid structures . Somo AA'ent to Scotland and established themselves at

Kil-Avinniug (\ . T > . 1140 ) , where thoy erected a stately abbey , and here ivas the germ of Scottish Freemasonry , which has regularly descended through the Grand Lodge to this timo . Iii Elias Ashmole ' s MS . in the British Museum , Ave have an account of a charter granted to the Jlasons by King Athelstano in 926 , upon the application of his brother Prince Edwin ; he says , 'Accordingly Princo Edivin summoned all the Jlasons in the realm to meet him in a congregation at Y ork , ivho came

and composed a general Lodgo of which ho was the Grand Master ; and having brought with them all the writings and records extant , some in Greek , some in Latin , some in French , aud other languages from the continents thereof , that assembly did form the constitution and charges of an English Lodge . " Thus , about the same period , similar guilds were instituted in Italy and in Britain ; Ave have in some of our ancient parish churches , specimens of tho skill of

Anglo-Saxon architects . Presuming Ashmole ' s to he a true statement , it Avas doubtless the first formation of a guild of the Craft of Masonry ; and hence the ivord Free , in connection AA'ith Mason , originally signified that the person so called was free of the

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