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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, March 19, 1870: Page 1

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    Article ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE HISTORY OF THE CRAFT.—No. 2. Page 1 of 4 →
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Ar00100

(* wmtcttts . PA < JE . Illustrations of the History of the Craft—By a Masonic Student 221 The Red Cross of Rome and Constantine—By Bro . C . Fitzgerald Matier 224 The Haushf'oot Lodge and Speculative Masonry—By R . S . ... 22 G Masonic Jottings—No . 11 228 Masonic Notes and Queries 229

Correspondence 230 Masonic Moms 232 CEAPT LoDGi 3 MEETINGS : — Metropolitan 232 Provincial 233 Turkey 235 Roval Arch 238 Mark Masonry 236

Knights Templar 237 Masonic Festivities 227 Inauguration of the Masonic Hall , Sunderland 239 South Eastern Masonic Association 239 Obituary 240 Scientific Meetings ' 240 List of Lodge , & c , Meetings for ensuing week 210 To Correspondents 210

Illustrations Of The History Of The Craft.—No. 2.

ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE HISTORY OF THE CRAFT . —No . 2 .

LONDON , SATURDAY , MARCH 19 , 1870 .

By A MASONIC STUDENT . ( Continued from Page 145 ) I propose in this chapter to point out what I believe to be the only true foundation ., on which

the history of our Order can safely rest . In a few words , I am anxious to advocate and uphold what may be called the guild theory . In 1863 I made the following statement , in regard to the opinion I then ventured to entertain

in respect of this much " vexata quasstio / ' and subsequent study and consideration have onl y tended to strengthen the conviction I then expressed , and which I had arrived at after some years of patient and careful inquiry

" Freemasonry as we have ifc to-day , affected no doubt , to a great extent by the preponderance of the Speculative clement , has come down to us I venture to believe , through a long succession of centuries , and may be most safely and satisfactorily

traced through the operative guilds and Masonic sodalities of the middle and early ages , to Roman Collegia , to Grecian communities , and thence to Jewish and Tyrinn Masons . " * And it is this same view substantially of our

Masonic Order , which I wish to bring ' now more formally before my brethren generally , because in it , and in it alone , I feel persuaded the true history of Freemasonry is to bo found . The more we study the whole question—difficult

as it confessedly is in all its bearings—the more shall we be convinced , I feel confident ere long , that no other theory can satisfy the exigencies of historical criticism on the one hand , or harmonise the confused traditions of Freemasonry on the

other , but that , which regards our Speculative Order to-day , as nothing more and nothing less , than the direct continuation and legitimate result of the olden system of operative sodalities . Let it be granted that Freemasonry exists under

an altered condition of things , and is to be found perhaps in a wider sphere than of old , when ifc was confined to the b nil diner societies of an

onerative brotherhood : yet , its normal state from which , our present Freemasonry has derived its life and history , was that of an operative Masonic guild . Now it is a mistake to suppose , as some modern writers seem to do , that this explanation of our

Masonic annals and progress is a novel one , of a comparatively very recent date and unknown to our earlier historians . It has been said for

instance , by our latest Masonic annalist , our learned German brother Dr . Findel , that the "first writer on the subject of Freemasonry who ventured to hint at the existence of an historical connection between the fraternity of Freemasons , and that of

the stonemasons was the Abbe Grandidier , a non = Mason , " who wrote in 1779 . * But though I am quite willing to admit , that he is perhaps the first writer AVIIO openly argued for the distinct existence of a purely operative

brotherhood , with signs and symbols , forms and teaching analogous to our own , yet we should never forget , that the assertion of a secret bond of union , of a similarity of symbolic teaching , of

a continuity oi organisation and existence , as between operative and Speculative Preemasonry , is really as old as the time of Anderson and Preston . Anderson , the first edition of whose "

Constitutions of the Freemasons " was published in 1728 , and Preston , whose first edition appeared in 1772 , have based their entire history of the Order , though with differences of detail peculiar to each writer , as our Bro . Findel has himself admitted ,

" on a history of architecture taken from the legends of the guilds . " And though since their time the subject has been greatly elaborated by many able foreign writers on Freemasonry—to some extent by Bro ,

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1870-03-19, Page 1” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 14 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_19031870/page/1/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE HISTORY OF THE CRAFT.—No. 2. Article 1
THE RED CROSS OF ROME AND CONSTANTINE. Article 4
THE HAUGHFOOT LODGE AND SPECULATIVE MASONRY. Article 6
MASONIC JOTTINGS.—No. 11. Article 8
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 9
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 10
ROYAL ARCH MASONRY. Article 11
Untitled Article 12
MASONIC MEMS Article 12
Craft Masonry. Article 12
PROVINCIAL. Article 13
TURKEY. Article 15
ROYAL ARCH. Article 16
MARK MASONRY. Article 16
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 17
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 17
SOUTH AFRICA. Article 18
INAUGURATION OF THE MASONIC HALL, SUNDERLAND. Article 19
SOUTH EASTERN MASONIC ASSOCIATION. Article 19
Obituary. Article 20
SCIENTIFIC MEETINGS FOR THE WEEK. Article 20
LIST OF LODGE, MEETINGS, &c., FOR WEEK ENDING 26TH MARCH, 1870. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Ar00100

(* wmtcttts . PA < JE . Illustrations of the History of the Craft—By a Masonic Student 221 The Red Cross of Rome and Constantine—By Bro . C . Fitzgerald Matier 224 The Haushf'oot Lodge and Speculative Masonry—By R . S . ... 22 G Masonic Jottings—No . 11 228 Masonic Notes and Queries 229

Correspondence 230 Masonic Moms 232 CEAPT LoDGi 3 MEETINGS : — Metropolitan 232 Provincial 233 Turkey 235 Roval Arch 238 Mark Masonry 236

Knights Templar 237 Masonic Festivities 227 Inauguration of the Masonic Hall , Sunderland 239 South Eastern Masonic Association 239 Obituary 240 Scientific Meetings ' 240 List of Lodge , & c , Meetings for ensuing week 210 To Correspondents 210

Illustrations Of The History Of The Craft.—No. 2.

ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE HISTORY OF THE CRAFT . —No . 2 .

LONDON , SATURDAY , MARCH 19 , 1870 .

By A MASONIC STUDENT . ( Continued from Page 145 ) I propose in this chapter to point out what I believe to be the only true foundation ., on which

the history of our Order can safely rest . In a few words , I am anxious to advocate and uphold what may be called the guild theory . In 1863 I made the following statement , in regard to the opinion I then ventured to entertain

in respect of this much " vexata quasstio / ' and subsequent study and consideration have onl y tended to strengthen the conviction I then expressed , and which I had arrived at after some years of patient and careful inquiry

" Freemasonry as we have ifc to-day , affected no doubt , to a great extent by the preponderance of the Speculative clement , has come down to us I venture to believe , through a long succession of centuries , and may be most safely and satisfactorily

traced through the operative guilds and Masonic sodalities of the middle and early ages , to Roman Collegia , to Grecian communities , and thence to Jewish and Tyrinn Masons . " * And it is this same view substantially of our

Masonic Order , which I wish to bring ' now more formally before my brethren generally , because in it , and in it alone , I feel persuaded the true history of Freemasonry is to bo found . The more we study the whole question—difficult

as it confessedly is in all its bearings—the more shall we be convinced , I feel confident ere long , that no other theory can satisfy the exigencies of historical criticism on the one hand , or harmonise the confused traditions of Freemasonry on the

other , but that , which regards our Speculative Order to-day , as nothing more and nothing less , than the direct continuation and legitimate result of the olden system of operative sodalities . Let it be granted that Freemasonry exists under

an altered condition of things , and is to be found perhaps in a wider sphere than of old , when ifc was confined to the b nil diner societies of an

onerative brotherhood : yet , its normal state from which , our present Freemasonry has derived its life and history , was that of an operative Masonic guild . Now it is a mistake to suppose , as some modern writers seem to do , that this explanation of our

Masonic annals and progress is a novel one , of a comparatively very recent date and unknown to our earlier historians . It has been said for

instance , by our latest Masonic annalist , our learned German brother Dr . Findel , that the "first writer on the subject of Freemasonry who ventured to hint at the existence of an historical connection between the fraternity of Freemasons , and that of

the stonemasons was the Abbe Grandidier , a non = Mason , " who wrote in 1779 . * But though I am quite willing to admit , that he is perhaps the first writer AVIIO openly argued for the distinct existence of a purely operative

brotherhood , with signs and symbols , forms and teaching analogous to our own , yet we should never forget , that the assertion of a secret bond of union , of a similarity of symbolic teaching , of

a continuity oi organisation and existence , as between operative and Speculative Preemasonry , is really as old as the time of Anderson and Preston . Anderson , the first edition of whose "

Constitutions of the Freemasons " was published in 1728 , and Preston , whose first edition appeared in 1772 , have based their entire history of the Order , though with differences of detail peculiar to each writer , as our Bro . Findel has himself admitted ,

" on a history of architecture taken from the legends of the guilds . " And though since their time the subject has been greatly elaborated by many able foreign writers on Freemasonry—to some extent by Bro ,

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