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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • March 19, 1870
  • Page 5
  • THE RED CROSS OF ROME AND CONSTANTINE.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, March 19, 1870: Page 5

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The Red Cross Of Rome And Constantine.

absurdity of the whole thing , and have speedily forgotten all about it . As , however , Bro . Little has mixed up with his rficfcion certain facts , mentioned iu standard work s -of laktory , I have considered ifc my duty to prove

the 'Kfrfcei * fallacy of his historical statements , and 'from 'this to show how little faith can be placed iu his historical claims . And firstly , I shall quote from Dr . William Smith ' s Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography

and Mythology ( pub . in London 1867 ) , as regards 'the birthplace of Constantine the Great . Although there are many different opinions respecting this , yet ifc is most probable , and is noio generally Teelieved , that he was born A . D . 272 in Naissus ,

snow Nissa , a well-known town in Dardania , and that he was not " a native of Britain , " as Bro . Little states . In the second place , according to the testimony of all authors who have written on the subject , the luminous trophy of the cross seen

"by Constantine A . D . 312 , when marching against his brother-in-law Licmius ( not Maxentius ) , was inscribed with the Latin words IN HOC SIGNO

VfJetOES , which Eusebius , writing in Greek , 'translated as EN ToTTn NIKA . Therefore the Latin is the correct version , and our old friend Dr-¦ Oliver is wrong again . IBL the last paragraph of his notes , Bro . Little

says : " Viceroy Eusebius , the second officer of a Bed Gross Conclave . This dignitary represents Eusebius BISHOP of NICOHEDIA , who was entrusted "by Constantine with the command , of his body guard , of Christian Knights , & c . " I again opeu

Dr . Smith ' s Dictionary , which every reader of this MAGfAZXNB can refer to , and I find the following ¦ " Easebius of Nicomedeia , the friend and protector of Arius , was maternally connected , though

distantly , with the Emperor Julian , and wees born ¦ about A . D . 324 . He was first Bishop of Berytus ( Beyrouth ) in Syria , and then of Nicomedeia , which Diocletian had made his residence , so that it was in fact the capital of the Eastern Empire , until

Constantine fixed his court at Byzantium . " He first comes under the notice of history by taking the part of Arius after his excommunication by Alexander , Bishop of Alexandria . Indeed , so warmly did he become a partisan of the Arian

heresy , that the Arians were sometimes called Eusebians . Now , according to Bro . R . W . Little , this prelate was entrusted with the command of the body guard of Constantine twelve years before he was bom , as the battle of Saxa Rubra was

The Red Cross Of Rome And Constantine.

fought on the 2 Sth October , A . D . 312 ( not on the 12 th October as Bro . Little states ) . Now , as this must be manifestly " a mockery , a delusion , and a snare , " we must charitably suppose the learned " historian " of the Masonic Order has mixed up

the Bishop of Nicomedeia with his namesake , the Bishop of CJESAREIA , " the father of ecclesiastical history , who was born in Palestine , A . D . 264 , towards the end of the reign of the Emperor Gallenienus " ( see again Dr . Smith , passlm ) , and w ho was therefore neariy 50 years of age at the date of the battle of Saxa Rubra—a rather ad vane ed

stage of life for a bishop of the Christian Church to be in command of a company of body guards r more especially when we know that in A . D . 312 he was quietly dragging out life in a prison in Egypt , where he continued till the end of the

persecution of the Christians . He then returned to Caesaria , and succeeded Agapius as Bishop of thatseeinA . D . 315 , which he continued to hold uuti 1 his death , in A . D . 340 . I have no doubt that his appointment in A . D . 327 , to be present at the Council

ofNiccea to receive Constantine with a panegyrical oration ; or perhaps the fact , of his being the biographer of Constantine , has caused Bro . R . W " Little to invest him with the vice-royalty of the Masonic Order , and . even to actually represent him

in the Conclave by a priestly grade , I can only say that the ancient prelate never either possessed or even dreamt of the honour with which his

soidisant successors have invested him . Again , supposing Eusebius had been at Saxa Rubra , and had taken command of the body guards , would he not have seen the wondrous vision in common with the whole of the army , and have

been able to personally vouch for the truth of the story ? Why then the necessity for him to say ( in his life of Constantine ) that he related the fact of the miraculous appearance of the cross , on the authority of Constantine himself , who " many

years after the event , in the freedom of conversation had related to him this extraordinary incident of his own life , and had attested the faith of it by a solemn oath . " See " Gibbon ' s Decline and Pall of the Roman Empire , " chap . xx .

Gibbon himself takes these facts from the authority of Eusebius . Thus , from the testimony of the "Viceroy" himself , we completely upset the " second officer in tho Red Cross Conclave . ''' The charge of the Imperial standard , or Labamm , which was constructed A . D . 312 , was confided to a chosen guard of 50 young men of

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1870-03-19, Page 5” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 21 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_19031870/page/5/.
  • List
  • Grid
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.

The Red Cross Of Rome And Constantine.

absurdity of the whole thing , and have speedily forgotten all about it . As , however , Bro . Little has mixed up with his rficfcion certain facts , mentioned iu standard work s -of laktory , I have considered ifc my duty to prove

the 'Kfrfcei * fallacy of his historical statements , and 'from 'this to show how little faith can be placed iu his historical claims . And firstly , I shall quote from Dr . William Smith ' s Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography

and Mythology ( pub . in London 1867 ) , as regards 'the birthplace of Constantine the Great . Although there are many different opinions respecting this , yet ifc is most probable , and is noio generally Teelieved , that he was born A . D . 272 in Naissus ,

snow Nissa , a well-known town in Dardania , and that he was not " a native of Britain , " as Bro . Little states . In the second place , according to the testimony of all authors who have written on the subject , the luminous trophy of the cross seen

"by Constantine A . D . 312 , when marching against his brother-in-law Licmius ( not Maxentius ) , was inscribed with the Latin words IN HOC SIGNO

VfJetOES , which Eusebius , writing in Greek , 'translated as EN ToTTn NIKA . Therefore the Latin is the correct version , and our old friend Dr-¦ Oliver is wrong again . IBL the last paragraph of his notes , Bro . Little

says : " Viceroy Eusebius , the second officer of a Bed Gross Conclave . This dignitary represents Eusebius BISHOP of NICOHEDIA , who was entrusted "by Constantine with the command , of his body guard , of Christian Knights , & c . " I again opeu

Dr . Smith ' s Dictionary , which every reader of this MAGfAZXNB can refer to , and I find the following ¦ " Easebius of Nicomedeia , the friend and protector of Arius , was maternally connected , though

distantly , with the Emperor Julian , and wees born ¦ about A . D . 324 . He was first Bishop of Berytus ( Beyrouth ) in Syria , and then of Nicomedeia , which Diocletian had made his residence , so that it was in fact the capital of the Eastern Empire , until

Constantine fixed his court at Byzantium . " He first comes under the notice of history by taking the part of Arius after his excommunication by Alexander , Bishop of Alexandria . Indeed , so warmly did he become a partisan of the Arian

heresy , that the Arians were sometimes called Eusebians . Now , according to Bro . R . W . Little , this prelate was entrusted with the command of the body guard of Constantine twelve years before he was bom , as the battle of Saxa Rubra was

The Red Cross Of Rome And Constantine.

fought on the 2 Sth October , A . D . 312 ( not on the 12 th October as Bro . Little states ) . Now , as this must be manifestly " a mockery , a delusion , and a snare , " we must charitably suppose the learned " historian " of the Masonic Order has mixed up

the Bishop of Nicomedeia with his namesake , the Bishop of CJESAREIA , " the father of ecclesiastical history , who was born in Palestine , A . D . 264 , towards the end of the reign of the Emperor Gallenienus " ( see again Dr . Smith , passlm ) , and w ho was therefore neariy 50 years of age at the date of the battle of Saxa Rubra—a rather ad vane ed

stage of life for a bishop of the Christian Church to be in command of a company of body guards r more especially when we know that in A . D . 312 he was quietly dragging out life in a prison in Egypt , where he continued till the end of the

persecution of the Christians . He then returned to Caesaria , and succeeded Agapius as Bishop of thatseeinA . D . 315 , which he continued to hold uuti 1 his death , in A . D . 340 . I have no doubt that his appointment in A . D . 327 , to be present at the Council

ofNiccea to receive Constantine with a panegyrical oration ; or perhaps the fact , of his being the biographer of Constantine , has caused Bro . R . W " Little to invest him with the vice-royalty of the Masonic Order , and . even to actually represent him

in the Conclave by a priestly grade , I can only say that the ancient prelate never either possessed or even dreamt of the honour with which his

soidisant successors have invested him . Again , supposing Eusebius had been at Saxa Rubra , and had taken command of the body guards , would he not have seen the wondrous vision in common with the whole of the army , and have

been able to personally vouch for the truth of the story ? Why then the necessity for him to say ( in his life of Constantine ) that he related the fact of the miraculous appearance of the cross , on the authority of Constantine himself , who " many

years after the event , in the freedom of conversation had related to him this extraordinary incident of his own life , and had attested the faith of it by a solemn oath . " See " Gibbon ' s Decline and Pall of the Roman Empire , " chap . xx .

Gibbon himself takes these facts from the authority of Eusebius . Thus , from the testimony of the "Viceroy" himself , we completely upset the " second officer in tho Red Cross Conclave . ''' The charge of the Imperial standard , or Labamm , which was constructed A . D . 312 , was confided to a chosen guard of 50 young men of

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