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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • May 20, 1865
  • Page 2
  • THE MAJESTY OF ARCHITECTURE.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, May 20, 1865: Page 2

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    Article HISTORICAL SKETCH OF MASONIC EVENTS DURING 1864. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article THE MAJESTY OF ARCHITECTURE. Page 1 of 3
    Article THE MAJESTY OF ARCHITECTURE. Page 1 of 3 →
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Historical Sketch Of Masonic Events During 1864.

in many respects , and on the other hand he reconciles the adherents of the high degree system by allowing the St . John ' s degrees to remain , and leaving individual lodges and Masonic authoi'ities at liberty create for themselves higher and more

intimate degrees of love and friendship , knowledge and experience . The objection may be raised that -under the existing political circumstances , which are not likely to undergo any alteration at the hands of the Eisenach Congress , these high

protectors alone have guaranteed the existence of Masonry in many German States , and that upon their removal the further toleration of the Craft would become questionable ; but the secondary considerations are not of the slightest weight with

Bro . Schauberg : no doubt he will settle with the protectors and the hi gh degrees men , to his satisfaction .

The first articles of his new platform are a mere circumlocution of the existing constitution . Query , where is the necessity of modifying the latter ? Bro . Schauberg proposes , for his German National Grand Lodge , to organise a Universal Grand

Lodge , in conjunction with the high Masonic authorities of other countries . Unfortunately , these latter authorities will adhere to the obnoxious old Constitution , and we are at a loss to guess how Bro . Schauberg means to carry out his proposed

reform , supposing even he should meet with full and entire approval on the part of the forthcoming Eisenach Congregation . ( To he continued . )

The Majesty Of Architecture.

THE MAJESTY OF ARCHITECTURE .

AH study confirms the proposition that there are but few subjects in the range of history , art , and science , that are unindebted to architecture either for illustration . or confirmation . Thinking , in the exigencies of our daily task , of the requirements of modern life to be provided for in

modern buildings , > we are apt to undervalue the versatility , overlook the antiquity , and deny the -majesty of the grandest of the arts . We have been especially impressed recently with the services architecture has rendered to ethnologists . No one now treats of the origin of the races of

man without bringing forward in evidence the . remains of Egyptian buildings . Dr . Nott , in his "Types of Mankind , " Dr . Colenso , Mr . R . S . Poole , all produce the testimony of Egyptian •remains in support of their views . Dr . Nott writes , — "Ethnology was no new science even before the time of Moses . It is clear and positive that' at that early day ( fourteen or

The Majesty Of Architecture.

fifteen centuries B . C . ) , the Egyptians not only recognised and faithfully represented on their monuments many distinct races , but possessed their own ethnographic systems , and alread y had classified humanity , as known to them , accordingly . They divided mankind into four

species , viz ., red , black , white , and yellow . . . . When Egypt first presents itself to our view , she stands forth , not in childhood , but with the maturity of manhood ' s age , arrayed in the timeworn habiliments of civilisation . Her tombs , her templesher pyramidsher mannerscustoms

, , , , and arts , all betoken a full-grown nation . " We are not going to follow 7 Dr . Nott in the inferences he draws from this early civilisation , our object being simply to show how ethnologists have turned to the architecture of the Egyptians as to a storehouse of proof of the antiquity of

man . In the same strain we have Lepsius writing ( Briefe cms Egj / pten ) , — "We are still busy with structures , sculptures , and inscriptions , which are to be classed , by means of- the now more accurately determined groups of kings , in an epoch of highly flourishing civilisation , as far back as the fourth millennium before Christ . " Delitzch awaits the proof of a manifold division of the human race from an investigation of

Egyptian monuments . Ivenrick notes that , 1 , 000 years before the Deluge , the same hierogyphics were used on monuments as at the end of the monarchy of the Pharoahs , marking an organised monarch } -and religion in that remote era . Additional researches have been made in the same

field for the same purpose by Bunsen , Birch , Humboldt , Hinclcs , and Osborn . The size of the human race , too , in old times , is determined by the same test . The traditions of former gigantic stature are exploded by the passages , chambers , and sarcophagi of the pyramids . Againstudents

, of theology , deciphering with microscopic care every passage in Holy Writ , find in architectural remains some of their most stupendous references . Thus , Dr . Colenso , connecting the mention of the tower of Babel with the famous unfinished temple of Bolus ( Birs Nimroud ) , quotes Kalisch for a

description of that terraced pyramidal edifice , — "The tower consisted of seven distinct stages , or square platforms , built of lime-burnt bricks , each about 20 ft . high , gradually diminishing in diameter . The upper part of the brickwork has a vitrified appearance ; for it is supposed that the

Babylonians , in order to render their edifices more durable , submitted them to the heat of the furnace ; and large fragments of such vitrified and calcined materials are also intermixed with the

rubbish at the base . ' Professor Rawlinson thus interprets the history of it , as related on the cylinders by Nebuchadnezzar , who endeavoured to complete the work , — " The building named the Planisphere , which was the wonder of Babylon , I have made and finished . With bricks , enriched with lapis lazuli , I have exalted its head . Behold

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1865-05-20, Page 2” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 14 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_20051865/page/2/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
HISTORICAL SKETCH OF MASONIC EVENTS DURING 1864. Article 1
THE MAJESTY OF ARCHITECTURE. Article 2
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 4
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 7
CAUTION.—AN ITINERANT MASON. Article 7
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 8
METROPOLITAN. Article 8
PROVINCIAL. Article 8
ROYAL ARCH. Article 9
MARK MASONRY. Article 10
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 10
SOUTH AMERICA. Article 12
INDIA. Article 13
CHINA. Article 14
Obituary. Article 15
LITERARY EXTRACTS. Article 16
Poetry. Article 16
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 17
THE WEEK. Article 17
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Historical Sketch Of Masonic Events During 1864.

in many respects , and on the other hand he reconciles the adherents of the high degree system by allowing the St . John ' s degrees to remain , and leaving individual lodges and Masonic authoi'ities at liberty create for themselves higher and more

intimate degrees of love and friendship , knowledge and experience . The objection may be raised that -under the existing political circumstances , which are not likely to undergo any alteration at the hands of the Eisenach Congress , these high

protectors alone have guaranteed the existence of Masonry in many German States , and that upon their removal the further toleration of the Craft would become questionable ; but the secondary considerations are not of the slightest weight with

Bro . Schauberg : no doubt he will settle with the protectors and the hi gh degrees men , to his satisfaction .

The first articles of his new platform are a mere circumlocution of the existing constitution . Query , where is the necessity of modifying the latter ? Bro . Schauberg proposes , for his German National Grand Lodge , to organise a Universal Grand

Lodge , in conjunction with the high Masonic authorities of other countries . Unfortunately , these latter authorities will adhere to the obnoxious old Constitution , and we are at a loss to guess how Bro . Schauberg means to carry out his proposed

reform , supposing even he should meet with full and entire approval on the part of the forthcoming Eisenach Congregation . ( To he continued . )

The Majesty Of Architecture.

THE MAJESTY OF ARCHITECTURE .

AH study confirms the proposition that there are but few subjects in the range of history , art , and science , that are unindebted to architecture either for illustration . or confirmation . Thinking , in the exigencies of our daily task , of the requirements of modern life to be provided for in

modern buildings , > we are apt to undervalue the versatility , overlook the antiquity , and deny the -majesty of the grandest of the arts . We have been especially impressed recently with the services architecture has rendered to ethnologists . No one now treats of the origin of the races of

man without bringing forward in evidence the . remains of Egyptian buildings . Dr . Nott , in his "Types of Mankind , " Dr . Colenso , Mr . R . S . Poole , all produce the testimony of Egyptian •remains in support of their views . Dr . Nott writes , — "Ethnology was no new science even before the time of Moses . It is clear and positive that' at that early day ( fourteen or

The Majesty Of Architecture.

fifteen centuries B . C . ) , the Egyptians not only recognised and faithfully represented on their monuments many distinct races , but possessed their own ethnographic systems , and alread y had classified humanity , as known to them , accordingly . They divided mankind into four

species , viz ., red , black , white , and yellow . . . . When Egypt first presents itself to our view , she stands forth , not in childhood , but with the maturity of manhood ' s age , arrayed in the timeworn habiliments of civilisation . Her tombs , her templesher pyramidsher mannerscustoms

, , , , and arts , all betoken a full-grown nation . " We are not going to follow 7 Dr . Nott in the inferences he draws from this early civilisation , our object being simply to show how ethnologists have turned to the architecture of the Egyptians as to a storehouse of proof of the antiquity of

man . In the same strain we have Lepsius writing ( Briefe cms Egj / pten ) , — "We are still busy with structures , sculptures , and inscriptions , which are to be classed , by means of- the now more accurately determined groups of kings , in an epoch of highly flourishing civilisation , as far back as the fourth millennium before Christ . " Delitzch awaits the proof of a manifold division of the human race from an investigation of

Egyptian monuments . Ivenrick notes that , 1 , 000 years before the Deluge , the same hierogyphics were used on monuments as at the end of the monarchy of the Pharoahs , marking an organised monarch } -and religion in that remote era . Additional researches have been made in the same

field for the same purpose by Bunsen , Birch , Humboldt , Hinclcs , and Osborn . The size of the human race , too , in old times , is determined by the same test . The traditions of former gigantic stature are exploded by the passages , chambers , and sarcophagi of the pyramids . Againstudents

, of theology , deciphering with microscopic care every passage in Holy Writ , find in architectural remains some of their most stupendous references . Thus , Dr . Colenso , connecting the mention of the tower of Babel with the famous unfinished temple of Bolus ( Birs Nimroud ) , quotes Kalisch for a

description of that terraced pyramidal edifice , — "The tower consisted of seven distinct stages , or square platforms , built of lime-burnt bricks , each about 20 ft . high , gradually diminishing in diameter . The upper part of the brickwork has a vitrified appearance ; for it is supposed that the

Babylonians , in order to render their edifices more durable , submitted them to the heat of the furnace ; and large fragments of such vitrified and calcined materials are also intermixed with the

rubbish at the base . ' Professor Rawlinson thus interprets the history of it , as related on the cylinders by Nebuchadnezzar , who endeavoured to complete the work , — " The building named the Planisphere , which was the wonder of Babylon , I have made and finished . With bricks , enriched with lapis lazuli , I have exalted its head . Behold

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