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  • Nov. 26, 1859
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  • AECHÆOLOG Y.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Nov. 26, 1859: Page 6

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Aechæolog Y.

evidence of four , if not more , distinct deluges—namely , that which washed from the chalk , and strewed over the surface , tho flint stones from which these implements were fashioned ; next , that which carried them into their present position ; afterwards , those several changes by which large portions of the first deposit of gravel were removed , and the beds of sand , with the remains of laud and freshwater shells were depositedand lastl the

; y , formation of a thick bed of solid brick earth . Above all arc seen the tombs , and coins , and weapons of those who , although they lived two thousand years since , seem , when compared with these relics of a far more ancient period , to be but of yesterday . Tin ' s view of the subject appears to be in accordance with many of the phenomena which tire presented in our own and other countries . The chalk seems to have been a vast quarry , from

which , by means of various dynamical changes , occurring at distant epochs , vast quantities of material have been extracted . The lime has been used up , and merged in various combinations , but the more enduring flint has remained hi various distinct conditions , each of which seems to indicate some partial breaking up of the great chalk quarry—the trophies won by a successful invasion—the wrecks left after some great storm . Thus we have the coated flints

green lying at the base of the Reading sands , which evidentl y have hardl y been stirred since ' they were first torn from their chalk matrix . Above these we find large masses of hi g hl y rounded flint pebbles , which form the base of the London clay , and above the London clay numerous extensive accumulations of coarse chalk flint gravel and silicious sands . It remains onl y to notice the occurrence of mammalian remains in these beds

. In the pit from which these implements were taken we procured a few small and indistinct fragments of bone , and Mr . Prcstwich , in his former visit , obtained part of an elephant ' s tooth , and some teeth of the horse , probably of an extinct species . At St . Roch ( distant from St . Acheul about a mile ) wc obtained two very fine and perfect hippopotamus ' s tusks . These were discovered a few days before our visitat depth of twent

, a y feet from the surface , in a thick bed of gravel , exactly resembling in every respect that of St . Acheul , save onl y that at St . Roch wc did not meet with any flint weapons , and the bed of coarse white sand , with land and fresh water shells , was wanting . Like the flmt celts , these tusks appeal- to have undergone hardly any injury from the contact of the coarse heavy gravel in which they are imbedded , from which circumstance ire may conclude that they did not travel

together lor any lengthened period . The discovery of these relics of a race which seems to have been of fin- greater antiquity than any that has been hitherto supposed to have inhabited our planet , involves many interestiii " and difficult questions . AVe feel as much at a loss to imagine who those were who were thus contemporary in Fraucc with the mammoth and the hippopotamus , as Robinson Crusoe was perlexed the of his

p by seeing footprints mysterious visitor in the sands of his desert island . Nor is this the only perplexity in which wc are involved . How are we to account for the circumstance that no trace of human hones , or of any other work of art has been found associated with these implements ; and how has it happened that several hundreds of them have been accumulated m a single gravel pit ? These questions , which still remain unsolved , may well deserve the attention of philosophers and naturalists .

Masonic Notes And Queries.

MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES .

NUMBERING OF THE LODGES . IT would be a very desirable piece of information if some one would communicate the exact times at which tiic alterations of the numbers of the Lodges have taken place by authority ; so that it would be known when such changes took place in the whole body of the Lodges on the registers of the Grand Lodges , both of Antient and Modern Masons ; for without a clue of this kind it is almost to trace the

impossible antecedents of a Lod ge having no records , and yet acknowled ged to be of some antiquity , which is the case with the Lodge of— -CIIUOXOLOGUS . DKS . iriCMMIXG AND OLIVE ]? . _ Taking up , by chance , Dr . Oliver's Star in the East , it opened m my hand at page 120 , where I read in a note— " It will have been observed b

y our well instructed brethren , that I have cited the Lectures as they existed before their revision by Dr . Hemming , under the authority , I believe , of the Grand Lodge . Such a revision would depend in a great measure on the personal taste of the brother commissioned to effect the alteration ; and it must be confessed that many passages have been retained which arc comparativel y worthless , and others omitted which were highly

illustrative and useful . The worthy Doctor indeed had a task imposed on him of no common interest . His path was beset with difficulties ; and it is to be feared that a slight feeling of prejudice was one of them , arising out of a circumstance thou existing , which was extremely unfavourable to his labours . " Was this so ? And if so , what was the prejudice , and the circumstances out of which it arose ?—VERAX .

SOCIETY OF . 101 IX . An old friend of our famil y lately put into my hand the accompanying curious paper , adding , — "As you are a Freemason this may interest you , take a copy and return it to me again ;" I did so ; and enclose the same for insertion among the Masonic Notes and Queries of the Freemasons' Magazine . The document is as follows :

| "S . M . O . D . O .- AVe , the Elect Mas tore of the Venerable Society sacred to John , or of the Social Order of Freemasons , Killers of the Lodges or Tabernacles , constituted at London , Edinburgh , Vienna , Amsterdam , Paris , Lyons , Frankfort , Hamburgh , Antwerp , B , otterdam , Madrid , Venice , Ghent , Regiornonte , Brussels , Dantzic , Middlebnrgh , and in Chapter assembled in the said city of Cologne , in the year , month , and days aftermentioned : our Proses being the Master of the Lodge established in this city—a venerable brother , and most learned , prudent , and j udicious man ,

called to preside over these deliberations , by our unanimous vote—Co , by these letters , addressed to all the above-mentioned Lodges—to our brethren present and future , declare , that forasmuch as we have been considering the designs , which in these calamitous times embroiled , by civil dissensions and discord , have been imputed to our foresaid society , and to all the brethren belonging to this Order of Freemasons , or of John , opinions , machinations , secret , as well as openly detected ; all which are utterly foreign to usand to the iritdesignand ts of the

, sp , , precep association . It moreover appears that we , the members of this Order ( chiefly because we are bound by those inscrutablo secrets of our connection and covenant which are most sacredly kept by us all ) , in order that wo may bo moro effectually vilified among the uninitiated and profane , and that we may be devoted to public execration , are accused of the crime of reviving the Order of the Templars , and commonly designated by that appellation , as if wc had combined and conspired for the purpose of recovering ( as members of that Order ) its property

and possessions , and avenging tho death of the last Grand Master who presided over that order on the posterity of the kings and princes who were guilty of the c-rimo , and who were the authors of the extinction of tho said Order ; as if , with that view , we were exciting schisms in the churches , aud disturbances and sedition in the temporal government and domiuions ; as if we were influenced by hatred and enmity against the Pope , the Chief routiil ' , the Emperor , and all kings ; as if obeying no external power , but only the superiors aud elected of our own association

, which is spread throughout the whole world , wo executed their secret mandates and claudestine designs , by tho private intercourso of correspondence and emissaries ; as if , in fine , wo admitted none into our mysteries but those who , after being scrutinized and tried by bodily

tortures , became bound and devoted to our conclaves : THEREI-OISK , having all these considerations in view , it bath seemed to us expedient , and even absolute ) } ' necessary , to expound the true state and origin of our Order , and to what it teuds , as an institute of charity itself , according as these principles arc recognized and approved by those who mo most vcrsant in the highest Craft , and by masters enlightened in tho gonnino sciences of the institution , and to give forth to the Lodges or conclaves of our society the principles thus expounded , digested , and

organized , as an exemplar authenticated by our signatures , whereby a perpetual record may remain o £ this our renewed covenant , and the unshaken integrity of our purpose ; aud also in case , through tho daily increasing propensity of tho people to animosities , enmity , intolerance , and wars , this our society should hereafter be more and more oppressed , insomuch as to be unable to maintain its standing and consolidation , and thus be dispersed to some distant regions of the earth ; and iu ease , through lapse of timethe society itself should become less observant of

, its integrity , purity , and incorruptibility . Nevertheless , iu bettor times and more convenient circumstances , there may remain , if not tho whole , yet perhaps one or other of the duplicates of these presents , by which standard the Order , if subverted , may be restored , and if corrupted or estrange /! from its purpose and designs , may be reformed . For these causes , by these our universal letters , compiled according to tho context of tho most ancient monuments which are extant , concerning the objects of the institution—the i-ites and customs of our most ancient

order—AVe , Elect Masters , influenced by the love of the true light , do , by the most solemn sanctions , adjure all fellow-labourers , to whom these presents now or in time hereafter may come , that they withdraw not themselves from the truth contained in this document . Moreover , to the enlightened , as well as to the darker world , whose common safety concerns and strongly interests us , we announce and proclaim . ( A ) That the Society of Free Masons , or Order of Brethren attached to the solemnities of StJohnderive not their oriin from the Knihts

. , g g Templars , nor from any other order of knights , ecclesiastical or secular , detached or connected with one or more , neither iiave any or the least communication with them , directly , or through any manner of intermediate tie ; that they are more ancient than any order ot knights of this description , and existed in Palestine aud Greece , as well as iu every

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1859-11-26, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_26111859/page/6/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
THE YOUTH OF SOLOMON. Article 1
A MODEL LODGE. Article 4
Untitled Article 4
AECHÆOLOG Y. Article 4
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 6
Literature. Article 8
FINE ARTS. Article 10
Poetry. Article 11
CORRESPONOENCE. Article 12
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 13
ROYAL ARCH. Article 15
CANADA. Article 17
INDIA. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 18
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Aechæolog Y.

evidence of four , if not more , distinct deluges—namely , that which washed from the chalk , and strewed over the surface , tho flint stones from which these implements were fashioned ; next , that which carried them into their present position ; afterwards , those several changes by which large portions of the first deposit of gravel were removed , and the beds of sand , with the remains of laud and freshwater shells were depositedand lastl the

; y , formation of a thick bed of solid brick earth . Above all arc seen the tombs , and coins , and weapons of those who , although they lived two thousand years since , seem , when compared with these relics of a far more ancient period , to be but of yesterday . Tin ' s view of the subject appears to be in accordance with many of the phenomena which tire presented in our own and other countries . The chalk seems to have been a vast quarry , from

which , by means of various dynamical changes , occurring at distant epochs , vast quantities of material have been extracted . The lime has been used up , and merged in various combinations , but the more enduring flint has remained hi various distinct conditions , each of which seems to indicate some partial breaking up of the great chalk quarry—the trophies won by a successful invasion—the wrecks left after some great storm . Thus we have the coated flints

green lying at the base of the Reading sands , which evidentl y have hardl y been stirred since ' they were first torn from their chalk matrix . Above these we find large masses of hi g hl y rounded flint pebbles , which form the base of the London clay , and above the London clay numerous extensive accumulations of coarse chalk flint gravel and silicious sands . It remains onl y to notice the occurrence of mammalian remains in these beds

. In the pit from which these implements were taken we procured a few small and indistinct fragments of bone , and Mr . Prcstwich , in his former visit , obtained part of an elephant ' s tooth , and some teeth of the horse , probably of an extinct species . At St . Roch ( distant from St . Acheul about a mile ) wc obtained two very fine and perfect hippopotamus ' s tusks . These were discovered a few days before our visitat depth of twent

, a y feet from the surface , in a thick bed of gravel , exactly resembling in every respect that of St . Acheul , save onl y that at St . Roch wc did not meet with any flint weapons , and the bed of coarse white sand , with land and fresh water shells , was wanting . Like the flmt celts , these tusks appeal- to have undergone hardly any injury from the contact of the coarse heavy gravel in which they are imbedded , from which circumstance ire may conclude that they did not travel

together lor any lengthened period . The discovery of these relics of a race which seems to have been of fin- greater antiquity than any that has been hitherto supposed to have inhabited our planet , involves many interestiii " and difficult questions . AVe feel as much at a loss to imagine who those were who were thus contemporary in Fraucc with the mammoth and the hippopotamus , as Robinson Crusoe was perlexed the of his

p by seeing footprints mysterious visitor in the sands of his desert island . Nor is this the only perplexity in which wc are involved . How are we to account for the circumstance that no trace of human hones , or of any other work of art has been found associated with these implements ; and how has it happened that several hundreds of them have been accumulated m a single gravel pit ? These questions , which still remain unsolved , may well deserve the attention of philosophers and naturalists .

Masonic Notes And Queries.

MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES .

NUMBERING OF THE LODGES . IT would be a very desirable piece of information if some one would communicate the exact times at which tiic alterations of the numbers of the Lodges have taken place by authority ; so that it would be known when such changes took place in the whole body of the Lodges on the registers of the Grand Lodges , both of Antient and Modern Masons ; for without a clue of this kind it is almost to trace the

impossible antecedents of a Lod ge having no records , and yet acknowled ged to be of some antiquity , which is the case with the Lodge of— -CIIUOXOLOGUS . DKS . iriCMMIXG AND OLIVE ]? . _ Taking up , by chance , Dr . Oliver's Star in the East , it opened m my hand at page 120 , where I read in a note— " It will have been observed b

y our well instructed brethren , that I have cited the Lectures as they existed before their revision by Dr . Hemming , under the authority , I believe , of the Grand Lodge . Such a revision would depend in a great measure on the personal taste of the brother commissioned to effect the alteration ; and it must be confessed that many passages have been retained which arc comparativel y worthless , and others omitted which were highly

illustrative and useful . The worthy Doctor indeed had a task imposed on him of no common interest . His path was beset with difficulties ; and it is to be feared that a slight feeling of prejudice was one of them , arising out of a circumstance thou existing , which was extremely unfavourable to his labours . " Was this so ? And if so , what was the prejudice , and the circumstances out of which it arose ?—VERAX .

SOCIETY OF . 101 IX . An old friend of our famil y lately put into my hand the accompanying curious paper , adding , — "As you are a Freemason this may interest you , take a copy and return it to me again ;" I did so ; and enclose the same for insertion among the Masonic Notes and Queries of the Freemasons' Magazine . The document is as follows :

| "S . M . O . D . O .- AVe , the Elect Mas tore of the Venerable Society sacred to John , or of the Social Order of Freemasons , Killers of the Lodges or Tabernacles , constituted at London , Edinburgh , Vienna , Amsterdam , Paris , Lyons , Frankfort , Hamburgh , Antwerp , B , otterdam , Madrid , Venice , Ghent , Regiornonte , Brussels , Dantzic , Middlebnrgh , and in Chapter assembled in the said city of Cologne , in the year , month , and days aftermentioned : our Proses being the Master of the Lodge established in this city—a venerable brother , and most learned , prudent , and j udicious man ,

called to preside over these deliberations , by our unanimous vote—Co , by these letters , addressed to all the above-mentioned Lodges—to our brethren present and future , declare , that forasmuch as we have been considering the designs , which in these calamitous times embroiled , by civil dissensions and discord , have been imputed to our foresaid society , and to all the brethren belonging to this Order of Freemasons , or of John , opinions , machinations , secret , as well as openly detected ; all which are utterly foreign to usand to the iritdesignand ts of the

, sp , , precep association . It moreover appears that we , the members of this Order ( chiefly because we are bound by those inscrutablo secrets of our connection and covenant which are most sacredly kept by us all ) , in order that wo may bo moro effectually vilified among the uninitiated and profane , and that we may be devoted to public execration , are accused of the crime of reviving the Order of the Templars , and commonly designated by that appellation , as if wc had combined and conspired for the purpose of recovering ( as members of that Order ) its property

and possessions , and avenging tho death of the last Grand Master who presided over that order on the posterity of the kings and princes who were guilty of the c-rimo , and who were the authors of the extinction of tho said Order ; as if , with that view , we were exciting schisms in the churches , aud disturbances and sedition in the temporal government and domiuions ; as if we were influenced by hatred and enmity against the Pope , the Chief routiil ' , the Emperor , and all kings ; as if obeying no external power , but only the superiors aud elected of our own association

, which is spread throughout the whole world , wo executed their secret mandates and claudestine designs , by tho private intercourso of correspondence and emissaries ; as if , in fine , wo admitted none into our mysteries but those who , after being scrutinized and tried by bodily

tortures , became bound and devoted to our conclaves : THEREI-OISK , having all these considerations in view , it bath seemed to us expedient , and even absolute ) } ' necessary , to expound the true state and origin of our Order , and to what it teuds , as an institute of charity itself , according as these principles arc recognized and approved by those who mo most vcrsant in the highest Craft , and by masters enlightened in tho gonnino sciences of the institution , and to give forth to the Lodges or conclaves of our society the principles thus expounded , digested , and

organized , as an exemplar authenticated by our signatures , whereby a perpetual record may remain o £ this our renewed covenant , and the unshaken integrity of our purpose ; aud also in case , through tho daily increasing propensity of tho people to animosities , enmity , intolerance , and wars , this our society should hereafter be more and more oppressed , insomuch as to be unable to maintain its standing and consolidation , and thus be dispersed to some distant regions of the earth ; and iu ease , through lapse of timethe society itself should become less observant of

, its integrity , purity , and incorruptibility . Nevertheless , iu bettor times and more convenient circumstances , there may remain , if not tho whole , yet perhaps one or other of the duplicates of these presents , by which standard the Order , if subverted , may be restored , and if corrupted or estrange /! from its purpose and designs , may be reformed . For these causes , by these our universal letters , compiled according to tho context of tho most ancient monuments which are extant , concerning the objects of the institution—the i-ites and customs of our most ancient

order—AVe , Elect Masters , influenced by the love of the true light , do , by the most solemn sanctions , adjure all fellow-labourers , to whom these presents now or in time hereafter may come , that they withdraw not themselves from the truth contained in this document . Moreover , to the enlightened , as well as to the darker world , whose common safety concerns and strongly interests us , we announce and proclaim . ( A ) That the Society of Free Masons , or Order of Brethren attached to the solemnities of StJohnderive not their oriin from the Knihts

. , g g Templars , nor from any other order of knights , ecclesiastical or secular , detached or connected with one or more , neither iiave any or the least communication with them , directly , or through any manner of intermediate tie ; that they are more ancient than any order ot knights of this description , and existed in Palestine aud Greece , as well as iu every

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