FREEMASONRY AND THE CATHEDRAL BUILDERS

Lincoln Cathederal

There has been a great deal of difference of opinion among the historians of architecture as to where and when Gothic began. English writers, who have a very natural desire to claim for their own land the glory of the discovery of the art, date it at 1100 A.D. or earlier, and find its first manifestations at Durham; whereas French writers almost unanimously hold that Gothic began first of all in the region round about Paris, in what was once called the Ile de France, and say that the Abbey Church of St. Denis, begun in 1140, is to be regarded as the first known Gothic monument. It appears that a majority of the more modern writers incline to agree with the French theory. Porter dates the new style as beginning in Paris about 1163, and says that it reached its culmination in the year 1220, with the nave of Amiens.

THE INITIATIC SYMBOLISM OF FREEMASONRY

Kheops Pyramid

Freemasonry continues an initiatic tradition whose beginnings are lost in antiquity. This statement cannot be proven historically.Yet the more you study Masonic rites and its symbols, the more you become convinced that you are dealing with something ancient, maybe even primordial. It becomes clear that this tradition is much older than Masonrys institutional beginnings in 1717, older than the cathedral builders and medieval guilds, older even than King Solomons Temple or the Egyptian Pyramids.

A BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH OF CHEVALIER

0acb6b0baa37f5946b802bbdeacbbbe8

First published here http://www.freemasons-freemasonry.com/ A BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH OF CHEVALIER ANDREW MICHAEL RAMSAY Including a full transcript of his…

FREEMASONRY AND THE ROMAN COLLEGIA

f29634bb2d7d7016dfa51d05e31dfee3

by Bro. H.L. HAYWOOD, Editor THE BUILDER The Builder Magazine, June 1924 – Volume X – Number 6 FREEMASONRY AND THE ROMAN COLLEGIA   THE ORIGIN OF…

The Philosophy of Masonry: William Preston

William Preston's system of lectures of instruction, and his book "Illustrations of Masonry" offer great insights into the Philosophy of Freemasonry

PHILOSOPHERS are by no means agreed with respect to the scope and subject matter of philosophy. Nor are Masonic scholars at one with respect to the scope and purpose of Freemasonry. Hence one may not expect to define and delimit Masonic philosophy according to the easy method of Dickens’ editor who wrote upon Chinese metaphysics by reading in the Encyclopedia upon China and upon metaphysics and combining his information.

THE MASONIC CAREER OF A E WAITE

THE MASONIC CAREER OF A E WAITE

THE MASONIC CAREER OF A. E. WAITE – BY BRO. R.A. GILBERT – ARS QUATUOR CORONATORUM – VOLUME 99 FOR THE YEAR 1986 INTRODUCTION In English Freemasonry the…