The Quiet Man – Provincial Grand Lodge of Durham
The Second Provincial Grand Principal, Gordon Brewis was delighted to attend St Hilda Chapter in South Shields to present a 50-year certificate to Rodney…
Promoting the Fraternity across the World
The Second Provincial Grand Principal, Gordon Brewis was delighted to attend St Hilda Chapter in South Shields to present a 50-year certificate to Rodney…
Arthur, for family reasons, is currently unable to visit the Masonic hall on a regular basis. Knowing he would soon be celebrating 60 years in the Craft,…
On Thursday 16th June We are holding A Reigning Principals Degree with the proceeds on the night going to the Iris Murdoch Foundation . we will be…
Most Excellent Grand High Priest of Illinois, Sean McBride holding old Homer Royal Arch sign Brother Todd Creason, author of Famous American…
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF WEST WALES PRIF GYFRINFA TALAITH GORLLEWIN CYMRU 11th May, 2016 To all Lodge Secretaries And Chapter Scribe…
At a specially arranged meeting in Coventry, the Provincial Grand Master, RW Bro David Macey presented cheques for £3,731 to the Chief Executive of Prostate Cancer Research, Professor John Masters. This was on behalf of the St John’s Lodge 2811, represented by W Bro Paul Skinner and W Bro Hosey Davoudian.
The installation convocation of Blackpool Chapter of Sincerity No 4175 was chalked up to begin at five o’clock and only a short while before…
Whiston Chapter exalted two Master Masons together last Monday (16/05/16) in the presence of the Deputy Grand Superintendent – ExComp John Robert…
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 origins of masonic ceremonies are fully discussed by Knoop and Jones in Chapter X of The Genesis of Freemasonry. The authors deduce the origins of eighteenth-century Masonic ceremonies from two main sources. Firstly, the Invocation; the legend or “history” of the Craft; and the Masons’ regulations, as commonly contained in the Ms. Constitutions of Masonry, these being the respective prototypes of the Opening Prayer, the Traditional History, and the Charges of later Masonic ritual