Historical Origins of the Mark Degree

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The Mark is a ceremony or degree [sometimes called the ‘friendly’ degree], conferrable today only to Master Masons and forms part of a hierarchical organization. In Craft Masonry it was quite a late innovation making its appearance during the mid-1700s.  However we do know that Operative Masons, without any kind of ceremony, were taking marks 150 years before the Mark came into use as part of that particular ceremony.

JUBAL AND TUBAL CAIN – Poetry

Sculptures in the Portico of Glory of the Santiago de Compostela Cathedral, work of Master Mateo

BROTHER RUDYARD KIPLING THE ROYAL ARCH MASON Winter 1964 Jubal sang of the wrath of God And the curse of thistle and thorn, But Tubal got him a pointed…

Allied Masonic Degrees – Degrees of Significance

Allied Masonic Degrees

Of the many ‘extra-Craft’ degrees, those five controlled by the Grand Council of the Order of the Allied Masonic Degrees are probably the least known: one has to be a Mark Master and a Royal Arch Mason to be eligible and this double qualification will exclude many. There are also fewer private Allied Councils than there are lodges, or equivalent bodies, for the much larger orders of Mark and Royal Ark Mariners and even of smaller orders, such as the Royal and Select Masters.