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  • Dec. 1, 1795
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Dec. 1, 1795: Page 13

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    Article HISTORY OF MASONRY. ← Page 3 of 6 →
Page 13

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History Of Masonry.

according to very imperfect ideas of astronomical correctness . The Julian calendar continued in use till it was again reformed by Pope "Gregory XIII . in 1582 ; which reform , after being received by a great part of Europe , was at length adopted in Britain in 1 752 ; and thus put an end to the- almost continual occasion of adverting to the distinction betwixt the old stile and new stilein public and private

, transactions with foreign countries . Julius Caesar and his legions had built much in Gaul : and at Rome he raised his great circus , three furlongs in length , and one in breadth , that held 260 , 000 people at the shews ; with his stately palace , and temple of Venus : he also ordered Carthage and Corinth to be rebuilt , about 100 years after they had been demolished . He had

attained that supremacy over the republic to which he so strenuously aspired ; but we cannot know certainly the use he intended to make of the plenitude of power he possessed , because he was prematurely cut off by assasination in the senate-house ; at a time when this act of treacherous violence , so far from restoring liberty to a worn-out republiconlleft the place Caesar occupiedto be contended for

, y , again by a renewal of all the horrors of unprincipled ambition and civil discord . [ A . M . 39 60 . Before Christ 44 . 3 But when , after a copious evacuation of the best and most illustrious blood in the state , supreme power once more centred in the hand of Octavius , afterward so famous under the name of Augustus , this proud mistress of the world became as truly the unrivalled seat of arts as of empire .

The death of Julias Caesar was soon followed by the conquest of Egypt , the death of Cleopatra , the end of the Grecian monarchy ; and the commencement of the Roman empire , by the victory-Augustus gained over Pompey the younger at Actittm . This illustrious patron of architecture , with his minister Agrippa , erected the great portico of the Pantheon , which has the following inscription on the frieze : ^ Before Christ 29 , 3

M . AGRIPPA L . F . COS . TERTIUM FECIT . This inscription has given rise to a general opinion that the whole of this beautiful temple was of his erection ; yet several antiquarians and artists have concluded that the Pantheon existed from the time of the . commonwealth . Dion Cassius , in treating of the magnificence of Agrippa , says , ' And he also finished or perfected the Pantheon : '

and Michael Angelo was persuaded that the body of the temple , and the portico leading into it , were the work of three several architects ; because the roof , and the order which supports it , do not correspond with each other , and want much of that elegance and symmetry so striking in the portico . The body of this temple , which was consecrated to all the Godsis roundor cylindricalcrowned with a

, , , dome ; it is 144 feet diamater within , and of the same height from the pavement up to the large aperture at the summit , from which the building receives its light . It is of the Corinthian order ; and the inner circumference is divided into seven grand niches , wrought in the thickness pf the wall ; six of which are flat at the top , but the 3 E ?

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1795-12-01, Page 13” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 29 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01121795/page/13/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
LONDON : Article 1
TO READERS, CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 2
Untitled Article 2
Untitled Article 4
WITH A PORTRAIT. Article 5
Untitled Article 5
COVETOUSNESS; A VISION. Article 6
HISTORY OF MASONRY. Article 11
TO THE EDITOR. Article 17
Untitled Article 17
ADVICE TO THE PUBLIC, Article 18
ACCOUNT OF THE SYBARITES. FROM ATHENAEUS. Article 19
COTYS. Article 19
ALCIBIADES. Article 20
FROM THE SAME. Article 22
ON THE ORIGIN OF COCK-FIGHTING. Article 22
FROM THE SAME. Article 22
FROM THE SAME. Article 23
FROM THE SAME. Article 23
FROM THE SAME. Article 23
FROM THE SAME. Article 23
FROM THE SAME. Article 23
FROM THE SAME. Article 24
A BILL OF FARE FOR FIFTY PEOPLE OF THE COMPANY OF SALTERS, A. D. 1506. Article 24
APOPLEXY. Article 24
THE STAGE. Article 25
ACCOUNT OF THE STOCKS OR PUBLIC FUNDS OF THIS KINGDOM. Article 26
BAD EFFECTS OF SPIRITOUS LIQUORS, ESPECIALLY AMONG THE LOWER RANKS. Article 29
TO THE EDITOR. ON THE EFFECTS OF TRAGEDY. Article 31
AN EXPLANATION OF THE FACULTYE OF ABRAC. Article 34
DETACHED SENTIMENTS. Article 35
CHARACTER OF GAVIN WILSON, WITH SOME ACCOUNT OF HIS INVENTIONS, Article 36
THOUGHTS ON QUACKS OF ALL DENOMINATIONS. Article 41
REFLECTIONS ON THE UNEQUAL DISTRIBUTION OF TALENTS TO MANKIND. Article 43
ANECOTE OF SIR ROBERT WALPOLE. Article 45
OPINION OF THE THE GREAT JUDGE COKE, UPON THE ACT AGAINST FREEMASONS. Article 46
THE OPINION. Article 46
A FRAGMENT. Article 47
ANOTHER. Article 47
REMARKS ON THE IMITATIVE POWER OF INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC. Article 48
SKETCH OF THE CHARACTER OF Dr. ADAM SMITH. Article 50
ANECDOTE OF THE LATE EARL OF LAUDERDALE. Article 52
POETRY. Article 53
IMPOSSIBILITIES. Article 54
SIR PHILIP SYDNEY'S EPITAPH. Article 54
EPITAPH under Dr. JOHNSON's STATUE in St. PAUL's. Article 54
ON PLUCKING A ROSE INTENDED FOR A YOUNG LADY. Article 55
THE SOLDIER's PARTING; OR, JEMMY AND LUCY, A SONG. Article 56
EPITAPH on Dr. SACHEVEREL, and SALLY SALISBURY. Article 56
DESCRIPTION OF A PARISH WORKHOUSE. Article 57
TO MY LOVELY FRIEND. Article 57
Untitled Article 58
Untitled Article 58
LOVE WITHOUT SPIRIT. Article 58
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 59
EPILOGUE Article 59
THE ARTS. Article 60
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 61
GRAND LODGE OF SCOTLAND. Article 62
UNTO THE KING'S MOST EXCELLENT MAJESTY, Article 63
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 63
PROMOTIONS. Article 69
BANKRUPTS. Article 70
INDEX TO THE FIFTH VOLUME. Article 71
Untitled Article 74
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

History Of Masonry.

according to very imperfect ideas of astronomical correctness . The Julian calendar continued in use till it was again reformed by Pope "Gregory XIII . in 1582 ; which reform , after being received by a great part of Europe , was at length adopted in Britain in 1 752 ; and thus put an end to the- almost continual occasion of adverting to the distinction betwixt the old stile and new stilein public and private

, transactions with foreign countries . Julius Caesar and his legions had built much in Gaul : and at Rome he raised his great circus , three furlongs in length , and one in breadth , that held 260 , 000 people at the shews ; with his stately palace , and temple of Venus : he also ordered Carthage and Corinth to be rebuilt , about 100 years after they had been demolished . He had

attained that supremacy over the republic to which he so strenuously aspired ; but we cannot know certainly the use he intended to make of the plenitude of power he possessed , because he was prematurely cut off by assasination in the senate-house ; at a time when this act of treacherous violence , so far from restoring liberty to a worn-out republiconlleft the place Caesar occupiedto be contended for

, y , again by a renewal of all the horrors of unprincipled ambition and civil discord . [ A . M . 39 60 . Before Christ 44 . 3 But when , after a copious evacuation of the best and most illustrious blood in the state , supreme power once more centred in the hand of Octavius , afterward so famous under the name of Augustus , this proud mistress of the world became as truly the unrivalled seat of arts as of empire .

The death of Julias Caesar was soon followed by the conquest of Egypt , the death of Cleopatra , the end of the Grecian monarchy ; and the commencement of the Roman empire , by the victory-Augustus gained over Pompey the younger at Actittm . This illustrious patron of architecture , with his minister Agrippa , erected the great portico of the Pantheon , which has the following inscription on the frieze : ^ Before Christ 29 , 3

M . AGRIPPA L . F . COS . TERTIUM FECIT . This inscription has given rise to a general opinion that the whole of this beautiful temple was of his erection ; yet several antiquarians and artists have concluded that the Pantheon existed from the time of the . commonwealth . Dion Cassius , in treating of the magnificence of Agrippa , says , ' And he also finished or perfected the Pantheon : '

and Michael Angelo was persuaded that the body of the temple , and the portico leading into it , were the work of three several architects ; because the roof , and the order which supports it , do not correspond with each other , and want much of that elegance and symmetry so striking in the portico . The body of this temple , which was consecrated to all the Godsis roundor cylindricalcrowned with a

, , , dome ; it is 144 feet diamater within , and of the same height from the pavement up to the large aperture at the summit , from which the building receives its light . It is of the Corinthian order ; and the inner circumference is divided into seven grand niches , wrought in the thickness pf the wall ; six of which are flat at the top , but the 3 E ?

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