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  • June 30, 1853
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The Freemasons' Quarterly Review, June 30, 1853: Page 114

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    Article CORRESPONDENCE. ← Page 4 of 9 →
Page 114

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Correspondence.

over , as the deputies of Prussia , Hanover , and Brunswick opposed the motion , did not pass . Since 1801 , every one in the Austrian service must abjure the Order for ever . We find the Order also early established in BAVAEIA , as a Lodge is said to have been established at Manheim ( then a Bavarian city ) as early as 1737 . Later onin 1766 a Scotch Lodge was constituted

, , under the protection of Prince Frederick of Pfalz-Zweibriicken ( Deux Fonts ) by Frenchmen , under the title diaries de V Union ; from whicli proceeded , in 1778 , diaries of Unity ( Karl zur Einigkeit ) , as the Mother Lodge of working tabernacles ( Bauhutten ) at Landau and Kaiserslautern .

This Union came into great discredit from the abuse of its forms by the llluminati . It was , with them , strictly prohibited the 2 nd March , 1784 , by a severe edict , and the 16 th August of the year following , entirel y abolished and prohibited . His successor , the subsequent King Maximilian , renewed this prohibition in 1799 ; but when , in 1807 , he received cession of the principalities of Anspach and Bairenth from Prussiahe permitted the continuance of the

ex-, isting Lodges , but with the proviso that all persons in tlie service of the crown should abjure the Order or relinquish their places . And so it is at present ; but it is to be hoped that Louis , who has shown himself the warm friend and admirer of all the arts , will at length acknowledge the EOYAL * one . Freemasonry was planted in Bairenth as early as 1740 bthe Margraf of Baireuthwho had been hiitiated

, y , by his brother-in-law , Frederic the Great , and whose sister he had married . The Order still flourishes there in a Grand Lodge of the Sun ( zur Sonne ) , besides which there are lodges in Niirnberg , Forth , Frankenthal , Hof , Regensburg ( Ratisbon ) , and Erlangen . In BADEN , after Manheim had been joined to her territory , the Lodge of Unity ( zur Einigkeit ) , which had been closed by the

Elector Karl Theodor in 1806 , was not only re-opened by the Grand Duke , but also a G . 0 . erected under the G . M . Prince Karl von Isenburg . In 1813 a prohibition was published against all secret societies , without exception , in consequence of which the Lodge at Manheim remained closed till 24 th August , 1846 , when it and another at

Karlsruhe were again opened , 24 th June , 1847 , in consequence of a government authority . In WUETEMBEEG some early-founded Lodges were at first tolerated , namely , Karl ofthe Tlvree Cedars ( zu den drei Cedern ) , but closed in 1784 by a government decree ; but in 1836 again called to labour with the sanction of his present majesty . In HESSEN CASSEL the Order had early , if not a locus standi , at

least a permissive existence . The Landgraf Frederic was , in 1780 , by the Great National Lodge of the United Netherlands , on account of his great services to them , chosen their protector . Under the

“The Freemasons' Quarterly Review: 1853-06-30, Page 114” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 13 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fqr/issues/fqr_30061853/page/114/.
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Title Category Page
Till:. HOYAL __T_ t_EMASONS ! SCHOOL EOK... Article 1
THE HOYAL EK Article 2
THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY MAGAZINE. Article 3
A FEW WORDS ON BENEFIT SOCIETIES. Article 7
EPISODES IN THE LIFE OF A FREEMASON. Article 15
THE COUNTESS AND THE SERF* Article 32
THE KNIGHTS OF ST. HELEN'S. Article 54
ON SYMBOLS AND SYMBOLISM, Article 65
A RELIC OF THE PRETENDER. Article 82
ELEANORA ULFELD. Article 83
THE PRISON-FLOWER. Article 96
OLDEN HOLIDAY CUSTOMS. Article 99
SI J'ETAIS ROI. Article 110
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 111
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONs' QUARTERLY MAGAZINE. Article 119
MASONRY IN FRANCE. Article 120
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 126
UNITED GRAND LODGE. Article 126
THE GRAND BANQUET. Article 128
duty to perform towards the nobleman who... Article 129
ESPECIAL MEETING , May 11, 1853. Article 133
QUARTERLY COMMUNICATION, June 1, 1853. Article 133
ESPECIAL MEETING , June 22, 1853. Article 135
GRAND CONCLAVE OF MASONIC KNIGHTS TEMPLAR, Article 136
THE ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 142
ROYAL FREEMASONS' GIRLS' SCHOOL. Article 148
THE CHARITIES. ROYAL MASONIC BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION Article 155
METROPOLITAN. Article 160
PROVINCIAL. Article 160
OXFORDSHIRE. Article 167
SCOTLAND. Article 181
COLONIAL. Article 182
INTERESTING DISCOVERY AT JERUSALEM. Article 187
Obituary. Article 188
NOTICES TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 189
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Page 114

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Correspondence.

over , as the deputies of Prussia , Hanover , and Brunswick opposed the motion , did not pass . Since 1801 , every one in the Austrian service must abjure the Order for ever . We find the Order also early established in BAVAEIA , as a Lodge is said to have been established at Manheim ( then a Bavarian city ) as early as 1737 . Later onin 1766 a Scotch Lodge was constituted

, , under the protection of Prince Frederick of Pfalz-Zweibriicken ( Deux Fonts ) by Frenchmen , under the title diaries de V Union ; from whicli proceeded , in 1778 , diaries of Unity ( Karl zur Einigkeit ) , as the Mother Lodge of working tabernacles ( Bauhutten ) at Landau and Kaiserslautern .

This Union came into great discredit from the abuse of its forms by the llluminati . It was , with them , strictly prohibited the 2 nd March , 1784 , by a severe edict , and the 16 th August of the year following , entirel y abolished and prohibited . His successor , the subsequent King Maximilian , renewed this prohibition in 1799 ; but when , in 1807 , he received cession of the principalities of Anspach and Bairenth from Prussiahe permitted the continuance of the

ex-, isting Lodges , but with the proviso that all persons in tlie service of the crown should abjure the Order or relinquish their places . And so it is at present ; but it is to be hoped that Louis , who has shown himself the warm friend and admirer of all the arts , will at length acknowledge the EOYAL * one . Freemasonry was planted in Bairenth as early as 1740 bthe Margraf of Baireuthwho had been hiitiated

, y , by his brother-in-law , Frederic the Great , and whose sister he had married . The Order still flourishes there in a Grand Lodge of the Sun ( zur Sonne ) , besides which there are lodges in Niirnberg , Forth , Frankenthal , Hof , Regensburg ( Ratisbon ) , and Erlangen . In BADEN , after Manheim had been joined to her territory , the Lodge of Unity ( zur Einigkeit ) , which had been closed by the

Elector Karl Theodor in 1806 , was not only re-opened by the Grand Duke , but also a G . 0 . erected under the G . M . Prince Karl von Isenburg . In 1813 a prohibition was published against all secret societies , without exception , in consequence of which the Lodge at Manheim remained closed till 24 th August , 1846 , when it and another at

Karlsruhe were again opened , 24 th June , 1847 , in consequence of a government authority . In WUETEMBEEG some early-founded Lodges were at first tolerated , namely , Karl ofthe Tlvree Cedars ( zu den drei Cedern ) , but closed in 1784 by a government decree ; but in 1836 again called to labour with the sanction of his present majesty . In HESSEN CASSEL the Order had early , if not a locus standi , at

least a permissive existence . The Landgraf Frederic was , in 1780 , by the Great National Lodge of the United Netherlands , on account of his great services to them , chosen their protector . Under the

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