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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • May 2, 1868
  • Page 8
  • THE KNIGHTS TEMPLARS.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, May 2, 1868: Page 8

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    Article (No. 7).—THE MASONIC TEMPLE, ST. HELIER. ← Page 5 of 5
    Article THE KNIGHTS TEMPLARS. Page 1 of 3 →
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(No. 7).—The Masonic Temple, St. Helier.

nouneed "mythical" by some misinformed writers . Nor was Miss St . Leger the only one of her sex who penetrated our Order , for in the Freemasons' Magazine for Nov . 19 th , 1859 , there was the following quotation from " A General History of the County of Norfolk , " published in

1829 : — " Died in St . John ' s Maddermarket , Norwich , July , 1802 , aged eighty-five , Mrs . Beaton , a native of Wales . She was commonly called the Freemason , from the circumstance of her having

contrived to conceal herself one evening in the wainscotting of a lodge room , where she learned the secret , the knowledge of which thousands of her sex have in vain attempted to arrive at . She was in many respects a very singular character , of

which one proof adduced is that the secret of the Freemasons died with her . " It would be an act of fraternal grace if some of our brethren in Norfolk could discover a portrait of Mrs . Beaton , and present the same to the Masonic Temple , Jersey , as a companion to the portraits of Mrs . Aldworth .

The good which results to the Craft by the erection of such buildings as the Jersey Masonie Temple cannot be overestimated . They not only remove the stumbling-block of public-house meetings , which in many places are the cause of

keeping men of high character aud ability from joining us , but they enable the Masonic work to be done with propriety and zeal . Moreover , they speak volumes to outsiders in favour of the ancient Order , which , elucidating the mysteries of King

Solomon ' s Temple , has survived the anathemas of Popes , the assaults of Emperors , and the attacks of malevolent slanderers . To visiting brethren the Masonic Temple , St . Helier , is a standing recommendation to follow in the footsteps of Bro . Schmitt and his fellow-Craftsmen , and "Go and do likewise . "—J . A . H .

The Knights Templars.

THE KNIGHTS TEMPLARS .

By ANTHONY ONEAL HAYE . ( Continued from page 331 ) . BOOK III . —CHAPTER I . —( contd . )

At a meeting of a chapter general of the Order , held in 1112 , Robert de Sablaus , * who was then in England , was elected Grand Master . Mr .

Addison says , " At the period of the arrival of King Richard , the Templars had again lost their Grand Master , " referring to the Grand Marshal , Walter . Undoubtedly both Ducange and the Cotton MS . confer upon Walter the title of Master ,

but , with deference to these authorities , we are or the opinion that he was only Regent during the interregnum , as William de Rupefort was at a later period . The new Grand Master ' s name is differently spelled by authors , Sable , Sabloil ,

Sambell , Sabul . He had the character of being an honourable and valiant Knight , as well as a prudent and sagacious leader . He commanded a division of the English fleet on the voyage to the Holy Land , where the English and French

monarchs , were anxiously looked for . Hoveden * gives a curious account of this voyage , and relates the difficulties Sablaus had to encounter in maintaining peacebetween the Crusaders , whose excesses were anything than befitting Christians , and the people of the ports at which the fleet stopped . He likewise relates that the' Grand Master was a

party to the agreement made at Messina , between Philip and Richard , and of that between the latter , and Tancred , King of Sicily . After many delays , Philip and Richard , with their armies arrived at Acre . On the voyage ,

Richard had made war against the King of Cyprus , in revenge for some fancied slight , and reducing the island sold it to the Templars for three hundred thousand ducats of gold . Vertot cannot permit this transaction to pass without showing

his animus . He writes , "As Cyprus was too remote from England to be annexed to that kingdom , Richard sold it to the Templars for the sum of three hundred thousand livres . These military monks took possession , and , to secure their

authority , threw a numerous body of troops into it . But the harshness of their government , and the haughty ways of these Templars , alienated the minds of these new subjects . Besides , the Cypriots , who followed the Greek rites , could not

conform to the Latin . This was the cause , or at least the pretext for continued war between the great men of that kingdom and the Templars , who were obliged at least to abandon the island , and deliver it back to the King of England , as we shall

observe hereafter . " And so shall toe . The Abbe ' s sycophancy here is at variance in every respect with historical facts . Another passage—while

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1868-05-02, Page 8” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 1 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_02051868/page/8/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE ORDER OF ST. CONSTANTINE. Article 1
EARS OF WHEAT FROM A CORNUCOPIA. Article 3
(No. 7).—THE MASONIC TEMPLE, ST. HELIER. Article 4
THE KNIGHTS TEMPLARS. Article 8
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 10
MASONIC EXCHANGE. Article 10
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 11
THE ANCIENT EGYPTIANS. Article 11
THE TENDENCY OF SOME LATE CORRESPONDENCE. Article 11
MASONIC LIFEBOAT FUND. Article 11
MASONIC MEMS. Article 12
GRAND LODGE . Article 12
METROPOLITAN. Article 13
PROVINCIAL. Article 16
CHANNEL ISLANDS. Article 17
SCOTLAND. Article 18
ROYAL ARCH. Article 18
MARK MASONRY. Article 18
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 19
Poetry. Article 20
MASONIC LIFEBOAT FUND. Article 20
MEETINGS OF THE LEARNED SOCIETIES FOR THE WEEK ENDING MAY 9TH, 1868. Article 20
METROPOLITAN LODGE MEETINGS, ETC., FOR THE WEEK ENDING MAY 9TH, 1868. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

(No. 7).—The Masonic Temple, St. Helier.

nouneed "mythical" by some misinformed writers . Nor was Miss St . Leger the only one of her sex who penetrated our Order , for in the Freemasons' Magazine for Nov . 19 th , 1859 , there was the following quotation from " A General History of the County of Norfolk , " published in

1829 : — " Died in St . John ' s Maddermarket , Norwich , July , 1802 , aged eighty-five , Mrs . Beaton , a native of Wales . She was commonly called the Freemason , from the circumstance of her having

contrived to conceal herself one evening in the wainscotting of a lodge room , where she learned the secret , the knowledge of which thousands of her sex have in vain attempted to arrive at . She was in many respects a very singular character , of

which one proof adduced is that the secret of the Freemasons died with her . " It would be an act of fraternal grace if some of our brethren in Norfolk could discover a portrait of Mrs . Beaton , and present the same to the Masonic Temple , Jersey , as a companion to the portraits of Mrs . Aldworth .

The good which results to the Craft by the erection of such buildings as the Jersey Masonie Temple cannot be overestimated . They not only remove the stumbling-block of public-house meetings , which in many places are the cause of

keeping men of high character aud ability from joining us , but they enable the Masonic work to be done with propriety and zeal . Moreover , they speak volumes to outsiders in favour of the ancient Order , which , elucidating the mysteries of King

Solomon ' s Temple , has survived the anathemas of Popes , the assaults of Emperors , and the attacks of malevolent slanderers . To visiting brethren the Masonic Temple , St . Helier , is a standing recommendation to follow in the footsteps of Bro . Schmitt and his fellow-Craftsmen , and "Go and do likewise . "—J . A . H .

The Knights Templars.

THE KNIGHTS TEMPLARS .

By ANTHONY ONEAL HAYE . ( Continued from page 331 ) . BOOK III . —CHAPTER I . —( contd . )

At a meeting of a chapter general of the Order , held in 1112 , Robert de Sablaus , * who was then in England , was elected Grand Master . Mr .

Addison says , " At the period of the arrival of King Richard , the Templars had again lost their Grand Master , " referring to the Grand Marshal , Walter . Undoubtedly both Ducange and the Cotton MS . confer upon Walter the title of Master ,

but , with deference to these authorities , we are or the opinion that he was only Regent during the interregnum , as William de Rupefort was at a later period . The new Grand Master ' s name is differently spelled by authors , Sable , Sabloil ,

Sambell , Sabul . He had the character of being an honourable and valiant Knight , as well as a prudent and sagacious leader . He commanded a division of the English fleet on the voyage to the Holy Land , where the English and French

monarchs , were anxiously looked for . Hoveden * gives a curious account of this voyage , and relates the difficulties Sablaus had to encounter in maintaining peacebetween the Crusaders , whose excesses were anything than befitting Christians , and the people of the ports at which the fleet stopped . He likewise relates that the' Grand Master was a

party to the agreement made at Messina , between Philip and Richard , and of that between the latter , and Tancred , King of Sicily . After many delays , Philip and Richard , with their armies arrived at Acre . On the voyage ,

Richard had made war against the King of Cyprus , in revenge for some fancied slight , and reducing the island sold it to the Templars for three hundred thousand ducats of gold . Vertot cannot permit this transaction to pass without showing

his animus . He writes , "As Cyprus was too remote from England to be annexed to that kingdom , Richard sold it to the Templars for the sum of three hundred thousand livres . These military monks took possession , and , to secure their

authority , threw a numerous body of troops into it . But the harshness of their government , and the haughty ways of these Templars , alienated the minds of these new subjects . Besides , the Cypriots , who followed the Greek rites , could not

conform to the Latin . This was the cause , or at least the pretext for continued war between the great men of that kingdom and the Templars , who were obliged at least to abandon the island , and deliver it back to the King of England , as we shall

observe hereafter . " And so shall toe . The Abbe ' s sycophancy here is at variance in every respect with historical facts . Another passage—while

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