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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • May 19, 1866
  • Page 6
  • THE ORIGIN OF THE NAMES OF THE MASONIC FRATERNITY. *
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, May 19, 1866: Page 6

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Page 6

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

The Origin Of The Names Of The Masonic Fraternity. *

of the Coptic verb MAI , to love ( denoted in the hieroglyphic alphabet by a sign that is called a plough and represents the sound M ) , prefixed to the noun substantive 20 N , brother , represented also in the hieroglyphic alphabet by what is

supposed to be a disguised Avorking tool AA'hich seems to me to represent a chisel or perhaps a seal . This Coptic combination JIAISON is exactly alike , in sound , to our AA'ord MASON , and its literal meaning is loving brother ( otherwise < pi \ a . o-eh < l > 6 s )

member of a brotherhood . These signs are the initials of the respective syllables ( just as Ave Avrite MS . for manuscipt ) aud illustrate a mode of writing which stands , indeed , almost as a general rule in ancient monuments , the Avriting of the

words in full being the exception . The Egyptian Avriter had various signs at his command to denote the same sound . It is

therefore obvious that he might have used for Avriting the phrase alluded to any other letters that represented the identical sounds m , y , s ; but , says Gliddon , the choice of the letters that should be used Avas not altogether left at the discretion or

caprice of every individual writer . There were certain rules that determined the use of the letters , so that the meaning was expressed symbolically in accordance Avith the subject AA'hich the Avriter happened to treat . The characters quoted above

as occurring in the inscription are merely phoneticsigns and have no symbolical meaning . It seems to me that to them maybe traced the origin of two of our symbols Avhich are used in our ritual in accordance Avith this origin . This hieroglyph of the plough , the initial of the first syllable has a resemblance to the P . M . ' s jeAvol ; and the

emblem of the sun , the hieroglyphic symbol of h ' o-hfc and revelation , is altogether similar to it . Even in minor details a coincidence may be found as transmuting the curved outline of the symbol into a rectilinear form , the angle at the vertex Avill be

one' of 60 ° . The hieroglyphic initial of the second syllable is the chisel , a symbol peculiar to the Mark Master ' s degree , and this is also the figure of some instrument for stamping ( one of the homophons of the S is undoubtedly a seal ) ,

the symbolical meaning of Avhich accounts for its use in the same degree . The seal , denoted in Egyptian by the letter S , expressed symbolicall y the idea of shitting , guarding . I have stated that there lvere in that language various signs to represent the same sound . If , in the phrase alluded to , the letter M had been denoted hy that

The Origin Of The Names Of The Masonic Fraternity. *

hieroglyph AA'hich represents a sickle or cimeter ( and this might have been done Avithout any violence to the idiom ) , the aggregate Avord Avould have expressed the character of the person to Avhom it applies ' and had a peculiar symbolical

meaning imparted to it . That sign denoted the idea of seeing , contemplating , meditating , and will readily suggest the origin of the speculativecharacter of the Order . These tAvo symbols combined , which occur rather frequently in

hieroglyphic sculpture , represent a figure Avhich bears some resemblance to other emblems of ours , the hour-glass and the scythe . From this Egyptian word , then , which is still to be found in the monumental constructions of the

Nile and the meaning and the use of Avhichis fully determined , * I feel inclined to derive the word Mason , and notice that up to the present day it has preserved the same meaning , viz ., Brother , member

of one and ^ the same society or organisation , and corresponds to the term Avhich is in general use in the Order . ( To "be continued ) .

Masonic Emblems.

MASONIC EMBLEMS .

THE CUBIC STONE . This is one of the principal emblems wroughtupon the tapestry , Avith which the ori ginal lodges of the Order of St . John ( or Freemasons ) was decorated .

As the rough stone represented man in his uneducated state , so likewise , the regular form ,, the level surfaces , and solid firmness of the cubic stone typified the accomplished , ennobled man , so rendered through the elevating principles of

Masonry . It stands AA'ritceu in the archives of the Masonic lodge of Leghorn ( printed in Leipsic , 1803 , p . 272 ) , that the cubic stone upon Avhich the workmen sharpened their tools should remind

them that , as their tools , blunted through use , must be resharpened , so also , that a man who strives toward perfection , will , from time to time , find it necessary to sharpen his faculties , through reflection , and rouse his slumbering energies to

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1866-05-19, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 16 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_19051866/page/6/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
AUXILIARIES TO OUR THREE GREAT CHARITIES. Article 1
RECOLLECTIONS OF THE LODGE OF FREEMASONS AT THORNHILL. Article 2
PROPOSED MASONIC SCHOOL FOR INDIA. Article 3
Untitled Article 3
THE ORIGIN OF THE NAMES OF THE MASONIC FRATERNITY. * Article 4
MASONIC EMBLEMS. Article 6
THE BIRMINGHAM MASONIC HALL AND CLUB COMPANY (LIMITED). Article 8
LAYING THE FOUNDATION STONE OF THE GREY FRIARS CHURCH, DUMFRIES. Article 8
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 11
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 12
THE GIRLS' SCHOOL FESTIVAL. Article 12
METROPOLITAN. Article 12
PROVINCIAL. Article 12
ROYAL ARCH. Article 14
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 14
SCOTLAND. Article 15
IRELAND. Article 15
INDIA. Article 15
MARK MASONRY. Article 17
Obituary. Article 17
THE WEEK. Article 18
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Origin Of The Names Of The Masonic Fraternity. *

of the Coptic verb MAI , to love ( denoted in the hieroglyphic alphabet by a sign that is called a plough and represents the sound M ) , prefixed to the noun substantive 20 N , brother , represented also in the hieroglyphic alphabet by what is

supposed to be a disguised Avorking tool AA'hich seems to me to represent a chisel or perhaps a seal . This Coptic combination JIAISON is exactly alike , in sound , to our AA'ord MASON , and its literal meaning is loving brother ( otherwise < pi \ a . o-eh < l > 6 s )

member of a brotherhood . These signs are the initials of the respective syllables ( just as Ave Avrite MS . for manuscipt ) aud illustrate a mode of writing which stands , indeed , almost as a general rule in ancient monuments , the Avriting of the

words in full being the exception . The Egyptian Avriter had various signs at his command to denote the same sound . It is

therefore obvious that he might have used for Avriting the phrase alluded to any other letters that represented the identical sounds m , y , s ; but , says Gliddon , the choice of the letters that should be used Avas not altogether left at the discretion or

caprice of every individual writer . There were certain rules that determined the use of the letters , so that the meaning was expressed symbolically in accordance Avith the subject AA'hich the Avriter happened to treat . The characters quoted above

as occurring in the inscription are merely phoneticsigns and have no symbolical meaning . It seems to me that to them maybe traced the origin of two of our symbols Avhich are used in our ritual in accordance Avith this origin . This hieroglyph of the plough , the initial of the first syllable has a resemblance to the P . M . ' s jeAvol ; and the

emblem of the sun , the hieroglyphic symbol of h ' o-hfc and revelation , is altogether similar to it . Even in minor details a coincidence may be found as transmuting the curved outline of the symbol into a rectilinear form , the angle at the vertex Avill be

one' of 60 ° . The hieroglyphic initial of the second syllable is the chisel , a symbol peculiar to the Mark Master ' s degree , and this is also the figure of some instrument for stamping ( one of the homophons of the S is undoubtedly a seal ) ,

the symbolical meaning of Avhich accounts for its use in the same degree . The seal , denoted in Egyptian by the letter S , expressed symbolicall y the idea of shitting , guarding . I have stated that there lvere in that language various signs to represent the same sound . If , in the phrase alluded to , the letter M had been denoted hy that

The Origin Of The Names Of The Masonic Fraternity. *

hieroglyph AA'hich represents a sickle or cimeter ( and this might have been done Avithout any violence to the idiom ) , the aggregate Avord Avould have expressed the character of the person to Avhom it applies ' and had a peculiar symbolical

meaning imparted to it . That sign denoted the idea of seeing , contemplating , meditating , and will readily suggest the origin of the speculativecharacter of the Order . These tAvo symbols combined , which occur rather frequently in

hieroglyphic sculpture , represent a figure Avhich bears some resemblance to other emblems of ours , the hour-glass and the scythe . From this Egyptian word , then , which is still to be found in the monumental constructions of the

Nile and the meaning and the use of Avhichis fully determined , * I feel inclined to derive the word Mason , and notice that up to the present day it has preserved the same meaning , viz ., Brother , member

of one and ^ the same society or organisation , and corresponds to the term Avhich is in general use in the Order . ( To "be continued ) .

Masonic Emblems.

MASONIC EMBLEMS .

THE CUBIC STONE . This is one of the principal emblems wroughtupon the tapestry , Avith which the ori ginal lodges of the Order of St . John ( or Freemasons ) was decorated .

As the rough stone represented man in his uneducated state , so likewise , the regular form ,, the level surfaces , and solid firmness of the cubic stone typified the accomplished , ennobled man , so rendered through the elevating principles of

Masonry . It stands AA'ritceu in the archives of the Masonic lodge of Leghorn ( printed in Leipsic , 1803 , p . 272 ) , that the cubic stone upon Avhich the workmen sharpened their tools should remind

them that , as their tools , blunted through use , must be resharpened , so also , that a man who strives toward perfection , will , from time to time , find it necessary to sharpen his faculties , through reflection , and rouse his slumbering energies to

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