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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Dec. 23, 1865
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  • ANCIENT MASONIC HIEROGLYPHS.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Dec. 23, 1865: Page 1

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

Ancient Masonic Hieroglyphs.

ANCIENT MASONIC HIEROGLYPHS .

LONDON , SATURDAY , DECEMBER 23 , 1 S 65 .

BY BRO . ANDREW OASSARD , 38 ° . The figure illustrated in the accompanying woodcut represents the most sublime of all ancient ecrets , known originally by the name of Bahunicd

and Kraruf , i . e ., the secret of the nature of the world , or the secret of secrets , and the beginning and end , or alpha and omega of all things . It would be impossible to do more than scanty justice to the paramount importance of this figure ,

in an article the space of which is necessarily limited . Brethren anxious to enter deeper into the subject may consult Kircher ' s " Treatise on Hieroglyphs , " based on a most important MS . he found in Malta amongst the Turks , which had

been translated by the Syrian , Aben Vahschia , into Turkish from the original Chaldean and Arab languages , and deposited by him , in 214 , in the Treasury Chamber of Abdolmelic . The accompanying figure is one of the most

important of those known in Arabian as belonging to the alphabet of Hermes , who , according to Oriental history , was the King of the ancient Egyptians , and it is evidently the one Kircher calls anima murdi ; but this name has never been

explained . Its original name is Jlahumed or Balmmid , for which the Arabian translation is Kraruf . But it is demonstrated that it was invented by Hermes , and belongs to his alphabet or else to the Tpi ^ yarTos of the ancient Hellenes , which was kept in close secrecy by his descendants >

it is possible , also , that it belongs to the triple frame of the Indians . The Hermesians used to communicate their secret knowledge and sciences to their disciples only , for fear lest " arts and sciences might be

vulgarised and perverted . " By means of their alphabet they concealed their secrets and valuable treasure , which were impenetrable to all save the " sons of the li ° ht of truth and learning . " O O Those initiated in the mysteries of the school

of Hermetic philosophy were divided into different classes , but all recognised Hermes the Great as their common head and chief . In order to avoid all intercourse with strangers , by which the essential secrecy of their sciences might be

jeopardised , " they formed matrimonial alliances with none but daughters of the same race ( the initiated ) , all of whom were considered as members and integral parts of one and the same family . " And it is positively asserted that no

stranger ever invaded the stronghold of those well-founded secrets which they alone possessed . These Hermesians were the authors of those

works known as the "Bdris , or Books of Enoch . They built temples dedicated to the Divinity ; they professed the unity of God ,, and blessed the name of the "Supreme Creator of all things . " The few adepts of the Hermetic

secrets * who have lived down to the present day are to be found in some islands adjacent to the confines of China , t and they are still adhering to the same doctrines that are taught in our own temples nowadays , viz ., the preaching and

practising of the purest morals , and of the most wholesome philosophy , the sublime principles of which were inculcated to them by their forefathers , and have been handed to them from age to a ° e . We cannot venture here to expatiate on the

antiquity ofthe Hermetic mysteries and philosophy , or on the mysterious feeling of veneration entertained for the Bahumed or Kraruf by the initiated . It would be superfluous also to repeat all that has been said and written on the Apis of Egypt ,

revived by the Israelites in their veneration oi the Kraruf , ancl preserved to the present day in the mysteries of the Drusiaus . Suffice it to draw the attention of the reader to the peculiar and intimate relationship existing between the institutions of

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1865-12-23, Page 1” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_23121865/page/1/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
ANCIENT MASONIC HIEROGLYPHS. Article 1
THE LATE KING OF THE BELGIANS. Article 2
FREEMASONRY AND THE POPE. Article 2
THE PROVINCIAL MASONIC CHARITIES. Article 3
ROYAL ARCH. Article 4
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 6
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 6
CHARITY STEWARDS. Article 7
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 7
METROPOLITAN. Article 7
PROVINCIAL. Article 8
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 13
ROYAL ARCH. Article 13
MARK MASONRY. Article 13
CHANNEL ISLANDS. Article 14
BRITISH BURMAH. Article 16
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 18
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.

Ancient Masonic Hieroglyphs.

ANCIENT MASONIC HIEROGLYPHS .

LONDON , SATURDAY , DECEMBER 23 , 1 S 65 .

BY BRO . ANDREW OASSARD , 38 ° . The figure illustrated in the accompanying woodcut represents the most sublime of all ancient ecrets , known originally by the name of Bahunicd

and Kraruf , i . e ., the secret of the nature of the world , or the secret of secrets , and the beginning and end , or alpha and omega of all things . It would be impossible to do more than scanty justice to the paramount importance of this figure ,

in an article the space of which is necessarily limited . Brethren anxious to enter deeper into the subject may consult Kircher ' s " Treatise on Hieroglyphs , " based on a most important MS . he found in Malta amongst the Turks , which had

been translated by the Syrian , Aben Vahschia , into Turkish from the original Chaldean and Arab languages , and deposited by him , in 214 , in the Treasury Chamber of Abdolmelic . The accompanying figure is one of the most

important of those known in Arabian as belonging to the alphabet of Hermes , who , according to Oriental history , was the King of the ancient Egyptians , and it is evidently the one Kircher calls anima murdi ; but this name has never been

explained . Its original name is Jlahumed or Balmmid , for which the Arabian translation is Kraruf . But it is demonstrated that it was invented by Hermes , and belongs to his alphabet or else to the Tpi ^ yarTos of the ancient Hellenes , which was kept in close secrecy by his descendants >

it is possible , also , that it belongs to the triple frame of the Indians . The Hermesians used to communicate their secret knowledge and sciences to their disciples only , for fear lest " arts and sciences might be

vulgarised and perverted . " By means of their alphabet they concealed their secrets and valuable treasure , which were impenetrable to all save the " sons of the li ° ht of truth and learning . " O O Those initiated in the mysteries of the school

of Hermetic philosophy were divided into different classes , but all recognised Hermes the Great as their common head and chief . In order to avoid all intercourse with strangers , by which the essential secrecy of their sciences might be

jeopardised , " they formed matrimonial alliances with none but daughters of the same race ( the initiated ) , all of whom were considered as members and integral parts of one and the same family . " And it is positively asserted that no

stranger ever invaded the stronghold of those well-founded secrets which they alone possessed . These Hermesians were the authors of those

works known as the "Bdris , or Books of Enoch . They built temples dedicated to the Divinity ; they professed the unity of God ,, and blessed the name of the "Supreme Creator of all things . " The few adepts of the Hermetic

secrets * who have lived down to the present day are to be found in some islands adjacent to the confines of China , t and they are still adhering to the same doctrines that are taught in our own temples nowadays , viz ., the preaching and

practising of the purest morals , and of the most wholesome philosophy , the sublime principles of which were inculcated to them by their forefathers , and have been handed to them from age to a ° e . We cannot venture here to expatiate on the

antiquity ofthe Hermetic mysteries and philosophy , or on the mysterious feeling of veneration entertained for the Bahumed or Kraruf by the initiated . It would be superfluous also to repeat all that has been said and written on the Apis of Egypt ,

revived by the Israelites in their veneration oi the Kraruf , ancl preserved to the present day in the mysteries of the Drusiaus . Suffice it to draw the attention of the reader to the peculiar and intimate relationship existing between the institutions of

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