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  • Jan. 29, 1870
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Jan. 29, 1870: Page 10

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    Article SPECULATIVE FREEMASONRY AND ITS ORIGIN (pp. 67, 69.) Page 1 of 2 →
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Speculative Freemasonry And Its Origin (Pp. 67, 69.)

SPECULATIVE FREEMASONRY AND ITS ORIGIN ( pp . 67 , 69 . )

" Our Freemasonry , or Speculative Masonry , was a new institution , manufactured or brought into being in A . D . 1717 . It was made up of quotations from operative documents—Rosicrucian ideas , principles and doctrines stirred up by the Reformation , ideas taken from the study of ancient history & call mixed

, , together with such suitable seasoning as the brains of Drs . Desaguliers and Anderson judged best for the purpose . There being a few old Masonic lodges in London , the Doctors gave each a dose of the new ¦ compound , which so tickled their fancy , pleased , and intoxicated them , that , inirabile d-ictu , they immediately

lost all remembrance of past events ! Yea , verily , such was the curious action of this new compound , that if ¦ a Masou only took one sip , he was ever after ready to swear that lie had been drinking it continually and habitually all his life . A dose being also sent to the Scottish lodges , they tasted , were quite satisfied , and immediately adopted the recipe , and , as quickly as

the new compound could be manufactured in that cold climate , dispensed it . It was soon found , however , ¦ that the old lodges , or " old bottles , " were neither sufficient in capacity nor numbers to contain anything like the necessary amount of material , nor were they able to dispense the intended good in a manner

commensurate with the good intended ; consequently the Doctors had to set about manufacturing more " hot ties , " which they of course did in a dignified manner , and in accordance with the demand . So much for the manufacture of Speculative Masonry about A . D . 1717 . 'The Masons before 1717 depicted the compasses and

square and others of their tools upon their flags , & c . ; but so also did the Wrights , who also used the compasses and square , & c ; aud other trades had also their tools depicted . But although that was done , it does not follow that they served any other purpose with them than merely as trade marks ; and much less does it follow that our degrees and rituals , & c ., existed before 1717 ; as yet , I have seen no evidence to prove so , but a good deal against it . —W . P . BUCHAN .

THE ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED EITE . I think we may fairly presume that this rite originated about the year 1730 . We know that Ramsay and others were busy with a " new system" some years earlier , and it is probable that the Royal Arch established 1740 , was arranged from the degrees of

this rite relating to Zerubbabel ' s Temple . All the Cross degrees , viz ., the Rose Croix of Prance , Rosy Cross of Scotland , Eouge Croix of Sweden , and the Templar of England appear to have arisen about the year 1750 . Of course the Ancient and Accepted Rite was not established in its present entirety till many vears later . " - —Lx . W . L .

THE EOSICEUCIANS . Anew work , " The Rosicrucians , " by Mr . Hargrave Jennings , author of " Indian Reli gions , - or , Results -of the Mysterious Bhuddism , " will be immediately published b y Mr . Hotteu , of Piccadilly . This book will contain upwards of 300 engravings of Hermetic

subjects , expressly collected for this publication . The book will give a serious view of the occult system of the renowned brothers of the Eosy Cross , otherwise the Alchemists and " Illuminati , " drawn , for the first

time , from the Latin writings of Robertus de Fluetibus ( Robert Flood , or Fludd ) .

THE GUILDS . The following appeared in " Notes and Queries , " of Jan . 22 nd : — " Important as has been the influence of guilds upon the social and municipal institutions of England , their history , it would seem , is destined to be written by forei scholarsWilda published in

gn . 1831 a book upon the subject , TJeber das Gildewesen des Mittelalters , and now we learn that the late lamented Mr . Touhnin Smith ' s 'English G-uilds' is to be accompanied by a review of the whole history and development of guilds , from the pen of a learned German scholar , Dr . L . Brentane . "—PICTTJS .

MASONEY IN JEETJSALEM . At the conversazione of the London Institution on Wednesday , the 19 th inst . Bro . the Rev . H . B . Tristram , one of the Palestine explorers , in giving an address on Jerusalem , made distinct reference to its Masonic interest , speaking as a Freemason . He

particularly referred to the masons' marks on the walls ofthe Harem , defined by Bro . Deutsch as Phoenician , and which Bro . Tristram therefore decides to be those of the workmen of Hiram . It must , however , be observed that as yet the identification is incomplete , because it does not follow , as assumed by Bro . Tristram , that in the next construction ofthe Temple Phoenician masons may not have been employed as before . —A MASONIC ATJDITOE .

ONE OP BEO . HUGHAN ' LETTEES . Bro . Hughan ' s letter , respecting which a West of England correspondent enquires , is one with which most readers of the Freemasons ^ Magazine must be familiar . It is inserted in Ho . 536 , 9 th Oct ., 1869 . I recommend to my correspondent ' s attention the

following passage : — " Our present system of Speculative Freemasonry arose out of the mediaeval and early operative guilds or fraternities , when the latter were languishing , after a long existence of many centuries , and these in their turn were but a copy of still earlier secret organisations . "—CHAELES PUETON COOPEE .

THE LODGE 01 ? GLASGOW ST . JOHN AND THE MAEK ( page 68 ) . Allow me to inform your esteemed correspondent , Bro . W . J . Hughan , that in my next article , and at date April , 1858 , there occurs notice of contest with the Glasgow Prov . Grand Lodge upon this matter , which will be alluded to . —W . P . BUCHAN .

EECOGNITION OP THE HIGH DEGEEES BY GEAND LODGE . I think " Yerha Nbn Res" has misunderstood my remarks in the Magazine , page 49 . I stated that the Act of Union " declares what we know to be but a form of high grade Masonry { i . e ., the B . A . ) , to be

part of the Antient system . " I did not mention the Ancient and Accepted Rite , but its degrees were in operation ( abroad ) A . D . 1813 . He admits that its two principal degrees had already been incorporated with English high grade Masonry . I am not an advocate of the Ancient and Accepted or any other form of high grade Freemasonry , but I think I state facts . — HOLZ .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1870-01-29, Page 10” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_29011870/page/10/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
THE TEMPLARS AND FREEMASONRY. Article 1
A PUBLIC ORDER OF MERIT. Article 3
THE LODGE OF GLASGOW ST. JOHN. Article 3
Untitled Article 5
HOW I SPENT MY FIVE WEEKS' LEAVE. Article 6
MASONIC JOTTINGS.—No. 5. Article 8
THE RISE AND PURPOSES OF SPECULATIVE MASONRY. Article 8
THE ORIGIN OF THE LODGE ST. AYLES EAST ANSTRUTHER. Article 9
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 9
SPECULATIVE FREEMASONRY AND ITS ORIGIN (pp. 67, 69.) Article 10
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 11
Untitled Article 14
MASONIC MEMS. Article 14
ROYAL MASONIC BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION FOR AGED FREEMASONS AND THEIR WIDOWS. Article 14
Craft Masonry. Article 14
PROVINCIAL. Article 15
MALTA. Article 18
ROYAL ARCH. Article 19
REVIEWS Article 19
PROFESSOR ANDERSON AND THE FREEMASONS OF DUNDEE. Article 19
LIST OF LODGE, MEETINGS, &c., FOR WEEK ENDING 5TH FEBRUARY, 1870. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Speculative Freemasonry And Its Origin (Pp. 67, 69.)

SPECULATIVE FREEMASONRY AND ITS ORIGIN ( pp . 67 , 69 . )

" Our Freemasonry , or Speculative Masonry , was a new institution , manufactured or brought into being in A . D . 1717 . It was made up of quotations from operative documents—Rosicrucian ideas , principles and doctrines stirred up by the Reformation , ideas taken from the study of ancient history & call mixed

, , together with such suitable seasoning as the brains of Drs . Desaguliers and Anderson judged best for the purpose . There being a few old Masonic lodges in London , the Doctors gave each a dose of the new ¦ compound , which so tickled their fancy , pleased , and intoxicated them , that , inirabile d-ictu , they immediately

lost all remembrance of past events ! Yea , verily , such was the curious action of this new compound , that if ¦ a Masou only took one sip , he was ever after ready to swear that lie had been drinking it continually and habitually all his life . A dose being also sent to the Scottish lodges , they tasted , were quite satisfied , and immediately adopted the recipe , and , as quickly as

the new compound could be manufactured in that cold climate , dispensed it . It was soon found , however , ¦ that the old lodges , or " old bottles , " were neither sufficient in capacity nor numbers to contain anything like the necessary amount of material , nor were they able to dispense the intended good in a manner

commensurate with the good intended ; consequently the Doctors had to set about manufacturing more " hot ties , " which they of course did in a dignified manner , and in accordance with the demand . So much for the manufacture of Speculative Masonry about A . D . 1717 . 'The Masons before 1717 depicted the compasses and

square and others of their tools upon their flags , & c . ; but so also did the Wrights , who also used the compasses and square , & c ; aud other trades had also their tools depicted . But although that was done , it does not follow that they served any other purpose with them than merely as trade marks ; and much less does it follow that our degrees and rituals , & c ., existed before 1717 ; as yet , I have seen no evidence to prove so , but a good deal against it . —W . P . BUCHAN .

THE ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED EITE . I think we may fairly presume that this rite originated about the year 1730 . We know that Ramsay and others were busy with a " new system" some years earlier , and it is probable that the Royal Arch established 1740 , was arranged from the degrees of

this rite relating to Zerubbabel ' s Temple . All the Cross degrees , viz ., the Rose Croix of Prance , Rosy Cross of Scotland , Eouge Croix of Sweden , and the Templar of England appear to have arisen about the year 1750 . Of course the Ancient and Accepted Rite was not established in its present entirety till many vears later . " - —Lx . W . L .

THE EOSICEUCIANS . Anew work , " The Rosicrucians , " by Mr . Hargrave Jennings , author of " Indian Reli gions , - or , Results -of the Mysterious Bhuddism , " will be immediately published b y Mr . Hotteu , of Piccadilly . This book will contain upwards of 300 engravings of Hermetic

subjects , expressly collected for this publication . The book will give a serious view of the occult system of the renowned brothers of the Eosy Cross , otherwise the Alchemists and " Illuminati , " drawn , for the first

time , from the Latin writings of Robertus de Fluetibus ( Robert Flood , or Fludd ) .

THE GUILDS . The following appeared in " Notes and Queries , " of Jan . 22 nd : — " Important as has been the influence of guilds upon the social and municipal institutions of England , their history , it would seem , is destined to be written by forei scholarsWilda published in

gn . 1831 a book upon the subject , TJeber das Gildewesen des Mittelalters , and now we learn that the late lamented Mr . Touhnin Smith ' s 'English G-uilds' is to be accompanied by a review of the whole history and development of guilds , from the pen of a learned German scholar , Dr . L . Brentane . "—PICTTJS .

MASONEY IN JEETJSALEM . At the conversazione of the London Institution on Wednesday , the 19 th inst . Bro . the Rev . H . B . Tristram , one of the Palestine explorers , in giving an address on Jerusalem , made distinct reference to its Masonic interest , speaking as a Freemason . He

particularly referred to the masons' marks on the walls ofthe Harem , defined by Bro . Deutsch as Phoenician , and which Bro . Tristram therefore decides to be those of the workmen of Hiram . It must , however , be observed that as yet the identification is incomplete , because it does not follow , as assumed by Bro . Tristram , that in the next construction ofthe Temple Phoenician masons may not have been employed as before . —A MASONIC ATJDITOE .

ONE OP BEO . HUGHAN ' LETTEES . Bro . Hughan ' s letter , respecting which a West of England correspondent enquires , is one with which most readers of the Freemasons ^ Magazine must be familiar . It is inserted in Ho . 536 , 9 th Oct ., 1869 . I recommend to my correspondent ' s attention the

following passage : — " Our present system of Speculative Freemasonry arose out of the mediaeval and early operative guilds or fraternities , when the latter were languishing , after a long existence of many centuries , and these in their turn were but a copy of still earlier secret organisations . "—CHAELES PUETON COOPEE .

THE LODGE 01 ? GLASGOW ST . JOHN AND THE MAEK ( page 68 ) . Allow me to inform your esteemed correspondent , Bro . W . J . Hughan , that in my next article , and at date April , 1858 , there occurs notice of contest with the Glasgow Prov . Grand Lodge upon this matter , which will be alluded to . —W . P . BUCHAN .

EECOGNITION OP THE HIGH DEGEEES BY GEAND LODGE . I think " Yerha Nbn Res" has misunderstood my remarks in the Magazine , page 49 . I stated that the Act of Union " declares what we know to be but a form of high grade Masonry { i . e ., the B . A . ) , to be

part of the Antient system . " I did not mention the Ancient and Accepted Rite , but its degrees were in operation ( abroad ) A . D . 1813 . He admits that its two principal degrees had already been incorporated with English high grade Masonry . I am not an advocate of the Ancient and Accepted or any other form of high grade Freemasonry , but I think I state facts . — HOLZ .

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