Last Updated:
Wednesday, February 23, 2005 04:14:10 PM
The Templar Orders in
Freemasonry
An Historical Consideration of Their Origin and
Development
-
by Arthur Edward Waite - (Posted here by Wes Penre, Feb 23,
2005)
Having
regard to the fact that Emblematic Freemasonry, as it is known and
practised at this day,
arose from an Operative Guild and within the
bosom of a development from certain London Lodges which prior to the
year 1717 had their titles in the past of the Guild and recognised its
Old Charges, it would seem outside the reasonable likelihood of things
that less than forty years after the foundation of Grand Lodge Knightly
Orders should begin to be heard of developing under the aegis of the
Craft, their titles in some cases being borrowed from the old
institutions of Christian Chivalry. It is this, however, which occurred,
and the inventions were so successful that they multiplied on every
side, from 1754 to the threshold of the French Revolution, new
denominations being devised when the old titles were exhausted.
There arose in this manner a great tree of Ritual, and it happens,
moreover, that we are in a position to affirm the kind of root from
which it sprang. Twenty years after the date of the London Grand Lodge,
and when that of Scotland may not have been twelve months old, the
memorable Scottish Freemason, Andrew Michael Ramsay, delivered an
historical address in a French Lodge, in the course of which he
explained that the Masonic Brotherhood arose in Palestine during the
period of the Crusades, under the protection of Christian Knights, with
the object of restoring Christian Churches which had been destroyed by
Saracens in the Holy Land.
For some reason which does not emerge, the foster-mother of Masonry,
according to the mind of the hypothesis, was the Chivalry of St. John.
Ramsay appears to have left the Masonic arena, and he died in the early
part of 1743, but his discourse produced a profound impression on French
Freemasonry. He offered no evidence, but France undertook to produce it
after its own manner and conformably to the spirit of the time by the
creation of Rites and Degrees of Masonic Knighthood, no trace of which
is to be found prior of Rainsay.
Their prototypes of course were extant, the Knights of Malta, Knights of
the Holy Sepulchre, Knights of St. Lazarus, in the gift of the Papal
See, and the Order of Christ in Portugal, in the gift of the Portuguese
Crown. There is no need to say that these Religious and Military Orders
have nothing in common with the Operative Masonry of the past, and when
their titles were borrowed for the institution of Masonic Chivalries, it
is curious how little the latter owed to the ceremonial of their
precursors, in their manners of making and installing Knights, except in
so far as the general prototype of all is found in the Roman Pontifical.
There are, of course, reflections and analogies:
(1) in the old knightly corporations the candidate was required to
produce proofs of noble birth, and the Strict Observance demanded these
at the beginning, but owing to obvious difficulties is said to have
ended by furnishing patents at need;
(2) in the Military Order of Hospitallers of the Holy Sepulchre of
Jerusalern, he undertook, as in others, to protect the Church of God,
with which may be compared modern Masonic injunctions in the Temple and
Holy Sepulchre to maintain and defend the Holy Christian Faith;
(3) again at his Knighting he was "made, created and constituted now and
for ever," which is identical, word for word, with the formula of
another Masonic Chivalry, and will not be unknown to many.
But the appeal of the new foundations was set in another direction, and
was either to show that they derived from Masonry or were Masonry itself
at the highest, in the proper understanding thereof. When the story of a
secret perpetuation of the old Knights Templar- outside the Order of
Christ- arose in France or Germany, but as I tend to conclude in France,
it was and remains the most notable case in point of this appeal and
claim.
It rose up within Masonry, and it came about that the Templar element
overshadowed the dreams and pretensions of other Masonic Chivalries, or,
more correctly, outshone them all. I am dealing here with matters of
fact and not proposing to account for the facts themselves within the
limits of a single study. The Chevalier Ramsay never spoke of the
Templars: his affirmation was that the hypothetical building
confraternity of Palestine united ultimately with the Knights of St.
John of Jerusalem; that it became established in various countries of
Europe as the Crusaders drifted back; and that its chief centre in the
thirteenth century was Kilwinning in Scotland. But the French or
otherwise German Masonic mind went to work upon this thesis, and in
presenting the Craft with the credentials of Knightly connections it
substituted the Order of the Temple for the chivalry chosen by Ramsay.
The Battle of Lepanto and the Siege of Vienna had invested the annals of
the St. John Knighthood with a great light of valour; but this was as
little and next to nothing in comparison with the talismanic attraction
which for some reason attached to the Templar name and was obviously
thrice magnified when the proposition arose that the great chivalry had
continued to exist in secret from the days of Philippe le Bel even to
the second half of the eighteenth century. There were other
considerations, however, which loomed largely, and especially in regard
to the sudden proscription which befell the Order in 1307. Of the trial
which followed there were records available to all, in successive
editions of the French work of Dupuy, first published in 1685; in the
German Historical Tractatus of Petrus Puteamus published at
Frankfort in 1665; in Gurther's Latin Historia Tempiarsorum of
1691; and in yet other publications prior to 1750. There is not a little
evidence of one impression which was produced by these memorials, the
notion, namely, of an unexplored realm of mystery extending behind the
charges.
It was the day of Voltaire, and it happened that a shallow infidelity
was charactersed by the kind
of
licence which fosters intellectual extravagance, by a leaning in
directions which are generally termed superstitious- though superstition
itself was pilloried- and in particular by attraction towards occult
arts and supposed hidden knowledge. Advanced persons were ceasing to
believe in the priest but were disposed to believe in the sorcerer, and
the Templars had been accused of magic, of worshipping a strange idol,
the last suggestion- for some obscure reason- being not altogether
indifferent to many who had slipped the anchor of their faith in God.
Beyond these frivolities and the foolish minds that cherished them,
there were other persons who were neither in the school of a rather
cheap infidelity nor in that of common superstition, but who looked
seriously for light to the East and for its imagined traditional wisdom
handed down from past ages. They may have been dreamers also, but they
were less or more zealous students after their own manner; within their
proper measures, and the Templar Chivalry drew them because they deemed
it not unlikely that its condemnation by the paramount orthodoxy
connoted a suspicion that the old Knighthood had learned in Palestine
more than the West could teach.
Out of such elements were begotten some at least of the Templar Rites
and they grew from more
to more, till this particular aspect culminated
in the Templar dramas of Werner, in which an Order concealed through the
ages and perpetuated through saintly custodians reveals to a chosen few
among Knights Templar some part of its secret doctrine-the identity of
Christ and Horus, of Mary the Mother of God, and Isis the Queen of
Heaven. The root of these dreams on doctrine and myth transfigured
through the ages- with a heart of reality behind it- will be found, as
it seems to me, in occult derivations from Templar Ritual which belong
to circa 1782 and are still in vigilant custody on the continent
of Europe. I mention this lest it should be thought that the intimations
of a German poet, though he was an active member of the Strict
Observance, were mere inventions of an imaginative mind.
There is no historical evidence for the existence of any Templar
perpetuation story prior to the Oration of Ramsay, just as there is no
question that all documents produced by the French non-Masonic Order of
the Temple, founded in the early years of the nineteenth century, are
inventions of that period and are fraudulent like the rest of its claim,
its list of Grand Masters included.
There is further- as we have observed- no evidence of any Rite or Degree
of Masonic Chivalry prior to 1737, to which date is referred the
discourse of Ramsay. That this was the original impetus which led to
their production may be regarded as beyond dispute, and it was the case
especially with Masonic Templar revivals. Their thesis was his thesis
varied. For example, according to the Rite of the Strict Observance the
proscribed Order was carried by its Marshal, Pierre d'Aumont, who
escaped with a few other Knights to the Isles of Scotland, disguised as
Operative Masons. They remained there and under the same veil the
Templars continued to exist in secret from generation to generation
under the shadow of the mythical Mount Heredom of Kilwinning. To
whatever date the old dreams ascribe it, when Emblematic Freemasonry
emerged it was- ex hypothesi-a product of the union between
Knights Templar and ancient Scottish Masonry. Such is the story told.
The Strict Observance was founded by Baron von Hund in Germany between
about 1751 and 1754 ot 1755, and is usually regarded as the first
Masonic Chivalry which put forward the story of Templar perpetuation. I
have accepted this view on my own part, but subject to his claim at its
value- if any- that he had been made a Knight of the Temple in France,
some twelve years previously. The question arises, therefore, as to the
fact or possibility of antecedent Degrees of the kind in that country,
and we are confronted at once by many stories afloat concerning the
Chapter of Clermont, the foundation of which at Paris is referred to
several dates. It was in existence, according to Yarker, at some
undetermined period before 1742, for at that date its Masonic Rite,
consisting of three Degrees superposed on those of the Craft, was taken
to Hamburg.
A certain Von Marshall, whose name belongs to the history of the Strict
Observance, had been admitted in the previous year, Von Hund himself
following in 1743- not at Hamburg, but at Paris- for all of which no
authority is cited and imagination may seem to have been at work. But
some of the statements, including those of other English writers, are
referable to a source in Thory's Acta Latamorum. When Woodford
speaks of Von Hund's admission into Templar Masonry at Clermont as not a
matter of hypothesis, but of certain knowledge, he is dependent on the
French historian, according to whom the German Baron was made a Mason at
Paris in 1742. The Chapter of Clermont was founded in that city so late
as 1754, and some time subsequently Von Hund retunied thither, with the
result that he derived Templar teaching from Clermont, on which he built
up the Observance system. But, whatever the point is worth, this story
is not only at issue with that of Von Hund himself, but with the current
chronology of the Observance.
To involve matters further, the Chapter is reported otherwise to have
derived its Templar element from something unspecified at Lyons which is
referred to 1738. The utmost variety of statement will be found,
moreover, as to the content of the Clermont Rite, the Templar character
of which has been also challenged. It is proposed otherwise that the
Chapter was founded on a scale of considerable magnitude, that it was
installed in a vast building, and that it attracted the higher classes
of French Freemasons, which notwithstanding it ceased to exist in 1758,
being absorbed by the Council of Emperors established in that year for
the promulgation of a different Grade system.
I am in a positiori to reflect some light for the relief of these
complications by reference to Dutch archives which have come to my
knowledge. The date of the Chapter's foundation remains uncertain, but
it was in activity between 1756 and 1763, so that it was not taken over-
as Gould suggests- by those Masonic Emperors to whom we are indebted for
the first form of the Scottish Rite, Ancient and Accepted. It is not
impossible that its foundation is referable to the first of these dates,
when it superposed on the three Craft Grades as follows: (I) Grade of
Scottish Master of St. Andrew of the Thistle, being the Fourth Grade of
Masonry, "in which allegory dissolves"; (2) Grade of Sublime Knight of
God and of his Temple, being the Fifth and Last Grade of Free Masonry.
At a later period, however, it became the Seventh Grade of the Rite,
owing to the introduction of an Elect Degree which took the number 5
under the title of Knight of the Eagle, followed by an Illustrious
Degree, occupying the sixth place and denominated Knight of the Holy
Sepulchre. The Grade final in both enumerations- otherwise Knight of
God- presented a peculiar, as it was also an early version of the
perpetuation story, from which it follows that the Clermont Rite was
Templar.
I have so far failed to trace any copy of the Ritual in this country
with the exception of that which has been placed recently in my hands,
an example of the discoveries that await research in continental
archives. The Templar element- which may be called the historical part-
is combined with a part of symbolism, for though allegory is said to be
abandoned in the Fourth Degree, its spiritual sister is always present
in Ritual. The aspect which it assumes in the present case is otherwise
known in Masonry, the Chapter representing the Holy City, the New
Jerusalem, with its twelve gates, as a tabernacle of God with men.
The Candidate is represented therefore as seeking the light of glory and
a perfect recompense, while that which he is promised is an end of toils
and trials. He is obligated as at the gates of the City and is promised
the Grand Secret of those who abide therein. The City is- spiritually
speaking- in the world to come, and the reward of chivalry is there; but
there is a reward also on earth within the bonds of the Order, because
this is said to be divine and possessed of the treasures of wisdom. The
kind of wisdom and the nature of the Great Secret is revealed in the
Perpetuation Story, and so far as I am aware offers the only instance of
such a claim being made on behalf of the Templars, in or out of Masonry.
It belongs to a subject which engrossed the zeal of thousands throughout
the seventeenth century and had many disciples- indeed, they were
thousands also- during the Masonic Age which followed. The story is that
the Templars began in poverty, but Baldwin II, King of Jerusalem, gave
them a house in the vicinity of the site where Solomon's Temple was
built of old.
Solomon's
Temple
When it was put in repair by Hugh de Payens and the rest of the first
Brethren, their digging operations unearthed an iron casket which
contained priceless treasures, and chief among all the true process of
the Great Work in Alchemy, the secret of transmuting metals, as
communicated to Solomon by the Master Hiram Abiff. So and so only was it
possible to account for the wealth of adornment which characterised the
First Temple. The discovery explains also the wealth acquired by the
Templars, but it led in the end to their destruction. Traitors who knew
of the secret, though they had not themselves attained it, revealed the
fact to Clement V and Philip the Fair of France, and the real purpose of
the persecution which followed was to wrest the transmuting process from
the hands of its custodians.
Jacques de Molay and his co-heirs died to preserve it, but three of the
initiated Knights made their escape and after long wandering from
country to country they found refuge in the caves of Mount Heredom. They
were succoured by Knights of St. Andrew of the Thistle, with whom they
made an alliance and on whom they conferred their knowledge. To conceal
it from others and yet transmit it through the ages they created the
Masonic Order in I340; but the aichemical secret, which is the physical
term of the Mystery, has been ever reserved to those who can emerge from
the veils of allegory- that is to say, for the chiefs of St. Andrew of
the Thistle, who are Princes of the Rosy Cross, and the Grand Council of
the Chapter.
The alchemical side of this story is in a similar position to that of
the perpetuation myth, of which it is an early version. There is nothing
that can be taken seriously. But this is not to say that in either case
there is no vestige of possibilities behind. Modern science tends more
and more to show us that the transmutation of metals is not an idle
dream and- speaking on my own part- there are well-known testimomes in
the past on the literal point of fact which I and others have found it
difficult to set utterly aside. So also there are few things more
certain in history than is the survival of Knights Templar after their
proscription and suspension as an Ordeer. With this fact in front of us
it is not as a hypothesis improbable that there or here the chivalry may
have been continued in secret by the making of new Knights.
It is purely a question of evidence, and this is unhappily wanting. The
traditional histories of Knightly Masonic Degrees- like those of the
Chapter of Clermont, the Strict Observance and the Swedish Rite- bear
all the marks of manufacture; the most that can be said concerning them-
and then in the most tentative manner- is that by bare possibility there
may have been somewhere in the world a rumour of secret survival, in
which case the root matter of their stories would not have been pure
invention. The antecedent material would then have been worked over and
adapted to Masonic purposes, inspired by the Oration of Ramsay.
It is to be presumed that when this speculation is left to stand at its
value, there is no critical mind which will dream of an authentic
element in Hugh de Payen's supposed discovery of the Powder of
Projection at or about the site of the Jewish Temple. This romantic
episode stands last in a series of similar fictions which are to be
found in the history of Alchemy. When we are led to infer therefore by
the records before me that the Chapter of Clermont reached its end circa
1763, we shall infer that it was in a position no longer to carry on the
pretence of possessing and being able to communicate at will the Great
Secret of Alchemy.
It is evident from the Ritual that this was not disclosed to those who,
being called in their turn, were admitted to the highest rank and became
Knights of God. It was certainly promised, however, at a due season as a
reward of merit. From a false pretence of this kind the only way of
escape would be found by falling back upon renounced and abjured
allegory. Now, we have seen that the Chapter in its last Degree
represented the New Jerusalem, and therefore its alchemy might well be
transferred from a common work in metals to the spiritual side of
Hermeticism. Those who have read Robert Fludd and Jacob Bohme will be
acquainted with this aspect; but it may not have satisfied the
figurative Knights of God, who had come so far in their journey from the
Lodge of Entered Apprentice to a Temple of supposed adeptship. The
Chapter therefore died.
I HAVE met with another French Ritual in a great manuscript collection
and again- so far as ascertained- it seems to be the sole copy in
England, though it is not unknown by name, in view of the bibliographies
of Kloss and Wolfsteig. It is called Le Chevalier du Temple, and
is of high importance to our subject. The collection to which I refer is
in twelve volumes, written on old rag paper, the watermark of which
shows royal arms and the lilies of France: it is pre-French Revolution
and post 1768- say, on a venture, about 1772.
The Ritual to which I refer extends from p. 73 to 202 of the fifth
volume, in a size corresponding to what is termed crown octavo among us.
The hand is clear and educated. The particular Templar Chivalry is
represented as an Order connected with and acknowledging nothing else in
Freemasonry except the Craft Degrees. In respect of antiquity it claims
descent by succession from certain Canons or Knights of the Holy
Sepulchre, who first bore the Red Cross on their hearts, and were
founded by James the First, brother of the first Bishop of Jerusalem.
These Canons became the Knights Hospitallers of a much later date. On
these followed the Templars, from whom the Masonic Knights of the Temple
more especially claimed derivation, though in some obscure manner they
held descent from all, possibly in virtue of spiritual consanguinity
postulated between the various Christian chivalries of Palestine. The
traditional history of the Grade is given at unusual length and is
firstly that of the Templars, from their foundation to their sudden
fail, the accusations against them included; it is a moderately accurate
summary, all things considered. There is presented in the second place a
peculiar version of the perpetuation story which is designed on the one
hand to indicate the fact of survival in several directions, and on the
other to make it clear that Templar Masonry had in view no scheme of
vengeance against Popes and Kings.
After the proscription of the chivalry it is affirmed that those who
remained over were scattered through various countries, desolate and
rejected everywhere. A few in their desperation joined together for
reprisals, but their conspiracy is characterised as detestable and its
memory is held in horror. It fell to pieces speedily for want of
recruits. Among the other unfortunate Knights who had escaped
destruction, a certain number entered also into a secret alliance and
chose as time went on their suitable successors among persons of noble
and genfle birth, with a view to perpetuate the Order and in the hope at
some favourable epoch that they would be restored to their former glory
and reenter into their possessions.
We hear nothing of Kilwinning or Heredom, and indeed no one country is
designated as a place of asylum; but it is affirmed that this group of
survivors created Freemasonry and its three Craft Degrees to conceal
from their enemies the fact that the Chivalry was still in being and to
test aspirants who entered the ranks, so that none but those who were
found to be of true worth and fidelity should be advanced from the Third
Degree into that which lay beyond. To such as were successful the
existence of the secret chivalry became known only at the end of seven
years, three of which were passed as Apprentice, two as Companion or
Fellow Craft, and two as Master Mason. It was on the same conditions and
with the same objects that the Order in the eighteenth century was
prepared to receive Masons who had been proved into that which was
denominated the Illustrious Grade and Order of Knights of the Temple of
Jerusalem.
The Candidate undertakes in his Obligation to do all in his power for
the glorious restoration of the
Order; to succour his Brethren in their
need; to visit the poor, the sick and the imprisoned; to love his King
and his religion; to maintain the State; to be ever ready in his heart
for all sacrifice in the cause of the faith of Christ, for the good of
His Church and its faithful. The Pledge is taken on the knees, facing a
tomb of black marble which represents that of Molay, the last Grand
Master and martyr-in-chief of the Order. Thereafter the inward meaning
of the three Craft Degrees is explained to the Candidate.
That of Apprentice recalls the earliest of Christian chivalries, being
the Canons or Knights of the Holy Sepulchre, who for long had no
distinctive clothing and hence the divested state of the Masonic
Postulant. But this state signified also that his arm is ever ready to
do battle with the enemies of the Holy Christian Religion and his heart
for the sacrifice of his entire being to Jesus Christ. The alleged
correspondences and meanings are developed at some length, but it will
be sufficient to mention that the Masonic Candidate enters the Lodge
poor and penniless, because that was the condition at their beginning of
the Templars and the other Orders of Christian Knighthood.
The Candidate is prepared for the Second Craft Degree in a somewhat
different manner from that of the First, and this has reference to
certain distinctions between the clothing of a Knight of the Holy
Sepulchre and that of a Knight of St. John.
The seven steps are emblematic of the seven sacraments of the Holy
Church, by the help of which the Christian Chivalries maintained their
faith against the infidel, and also of the seven deadly sins which they
trampled under their feet. The Blazing Star inscribed with the letter
Yod, being the initial letter of the Name of God in Hebrew, signified
the Divine Light which enlightened the Chivairies and was ever before
their eyes, as it must be also present for ever before the mind's eye of
the Masonic Templars, a sacred symbol placed in the centre of the
building. In French Freemasonry the Pillar B belonged to the Second
Degree and was marked with this letter, which had reference to Baldwin,
King of Jerusalem, who provided a House for the Templars in the Holy
City.
The Traditional History of the Master Grade is that of the martyrdom of
Jacques de Molay, the last Grand Master of the Temple. The three
assassins answered to Philip the Fair, Pope Clement V and the Prior of
Montfaucon, a Templar of Toulouse, who is represented as undergoing a
sentence of imprisonment for life at Paris on account of his crimes, by
the authority of the Grand Master. He is said to have betrayed the Order
by making false accusations and thus secured his release. The initials
of certain Master Words are J.B.M., and they are those also of Jacobus
Burgundus Molay.
The Chevalier du Temple has unfortunately no history, so far as I
have been able to trace. I have met with it as a bare title in one other
early collection, which has become known to me by means of a Dutch list
of MSS., and there is no need to say that it occurs in the nomenclature
of Ragon.
It is numbered 69 in the archives of the Metropolitan Chapter of France,
and 8 in the Rite of the Philalethes: they may or may not refer to the
same Ritual as that which I have summarised here. There is no means of
knowing. In any case the 36th Grade of Mizraim and the 34th of Memphis,
which became No. 13 in the Antient and Primitive Rite, is to be
distinguished utterly: it is called Knight of the Temple, but has no
concern with the Templars and is quite worthiess. It should be added
that in one of the discourses belonging to Le Chevalier du Temple
there is a hostile allusion to the existing multiplicity of Masonic and
pseudo-Masonic Grades, and this may suggest that it is late in the order
of time. A great many were, however, in evidence by and before the year
1759. We should remember Gould's opinion that there was an early and
extensive propagation of Ecossais Grades, and the source of these
was obviously in the Ramsay hypothesis. It is certain also that Elu
Grades were not far in the rear.
The date of the particular Collection Maconnique on which I
depend is, of course, not that of its contents. On the whole there seems
nothing to militate against a tentative or provisional hypothesis that
Chevalier de Temple was no later and may have been a little
earlier than the Clermont Knight of God, thus giving further colour to
the idea that Templar Masonry and its perpetuation story arose where it
might have been expected that they would arise, in France and not in
Germany.
I have said that the Grade under notice has no reference to Scotland or
to any specific place of Templar refuge after the proscription. But the
chivalrous origin of Masonry is not less a Ramsay
myth, and it characterises almost every variant of Templar perpetuation which has
arisen under a Masonic aegis, from that of the Knights of God and the
Chevalier du Temple to that of Werner and his Sons of the Valley,
belonging to the year 1803. There stand apart only the English Religious
and Military Order and the late French Order of the Temple which depends
from the Charter of Larmenius, but this was not Masonic, though its
pretence of Templar perpetuation and succession is most obviously
borrowed from Masonry. In conclusion, I shall think always that Baron
von Hund drew from France, whether directly at Paris or via Hamburg in
his own country.
We have seen that the Strict Observance appeared in Germany between 1751
and 1755, a development according to its founder of something which he
had received in France so far back as 1743. No reliance can be placed on
this statement, nor is the year 1751 in a much better position. Hund is
supposed to have founded a Chapter of his Templar Rite about that time
on his own estate at Unwurdi, where the scheme of the Order was worked
out. We hear also of a later scheme, belonging to 1755 and dealing with
financial matters. But the first evidential document is a Plan of the
Strict Observance, laying claim on January 13, 1766, as its date of
formulation, and there is a record of the Observance Master Grade, with
a Catechism attached thereto, belonging to the same year. But as 1751
seems too early for anything in the definite sense so 1766 is much too
late. A memoir of Herr von Kleefeld by J. C. Schubert bears witness to
the former's activities on behalf of the Strict Observance between 1763
and 1768.
The Rite, moreover, was sufficiently important in 1763 for an impostor
named Johnson to advance his claims upon it and to summon a Congress at
Altenberg in May, 1764, as an authorised ambassador of the Secret
Headship or Sovereign Chapter in Scotland. His mission was to organise
the Order in Germany, and for a time Von Hund accepted and submitted,
from which it follows that his own Rite was still in very early stages.
I make no doubt that it made a beginning privately circa 1755,
and that a few persons were knighted, but Von Hund had enough on his
hands owing to the seven years' war, so that from 1756 to 1763 there
could have been little opportunity for Templar Grades under his custody,
either on his own estates or elsewhere. Meanwhile the Clermont Rite was
spreading in Germany and in 1763 there were fifteen Chapters in all.
There is hence an element which seems nearer certitude rather than mere
speculation in proposing that the Templar claim on Masonry was imported
from France into Germany, that Von Hund's business was to derive and
vary, not to create the thesis. Of the great success which awaited the
Strict Observance, once it was fairly launched, of its bid for supremacy
over all continental Masonry and of the doom which befell it because no
investigation could substantiate any of its claims, there is no
opportunity to speak here. It may be said that a final judgment was
pronounced against it in 1782 when the Congress of Wilhelmsbad set aside
the Templar claim and approved the Rectified Rite, otherwise a
transformed Strict Observance, created within the bosom of the Loge de
Bienfaisance at Lyons and ratified at a Congress held in that city prior
to the assembly at Wilhelmsbad.
The Grades of the Strict Observance superposed on the Craft were those
of Scottish Master, Novice and Knight Templar; those of the revision
comprised a Regime Ecossais, described as Ancient and Rectified,
and an Ordre Interieur, being Novice and Knight Beneficent of the
Holy City. It laid claim on a spiritual consanguinity only in respect of
the Templar Chivalry, apart from succession and historical connection,
but it retained a certain root, the poetic development of which is in
Werner's Sons of the Valley already mentioned, being the
existence from time immemorial of a Secret Order of Wise Masters in
Palestine devoted to the work of initiation for the building of a
spiritual city and as such the power behind the Temple, as it was also
behind Masonry.
In conclusion as to this part of my subject, the combined influence of
the Templar element in the Chapter of Clermont and that of the Strict
Observance which superseded it had an influence on all Continental
Masonry which was not only wide and general, but lasting in the sense
that some part of it has persisted there and here to the present day.
The eighth Degree of the Swedish Rite, being that of Master of the
Temple, communicated its particular version of the perpetuation myth,
being
(1) that Molay revealed to his nephew Beaujeu, shortly before his death,
the Rituals and Treasures of the Order;
(2) that the latter escaped, apparently, with these and with the
disinterred ashes of the master, and was accompanied by nine other
Knights, all disguised as Masons;
(3) that they found refuge among the stonemasons. It is said that in
Denmark the history of Masonry, owing to the activity of a Mason named
Schubert, became practically that of the Observance, until 1785, when
the Rectified Rite was introduced as an outcome of the Congress of
Wilhelmsbad. It was not until 1853 that the Swedish Rite replaced all
others, by reason of a royal decree. So late as 1817 the Rectified Rite
erected a central body in Brussels. In 1765 the Observance entered
Russia and was followed by the Swedish Rite on an authorised basis in
1775. Poland and Lithuania became a diocese of the Observance Order in
1770, and it took over the Warsaw Lodges in 1773.
The story of its influence in Germany itself is beyond my scope. It is
written at large everywhere: at Hamburg from 1765, when Schubert founded
an independent Prefectory, to 1781 (when the Rectified Rite was
established for a brief period by Prince Karl von Hesse); at Nuremberg
in 1765, under the same auspices; in the Grand Lodge of Saxony from
circa 1762 to 1782; at Berlin, in the Mother Lodge of the Three Globes,
from 1766 to 1779, when the Rosicrucians intervened; at Konigsberg from
1769 to 1799 in the Provincial Grand Lodge; in the Kingdom of Hanover,
at the English Provincial Grand Lodge, from 1766 to 1778; and even now
the list is not exhausted. The explanation of this influence through all
its period and everywhere is (I) that which lay behind the romantic
thesis of Ramsay, as shown by his work on the Philosophical
Principles of Natural and Revealed Religion, published in 1748- I
refer to the notion that there was a Mystery of Hidden Knowledge
perpetuated in the East from the days of Noah and the Flood; (2) that
which lay behind, as already mentioned, the talismanic attraction
exercised on Masonic minds in the eighteenth century by the name of
Knights Templar, because the Church had accused them.
They had learned strange things in the East: for some it corresponded to
the view of Ramsay, for others to occult knowledge on the side of Magic,
and for the Chapter of Clermont to Alchemy. The collapse of the Strict
Observance was not so much because it could not produce its hypothetical
unknown superiors, but because it could not exhibit one shred or vestige
of the desired secret knowledge.
I have now accounted at length for that which antecedes the present
English Military and Religious Order of the Temple and Holy Sepulchre,
so far as possible within the limits at my disposal. The Clerical
Knights Templar, which originated at Weimar with the Lutheran
theologian, J. A. von Starck, and presented its claims on superior and
exclusive knowledge to the consideration of the Strict Observance about
1770, represent an intervention of that period which has been judged-
justly or not- without any knowledge of the vast mass of material which
belongs thereto and of which I in particular had not even dreamed.
The fact at least of its existence is now before me, and I await an
opportunity to examine it. I can say only at the moment that it was
devised, as my reference shows, to create an impression that an alleged
Spiritual Branch of the old Knights Templar possessed their real secrets
and had been perpetuated to modern times. It was, therefore, in a
position to supply what the Strict Observance itself wanted; but the
alleged Mysteries of the Order appear to be those of Paracelsus and of
Kabalism on the magical side. I have left over also:
(1) Les Chevaliers de la Palestine, otherwise Knights of Jerusalem,
because although it is a Templar Grade, it is concerned with the old
chivalry at an early period of its history, and not with its
transmission to modern times;
(2) the Grade of Grand Inspector, otherwise Kadosh, though I am
acquainted with a very early and unknown Ritual, because it does not add
to our knowledge in respect of the Templar claim on Masonry. In the
earliest form it shows that the judgment incurred by those who betrayed,
spoliated and destroyed the Order had been imposed Divinely; that the
hour of vengeance was therefore fulfilled, and that the call of Kadosh
Knights was to extirpate within them those evil tendencies which would
betray, spoliate and destroy the soul.
(3) Sublime Prince of the Royal Secret, because in the sources with
which I am acquainted it recites the migrations of Templars and only
concerns us in so far as it reproduces and varies the Ramsay thesis in
respect of Masonic connections. It is important from this point of view.
(4) Sovereign Grand Inspector General, because I have failed so far to
meet with any early codex, and that of Ragon is a Templar Grade indeed
but concerned more especially with wreaking a ridiculous vengeance on
the Knights of Malta, to whom some of the Templar possessions were
assigned.
(5) Knight Commander of the Templar, because, according to the plenary
Ritual in manuscript of Albert Pike, it is exceedingly late and is
concerned in his version with the foundation and history of the Teutonic
Chivalry, which is beside our purpose.
In respect of the English Military and Religious Order I have met with
nothing which gives the least colour to a supposition of Gould that it
arose in France: the Chevalier du Temple is its nearest analogy
in that country, but the likeness resides in the fact that both Orders
or Degrees have a certain memorial in the centre of the Chapter or
Preceptory: we know that which it represents in at least one case and in
the other, as we have seen, it is the tomb of the last Grand Master. But
failing an origin in France it is still less likely that it originated
elsewhere on the continent, as, for example, in Germany. I conclude,
therefore, that it is of British birth and growth, though so far as
records are concerned it is first mentioned in America, in the Minutes
of a Royal Arch Chapter, dated August 28, 1769. I have sought to go
further back and so far have failed. It was certainly working at Bristol
in 1772, and two years later is heard of in Ireland. It is a matter of
deep regret that I can contribute nothing to so interesting and vital a
question, which appeals especially to myself on account of the beauty
and spiritual significance of the Ritual in all its varied forms.
The number of these may be a source of surprise to many, and I have
pointed out elsewhere that however widely and strangely they differ from
each other they have two points of agreement: there is no traditional
history presenting a perpetuation myth or a claim on the past of
chivalry, while except in one very late instance, there is no historical
account whatever; and they are concerned with the one original Templar
purpose, that of guarding the Holy Sepulchre and pilgrims to the Holy
Places.
They offer no version of Masonic origins, no explanation of Craft
Symbolism, no suggestion of a secret science behind the Temple, no plan
of restoring the Order to its former glory, and, above all, to its
former possessions. The issue is direct and simple, much too simple and
far too direct for a Continental source. Moreover, the kind of issue
would have found no appeal in France; for example, or Germany, because
there was no longer any need in fact to guard the tomb of Christ, and
there were no pilrims in the sense of crusading times. Finally, they
would not have allegorised on subjects of this kind.
I am acquainted personally with nine codices of the Ritual, outside
those which belong to Irish workings, past and present, an opportunity
to examine which I am hoping to find. The most important are briefly
these:
(1) That of the Baldwyn Encampment at Bristol, which is probably the
oldest of all: the procedure takes place while a vast army of Saracens
is massing outside the Encampment.
(2) That of the Early Grand Rite of Scotland, subsequently merged in the
Scottish Chapter General: the Pilgrim comes to lay the sins and follies
of a life-time at the foot of the Cross, and he passes through various
symbolical veils by which the encampment is guarded.
(3) That connected with the name of Canongate Kilwinning under the title
of Knight Templar Masonry, in which there is a pilgrimage to Jericho and
the Jordan.
(4) That of St. George Aboyne Templar Encampment at Aberdeen, a strange
elaborate pageant, in which the Candidate has a searching examination on
matters of Christian doctrine.
(5) That of the Royal, Exalted, Military and Holy Order of Knights of
the Temple, in the library of Grand Lodge. It represents a revision of
working and belongs to the year 1830. It is of importance as a stage in
the development of the English Military Order.
(6) That which Matthew Cooke presented to Albert Pike, by whom it was
printed in the year 1851. It is practically the same as ours and was
ratified at Grand Conclave on April 11 of that year.
(7) That of the Religious and Military Order, of the grace and beauty of
which I have no need to speak. The two that remain over are Dominion
Rituals of the Order of the Temple, being that in use by the Sovereign
Great Prior of Canada prior to 1876, and that which was adopted at this
date under the auspices of the Grand Master, Wm. J. B. MacLeod Moore.
They are of considerable interest as variants of the English original,
but the second differs from all other codices by the introduction of
three historical discourses, dealing with the origin of the Templar
Chivalry, its destruction and its alleged Masonic connections, which are
subject to critical examination, the conclusion reached being that the
Templar system is Masonic only in the sense that none but Masons are
admitted. The appeal of the entire sequence is one and the same
throughout, an allegory of human life considered as pilgrimage and
warfare, with a reward at the end in Christ for those who have walked
after His commandments under the standard of Christian Chivalry.
We have very little need to make a choice between them, either on the
score of antiquity or that of Ritual appeal. A descent from the Knights
Templar is of course implied throughout, but it is possible to accept
this, not indeed according to the literal and historical sense, but in
that of the relation of symbols. The old Chivalry was founded and
existed to defend the Church and its Hallows, and Masonic Knights
Templar are dedicated to the same ends though official obediences alter
and Hallows transform.
The Holy Sepulchre for them is the Church of Christ, however understood,
and if there is anything in the old notion that the Christian Chivalry
in the past had sounded strange wells of doctrine, far in the holy East,
there are such wells awaiting our own exploration, to the extent that we
can enter into the life behind doctrine, and this is the life which is
in Christ. Finally the modern chivalry is of Masons as well as Templars,
because in both Orders there is a quest to follow and attain. But this
Quest is one, a Quest for the Word, which is Christ, and a Quest for the
Abodes of the Blessed, where the Word and the Soul are one.
* * *
Scanned from the
periodical "The Occult Review", Volume XLV, nos. 1 and 4, January and
April, 1927.
Design downloaded from
FreeWebTemplates.com
Free web design, web templates, web layouts, and website resources!