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  • The Freemasons' Quarterly Review
  • March 31, 1851
  • Page 45
  • NOTES UPON FUNERAL SOLEMNITIES.
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The Freemasons' Quarterly Review, March 31, 1851: Page 45

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    Article NOTES UPON FUNERAL SOLEMNITIES. ← Page 2 of 6 →
Page 45

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Notes Upon Funeral Solemnities.

of deceased members of thc Order : but wc cannot but hope that some intelligent Brother may take the hint , and make a subject so interesting matter for a separate article . In our last paper we alluded , more particularly , to the obsequies of Abbat Islippe , as giving a good idea of the ceremonials attending the funeral of those distinguished b

y rank or attainments in the middle ages ; and , as this instance is similar in every respect to cotemporary accounts of occurrences of the same nature , we venture to give a more particular description of it . His corpse was first chested and cered , and so remained in a large parlour hung with black clothgarnished with

, escocheons of his arms , and those of the monastery of Westminster . The corpse was covered with a rich pall of cloth of gold of tissue , and four great tapers were placed about it , burning day and night with daily masses and nightly

watches until the 16 th of May , when it was conveyed into the monastery of Westminster in the following manner : 1 st . Two conductors with black staves , then the cross , then a number of priests , friars , and monks , and other religious persons ; after whom came the Abbot of Bury in pontificalibus . The corpse was borne by six of his yeomen , in

black coats . Two branches of white wax were borne by two clerks in their surplices , and before the corpse were twenty-four poor men in gowns and hoods , bearing twentyfour torches . Then came the chief mourner alone , followed by others , two and two , habited in long gowns and hoods . At the entry of the monastery , the Abbot of Bury , with

his assistant priests , received the corpse , and so proceeded to the choir , where it was set under a goodly herse , with many lights , and a majesty and vallence . Machym , a herald painter , who writes from 1550 to 1563 , mentions a " fayrc majesty ancl vallence" gilded and fringed , as an adjunct to the hearse , which may be supposed to have been a canopy , or termination of the whole . The corpse placed under the herse , the Dirige * began ,

“The Freemasons' Quarterly Review: 1851-03-31, Page 45” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 26 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fqr/issues/fqr_31031851/page/45/.
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Title Category Page
Ip—^S^—^ ^i^fe?^ SHeLF ft ; / : V y:: y ... Article 1
^^^J IN LOVING REMEMBRANCE OF ^fciS Article 2
Untitled Article 3
m A .i P°l Mi — ,' i Article 5
THE FREEMASONS' Article 6
CONTENTS. Article 7
NOTICE TO THE CRAFT: Article 8
CONTENTS. Article 9
CONT E N T S. Article 10
CONTENTS. Article 11
THE CHARITIES. Article 12
THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY MAGAZINE AND REVIEW. Article 13
LOVE'S TRIUMPH. Article 24
THE FIRST OFFENCE. Article 25
ON THE TABERNACLE AND TEMPLE Article 37
NOTES UPON FUNERAL SOLEMNITIES. Article 44
THE CONDITION OF SCOTCH MASONRY. Article 49
ON THE RHINE . Article 55
"THINKING" AND "WORKING" FREEMASONS. Article 57
MASONIC PROCESSIONS. Article 59
GEOMETRICAL MASON FLOOR CLOTH. Article 64
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 65
TO THE EDITOR. Article 73
TO THE EDITOR. Article 75
TO THE EDITOR. Article 76
TO THE EDITOR. Article 79
TO THE EDITOR. Article 80
TO THE EDITOR. Article 81
TO THE EDITOR. Article 82
Obituary. Article 83
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 105
THE 33RD DEGREE FOR ENGLAND AND WALES, AND THE DEPENDENCIES OF THE BRITISH CROWN. Article 108
THE CHARITIES. Article 111
THE 33RD DEGREE FOR ENGLAND AND WALESAND THE DEPENDENCIES OF THE BRITISH CROWN. Article 112
THE CHARITIES. Article 115
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS. Article 118
METROPOLITAN. Article 120
PROVINCIAL. Article 124
SCOTLAND. Article 137
COLONIAL. Article 148
EAST INDIES. Article 150
WEST INDIES. Article 152
AMERICA. Article 157
SWITZERLAND. Article 158
LITERARY NOTICE. Article 160
NOTICES TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 161
ERRATA IN THE LAST NUMBER. Article 162
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Page 45

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

Notes Upon Funeral Solemnities.

of deceased members of thc Order : but wc cannot but hope that some intelligent Brother may take the hint , and make a subject so interesting matter for a separate article . In our last paper we alluded , more particularly , to the obsequies of Abbat Islippe , as giving a good idea of the ceremonials attending the funeral of those distinguished b

y rank or attainments in the middle ages ; and , as this instance is similar in every respect to cotemporary accounts of occurrences of the same nature , we venture to give a more particular description of it . His corpse was first chested and cered , and so remained in a large parlour hung with black clothgarnished with

, escocheons of his arms , and those of the monastery of Westminster . The corpse was covered with a rich pall of cloth of gold of tissue , and four great tapers were placed about it , burning day and night with daily masses and nightly

watches until the 16 th of May , when it was conveyed into the monastery of Westminster in the following manner : 1 st . Two conductors with black staves , then the cross , then a number of priests , friars , and monks , and other religious persons ; after whom came the Abbot of Bury in pontificalibus . The corpse was borne by six of his yeomen , in

black coats . Two branches of white wax were borne by two clerks in their surplices , and before the corpse were twenty-four poor men in gowns and hoods , bearing twentyfour torches . Then came the chief mourner alone , followed by others , two and two , habited in long gowns and hoods . At the entry of the monastery , the Abbot of Bury , with

his assistant priests , received the corpse , and so proceeded to the choir , where it was set under a goodly herse , with many lights , and a majesty and vallence . Machym , a herald painter , who writes from 1550 to 1563 , mentions a " fayrc majesty ancl vallence" gilded and fringed , as an adjunct to the hearse , which may be supposed to have been a canopy , or termination of the whole . The corpse placed under the herse , the Dirige * began ,

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