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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Jan. 1, 1880
  • Page 4
  • THE LEGEND OF THE "QUATUOR CORONATI."
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The Masonic Magazine, Jan. 1, 1880: Page 4

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    Article TARSHISH; ITS MODERN REPRESENTATIVE. ← Page 4 of 4
    Article THE LEGEND OF THE "QUATUOR CORONATI." Page 1 of 7 →
Page 4

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

Tarshish; Its Modern Representative.

famous mackerel sauce . Going farther westward , the Canary Isles were discovered by the same people . And in the interior of Spain , Hispalis , or Seville , was founded by them . Farther , it is recorded that , B . C . 610 , Africa was circumnavigated by a Phoenician vessel . Sir G . C . Lewis , in his " Survey on the Astronomy of the Ancients , " p . 448 , says that " the voyages of the Phoenicians to Cornwall for tinand to the coasts

, of the Baltic for amber , pass equally as historial facts . " Herodotus names the portion of Britain known as the Scilly Isles , if not all Britain , the Cassiterides , or lands of tin . Appian tells ns that the Spaniards of his time used to perform the vovages to Britain in half a clay .

In Clemens Romanus we meet with the phrase " the utmost parts of the west . " This was used when spealdng of the Apostle Paul ' s labours . The west included Spain , Gaul , ancl Britain . In the Epistles of Paul to the Romans Spain is mentioned ; and a native of Britain also—Claudia , who was married to Pudens , or Linus . See Horn , xvi ., 13 , and II . Tim . iv ., 21 . Martial mentions Claudia by name ( Epig . 54 , book xi . ); ancl Rufus or Pudens ( Epig . 13 , book iv ) . It is worthy of notice that about this timeanother British lad

, y was accused in Rome of having embraced a foreign superstition : Pomponia Grceeina , wife of Aulus Plantus , the first governor of Britain , and a distinguished general of Claudius . See Tacitus , Annal , book 13 , chap , xxxii . As bearing- on this point , we would mention that the Jews in England record a decree of Augustus Caisar in their favor , OS . 15 . In a work published by Aben Ezraentitled the " Epistle on the Sabbath" in the prefix it is stated

, , , " I , Abraham Aben Ezra , the Sephardy , have been in one of the cities of the island called ' the End of the Earth . ' Aben Ezra visited England in the reign of Henry II . The classical phrase is , ' idtimos Orbis Britannos ; ' the scriptual , " the isles afar off . "

Godfrey Higgins , Esq ., in his " Celtic Druids , " points out that the earl y Greeks knew more of Britain than the Greeks of Strabo ancl his time . Of Ireland he states , p . 107 , " Orpheus , or rather Onomacritus , mentions Ireland ; but , says Bochart , 'he learned the name and site of it from the Phoenicians : the Greeks at that time hacl not sailed into these parts . ' " Onomacritus lived 560 years before Christ . Polybiuswho lived only 124 years before Christ

, , acknowledges they knew nothing of the northern nations . " Itaqyue multa potuisse illis esse perspecta de occiclentalis oceani insulis cpuce Polybius dgnoraverit , " says Bochart , speaking of the trade of the Phoenicians to these islands . ( To be concluded . )

The Legend Of The "Quatuor Coronati."

THE LEGEND OF THE "QUATUOR CORONATI . "

From the Armidel MS ., 91 .

Concluded from page 241 .

TUNC abiernnt et fecerunt secundum consuetuclinem et operati sunt omnia excepto simulacro Asclepii . Post aliquos vero menses illi dederunt suggestionem Augusto

rilHEN they went away and did -L acccorcling to their custom , and performed all the work except the image of ifisculapius . But after some months the philosophers suggested to Diocletian Angus-

“The Masonic Magazine: 1880-01-01, Page 4” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01011880/page/4/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
TARSHISH; ITS MODERN REPRESENTATIVE. Article 1
THE LEGEND OF THE "QUATUOR CORONATI." Article 4
THE OLD CHARGES OF THE BRITISH FREEMASONS. Article 11
MICHAEL FARADAY. Article 16
THE OLD AND THE NEW TEAR. Article 20
THE RUINS OF PALENQUE. Article 22
THE FLOWERS UPON THE GRAVE. Article 23
THE MORAL AND RELIGIOUS ORIGIN OF FREEMASONRY: Article 24
BEATRICE. Article 27
A SONNET. Article 29
LENORA. Article 30
EXTRACTS, WITH NOTES, FROM THE MINUTES OF THE LODGE OF FRIENDSHIP, NO. 277, OLDHAM. Article 33
ACROSTIC. Article 36
A CATALOGUE OF MASONIC BOOKS IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM. Article 37
BENEFICIENTIA. Article 39
OUTLINE OF A MASONIC LECTURE ON MASONRY IN JAPAN IN THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY. Article 40
THE LEVEL AND THE SQUARE. Article 42
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Tarshish; Its Modern Representative.

famous mackerel sauce . Going farther westward , the Canary Isles were discovered by the same people . And in the interior of Spain , Hispalis , or Seville , was founded by them . Farther , it is recorded that , B . C . 610 , Africa was circumnavigated by a Phoenician vessel . Sir G . C . Lewis , in his " Survey on the Astronomy of the Ancients , " p . 448 , says that " the voyages of the Phoenicians to Cornwall for tinand to the coasts

, of the Baltic for amber , pass equally as historial facts . " Herodotus names the portion of Britain known as the Scilly Isles , if not all Britain , the Cassiterides , or lands of tin . Appian tells ns that the Spaniards of his time used to perform the vovages to Britain in half a clay .

In Clemens Romanus we meet with the phrase " the utmost parts of the west . " This was used when spealdng of the Apostle Paul ' s labours . The west included Spain , Gaul , ancl Britain . In the Epistles of Paul to the Romans Spain is mentioned ; and a native of Britain also—Claudia , who was married to Pudens , or Linus . See Horn , xvi ., 13 , and II . Tim . iv ., 21 . Martial mentions Claudia by name ( Epig . 54 , book xi . ); ancl Rufus or Pudens ( Epig . 13 , book iv ) . It is worthy of notice that about this timeanother British lad

, y was accused in Rome of having embraced a foreign superstition : Pomponia Grceeina , wife of Aulus Plantus , the first governor of Britain , and a distinguished general of Claudius . See Tacitus , Annal , book 13 , chap , xxxii . As bearing- on this point , we would mention that the Jews in England record a decree of Augustus Caisar in their favor , OS . 15 . In a work published by Aben Ezraentitled the " Epistle on the Sabbath" in the prefix it is stated

, , , " I , Abraham Aben Ezra , the Sephardy , have been in one of the cities of the island called ' the End of the Earth . ' Aben Ezra visited England in the reign of Henry II . The classical phrase is , ' idtimos Orbis Britannos ; ' the scriptual , " the isles afar off . "

Godfrey Higgins , Esq ., in his " Celtic Druids , " points out that the earl y Greeks knew more of Britain than the Greeks of Strabo ancl his time . Of Ireland he states , p . 107 , " Orpheus , or rather Onomacritus , mentions Ireland ; but , says Bochart , 'he learned the name and site of it from the Phoenicians : the Greeks at that time hacl not sailed into these parts . ' " Onomacritus lived 560 years before Christ . Polybiuswho lived only 124 years before Christ

, , acknowledges they knew nothing of the northern nations . " Itaqyue multa potuisse illis esse perspecta de occiclentalis oceani insulis cpuce Polybius dgnoraverit , " says Bochart , speaking of the trade of the Phoenicians to these islands . ( To be concluded . )

The Legend Of The "Quatuor Coronati."

THE LEGEND OF THE "QUATUOR CORONATI . "

From the Armidel MS ., 91 .

Concluded from page 241 .

TUNC abiernnt et fecerunt secundum consuetuclinem et operati sunt omnia excepto simulacro Asclepii . Post aliquos vero menses illi dederunt suggestionem Augusto

rilHEN they went away and did -L acccorcling to their custom , and performed all the work except the image of ifisculapius . But after some months the philosophers suggested to Diocletian Angus-

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