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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • March 1, 1882
  • Page 14
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The Masonic Magazine, March 1, 1882: Page 14

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    Article THE ROMAN COLLEGIA. ← Page 3 of 3
    Article MEMOIR OF ELIAS ASHMOLE. Page 1 of 5 →
Page 14

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The Roman Collegia.

" Sodales sunt qui ejusdem collegii sunt . His autem potestatem facit lex , pactionem quam veliut sibi ferre , dum nequid ex publica lege corrumpant . " The Collegia had at one time great power , and we find that they were regarded often with grave suspicion as the focus of secret intrigues , or the rallying point of hidden conspirators . The Roman Collegiumanswering to the Greek " Sunarchia" "Etairia "

, , , " Sullogos , " Summoria , Koinor ., and to a certain extent Eranos , was a Societas or "corpus hominum , " as Cicero tells us , " Ut minimum ejusdem dignitatis numeris vel artis . Differt ab ordine qui plures complectitur , etc ., et significat certum hominum statum sive ii societate conjuncti sint sive non . " We find that the Collegium was also termed Consilium . " Agere causum apud Collegium" was to bring a matter before the Collegium . " Cooptare

, aliquem hi collegium " was to elect a joining or honorary member . " Recipere aliqnem in collegium " was to receive any one into the body . " Collegium coit , " the Collegium meets together . " Constituere Collegium" was to constitute a Collegium lawfully . " Collegia contra leges instituta dissolvuntur , "

alludes to the power of dissolving " Collegia Illicita ; " and hence the phrase " Illicitum Collegium coire usurpare " meant to meet or attend for unlawful purposes ; while " celebrare Collegium" was to attend lawfully for the purposes of a festal day , an alba dies . Many other allusions are to be found , and thus we gain an outline of their position and existence , but of their inner life we know little or nothing .

Vitruvius seems to acknowledge them , though he probably alludes rather to the " Collegium Architeotorum , " which is said also to have had a " secreta receptio , " and signs and words of greeting and recognition . We do not suppose that any who have read Findel , or Heldmann , or Schauberg , or Coote , or "Kenning ' s Cyclopasdia , " will find much that is new for them here , but , for the first time it isperhapsclearly set before usMasonicallywhat a living

, , , , institution the Collegium was among the Romans , as living and important as the Guilds in our mediaeval social existence , and of which we as yet know so little . The Roman Guilds which fell with the Roman empire , though they were revived at Byzantium , seem to have gradually become Christian , and the next we hear of them after the "Romanum opus , " is doing the " novum sedificandi genus" in Gaul , Germany , and England in the eleventh century .

Memoir Of Elias Ashmole.

MEMOIR OF ELIAS ASHMOLE .

[ As the attention of our readers has recentl y been called in the Magazine in Bro . W . H . Ryland ' s exhaustive paper to the Masonic connection of Ashmole with the Craft and his interesting Diary , it has been thought that a brief memoir of a somewhat remarkable man , a distinguished antiquary , and so far the earliest English Freemason known , may not prove unacceptable to the readers . — -ED . M . M . ~ ] "IVrO sketch of the earl y history of our modern or speculative system of

Free--L ' masony is complete without some reference to the circumstances attending the _ initiation into the mysteries of our Craft of this distinguished antiquary ; while no memoir of the antiquary himself would be regarded as satisfactory which

“The Masonic Magazine: 1882-03-01, Page 14” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01031882/page/14/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE CARDINAL VIRTUES. Article 1
MAIDENHOOD. Article 6
DOCUMENTA LATOMICA INEDITA. Article 7
THE ROMAN COLLEGIA. Article 12
MEMOIR OF ELIAS ASHMOLE. Article 14
AN ARCHITECTURAL PUZZLE. Article 19
THE SUNDERLAND AND HAMILTON-BECKFORD LIBRARIES. Article 20
THE WORSHIPFUL MASTER. Article 23
NATIONAL SAXON MASONIC HYMN. Article 29
ECHOES OF THE LAST CENTURY. Article 30
LITERARY GOSSIP. Article 34
THE LEGENDS OF THE CRAFT. Article 36
A CURIOUS CORRESPONDENCE. Article 37
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Roman Collegia.

" Sodales sunt qui ejusdem collegii sunt . His autem potestatem facit lex , pactionem quam veliut sibi ferre , dum nequid ex publica lege corrumpant . " The Collegia had at one time great power , and we find that they were regarded often with grave suspicion as the focus of secret intrigues , or the rallying point of hidden conspirators . The Roman Collegiumanswering to the Greek " Sunarchia" "Etairia "

, , , " Sullogos , " Summoria , Koinor ., and to a certain extent Eranos , was a Societas or "corpus hominum , " as Cicero tells us , " Ut minimum ejusdem dignitatis numeris vel artis . Differt ab ordine qui plures complectitur , etc ., et significat certum hominum statum sive ii societate conjuncti sint sive non . " We find that the Collegium was also termed Consilium . " Agere causum apud Collegium" was to bring a matter before the Collegium . " Cooptare

, aliquem hi collegium " was to elect a joining or honorary member . " Recipere aliqnem in collegium " was to receive any one into the body . " Collegium coit , " the Collegium meets together . " Constituere Collegium" was to constitute a Collegium lawfully . " Collegia contra leges instituta dissolvuntur , "

alludes to the power of dissolving " Collegia Illicita ; " and hence the phrase " Illicitum Collegium coire usurpare " meant to meet or attend for unlawful purposes ; while " celebrare Collegium" was to attend lawfully for the purposes of a festal day , an alba dies . Many other allusions are to be found , and thus we gain an outline of their position and existence , but of their inner life we know little or nothing .

Vitruvius seems to acknowledge them , though he probably alludes rather to the " Collegium Architeotorum , " which is said also to have had a " secreta receptio , " and signs and words of greeting and recognition . We do not suppose that any who have read Findel , or Heldmann , or Schauberg , or Coote , or "Kenning ' s Cyclopasdia , " will find much that is new for them here , but , for the first time it isperhapsclearly set before usMasonicallywhat a living

, , , , institution the Collegium was among the Romans , as living and important as the Guilds in our mediaeval social existence , and of which we as yet know so little . The Roman Guilds which fell with the Roman empire , though they were revived at Byzantium , seem to have gradually become Christian , and the next we hear of them after the "Romanum opus , " is doing the " novum sedificandi genus" in Gaul , Germany , and England in the eleventh century .

Memoir Of Elias Ashmole.

MEMOIR OF ELIAS ASHMOLE .

[ As the attention of our readers has recentl y been called in the Magazine in Bro . W . H . Ryland ' s exhaustive paper to the Masonic connection of Ashmole with the Craft and his interesting Diary , it has been thought that a brief memoir of a somewhat remarkable man , a distinguished antiquary , and so far the earliest English Freemason known , may not prove unacceptable to the readers . — -ED . M . M . ~ ] "IVrO sketch of the earl y history of our modern or speculative system of

Free--L ' masony is complete without some reference to the circumstances attending the _ initiation into the mysteries of our Craft of this distinguished antiquary ; while no memoir of the antiquary himself would be regarded as satisfactory which

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