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  • June 1, 1880
  • Page 31
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The Masonic Magazine, June 1, 1880: Page 31

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    Article MASONS' MARKS.* Page 1 of 2 →
Page 31

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

Masons' Marks.*

MASONS' MARKS . *

MASONS' Marks furnish one of the most interesting subjects for stud y in Freemasonry , and one productive of entertainment as well as instruction . From the earliest times our operative brethren employed marks , and now that Freemasons no longer design or superintend the erection of material Temjjles and other stately edifices , we retain the custom of the Craft , so far as Masons' Marks are concerned , by their employment in the Mark Master ' s Degree .

In ancient and mediceval times there were two classes of Marks employed —the superior class by the Master Masons , Masters of the work , or overseers , and the inferior b y the Fellow-Crafts , or hewers of the stone . The first were monograniniatic characters , and the second , Craft or mathematical symbols of varied configuration . The last named have often been described , but references to the former are more rare , and the subject appears to us to be of

sufficient interest to warrant a brief article upon it . The ordinary marks are found at the present day on the ori ginal foundation stones of King Solomon ' s Temple ; and they may traced from that time , down , through' Europe , in all important structures . M . Didron , a French writer on architecture , has referred to those found on the Cathedrals of Spire , Worms , Strasburg , Rheims , etc ., and stated that he can classify them as

belonging to distinct schools or Lodges of Masons . The extraordinary marks of superintending architects , on the other hand , all have an individual character , and ordinarily are either monograms or rebnsses . Examples of Fellow-Crafts' marks may be found as follows : the interlaced compasses at Melrose and Fountain Abbeys , and crosses , triangles , the figure 4 , the H , and analagous marks at Cologne , Malmsbury and Gloucester Cathedrals , and Furnas Abbey .

Bro . Fort , in his " Early History and Antiquities of Freemasonry , " has an interesting chapter on these , as also has Bro . Lyon in his " Freemasonry in Scotland , " on similar marks in that country . In Fountains Abbey the marks of French and English Masons have been distinguished . All of these marks were apparently a growth , a development , being at first , as Bro . Woodford has pointed out , in the earliest times alphabetical , then numeralistic , and finally symbolic and exoteric .

The monograms or rebnsses ( many of them very amusing ) adopted b y Master Masons or supervising architects as marks , were at first view onl y plays upon words , indicative of the mirthful spirit that dominated our ancient brethren ; but they were in fact much more- than this . At the time , for example , when the mediaeval cathedrals were erected , the majority of the persons who frequented them could not read ; but these pictorial marks were

intelli gible to the most illiterate , and served to commemorate to the populace the names of the architects ( many of them ecclesiastics as well ) to whom they stood indebted for the sculptured glories of their Temples to the living God . We will give some curious examples . Among the monograms or rebnsses carved in stone on famous edifices are the following : Prior Boltonthe architect of the choir of the celebrated London

, Ciiurch of St . Bartholomew the Great , adorned an oriel with a rebus of his name—a bolt through a tun . ( The well-known inn in Fleet street , " The Bolt in Tun , " derived its name from this rebus . ) Another noted Mason ' s mark is that of the Abbot Islip in Westminster Abbey . In the splendid nave of that cathedral—the loftiest of England , over the centre of one of its doorways is a

“The Masonic Magazine: 1880-06-01, Page 31” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 5 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01061880/page/31/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE BELZONI MASONIC MSS. Article 1
A CHARGE Article 6
THE YORK FABRIC ROLLS. Article 10
THE ANCIENT CITIES OF TROY AND PERGAMOS. Article 11
OLD RECORDS OF THE LODGE OF PEEBLES. Article 13
THE LAMENT OF THE CAPTIVE. Article 17
THE TREVOR FAMILY;* Article 19
BRONZE WORK IN SOLOMON'S TEMPLE. Article 25
THE CELESTIAL ARMY. Article 27
THE ROD IN AND OUT OF SCHOOL. Article 28
MASONS' MARKS.* Article 31
ORIGIN AND SHORT HISTORY OF THE KABBALAH.* Article 32
ODE TO WOMAN. Article 34
A MASON'S NOTES OF TRAVEL IN ASIA.* Article 35
ROSENGARTEN'S ARCHITECTURAL STYLES.* Article 37
THE TIMELY WARNING.* Article 37
MASONIC AND GENERAL ARCHAEOLOGIA. Article 39
ST. JOHN'S LODGE. No. 221. BOLTON Article 41
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Masons' Marks.*

MASONS' MARKS . *

MASONS' Marks furnish one of the most interesting subjects for stud y in Freemasonry , and one productive of entertainment as well as instruction . From the earliest times our operative brethren employed marks , and now that Freemasons no longer design or superintend the erection of material Temjjles and other stately edifices , we retain the custom of the Craft , so far as Masons' Marks are concerned , by their employment in the Mark Master ' s Degree .

In ancient and mediceval times there were two classes of Marks employed —the superior class by the Master Masons , Masters of the work , or overseers , and the inferior b y the Fellow-Crafts , or hewers of the stone . The first were monograniniatic characters , and the second , Craft or mathematical symbols of varied configuration . The last named have often been described , but references to the former are more rare , and the subject appears to us to be of

sufficient interest to warrant a brief article upon it . The ordinary marks are found at the present day on the ori ginal foundation stones of King Solomon ' s Temple ; and they may traced from that time , down , through' Europe , in all important structures . M . Didron , a French writer on architecture , has referred to those found on the Cathedrals of Spire , Worms , Strasburg , Rheims , etc ., and stated that he can classify them as

belonging to distinct schools or Lodges of Masons . The extraordinary marks of superintending architects , on the other hand , all have an individual character , and ordinarily are either monograms or rebnsses . Examples of Fellow-Crafts' marks may be found as follows : the interlaced compasses at Melrose and Fountain Abbeys , and crosses , triangles , the figure 4 , the H , and analagous marks at Cologne , Malmsbury and Gloucester Cathedrals , and Furnas Abbey .

Bro . Fort , in his " Early History and Antiquities of Freemasonry , " has an interesting chapter on these , as also has Bro . Lyon in his " Freemasonry in Scotland , " on similar marks in that country . In Fountains Abbey the marks of French and English Masons have been distinguished . All of these marks were apparently a growth , a development , being at first , as Bro . Woodford has pointed out , in the earliest times alphabetical , then numeralistic , and finally symbolic and exoteric .

The monograms or rebnsses ( many of them very amusing ) adopted b y Master Masons or supervising architects as marks , were at first view onl y plays upon words , indicative of the mirthful spirit that dominated our ancient brethren ; but they were in fact much more- than this . At the time , for example , when the mediaeval cathedrals were erected , the majority of the persons who frequented them could not read ; but these pictorial marks were

intelli gible to the most illiterate , and served to commemorate to the populace the names of the architects ( many of them ecclesiastics as well ) to whom they stood indebted for the sculptured glories of their Temples to the living God . We will give some curious examples . Among the monograms or rebnsses carved in stone on famous edifices are the following : Prior Boltonthe architect of the choir of the celebrated London

, Ciiurch of St . Bartholomew the Great , adorned an oriel with a rebus of his name—a bolt through a tun . ( The well-known inn in Fleet street , " The Bolt in Tun , " derived its name from this rebus . ) Another noted Mason ' s mark is that of the Abbot Islip in Westminster Abbey . In the splendid nave of that cathedral—the loftiest of England , over the centre of one of its doorways is a

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