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    Article THE ROMAN COLLEGIA. Page 1 of 8 →
Page 1

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

The Roman Collegia.

THE ROMAN COLLEGIA .

THE MASONIC MONTHLY

.New Series of the " Masonic Magazine . "

No . II . BY MASONIC STUDENT . Continued from page 134 .

OINCE I put together , my last paper on this subject , I have seen ^ and studied several other books which all bear on the subject , such as the " Romans in Britain , " by H . 0 . Coote , F . S . A . ; the " Syntagma Antiquitatum Romanarum , " by Heineccius , a work edited

by Haubold , and aided by Mii . hlenbrn . ch , published at Frankfort , 1841 ; and lastly a fine copy of the " Corpus Juris Civilis , " Amsterdam , 1681 . Mr . Coote thus sums up the various points of the whole question at p . 383 , et seq :

" By immemorial law or custom of Rome the citizens could combine and band together with the view and intention of effecting habitually some common lawful purpose . This combination was a collegium , and inseparable from this common bond was the obligation of the colleagues to secure to a deceased member his due burial and

jparentctlia under the care and at the general cost of the association to whose fund he had contributed in his lifetime . So unfailing are the provisions for effecting these two things in the rules of all the colleges , and so cherished to all appearance is this twofold object , that I cannot but suspect that it was the original design , to which every

other associated interest subordinated itself . And this explanation becomes irresistibly convincing , if we duly consider the twin beliefs engrained in the Aryan mind , —the efficacy of decent burial in procuring repose to the soul , and the power of annual sacrifice , as well in . VOL . I . —NO . 4 . 0

“The Masonic Monthly: 1882-10-01, Page 1” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 19 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/msm/issues/mxr_01101882/page/1/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
THE ROMAN COLLEGIA. Article 1
HISTORY OF THE ANCHOR AND HOPE LODGE, No. 37, BOLTON. Article 8
THE HISTORY OF FREEMASONRY. Article 10
AUDI, VIDE, TACE! Article 15
CURIOUS BOOKS. Article 16
CRAFT CUSTOMS OF THE ANCIENT STONEHEWERS, MASONS, AND CARPENTERS. Article 18
THE EARLY BUILDERS. Article 28
AUTUMN THOUGHTS. Article 31
THE CONSTITUTIONS OF 1762, Article 32
REGULATIONS AND CONSTITUTIONS. Article 33
THE GILDS.* Article 43
FREEMASONRY REDIVIVA. Article 47
EARLY HAUNTS OF FREEMASONRY. Article 49
AN OLD WORTHY. Article 54
THE GAVEL. Article 57
THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 58
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Roman Collegia.

THE ROMAN COLLEGIA .

THE MASONIC MONTHLY

.New Series of the " Masonic Magazine . "

No . II . BY MASONIC STUDENT . Continued from page 134 .

OINCE I put together , my last paper on this subject , I have seen ^ and studied several other books which all bear on the subject , such as the " Romans in Britain , " by H . 0 . Coote , F . S . A . ; the " Syntagma Antiquitatum Romanarum , " by Heineccius , a work edited

by Haubold , and aided by Mii . hlenbrn . ch , published at Frankfort , 1841 ; and lastly a fine copy of the " Corpus Juris Civilis , " Amsterdam , 1681 . Mr . Coote thus sums up the various points of the whole question at p . 383 , et seq :

" By immemorial law or custom of Rome the citizens could combine and band together with the view and intention of effecting habitually some common lawful purpose . This combination was a collegium , and inseparable from this common bond was the obligation of the colleagues to secure to a deceased member his due burial and

jparentctlia under the care and at the general cost of the association to whose fund he had contributed in his lifetime . So unfailing are the provisions for effecting these two things in the rules of all the colleges , and so cherished to all appearance is this twofold object , that I cannot but suspect that it was the original design , to which every

other associated interest subordinated itself . And this explanation becomes irresistibly convincing , if we duly consider the twin beliefs engrained in the Aryan mind , —the efficacy of decent burial in procuring repose to the soul , and the power of annual sacrifice , as well in . VOL . I . —NO . 4 . 0

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