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  • Oct. 1, 1882
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The Masonic Monthly, Oct. 1, 1882: Page 2

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    Article THE ROMAN COLLEGIA. ← Page 2 of 8 →
Page 2

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

The Roman Collegia.

comforting the manes as in securing to his relatives an immunity against his malignant attacks . For the disembodied spirit was an irritable divinity , which might harm though it never could do good . * "We may therefore easily understand that a permanent and adequate provision , which should realize these two advantages to all who joined a college , could never fail to attract men who entertained such beliefs .

" Through this agency of the college that terror of antiquity , ' ne nltimus suorum moriatur , ' had no place in the mind of a member , for the colleagues of the deceased were a never-failing kindred , at whose hands he would receive those sacred rites the provision for which nature had otherwise denied him .

" The common lawful purpose associated with burial and sacrifice was as diverse and various as the interests of civilized communities must ever be . Every art , trade , profession and business had its college . Some of these colleges were exceptionally numerous and abnormally powerful . The mintmen of Rome were in one age strong

enough to revolt as a nation , and the old clothesmen { centonarii ) , united with the timber merchants and dealers in wood ( dendrophori ) , constituted the most populous and influential corporation ever known under the empire .

" Sometimes colleges were constituted for burial and parentation only , — 'funerum causa , ' as it was said . These colleges , having no professional character to sustain , no aims in trade to promote , called themselves only worshippers of some god or goddess whom they had selected out of the well-stocked Pantheon of Europe and Asia . In such a case they designated themselves cultores Jovis , cultores Herculis , and the like . f

“The Masonic Monthly: 1882-10-01, Page 2” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 20 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/msm/issues/mxr_01101882/page/2/.
  • List
  • Grid
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.

comforting the manes as in securing to his relatives an immunity against his malignant attacks . For the disembodied spirit was an irritable divinity , which might harm though it never could do good . * "We may therefore easily understand that a permanent and adequate provision , which should realize these two advantages to all who joined a college , could never fail to attract men who entertained such beliefs .

" Through this agency of the college that terror of antiquity , ' ne nltimus suorum moriatur , ' had no place in the mind of a member , for the colleagues of the deceased were a never-failing kindred , at whose hands he would receive those sacred rites the provision for which nature had otherwise denied him .

" The common lawful purpose associated with burial and sacrifice was as diverse and various as the interests of civilized communities must ever be . Every art , trade , profession and business had its college . Some of these colleges were exceptionally numerous and abnormally powerful . The mintmen of Rome were in one age strong

enough to revolt as a nation , and the old clothesmen { centonarii ) , united with the timber merchants and dealers in wood ( dendrophori ) , constituted the most populous and influential corporation ever known under the empire .

" Sometimes colleges were constituted for burial and parentation only , — 'funerum causa , ' as it was said . These colleges , having no professional character to sustain , no aims in trade to promote , called themselves only worshippers of some god or goddess whom they had selected out of the well-stocked Pantheon of Europe and Asia . In such a case they designated themselves cultores Jovis , cultores Herculis , and the like . f

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