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  • The Masonic Monthly
  • Dec. 1, 1882
  • Page 13
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The Masonic Monthly, Dec. 1, 1882: Page 13

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    Article THE LEGEND OF THE INTRODUCTION OF MASONS INTO ENGLAND. ← Page 9 of 11 →
Page 13

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

The Legend Of The Introduction Of Masons Into England.

little mansion of stone , " in which he was accustomed to sit and reflect , etc ., was exhibited " even to the present day . " * „ The Danes and Frisians , in the year 867 , f having taken York , spread over the whole country , destroying churches and monasteries far and wide with fire-and sword , " leaving nothing remaining save

the bare unroofed walls ; " sometimes those were utterly destroyed . Mr . Stephenson , in a note , J suggests that the name St . Mary-le-Bow is to be attributed to the fact that when in the year 995 the body of St . Cuthbert was carried by the monks to Duimam , which as Simeon tells us was " the spot which had been pointed out to them

by heaven , " they " made a little church of boughs of trees with all speed , therein they placed the shrine for a time . " " From that smaller church" the body " was removed § into another , which was called White

Church , " where it remained during the three years required for the building of the larger one . " At a later period , Bishop Aldhun erected a tolerably large church of stone" at Durham . "The entire population of the district , which extends from the river Coquet to the Tees , readily and willingly

Tendered assistance as well to this work [ the clearing away the forest ] as to the erection of the church at a later period ; nor did they discontinue their labours until the whole was completed . " ( j In the the third year after its foundation the church was dedicated b y Bishop Aldhun , on the 4 th September , 998 , ^ f but we are told * * that at

the death of the Bishop " of the church , the building of which he had commenced , he left behind him nothing more than the western tower , and that in an unfinished condition . "

Aegelrick , when Bishop of Durham , about 1045 f f " thought fit to pull down the wooden church at Cunecaceastre , ( which we now corruptly call Ceastre ) , and to build there another of stone . " Having resigned the Bishopric about the year 1057 , he returned to his own monastery and expended the money he had removed from the church

in "constructing through the fenny regions roads of stone and wood . " ++ In 1072 , Walcher was chosen Bishop , and on some monks coming from Eovesham to Northumbria he gave them the monastery at Jarrow , "the unroofed walls of which were alone standing . . . . Upon those walls they reared a covering formed of unhewn timbers ,

“The Masonic Monthly: 1882-12-01, Page 13” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 5 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/msm/issues/mxr_01121882/page/13/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
A FEW PARTING WORDS. Article 1
THE ROMAN COLLEGIA. Article 2
THE LEGEND OF THE INTRODUCTION OF MASONS INTO ENGLAND. Article 5
A MAIDEN. Article 16
THE LECHMERE MS. Article 17
AN OLD SOCIETY. Article 22
Untitled Ad 23
AESTHETICAL. Article 25
A MASONIC ADDRESS. Article 26
CURIOUS BOOKS. Article 30
THE RUINED CITIES IN CENTRAL AMERICA. Article 31
THE HAMILTON MANUSCRIPTS. Article 37
THE GRANGE. Article 42
REVIEW. Article 44
EARLY HAUNTS OF FREEMASONRY. Article 47
MASONIC PROCEEDINGS IN SPAIN. Article 53
LODGE LIBRARIES. Article 58
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Legend Of The Introduction Of Masons Into England.

little mansion of stone , " in which he was accustomed to sit and reflect , etc ., was exhibited " even to the present day . " * „ The Danes and Frisians , in the year 867 , f having taken York , spread over the whole country , destroying churches and monasteries far and wide with fire-and sword , " leaving nothing remaining save

the bare unroofed walls ; " sometimes those were utterly destroyed . Mr . Stephenson , in a note , J suggests that the name St . Mary-le-Bow is to be attributed to the fact that when in the year 995 the body of St . Cuthbert was carried by the monks to Duimam , which as Simeon tells us was " the spot which had been pointed out to them

by heaven , " they " made a little church of boughs of trees with all speed , therein they placed the shrine for a time . " " From that smaller church" the body " was removed § into another , which was called White

Church , " where it remained during the three years required for the building of the larger one . " At a later period , Bishop Aldhun erected a tolerably large church of stone" at Durham . "The entire population of the district , which extends from the river Coquet to the Tees , readily and willingly

Tendered assistance as well to this work [ the clearing away the forest ] as to the erection of the church at a later period ; nor did they discontinue their labours until the whole was completed . " ( j In the the third year after its foundation the church was dedicated b y Bishop Aldhun , on the 4 th September , 998 , ^ f but we are told * * that at

the death of the Bishop " of the church , the building of which he had commenced , he left behind him nothing more than the western tower , and that in an unfinished condition . "

Aegelrick , when Bishop of Durham , about 1045 f f " thought fit to pull down the wooden church at Cunecaceastre , ( which we now corruptly call Ceastre ) , and to build there another of stone . " Having resigned the Bishopric about the year 1057 , he returned to his own monastery and expended the money he had removed from the church

in "constructing through the fenny regions roads of stone and wood . " ++ In 1072 , Walcher was chosen Bishop , and on some monks coming from Eovesham to Northumbria he gave them the monastery at Jarrow , "the unroofed walls of which were alone standing . . . . Upon those walls they reared a covering formed of unhewn timbers ,

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