Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Jeffers Delves Into Masonic History In 2005 Freemasons

Jeffers Delves Into Masonic History In 2005 Freemasons
I conclude reading "Freemasons: A What went before and Persuade of the World's Oldest Secret Private club" by H. Paul Jeffers the other day, and I enjoyed it for its in-depth involve at home the history of freemasonry.

Published by Support Knead in 2005, this book "delves at home Masonic history to reveal the shocking and controversial truths behind this ancient and clandestine order, from its mystery-shrouded start in medieval Europe produce its fly in America, where Benjamin Franklin founded the put the lid on small house."

Unusual topics indirect in this 237-page book introduce architectural symbolism, Masonic rings, freemasonry and religion, women and freemasonry, "Anti-masons," African American masonry, myths and plan theories, the Knights Templar, freemasonry's start in America, freemasonry participating in the Sociable War, Mozart and freemasonry, theories about Jack the Ripper and freemasonry, Masonic songs, Rudyard Kipling (aka, "The Critic of Freemasonry") as well as a nine-page list of critical masons.

This book also included an finer list of books for service reading. Books on that list included:

- "Antiquity of the Saintly Pomp Pergola" by F. De P. Castells (2003)

- "Apron: Its Sacrament, What went before and Secret Significances" by Open C. Higgins (1997)

- "Early years of Freemasonry in America" by Melvin M. Johnson (1999)

- "Commencement and Growth of the Dignified Catch of England, 1717 to 1926" by Gilbert W. Daynes (2003)

- "Uneducated in Blood: The Abandoned Secrets of Freemasonry" by John J. Robinson (1989)

- "The Brotherhood: The Secret Handiwork of the Freemason" by Stephen Knight (1985)

- "House of worship Builders: The Chronicle of a Finalize Masonic Group" by Head Scott (1899)

- "Coil's Masonic Book" by Henry Wilson Bounce (1995)

- "The Authentic Jack the Ripper" by Donald Rumbelow (1975)

- "Night Appreciable" by Walton Hannah (1952)

- "The Degrees and Finalize Symbols of Walls" by Joseph F. Newton (1992)

- "A Dictionary of Freemasonry" by Robert Macoy (1989)

- "Discrepancies of Freemasonry" by George Oliver (2003)

- "Duncan's Masonic Bureaucratic and Law" by Malcolm C. Duncan (1976)

- "An Book of Freemasonry" by Albert G. Mackey (1966)

- "Testimony about George Washington As a Freemason" by J. Hugo Tatsch (1931)

- "The Testimony of the Masonic Catch" by John Ankerberg and John Weldon (1958)

- "Freemasonry: A Be in charge produce Bureaucratic and Illustration" by W. Kirk MacNulty (1991)

- "Freemasonry and Its Ancient history Learned Wake" by C.W. Leadbeater (1986)

- "Freemasonry in the American Attack" by Sidney Morse (1992)

- "Freemasonry: The Barely discernible Whim in Our Midst" by Jack Harris (1987)

- "Freemasonry: The Incredulity of Freemasonry" by Alexander Piatigorsky (2000)

- "The Freemasons: A What went before of the World's Best Compelling Secret Private club" by Jasper Ridley (2001)

- "Freemasons at Gettysburg" by Sheldon A. Munn (1993)

- "A What went before of Freemasonry" by H.L. Haywood (2003)

- "What went before of Freemasonry: Its Antiquities, Symbols, Constitutions, Customs, etc." by Robert Freke Gould (1886)

- "Saintly Blood, Saintly Grail" by Michael Baigent and Richard Leigh (1982)

- "Own Undivided: The Chronicle of Freemasonry and the Sociable War" by Allen E. Roberts (1961)

- "Illustrations of Walls by One of the Connotation Who Has Keen 30 Years to the Group" by William Morgan (1827)

- "Jack the Ripper: The Resolved Unqualified" by Stephen Knight (1986)

- "Develop to the East!: A Bureaucratic of the Core Three Degrees of Freemasonry" by Ralph P. Lester (1998)

- "Masonic Ritual: A Observe of the Freemason Bureaucratic" by E.H. Cartwright (1947)

- "The Central theme of Walls" by W.L. Wilmhurst (1927)

- "Martial Lodges: The Apron and the Sword of Freemasonry under Guns" by Robert Freke Gould (2003)

- "Principles and Dogmas of the Ancient history and Acknowledged Scottish Assistance of Freemasonry" by Albert Max out (2002)

- "A New Book of Freemasonry" by Arthur Edward Waite (1970)

- "Downward slope of Freemasonry and Knight Templar" by John Bennett (1997)

- "Radical Brotherhood: Freemasonry and the Change of the American Unreserved Neatness, 1730-1840" by Steven C. Bullock (1988)

- "A Immediate Masonic What went before In the role of an Autobiography of the Growth of Freemasonry and Positive of the Preferably Secret Societies" by Frederick Armitage (2003)

- "Abstract Walls" by A.S. Macbride (2003)

- "Symbolism of King Solomon's Place of worship" by T. DeWitt Peake (2003)

- "Templars: The Animated What went before of the Knights Templar, the Best Compelling Martial Neatness of the Crusades" by Piers Paul Entr (2001)

- "The Place of worship and the Catch" by Michael Baigent and Richard Leigh (1989)

- "At the same time as Walls Is and Its Objects: Ancient history Standards in Modern Walls" by Albert Max out (1919)

In mass to these books, a publication of other books were mentioned in other portions of the book. Books mentioned in the book's reproduction included:

- "An Autobiography of the Savage Habit of Head William Morgan" by Edward Giddins

- "The Massacre of Mozart" by David Weiss

- "The Brotherhood and the Manipulation of Private club" by Ivan Frazer and Bloom Beeston

- "Make it to, Morgan and Anti-Masonry" by John C. Palmer

- "Elements of Geometry" by Euclid

- "Freemasonry and the Far-flung" by David F. Coady

- "The Freemason's Law" by Thomas Smith Webb

- "What went before of Art" by H.B. Cotterill

- "What went before of Standby Walls" by Alexander Lawrie

- "Illustrosions of Walls" by William Preston

- "Jack the Ripper: The Authentic Casebook" by Donald Rumbelow

- "The Maltese Falcon" by Dashiell Hammett

- "Blue-collar of the Catch" by Albert G. Mackey

- "Mein Kampf" by Adolph Hitler

- "New Ahiman Rezon" by John K. Entr

- "The New Handiwork Neatness" by Pat Robertson

- "See in your mind's eye of a Killer: Jack the Ripper - Case Congested" by Patricia Cornwell

- "The Place of worship or the Momentous" by Sir Charles Haunt

- "Less Jerusalem" by Sir Charles Haunt

In the end, I really enjoyed reading the "Freemasons: A What went before and Hunt of the World's Oldest Secret Private club," and I'm looking placement to reading some of the books Jeffers referenced relating its covers.

Include any of you had the junction to read this book or any of the others mentioned above? If so, what did you ponder about them? Which would you recommend? Let us know in the observations split up base.