But because the association had been made with these degrees, and the degrees had perpetuated themselves, after a time it began to look like there had been a connection." "These are myths or symbolic figures that were used by the Masons. "But those degrees and Masonic orders had no historic connection with the original Knights Templar," Kinney explained. The powerful military and religious order was established to protect medieval pilgrims to the Holy Land and dissolved by Pope Clement V, under pressure of King Phillip IV of France, in 1312.Īfter modern Masonry appeared in the 17th- or 18th-century Britain, some Freemasons claimed to have acquired the secrets of the Templars and adopted Templar symbols and terminology-naming certain levels of Masonic hierarchy after Templar "degrees," for example. ![]() Much has been made of the Freemasons purported lineage to the Knights Templar. MYTH 2: Masons Descend From the Knights Templar His proposed design was eyeless, and rejected. There was one known Mason on the committee to design the seal, Benjamin Franklin. Congress Charles Thompson put it in 1782, it alludes "to the many signal interpositions of providence in favour of the American cause." ![]() ship of state, or as Secretary of the U.S. The eye represents divine guidance of the U.S. dollar bill-by way of artist Pierre Du Simitiere, a non-Mason. Likewise, the all-seeing eye saw its way to the Great Seal-and the U.S. The pentagram, for example, is much older than Freemasonry and acquired its occult overtones only in the 19th and 20th centuries, hundreds of years after the Masons had adopted the symbol. "Masonry employs them in its own fashion." "I view the Masonic use of symbols as a grab bag taken from here, there, and everywhere," he said. (See "LOST SYMBOL PICTURES: Masonic Symbols Decoded.")įreemasonry is rich in symbols, and many are ubiquitious-think of the pentagram, or five-pointed star, or the "all-seeing eye" in the Great Seal of the United States.īut most Masonic symbols aren't unique to Freemasonry, Kinney said. ![]() It's true that Masonic symbols are anything but lost, said Freemason and historian Jay Kinney, author of the newly released Masonic Myth. To separate Freemason fact from Lost Symbol-style myth, National Geographic News went inside the centuries-old order with two Masons and a historian of the ancient Christian order from which some claim the Masons sprang in the 17th or 18th century. Released today, The Lost Symbol isn't likely to squelch any rumors, beginning as it does with a wine-filled skull, bejeweled power brokers, and a dark Masonic temple steps away from the White House.īut what if Freemasons-the world's largest international secret society-are just a bunch of guys into socializing, non-satanic rituals, self-improvement, and community service? Detractors include global conspiracy theorists and religious organizations, including the Catholic Church. Since long before The Lost Symbol, Freemasons have been accused of everything from conspiring with extraterrestrials to practicing sexual deviancy to engaging in occult rituals to running the world-or trying to end it.
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