The Middle Ages: Freemasonry – Its Origins, Its Myths, and Its Rituals (Episode #68)

Freemasonry: What is it? Where does it come from? What is one taught as a Freemason? What do they do in their closed-door rituals — and why? Freemasonry in the 1700s is my own field of research, and as a thank-you for reaching 50 patrons, I give a deep illumination of this unusual Society’s roots in the gatherings of stonemasons in the late Middle Ages, its mythical connections to Solomon’s Temple and the Crusades, and its elaborate system of symbols and initiatory rituals, which cast the Masons as a quasi-priestly caste with a shamanic connection to the world of the dead.


Also see Freemasonry — Its Growth and Spread Before 1789

Suggested Further Reading: David Stevenson, “Origins of Freemasonry: Scotland’s Century”; Margaret Jacob, “Living the Enlightenment”; Jessica Harland-Jacobs, “Builders of Empire”; Ric Berman, “The Foundations of Modern Freemasonry”; Steven Bullock, “Revolutionary Brotherhood”; Jasper Ridley, “The Freemasons”

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