Search This Blog

Monday, August 23, 2010

History of the Fort De Goede Hoop


Click to enlarge:  The position of the 1st,  4 pointed, Fort de Goede Hoop.  The  5 pointed Fort (Castle) of 1666  is North East of the original.  Very interesting article of excavations on the Parade (Cape Town).
    





Louis Michel Thibault's map of the Cape De Goede Hoop and the Fortifications.  

Friday, August 13, 2010

Cape Town - Pentagram - Lodge de Goede Hoop







































A map drawn by the Freemason architect Louis Michel Thibault (1791) of Cape Town and the Castle of Good Hope.  An imaginary line connecting Lion's Head and the Castle transects the position of the Lodge de Goede Hoop which was designed and built by Thibault in 1803.





The inside of the Masonic Temple - Lodge de Goede Hoop.

Google Earth view of the same map (North Up).  The Castle of Good Hope is marked as 001.  A pentagram is formed by the 4 most visible geographic points and the Castle.

Pentagram:
Signal Point,
Lion's Head,
West side of table mountain (now the cable car station) and
Devil's Peak.
The Castle of Good Hope - itself a pentagram - forms the 5th point.

Lodge de Goede Hoop lies on the line connecting Lion's Head and the Castle.



Thursday, August 12, 2010

Egyptian Obelisks

"The obelisk symbolized the sun god Ra, and during the brief religious reformation of Akhenaten was said to be a petrified ray of the Aten, the sundisk. It was also thought that the god existed within the structure."
 Click here to view source...




"Rome is the obelisk capital of the world. The most prominent is the 25.5 m/83.6 ft high 331 ton obelisk at Saint Peter's Square in Rome.  The obelisk had stood since AD 37 on its site on the wall of the Circus of Nero, flanking St Peter's Basilica".

"Re-erecting the obelisk had daunted even Michelangelo, but Sixtus V was determined to erect it in front of St Peter's (1586), of which the nave was yet to be built. He had a full-sized wooden mock-up erected within months of his election. Domenico Fontana, the assistant of Giacomo Della Porta in the Basilica's construction, presented the Pope with a little model crane of wood and a heavy little obelisk of lead, which Sixtus himself was able to raise by turning a little winch with his finger. Fontana was given the project."



View of Rome from the dome of St. Peter's Basilica




http://www.egipto.com/obeliscos/obeliskindex.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obelisk

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

The Square & Compass - Freemasonary



As the Sun was male, so the moon was female; and Isis was both the sister and wife of Osiris. The compass therefore, is the Hermetic symbol of the creative deity, and the square of the productive Earth or Universe'


In explaining the deeper meaning of symbols in the teaching of the 32nd degree Albert Pike hearkens back to the sculpted images of the ancients.   Unpacking the hermetic symbol of Azoth, Pike says:
'Upon it you see a triangle upon a square, both of these contained within a circle, and above this, standing upon a dragon, a human body, with two arms only, but two heads, one male and the other female. By the side of the male head is the Sun, and by that of the female head, the Moon, the crescent within the circle of the full moon. And the hand on the male side holds a compass, and that on the female side, a square..
The hermaphroditic figure is the symbol of the double nature anciently assigned to the deity, as generator and producer, as Brahm and maya among the Aryans, osiris and Isis among the Egyptians. As the Sun was male, so the moon was female; and Isis was both the sister and wife of Osiris. The compass therefore, is the Hermetic symbol of the creative deity, and the square of the productive Earth or Universe.




SOURCE: From 'Morals & Dogma of the Ancient and accepted Rite of Freemasonry' by Albert Pike,1871,1906 - Pages 850, 851.  http://www.freemasons-freemasonry.com/apikefr.html

Jacob's Ladder - Freemasons

An important symbol of the Entered Apprentice Degree. A ladder of several staves or rounds of which three are illustrated to the candidate as Faith, Hope and Chairty; the three theological virtues.

- Source: Masonicdictionary.com


The introduction of Jacob's ladder into the symbolism of Speculative Freemasonry is to be traced to the vision of Jacob, which is thus substantially recorded in the twenty-eighth chapter of the Book of Genesis: When Jacob, by the command of his father Isaac, was journeying toward Padanaram, while sleeping one night with the bare earth for his couch and a stone for his pillow, he beheld the vision of a ladder, whose foot rested on the earth and whose top reached to heaven. Angels were continually ascending and descending upon it, and promised him the blessing of a numerous and happy posterity. When Jacob awoke, he was filled with pious gratitude, and consecrated the spot as the house of God.
This ladder, so remarkable in the history of the Jewish people, finds its analogue in all the ancient initiations. Whether this is to be attributed simply to a coincidence-a theory which but few scholars would be willing to accept-or to the fact that these analogues were all derived from a common fountain of symbolism, or whether, as suggested by Brother Oliver, the origin of the symbol was lost among the practices of the Pagan rites, while the symbol itself was retained, it is, perhaps, impossible authoritatively to determine. It is, however, certain that the ladder as a symbol of moral and intellectual progress existed almost universally in antiquity, presenting itself either as a succession of steps, of gates, of Degrees, or in some other modified form. The number of the steps varied; although the favorite one appears to have been seven, in reference, apparently, to the mystical character almost everywhere given to that number.




"Its three principle rounds, representing Faith, Hope, and Charity, present us with the means of advancing from earth to heaven from death to life – from the mortal to immortality".


Tracing board - 1st Degree:  England 1819

The Masonic ladder which is presented in the symbolism of the first degree ought really to consist of seven steps which thus ascend:  Temperance, Fortitude, Prudence, Justice, Faith, Hope, and Charity,  but in the earliest examples of it present it only with three, referring to the three theological virtues, whence it is called the theological ladder. 

As the symbol of progress, Jacob’s ladder was early recognized.  Written in the sixteenth century, Jacob’s ladder is a symbol of the progressive scale of intellectual communication betwixt earth and heaven.

In the Ancient Craft degrees of the York Rite, Jacob’s ladder was not an original symbol.  It is said to have been introduced by Dunckerley when he reformed the lectures.  This is confirmed by the fact that it is not mentioned in any of the early rituals of the last century, nor even by Hutchinson, who had an excellent opportunity of doing so in his lecture on the Nature of the Lodge, where he speaks of the covering of the Lodge, but says nothing of the means of reaching it, which he would have done, had he been acquainted with the ladder as a symbol.  Its first appearance is in a Tracing Board, on which the date of 1776 is inscribed.

As to the modern Masonic symbolism of the ladder, it is a symbol of progress, such as it is in all the old initiations.  Its three principle rounds, representing Faith, Hope, and Charity, present us with the means of advancing from earth to heaven from death to life – from the mortal to immortality.   Hence its foot is placed on the ground-floor of the Lodge, which is typical of the world, and its top rests on the covering of the Lodge, which is symbolic of heaven.   In Dunckerley’s system, the ladder is said to rest on the Holy Bible, and to reach to the heavens.  This symbolism is thus explained: By the doctrines contained in the Holy Bible we are taught to believe in the divine dispensation of Providence, which belief strengthens our Faith, and enables us to ascent the first step.  That Faith naturally creates in us a Hope of blessed promises, which enables us to ascend to the second step.  But the third and last being Charity comprehends the whole and he who is possessed of this virtue in its ample sense, is said to have arrived to the summit of his profession. 

The delineation of the ladder with three steps only on the Tracing Board of 1776, which is a small one, may be attributed to notions of convenience.  But the fact that Dunckerley derived his symbol from Ramsay; that Ramsay’s ladder had seven steps, being the same as the Kadosh symbol; that in all the old initiations the number seven was preserved; and lastly, that Preston describes it as having “many rounds or staves, which point out as many moral virtues, but three principal ones, namely , Faith, Hope, and Charity,” irresistibly lead us to the conclusion that the Masonic ladder should properly have seven steps which represent the four cardinal and three theological virtues.





Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Ziggurat of Ur


The remains of the ziggurat were first described by William Kennett Loftus in the early 19th century. The first excavations at the site were conducted by John George Taylor (mistakenly credited as "J. E. Taylor")[5] in the 1850s, leading to the identification of the site as Ur. After World War I, preliminary excavations were performed byReginald Campbell Thomson and Henry Hall. The site was extensively excavated in the 1920s by Sir Leonard Woolley by appointment of the University Museum of the University of Pennsylvania and the British Museum in the period of 1922 to 1934. The ziggurat of Ur is the best preserved of those known from Iran and Iraq.[citation needed] It is one of three well-preserved structures of the Neo-Sumerian city of Ur, alongside the Royal Mausolea and the Palace of Ur-Nammu (the E-hursag).
The remains of the ziggurat consist of a three-layered solid mass of mud brick faced with burnt bricks set in bitumen. The lowest layer corresponds to the original construction of Ur-Nammu, while the two upper layers are part of the Neo-Babylonian restorations. (Woolley 1939). The facade of the lowest level and the monumental staircase were rebuilt under the orders of Saddam Hussein. The ziggurat was damaged in the First Gulf War in 1991 by some 400 bullet holes and the structure was shaken by explosions, recognizable from four nearby bomb craters.

Where is Babylon?

Ever thought of exactly where Babylon is?









The site of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon was converted into Camp Alpha shortly after the United States invaded Iraq in 2003.