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Spring 2009
Issue 48

Letter from the Editor
Grand Secretary's Column
Address by The Grand Master
News and Views
On The Level
Masonic Education
International News
Royal Arch News
Freemasonry Beyond The Craft
A Bit Rum
The Business of Freemasonry
Freemasonry and Suffrage
Graduates into Freemasonry
The Meaning of the Sphinx
Westminster Bridge
Masonic from its Foundation
Off the Record
Review: Scottish Rite Ritual
Review: The Compasses and the Cross
Review: The Sphinx Mystery
Review: A Handbook for the Freemason's Wife
Letters to the Editor
Library & Museum of Freemasonry
Grand Lodge
Grand Charity
Masonic Samaritan Fund
RMBI
RMTGB
Canon Richard Tydeman: Hidden Mysteries
Copyright 1997-2010
Grand Lodge Publications Ltd
Designed and Maintained by: Cyberpoint

FREEMASONRY TODAY
Book Review


    THE SCOTTISH RITE RITUAL MONITOR AND GUIDE

Arturo de Hoyos, The Supreme Council, 33°, Southern Jurisdiction, Washington D.C., 2008. Hardback, xvii and 949 pages, £47.95. ISBN: 0-9708749-2-8.

This is a huge tome written by Arturo de Hoyos, 33°, one of the foremost experts and scholars of the Scottish Rite (known in the UK as the Ancient and Accepted Rite); he is also the Grand Archivist and Grand Historian of The Supreme Council, 33°, Southern Jurisdiction, Washington D.C. And apart from a foreword, preface and seven appendices, the volume divides into sixteen sections or chapters each of which negotiate a particular aspect of this highly popular masonic system. Indeed, it contains everything from practical information for new members, to information about the Rite’s annual calendar. But the most interesting chapters by far, are the ones that deal with the Rite’s colourful ceremonies, its mythology, and the symbolism that adorns each of its thirty-three degrees.
     The information relating to the various degrees of the rite comprise four main sections: the ineffable degrees (4° to 14°), the chapter degrees of the Knights Rose Croix of Heredom (15° to 18°), the philosophical and chivalric degrees of the Council of Kadosh (19° to 30°), and the Consistory of Masters of the Royal Secret (31° to 32°). And aside from some really quite fascinating degrees like the Perfect Elu (14°), Knight of the East (15°), or Knight of the Sun (29°), the majority of Freemasons in both England and Wales will almost certainly be most interested in the information proffered on the degrees of the Knights of the Rose Croix, of the Eagle, or of the Pelican (18°), and Knight Kadosh, or Knight of the White and Black Eagle (30°).
     However, this book does not delve into a detailed history of the Rite, most especially its early history and provenance, when degrees like the Scottish Master or Knight of the East first emerged in the second and third quarters of the eighteenth-century. It is, nonetheless, an indispensable guide for anyone contemplating this enigmatic system, and I would certainly recommend it to all those who are interested in studying Freemasonry, either as a historical phenomenon or as a modern mystery school.

Matthew Scanlan


  Issue 48, Spring 2009
© Grand Lodge Publications Ltd 1997-2010