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fme_716045 - FREEMASONRY Insigne, Steward, Mark Benevolent Fund

FREEMASONRY Insigne, Steward, Mark Benevolent Fund AU
40.00 €(Approx. 43.60$ | 33.60£)
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Type : Insigne, Steward, Mark Benevolent Fund
Date: 1948
Metal : silver plated metal
Diameter : 46,5 mm
Orientation dies : 12 h.
Weight : 16,63 g.
Edge : lisse
Puncheon : sans poinçon
Coments on the condition:
Exemplaire ayant été nettoyé, des frottements visibles au revers. Présence de quelques rayures. Peu d’usure

Obverse


Obverse legend : MARK - FUND / BENEVOLENT // 19 - 48 / STEWARD.
Obverse description : Écusson.

Reverse


Reverse legend : LISSE.
Reverse description : Signé : SPENCER / LONDON.

Commentary


Le Mark Benevolent Fund est un organisme de bienfaisance enregistré (n° 207610) qui a vu le jour en 1868 à la suggestion du révérend George Raymond Portal, grand maître.

Historical background


FREEMASONRY

The compass and the square are very often associated in an ambivalent symbol of balance: fixity and mobility, passive and active, matter and spirit.. The compass is the tool of the Creator and of the great Architect of the Universe. The spacing of the branches of the compass obeys precise rules and varies according to the three degrees: apprentice, companion, master. The Napoleonic era, in the activity of lodges as in that of many groups, saw a flowering after the terrible years of the revolutionary period. Masonic activity, rid of its republican theories and firmly controlled by a Grand-Master appointed by the Emperor, experienced a vigor in unity never found since.. It is considered that each regiment, each garrison, each city had its Lodge. The testimonies that the sumptuous tokens of the period leave us show that these lodges were rich and influential.. The symbolism is sought after, without comparison with the later eras, which were much more conventional, even bland or destitute at the beginning of the 20th century.. Freemasonry had more than a thousand lodges spread over one hundred and thirty departments and more than sixty thousand Brothers.

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