Bro. H. L. Haywood
Editor The Builder
Originally Published In The Builder
September 1923
By the Old Charges is meant those
ancient documents that have come down to us from the fourteenth century and
afterwards in which are incorporated the traditional history, the legends and
the rules and regulations of Freemasonry. They are called variously: Ancient
Manuscripts, Ancient Constitutions, Legend of the Craft, Gothic
Manuscripts, Old Records. In their physical makeup these documents
are sometimes found in the form of handwritten paper or parchment rolls, the
units of which are either sewn or pasted together; of hand-written sheets
stitched together in book form, and in the familiar printed form of a modern
book. Sometimes they are found incorporated in the minute book of a lodge.
They range in estimated date from 1390 until the first quarter of the
eighteenth century, and a few of them are specimens of Gothic script. The
largest number of them are in the keeping of the British Museum; the Masonic
library of West Yorkshire, England, has in custody the second largest number.
As already said, these Old Charges (such is their most familiar appellation)
form the basis of modern Masonic Constitutions, and therefore jurisprudence.
They establish the continuity of the Masonic Institution through a period of
more than five centuries, and by fair implication much longer; and at the same
time, and by token of the same significance, prove the great antiquity of
Masonry by written documents, which is a thing no other Craft in existence is
able to do. These manuscripts are traditional and legendary in form and are
therefore not to be read as histories are, nevertheless a careful and critical
study of them based on internal evidence sheds more light on the earliest
times of Freemasonry than any other one source whatever. It is believed that
the Old Charges were used in making a Mason in the old Operative days; that
they served as constitutions of lodges in many cases, and sometimes functioned
as what we today call a warrant.
The systematic study of these manuscripts began in the middle of the past
century, at which time only a few were known to be in existence. In 1872
William James Hughan listed 32. Owing largely to his efforts many others were
discovered, so that in 1889 Gould was able to list 62, and Hughan himself in
1895 tabulated 66 manuscript copies, 9 printed versions and 11 missing
versions. This number has been so much increased of late years that in Ars
Quatuor Coronatorum, Volume XXXI, 1918, Bro. Roderick H. Baxter listed 98,
which number included the versions known to be missing. Bro. Baxter's list is
peculiarly valuable in that he gives data as to when and where these
manuscripts have been reproduced.
For the sake of being better able to compare one copy with another, Dr. W.
Begemann classified all the versions into four general families: the Grand
Lodge Family, the Sloane Family, the Roberts Family and the Spencer
Family. These family groups he divided further into branches, and
he believed that the Spencer Family was an offshoot of the Grand
Lodge Family, and the Roberts Family an offshoot of the Sloane
Family. In this general manner of grouping, Begemann was followed by
Hughan, Gould and their colleagues, and his classification still holds in
general; attempts have been made in recent years to upset it, but without much
success. One of the best charts, based on Begemann, is that made by Bro.
Lionel Vibert.
The first known printed reference to these Old Charges was made by Dr. Robert
Plot in his Natural History of Staffordshire, 1868. Dr. A.F.A. Woodford
and William James Hughan were the first to undertake a scientific study.
Hughan's Old Charges is to this day the standard work in English. Gould's
chapter in his History of Masonry would probably be ranked second in
value, whereas the voluminous writings of Dr. Begemann, contributed by him to Zirkelcorrespondez,
official organ of the National Grand Lodge of Germany, would, if only they
were translated into English, give us the most exhaustive treatment of the
subject ever yet written.
The Old Charges are peculiarly English. No such documents have ever been found
in Ireland. Scotch manuscripts are known to be of English origin. It was once
held by Findel and other German writers that the English versions ultimately
derived from German sources, but this has been disproved. The only known point
of similarity between the Old Charges and such German documents as the Torgau
Ordinances and the Cologne Constitutions is the Legend of the
Four Crowned Martyrs, and this legend is found among English versions only
in the Regius Manuscript. As Gould well says, the British MSS. have
neither predecessors nor rivals; they are the richest and rarest things in the
whole field of Masonic writings.
When the Old Charges are placed side by side it is immediately seen that in
their account of the traditional history of the Craft they vary in a great
many particulars, nevertheless they appear to have derived from some common
origin, and in the main they tell the same tale, which is as interesting as a
fairy story out of Grimm. Did the original of this traditional account come
from some individual or was it born out of a floating tradition, like the folk
tales of ancient people? Authorities differ much on this point. Begemann not
only declared that the first version of the story originated with an
individual, but even set out what he deemed to be the literary sources used by
that Great Unknown. The doctor's arguments are powerful. On the other
hand, others contend that the story began as a general vague oral tradition,
and that this was in the course of time reduced to writing. In either event,
why was the story ever written? In all probability an answer to that question
will never be forth-coming, but W. Harry Rylands and others have been of the
opinion that the first written versions were made in response to a general Writ
for Return issued in 1388. Rylands' words may be quoted: It appears to
me not at all improbable that much, if not all, of the legendary history was
composed in answer to the Writ for Returns issued to the guilds all over the
country, in the twelfth year of Richard the Second, A.D. 1388.1
The two Oldest Manuscripts
In 1757 King George II presented to the British Museum a collection of some
12,000 volumes, the nucleus of which had been laid by King Henry VII and which
came to be known as the Royal Library. Among these books was a rarely
beautiful manuscript written by hand on 64 pages of vellum, about four by five
inches in size, which a cataloger, David Casley, entered as No. 17 A-1 under
the title, A Poem of Moral Duties: here entitled Constitutiones Artis
Gemetrie Secundem. It was not until Mr. J.O. Halliwell, F.R.S. (afterwards
Halliwell-Phillipps), a non-Mason, chanced to make the discovery that the
manuscript was known to be a Masonic document. Mr. Phillipps read a paper on
the manuscript before the Society of Antiquaries in 1839, and in the following
year published a volume entitled Early History of Freemasonry in England
(enlarged and revised in 1844), in which he incorporated a transcript of the
document along with a few pages in facsimile. This important work will be
found incorporated in the familiar Universal Masonic Library, the rusty
sheepskin bindings of which strike the eyes on almost every Masonic book
shelf. This manuscript was known as the Halliwell, or as the
Halliwell-Phillipps until some fifty years afterwards Gould rechristened it,
in honor of the Royal Library in which it is found, the Regius, and since then
this has become the more familiar cognomen.
David Casley, a learned specialist in old manuscripts, dated the Regiusas of the fourteenth century. E.A. Bond, another expert, dated it as of
the middle of the fifteenth century. Dr. Kloss, the German specialist, placed
it between 1427 and 1445. But the majority have agreed on 1390 as the most
probable date. It is impossible to arrive at absolute certainty on this point,
says Hughan, whose Old Charges should be consulted, save that it is not likely
to be older than 1390, but may be some twenty years or so later. Dr.W.
Begemann made a study of the document that has never been equalled for
thoroughness, and arrived at a conclusion that may be given in his own words: it
was written towards the end of the 14th or at least quite at the beginning of
the 15th century (not in Gloucester itself, as being too southerly, but) in
the north of Gloucestershire or in the neighboring north of Herefordshire, or
even possibly in the south of Worcestershire. 2
In 1889 an exact facsimile of this famous manuscript was
published in Volume I of the Antigrapha produced by the Quatuor Coronati Lodge
of Research, and was edited by the then secretary of that lodge, George
William Speth, himself a brilliant authority, who supplied a glossary that is
indispensable to the amateur student. Along with it was published a commentary
by R.F. Gould, one of the greatest of all his Masonic papers, though it is
exasperating in its rambling arrangement and general lack of conclusiveness.
The Regius Manuscript is the only one of all the versions to be written
in meter, and may have been composed by a priest, if one may judge by certain
internal evidences, though the point is disputed. There are some 800 lines in
the poem, the strictly Masonic portion coming to an end at line 576, after
which begins what Hughan calls a sermonette on moral duties, in which
there is quite a Roman Catholic vein with references to the sins seven, the
sweet lady (referring to the Virgin) and to holy water. There is no such
specific Mariolatry in any other version of the Old Charges, though the great
majority of them express loyalty to Holy Church and all of them, until
Anderson's familiar version, are specifically Christian, so far as religion is
concerned.
The author furnishes a list of fifteen points and fifteen articles, all of
which are quite specific instructions concerning the behavior of a Craftsman:
this portion is believed by many to have been the charges to an initiate as
used in the author's period, and is therefore deemed the most important
feature of the book as furnishing us a picture of the regulations of the Craft
at that remote date. The Craft is described as having come into existence as
an organized fraternity in King Adelstoune's day, but in this the author
contradicts himself, because he refers to things written in old books
(modern spelling) and takes for granted a certain antiquity for the Masonry,
which, as in all the Old Charges, is made synonymous with Geometry, a thing
very different in those days from the abstract science over which we labored
during our school days.
The Regius Poem is evidently a book about Masonry, rather than a
document of Masonry, and may very well have been written by a non-Mason,
though there is no way in which we can verify such theories, especially seeing
that we know nothing about the document save what it has to tell us about
itself, which is little.
In his Commentary on the Regius MS, R.F. Gould produced a paragraph
that has ever since served as the pivot of a great debate. It reads as follows
and refers to the sermonette portion which deals with moral duties: These
rules of decorum read very curiously in the present age, but their
inapplicability to the circumstances of the working Masons of the fourteen or
fifteenth century will be at once apparent. They were intended for the
gentlemen of those days, and the instruction for behavior in the presence of a
lord - at table and in the society of ladies - would have all been equally out
of place in a code of manners drawn up for the use of a Guild or Craft of
Artisans.
The point of this is that there must have been present among the Craftsmen of
that time a number of men not engaged at all in labour, and therefore were, as
we would now describe them, Speculatives. This would be of immense
importance if Gould had made good his point, but that he was not able to do.
The greatest minds of the period in question were devoted to architecture, and
there is no reason not to believe that among the Craftsmen were members of
good families. Also the Craft was in contact with the clergy all the while,
and therefore many of its members may well have stood in need of rules for
preserving proper decorum in great houses and among the members of the upper
classes. From Woodford until the present time the great majority of Masonic
scholars have believed the Old Charges to have been used by a strictly
operative craft and it is evident that they will continue to do so until more
conclusive evidence to the contrary is forthcoming than Gould's surmise.
Next to the Regius the oldest manuscript is that known as the Cooke.
It was published by R. Spencer, London, 1861 and was edited by Mr. Matthew
Cooke, hence his name. In the British Museum's catalogue it is listed as
Additional M.S. 23,198, and has been dated by Hughan at 1450 or thereabouts,
an estimate in which most of the specialists have concurred. Dr. Begemann
believed the document to have been compiled and written in the southeastern
portion of the western Midlands, say, in Gloucestershire or Oxfordshire,
possibly also in southeast Worcestershire or southwest Warwickshire. The Book
of Charges which forms the second part of the document is certainly of the
14th century, the historical or first part, of quite the beginning of the
15th. 3
The Cooke MS. was most certainly in the hands of Mr.
George Payne, when in his second term as Grand Master in 1720 he compiled the
General Regulations, and which Anderson included in his own version of the
Constitutions published in 1723. Anderson himself evidently made use of lines
901-960 of the MS.
The Lodge Quatuor Coronati reprinted the Cooke in facsimile in Vol. II of its
Antigrapha in 1890, and included therewith a Commentary by George William
Speth which is, in my own amateur opinion, an even more brilliant piece of
work than Gould's Commentary on the Regius. Some of Speth's conclusions
are of permanent value. The M.S. is a transcript of a yet older document and
was written by a Mason. There were several versions of the Charges to a Mason
in circulation at the time. The MS. is in two parts, the former of which is an
attempt at a history of the Craft, the latter of which is a version of the
Charges. Of this portion Speth writes that it is far and away the earliest,
best and purest version of the Old Charges which we possess. The MS. mentions
nine articles, and these evidently were legal enforcements at the time; the
nine points given were probably not legally binding but were morally so.
Congregations of Masons were held here and there but no General Assembly (or
Grand Lodge); Grand Masters existed in fact but not in name and presided at
one meeting of a congregation only. Many of our present usages may be traced
in their original form to this manuscript.
Anderson's Constitutions and other printed versions
One of the most important of all the versions of the Old Charges is not an
ancient original at all, but a printed edition issued in 1722, and known as
the Roberts, though it is believed to be a copy of an ancient document. Of
this W.J. Hughan writes: The only copy known was purchased by me at Bro.
Spencer's sale of Masonic works, etc. (London, 1875), for 8 pounds 10s., on
behalf of the late Bro. R.F. Bower, and is now in the magnificent library of
the Grand Lodge of Iowa, U.S.A. This tiny volume is easily the most
priceless Masonic literary possession in America, and was published in exact
facsimile by the National Masonic Research Society, with an eloquent
Introduction by Dr. Joseph Fort Newton in 1916. The Reverend Edmund Coxe
edited a famous reprint in 1871. It is a version meriting the most careful
study on the part of the Masonic student because it had a decided influence on
the literature and jurisprudence of the Craft after its initial appearance. It
appeared in one of the most interesting and momentous periods of modern
Speculative Masonry, namely, in the years between the organization of the
first Grand Lodge in 1717 and the appearance of Anderson's Constitution in
1723. It is the earliest printed version of the Old Charges known to exist.
Another well-known printed version is that published in 1724 and known as the Briscoe.
This was the second publication of its kind. The third printed version was
issued in 1728-9 by Benjamin Cole, and known as the Cole Edition in
consequence. This version is considered a literary gem in that the main body
of the text is engraved throughout in most beautiful style. A special edition
of this book was made in Leeds, 1897, the value of which was enhanced by one
of W.J. Hughan's famous introductions. For our own modern and practical
purposes the most important of all the versions ever made was that compiled by
Dr. James Anderson in 1723 and everywhere known familiarly as Anderson's
Constitution. A second edition appeared, much changed and enlarged, in 1738; a
third, by John Entick, in 1756; and so on every few years until by 1888
twenty-two editions in all had been issued. The Rev.A.F.A. Woodford, Hughan's
collaborator, edited an edition of The Constitution Book of 1723 as Volume I
of Kenning's Masonic Archeological Library, under date of 1878. This is a
correct and detailed reproduction of the book exactly as Anderson first
published it, and is valuable accordingly.
Anderson's title page is interesting to read: The CONSTITUTION, History,
Laws, Charges, Orders, Regulations, and Usages, of the Right Worshipful
FRATERNITY of ACCEPTED FREE MASONS; collected from their general RECORDS, and
their faithful TRADITIONS of many Ages. To be read At the Admission of a NEW
Bro., when the Master or Warden shall begin, or order some other Bro. to read
as follows, etc. After the word follows Anderson's own version of
Masonic history begins with this astonishing statement: Adam, our first
Parent, created after the Image of God, the great Architect of the Universe,
must have had the Liberal Sciences, particularly Geometry, written on his
Heart, etc.
Thus did Dr. Anderson launch his now thrice familiar account of the history of
Freemasonry, an account which, save in the hands of the most expert Masonic
antiquarian, yields very little dependable historical fact whatsoever, but
which, owing to the prestige of its author, came to be accepted for
generations as a bona fide history of the Craft. It will be many a long year
yet before the rank and file of brethren shall have learned that Dr.
Anderson's history belongs in the realm of fable for the most part, and has
never been accepted as anything else by knowing ones.
The established facts concerning Dr. Anderson's own private history comprise a
record almost as brief as the short and simple annals of the poor. Bro. J.T.
Thorp, one of the most distinguished of the veterans among living English
Masonic scholars, has given it in an excellent brief form:4Of this distinguished Bro. we know very little. He is believed to have been
born, educated and made a Mason in Scotland, subsequently settling in London
as a Presbyterian Minister. He is mentioned for the first time in the
Proceedings of the Grand Lodge of England on September 29th, 1721, when he was
appointed to revise the old Gothic Constitutions - this revision was approved
by the Grand Lodge of England on September 29th in 1723, in which year
Anderson was Junior Grand Warden under the Duke of Wharton - he published a
second edition of the Book of Constitutions in 1738, and died in 1739. This is
about all that is known of him.
In his 1738 edition Anderson so garbled up his account of the founding of
Grand Lodge, and contradicted his own earlier story in such fashion, that R.F.
Gould was inclined to believe either that he had become disgruntled and full
of spleen, or else that he was in his dotage. Be that as it may, Anderson's
historical pages are to be read with extreme caution. His Constitution itself,
or that part dealing with the principles and regulations of the Craft, is most
certainly a compilation made of extracts of other versions of the Old Charges
pretty much mixed with the Doctor's own ideas in the premises, and so much at
variance with previous customs that the official adoption thereof caused much
dissension among the lodges, and may have had something to do with the
disaffection which at last led to the formation of the Ancient Grand Lodge of
1751 or thereabouts. The Anderson of this latter body, which in time waxed
very powerful, was Laurence Dermott, a brilliant Irishman, who as Grand
Secretary was leader of the Ancient forces for many years, and who wrote for
the body its own Constitution, called Ahiman Rezon, which cryptic title
is believed by some to mean Worthy Bro. Secretary. The first edition of this
important version was made in 1756, a second in 1764, and so on until by 1813
an eighth had been published. A very complete collection of all editions is in
the Masonic Library at Philadelphia. A few of our Grand Lodges, Pennsylvania
among them, continue to call their Book of Constitutions, the Ahiman Rezon.
Anderson himself is still on the rack of criticism. Learned brethren are
checking his statements (see Bro. Vibert), sifting his pages and leaving no
stone unturned in order to appraise correctly his contributions to Masonic
history. But there is not so much disagreement on the Constitution. In that
document, which did not give satisfaction to many upon its appearance,
Anderson, as Bro. Lionel Vibert has well said, builded better than he knew,
because he produced a document which until now serves as the groundwork of
nearly all Grand Lodge Constitutions having jurisdiction over Symbolic
Masonry, and which once and for all established Speculative Freemasonry on a
basis apart, and with no sectarian character, either as to religion or
politics. For all his faults as a historian (and these faults were as much of
his age as of his own shortcomings), Anderson is a great figure in our annals
and deserves at the hand of every student a careful and, reverent study.
Conclusion
I return to my first statement. In the whole circle of Masonic studies there
is not, for us Masons at any rate, any subject of such importance as this of
the Old Charges, especially insofar as they have to do with our own
Constitutions and Regulations, and that is very much indeed. Many false
conceptions of Freemasonry may be directly traced to an unlearned, or wilful
misinterpretation of the Old Charges, what they are, what they mean to us, and
what their authority may be. In this land jurisprudence is a problem of
supreme importance, and in a way not very well comprehended by our brethren in
other parts, who often wonder why we should be so obsessed by it. We have
forty-nine Grand Lodges, each of which is sovereign in its own state, and all
of which must maintain fraternal relations with scores of Grand bodies abroad
as well as with each other. These Grand Lodges assemble each year to legislate
for the Craft, and therefore, in the very nature of things, the organization
and government of the Order is for us, not English Masons, a much more
complicated and important thing than it can be in other lands. To know what
the Old Charges are, and to understand Masonic constitutional law and
practice, is for our leaders and law-givers a prime necessity.
________________
1 A.Q.C. ,XVL. 2 A.Q.C., VII. 3 A.Q.C., IX. 4 A.Q.C., XVIII.
___________________
Source:
The Masonic Review, XIII;
A.Q.C., I, IV, V, VII, VIII, IX, XI, XVI, XVIII, XX, XXI, XXVIII;
A.Q.C., Antigapha, all volumes;
Clegg, Mackey's Revised History;
Edward Conder, Records of the Hole Craft and Fellowship of Masons;
Findel, History of Freemasonry;
Fort, Early History and Antiquities of Freemasonry;
Gould, History of Freemasonry, I;
Gould, Concise History;
Gould, Collected Essays;
Hughan, Cole's Constitutions;
Hughan, Old Charges;
Hughan, Ancient Masonic Rolls:
Pierson, Traditions, Origin and Early History of Freemasonry;
Stillson, History of Freemasonry and Concordant Orders;
Vibert, Story of the Craft;
Vibert, Freemasonry Before the Era of Grand Lodge;
Waite, New Encyclopedia of Freemasonry;
Ward, Freemasonry and the Ancient Gods:
the records of the Vialardi di Sandigliano Foundation Museum and Center for
History and Humanities