Item #77552 Apologie pour L'Ordre des Francs-Macons. Johann Lorenz NATTER.

Apologie pour L'Ordre des Francs-Macons.

Item #77552

(FRANKLIN, BENJAMIN). [NATTER, Johann Lorenz]. Apologie pour L'Ordre des Francs-Macons. Par Mr. N*** Membre de l'Ordre. Avec deux chansons composees par Le Frere Americain. The Hague: Chez Pierre Gosse & Dresden: Chez George Conrad Walther, 1742. 1st ed. [14],118,[2]pp. plus engraved frontispiece and two plates of engraved music. Antique-style 3/4 calf and marbled boards, spine gilt, leather label. Near fine. First edition of one of the earliest apologies for the Order of Freemasons, containing two American Masonic songs by Benjamin Franklin. This is one of the key 18th-century texts delineating the exclusivity of the Masonic Order to Christians: "The Order admits only Christians. Out of the Christian Church one can not and should not be received as a Freemason. That is why the Jews, Mohammedans, and Pagans are excluded as infidels" (translated from the French). The two songs by Franklin are also of considerable note. The likely author of the main text is Johann Lorenz Natter (1705-63), the German goldsmith, gem-cutter, and lapidary who was accepted to the Florence Masonic Lodge as a disciple of the antiquarian Baron Philipp von Stosch, the founder of the lodge, in 1733. Natter was the most celebrated and talented engraver of his time, and so much so that his talent was even eulogized by Goethe. Natter's book about gem-engraving was published in London in 1754, in both English and French. Natter's contribution in spreading Masonic knowledge is well-known and important: "...on his travels [he] left copies of the various manuscripts at the court of William IV in The Hague, in London, Copenhagen and Stockholm. In St. Petersburg Natter joined some Roiscrucians, and the documents he had brought became their basic study material. Later, in 1763 this same knowledge was imparted to Johann August Starck, when he went to St. Petersburg as a teacher of Oriental languages. He contacted the Freemasons there, who had incorporated much of Natter's legacy. Starck, in turn, shared his special 'secret knowledge,' once he had returned to Germany, with the existing Masonic Order of the Strict Observance with which he associated himself. Since this Order had many affiliations, not least in France, the Florentine scriptures thus provided some of the most seminal sources in the hermetic-rosicrucian tradition of that day" (I.

Price: $7,500.00

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