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The First Grand Master is Found
Old 01-27-2008, 07:32 PM   #1
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The First Grand Master is Found

PRINCE EDWIN OF YORK IS FOUND


The Grand Lodge of all England at York formally announces that it has traced the final resting place of King Athelstan's brother, Prince Edwin of York, the first Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of All England at York (AD926).

For generations, Masonic "historians" have attempted to deny the very existence of King Athelstan's brother, Prince Edwin of York. This calumny has now been thoroughly exposed and he cannot any longer be denied his rightful place in Anglo-Saxon, and English Masonic history.

Prince Edwin of York is chronicled in Bede's Ecclesiastical History of the English People where it is recorded that he ordered the construction of a church on the former Roman fortress site of Eboracum (York).

He is also chronicled immediately after the entry for "Exemptus" King Athelstan in the Rosicrucian Chronology for the year AD925.

In one of Symeon of Durham's Northumbrian Annals dated AD933, which he used as material for his Historia regum Anglorum et Dacorum, he states that: "King Ethelstan ordered his brother Edwin to be drowned in the sea".

William of Malmesbury expressed grave doubt about this story "on account of the extraordinary affection he [Athelstan] manifested towards the rest of his brothers".

Records of the Abbey of St Bertin in Flandres, a few miles from Ushant, make note of King Athelstan's expressions of gratitude for their burial of Edwin, who had drowned in a storm escaping from England during a period of turmoil (AD933).

In the contemporary Cartulaire de l'abbaye de S. Bertin it records the favour Athelstan heaped on the monastery "because the king's brother, King [sic] Edwin, had been buried in the monastery of St. Bertin."

The cartulary version dates the incident to 932 and describes how, "the same King [sic] Edwin, when, because of some perturbation in his kingdom, got into a ship and tried to reach this part by sea, but the ship foundered in the storms and he was lost in the waves. When his body was brought to the shore Count Adalolf received it with honour because he was a close kinsman and brought it to St. Bertin for burial."

The William of Malmesbury version in his Gesta regum suggests ingenuity and perseverance in an armour-bearer who found and fished out his master's body and "swam a ship to land".

This incident is confirmed by the entry in the Anglo-Saxon chronicles for the year 933: "This year died Bishop Frithestan; and Edwin the atheling was drowned in the sea".

Milton Abbey in Blandford Forum, Dorset, England was founded by King Athelstan to commemorate the death at sea of his brother Edwin.

Let us hear no more falsehood on this issue: Prince Edwin of York, the first Grand Master of The Grand Lodge of All England at York lived his life, died at sea in AD933, and his mortal remains are buried in the Benedictine Monastery of l'Abbeye Saint Bertin in Flandres.

A delegation from The Grand Lodge at York will soon make pilgrimage to l'Abbeye Saint Bertin.

YORK
January 2008


---Submitted News

Last edited by D. W. Brown : 01-28-2008 at 09:00 PM.
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The first grand master is found
Old 02-22-2008, 02:48 PM   #2
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The first grand master is found

Send this story to MQ offical magazine of the united grand lodge of England from,michael hanley W.M. Wigan lodge 2326
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