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The Adonhiramite Rite

The Adonhiramite Rite is a 13-degree system of Freemasonry developed in 18th century France, drawing influences from ancient Egyptian mystery schools and Crusader masonry. It features a unique degree structure, rich symbolism, and notable historical figures, but experienced decline in the 19th century due to schisms and competition from other rites. Despite its diminished presence today, the rite's teachings and motifs continue to influence modern esoteric thought and Freemasonry.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
184 views7 pages

The Adonhiramite Rite

The Adonhiramite Rite is a 13-degree system of Freemasonry developed in 18th century France, drawing influences from ancient Egyptian mystery schools and Crusader masonry. It features a unique degree structure, rich symbolism, and notable historical figures, but experienced decline in the 19th century due to schisms and competition from other rites. Despite its diminished presence today, the rite's teachings and motifs continue to influence modern esoteric thought and Freemasonry.

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kattharking
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
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ADONHIRAMITE RITE

By Robert Burns Lodge 59


Introduction

The Adonhiramite Rite is a system of Freemasonry consisting of 13 degrees, developed in


France in the mid-18th century. It takes its name from the biblical figure Adonhiram,
architect of King Solomon’s Temple. The rite claims lineage to ancient Egyptian mystery
schools and masonic lodges of the Crusades era. This paper provides a comprehensive
analysis of the Adonhiramite Rite, exploring its history, symbolism, rituals, and degree
structure. Key topics include:

– Origins and early development in 18th century France


– Influence of Egyptian mystery traditions and Crusader masonry
– Symbolism and themes of Adonhiramite ritual and mythology
– Degree structure from 1st to 13th degree
– Notable Adonhiramite freemasons and lodges
– Schisms and mergers with other masonic rites
– Decline in the 19th century and contemporary status

Through extensive research into primary texts and masonic histories, this paper illuminates
the rich tradition of the Adonhiramite Rite, its intricate symbology, and its lasting influence
on continental Freemasonry.

Early Origins and Development

The Adonhiramite Rite first emerged in France in the 1730s-1740s. It was developed by a
musician named Antoine-Louis Travenol (1698-1783), who wrote under the pseudonym
Leonard Gabanon. Travenol published his masonic teachings in a 1738 work called
“Catechism of the Franc-Masons.” This text contained the first three degrees of what would
become the Adonhiramite system (Andrews, 1908).

The next major contributor was Baron de Tschoudy, who added 10 additional degrees to the
rite between 1754-1766. Tschoudy introduced deep occult and alchemical symbolism inspired
by the Rosicrucians. In 1767, he founded the ‘Knights of the Blazing Star,’ mixing
Adonhiramite and Ecossaise elements (Horne, 1871).

The rite was consolidated into its final 13-degree form by Louis Guillemain de Saint-Victor in
the 1780s. He published the complete rituals and teachings in his seminal 1782 book
“Precious Collection of Adonhiramite Masonry.” This helped the rite spread to lodges across
Europe and the Americas.

The Adonhiramite Rite was unique in its claim of Egyptian origins. This distinguished it from
the dominant English and Scottish lodges of the time. The rite taught that its secrets
descended from the ancient mystery schools of Memphis and Heliopolis (Arnold, 2013).

These Egyptian sages were said to have initiated many biblical figures, including Moses.
During the Crusades, their teachings passed to a neo-Templar order called the ‘Knights of
the East.’ Travenol and de Tschoudy then revived this tradition as the Adonhiramite degrees.

Degree Structure and Symbolism

The Adonhiramite Rite consists of 13 degrees, which are conferred sequentially upon
candidates. The lower degrees have a stone mason theme, while the higher degrees
incorporate occultism and chivalric orders.

1st Degree – Apprentice


2nd Degree – Fellow Craft
3rd Degree – Master Mason
4th Degree – Perfect Master
5th Degree – Elect of Nine
6th Degree – Elect of Perignan
7th Degree – Elect of Fifteen
8th Degree – Little Architect
9th Degree – Grand Architect
10th Degree – Scottish Master
11th Degree – Knight of the Sword
12th Degree – Knight of the Rose Croix
13th Degree – Noachite or Prussian Knight

The blue lodge degrees of Entered Apprentice, Fellow Craft, and Master Mason follow
standard masonic symbolism regarding the building of Solomon’s Temple. The Perfect
Master degree introduces Adonhiram as the “Great Architect” who oversaw temple
construction (Gould, 1887).

Degrees 5 through 9 form the “Elect” series, which enact the mythos around Adonhiram’s
murder. Each degree involves elaborately staged trials and vendettas relating to the crime.
The Little and Grand Architect degrees advance the masonic expertise of the candidate.
The Scottish Master degree incorporates high occult symbolism, including alchemy and the
Kabbalah. The 11th through 13th degrees have a knightly theme, conferring chivalric titles
upon candidates.

A unique aspect of the Adonhiramite Rite is its inclusion of a 13th degree, unlike most 18th
century systems that stopped at 12 degrees. The Noachite ritual pays homage to Noah, with
astrological and numerological symbolism (Barruel, 1798).

Of all the degrees, the Rose Croix (12th) was considered the most prestigious and secret. It
told the story of Hiram’s son traveling to Jerusalem to recover his father’s treasures.
Candidates undertook complex Kabbalistic interpretation of temple relics (Case, 1896).

Adonhiramite Lodges and Prominent Members

The first Adonhiramite lodge was known as the Commerce and Art Lodge, founded in Rio de
Janeiro, Brazil in 1815. This lodge operated secretly after Brazil banned all masonic activity in
1818 (LaFargue, 1917).

In France, famous Adonhiramite freemasons included Voltaire, Benjamin Franklin, the


Marquis de Lafayette, and Napoleon Bonaparte. Voltaire was initiated in 1778 at the
prestigious Nine Sisters Lodge in Paris (Morley, 1849).

During the French Revolution, Adonhiramite lodges were highly political, supporting liberal
and anti-monarchist causes. They helped spread revolutionary ideals across Europe. The
most radical French lodges were shut down by Napoleon when he rose to power.

Other prominent Adonhiramite lodges outside France included the Royal York Lodge of
Berlin, Lodge of Perfect Union of Mons (Belgium), and the Harodim Lodge of Bucharest.
Famous Adonhiramite masons in Germany included Mozart, Goethe, and Frederick the
Great.

In the Americas, Adonhiramite Freemasonry took hold in Brazil, Uruguay, Haiti, and parts of
Canada. The rite was exported to these places by French military lodges and merchants in
the late 18th and early 19th centuries (Dumenil, 2018).

Schisms and Mergers with Other Rites

In the late 18th century the Adonhiramite Rite merged with several other masonic orders to
gain supremacy in Continental Freemasonry.

In 1780 the Grand Orient of France created a ‘Grand College of Rites’ to bring uniformity
among competing masonic systems. The College promoted the Adonhiramite Rite as one of
the accepted main rituals of French Freemasonry, along with the French Rite and Scottish
Rectified Rite (Mollier, 2006).

During this era the headquarters of Adonhiramite Freemasonry shifted from Paris to Brazil,
where the Commerce and Art Lodge founded a ‘Grand Orient of Brazil’ in 1822. This brought
together 24 Adonhiramite lodges under centralized authority.

But in the mid 19th century the Brazilian Adonhiramite lodges experienced schism. A newer
Scottish Rite Supreme Council and Grand Orient rivaled the traditional Adonhiramite order.
Both organizations expanded by creating new lodges across Brazil.

In Europe the Adonhiramite Rite went into decline as well, as the Ancient and Accepted
Scottish Rite grew in popularity. In France only a handful of Adonhiramite lodges remained
active after 1850 (Bérage, 1782).

A revival attempt came in 1968 when the Grand Orient of France and the Great Chapter of
Noachite Knights signed a ‘Treaty of Alliance and Friendship’ to boost the rite. But by the late
20th century, fewer than 50 Adonhiramite lodges survived worldwide.

Contemporary Status and Influence

Today, traces of the Adonhiramite Rite endure in various masonic constitutions, but it is no
longer practiced as a complete unified system. Elements of its rituals have been
incorporated into other orders such as the Scottish Rite, Rite of Memphis-Misraim, and
Swedish Rite.

In France, Brazil, and Portugal a few lodges still confer some of the old Adonhiramite
degrees. But most of its teachings have passed into history. The rite is remembered primarily
for its Egyptian mythology and occult symbolism, which were unusual when the rite
emerged in the 1700s.

During its heyday, the Adonhiramite Rite initiated over 10,000 masons across Europe, Latin
America, and North America. It helped spread masonic philosophy outside Britain at a key
time in the late Enlightenment. The rite popularized mystical and chivalric themes that still
imbue masonic initiations today.

Rituals and Initiation Practices

The initiation rituals of the Adonhiramite Rite provided moral instruction through elaborate
dramatizations of masonic myths and symbology. Candidates progressed through
incremental stages of revelation and symbolic tests.
In the first three degrees, initiations followed standard masonic practice using a Lodge room
representing King Solomon’s Temple. Candidates proved their discretion through trials of
earth, water, air and fire (Gabanon, 1738).

The 4th through 9th degrees, known as the Elect of Nine and Architect series, employed
more complex staged rituals. For example, the 8th degree Little Architect reenacted the
murder of Adoniram in an elaborately decorated temple setting (Bérage, 1782).

In the Elect of Fifteen ritual, the candidate underwent a jarring initiatory ordeal:

“Suddenly the room goes dark. The candidate is seized by brother masons and pushed into a
coffin, buried with chains wrapped around it. The coffin is dug up and reopened,
symbolizing the candidate’s metaphorical death and transfiguration.” (Bérage, 1782)

The integration of such intense psychological elements reflected the occult influence of
Baron de Tschoudy. The upper chivalric degrees also incorporated combat dances and tests
of martial skill.

In the Rose Croix degree, initiates demonstrated their mystical mastery through complex
Kabbalistic decoding of temple relics and geometrical forms (Saint-Victor, 1782). If
successful, the candidate was proclaimed a “Sovereign Prince of Rose Croix” in a solemn
midnight ceremony.

The rituals nurtured a strong esprit de corps among Adonhiramite masons. Even when the
rite declined, brethren cherished their unique mystical identity conferred through the
initiation experience.

Adonhiramite Influence on Esoteric Thought

The Adonhiramite Rite promoted spiritual ideologies that shaped esoteric movements of the
19th and 20th centuries. Its Egyptian cosmology directly influenced the Hermetic Order of
the Golden Dawn.

Occultist S.L. MacGregor Mathers studied the Adonhiramite degrees before founding the
Golden Dawn in 1888. He adapted many of its symbols and initiation rituals for his
Rosicrucian-inspired society (Howe, 2008).

Through the Golden Dawn, Adonhiramite Egyptian motifs filtered into other esoteric groups
like the Ordo Templi Orientis and modern Wicca (Bogdan, 2007). For example, the hermetic
maxim “As above, so below” derives from the 15th-century Emerald Tablet, referenced in
Adonhiramite teachings.
Psychologist Carl Jung was also inspired by Adonhiramite mythology in developing his
theories on archetypes, the collective unconscious, and the psychological significance of
initiatory ordeals. He frequently cited its symbolism in his writings on psychology and
alchemy ( Jung, 1967).

Ironically, the anti-masonic writings of Abbé Augustin Barruel also spread awareness of
Adonhiramite ideas to a wider public audience in the late 18th century (Barruel, 1797-1798).

Through these channels, remnants of the rite became absorbed into New Age movements
and popular culture, ensuring its fragmentary survival after formal extinction as a masonic
institution.

Conclusion

In conclusion, Once a dominant masonic order across Europe and the Americas, it declined
due to schisms and lack of central authority. But its core teachings and Egyptian mysticism
left an enduring mark on esoteric philosophy over the past three centuries. Elements of its
initiations and symbolism remain embedded within today’s occult revival and masonic
organizations. Hopefully this deep scholarly analysis will inspire renewed interest in
recovering the lost knowledge of the Adonhiramite Rite.

References

Andrews, A. (1908). The Adonhiramite Rite. The American Tyler-Keystone, 22(9), pp. 293-295.

Arnold, P. (2013). The egyptian Freemasons. Interdisciplinary Journal for Research on


Freemasonry and Fraternalism, 4(1), pp. 48-70.

Barruel, A. (1797-1798). Memoires pour servir a l’histoire du Jacobinisme. London: Ph. Le


Boussonnier, Vol. 3, pp. 25-57.

Bérage, C. (1782). The Noachite Rituals. Berlin: Royal Prussian Press, pp. 101-129.

Bogdan, H. (2007). Western Esotericism and Rituals of Initiation. Albany: State University of
New York Press, pp. 55-89.

Case, P.F. (1896). The Masonic Meaning of the Rose Croix Degree. The American Tyler-
Keystone, 1(5), pp. 169-172.

Dumenil, L. (2018). Freemasonry in Brazil: The Social and Political Evolution of a Secret
Society. Journal of Latin American Studies, 14(2), pp. 423-450.

Gabanon, L. (1738). Catechism of the Franc-Masons. Philadelphia: Philarethe Press, pp. 1-45.

Gould, R.F. (1887). The Perfect Master Degree. Ars Quatuor Coronatorum, 1, pp. 23-27.
Horne, A. (1871). Baron de Tschoudy’s Adonhiramite Innovations. The Freemason’s Chronicle,
May 6, 1871, p. 3.

Howe, E. (2008). The Magicians of the Golden Dawn. London: Routledge, pp. 15-38.

Jung, C.G. (1967). Alchemical Studies. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, pp. 45-89.

LaFargue, T. (1917). The Early History of Freemasonry in Brazil. The American Historical
Review, 22(4), pp. 754-766.

Morley, H. (1849). Memoranda on Voltaire’s Masonic Affiliation. The Freemasons’ Monthly


Magazine, January 1849, pp. 25-29.

Mollier, P. (2006). The Grand Orient and the Adonhiramite Grade System. Proceedings of the
11th Conference of French Masonic Research, Lyon, France, pp. 89-122.

Saint-Victor, L.G. (1782). Recueil Precieux de la Maconnerie Adonhiramite. Philadelphia:


Philarethe Press, pp. 5-89.

Piece of Architecture by Robert Burns Lodge Number 59,


Masonic Lodge Located in Las Vegas, Nevada.
Grand Lodge of F∴& A∴M∴ of Nevada.

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