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A legősibb titkos társaság

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A szabadkőművesek világtörténete

A ​szabadkőművességet sok mindennel megvádolták már. Egyesek szerint titkos sátáni szertartásokat űznek, mások szerint összeesküvést szőttek a világuralom megszerzésére. A rend tagjai -köztük Isaac Newton, John Wayne, Bill Gates, az Egyesült Államok sok népszerű művésze és 25 amerikai elnök- azonban azt állítják, csupán a testvériség, a szolgálat és a jótékonyság kötelékei tartják össze őket. A szabadkőművesség a legnagyobb és legrégebbi testvériség, napjaink sok sikerkönyvében (például a Da Vinci-kódban) játszik szerepet – ennek ellenére még ma is teljesen félreismerik.
Könyvében H. Paul Jeffers bemutatja a kőművesség történetét, és rávilágít a meglepő, gyakran ellentmondásos tényekre, melyek ezen ősi, titkos társaságot jellemzik. A szerző időutazása a középkori Európából indul, alig ismert kezdetektől, majd bemutatja a szervezet felemelkedését az USA-ban, ahol Benjamin Franklin alapította az első páholyt. Ma a világon 4-5 millió szabadkőműves él, akik esküt tettek, hogy életük vezérelvei az erkölcsiség, a jótékonyság és a lojalitás lesznek – lojalitás kőművestársaikkal és a renddel szemben.

263 pages, Hardcover

First published March 1, 2005

12 people are currently reading
310 people want to read

About the author

H. Paul Jeffers

88 books19 followers
H. Paul Jeffers was an established military historian and author of seventy books. He worked as an editor and producer at ABC, CBS and NBC, and is the only person to have been news director of both of New York City's all-news radio stations. He taught journalism at New York University, Syracuse University, and Boston University.

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5 stars
30 (15%)
4 stars
55 (27%)
3 stars
79 (39%)
2 stars
27 (13%)
1 star
9 (4%)
Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews
Profile Image for M.F. Soriano.
Author 13 books7 followers
June 11, 2010
A decent, but not inspired, survey of Masons. The author is a workhorse, having published more than 60 books on a panoply of (mostly non-masonic) subjects. I've never read any other book by him, nor heard of him prior to reading this book, but I get the feeling his strength lies more in his research and productivity, and less in his clarity or eloquence. This book gave me a good, basic understanding of The Craft and its rituals, and it maintained an objective approach, which I am grateful for (since so many other books on Masonry follow sensational conspiracy tack), but it muddled certain areas badly. Masonic history, and history in general, don't come through clearly in Jeffers words. He tends to jumble multiple figures together in single sentences without clear connection between them, and he's also guilty of tacking non-sequitur clauses on to the end of otherwise logical sentences. Plus he'll digress into a completely different subject for several sentences in the middle of a paragraph that purports to be about something else.

Still, if you want to learn about Masons, there are worse places to start.
11 reviews
January 7, 2025
Absolutely wonderful book! After the first chapter or two I could not put this book down! Great insight to many aspects of Masonic history and members without being overwhelming or boring. Wonderful explanations of the rituals used and explanations of certain symbols or figures used within the lodge. Would happily ready this again in the future!
2 reviews
March 25, 2022
Rated 4 stars because it has encouraged me to seek out and become a Mason. I am new to learning this stuff and it seems comprehensive on one hand, it seems like a LOT to be condensed into such a small book. I will seek out further reading as recommended in the book.
Profile Image for Kingdomofkush718.
61 reviews
February 27, 2019
A master level understand on the history of the creed from Hiram to the kabbalistic Jews and illuminati.Excellent read!
11 reviews
October 1, 2007
This is a great book if you want to know the basics surrounding Freemasonry. The book reads more like a textbook than anything else, but the history is very detailed. You will learn just how involved Freemasons have been and continue to be in shaping our nation.
Profile Image for Chuck.
11 reviews1 follower
January 13, 2012
The book is worthy enough to scan through, since it has good tidbits of knowledge. But it sorely needed a good editor to improve its readability. There are huge leaps of topic, confusing sentences, redundancies and errors.
Profile Image for Raine Mclellan.
5 reviews1 follower
April 19, 2012
I appreciate the way Jeffers does not go too deeply into the "behind the scenes" of masonry. This book is better for an overview of Masonic history in a short and readable series of chapters with a good flow.
Profile Image for Gillian Saltz.
6 reviews2 followers
February 22, 2012
His writing is so all over the place it was hard to concentrate on the topic at hand. His use of quotes was almost lazy.
Profile Image for Stacy Curro.
66 reviews
June 2, 2012
I love finding out more about secret societies. This book is well written researched and presented.
Profile Image for Tom J.
256 reviews5 followers
December 1, 2020
a lot better than i expected, and significantly less conspiracy stuff. a solid if unimaginative history of an interesting topic
Profile Image for Cade.
277 reviews
September 5, 2009
A interesting look into an interestingly mysterious organization.
1 review
Currently reading
May 20, 2016
good
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Robert Monk.
136 reviews4 followers
April 5, 2017
Got this cheap, mostly because I was a little curious about the Masons. They've been accused of all sorts of sinister deeds, but I've always assumed they were just boring white men who liked to play a little dress-up while they got drunk. Might this book shine a little light on them?

A little. What you essentially get here is a fair amount of trivial information, and almost no analysis. For example, the author tells us the Masons' own version of their history, but doesn't expound on what might really have led to their modern foundation in 1717. He talks about how a bunch of eighteenth century revolutionaries in America and France were Masons, but doesn't say if there was any connection, even if that connection was just the fact that prominent people tended to join the Masons at that point. Which then begs the unanswered question of why prominent men so often joined the Masons.

The author doesn't succumb to Mason paranoia, which is probably good, but he also seems clueless about what makes Freemasonry fun. Why is it that people have been meeting in windowless rooms, learning funny handshakes, and whapping each other with outdated tools for over 250 years? You won't find an answer here.
Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews

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