Appearance of the blazing star of Masonry (Mackey, An encyclopaedia of freemasonry and its kindred sciences, 1874)

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Quote:

   Blazing Star. The Blazing Star [...] is one of the most important symbols of Freemasonry, and makes its appearance in several of the degrees. [...]

   In the earliest rituals, immediately after the revival of 1717, the Blazing Star is not mentioned, but it was not long before it was introduced. In the ritual of 1735 it is detailed as a part of the furniture of a Lodge, with the explanation that the "Mosaic Pavement is the Ground Floor of the Lodge, the Blazing Star the Centre, and the Indented Tarsel the Border round about it!" In a primitive Tracing Board of the Entered Apprentice, copied by Oliver, in his Historical Landmarks, (i. 133,) without other date than that it was "published early in the last century," the Blazing Star occupies a prominent position in the centre of the Tracing Board. [...]

Mackey, Albert Gallatin, An encyclopaedia of freemasonry and its kindred sciences: comprising the whole range of arts, sciences and literature as connected with the institution, Philadelphia: Moss & Company, 1874, p. 116.

Online Source: archive.org/details/encyclopaediaoff00mackrich

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