Memory Palaces and Masonic Lodges: Esoteric Secrets of the
Art of Memory
by Charles B. Jameux
Only ONE left available for
purchase!
". . . a masterpiece of
research on two topics: the art of memory and the lost Wod of Freemasonry. . . .
indispensable to understanding the history and
practice of the transmission of knowledge in all its forms."
— MARK STAVISH, author of
Egregores and Freemasonry
In Antiquity, the art of memory was a mnemonic device that allowed an orator, such as Cicero, to recall all the points he wished to make by associating each of them with an image or architectural element in the site he was speaking. When this art was rediscovered in the Renaissance, hermetic thinkers like Giordano Bruno reworked it into a method that allowed them to acquire knowledge with the creation of "memory palaces." The elements of these memory palaces were not intended to trigger the memory but would actually transform into talismanic objects with knowledge entirely new to the seeker.
In this book, Charles B. Jameux
shows that this hermetic reworking of the classical art of memory was no mystery
to operative Masons, who grafted it onto their own rituals, catalyzing the
transformation of operative Masonry into speculative Masonry. He shows how the
hieroglyphic writing used during the Renaissance in the art of memory provided
the groundwork for one of the most esoteric elements of masonic practice: the
grasp of the realm of image by the letter, where symbols were "buried" within
words. Using archival evidence from 17th-century Scotland and earlier, combined
with the research of modern scholars such as Frances Yates and David Stevenson,
Jameux argues that the creation of speculative Freemasonry can be traced back
100 years earlier than conventional history records–to 1637, when the first
recorded use of the Mason's Word appeared and also the first known appearance of
the symbolic Temple of Solomon. He follows Giordano Bruno's visit to the British
Isles in the late 16th century and the subsequent activities of the men he met
there, showing that Masonic symbolism owes much of its current form to early
memory palaces, which represented the Masonic lodge and temple in their fully
imaginary states.
Revealing the pivotal role of
the memory palace and hermetic traditions in early Masonic symbolism, Jameux
sheds new light on the Masonic questions asked of each initiate and the
spiritual importance of the Temple of Jerusalem to
Freemasonry.