Napoleon & Empire
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Freemasonry under the French First
Empire
Was Napoleon Bonaparte a member of the Masonic Brotherhood?
Multiple hypotheses have been advanced on the subject, and although
the probability is high, it has never been definitely established
that he was made a Freemason, either in Valence (French Department
Drome), Marseille, Nancy ("St. John of Jerusalem" Lodge, December
3, 1797?), Malta, Egypt or elsewhere.
What is certain is that members of the expedition he commanded
during the Egyptian campaign brought the Freemasonry to the banks
of the Nile. General Kleber founded the "Isis" Lodge in Cairo (was
Bonaparte a co-founder?), while Brothers Gaspard Monge (member,
among others, of the "Perfect Union" Military Lodge, Mezieres) and
Dominique Vivant Denon (a member of Sophisians, "The Perfect
Meeting" Lodge, Paris) were among the scholars who would make this
strategic and military setback a success that the young General
Bonaparte would exploit upon his return to France.
What is also undeniable is that, beginning with Bonaparte's coup of
18 Brumaire, the Freemasonry would thrive for 15 extraordinary
years, multiplying the number of lodges and members. The First
Consul Napoleon Bonaparte, understanding the advantages he could
derive from the obedient Freemasonry, invested in these reliable
men, hoping to be rewarded with faultless servility. He was not
disappointed.
Freemasonry under the Consulate
When Napoleon Bonaparte came to power, a text of nine articles was
signed on June 22, 1799 (the 21st day of the third year of the V:.
L:. 5799) that unified the Great Lodge of France (Grande Loge De
France: GLDF) and the Great Orient of France (Grand Orient De
France: GODF). The text provided for the assembly of archives of
both organizations, removed the privileges of the masters of the
lodges of Paris, entrenched the tenure of Worshipful Masters, and
established a system of election of officers. However, some
"Scottish" lodges rejected this arrangement.
In 1801, while in Paris, Brother Jean Portalis ("Friendship" Lodge,
Aix-en-Provence) actively participated in negotiating the Concordat
with the Holy See and drafting the Civil Code with Brothers
Jean-Jacques Regis de Cambaceres and Claude-Ambroise Regnier, a
page of Freemason history was written on May 31 in Charleston,
South Carolina. There, Colonel John Mitchell, a merchant born in
Ireland, and Frederick Dalcho, a physician born in London of
Prussian parents, "opened the Supreme Council 33° for the United
States of America", the first Supreme Council of rite in 33 grades
that would take the name Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite (AASR)
of France. It would announce its creation through a circular
distributed "across both hemispheres" on January 1, 1803.
The Master Masons of the two great rival systems (Ancients and
Moderns) were eligible indiscriminately, regardless of religion
(hence perhaps the term "Accepted"). The motto Ordo ab Chao was
adopted which, in organizational terms, expressed the desire to
create a coherent system of degrees and to end the chaotic
profusion of high grades. The rite, whose ranks were all of French
origin, synthesized the influences initially spun by the English
lodges, Scottish Lodges of Perfection, dissident structures such as
the Council of the Eastern Knights of Brother Pirlet, the Order of
Scottish Trinitarians, and the Order of the Flamboyant Star of
Baron Tschoudy, and of the administrative system of the Mother
Lodge of the Scottish Social Contract, which was a member of Count
Auguste de Grasse-Tilly (started in 1783 in the "Saint John of the
Scottish Social Contract" Lodge, Paris).
The universality of the AASR was founded on the basis of 33
successive degrees of initiation and the content of its various
grades that encompassed almost all sources of ancestral
spirituality in the West and Middle East. It was, therefore, not
possible to claim the AASR without rigorously following its
initiation rites and trusting the consistency of its gradual
evolution.
In 1801, the Vatican reiterated its ban on priests receiving
Masonic initiation.
The same year, the Freemason Rulebook, on the Modern French Rite of
the Great Orient of France, was published, in line with the first
Moderns, House of Grades of the Great Orient and some aspects of
the Rectified Scottish Regime (RSR) that were made in 1795 by the
Great Worship Master Alexander-Louis Ro?ttiers de Montaleau.
This document was consistent with decisions made in 1785, but in
1796 was repudiated by the Grand Orient, which had opted for
communication of rituals to be exclusively in handwritten, not
printed, form. The ritual of the French Rite was subsequently
revised several times.
Regarding the Rectified Scottish Rite, 1801 saw the beginning of a
three-year correspondence between Jean-Baptiste Willermoz, of Lyon
("founder" of the RSR in France and general counsel of Department
Rhone by the First Consul Napoleon Bonaparte since June 1, 1800)
and Claude-Fran?ois Achard, of Marseille (Worshipful Master of The
Triple Union, which resumed its work on June 1, 1801). In September
1802, Brother Taxil was received in Lyon by Willermoz and tasked to
copy the "new rituals," which took five years.
On November 12, 1802 (the 12th day of the ninth month of the year
of the V:. L:. 5802), a circular from the Grand Orient of France
condemned the "so-called Scottish" Lodges and invited Brothers to
"turn from our Temples a seed of discord that, during the most
tempestuous times, seemed to have been respected." So as to
maintain "regular lodges in France," the GODF began to write off
all lodges practicing a rite other than the French Rite of seven
degrees – an action that specifically targeted Scottish Mother
Lodges.
The year 1804 saw, in the atmosphere following the global exclusion
of the Grand Orient, the Count of Grasse-Tilly returning to France
and founding the Supreme Council of the 33rd Degree on September
22. It met on October 22 at the Scottish General Grand Lodge of
France with the participation of the Scottish Mother Lodge of
Marseilles. Both lodges had refused the merger with the Grand
Orient in 1799, and were "blacklisted" by the Big East because of
"discrepancies" - that is, for practicing the Scottish Rite – as
representatives of Santo Domingo lodges followed the rite of
Ancients, and, according to some sources, the Prince of Rohan, who
had signed the Morin patent in 1761. Louis Bonaparte became the
Grand Master.
Seeing the Supreme Council extended de facto authority over the
lodges' first three degrees, the Grand Orient suddenly had the
power to sign a contract that merged the Scottish Grand Lodge with
the Grand Orient, but left in existence a Sublime Council of the
33rd degree, which remained the sole authority to confer this level
and to "decide on everything that was a point of honor."
Freemasonry under the Empire
It was during this period that French Freemasonry would experience
its first golden age, as the number of lodges grew from 300 to
1,220 in ten years.
Bonaparte (initiated in "The Perfect Sincerity" Lodge of
Marseilles) became Grand Master of the Grand Orient, which was
entirely devoted to Napoleon and rarely failed to criticize the
fiercely independent Scottish lodges.
Napoleon's relationship with the Grand Orient was all the more
excellent that Ro?ttiers de Montaleau undertook to purify
anti-Bonapartists, and that there were then among the dignitaries
of the obedience:
Prince Louis Bonaparte
The Chancellor of the Empire Jean-Jacques Régis of Cambaceres
Marshals Andre Massena (initiated in Toulon in 1784 by "The
Students of Minerva," a member of many lodges, including "The Real
Friends Meeting" in Nice and the military lodge "The Perfect
Friendship," GODF administrator and member of the Supreme Council),
Joachim Murat, Fran?ois Etienne Christophe Kellermann ("Saint
Napoleon" Lodge, Paris), Charles Augereau (initiated in the lodge
"The Children of Mars" in The Hague during his assignment in
Holland, then a member of the Parisian Lodge "The Candor" before
becoming Worshipful Master of the "Friends of the Arts and Glory"
regimental Lodge), Fran?ois Joseph Lefebvre ("Friends Meeting,"
Mainz), Catherine Dominique de Perignon, Jean-Mathieu Philibert
Serurier (Parisian lodges "St. Alexander of Scotland" and "The
Imperial Bee"), Guillaume Brune ("Saint-Napoleon", Orient of Paris
and "The Constant Friendship"), Adolphe Edouard Casimir Joseph
Mortier (33°), Jean-de-Dieu Soult and Jean Lannes
Senators Antoine-César de Choiseul-Praslin ("The Candor," Paris),
Arnail-Francis de Jancourt, Louis-Joseph-Charles Amable de Luynes
and Dominique Clement de Ris
Deputy Luc Duranteau de Baune
Grand Chancellor of the Legion of Honor Bernard Germain Etienne de
Lacepede (member of the "Nine Sisters" and "Saint Napoleon" lodges
in Paris)
Scholar Joseph Jér?me Lefran?ois de Lalande (the first Worshipful
Master of the "Nine Sisters" Lodge in Paris)
Generals Etienne Macdonald and Horace Sebastiani
Contre-Admiral Charles Rene Magon de Medine
Ambassador Pierre Riel de Beurnonville
Interior Minister Jean-Baptiste de Nompere de Champagny
Constable Joseph Fouché (initiated in the "Sophie Madeleine, Queen
of Sweden" Lodge in Arras) and the first president of the Court of
Appeal Honoré Muraire (in original records of the secularization of
the Civil State).
Brother Jean-Antoine Chaptal ("The Perfect Union," Montpellier) was
in charge of agriculture.
Clearly the Freemasonry was still in power, and its influence not
hidden.
Napoleon I, whether he had been initiated or not, was wary of
Freemasonry, which he monitored through Joseph Fouché, and although
the lodges displayed his bust in their temples and considered any
challenge to his regime a serious Masonic error, some workshops
were devoted mainly to celebrating the glory of the Emperor
("Napoléomagne", "The French Saint-Napoleon"), while others used
the distinctive Masonic signage to conceal the work of subversive
royalist activities ("St. Napoleon", in Angers).
There was a strong development of Masonic military lodges under the
Empire, and Napoleon saw in that Masonic presence a powerful means
of military cohesion and a tool for his European ambitions (using
his own passionate feelings to unite the Brotherhood).
As for Lodges of Adoption (women's lodges attached to men's lodges
by a ritual called "adoption"), most weakened under the Empire,
except for those of the Empress Josephine, who was a Grand Mistress
("Free Knights" and "Sainte Caroline" Lodges of Adoption, in
Paris). In 1808, Lodges of Adoption were banned by the male Masons
as "contrary to its constitution". The Masonic practice of adoption
did not survive into the nineteenth century, except marginally.
Trade guilds, which had been banned during the Revolution – a
prohibition reinforced by the Consulate – were tolerated, but
closely monitored, under the Empire. At the beginning of the
nineteenth century, the guilds were organized around three rites.
The rite of Father Soubise included roofers, plasterers and
carpenters. Those seen as heirs to the Holy Duty to God (Catholic,
royalist and Bonapartist), followers of Master Jacques, gathered
stonemasons, smiths and tanners, as well as some otherprofessions
(rope makers, basket makers, hatters, etc.).
Under the rite of Solomon, which welcomed Protestant or agnostic
members with a Republican, left-leaning political sensitivity, one
found foreign stonemasons (C:.E:.) and the Journeymen of the Duty
of Freedom (I:.N:.D:.G:.), which separated from the Duty of Freedom
in 1804 under the pressure of freethinking and anticlerical trade
union members. It was during that period that a French Freemason
journeyman introduced the third grade in the Duty of Freedom (which
now included affiliates of members), and an aristocratic body (the
"insiders") composed mainly of members established as Masters was
formed.
In 1804, the system of Beneficent Knights of the Holy City (the
final stage of the Rectified Rite or Regime), which had been
dormant during the French Revolution, was revived in Besan?on.
In 1805, the first of two series of the rite of Mizraim (symbolic
degrees 1-33° and philosophical degrees 34-66°) developed in France
and Italy, borrowing various high levels from the eighteenth
century (to compete with the AASR):
The rite of the Metropolitan Chapter of France
The Rite of Perfection of the Council of Eastern and Occidental
Emperors (also used for AASR)
The Adonhiramite rite
The rite of the Grand Lodge of the Regular Masters of Lyon
The rite of the Scottish Mother Lodge of Marseilles
The Strict Templar Observance (SOT) and the Rectified Scottish Rite
(RSR),
The Primitive Rite of Namur, the Scottish Philosophical Rite of
Avignon, the Golden Rosicrucian, the Inside Brothers of Asia and
the Egyptian Rite of Cagliostro.
Specific contributions rose from the gradations of Chaos (49-50°)
and Key Masonics (54-57°).
That same year, Charles-Maurice de Talleyrand-Perigord was
introduced to the Imperial Lodge of the Free Knights in Paris,
where he remained apprenticed throughout his life.
It was also in 1805 that the Grand Orient created a Grand Executive
Board of Rites, where some Brothers received the 33rd degree, in
violation of agreements with the Sublime Council. The latter
reacted by denouncing the text, restoring the Grand Lodge and
Scottish General, and reinstating its authority over the entire
AASR. But again, the imperial power intervened on behalf of the
Grand Orient and forced the signing of a power-sharing agreement
that gave it authority over the first eighteen degrees, with the
Supreme Council of France overseeing the nineteenth to
thirty-third.
Contrary to the wishes of Napoleon, there were now two rival
Masonic powers in France, so the next year, to ensure control of
the Supreme Council, he named Chancellor Jean Jacques Régis de
Cambaceres the Sovereign Grand Commander instead of Grasse-Tilly or
one of several dignitaries of the Grand Orient (Dominique Clement
de Ris, Pierre Riel de Beurnonville, Catherine Dominique de
Pérignon, Honoré Muraire, D'Aigrefeuille, etc.).
In the next decade, the Supreme Council dedicated itself to
developing the "Guide to Scottish Freemasons", which took its roots
from the Scottish Mother Lodges and Freemasonry of English and
American Ancients (particularly Three Distinct Knocks of 1760) but
also in the Freemason Regulator of the Modern French Rite. For the
blue lodges (the first three workshops degrees), there was the
"Journal of Symbolic three grades of the Ancient and Accepted
Rite".
On February 18, 1806, two months after the battle of Austerlitz,
Napoleon I decided to build a triumphal arch, a project that
involved several Freemasons. Brother Jean-Baptiste Champagny
Nompère convinced the Emperor to choose the site of the monument in
these terms: "An Arch of Triumph that features the most majestic,
superb and picturesque view, of the imperial palace of the
Tuileries ... It will strike admiration in the traveler entering
Paris ... It will imprint in any visitor to the French capital an
indelible memory of its incomparable beauty ... Although the
visitor has gone away, he will always have in front of him the
triumphant arch. Your Majesty will cross it on your way to
Malmaison, St. Germain, St. Cloud and even to Versailles ..."
Brother Jean Chalgrin ("The Simple Hearts of the North Star" Lodge,
Paris), an architect, drew up the plans, based upon an initial
draft prepared by Brother Charles Louis Balzac ("The Great Sphinx"
Lodge, Paris). Under the July Monarchy (constitutional monarchy in
France under King Louis-Philippe, starting with the July Revolution
of 1830), two Brothers were to be in charge of the sculpture in
bas-relief of the North Face - Francois Rude (The Marseillaise) and
Jean-Pierre Cortot (The Peace of Vienna).
It was probably also in 1806 that Pierre-Joseph Briot, Governor of
Abruzzo (under the authority of Joseph Bonaparte), introduced the
Carbonari in Italy and started a "Secret Society of Philadelphian
Republicans" at Besan?on, "Good Cousin Carbonari" of the woodsman
rite of Alexander the Great's Order of the Forger, which became
affiliated at the rite of Mizraim in 1810.
Meanwhile, Filippo Buonarroti, a French revolutionary from Pisa and
an old friend of Gracchus Babeuf, who knew Briot at Sospel, spent
30 years serving the lodges, especially within his own organization
("The Perfect Sublime Masters", under the direction of a "Great
Firmament"), to cover up the spread of revolutionary ideas,
Babouvist ideals and communism. Although its incidence was
relatively limited, this unfortunate confusion between Freemasons
and Carbonari ideas would quickly be interpreted as the
politicization of the lodges.
The same year, 1806, saw the demise of the Strict Templar
Observance (SOT), which did not survive the Revolution, as well as
the introduction of the RSR and the loss of interest of its great
master Charles of Hesse-Cassel, who became much more passionate
about his research and mystical theurgics than about the
Freemasonry.
Not counting the Anderson texts (The Constitutions of the
Free-Masons of Pastor James Anderson, published in 1723), which
defined the Freemasons of British influence, the statutes enacted
in 1806 by the Grand Orient of France merely noted that "the
Masonic Order in France was composed only of Freemasons recognized
as such, assembled at regular workshops for camaraderie".
Also in 1806, archaeologist Alexandre Du Mège (or Dumège) founded
an Egyptian rite, the "Sovereign Pyramid of Friends of the Desert",
in Toulouse. There were some spin-offs in the region (Auch,
Montauban), but they didn't last. The Friends of the Desert came
into contact with the neighboring Napoleomagne Lodge, whose members
had revived the Jacobite Scottish Rite of "Scottish Faithful,"
brought to Toulouse in 1747 by George Lockhart, aide to Charles
Edward Stuart. The Grand Executive Board of Rites of the Grand
Orient of France rejected this rite, based on Eastern occultism, in
1812.
In 1808, Brother Michel Ange de Mangourit, Grand Officer of the
Scots Philosophical rite (who was temporary Foreign Minister in the
Government of the Convention in November 1794), revived the Masonic
"adoption" practice by creating the "Sovereign Metropolitan Chapter
of the Ladies Scottish Hospice of France in Mount Tabor, Paris",
which consisted mainly of women of imperial nobility. This highly
esteemed lodge, which would operate until 1830, had a "class of
choice" (Novice Freemason and Discreet Companion), two grades of
Perfection, or "Great Mysteries" (Mistress Adonis and Mistress
Moralist), and two highest grades (Historical and
Philosophical).
In Naples, where Joachim Murat became king on August 1, 1808, the
(military) Franco-Italian lodges saw a blossoming of the Rite of
Mizraim, which would last until the end of the Empire. In 1811,
Murat required the Grand Orient and Supreme Council of Naples to
unify, and became their Grand Commander. It was doubtless during
this period that the first attempts were made to establish the Rite
of Mizraim in France. The rite thus received its third series
(67-77° mystic degrees) the last (78-90°) would be introduced only
until about 1812 in Naples.
In 1809, the Pope Pius VII was arrested by order of Napoleon, in
anger over his excommunication because of the capture of Rome and
the despoliation of the Papal States. It seemed the Emperor had not
lost the support of the Grand Orient when he introduced a certain
anticlericalism in the lodges, but the Pope did not forget how the
Freemasons supported Napoleon.
In 1810, there arose in France a groundswell of opposition to
republican secret societies such as the Carbonari founded by Arnaud
Bazard, Jacques Flotard and Brother Jacques Buchez. In the region
of Besan?on, a revolutionary movement of Carbonari Cousins tried to
infiltrate the lodges to let in opposing ideas and recruit workers
to participate in a republican uprising. The Carbonari were
organized into groups of twenty members, coordinated by a "High"
group that belonged to Brother Lafayette (it also housed the
venerable "Friends of Truth" of Rosoy and member of Supreme
Council).
At the other end of the political spectrum, Count Ferdinand de
Bertier in 1810 founded the "Knights of the Faith" ("Banner
Association"), an ultra-royalist political movement based on
ancient and medieval orders and the more recent and concrete
experience of the Philanthropic Institute. The order had five
grades: Charity Partner, Squire, Knight, Knight of Hospitality, and
Knight of Faith. Several of its members also belonged to the
religious congregation of the "Blessed Virgin".
In 1811, several Masonic events occurred:
Brother Jean-Baptiste Jules Bernadotte - Marshal of the Empire, who
the previous year had become hereditary prince of Sweden - reformed
the Swedish rite, whose organization still exists in twelve degrees
in the 21st century.
The Provincial Grand Lodge of Hamburg adopted the rite developed by
Brother Friedrich Ludwig Schroeder, limited to three symbolic
grades, inspired by the ancient "Templar" Freemasonry - a rite
still practiced today in some lodges in Germany, Austria, Hungary
and Switzerland.
In Egypt, the "Mother Lodge of Paris of the Scottish Philosophical
Rite" was founded in Cairo ("Knights of the Pyramids") and
Alexandria ("Friends of the Concorde").
In Spain, the Count of Grasse-Tilly installed the Spanish Supreme
Council.
In 1813, the Rite of Mizraim was endowed from 90 degrees from the
impetus of Charles Lechangeur, Theodoric Cerbes and brothers Marc,
Michel and Joseph Bédarride. Pierre Lassalle, grand master of
Mizraim in Naples, was probably the one who introduced the Arcana
Arcanorum in the "Plan of Naples" to the primitive rite of Mizraim.
At the same time, the occultist Lodge of the "Commanders of Mount
Tabor", linked to the Scottish Philosophical Rite, was founded,
while a lodge of Egyptian Rite of Cagliostro ("The Vigilanza")
continued its work independently of Mizraim.
The same year in England, after more than half a century of
conflict, the Union Act put an end to the quarrel between the
Ancients and Moderns, merging them into a universal masonry at
three degrees (Emulation rite), in which explicit references to
Christianity were removed.
After the first abdication of Napoleon and his exile to Elba, the
Grand Orient provided support to King Louis XVIII, affirming the
position that the Empire was only tyranny. This led many Freemasons
to resign, especially as the Grand Orient changed its position
again during the Hundred Days.
The Battle of Waterloo saw the end of the First Empire and of the
great period of military lodges. The units commanded by Brothers
Michel Ney (initiated in 1801 at the "St. John of Jerusalem" Lodge
in Nancy, then a member of "The Candor" Lodge of the 6th Corps of
the Grand Army), Pierre Cambronne and Emmanuel de Grouchy (of the
"Heroism" Lodge in Beauvais and the "Candor" Lodge in Strasbourg)
were defeated by those headed by Brothers Arthur Wellesley of
Wellington (of the "Wellesley Family Lodge # 494" of Trim, Ireland)
and Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher ("Archimedes" Lodge in
Altenburg). Most of the marshals of the Empire were Freemasons, as
were many of their opponents, including the English Vice-Admiral
Horatio Nelson (York Union Lodge # 331), Sir John Moore, Marshal
Mikha?l Illarionovitch Kutuzov ("The Three Keys" Lodge, Regensburg)
and General Jean-Victor Marie Moreau.
Among the famous Freemasons of the Empire were:
Prince Jerome Bonaparte (acknowledged as Wolf Cub when he was 17
years old at the "Peace" Lodge in Toulon, then serving as Grand
Master of the Grand Mother Lodge of Westphalia)
Prince Eugene de Beauharnais, Viceroy of Italy (founder of the
Grand Orient and Supreme Council of Italy)
Prince Marshal Jozef Antoni Poniatowski ("Bracia Polacy
Zjetnoczeni" Lodge, Warsaw)
Marshal Bon Adrien Jannot de Moncey, Duke of Conegliano
Marshal Nicolas Charles Oudinot, Duke of Reggio ("Saint Napoleon"
Lodge, Amsterdam)
Marshal Louis-Gabriel Suchet, Duke of Albufera
Grand Marshal of the Palace Géraud-Michel Duroc, Duke of Friuli
General Jean Andoche Junot, Duke of Abrantes (initiated in Toulon
in 1794 by "The Children of Mars and Neptune" and member of "The
Great Master" Lodge, Paris)
General Armand de Caulaincourt, Duke of Vicenza ("Friends Meeting"
and "Candor" lodges, Paris)
General général Jacques Alexandre Law de Lauriston ("Sully" Lodge,
regiment of Toul, and deputy Grand Master of the GODF)
General Louis Bertrand de Sivray
General Charles Tristan de Monthollon
General Remi Joseph Isidore Exelmans
General Joseph Leopold Sigisbert Hugo ("Friends of the French
Honor" Lodge)
Admiral Charles-Henri Verhuell
Joseph Simeon (Attorney for GODF, then Grand Master of the Kingdom
of Westphalia)
Astronomer Pierre-Simon de Laplace
Baron Jean-Domique Larrey ("Children of Mars" Lodge at the 27th
RI)
Sir Charles-Louis Cadet de Gassicourt
Painters Pierre Prud'hon ("The Charity" Lodge, Beaune), Fran?ois
Gerard ("The Great Sphinx" Lodge, Paris) and Jean-Baptiste Isabey
("Friends Meeting" and "Saint-Napoleon" lodges, Paris)
The tragedian Fran?ois-Joseph Talma ("The Union" Lodge, Paris)
Academic Georges Cabanis
Writer and politician Benjamin Constant
Architects Alexandre Brongniart ("Saint John of the Social
Contract" Lodge, Paris) and Pierre Fontaine
Composers Luigi Cherubini ("Saint John of Palestine" Lodge, the
GODF) and Andre Gretry
Sculptor Claude Clodion ("Friends Meeting" Lodge, Paris)
Academic Joseph Lakanal ("The Perfect Point" and "The Triple
Harmony" lodges, Paris)
Industrialist Christophe Oberkampf ("The Perfect Harmony" Lodge,
Paris)
Privateer Robert Surcouf (initiated in 1796 to the "The Triple
hope" Lodge in Port Louis, Mauritius and a member in 1809 of "The
Triple Essence" Lodge in Saint-Malo)...
The fall of Napoleon caused to a large extent that of French
Freemasonry. Louis XVIII was returned to power, and during the
subsequent White Terror, people suspected of having ties with the
government of the French Revolution or Napoleon – including the
military and Freemasons – saw their armies and lodges decimated by
"Knights of Faith," led by General Amédée Willot de Gramprez, a
freemason himself. Duke Elie Decazes, Prefect of Police and a
member of the Supreme Council of France, was hardly able to limit
attacks against the Freemasons. The Freemasons would later, like
many public figures, capitalize on political opportunism. But they
would have to wait until the Second Empire and, more importantly,
the Third Republic, before the Freemasonry would know a second
"golden age" in France.
Lionel A.
Bouchon and Didier Grau, webmasters of this site, warmly thank
their friend who permitted them to use his personal archives about
Freemasonry during French Consulate and First
Empire.
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