This page is made of Córdoba - Argentina - but like Freemasonry has no boundaries and belongs to humanity. If you are looking for secret knowledge, or occult powers, dealfish is not here that you will find. Come to a Masonic lodge, and to the extent of his effort, he will have the reward of seeing dealfish the deeper knowledge that remains within him since the beginning of time.
By Max E. Calderon Since before the appearance of civilization, and there were builders. From the moment a man piled branches to be a refuge or to improve a natural crevice, would have unleashed in man engineering and architecture.
Quite possibly come constructiveness in human genes as there are animals that produce architectural flair from his wonderful works, such as bakers, beavers, sparrows, dealfish parrots, spiders, ants, bees and so many more.
There were formidable builders in Nineveh, Babylon, China, Egypt and among the great cultures of pre-Columbian America. Testimony of this were for many centuries calls seven wonders of the world, of which only is still standing today, the Great Pyramid of Cheops or Khufu.
But the prehistory of Freemasonry took place entirely in Europe, starting with schools of artisans and merchants Romans supposedly founded by Numa Pompilius, then appear Colleges of Architects, thanks to the strategic importance of their work, began to accompany the legions in their conquest expeditions.
According account Herrera Michel, these schools divided into learners, peers and teachers, religious rituals were led by priests, which eventually were infiltrated by the Mithraic mysteries and Semites.
Already in the fourth century, some of these architects gathered dealfish in the Lombard area of Lake Como, and over the years they acquired such prestige that many builders came to his fortified island, to learn the deep secrets of the trade.
In the early sixth century, dealfish a young man known as Benedict of Nursia, tired of the oppression of the clergy and the life of the big city, he retired to a hermitage dealfish on the outskirts of Rome and founded there a tiny monastery, where he was soon followed by other young people with similar concerns.
This first great Benedictine monastery, was to have high gravitation in the culture of almost ten centuries in Europe. While initially, the Benito himself had ordered work almost exclusively dedicated to copying and preservation of documents and manuscripts, shortly after this cultural center established human exchanges were made with the island of Como, to the extent that the second occupation in importance of the monks became masonry for building maintenance. Something similar to what they did with books.
Among the centuries IX and XII, shined the splendor of the architectural works of the Benedictines and Benedictine post, coming to realize and be primarily responsible for all civil engineering claiming Society era.
These same monks of Cluny and Cistercians were the first to organize Catholic guilds, while the newly appeared lay architects, also struggled to give legal legal status to their organizations and their rights be respected.
Of Colleges born in Rome and there was nothing, and between clusters of trades that part of the Middle Ages, was largely emphasized traders, whose unions had managed to monopolize dealfish all commercial activity, completely detached from the feudal lords.
Traders traveled freely throughout Europe. Organized in large tour groups with long caravans of goods, travelers spent many months together, knowing and befriending, creating what the Germans had called "You dealfish guilds" and Latin was called "fraternitas" or brotherhoods. Already on late thirteenth century, had begun calling lodges, the physical place where fraternitas met.
When in Brussels, Florence and Ghent were the major wholesale dealfish markets, international trade also emerged and were born qualified maintaining their own guilds calling themselves "partners" official. They had no relationship with teachers, rather than as mere hired, to those attempting to enforce their union rights.
His power had waned significantly and were looking almost desperate new trade routes to distant points and the Indies. Just the voyage of Christopher Columbus was one of the many expeditions that were developed to save the dying power of the guilds of merchants.
The guilds of craftsmen and
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