The following article is presented with the
compliments of the The article may be freely used for masonic purposes only.
For all other purposes the approval of the |
STONE MASONS TERMINOLOGY
Cowan | One who is a stonemason working without mortar courses.
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Stone | A walling material, either cut natural rock such as Sandstone, Limestone,
and Granite, or cast stone. For our exercise we will leave cast stone aside
as it doesn't apply.
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Stone Mason | A worker in WALLING MATERIAL.
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Free Stone | Building stone which is fine-grained and uniform enough to be worked
in any direction, and can thus be CARVED. Freestones are generally lime stones
or fine-grained sandstones. (Some authors use the term "having no grain",
which Geologically laughable)
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Freemason | A term in the Middle Ages which meant a skilled mason, capable of CARVING
Freestone. The term is no longer used in the building industry but refers
to members of certain associations.
This Freestone mason (since reduced to Freemason). The Freestone was a term applied to stone suitable in texture for the jambs, piers, arches, traceries, and other constructional parts of a building, the planning of which required a thorough knowledge of Geometry, and the details of the work had to be set out by a master on a tracing board before the templates and molds could be made for the use of the Craftsmen. While the term has been dropped by the working masons, the inscription "stone and marble mason" may still be seen. As a Geologist I have worked for both a MATERIAL'S ARCHITECT, and a BUILDING ARCHITECT. The Material's architect is the Junior worker.
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Mason | A stone SETTER (worker); a BRICKLAYER (Scotland & USA); a FIXER or
WALLING (England). Therefore, a ROUGH stone mason is a Stone worker, setter, fixer or waller.
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Mason's Labourer | In the mason's YARD: A skilled labourer who helps in lifting stones and cutting lewis holes.
On the SITE:
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Mason's Mitre | An apparent ANGLE JOINT formed by shaping the corner out of the solid
stone. This is the true GIBLUM, if there was such a word.
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GIBLUM | Not a word - ref: The Oxford Dictionary.
Coil: usually translated as "stone-squarer", though masons would be as correct. Meant to refer to workers from Gebal. It is found in I Kings 5:18. King James Bible - "...and the stone-squarers..". Bernard Jones in his Compendium, shows great ignorance, when he states, when referring to the three assassins, "..if they have any true derivation of a masonic nature, then it is more likely to be by some roundabout road from the word "ghiblim" or "giblim" (stone-cutter or mason). Brown's Bible of 1880 - Giblites from Gebal were ships carpenters and stone-masons. |
Brethren all,
The Circle President welcomes
any corrections, suggestions, etc.
GO TO ARTICLES:
M W Bro A.T. Holden, PGM
The history and formation of the Holden Research
Circle
Decidation of HRC No 2
Freemasonry - the mighty paradox
The genuine Secrets of a Master Mason
Freemasonry in ancient China
Freemasonry in Thailand
Pillar Clubs
The "9 Worthies" or "Excellent Masters"
Stone Masons Terminology
A simple lodge meeting
Count Leo Tolstoy and Freemasonry
De-Christianisation of English
Freemasonry
Freemasonry which is of the now, not just the
future
Previous articles from our "Chips of the Chisel" may be obtained
and can be selected from the following pages:
1995/96 HRC Chips Index
1997 HRC Chips Index
1998 HRC Chips Index
1999 HRC Chips Index
2000 HRC Chips Index
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Updated: 23 June 2001