DUEGARD OF AN ENTERED APPRENTICE The Duegard of an Entered Apprentice represents the position of the hand when taking the oath of an Entered Apprentice, "my left hand supporting the Bible and my right hand resting thereon." SIGN OF AN ENTERED APPRENTICE The sign of the Entered Apprentice alludes to the penalty of the Entered Apprentice's obligation. The sign is made by drawing the right hand rapidly across the neck as shown on the left. The penalty that the sign alludes to is, "having my throat cut across, my tongue torn out by its roots, and my body buried in the rough sands of the sea at low water mar k , where the tide ebbs and flows twice in twenty-four hours, should I ever knowingly violate this my Entered Apprentice obligation." Explanation of the Entered Apprentice sign : Draw the right hand rapidly across the neck as represented and drop the arm to the side. This action shows the penalty of ...
Picha tulizozipata za wanafunzi kutoka chuo cha ST. AUGUSTINO UNIVERSITY OF TANZANIA, Mwanza ( SAUT ) zinatia kichefuchefu na kinyaa.. Eti hawa ndio Viongozi wa Taifa Letu baadae.. Hebu angalia huu uchizi.
Masonic Lodge Symbols Education Freemason Symbols: Masonic symbology has come down to us from the cuneiform scripts of the ancient Sumerians, circa 3000 B.C.. as well as the ancient Mesopotamians and Persians. Cuneiform writing was a series of pictographs (symbols) which were drawn on clay tablets with a blunt reed (or stylus). Masonic scholars, today, question the origin of the Point within the Circle, whose parallel upright lines on both sides of the circle, closely resemble an Egyptian hieroglyphic (circa 1570–1342 B.C. ). Is it one of the first Freemason symbols? It is not known; however this information creates questions in scholarly circles. Did Freemasonry begin long before King Solomon's temple was built (circa 953 B.C.)? Did it begin with the operative stone mason guilds during the Middle Ages? (between 500 A.D. and 1500 A.D.) Did it begin in Scotland near the time of Robert the Bruce (1274 - 1329)? These questions are a subject of much debate ...
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