992 resultados para Schimmelpenninck, Rutger Jan, 1761-1825.


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Mode of access: Internet.

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No more published.

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Mode of access: Internet.

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1.t. Törring. Babo. Hensler. Bretzner. 2.t., 1. abt. Gemmingen. Schroder. Iffland. 2.t., 2 abt. Kotzebue und Collin.

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The author's object was "to rectify the misrepresentations of Mr. Gibbon and Dr. Priestley with respect to the history of the primitive church".--p. [7]

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Nos. 4-5 in a volume of pamphlets. Includes memoirs of Edmund Kean, Charles Young, and Mrs. Harriett Coutts.

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Vanden Brugge (Jan Isaac), dit Pontanus. Album amicorum (1591-1627)

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The origins of the Scottish Rite of Freemasonry can be traced to France around 1754, when a Chapter of Claremont was founded in Paris. Initially this chapter had seven degrees, but by 1758 there were twenty-five degrees, known as the Rite of Perfection. In 1761, Stephen Morin was appointed to introduce the Rite into the New World. He began with Kingston, Jamaica and San Domingo. Further establishments were made in New Orleans, LA(1763); Albany, NY (1767); Philadelphia, PA (1782); and Charleston, SC (1783). In order to improve the disorganized state of the degrees in Europe, “Grand Constitutions” were enacted in 1786. These Constitutions formally brought into existence the “Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite”. None of the degrees of the Scottish Rite would seem to have origins in Scotland. “Scottish” is translated from the French word “Ecossais”, which is found in some of the French titles of some of the degrees of the Rite of Perfection. It is possible that the Scottish connection is a result of the involvement of a Scotsman, Andrew Michael Ramsey, who may have devised some of the degrees.

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"Message from the President transmitting an appendix to the digest of commercial laws presented Feb. 2d, 1824, containing the recent regulations and the general tariff of Spain. May 25 1824." p. [431]-527.