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Glasgow's most famous cemetery could be a giant masonic symbol, according to new research. The
city's Necropolis, which is spread over 37 acres, may be one of the world's biggest Freemasonry sites.
Historian Ronnie Scott claims to have discovered unseen patterns in the design of the iconic 19th-century cemetery.
Research has suggested the Necropolis
is a landscaped metaphor and its layout mirrors the masonic journey
"from darkness to light".
Later this month, Mr Scott will tell the world's first conference on the history of Freemasonry that the land may be one of
Europe
's most important masonic sites.
The
cemetery could attract crowds to rival the masonic-influenced Rosslyn Chapel in
Edinburgh
, which featured in Dan Brown's bestselller
The
Da Vinci Code.
Mr Scott said: "
The
more I looked, the more I began to see a pattern emerge
and the Necropolis began to look like a very large and very solid
representation of masonic ideals and symbolism.
"
The
Necropolis is clearly a symbolic landscape and my research
indicates that we should start to think of it as a freemasonic
landscape."
The
Necropolis opened in 1833 and was designed by a group of men from the
Merchants' House of Glasgow, most of whom are understood to have been
masons.
Visitors entering the cemetery cross a bridge, and pass through two pillars before they climb a hill.
The
path is supposed to represent the masonic journey, from west to east, according to experts.
More than 230 professors from across
Europe
,
America
and
Asia
will gather in
Edinburgh
later this month to discuss the theory.
Freemasonry is widely believed to have firm Scottish roots with the earliest surviving minutes of a masonic lodge dating back to
Edinburgh
in 1598.
Notable Scottish masons have included Robert Burns; Sir Walter Scott, Jimmy Shand and Jock Stein.
9:58am
Friday 11th May 2007
By Jonathan Paisley
http://www.eveningtimes.co.uk/news/display.var.1391761.0.
necropolis_may_be_the_biggest_freemason_symbol_in_europe.php |