Sunday 19 February 2012

Templars are recruiting

From the Sunday Express...

FOR more than 700 years they have been the subject of myth and legend after an angry Pope ordered their destruction and drove them underground.

Now the Knights Templars are back in the open and have launched a recruitment drive.

Last night an extraordinary public meeting took place to show potential recruits what the Order is about and what can be expected of them. Membership is open to men and women.

Russ Kellett, who is starting a new legion of Templars, said: “The idea is to attract fresh blood into what is an excellent organisation whose aims are to live a pious life and help in a charitable way people who may need our help.

“People believe that the Templars were destroyed between 1307 and 1312 but most of the knights involved simply disappeared and carried on with their work.”

He is reluctant to reveal too much about The Order of the Knights Templars but says many knights in other branches have carried on a family tradition stretching back generations. His legion isn’t the only one to be created in the past two years. He said: “We are still very popular and people are very interested in what we do. The Order does good work in many ways but doesn’t boast about it.”

The Knights’ official title is The Poor Fellow-Soldiers of Christ and of the ­Temple of Solomon and they became famous for their role in the Crusades in the Middle Ages. They built castles and temples around Europe and enjoyed affluence and influence as well as a reputation for their fighting skills.

Their rising power led Pope Clement V to order them to disband in 1312, which led to knights being executed or fleeing.

Mr Kellett said: “The Knights Templars did carry on, in this country and elsewhere and we will be meeting regularly and visiting fellow branches as well as having guest speakers.”

Members can expect to learn about medieval battle techniques and swordsmanship and undertake charitable work. Those at the first meeting in Filey, North Yorkshire, heard about the order’s origins, myths and legends and some of the secrets surrounding its creation.

Mr Kellett said: “Our work now is more necessary than ever before. We have attracted some quality applicants from varying backgrounds.”

Friday 17 February 2012

Engraved cup



Lockdales auctions in Ipswich, Suffolk, is selling this horn cup engraved with masonic symbols. It is expected to fetch up to £350.

The catalogue description reads: "Fine George III period Masonic engraved horn cup, with a tapering body engraved with various symbols including a hand with a heart, a bee hive, globe, an angel and justice holding a shield with the words Friendship, Love and Truth, also with various other engraved images, 9.5cm high."

Friday 10 February 2012

Blossom and Decay




Barbara Kirk auctions in Penzance, Cornwall, is selling this rather clever picture.

Called "Blossom and Decay" its message is rather obvious. IT is expected to fetch £35.

Wednesday 8 February 2012

Vintage photos



Here is the Duke of Devonshire, Provincial Grand Master for Derbyshire, at a stone-laying ceremony. Date and location unknown. It is being sold by Vennett-Smith auctions in Nottingham. the photo is expected to fetch about £30






This picture of masons on parade in Penzance, UK, is at the same sale with a similar estimate.


Sunday 5 February 2012

Durlston's globe

On the coast in the Purbeck Hills in Dorset is a splendid erection - a giant globe dated 1891 that was placed atop the cliff.


Around it are quotations from some of history's greats, including Shakespeare. But there is also this unattributed, yet familiar-sounding quotation.


It reads: "Let prudence direct you, temperance chasten you, fortitude support you, and justice be the guide to all your actions."

The cliffs have a long history of being mined for stone.

Here is a brief history from the Durlston website...

A Victorian Enterprise

Durlston was owned and farmed by various farmers and landowners but, in 1863, George Burt purchased a significant part of Durlston and a new era began. George Burt was born in 1816, and worked locally as a stone mason before moving to London, at the age of 19, to work for his uncle John Mowlem. Using his wealth, Burt played a major part in the plans to transform Swanage from an 'old world village' to a fashionable seaside spa.

It was not until George Burt retired in 1886, that he turned his energies to developing further his estate with the newly commissioned Durlston Head Castle as its centrepiece. The Castle was constructed by a local builder, William Masters Hardy, and despite its traditional appearance, an iron frame lies behind its stone cladding.

The Castle has always been used as a restaurant of sorts but, in 1890, the upper floor was used briefly as a signal station by Lloyds of London.

Fired by a Victorian zeal for learning and the natural world, George Burt set about transforming the rest of his estate. The most spectacular of his many creations was the Great Globe. George Burt's developments were not confined to building work. His estate was landscaped and planted with a variety of plants from around the world and it is worth noting that 50 men were employed to maintain Burt's ' New Elysian landscape'.

George Burt's plans for his estate were not entirely altruistic. Various plans were laid for a major residential development at Durlston and 88 plots of freehold building land were offered in 1891. Such schemes continued well into the 1920s but met with little success.

The Victorian era was also a great age of fossil collecting. Durlston Bay, already famous for its geology, attracted the interest of W.R. Brodie whose initial finds in 1854 led to the large scale excavations by Samuel Beckles in 1857. According to the London Illustrated News he found ' 27 species of marsupial mammal about 16 of which are totally new to science'.

The arrival of the railway in Swanage in 1885, and later transport developments including a steady growth in car ownership, saw Durlston becoming increasingly accessible to visitors. The sea views, Tilly Whim Caves, Durlston Castle and Great Globe were then, as now, major attractions.

George Burt
George Burt

The Globe Supported (1890)
The Large Globe (1890)

Durlston Castle (1906)
Durlston Castle (1906)