Synopsis
Jean-Marie Ragon de Bettignies (1781-1862) — called by his contemporaries "the most learned Freemason of the nineteenth century" — delivered his Philosophical and Interpretive Course on the Initiations, Ancient and Modern as a series of lectures before the Lodge of the Trinosophes in Paris in 1818-19, repeated at the lodge's request in 1838-39, and published in 1841 with the authorization of the Grand Orient of France. Now available in English for the first time, this landmark work presents Ragon's systematic interpretation of the degrees of Freemasonry in the light of the ancient mysteries, Pythagorean number-mysticism, and the solar-astronomical philosophy of the antique sages.
Nine discourses conduct the reader from the symbolic degrees of Blue Masonry — Apprentice, Companion, Master — through the chapteral degrees of Red Masonry — the Elu, the Écossais, the Knight of the East, the Rose-Croix — and on to the philosophical degrees of the Scottish Rite, culminating in the Knight Kadosch, which Ragon presents as the crown and philosophical completion of the entire initiatic system. Along the way, the author provides comprehensive interpretations of each degree's symbols, words, and ritual actions; a vast excursus on Pythagorean numerology and its Masonic applications; detailed histories of the reformers of Masonry including Swedenborg, Martinès de Pasqually, and Weishaupt; a penetrating parallel between Masonic governance and the institutions of revolutionary France; and a frank and often ironic institutional critique of the Grand Orient and the uses — and abuses — to which Masonry was put by the successive political regimes of his era.
Ragon occupies a singular position in the history of esoteric Masonry: the bridge between the documentary historians of the Napoleonic era and the great synthesizers of the fin de siècle — Éliphas Lévi, Papus, Oswald Wirth — who would draw on his systematic method while infusing it with the romantic esotericism of the occult revival. Situating Masonic symbolism within the universal tradition of solar religion, and insisting that its mysteries are grounded not in pious fable but in the philosophy of nature and the science of man, Ragon produced a work that remains indispensable to every serious student of initiation.
This translation — by the translator of Ragon's Masonic Orthodoxy: Followed by Occult Masonry and Hermetic Initiation (Triad Press, 2023) — is complete and unabridged, including all footnotes and sub-notes, and is accompanied by a scholarly introduction placing the work in its biographical and historical context and a glossary of French rite terminology.
About the Author
Jean-Marie Ragon de Bettignies (1781-1862) was born at Bray-sur-Seine, the son of a notary, and initiated into Freemasonry in 1804 at Bruges. Arriving in Paris, he founded the celebrated Lodge of the Trinosophes under the Grand Orient of France, serving as its Venerable Master from 1817 and transforming it into the foremost school of initiatic education in the French capital. He served as editor-in-chief of Hermès, one of the first French Masonic periodicals, and held membership in the Rite of Misraïm and the Order of the Temple of Fabré-Palaprat. His major works include the Cours philosophique et interprétatif des initiations anciennes et modernes (1841), Orthodoxie maçonnique (1853), De la Maçonnerie occulte et de l'initiation hermétique (1853), and the Tuileur général de la Franc-Maçonnerie (1861). Kenneth Mackenzie, editor of the Royal Masonic Cyclopaedia, described him as having "laboured hard to distinguish between the actual history of various Masonic societies and that vague traditional history which to so great an extent refutes itself." He died at Bruges in 1862.
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