Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Most Worshipful Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons of the Philippines is the organizational body based on the Philippines that governs Freemasonry. It currently has its offices at the Plaridel Masonic Temple , a historic building in Ermita, Manila .
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more
This page provides links to alphabetized lists of notable Freemasons. Freemasonry is a fraternal organisation which exists in a number of forms worldwide. Throughout history some members of the fraternity have made no secret of their involvement, while others have not made their membership public.
“Primera Luz Filipina”, the first masonic lodge in the Philippines was established in 1856 by Jose Malcampo Monje, a naval captain who became the Governor-General of the Philippines from June 18, 1874, to February 28, 1877. It was placed under the jurisdiction of “Gran Oriente Luisitano” and admitted only Spaniards.
Women and Freemasonry; Order of the Amaranth; Order of the Eastern Star; Prince Hall Order of the Eastern Star; Co-Freemasonry; Masonic youth organizations. DeMolay; A.J.E.F. Job's Daughters; International Order of the Rainbow for Girls
This is a list of all verifiable organizations that claim to be a Masonic Grand Lodge in Asia. A Masonic "Grand Lodge" (or sometimes "Grand Orient") is the governing body that supervises the individual "Lodges of Freemasons" in a particular geographical area, known as its "jurisdiction" (usually corresponding to a sovereign state or other major geopolitical unit).
University of the Philippines Diliman: Socio-political fraternity National [g] Pi Sigma Delta: January 26, 1975: University of the Philippines Diliman: Socio-political sorority National [h] Samahang Ilokano: c. 1946: Manila, Philippines: Cultural (Ilocano) National 3 Sigma Delta Phi: February 24, 1931 University of the Philippines Manila ...
A writer in the Freemasons' Quarterly Review in 1839 claimed Nelson and his servant, Tom Allen, were Freemasons, but gives no evidence to support his claim. Hamon Le Strange, in his History of Freemasonry in Norfolk, says that among the furniture of the Lodge of Friendship No. 100, at Yarmouth , there is a stone bearing an inscription to Nelson.