The United Religious, Military and Masonic Order of the Temple
and of St. John of Jerusalem, Palestine, Rhodes and Malta
in England and Wales and Provinces Overseas

Province of Gloucestershire & Herefordshire

History of the Masonic Orders


The earliest Speculative Freemasons were probably all Christians as a matter of course. Although Anderson’s ‘Constitutions’ of 1723 and 1738 opened the door of English Freemasonry to “all Good Men and True” who were not “stupid atheists”, in the 1740’s specifically Christian Masonic Rites began to appear in France, and possibly in England also.


For the most part these Rites were ‘chivalric’, and by the 1770’s vestiges of the Templar-Malta ceremonies had reached England. These were originally worked as a single Degree, possibly in association with others with which we are familiar today, and the ceremonies took place in ‘Encampments’ derived from Royal Arch Chapters under the Grand Lodge of the ‘Antients’.


In 1791 probably seven (there is some doubt about the precise number) of these Encampments joined together to form a Grand Conclave under the rule of Thomas Dunckerley. After the Union in 1813 the Duke of Sussex became Grand Master, but it was only after his death in 1843 that the Orders flourished with renewed vigour.


Although ‘Encampments’ later became known as ‘Preceptories’, and the ‘Grand Conclave’ changed its name to ‘Great Priory’, the latter is, after the Grand Lodge of the Craft itself, the longest established English Masonic authority. It presides over more than 600 Preceptories at home and abroad, each of which (with the exception of ‘Baldwyn’ at Bristol and ‘Antiquity’ at Bath) works the ‘Official’ ritual, and which are grouped into 39 Provincial Priories.


Great Priory meets twice a year, periodically a Church Service is arranged for Knights and their friends (in 2001 this took place in Lincoln Cathedral), and the Orders give considerable support to the St John of Jerusalem Eye Hospital, a charitable foundation of the (non-Masonic) Venerable Order of St John.


The Orders can claim to have inherited little more than the names of the two Knightly fraternities which were formed in the Holy Land at the time of the First Crusade. That of ‘Knights Templar’ was derived from the fact that in 1118 King Baldwin II granted the members of the original Order quarters on the reputed site of King Solomon’s Temple – more probably it was the site of the King's Palace stables.


Before this, in 1113, Pope Paschal II had given a Charter to the guardians of the Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem, the ‘Knights Hospitaller’, who, when driven from the Holy Land, were eventually granted the Island of Malta, and became known as ‘The Knights of Malta’. The latter ceased to exist as a military force in 1798.