... inviolable secrecy observed therein, and the exclusion of women were but too manifest indications, a circumstance that gave the highest offence to the whole kingdom ; and the said Coustos having refused to discover to the Inquisitors, the true tendency... Proceedings ... - Página 87por Scottish Rite (Masonic order). Supreme Council for the Northern Jurisdiction - 1867Vista completa - Acerca de este libro
| 1794 - 518 páginas
...Coustos, having refused to discover to the Inquisitors the true tendency and design of their meetings, and persisting, on the contrary, in asserting, that...the said prisoner may be prosecuted with the utmost rigour, and for this purpose desires the Court would exert its whole authority, and even proceed to,... | |
| Leon Hyneman - 1860 - 600 páginas
...having refused to discover to the Inquisition the true tendency and design of the Masonic meetings, and persisting, on the contrary, in asserting that...in itself, wherefore the Proctor of the Inquisition required that the said prisoners should be prosecuted with the utmost rigor, and for that purpose desired... | |
| George Smith (Captain.) - 1866 - 220 páginas
...refused to discover to the inquisitors the true tendency and design of the meetings of free-masons, and persisting, on the contrary, in asserting that...wherefore the proctor of the inquisition requires, 63 The inquisition is a tribunal of pretended justice, disgraceful to human nature ; and which, of... | |
| George Oliver - 1867 - 412 páginas
...refused to discover to the inquisitors, the true tendency and design of the meetings of Freemasons, and persisting, on the contrary, in asserting that...the said prisoner may be prosecuted with the utmost rigour; and, for this purpose, desires the court would exert its whole authority, and even proceed... | |
| 1885 - 966 páginas
...refused to discover to the Inquisition the true tend.ncy and design of the meetings of Freemasons ; and persisting, on the contrary, in asserting that...the said prisoner may be prosecuted with the utmost rigour, and for this purpose desires the Court would exert its whole authority and even proceed to... | |
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