Even though the publisher Westphalia Press is located in the conservative South of the USA, they publish many books about the French/continental approach to Freemasonry. Also they publish serious Masonic investigations. What is even better, they are neither an academic, nor an internal publishing house, so many of their books can be purchased for normal prices and by anyone, not just members of certain lodges for research for example.
This is one such deep diving scholarly Masonic publications that can be bought in paperback or hardcover. The book is subtitled: “Masonic Higher Degrees 1730-1800”. The authors (an Englishman and a Frenchman) complain about the facts that many scholars keep repeating that nothing much happened in Freemasonry between 1730 (the publication of “Masonry Dissected”) and 1760 (“Three Distinct Knocks”). Also that their predecessors keep repeating the same quotes without context; that they focus only on the “craft” degrees or a specific degree and a particular country. This the authors decided to turn over and show that actually a lot happened and that links can be found when you do not focus on one country and a specific (set of) degree(s).
In the book the authors go from the earliest mentions of ‘high degrees’ in England, Ireland, Scotland, France, Germany and a few other countries. They went to check on the proof that previous authors have used and sometimes have to conclude that the unsubstantiated claims are made even by academic investigators. Belton and Dachez reviewed evidence, looked for new information and paint a picture in which things are not so neatly divided as some want. There are much stronger links between Freemasonry in the mentioned countries than some think. Influences back and forth, new degrees that rapidly pop up in another part of Europe or even South or North America.
400+ Pages with detailed information about a broad spectrum of ‘high degrees’ and because the authors also investigate where they came from, you will also learn about the appearance of the third degree. Enormous amounts of information have been checked, authors they cite are consulted and new information was found. Highly interesting!
A minor point of criticism is that the book can use an extra redaction. There are quite a few typos (also in years), strange use of words as if Dachez wrote his texts in France and they were translated automatically, while notes are left untranslated), sentences and quotes that are printed twice. These sorts of things.
There is also a French version of the book: “Les Premiers Hauts Grades écossais – L’énigme des origines (1730-1800)”.
2024 Westphalia Press, isbn 978163319501