Group of Masonic lodges in Belgium
Seal of the Grand Orient of Belgium The Grand Orient of Belgium (French : Grand Orient de Belgique , Dutch : Grootoosten van Belgie ; or G.O.B.) is a Belgian cupola of masonic lodges which is only accessible for men, and works in the basic three symbolic degrees of freemasonry .
History The Grand Orient of Belgium was founded in 1833, three years after the independence of Belgium. The Grand Orient joins the Grand Orient of France and other Continental jurisdictions in not requiring initiates to believe in a Supreme Being (Great Architect of the Universe ). This meant that in the 1870s the Orient broke with the United Grand Lodge of England .
In 1921, the Grand Orient of Belgium was a founding and influential member within the International Masonic Association . It remained a member of this international alliance until 1950. During World War II , members of the Grand Orient of Belgium founded the Lodge Liberté chérie in a Nazi concentration camp and the Lodge l'Obstinée in a Nazi prisoner-of-war camp .
In 1959 five lodges of the Grand Orient of Belgium founded the Grand Lodge of Belgium in order to regain recognition by the United Grand Lodge of England which was lost in 1979. The Grand Orient of Belgium became a founding member of the Centre de Liaison et d'Information des Puissances maçonniques Signataires de l'Appel de Strasbourg (CLIPSAS) in 1961, but left in 1996 with the Grand Orient of France over disputes about the place of religious belief. In 1989 the Grand Orient of Belgium, the Grand Lodge of Belgium, the Women's Grand Lodge Of Belgium and the Belgian Federation of Le Droit Humain signed an agreement of mutual recognition. In 1998, these anti-clerical and atheistic Grand Orients founded the International Secretariat of the Masonic Adogmatic Powers (SIMPA), but by 2008, the Belgium Grand Orient had rejoined CLIPSAS.
Grand Masters 1833 - 1835 : Joseph-Marie de Frenne 1835 - 1842 : Goswin de Stassart 1842 - 1854 : Eugène Defacqz 1854 - 1862 : Théodore Verhaegen 1866 - 1868 : Joseph Van Schoor 1869 - 1871 : Pierre Van Humbeek 1871 - 1874 : Auguste Couvreur 1875 - 1877 : Henri Bergé 1877 - 1880 : Auguste Couvreur 1881 - 1883 : Henri Bergé 1896 - 1898 : Henri Bergé 1884 - 1886 : Eugène Goblet d'Alviella 1887 - 1889 : Victor Lynen 1890 - 1892 : Ernest Reisse 1893 - 1895 : Auguste Houzeau de Lehaie 1899 - 1901 : Gustave Royers 1902 - 1904 : Fernand Cocq 1905 - 1907 : Jean-Laurent Hasse 1908 - 1910 : Joseph Descamps 1911 - 1913 : Fernand Cocq 1914 - 1921 : Charles Magnette 1922 - 1924 : Fernand Levêque 1925 - 1927 : Charles Magnette 1928 - 1930 : Raoul Engel 1931 - 1933 : Victor Carpentier 1934 - 1936 : Paul Erculisse 1936 - 1944 : François Bovesse 1944 - 1944 : Jules Hiernaux 1945 - 1947 : Leonce Mardens 1947 - 1950 : Edmond Troch 1950 - 1953 : Walther Bourgeois 1954 - 1957 : Robert Hamaide 1957 - 1959 : Leopold Remouchamps 1960 - 1961 : Georges Beernaerts 1962 - 1962 : Charles Castel 1963 - 1965 : Henri Bonet 1966 - 1968 : Robert Dille 1969 - 1971 : Victor-Gaston Martiny 1971 - 1974 : Pierre Burton 1974 - 1977 : Jaak Nutkievitz 1977 - 1981 : Nicolas Bontyès 1981 - 1984 : André-Louis Mechelynck 1984 - 1987 : Sylvain Loccufier 1987 - 1990 : Guy Vlaeminck 1990 - 1993 : Louis Dengis 1993 - 1996 : Dimitri Sfingopoulos 1996 - 1999 : Pierre Klees 1999 - 2001 : Adolphe Adolphy 2005 - 2008 : Henri Bartholomeeusen 2008 - 2011 : Bertrand Fondu 2011 - 2014 : Jozef Asselbergh 2014 - 2017 : Marc Menschaert 2017 - 2020 : Henry Charpentier 2020 - present : Alain Cornet
Notable members Interior of the Les Amis Philanthropes temple in Brussels Jules Anspach , 1829–1879.Jules Bordet , 1870–1961, Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (1919)François Bovesse , 1890–1944.Léo Campion , 1905–1992.Charles De Coster , 1827–1879.Ovide Decroly , 1871–1932.Eugène Goblet d'Alviella , 1846–1925.Victor Horta , 1861–1947.Paul Hymans , 1865–1941, first President of the League of Nations Henri La Fontaine , 1854–1943, Nobel Peace Prize (1913)Charles-Joseph de Ligne , 1735–1814.Charles Magnette , 1863–1937.Constantin Meunier , 1831–1905.Edmond Picard , 1836–1924.Jean Rey , 1902–1983, second President of the European Commission Félicien Rops , 1833–1898.Goswin de Stassart , 1780–1854, First Grand Master 1833–1841, styled himself only Grand Senior Warden and Acting Grandmaster in the hope that King Leopold I would accept a nominal title of Grandmaster. (He didn't.)Emile Vandervelde , 1866–1938.Théodore Verhaegen , 1796–1862, Grand Master 1854 - 1862, founder of the Université Libre de Bruxelles Henri Vieuxtemps , 1820–1881.
Relationship with the Roman Catholic Church The GOB has often had a difficult relationship with the Roman Catholic Church (see Catholicism and Freemasonry ). The Grand Orient was seen as the main source of anticlericalism during the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century.
See also
References
Hugo De Schampeleire, Els Witte , Fernand V. Borne, Bibliografische bijdrage tot de geschiedenis der Belgische vrijmetselarij, 1798-1855 , Brussel 1973 Andries Van den Abeele , De Kinderen Van Hiram , Brussel, Roularta, 1991Hervé Hasquin (ed.), Visages de la franc-maçonner ie belge du XVIIIe au XXe siècle , Ed. ULB, Bruxelles, 1983Michel Huysseune, Vrijmetselarij, mythe en realiteit , EPO pub., 1988 Jo Gérard [fr] , La franc-maçonnerie en Belgique , Bruxelles 1988
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