Operative Masonry

English edit

Pronunciation edit

  • (US) IPA(key): /ˈɑpərətɪv ˈmeɪsənri/
  • (UK) IPA(key): /ˈɒpərətɪv ˈmeɪsənri/

Proper noun edit

Operative Masonry

  1. (Freemasonry, archaic) Practical masonry, i.e. construction with stone and other materials, understood as a coherent and ancient system contrasted with Speculative Masonry or Freemasonry.
    Coordinate term: Speculative Masonry
    • 1878 February 16, Rob Morris, “The Holy Land and the Temple”, in The Freemason’s Chronicle, volume 7, number 164, page 116:
      But you and I, my brother, are taught that Operative Masonry is but the outward form, the type, the model of speculative Masonry; and that King Solomon’s Temple, with all its particulars, was the antitype of the grand world-wide system which we call Freemasonry.