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The Cooke Manuscript
One of the oldest known Masonic Documents
Written about 1450

Matthew Cooke Manuscript
Thanked be God, our glorious Father, the founder and creator of
heaven and earth, and of all things that therein are, for that he
has vouchsafed, of his glorious Godhead, to make so many things of
manifold virtue for the use of mankind. For he made all things to be
subject and obedient to man. All things eatable of a wholesome
nature he ordained for man's sustenance. And moreover, he hath given
to man wit and the knowledge of divers things and handicrafts, by
the which we may labour in this world, in order to therewith get our
livelihood and fashion many objects, pleasant in the sight of God,
to our own ease and profit. To rehearse all these matters here were
too long in the writing or telling, I will therefore refrain ; but I
will nevertheless, tell you some ; for instance, how and in what
manner the Science of Geometry was first invented, and who were the
founders both thereof and of several other crafts, as is declared in
the Bible, and other histories.
How, and in what manner this worthy Science of Geometry took its
rise, I will tell you, as I said before. You must know that there
are seven liberal sciences, from which seven all other sciences and
crafts in the world sprung ; but especially is Geometry the first
cause of all the other sciences, whatsoevor they be.
These seven sciences are as follows:
The first, which is called the foundation of all science, is
grammar, which teacheth to write and speak correctly.
The second is rhetoric, which teaches us to speak elegantly.
The third is dialectic, which teaches us to discern the true from
the false, and it is usually called art or sophistry (logic).
The fourth is arithmetic, which instructs us in the science of
numbers, to reckon, and to make accounts.
The fifth is Geometry, which teaches us all about mensuration,
measures and weights, of all kinds of handicrafts.
The sixth is music, and that teaches the art of singing by notation
for the voice, on the organ, trumpet, and harp, and of all things
pertaining thereto.
The seventh is astronomy, which teaches us the course of the sun and
of the moon and of the other stars and planets of heaven.
Our intent is to treat chiefly of the first foundation of Geometry
and who were the founders thereof. As I said before, there are seven
liberal sciences, that is to say, seven sciences or crafts that are
free in themselves, the which seven exist only through Geometry. And
Geometry may be described as earth-mensuration, for Geometry is
derived from geo, which is in Greek "earth," and metrona or a
measure. Thus is the word Geometry compounded and signifies the
measure of the earth.
Marvel not because I said that all sciences exist only through the
science of Geometry. For there is no art or handicraft wrought by
man's hands that is not wrought by Geometry which is a chief factor
(notabulle cause) thereof. For if a man work with his hands he
employs some sort of tool, and there is no instrument of any
material in this world which is not formed of some sort of earth
(ore) and to earth it will return. And there is no instrument or
tool to work with that has not some proportion, more or less. And
proportion is measure, and the instrument or tool is earth. And
Geometry is earth-mensuration therefore I affirm that all men live
by Geometry. For all men here to this world live by the labour of
their hands.
Many more proofs could I give you that Geometry is the science by
which all reasoning men live, but I refrain at this time because the
writing of it were a long process.
And now I will enter further into the matter You must know that
among all the crafts followed by man in this world, Masonry has the
greatest renown end the largest share of this science of Geometry,
as is stated in history, such as the Bible, and the Master of
History," and in the Policronicon a well authenticated (or
trustworthy) chronicle, and in the history called Beda De Imagine
Mundi, and Isodorus Ethomolegiarum Methodius Episcopus & Martiris.
And many others say that Masonry is the chief part of Geometry and
so methinks it may well be said, for it was the first founded, as is
stated in the Bible, in the first book of Genesis and the fourth
chapter. And moreover all the learned authors above cited agree
thereto. And some of them affirm it more openly and plainly,
precisely as in Genesis in the Bible.
Before Noah's Flood by direct male descent from Adam in the seventh
generation, there lived a man called Lamech who had two wives,
called Adah and Zillah. By the first wife, Adah, he begat two sons,
Jabal and Jubal. The elder son Jabal was the first man that ever
discovered geometry and masonry, and he made houses, and is called
in the Bible the father of all men who dwell in tents or dwelling
houses. And he was Cain's master mason and governor of the works
when he built the city of Enoch, which was the first city ever made
and was built by Cain, Adam's son, who gave it to his own son Enoch,
and give the city the name of his son and called it Enoch, and now
it is known as Ephraim. And at that place was the Science of
Geometry and Masonry first prosecuted and contrived as a science and
as a handicraft. And so we may well say that it is the first cause
and foundation of all crafts and sciences. And also this man Jabel
was called the father of shepherds. The Master of History says, and
Beda De Imagine Mundi and the Policronicon and many others more say,
that he was the first that made partition of lands, in order that
every man might know his own land and labour thereon for himself.
And also he divided flocks of sheep, that every man might know his
own sheep, and so we may say that he was the inventor of that
science.
And his brother Jubal or Tubal was the inventor of music and song,
as Pythagoras states in Polycronicon, and the same says Isodorous.
In his Ethemolegiis in the 6th book he says that he was the first
founder of music and song, and of the organ and trumpet; and he
discovered that science by the sound of the weights of his
brother's, Tubal-Cain's, hammers.
And of a truth, as the Bible says, that is to say, in the fourth
Chapter of Genesis, Lamech begat by his other wife Zillah a son and
a daughter, and their names Tubal Cain, that was the son, and the
daughter was called Naamah. And according to the Policronicon, some
men say that she was Noah's wife; but whether this be so or not, we
will not affirm.
Ye must know that this son Tubal Cain was the founder of the smith's
craft and of other handicrafts dealing with metals, such as iron,
brass, gold and silver as some learned writers say; and his sister
Naamah discovered the craft of weaving for before her time no cloth
was woven, but they span yarn and knit it and made such clothing as
they could. And as this woman Naamah invented the craft of weaving
it was called woman's-craft.
And these four brethren knew that God would take vengeance for sin,
either by fire or water. And they were much concerned how to save
the sciences they had discovered, and they took counsel together and
exercised all their wits. And they said there were two kinds of
stone of such virtue that the one would not burn, called marble, and
the other named "Lacerus" would not sink in water. And so they
devised to write all the sciences they had found on these two
stones, so that if God took vengeance by fire the marble would not
burn, and if by water the other would not drown, and they besought
their elder brother Jabal to make two pillars of these two stones,
that is of marble and of "Lacerus," and to write on the two pillars
all the sciences and crafts which they had found and he did so. And
therefore we may say that he was the wisest in science, for he first
began and carried out their purpose before Noah's flood,
Fortunately knowing of the vengeance that God would send, the
brethren knew not whether it would be by fire or water. They knew by
a sort of prophecy that God would send one or the other, and
therefore they wrote their sciences on the two pillars of stone. And
some men say that they wrote on the stones all the seven sciences,
but [this I affirm not]. As they had it in mind that a vengeance
would come, so it befell that God did send vengeance, and there came
such a flood that all the world was drowned and all men died save
only eight persons. These were Noah and his wife and his three sons
and their wives, of which sons all the world is descended, and they
were named in this wise, Shem, Ham and Japhet. And this flood is
called Noah's Flood, for he and his children were saved therein. And
many years after the flood, according to the chronicle, these two
pillars were found, and the chronicle says that a great clerk,
Pythagoras, found the one, and Hermes the philosopher found the
other, and they taught the sciences that they found written thereon.
Every chronicle and history and many other writers and the Bible
especially relate the building or the tower of Babel; and it is
written in the Bible, Genesis, Chap. x how that Ham, Noah's son,
begat Nimrod, who grew a mighty man upon the earth and waxed strong,
like unto a giant. He was a great king and the beginning of his
kingdom was the kingdom of Babilon proper, and Erech and Arend and
Calnch and the land of Shinar. And this same Ham began the tower of
Babel and taught his workmen the Craft of Masonry and he had with
him many masons, more than 40,000, and he loved and cherished them
well. And it is written in Polycronicon, and in the Master of
History, and in other histories, and beyond this the Bible witnesses
in the same 10th chapter, as it is written, that Ashur who was of
near kindred to Nimrod went forth from the land of Shinar and built
the City of Nineveh and Plateas (sic) and many more. For it is
written "Do terra illa" [&c.]
It is but reasonable that we should plainly say how and in what
manner the Charges of the Mason's Craft were first founded, and who
first gave it the name of Masonry And you must know that it is
stated and written in the Polycronicon and in Methothus Episcopus
and Martiris that Ashur who was a worthy lord of Shinar, sent to
Nimrod the king to send him Masons and workmen of the Craft that
they might help him make his city which he was minded to make. And
Nimrod sent him 3000 masons. And as they were about to depart and go
forth, he called them before him and said to them, "Ye must go to my
cousin Ashur to help him build a city, but see to it, that ye be
well governed, and I will give you a Charge that shall be to your
and my profit.
"When you come to that lord, look that you be true to him, even as
you would be to me, labour at your Craft honestly, and take a
reasonable payment for it such as you may deserve. Love each other
as though you were brothers and hold together staunchly. Let him
that hath most skill teach his fellow, and be careful that your
conduct amongst yourselves and towards your lord may be to my
credit, that I may have thanks for sending you and teaching you the
Craft." And they received the charge from him, being their lord and
master, and went forth to Ashur and built the city of Nineveh in the
country of Plateas (sic) and other cities also that are called Calah
and Rosen, which is a great city between Calah and Nineveh. And in
this manner the Craft of Masonry was first instituted and charged as
a science.
Elders of Masons before our times had these charges in writing as we
have them now in our Charges of the story of Euclid, and as we have
seen them written both in Latin and in French.
But it is only reasonable that we should tell you how Euclid came to
the knowledge of Geometry, as stated in the Bible and in other
histories. In the XlIth chapter of Genesis it is told how Abraham
came to the land of Canaan and our Lord appeared unto him and said,
"I will give this land to thy seed." But a great famine reigned in
that land and Abraham took Sarah, his wife, with him and made a
journey into Egypt to abide there whilst the famine lasted. And
Abraham, so says the chronicle, was as a wise man and a learned. And
he knew all the seven sciences and taught the Egyptians the science
of Geometry. And this worthy clerk Euclid was his pupil and learned
of him. And he first gave it the name of Geometry ; although it was
practised before his time, it had not acquired the name of Geometry.
But it is said by Isodoras in the 5th Book and first Chapter of
Ethomolegiarum that Euclid was one of the first founders of Geometry
and gave it that name.
For in his time, the river of Egypt which is called the Nile so
overflowed the land that no man could dwell therein. Then the worthy
clerk Euclid taught them to make great walls and ditches to keep
back the water, and by Geometry he measured the land and parcelled
it out into sections and caused every man to enclose his own portion
with walls and ditches and thus it became a country abounding in all
kinds of produce, and of young people and of men and women : so that
the youthful population increased so much as to render earning a
livelihood difficult. And the lords of the country drew together and
took counsel how they might help their children who had no competent
livelihood in order to provide for themselves and their children,
for they had so many. And at the council amongst them was this
worthy Clerk Euclid and when he saw that all of them could devise no
remedy in the matter be said to them "Lay your orders upon your sons
and I will teach them a science by which they may live as gentlemen,
under the condition that they shall be sworn to me to uphold the
regulations that I shall lay upon them." And both they and the king
of the country and all the lords agreed thereto with one consent.
It is but reasonable that every man should agree to that which
tended to profit himself ; and so they took their sons to Euclid to
be ruled by him and he taught them the Craft of Masonry and gave it
the name of Geometry on account of the parcelling out of the ground
which he had taught the people at the time of making the walls and
ditches, as aforesaid, to keep out the water. And Isodoris says in
Ethomologies that Euclid called the craft Geometry.
And there this worthy clerk Euclid gave it a name and taught it to
the lord's sons of that land whom he had as pupils.
And he gave them a charge. That they should call each other Fellow
and no otherwise, they being all of one craft and of the same gentle
birth, lords' sons. And also that the most skilful should be
governor of the work and should be called master ; and other charges
besides, which are written in the Book of Charges. And so they
worked for the lords of the land and built cities and towns, castles
and temples and lords' palaces.
During the time that the childen of Israel dwelt in Egypt they
learned the craft of Masonry. And after they were driven out of
Egypt they came into the promised land, which is now called
Jerusalem, and they occupied that land and the charges were observed
there. And [at] the making of Solomon's Temple which king David
began, King David loved masons well, and gave them [wages] nearly as
they are now. And at the making of the Temple in Solomon's time, as
stated in the Bible in the third book of Kings and the fifth
chapter, Solomon held four score thousand masons at work. And the
son of the king of Tyre was his master mason. And in other
chronicles and in old books of masonry, it is said that Solomon
confirmed the charges that David his father had given to masons. And
Solomon himself taught them their usages differing but slightly from
the customs now in use.
And from thence this worthy science was brought into France and into
many other regions.
At one time there was a worthy king in France called Carolus
Secondus, that is to say Charles the Second. And this Charles was
elected king of France by the grace of God and also by right of
descent. And some men say he was elected by good fortune, which is
false as by the chronicles he was of the blood royal. And this same
king Charles was a mason before he became king. And after he was
king he loved masons and cherished them and gave them charges and
usages of his devising, of which some are yet in force in France ;
and he ordained that they should have an assembly once a year and
come and speak together in order that the masters and follows might
regulate all things amiss.
And soon after that came St. Adhabelle into England and he converted
St. Alban to Christianity. And St. Alban loved well masons and he
was the first to give them charges and customs in England, And he
ordained [wages] adequate to pay for their toil.
And after that there was a worthy king in England, called Athelstan,
and his youngest son loved well the science of Geometry ; and he
knew well, as well as the masons themselves, that their handicraft
was the practice of the science of Geometry. Therefore he drew to
their councils (or took counsel, or lessons, of them) and learned
the practical part of that science in addition to his theoretical
(or book) knowledge. For of the speculative part he was a master.
And he loved well masonry and masons. And he became a mason himself.
And he give them charges and usages such as are now customary in
England and in other countries. And he ordained that they should
have reasonable pay. And he purchased a free patent of the king that
they might hold an assembly at what time they thought reasonable and
come together to consult. Of the which charges, usages and assembly
it is written and taught in our Book of Charges; wherefore I leave
it for the present.
Good men! for this cause and in this way Masonry first arose. It
befell, once upon a time, that great lords had so many free begotten
children that their possessions were not extensive enough to provide
for their future. Therefore they took counsel how to provide for
their children and find them all honest livelihood. And they sent
for wise masters of the worthy science of Geometry, that through
their wisdom they might provide them with some honest living. Then
one of them that was called Euclid a most subtil and wise inventor
regulated [that science] and art and called it Masonry. And so in
this art of his he honestly taught the children of great lords
according to the desire of the fathers and the free consent of their
children. And having taught them with great care for a certain time
they were not all alike capable of exercising the said art,
wherefore the said master Euclid ordained that those that surpassed
the others in skill should be honoured above the others. And [comman]ded
to call the more skilful "master" and for [him] to instruct the less
skilful. The which masters were called masters of nobility, of
knowledge and skill in that art. Nevertheless they commanded that
they that were of less knowledge should not be called servants or
subjects, but fellows, on account of the nobility of their gentle
blood. In this manner was the aforesaid art begun in the land of
Egypt by the aforesaid master Euclid and so it spread from country
to country and from kingdom to kingdom
Many years after, in the time of king Athelstan, sometime king of
England, by common assent of his Council and other great lords of
the land on account of great defects found amongst masons, a certain
rule was ordained for them.
Once a year or every three years as might appear needful to the king
and great lords of the land and all the comunity, congregations
should be called by the masters from country to country and from
province to province of all masters, masons and fellows in the said
art. And at such congregations those that are made masters shall be
examined in the articles hereafter written and be ransacked whether
they be able and skilful in order to serve the lords to their profit
and to the honour of the aforesaid art. And moreover they shall be
charged to well and truly expend the goods of their lords, as well
of the lowest as of the highest ; for those are their lords for the
time being of whom they take their pay in recompense of their
service and toil.
The first article is this. That every master of this art should be
wise, and true to the lord who employs him, expending his goods
carefully as he would his own were expended; and not give more pay
to any mason than he knows him to have earned, according to the
dearth (or scarcity and therefore price) of corn and victuals in the
country and this without favouritism, for every man is to be
rewarded according to his work.
The Second article is this. That every master of the art shall be
warned beforehand to come to his congregation in order that he may
duly come, there, unless he may [be] excused for some cause or
other. But if he be found [i.e., accused of being] rebellious at
such congregation, or at fault in any way to his employer's harm or
the reproach of this art, he shall not be excused unless he be in
peril of death. And though he be in peril of death, yet must, he
give notice of his illness, to the master who is the president of
the gathering.
The [third] article is this. That no master take no apprentice for a
shorter term than seven years at least, for the reason that such as
have been bound a shorter time can not adequately learn their art,
nor be able to truly serve their employer and earn the pay that a
mason should.
The fourth article is this. That no master shall for any reward take
as an apprentice a bondsman born, because his lord to whom he is a
bondsman might take him, as he is entitled to, from his art and
carry him away with him from out the Lodge, or out of the place he
is in. And because his fellows peradventure might help him and take
his part, and thence manslaughter might arise ; therefore it is
forbidden. And there is another reason ; because his art was begun
by the freely begotten children of great lords, as aforesaid.
The fifth article is this. That no master shall pay more to his
apprentice during the time of his apprenticeship, whatever profit he
may take thereby, than he well knows him to have deserved of the
lord that employs him ; and not even quite so much, in order that
the lord of the works where he is taught may have some profit by his
being taught there.
The sixth article is this. That no master from covetousness or for
gain shall accept an apprentice that is unprofitable ; that is,
having any maim (or defect) by reason of which he is incapable of
doing a mason's proper work.
The seventh article is this. That no master shall knowingly help or
cause to be maintained and sustained any common nightwalker robber
by which nightwalking they may be rendered incapable of doing a fair
day's work and toil: a condition of things by which their fellows
might be made wrath.
The eighth article is this. Should it befall that a perfect and
skilful mason come and apply for work and find one working who is
incompetent and unskilful, the master of the place shall discharge
the incompetent and engage the skilful one, to the advantage of the
employer.
The ninth article is this. That no master shall supplant another.
For it is said in the art of masonry that no man can so well
complete a work to the advantage of the lord, begun by another as he
who began it intending to end it in accordance with his own plans,
or [he] to whom he shows his plans.
These regulation following were made by the lords (employers) and
masters of divers provinces and divers congregations of masonry.
[First point] To wit : whosoever desires to become a mason, it
behoves him before all things to [love] God and the holy Church and
all the Saints ; and his master and follows as his own brothers.
The second point. He must give a fair day's work for his pay.
The third [point]. He shall hele the counsel or his fellows in lodge
and in chamber, and wherever masons meet.
The fourth point. He shall be no traitor to the art and do it no
harm nor conform to any enactments against the art nor against the
members thereof : but he shall maintain it in all honour to the best
of his ability.
The fifth point. When he receives his pay he shall take it without
murmuring, as may be arranged at the time by the master; and he
shall fulfil the agreement regarding the hours of work and rest, as
ordained and set by the master.
The sixth point. In case of disagreement between him and his
fellows, he shall unquestioningly obey the master and be silent
thereon at the bidding of his master, or of his master's warden in
his master's absence, until the next following holiday and shall
then settle the matter according to the verdict of his fellows; and
not upon a work-day because of the hindrance to the work and to the
lord's interests.
The seventh point. He shall not covet the wife nor the daughter of
his master or of his fellows unless it be in marriage neither shall
he hold concubines, on account of the discord this might create
amongst them.
The eighth point. Should it befall him to be his master's warden, he
shall be a true mediator between his master and his fellows : and he
shall be active in his master's absence to the honour of his master
and the profit of the lord who employs him.
The ninth point. If he be more wise and skilful than his fellow
working with him in the Lodge or in any other place, and he perceive
that for want of skill, he is about to spoil the stone upon which he
is working and can teach him to improve the stone, he shall instruct
and help him ; so that love may increase the more amongst them and
the work of his employer be not lost.
When the master and fellows, being forewarned are come to such
congregations, the sheriff of the country or the mayor of the city
or alderman of the town in which the congregation is held, shall if
need be, be fellow and associate of the master of the congregation,
to help him against disobedient members to maintain the rights of
the realm.
And at the commencement of the proceedings, new men who have never
been charged before are to be charged in this manner. Ye shall never
be thieves nor thieves' maintainers, and shall do a fair day's work
and toil for your pay that you take of the lord, and shall render
true accounts to your fellows in all matters which should be
accounted for to them, and love them as yourselves. And ye shall be
true to the king of England and to the realm : and that ye keep with
all your might and [power] all the aforesaid articles.
After that an enquiry shall be held whether any master or fellow
summoned to the meeting, have broken any of the beforesaid articles,
which, if they have done, it shall be then and there adjudicated
upon.
Therefore be it known; if any master or fellow being forewarned to
come to the congregation, be contumacious and appear not ; or having
trespassed against any of the aforesaid articles shall be convicted
; he shall forswear his masonry and shall no longer exercise the
craft. And if he presume so to do, the sheriff of the country in
which he may be found at work shall put him in prison and take all
his goods for the use of the king, until his (the king's) grace be
granted and showed him.
For this cause chiefly were these congregations ordained ; that the
lowest as well as the highest might be well and truly served in the
aforesaid art throughout all the kingdom of England.
Amen, so mote it be.
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