Grand Orient of Italy explained

Grande Oriente d'Italia
Headquarters:Il Vascello,
Via San Pancrazio 8,
00152 Rome
Location:Italy
Type:Masonic Grand Lodge
Leader Title:Grand Master
Leader Name:Antonio Seminario
Website:grandeoriente.it

The Grand Orient of Italy (GOI) (Italian: Grande Oriente d'Italia) is an Italian masonic grand lodge founded in 1805; the viceroy Eugene of Beauharnais was instrumental in its establishment.[1] It was based at the Palazzo Giustiniani, Rome, Italy from 1901 until 1985 and is now located at the .[2] Its current Grand Master is Antonio Seminario.[3]

the Grand Orient had 22,675 members in 842 lodges,[4] a significant growth over the preceding three-year period.[5]

History

The Grand Orient of Italy was founded in 1805, during the Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy; the viceroy Eugene of Beauharnais was instrumental in its establishment.

Past Grand Masters have included:

Freemasonry was suppressed by Mussolini in 1925, being restarted after the Second World War.[10] Nevertheless, many people connected with the Italian Fascism were Freemasons: Edmondo Rossoni, Araldo di Crollalanza, Alfredo De Marsico, Peppino Caradonna, Bernardo Barbiellini Amidei, Aldo Finzi, Balbino Giuliano e Costanzo Ciano, father of Galeazzo, Alberto Beneduce, Giacomo Acerbo, Ezio Maria Gray, and Armando Casalini, among others.[11]

Regularity

Recognition by the United Grand Lodge of England (UGLE) is a key factor in maintaining the status of a Regular Masonic jurisdiction. The Grand Orient of Italy was once a significant player within international Freemasonry, and in 1972 it was recognised as regular by UGLE.[12] However, this recognition was withdrawn in 1993, due to accusations of corruption and Mafia involvement. For thirty years, the Regular Grand Lodge of Italy was the only Italian Grand Lodge recognised by UGLE or the other home constitutions of Ireland and Scotland.[13] However, the Grand Orient continued to be recognised by a large majority of the other regular masonic jurisdictions, both in Europe and worldwide.

This situation was highly unusual, in that most regular authorities recognised the Grand Orient, but its status was complicated by the lack of recognition from the three most senior jurisdictions, which normally give a lead in terms of international recognition. To further complicate the situation, the United Grand Lodge of England publicly stated that the Grand Orient of Italy was regular in both origins and practices, but that it must (at that time) remain unrecognised due to the issues surrounding alleged corruption.[14]

However, this position was rectified in March 2023, when the United Grand Lodge of England agreed to re-recognise the Grand Orient of Italy alongside the Regular Grand Lodge of Italy.[15]

Propaganda Due, the lodge that investigative journalists have identified as being implicated in the murder of Roberto Calvi, was originally chartered by the Grand Orient, although the Grand Orient revoked its charter in 1974.[12]

List of grand masters

Prior to Gustavo Raffi's grand mastership, two terms of five years was the maximum tenure for a grand master. This, however, was changed during Raffi's time, and his three-term grand mastership which began in 1999 ended in 2014.[5]

Name
TermOriginOccupation
1align=center Eugène de Beauharnais
18051814Paris, FranceViceroy of Italy (1805–1814)
align= center colspan=6 Lodge suppressed
2align=center Filippo Delpino
20 December 185920 May 1860 †Genoa, Piedmont-SardiniaPatriot
3align=center Livio Zambeccari
21 May 18603 October 1861Bologna, Papal StatesNaturalist, patriot
4align=center Costantino Nigra
8 October 186131 January 1862Castelnuovo, Piedmont-SardiniaItalian Ambassador to Austria-Hungary (1885–1887)
5align=center Filippo Cordova
1 March 18626 August 1863Aidone, Kingdom of NaplesMinister of Justice (1862)
6align=center Celestino Peroglio
6 August 186324 May 1864Palestro, Lombardy–VenetiaTeacher
7align=center Giuseppe Garibaldi
24 May 18648 August 1864Nice, Piedmont-SardiniaMember of the Chamber of Deputies (1861–1882)
8align=center Francesco De Luca
September 186420 June 1867Cardinale, Kingdom of NaplesMember of the Chamber of Deputies (1861–1874)
align=center Filippo Cordova
21 June 18672 August 1867Aidone, Kingdom of NaplesMinister of Justice (1867)
9align=center Lodovico Frapolli
2 August 18677 September 1870Milan, Lombardy–VenetiaMember of the Chamber of Deputies (1860–1874)
10align=center Giuseppe Mazzoni
7 September 187011 May 1880 †Prato, TuscanyFounder of P2; Senator of the Kingdom (1876–1880)
11align=center Giuseppe Petroni
12 May 188016 January 1885Bologna, Papal StatesLawyer
12align=center Adriano Lemmi
17 January 188531 May 1896Livorno, TuscanyBanker, businessman
13align=center Ernesto Nathan
1 June 189614 February 1904London, UKCo-founder of Dante Alighieri Society; later Mayor of Rome (1907–1913)
14align=center Ettore Ferrari
15 February 190425 November 1917Rome, Papal StatesSculptor
align=center Ernesto Nathan
26 November 191722 June 1919London, UKCo-founder of Dante Alighieri Society; later Mayor of Rome (1907–1913)
15align=center Domizio Torrigiani
23 June 191923 April 1927Lamporecchio, ItalyLawyer
/align=center Eugenio Chiesa
12 January 193022 June 1930 †Milan, ItalyMember of the Chamber of Deputies (1904–1929)
/align=center Arturo Labriola
23 June 193029 November 1931Naples, ItalyMember of the Chamber of Deputies (1913–1929)
16align=center Alessandro Tedeschi
32 August 193219 August 1940 †Livorno, ItalySurgeon
17align=center Davide Augusto Albarin
19 August 194010 June 1944Paris, French EmpireAnti-fascist activist
18align=center Guido Laj
18 September 19455 November 1948 †Messina, ItalyJournalist, politician
19align=center Ugo Lenzi
19 March 194921 April 1953 †Bologna, ItalyLawyer
20align=center Publio Cortini
4 October 195327 September 1956Rome, ItalyBusinessman, engineer
21align=center Umberto Cipollone
30 November 195728 May 1960 †Lanciano, ItalyLawyer
22align=center Giorgio Tron
29 May 196028 April 1961Villar Pellice, ItalySurgeon
23align=center Giordano Gamberini
17 July 196121 March 1970Ravenna, ItalyWriter, politician
24align=center Lino Salvini
22 March 197018 November 1978Florence, ItalyWriter, politician
25align=center Ennio Battelli
18 November 197827 March 1982Urbino, ItalyBusinessman, military officer
26align=center Armando Corona
28 March 198210 March 1990Villaputzu, ItalyBusinessman, politician
27align=center Giuliano Di Bernardo
11 March 199016 April 1993Penne, ItalyPhilosopher, writer
28align=center Virgilio Gaito
18 December 199321 March 1999Naples, ItalyLawyer
29align=center Gustavo Raffi
21 March 19996 April 2014Bagnacavallo, ItalyLawyer
30align=center Stefano Bisi
6 April 20146 April 2024Siena, ItalyJournalist, writer
31align=center Antonio Seminario
6 April 2024"incumbent"Crosia, ItalyBusinessman

Bibliography

External links

41.8992°N 12.4753°W

Notes and References

  1. "Nel 1805 fu costituito il Grande Oriente d’Italia." Tran. "In 1805 the Grand Orient of Italy was founded." La storia 1805–1860, from the GOI Official website
  2. Headquarters detailed.
  3. See section "Government", on GOI about us page.
  4. See Members & Lodges.
  5. News: Ponziano, Giorgio . Tremila massoni al Palacongresso . Three thousand Masons at Palacongresso . . it . March 30, 2012 . June 11, 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140714131815/http://www.italiaoggi.it/giornali/dettaglio_giornali.asp?preview=false&accessMode=FA&id=1764673&codiciTestate=1 . July 14, 2014 . live .
  6. http://freemasonry.bcy.ca/biography/garibaldi_g/garibaldi.html Garibaldi — the mason
  7. Aldo Alessandro Mola “Masons in Italy: The Borderland Between Fanaticism and Liberty”. Revista de Estudios Históricos de la Masonería Latinoamericana y Caribeña (REHMLAC). ISSN 1659-4223. p. 233
  8. Entry "Giuseppe Mazzini" in Volume III K – P of 10,000 Famous Freemasons, William R. Denslow, 1957, Macoy Publishing & Masonic Supply Co., Inc.
  9. Nathan, Ernesto . 31 . 1059.
  10. https://web.archive.org/web/20121021103626/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,922553,00.html?promoid=googlep Centuries of Secrecy
  11. News: Marcello Veneziani. it. To arms we are fascists, indeed Freemasons.
  12. http://freemasonry.bcy.ca/anti-masonry/anti-masonry01.html#p2 What was the P2 Lodge?
  13. Web site: United Grand Lodge of England » Europe . December 5, 2012 . dead . https://archive.today/20121205043331/www.ugle.org.uk/about-ugle/recognised-foreign-grand-lodges/grand-lodges-in-europe/ . December 5, 2012 . UGLE: Recognised Grand Lodges in Europe
  14. Web site: Grand Lodge of Albania is recognised . United Grand Lodge of England . April 3, 2018 . UGLE...has publicly stated that it accepts the Grand Orient's regularity of origin... . June 18, 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210618212048/https://www.freemasonrytoday.com/more-news/international/tag/Grand%20Orient%20of%20Italy . dead .
  15. Web site: United Grand Lodge of England » Foreign Grand Lodges . March 15, 2023. UGLE: Recognised Grand Lodges in Europe