1. Entered Apprentice Degree
2. Fellowcraft Degree
3. Master Mason Degree
There are 3 degrees in blue lodge, and 33 degrees in red lodge.
33 is the highest & that's just 1 sect. =========== No, there are three main degrees and advanced degrees to 33.
Freemasonry has a number of examples of colour symbolism in its various degrees. Black has its own meanings but is not the only or even the most important colour associated with Freemasonry.
There is no such custom.
The name of freemasonry is "Freemasonry".
The Scottish Rite is a series of 29 supplementary degrees which a Master Mason can take to pursue further researches in Freemasonry. Many of these degrees are of a specifically Christian character. The system was created in the United States in 1801, although the first 11 degrees can be traced to an earlier French system from the late 18th century.
How did Freemasonry affect George Washington's life?
Kent Museum of Freemasonry was created in 1933.
Women are not allowed to be a ordinary Freemasonry; but there are not so ordinary organization that stand on the pillar of freemasonry that allow both men and women called Co-Freemasonry
In Freemasonry, "signs" refers to certain gestures related to each of the degrees. These are considered secret by Freemasons, and as such are not shared or communicated to individuals or group who are not Masonic.
He was a freemason and I think that freemasonry had more influence on him than he had on it.
I am guessing that by "ranking" you are referring to degrees. To make a long story short, there is no degree in Freemasonry higher than that of Master Mason, or the Third Degree. There are, however, a number of organisations (or appendant bodies) that require being a Master Mason as a prerequisite for membership. The Scottish rite is one of these appendant bodies and offers degrees up to the thirty third. While these appendant bodies have no authority over Freemasonry, (nor regardless of the level of their degree, do they place their members in a "higher" status than that of a Master Mason) they can provide an expanded perspective on some of the allegorical, moral and philosophical aspects of Freemasonry.