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Canons Ashby 'masonic' chamber discovered after 400 years | Canons Ashby 'masonic' chamber discovered after 400 years |
(about 13 hours later) | |
A secret chamber, hidden for 400 years and with possible links to early freemasonry, has been discovered. | A secret chamber, hidden for 400 years and with possible links to early freemasonry, has been discovered. |
The entrance to the room, which has plastered walls, was found inside a cupboard at the National Trust-owned house Canons Ashby, near Daventry. | The entrance to the room, which has plastered walls, was found inside a cupboard at the National Trust-owned house Canons Ashby, near Daventry. |
It is a panelled room with walls showing crests of local families and enigmatic symbols. | It is a panelled room with walls showing crests of local families and enigmatic symbols. |
Laura Malpas, of the trust, said there was "speculation" the room had been an early masonic lodge. | Laura Malpas, of the trust, said there was "speculation" the room had been an early masonic lodge. |
Ms Malpas, community manager for the trust, said it was "a fascinating and puzzling space" with walls that include "frankly odd Latin texts". | Ms Malpas, community manager for the trust, said it was "a fascinating and puzzling space" with walls that include "frankly odd Latin texts". |
"[They] tell the reader things such as 'Do not eat of those things with a black tail' or 'Check your tongue, your belly and your lust, the best thing is to enjoy someone else's madness'." | "[They] tell the reader things such as 'Do not eat of those things with a black tail' or 'Check your tongue, your belly and your lust, the best thing is to enjoy someone else's madness'." |
She said the house manager Edward Bartlett made the discovery after deciding to investigate the cupboard while locking up for the night. | |
"With a torch he discovered an entrance to a small concealed chamber, hidden in the panelling of the room," she said. | "With a torch he discovered an entrance to a small concealed chamber, hidden in the panelling of the room," she said. |
"Clearly not a natural void left during the building process, this tiny chamber is floor boarded and the walls have been plastered from the inside to create a space that could hide a person and a sizeable amount of objects the owner of the house might want to keep hidden away from public view." | "Clearly not a natural void left during the building process, this tiny chamber is floor boarded and the walls have been plastered from the inside to create a space that could hide a person and a sizeable amount of objects the owner of the house might want to keep hidden away from public view." |
"It is believed the Dryden family may well have been part of a society that evolved into what we now recognise as the freemasons." | "It is believed the Dryden family may well have been part of a society that evolved into what we now recognise as the freemasons." |
She added: "There has been speculation that this room was used as an early form of Masonic lodge before Freemasonry was established in England some 130 years later in 1717." | She added: "There has been speculation that this room was used as an early form of Masonic lodge before Freemasonry was established in England some 130 years later in 1717." |
It would not have been a hole to hide priests as the Dryden family were puritans, she said. | It would not have been a hole to hide priests as the Dryden family were puritans, she said. |
The room is about 6ft (1.82m) high with 6ft (1.82m) by 5ft (1.52m) floor space. | The room is about 6ft (1.82m) high with 6ft (1.82m) by 5ft (1.52m) floor space. |
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