[377.] Lexicon of Freemasonry, p. 270.
[378.] Clavel, Histoire pittoresque de la Franc-Maçonnerie, p. 166.
[379.] A.Q.C., XXXII. Part 1. p. 17.
[380.] The Royal Order of Scotland, by Bro. Fred. H. Buckmaster, p. 3
[381.] Histoire de la Vie et des Ouvrages de Messire François de Salignac de la Mothe-Fenélon, archevêque de Cambrai, pp. 105, 149 (1727).
[382.] J.M. Ragon, Ordre Chapitral, Nouveau Grade de Rose-Croix, p. 35.
[383.] The identity of Lord Harnouester has remained a mystery. It has been suggested that Harnouester is only a French attempt to spell Derwentwater, and therefore that the two Grand Masters referred to were one and the same person.
[384.] In 1786 the seventh and eighth degrees were transposed, the eleventh became Sublime Knight Elect, the twentieth Grand Master of all Symbolic, the twenty-first Noachite or Prussian Knight, the twenty-third Chief of the Tabernacle, the twenty-fourth Prince of the Tabernacle, the twenty-fifth Knight of the Brazen Serpent. The thirteenth is now known as the Royal Arch of Enoch and must not be confounded with the Royal Arch, which is the complement of the third degree. The fourteenth is now the Scotch Knight of Perfection, the fifteenth Knight of the Sword or of the East, and the twentieth is Venerable Grand Master.
[385.] History of Freemasonry, III. 93. Thory gives the date of the Kadosch degree as 1743, which seems correct.
[386.] Zohar, section Bereschith, folio 18b.