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General: FREEMASONRY AND BUENOS AIRES’ MOST IMPORTANT BUILDINGS
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De: BARILOCHENSE6999  (Mensaje original) Enviado: 30/08/2021 02:30

FREEMASONRY AND BUENOS AIRES’ MOST IMPORTANT BUILDINGS

Buenos Aires is known for its varied and often schizophrenic architecture; high-rise apartment block sit alongside ancient casa chorizos or tower above PHs, ornate French baroque palaces lounge against charmless 1980’s office buildings, all on the one cuadra. But in the historical centre of the city, numerous buildings have more than a few unifying characteristics; the symbolic flourishes of Freemasonry.

Freemasonry has a long history in Argentina: many important figures throughout the ages including Sarmiento, Belgrano and San Martin were Masons, as were a total of 14 Argentine presidents. Although mired in mythology because of its clandestine nature, being a Mason is really nothing more than being part of an adult fraternity. The fundamental Masonic principles are even “Liberty, Equality, Fraternity”, like the motto of the French Revolution. And this in itself is interesting, because one of the reasons that Masons became so prominent in Argentina was precisely because of the European Masons that emigrated to the Southern Cone, predominantly the Italians. They were known to be more liberal than most Masonic societies by allowing men of any faith and social class to become a member, something that allowed for the expansion of the order in Argentina.

Symbols are a pillar of Masonic culture, representing various ideals, creeds and ethics that the Masons use in both their teachings and apply to their daily lives. The most well known symbol is the Masonic emblem of the square and compass, representing morality and boundaries respectively. These are the tools of the stonemason, and are often seen with a capital G in the middle, meaning geometry, or God, who is the “Great Architect of the Universe”. So naturally, the built environment is a perfect vehicle through which to physically express the values and virtues of Freemasonry in the most enduring way possible.

Palacio Barolo

Palacio Barolo is perhaps the most overtly Masonic building that does not serve the order in all of Buenos Aires. Its developer, textile tycoon Luis Barolo and architect Mario Palanti were both Italian Masons, and Dante Allighieri, the literary inspiration for the building, was a member of Fede Santa, an order which went on to become Masonic. The office building’s design is based on Dante’s “Divine Comedy” and was inaugurated in 1923. It was one of the first skyscrapers in South America and was constructed over the course of four years, with every single element fabricated in Italy and shipped to Argentina for assembly. Divided into three sections that correspond to the poem’s structure over its 22 floors, the two basement levels and ground floor represent Hell, floors 1 – 14 equate to Purgatory and floors 15 – 22 correlate to Paradise. The ornate ground floor is inset with 9 glass circles and there are 9 arches which serve as entrances to Hell. The number 9 not only relates to Dante’s poem, but also to Freemasonry, being the result of 3 times 3, a number sacred to the Masons.

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Palacio Barolo. Photo by Sorcha O’Higgins

There are many aspects of the building’s decoration and organization that relate to Freemasonry, with most being centred around the elevator as it represents ascension, in both physical and figurative senses, a fundamental Masonic theme signifying enlightenment. The most obvious Freemason symbol is the compass within the A of “Ascensor”. Another is that the arrow indicating the floors ends in a Fleur de Lis, an emblem synonymous with secrecy, and used by Masons to show the path that should be followed, in this case rising through the floors of purgatory to get to heaven. The floor of the lift lobby is also laid with black and white checkerboard tiles, a typical Masonic reference meaning the duality of god and evil. There are 7 lifts that serve the 22 floors, and the division of the latter by the former gives Pi, which is used to calculate the area and circumference of a circle. In Freemasonry, the circle represents perfect order, and many elements in Palacio Barolo are circular, such as the elevator cars, balconies, windows, arches over doors and of course, the internal dome on the 3rd floor. Directly under the dome on the ground floor, a series of squares are inset into each other, again reinforcing the themes of ascension and enlightenment.

The crowning moment of the Barolo is the lighthouse at the top of the central tower. It serves not only to represent the arrival to God as The Divine Comedy, but also signifies the Masonic traits of illumination and enlightenment. A Fleur de Lis also graces the very top of the lighthouse, which aligns with the Southern Cross constellation every year at the start of June. Legend has it that this alignment creates a direct passage to heaven.

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Palacio Barolo. Photo by Sorcha O’Higgins

Teatro Colon

European architects designed the Teatro Colon like Palacio Barolo at a time when the general thinking in South America was that Europe was on the brink of collapse after World War I. In response, Buenos Aires, the self-styled “Paris of the South”, was intent on architecturally emulating its mother continent, resulting in numerous buildings that were a melange of styles aesthetically. Both Teatro Colon and Palacio Barolo evade stylistic definition because of this.

The current Teatro Colon, in between Av. 9 de Julio and Libertad, took 20 years and three architects to complete, with construction beginning in 1888 and finishing in 1908. However, its first incarnation was actually in front of the Plaza de Mayo, where the Argentine National Bank now sits. Perhaps not incidentally, the original Teatro Colon also housed the first Masonic Grand Lodge on its first floor.

The original architect of the modern Colon was the Italian Francesco Tamburini, who also designed the lodge at Cangallo 1242 in Buenos Aires province. After his death he was succeeded by Victor Meano, a Mason who took Tamburini’s designs and embellished them to make the theatre more dramatic. This is most evident the entrance foyer, where the transition between the entrance and first floors is elevated to the realm of the divine. The stairs acts as a bridge between the mortal sphere below and the metaphysical dimension of music and entertainment above. Materially opulent, the floor is tiles with Venetian tessellations, while the stairs themselves are formed from Carrara marble. Yellow marble from Sienna and pink marble from Portugal are woven together in the balustrades. Structurally and decoratively, the ground floor is solid and terrestrial, with thick columns anchoring the building to the ground. But up above, on the first floor, home to the Gallery of Busts, the Golden Hall and the VIP entrances to the main auditorium, delicate fluted columns and gold leafed ceilings herald the crossover into the spiritual domain. Directly above the stairs is an ornate stained glass dome inset with the exquisite figures of eight of the nine Greek muses, the goddesses of the arts. The ninth is said to be metaphorically represented in the dome of the main auditorium. While not overtly Masonic in its symbolism, it could be assumed that it is a reference, because the number 9 in Freemasonry was consecrated to the Spheres and the Muses, and it would also follow that having this positioned directly above a passage of ascension would align with Masonic thinking on the themes of enlightenment.

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Teatro Colón. Photo by Sorcha O’Higgins

Palacio del Congreso

The National Congress building was designed by Victor Meano, second architect of the Teatro Colon. It was built between 1898 and 1906 in the Neo-classical style common among congress buildings, and in fact was modelled after Capitol Hill in Washington DC. However, the decorations on its facade and many of its aesthetic details were not completed until 1946. The congress building commands western end of the Congressional Plaza, which was inaugurated in 1910. The plaza itself contains a bronze statue of Rodin’s famous sculpture “The Thinker”, which was one of three sculptures cast in the original mould and signed by the artist. This is notable as Rodin was a Mason and “The Thinker” employs many Masonic elements – it is designed according to the Golden Ratio but the Thinker himself sits on a slab of rough stone, or rough ashlar, representing man’s need for self-improvement which can be gained by adhering to Masonic principles.

Palacio del Congreso also sits at one point of a Masonic triangulation that exists in the city of Buenos Aires, which is a projection of the positioning of the Masons in the temple: the Casa Rosada (near original Teatro Colon) represents the seat of the master, Congreso represents the seat of the first guard and Tribunales (near new Teatro Colon) represents the seat of the second guard. These axes are present in Washington, Paris and in other Masonic cities throughout the world.

There are many other Masonic influences visible in Argentina, from the Obelisco and the Pyramide de Mayo to the entire city of La Plata, which is laid out on a diagonal grid. To find out more about this fascinating society and its legacy in Buenos Aires, take a tour with Tamara, an expert in Masonic symbolism.

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Masonic triangulation. Photo by Sorcha O’Higgins
https://therealargentina.com/en/freemasonry-and-buenos-aires-most-important-buildings/


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El Obelisco de Buenos Aires cumple 85 años: la lucha de masones detrás de su construcción

El clásico monumento porteño es un símbolo masón que fue erigido para "romper" otro símbolo masón entre los edificios más importantes de la Ciudad de Buenos Aires.

Obelisco 20210504Obelisco | ARCHIVO HISTORICO DE LA NACION-SHUTERSTOCK
Carlos PiroCarlos Piro

Periodista y editor de Perfil.com. Historiador de Chacarita Juniors.
www.facebook.com/carlososvaldopiro @carlospiro68 ig@carlos_osvaldo_piro Web Mas notas de Carlos PiroMás notas de Carlos Piro

23-05-2021 18:00

El Obelisco es, sin lugar a dudas, uno de los íconos más reconocidos de la ciudad de Buenos Aires. Sus críticos suelen hablar de su inutilidad, de su falta de belleza, y hasta de que puede ser considerado un símbolo del patriarcado. Tantos detractores ha tenido desde que se inauguró hace 85 años, el 23 de mayo de 1936 que estuvo a punto de ser demolido antes de cumplir un año. Pero detrás del ícono, de las discusiones que tanto le gustan a los porteños y de su aniversario, se esconde un símbolo masón, que además, rompe con otro símbolo de la masonería.

Ya en sí, el obelisco es un símbolo masón, pagano, que tiene múltiples significados: es un rayo de sol, sirve para “pinchar” simbólicamente las nubes, es considerado un centro energético, se lo suele rodear por una rotonda, obligando a quienes lo quieren ver a rodearlo, como si se tratara de un ritual. Es más, para erigirlo, en Buenos Aires fue necesario demoler una iglesia. ¿Mayor símbolo del poder de la masonería por sobre el poder del culto católico?

 

 

 

Sí, obviamente, van a explicar que no es así, que no hay pruebas, y que estas afirmaciones pueden estar "flojas de papeles". Claro, como toda la información que rodea a la Masonería. Un símbolo del poder masón, es la dificultad para confirmar las informaciones.

Lo cierto es que Buenos Aires tiene cuatro de sus edificios más importantes que forman un triángulo exacto. De acuerdo al plan urbano armado en 1880, cuando se federalizó al capital de la República Argentina, armado por el primer intendente municipal Torcuato de Alvear, si se trazara una línea imaginaria que uniera el Centro de la Plaza de Mayo (donde está la Pirámide, que es en realidad un obelisco) con el centro de la Plaza de los Dos Congresos (la fuente) y unir con otras lineas rectas estos extremos con el centro de la Plaza Lavalle (Frente al palacio de Tribunales),  se forma un triángulo perfecto de lados desiguales.

Obelisco 20210504Triangulo imaginario. Fuente: http://danieleugeniopena.blogspot.com/

El triángulo, que tiene una fuerte simbología católica por la tríada sagrada de padre, hijo y espíritu santo, también tiene una fuerte carga en la simbología masónica.

Según especialistas en el tema, si se marcaran las bisectrices de los ángulos formados para que se intercepten en un punto de este triángulo, coincide con la sede de la Gran Logia de la Argentina de Libres y Aceptados Masones, ubicada en Presidente Perón 1242.

Pero a esta “fuente de energía”, este triángulo que simboliza el poder de la masonería, fue “roto”, al menos simbólicamente, por el Obelisco que se emplazó en tiempo récord en el porteñísimo cruce de 9 de julio y Corrientes.

El Obelisco, símbolo porteño, es una postal del deterioro

¿Fue un símbolo masónico sobre otro símbolo masónico? Está claro que sí, aunque nadie lo admita claramente. Lo cierto es que la historia cuenta que se erigió en tiempo récord. Fue construido en 1936 para celebrar el cuarto centenario de la llamada primera fundación de Buenos Aires y fue obra del arquitecto argetino Alberto Prebisch y la construcción estuvo a cargo del consorcio alemán GEOPÉ Siemebs Bauunion-Grün & Bilfinger.

La obra demandó apenas 31 días y trabajaron 157 obreros para su elevación, en secciones de dos metros, para facilitar el volcado de hormigón con cemento Incor de endurecimiento rápido. Se invirtieron 200 mil pesos moneda nacional, se usaron 680 m³ de cemento y 1360 m² de piedra blanca de Pampa de Olaen, Córdoba.

Algunos hitos de la historia del Obelisco porteño

  • En diciembre de 1973 se lo convirtió en árbol de Navidad.
  • En 1975 se colocó un anillo giratorio  con las inscripciones “El silencio es salud” y “Mantenga limpia Buenos Aires”.
  • En diciembre de 2005 fue cubierto por un preservativo rosado en conmemoración del Día Mundial de la lucha contra el Sida.
  • El 20 de septiembre de 2007 conmemorando los 150 años de las relaciones bilaterales entre Argentina y Alemania, amaneció cubierto con una tela de 60 m² con los colores de las banderas de esos países.
  • El 7 de agosto de 2009 exhibió el brazalete distintivo del lema “Say No More, de Charly García como parte de la campaña publicitaria para el lanzamiento de la canción «Deberías saber por qué», que marcó el esperado retorno del músico al mundo del espectáculo.
  • El 20 de septiembre de 2015 pareció haber perdido su punta por una intervención del artista Leandro Erlich, que generó una ilusión óptica.
  • El 24 de noviembre de 2016 por la celebración del Día del vino como Bebida Nacional, se proyectaron imágenes referidas a la vitivinicultura argentina en sus paredes.
https://www.perfil.com/noticias/cultura/el-obelisco-cumple-85-anos-la-pelea-de-masones-detras-de-su-construccion.phtml

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3,100 Ancient Symbols Four Elements Images, Stock Photos, 3D objects, &  Vectors | Shutterstock

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The Four Angels, Corners, and Winds of the Four Elements of God's Creation  | Christian traditions, Angel of the north, Witchcraft books
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