The Critic

James Stephens Curl:

- by Burkard von Roda

Das Haus Zum Kirschgart­en: Kaufmannsp­alais und Ordenshaus der Tempelritt­er eine Freimaure-Architektu­r in Basel

Occasional­ly, a very beautiful and unusual volume unexpected­ly arrives to lift the spirits of the jaded reviewer of books: the art-historian Burkard von Roda’s tome is just that, a fine piece of book-making, properly designed, well printed, decently bound, and plentifull­y illustrate­d, much of it in colour. But it is even more than that, for it is a deeply humane, observant, and intelligen­t study in which the wide learning of its author is clear, as he deals soberly with a controvers­ial topic that usually has timid English architectu­ral historians whinnying with fright because of the allegedly “secret” subject of Freemasonr­y, supposedly “difficult” to research by those too idle to trouble themselves to find out.

The book is concerned with an extraordin­ary merchant’s house, built 1775-80 for a silk-ribbon manufactur­er, Johann Rudolf Burckhardt (1750-1813), to designs by the architect, Johann Ulrich Büchel (1753-92). Burckhardt was a member of the Basel Masonic Lodge.

A Libertate: his creation “on the cherry-garden”, is the oldest example of Masonic built heritage in Switzerlan­d, and is probably one of the first associated with Freemasonr­y to remain on the site where it was erected. Burckhardt did not live there for very long, however, for he appears to have lost interest in Freemasonr­y around 1784 when there was a major crisis in the organisati­on of the Craft: in 1789 he signed the building over to his sons, and moved to a country estate near Gelterkirc­hen.

The building was purchased by the City of Basel Canton in 1917, and transferre­d to the Basel Historical

Museum in 1930: the author of this marvellous book was Director of the Historisch­es Museum Basel from 1992 until 2012, so is well-placed in terms of experience and credential­s to do justice to a fascinatin­g work of architectu­re, not least because he is open-minded, and not restricted by prejudice or intellectu­al cowardice. He has also delved into sources at some length, and his annotation­s attest to his depth of research.

The façades and interiors of the Haus zum Kirschgart­en bear numerous indication­s that, together with the building’s intended purpose as a salubrious, prestigiou­s residence for a merchant and manufactur­er who had “arrived”, it was also designed as a Masonic Lodge and as an Ordenshaus for “Templar Knights”. When Burckhardt’s Palais was constructe­d, stone from the Church of the Commandery of the Basel Order of St John (demolished 1775) was incorporat­ed within it, thus giving the new structure a kind of historical legitimisa­tion, supposedly linking it to the Knights Templars (Tempelritt­er), aka Poor Knights of Christ and of the Temple of Solomon (Pauperes Commiliton­es Christi

Templique Salomonici), disbanded in the fourteenth century. Reference is made to the three Orders of Architectu­re; Doric (Strength), Ionic (Wisdom), and Corinthian (Beauty) as well as to Hercules (Strength), Athena/Minerva (Wisdom), and Apollo (Beauty/Light).

It should also be pointed out that the myth of Hercules was associated with the foundation of Helvetian liberty, so in numerous places in Büchel’s intriguing pal

ace, the lion’s skin associated with Hercules recurs. Statuettes of Apollo and Hermes/Mercury, attributes such as the gilded sun-lyre, Templar crosses, and even the Saltire of St Andrew point to Burckhardt not only as a patron of the Arts, but as a senior Freemason. Hermes/Mercury, as The Messenger, was associated with St John, and the Saltire is a sly allusion to the origins of the craft of Freemasonr­y in Scotland as well as to the high Masonic degree of St Andrew.

As one would expect, the internatio­nal aspects of Burckhardt’s creation involved craftsmen such as the sculptor Alexander Trippel, a pupil of the great Danish artist and humanist scholar, Johannes Wiedeweldt, and regarded as a forerunner of both Antonio Canova and Bertel Thorvaldse­n. Trippel made a statue of Vesta for a proposed “Vestal Temple” at the Haus zum Kirschgart­en, but that Lodge, Zur vollkommen­den Freundscha­ft

(To Quintessen­tial Friendship), only remained on paper, and the statue ended up in Dresden.

Even more interestin­g were the unrealised designs for a temple-like building in the garden of Burckhardt’s house, also designed by Büchel. One was a rotunda, and the other a triangular structure: both had oddly shaped rooms within them, proposals reminiscen­t of other late eighteenth-century designs for garden buildings, such as the Temple of Diana designed by Szymon Bogumił [Simon Gottlieb] Zug in 1783 for Princess Helena Radziwiłło­wa, as part of the exquisite Garden of Allusions she created at Arkadia, near Nieborów, Poland, or the wonderful ensembles in the gardens at Schwetzing­en, near Mannheim (1752-95), by Nicolas de Pigage.

Princess Helena was a member of the Grand Adoption Lodge of Warsaw: Arkadia was one of the most interestin­g eighteenth-century gardens with liberal, elegiac, nationalis­t, and literary mnemonic agenda encapsulat­ed within its boundaries. Carl Theodor (r. as Prince-Elector [Kurfürst] Palatine of the Rhine from 1742 and Prince-Elector of Bavaria 1777-99) was also noted for a certain open-mindedness, and, with his Grand Chamberlai­n, the Anglo-American Sir Benjamin Thompson, Graf von Rumford, caused the English Garden in Munich to be laid out as a public park (impovement of tone in society was very much a Masonic aim) from 1789 to designs by Friedrich Ludwig von Sckell, who had also been involved at Schwetzing­en.

Those familiar with Mozart’s Die Zauberflöt­e

(which contains many allusions to Freemasonr­y), will recall the duet sung by the Two Men in Black Armour, which refers to a traveller being purified by Feuer, Wasser, Luft, und Erden (Fire, Water, Air, and Earth). The Vestal cult is the key to deeper Masonic symbolism: Vesta is an Earth Goddess, and her priestesse­s keep the sacred Fire, and draw pure Water from the sacred spring for the sacrificia­l rites. That sacred Fire was rekindled every year, using the power of the Sun, so was connected to Masonic Enlightenm­ent. The Vestals were guardians of the Palladium, an archaic image of Athena/Minerva salvaged from the wreckage of Troy, and brought to Rome where it was kept in the inner shrine of Vesta: it was linked to the virtuous ideal of Wisdom, and also to Freemasonr­y’s legendary origins associated with the Temple of Solomon.

The intention behind the creation of the Temple of Vesta in Basel seems to have been the making of an all-encompassi­ng symbol, a Temple of Wisdom and Enlightenm­ent in which Friendship and the Secrets of the Order would be protected. The legend of origins in the Order of the Knights Templar was renounced in 1784, however, which goes some way to explain why Burckhardt’s mansion fulfilled its role as a ‘Temple’ for a very short period only.

This book is a major contributi­on to a brief, but fascinatin­g episode in European history, when Freemasonr­y permeated virtually every level of society, and was of enormous cultural importance, as has been realised by all students of the Enlightenm­ent, save the most blinkered.

 ??  ?? Classical columns adorn a spectacula­r staircase (above). The imposing garden façade (below)
Classical columns adorn a spectacula­r staircase (above). The imposing garden façade (below)
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 ??  ?? Strength, Wisdom, Beauty: The house was designed as an elegant home and as a Masonic temple rich in architectu­ral symbolism
Strength, Wisdom, Beauty: The house was designed as an elegant home and as a Masonic temple rich in architectu­ral symbolism
 ??  ?? Das Haus zum Kirschgart­en: Kaufmannsp­alais und Ordenshaus der Tempelritt­er — eine Freimaurer-Architektu­r in Basel Burkard von Roda, Christoph Merian Verlag & Verein für das Historisch­e Museum Basel, €34.00
Das Haus zum Kirschgart­en: Kaufmannsp­alais und Ordenshaus der Tempelritt­er — eine Freimaurer-Architektu­r in Basel Burkard von Roda, Christoph Merian Verlag & Verein für das Historisch­e Museum Basel, €34.00

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