York Rite
The York Rite is a system of appendant degrees in Freemasonry that extends the symbolic teachings of the Craft Lodge's three foundational degrees—Entered Apprentice, Fellowcraft, and Master Mason—through a series of rituals administered by three primary bodies: the Chapter of Royal Arch Masons, the Council of Royal and Select Masters, and the Commandery of Knights Templar.[1][2] Named after the ancient English city of York, where legend holds an early assembly of masons convened around 926 AD, the Rite traces its formalized development to the 18th century in England and America, with the Royal Arch degree emerging as a capstone that resolves the narrative of the lost Master's Word from the third degree.[3][1] The Capitular degrees of the Chapter include Mark Master, Past Master, Most Excellent Master, and Royal Arch Mason, emphasizing the construction, loss, and recovery of sacred knowledge tied to King Solomon's Temple.[2] The Cryptic degrees of the Council—Royal Master, Select Master, and optional Super Excellent Master—focus on the preservation of that knowledge in a hidden vault.[1] The Chivalric orders of the Commandery, comprising the Illustrious Order of the Red Cross, Order of Malta, and Order of the Temple, incorporate Christian themes and require professed belief in the Christian religion, distinguishing them from the more general theistic requirements of earlier degrees.[2][1] Collectively, these ten degrees and orders provide moral and allegorical instruction, fostering fellowship among Master Masons seeking deeper Masonic light.[3] In contrast to the Scottish Rite's hierarchical, philosophically oriented progression through degrees up to the 33rd, the York Rite operates through autonomous local and grand bodies with a decentralized structure, prioritizing narrative completion of Ancient Craft Masonry over extended esoteric exploration.[1] Its emphasis on biblical typology and chivalric discipline has sustained its popularity in American Freemasonry since the late 18th century, with early chapters like Providence Royal Arch No. 1 chartered in 1793.[3]