Grand Lodge Alpina of Switzerland
History
The Grand Lodge was founded in 1844.[2] At the time of the foundation there were said to be around 30 masonic lodges operating in Switzerland In 1921, it became a founding member of the International Masonic Association in alliance with the Grand Orient of France, Grand Orient of Belgium, Grand Orient of the Netherlands and the Grand Orient of Italy, amongst many others. Indeed, the international headquarters of the Association was at 20, rue Général-Dufour, Grande-Chancellerie, Geneva, Switzerland. The first Grand Chancellor was a previous Grand Master of the Grand Lodge Alpina of Switzerland; Édouard Quartier-la-Tente. The second Grand Chancellor, too, had just retired as Grand Master of the Grand Lodge Alpina of Switzerland; Isaac Reverchon. The right-wing Swiss Army colonel Arthur Fonjallaz attempted to orchestrate a legal ban on Freemasonry (and other societies) in the 1930s, apparently in sympathy with bans introduced by Hitler's Germany and Mussolini's Italy at that period. The attempted ban was rejected by the Swiss people in 1937. In 2008 the Grand Lodge listed 4,000 members in 83 lodges under its jurisdiction.[4] It has since consecrated 3 further lodges, taking the total to 86.In 2009 the Grand Lodge Alpina adopted an official position on women's freemasonry. In common with the United Grand Lodge of England, and many other regular masonic jurisdictions, Grand Lodge Alpina encourages its members and its lodges to cooperate with women's masonic lodges in social events and charitable endeavours, but maintains entirely separate organisation and ceremonial, with no inter-visitation between formal meeting of male and female lodges.