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The Lodge St. Jean was called "Mother-Lodge of Sweden" and considered itself entitled to issue warrants to other Lodges in the
country. Count Carl Fredrik Scheffer who had been made a Freemason in Paris in 1737, was elected National Grand Master in 1753. During the 1750s, the Lodges opened their
doors to members of other classes of society than the nobility. In 1756, Carl Fredrik Eckleff together with six brethren formed the Scottish Lodge L'Innocente in Stockholm, working so called Scottish St. Andrew's degrees. The next step in the development of Swedish Freemasonry was taken by Eckleff in 1759, when he established a Grand Chapter in Stockholm. |
![]() Duke Karl, later King Karl XIII |