Angelo Soliman (1721 - 1796) is historically recognized as
the "First Moorish Freemason." Born in the Congo (Cameroon), at age seven he was kidnapped and sold into
slavery. In Europe, he was the slave (child toy) of a prominent Sicilian lady.
Later, at age 16, he was sold to a
royal family in Vienna, Austria. There,
he so impressed his masters with his remarkable intelligence, they chose to
educate him.

In his mid twenties,
Soliman distinguished himself as a studious and honorable subject with his
masters, and actually won his freedom through his high moral character and
education. As a free citizen of Vienna, the world's citadel of culture and
enlightenment at the time, Soliman, now a member of the royal Hapsburg
household, continued to pursue a personal course of erudite and moral
excellence. He spoke six languages fluently and could write three of them
fluently as well. He was also a master swordsman, war hero, chess specialist, navigation expert, concert composer, and a
tutor to royalty. He was the subject of Mozart's popular opera The Magic Flute.
Soliman is considered one of the most learned people of his generation as well as one of the greatest
Vienna citizens of all time.
He was a Vienna
celebrity, a dashing figure and personality widely admired for his
handsomeness, fashionable Moorish attire and social grace; he was an excellent
dancer and romancer at elite social affairs. He married in 1768 and in the same
year joined the True Concord Freemason's lodge, which included his friends
Mozart and Haydn. He eventually became the Grand Master of the lodge and
rewrote and refined its rituals and other literature. The Soliman Freemasonic
literary style spread all over Europe and around the world, eventually even
influencing modern Freemasonic literature and rituals. Thus, Soliman is called
the Father of Pure Masonic Thought. The Moorish Rite hails Angelo Soliman as
its patriarchal figure; he is a profound model of early Moorish/Black
achievement. To this day, in Vienna, he is celebrated in song and dance and
national memory. And today, in America, two Moorish Rite lodges so far have
been named in Soliman's honor.
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