On the basis ofthe archives and materials, which were, as a part ofthe legacy of the last living freemason Evgen Lovšin handed over to the National Museum in Ljubljana, as well as the material form Archives of the Ministry for Internal Affairs of Slovenia and the literature, the author reconstructs the feemasons movement in Slovenia before the World war II. He got to the consclusion that the Slovene freeemasonry had less members than similar organizations in Croatia and Serbia. The Freemasons lodge Valentin Vodnik, established on May 21th, 1940, associated 18 freemasons, among which important cultural and university workers. But these men, if any, became part of the history rather for their political activities and scientific or cultural creativness, and they didnt have, accordning to the nowday known data, much influence on the slovene political life between the two world wars.