Medieval Depiction of the Founders of the Knights Templar -- Sharing a Horse |
This Oct. 13th marks the 708th anniversary of the mass arrest of Knights Templar in France. It was the beginning of the end of this great medieval institution. In honor of that tragic event, I offer a concise history of the Poor Knights of the Temple of Solomon in Jerusalem. What follows is pure history. Anyone interested in conspiracies, heresy, magic, fantasy, and aliens can save their time and skip the following essay.
After the establishment of the Kingdom of Jerusalem following
the First Crusade, pilgrims flooded to the newly freed Holy Land, but the
situation was far from stable and the secular authorities were unable to
guarantee the safety of pilgrims who ventured out upon the dangerous roads from
Jerusalem to other pilgrimage sites such as Jericho and Nazareth. In 1115
Hugues de Payens, a Burgundian knight, and Sir Godfrey de St. Adhemar, a
Flemish knight, decided to join forces and form a band of sworn brothers
dedicated to protecting pilgrims. They soon recruited seven other knights, all
men like themselves – stranded in the Holy Land without wealth or land, and
allegedly so poor that Payens and St. Adhemar had only one horse between them.
In 1118 the King of Jerusalem gave them the stables of what was believed to
have been the palace (or temple) of King Solomon for their quarters, and from
this they took their name, “The Poor Knights of Christ of the Temple of Solomon
in Jerusalem” – a name was soon shortened to the Knights Templar. At the same
time, or shortly afterwards, these nine knights took monastic vows of chastity,
poverty, and obedience before the Patriarch of Jerusalem.
The Templar HQ with the Dome of Al Aqsa Mosque (the Templar Church) as it looks Today |
The Knights Templar rapidly attracted new recruits -– and
powerful patrons -- highlighting the extent to which the concept of knights
dedicated to the service of God touched a chord in men at this time. But the
concept of fighting monks was revolutionary. Even the crusades had not
sanctioned the bearing of arms by men dedicated to the Church; the crusades had
only allowed secular men to serve the
interests of the Church. What the Knights Templar proposed was to allow men of
God to also be fighting men.
Recognizing the need for guidance and official sanction,
Payens approached the Pope, and not only was his new kind of monastic order
recognized, it was enthusiastically praised. Bernard of Clairvaux, the most
influential churchman of his age (credited with founding 70 new Cistercian
monasteries), agreed to write the Templars’ Rule. Not surprisingly, he
fashioned the Templar Rule on that of the Cistercians; more unusual, however,
was that he also wrote a treatise in praise of the Knights Templar, the De Laude Novae Militiae (In Praise of
the New Knighthood), in which he contrasted the virtuous Templars with the
vain, greedy, and (senselessly) violent secular knights of the age.
A "Frivolous" Secular Knight Dancing and Consorting with Women as no Templar Would Have Done |
According to De Laude
Novae Militiae, the Knights Templar were disciplined, humble, and sober.
Thus, “impudent words, senseless occupations, immoderate language, whispering,
or even suppressed giggling are unknown. They have a horror of chess and dice;
they hate hunting; they don’t even enjoy the flight of the falcon. They despise
mimes, jugglers, storytellers, dirty songs, performances of buffoons – all
these they regard as vanities and inane follies.” The documented initiation
ceremonies – in contrast to the fabricated accusations of King Philip IV’s paid
informers tasked with discrediting the Order two centuries later – were simple
and sober professions of Catholic orthodoxy and vows to obey the officers of
the Order, to remain chaste, to own no property, and to protect the Holy Land
and Christians.” (See Andrea Hopkins, Knights,
Collins & Brown Lt., London, 1990, p. 90.)
The Templars were an
instant success (by medieval standards), and their resources increased
exponentially over the next decades. They soon controlled properties in
virtually every kingdom of Christendom, from Sicily to Ireland, but
particularly in France, England, and Portugal. The Order also rapidly developed
a sophisticated hierarchy and structure. The bulk of the Order’s members were
lay brothers: men who worked the fields of Templar landholdings and served as
skilled laborers, from blacksmiths to stone masons, in the fortresses of
Outremer. Furthermore, although only men already knighted, i.e., men from the
landed class, could become Knights
Templar, men of lesser birth could be men-at-arms, just as in any other army of
the age. In contrast to the usual pattern, however, these men were not foot
soldiers or archers but mounted fighting men, armed with sword and lance and
called “sergeants.” While the knights were allowed four horses and two squires,
the sergeants appear to have been allowed two horses and one squire. (These
squires, incidentally, were not members of the Order, and not bound by monastic
vows nor compelled to fight.) Last but not least, as enthusiasm for the Holy
Land waned in the West, the Templars came to rely more and more on auxiliary
troops raised in the Holy Land itself: men of Armenian, Greek, Arab, or mixed
descent, called “Turcopoles.” The Templars also had their own priests and
clerks.
Collieure, Languedoc -- One of the Templars many "Commanderies" in the West |
But manpower is only half the equation. Fighting men,
particularly monks who had renounced all wealth and owned nothing, had to be
clothed, equipped, mounted, armed, and fed at the expense of the Order. The
great castles in the Holy Land – absolutely crucial to the defense of the
Christian kingdoms – had to be built, maintained, and provisioned. The cost of
equipping even one knight was substantial, the cost of keeping a castle
enormous; the costs of maintaining thousands of knights in the field and dozens
of castles in defensible condition were astronomical. It would not have been
possible without the huge estates donated to the Templars in the West.
The Templars’ extensive properties in Western Europe provided
the Order with recruits, remounts, and above all, financial resources. They
also created a network through which the Templars could influence secular
leaders. Furthermore, the extensive network of Templar “commanderies,” combined
with the Templars’ reputation for incorruptibility and prowess at arms, enabled
the Templars to move money (then still exclusively in the form of gold and
silver) across great distances. Furthermore, the Templar network made it
possible for someone to deposit money at one commandery and withdraw it from
another with a kind of “letter of credit” – a service unknown before the
Templars. Because of their own wealth and the funds deposited with them, the
Templars were soon in a position to provide substantial loans, and are on
record as having lent money to the Kings of both England and France. Because of
their reputation as being scrupulously honest yet financially astute, they were
also often employed as tax collectors and financial advisors by ruling
monarchs, from Richard I of England to Philip IV of France.
A Templar Charge by Mariusz Kozik, Copyright Fireforge Games |
More important, the vow of obedience enabled disciplined
fighting – a rarity in the Middle Ages, when most men were proud to fight as
individuals, conscious of their own glory and gain. In contrast, a Templar who
acted on his own was subject to severe disciplinary measures, including
imprisonment or degradation for a year. There are many accounts of the Templars
forming the shock troops during the advance and the rear guard during the
retreat on crusades, of Templars defending the most difficult salient in a
siege, and of Templar sorties to rescue fellow Christians in distress. At the
height of their power, the Templars controlled a chain of mighty castles from
La Roche de Roussel, north of Antioch, to Gaza, as well as a powerful fleet.
Crusader Castle of Montreal - Typical of the Fortifications of the Templars |
The Knights Templar suffered a fatal blow, however, when
Jerusalem was lost to Saladin in 1187. Although the consequences were not
immediately apparent, the loss of Jerusalem – and the failure of all subsequent
crusades to regain permanent control – slowly eroded the faith in Christian
victory and, ultimately, the interest in fighting for the Holy Land. As the
territory controlled by Christians shrank, so did the resources of the local
barons. Soon, sufficient resources could not be raised in the Holy Land to
finance its defense. This meant that the defense of the remaining Christian
outposts fell increasingly to the militant orders, the Templars and
Hospitallers, who could still draw on the profits of their extensive holdings
in the West. But these resources proved insufficient in face of the huge cost of
maintaining their establishment in the Holy Land as enthusiasm for fighting for
the Holy Land waned. Throughout the second half of the 13th century, the crusader
territories were lost, castle by castle and city by city, mostly as a result of
the defenders having insufficient manpower to maintain their garrisons. When
the last Templar stronghold in the Holy Land, the Temple at Acre, fell to the
Saracens in 1292, some 20,000 Templars had given their lives for the Holy Land.
The Knights Templar transferred their headquarters to Cyprus
after losing their last foothold in Palestine, but they had lost their raison
d’ĂȘtre. That would have been crippling in itself, perhaps, but what proved
fatal was that they retained their apparent wealth. King Philip IV, whose coffers
were again empty, decided to confiscate the Templar “treasure” – meaning their
entire property.
To justify this move, Philip accused the Templars of various
crimes, including devil worship, blasphemy, corruption, and sodomy. Without
warning, on the night of Friday, October 13, 1307, officers of the French crown
simultaneously broke into Templar commanderies across France and seized all the
Templars and their property. While most of the men arrested were lay brothers
and sergeants (since most knights who had survived the fall of Acre were on
Cyprus), Philip IV made sure he would also seize the senior officers of the
Temple by inviting them to Paris “for consultations” in advance of his strike.
All those arrested, including the very men King Philip had treated as friends
and advisors only days before, were subjected to brutal torture until they
confessed to the catalog of crimes the French King had concocted.
The Arrest of the Templars from a Medieval Manuscript |
There is no evidence whatsoever that the Templars were in any
way heretical in their beliefs. Furthermore, although Philip persuaded the Pope
to order a general investigation of the Templars, in countries where torture
was not extensively employed (such as England, Spain, Portugal, Germany, and
Cyprus), the Templars were found innocent. (Edward II of England, a man not
otherwise known for his courage and no less keen than Philip IV to obtain
control of Templar wealth, initially refused the help of French torturers sent
to “assist” him, with the notable words that "torture had no tradition in English
jurisprudence"! It would take the Tudors to introduce that to England!)
Meanwhile, in France, Templars who retracted the confessions
torn from them under torture were burned at the stake as “relapsed heretics.”
Tragically, the Pope at the time lived in terror of King Philip IV, who had
deposed his predecessor with accusations almost identical to those leveled
against the Templars. He preferred to sacrifice the Templars rather than risk
confrontation with King Philip. Thus, although the evidence against the Order
was clearly fabricated and the Pope could not find sufficient grounds to
condemn the Order, he disbanded it in 1312. The last Grand Master and Marshal
of the Knights Templar, Jacques de Molay and Geoffrey de Charney respectively,
were burned at the stake for retracting their confessions, in the presence of
King Philip, on March 18, 1314.
Not until 2007 did the Vatican officially
declare the Templars’ innocence based on the evidence still in the Papal
archives.
Recommended Reading:
·
Barber, Malcolm, The New Knighthood: A History
of the Order of the Temple, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1994.
·
Hopkins, Andrea, Knights: The Complete Story of
the Age of Chivalry, From Historical Fact to Tales of Romance and Poetry,
Collins & Brown Ltd, London, 1990.
·
Howarth, Stephan, The Knights Templar, Barnes
and Noble Books, New York, 1982.
·
Robinson, John J., Dungeon, Fire and Sword: The
Knights Templar in the Crusades, Michael O’Mara Books Ltd.,
The Knights Templar were at the height of their popularity in the late 12th century and play a critical role in my biographical novel about Balian d'Ibelin and the fall of the Kingdom of Jerusalem.
So interesting! Thank you! Have you read Dorothy Dunnett's Lymond series? I have enjoyed your books very much, and also your essays! Again, thank you!!
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