Knights Templar
From KB42
The Knights Templar was a powerful, wealthy, and mysterious medieval Christian military order, created around 1119 to protect European pilgrims in the Holy Land and fight in the Crusades. Sworn to poverty, chastity, and obedience, they evolved into a vast international organization with advanced financial systems that made them extremely influential and rich. Their downfall came in 1307 when King Philip IV of France, driven by jealousy of their wealth and power, orchestrated their arrest and execution on charges of heresy, leading to their disbandment.
Origins and Purpose
- Formation: The Order of the Poor Knights of the Temple of Jerusalem was founded by the French nobleman Hugh de Payns and his followers in 1119-1120 following the First Crusade.
- Mission: Their initial mission was to safeguard Christian pilgrims traveling to sites in the Holy Land. They were eventually granted headquarters on the Temple Mount in Jerusalem.
- Papal Recognition: The order gained official recognition and support from the Roman Catholic Church in 1129.
Structure and Role
- Warrior Monks: The Knights Templar combined the lives of monks with warfare, taking vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience.
- Military Prowess: They were highly skilled and fearless warriors, participating in the Crusades and often forming elite units.
- Financial Ingenuity: The order became a major financial institution, managing vast estates and developing an innovative international banking system for wealth transfers and money lending. This made them incredibly wealthy and influential.
The Downfall
- Persecution: King Philip IV of France, envious of their immense wealth and power, sought to dismantle the order.
Arrest and Torture:
In 1307, Philip IV had the Templars arrested across France. Under torture, many Templars, including the Grand Master, confessed to charges of heresy, sacrilege, and devil worship.
- Disbandment: The order was officially suppressed in 1312 by Pope Clement V, with most of their wealth and assets seized by European monarchs, especially King Philip IV.
Legacy
- Mystery and Legend: Despite their suppression, the Knights Templar have remained a subject of fascination, spawning numerous legends and theories about hidden treasures and secret knowledge.
- Influence: Their innovative financial system is seen by some historians as a precursor to modern banking, and the order's impact on medieval culture is undeniable.
Rise to power
- Formation: After Christian forces captured Jerusalem in 1099, pilgrims faced constant danger from bandits on their journey. Around 1118, a French knight named Hugues de Payens and a group of eight others pledged to protect these travelers and formed the "Poor Fellow-Soldiers of Christ and the Temple of Solomon".
- Papal support: The order gained official church endorsement and a monastic rule written by the influential abbot Bernard of Clairvaux in 1129. In 1139, Pope Innocent II issued a papal bull granting the Templars special privileges, including exemption from all authority except that of the pope.
- Military prowess: The Templars became the shock troops of the Crusades, renowned for their discipline and ferocious fighting ability. Their signature white mantle with a red cross became a feared symbol on the battlefield. They built and garrisoned numerous castles to defend the Crusader states.
- Financial innovation: While individual members took vows of poverty, the order itself became immensely wealthy through donations and its innovative banking system. Pilgrims could deposit assets in their home country and withdraw funds in the Holy Land using an early form of a letter of credit.
- International influence: At the height of their power, the Templars owned a vast network of land, farms, and ships across Europe and the Middle East. They served as bankers and lenders to European monarchs and nobility.
Downfall and dissolution
- Loss of the Holy Land: As Muslim forces grew stronger and recaptured territory, the Templars' military mission lost its relevance. The fall of Acre in 1291 marked the last Crusader foothold in the Holy Land.
- King Philip IV's motivations: The French King Philip IV, who was deeply indebted to the Templars, coveted their immense wealth. He used a series of false allegations to move against the order.
- Arrests and torture: On Friday, October 13, 1307, Philip ordered the mass arrest of Templars in France. Many were tortured until they confessed to fabricated charges of heresy, blasphemy, and obscene rituals.
- Execution of leaders: Despite recanting confessions later, Grand Master Jacques de Molay and other Templar leaders were burned at the stake in 1314.
- Papal suppression: Under immense pressure from Philip IV, Pope Clement V reluctantly dissolved the order in 1312. Most of its property was transferred to its rival, the Knights Hospitaller, though Philip IV and others seized much of the wealth. In 2001, a Vatican document known as the Chinon Parchment revealed that the pope had initially absolved the Templars of heresy in 1308 but dissolved the order under pressure.
Legacy and legend
- Enduring mystery: The Templars' abrupt and dramatic collapse has fueled countless legends and conspiracy theories, including claims that they went underground and secretly preserved great treasures or religious relics like the Holy Grail.
- Modern influence: The mystique of the Templars has been revived by later organizations, most notably certain branches of Freemasonry in the 18th century, which incorporated some Templar symbols and traditions.
- Portugal's continuation: In Portugal, King Denis I refused to persecute the Templars. He officially re-established the order under the new name "Order of Christ," absorbing former Templar knights and assets.
