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http://www.knight.org/advent/cathen/14493a.htm
<A HREF="http://www.knight.org/advent/cathen/14493a.htm">Catholic
Encyclopedia: THE KNIGHTS TEMPLARS</A>
-----
--Such was the tragic end of the Templars. If we consider that the Order
of Hospitallers finally inherited, although not without difficulties,
the property of the Templars and received many of its members, we may
say that the result of the trial was practically equivalent to the
long-proposed amalgamation of the two rival orders. For the Knights
 (first of Rhodes, afterwards of Malta) took up and carried on elsewhere
the work of the Knights of the Temple--

Om
K
----

The Knights Templars




The Knights Templars were the earliest founders of the military orders,
and are the type on which the others are modelled. They are marked in
history (1) by their humble beginning, (2) by their marvellous growth,
and (3) by their tragic end.

(1) THEIR HUMBLE BEGINNING

Immediately after the deliverance of Jerusalem, the Crusaders,
considering their vow fulfilled, returned in a body to their homes. The
defense of this precarious conquest, surrounded as it was by Mohammedan
 neighbours, remained. In 1118, during the reign of Baldwin II, Hugues
de Payens, a knight of Champagne, and eight companions bound themselves
by a perpetual vow, taken in the presence of the Patriarch of Jerusalem,
to defend the Christian kingdom. Baldwin accepted their services and
assigned them a portion of his palace, adjoining the temple of the city;
hence their title "pauvres chevaliers du temple" (Poor Knights of the
Temple). Poor indeed they were, being reduced to living on alms, and, so
long as they were only nine, they were hardly prepared to render
important services, unless it were as escorts to the pilgrims on their
way from Jerusalem to the banks of the Jordan, then frequented as a
place of devotion.

The Templars had as yet neither distinctive habit nor rule. Hugues de
Payens journeyed to the West to seek the approbation of the Church and
to obtain recruits. At the Council of Troyes (1128), at which he
assisted and at which St. Bernard was the leading spirit, the Knights
Templars adopted the Rule of St. Benedict, as recently reformed by the
Cistercians. They accepted not only the three perpetual vows, besides
the crusader's vow, but also the austere rules concerning the chapel,
the refectory, and the dormitory. They also adopted the white habit of
the Cistercians, adding to it a red cross.

Notwithstanding the austerity of the monastic rule, recruits flocked to
the new order, which thenceforth comprised four ranks of brethren: the
knights, equipped like the heavy cavalry of the Middle Ages; the
serjeants, who formed the light cavalry; and two ranks of non-fighting
men: the farmers, entrusted with the administration of temporals; and
the chaplains, who alone were vested with sacerdotal orders, to minister
to the spiritual needs of the order.

(2) THEIR MARVELLOUS GROWTH

The order owed its rapid growth in popularity to the fact that it
combined the two great passions of the Middle Ages, religious fervour
and martial prowess. Even before the Templars had proved their worth,
the ecclesiastical and lay authorities heaped on them favours of every
kind, spiritual and temporal. The popes took them under their immediate
protection, exempting them from all other jurisdiction, episcopal or
secular. Their property was assimilated to the church estates and
exempted from all taxation, even from the ecclesiastical tithes, while
their churches and cemeteries could not be placed under interdict. This
soon brought about conflict with the clergy of the Holy Land, inasmuch
as the increase of the landed property of the order led, owing to its
exemption from tithes, to the diminution of the revenue of the churches,
and the interdicts, at that time used and abused by the episcopate,
became to a certain extent inoperative wherever the order had churches
and chapels in which Divine worship was regularly held. As early as 1156
the clergy of the Holy Land tried to restrain the exorbitant privileges
of the military orders, but in Rome every objection was set aside, the
result being a growing antipathy on the part of the secular clergy
against these orders. The temporal benefits which the order received
from all the sovereigns of Europe were no less important. The Templars
had commanderies in every state. In France they formed no less than
eleven bailiwicks, subdivided into more than forty-two commanderies; in
 Palestine it was for the most part with sword in hand that the Templars
extended their possessions at the expense of the Mohammedans. Their
castles are still famous owing to the remarkable ruins which remain:
Safèd, built in 1140; Karak of the desert (1143); and, most importantly
of all, Castle Pilgrim, built in 1217 to command a strategic defile on
the sea-coast.

In these castles, which were both monasteries and cavalry-barracks, the
life of the Templars was full of contrasts. A contemporary describes the
Templars as "in turn lions of war and lambs at the hearth; rough knights
on the battlefield, pious monks in the chapel; formidable to the enemies
of Christ, gentleness itself towards His friends." (Jacques de Vitry).
Having renounced all the pleasures of life, they faced death with a
proud indifference; they were the first to attack, the last to retreat,
always docile to the voice of their leader, the discipline of the monk
being added to the discipline of the soldier. As an army they were never
very numerous. A contemporary tells us that there were 400 knights in
Jerusalem at the zenith of their prosperity; he does not give the number
of serjeants, who were more numerous. But it was a picked body of men
who, by their noble example, inspirited the remainder of the Christian
forces. They were thus the terror of the Mohammedans. Were they
defeated, it was upon them that the victor vented his fury, the more so
as they were forbidden to offer a ransom. When taken prisoners, they
scornfully refused the freedom offered them on condition of apostasy. At
the siege of Safed (1264), at which ninety Templars met death, eighty
others were taken prisoners, and, refusing to deny Christ, died martyrs
to the Faith. This fidelity cost them dear. It has been computed that in
less than two centuries almost 20,000 Templars, knights and serjeants,
perished in war.

These frequent hecatombs rendered it difficult for the order to increase
in numbers and also brought about a decadence of the true crusading
spirit. As the order was compelled to make immediate use of the
recruits, the article of the original rule in Latin which required a
probationary period fell into desuetude. Even excommunicated men, who,
as was the case with many crusaders, wished to expiate their sins, were
admitted. All that was required of a new member was a blind obedience,
as imperative in the soldier as in the monk. He had to declare himself
forever "serf et esclave de la maison" (French text of the rule). To
prove his sincerity, he was subjected to a secret test concerning the
nature of which nothing has ever been discovered, although it gave rise
to the most extraordinary accusations. The great wealth of the order may
also have contributed to a certain laxity in morals, but the most
serious charge against it was its insupportable pride and love of power.
At the apogee of its prosperity, it was said to possess 9000 estates.
With its accumulated revenues it had amassed great wealth, which was
deposited in its temples at Paris and London. Numerous princes and
private individuals had banked there their personal property, because of
the uprightness and solid credit of such bankers. In Paris the royal
treasure was kept in the Temple. Quite independent, except from the
distant authority of the pope, and possessing power equal to that of the
leading temporal sovereigns, the order soon assumed the right to direct
 the weak and irresolute government of the Kingdom of Jerusalem, a
feudal kingdom transmissible through women and exposed to all the
disadvantages of minorities, regencies, and domestic discord. However,
the Templars were soon opposed by the Order of Hospitallers, which had
in its turn become military, and was at first the imitator and later the
rival of the Templars. This ill-timed interference of the orders in the
government of Jerusalem only multiplied the intestine dessentions, and
this at a time when the formidable power of Saladin threatened the very
existence of the Latin Kingdom. While the Templars sacrificed themselves
with their customary bravery in this final struggle, they were,
nevertheless, partly responsible for the downfall of Jerusalem.

To put an end to this baneful rivalry between the military orders, there
was a very simple remedy at hand, namely their amalgamation. This was
officially proposed by St. Louis at the Council of Lyons (1274). It was
proposed anew in 1293 by Pope Nicholas IV, who called a general
consultation on this point of the Christian states. This idea is
canvassed by all the publicists of that time, who demand either a fusion
of the existing orders or the creation of a third order to supplant
them. Never in fact had the question of the crusaders been more eagerly
taken up than after their failure. As the grandson of St. Louis, Philip
the Fair could not remain indifferent to these proposals for a crusade.
As the most powerful prince of his time, the direction of the movement
belonged to him. To assume this direction, all he demanded was the
necesary supplies of men and especially of money. Such is the genesis of
his campaign for the suppression of the Templars. It has been attributed
wholly to his well-known cupidity. Even on this supposition he needed a
pretext, for he could not, without sacrilege, lay hands on possessions
that formed part of the ecclesiastical domain. To justify such a course
the sanction of the Church was necessary, and this the king could obtain
only by maintaining the sacred purpose for which the possessions were
destined. Admitting that he was sufficiently powerful to encroach upon
the property of the Templars in France, he still needed the concurrence
of the Church to secure control of their possessions in the other
countries of Christendom. Such was the purpose of the wily negotiations
of this self-willed and cunning sovereign, and of his still more
treacherous counsellors, with Clement V, a French pope of weak character
and easily deceived. The rumour that there had been a prearrangement
between the king and the pope has been finally disposed of. A doubtful
revelation, which allowed Philip to make the prosecution of the Templars
as heretics a question of orthodoxy, afforded him the opportunity which
he desired to invoke the action of the Holy See.

(3) THEIR TRAGIC END

In the trial of the Templars two phases must be distinguished: the royal
commission and the papal commission.

First phase: The royal commission

Philip the Fair made a preliminary inquiry, and, on the strength of
so-called revelations of a few unworthy and degraded members, secret
orders were sent throughout France to arrest all the Templars on the
same day (13 October, 1307), and to submit them to a most rigorous
examination. The king did this, it was made to appear, at the request of
the ecclesiastical inquisitors, but in reality without their
co-operation.

In this inquiry torture, the use of which was authorized by the cruel
procedure of the age in the case of crimes committed without witnesses,
was pitilessly employed. Owing to the lack of evidence, the accused
could be convicted only through their own confession and, to extort this
confession, the use of torture was considered necessary and legitimate.

There was one feature in the organization of the order which gave rise
to suspicion, namely the secrecy with which the rites of initiation were
conducted. The secrecy is explained by the fact that the receptions
always took place in a chapter, and the chapters, owing to the delicate
and grave questions discussed, were, and necessarily had to be, held in
secret. An indiscretion in the matter of secrecy entailed exclusion from
the order. The secrecy of these initiations, however, had two grave
disadvantages.

As these receptions could take place wherever there was a commandery,
they were carried on without publicity and were free from all
surveillance or control from the higher authorities, the tests being
entrusted to the discretion of subalterns who were often rough and
uncultivated. Under such conditions, it is not to be wondered at that
abuses crept in. One need only recall what took place almost daily at
the time in the brotherhoods of artisans, the initiation of a new member
being too often made the occasion for a parody more or less sacrilegious
 of baptism or of the Mass.

The second disadvantage of this secrecy was, that it gave an opportunity
to the enemies of the Templars, and they were numerous, to infer from
this mystery every conceivable malicious supposition and base on it the
monstrous imputations. The Templars were accused of spitting upon the
Cross, of denying Christ, of permitting sodomy, of worshipping an idol,
all in the most impenetrable secrecy. Such were the Middle Ages, when
prejudice was so vehement that, to destroy an adversary, men did not
recoil from inventing the most criminal charges. It will suffice to
recall the similar, but even more ridiculous than ignominious
accusations brought against Pope Boniface VIII by the same Philip the
Fair.

Most of the accused declared themselves guilty of these secret crimes
after being subjected to such ferocious torture that many of them
succumbed. Some made similar confessions without the use of torture, it
is true, but through fear of it; the threat had been sufficient. Such
was the case with the grand master himself, Jacques de Molay, who
acknowledged later that he had lied to save his life.

Carried on without the authorization of the pope, who had the military
orders under his immediate jurisdiction, this investigation was
radically corrupt both as to its intent and as to its procedure. Not
only did Clement V enter an energetic protest, but he annulled the
entire trial and suspended the powers of the bishops and their
inquisitors. However, the offense had been admitted and remained the
irrevocable basis of the entire subsequent proceedings. Philip the Fair
took advantage of the discovery to have bestowed upon himself by the
University of Paris the title of Champion and Defender of the Faith, and
also to stir up public opinion at the States General of Tours against
the heinous crimes of the Templars. Moreover, he succeeded in having the
confessions of the accused confirmed in presence of the pope by
seventy-two Templars, who had been specially chosen and coached
beforehand. In view of this investigation at Poitiers (June, 1308), the
pope, until then sceptical, at last became concerned and opened a new
commission, the procedure of which he himself directed. He reserved the
cause of the order to the papal commission, leaving individuals to be
tried by the diocesan commissions to whom he restored their powers.

Second phase: The papal commission

The second phase of the process was the papal inquiry, which was not
restricted to France, but extended to all the Christian countries
Europe, and even to the Orient. In most of the other countries —
Portugal, Spain, Germany, Cyprus — the Templars were found innocent; in
Italy, except for a few districts, the decision was the same. But in
France the episcopal inquisitions, resuming their activities, took the
facts as established at the trial, and confined themselves to
reconciling the repentant guilty members, imposing various canonical
penances extending even to perpetual imprisonment. Only those who
persisted in heresy were to be turned over to the secular arm, but, by a
rigid interpretation of this provision, those who had withdrawn their
former confessions were considered relapsed heretics; thus fifty-four
Templars who had recanted after having confessed were condemned as
relapsed and publicly burned on 12 May, 1310. Subsequently all the other
Templars, who had been examined at the trial, with very few exceptions
declared themselves guilty.

At the same time the papal commission, appointed to examine the cause of
the order, had entered upon its duties and gathered together the
documents which were to be submitted to the pope, and to the general
council called to decide as to the final fate of the order. The
culpability of single persons, which was looked upon as established, did
not involve the guilt of the order. Although the defense of the order
was poorly conducted, it could not be proved that the order as a body
professed any heretical doctrine, or that a secret rule, distinct from
the official rule, was practised. Consequently, at the General Council
of Vienne in Dauphiné on 16 October, 1311, the majority were favourable
to the maintenance of the order.

The pope, irresolute and harrassed, finally adopted a middle course: he
decreed the dissolution, not the condemnation of the order, and not by
penal sentence, but by an Apostolic Decree (Bull of 22 March, 1312). The
order having been suppressed, the pope himself was to decide as to the
fate of its members and the disposal of its possessions. As to the
property, it was turned over to the rival Order of Hospitallers to be
applied to its original use, namely the defence of the Holy Places. In
Portugal, however, and in Aragon the possessions were vested in two new
orders, the Order of Christ in Portugal and the Order of Montesa in
Aragon. As to the members, the Templars recognized guiltless were
allowed either to join another military order or to return to the
secular state. In the latter case, a pension for life, charged to the
possessions of the order, was granted them. On the other hand, the
Templars who had pleaded guilty before their bishops were to be treated
"according to the rigours of justice, tempered by a generous mercy".

The pope reserved to his own jugment the cause of the grand master and
his three first dignitaries. They had confessed their guilt; it remained
to reconcile them with the Church, after they had testified to their
repentance with the customary solemnity. To give this solemnity more
publicity, a platform was erected in front of the Notre-Dame for the
reading of the sentence. But at the supreme moment the grand master
recovered his courage and proclaimed the innocence of the Templars and
the falsity of his own alleged confessions. To atone for this deplorable
moment of weakness, he declared himself ready to sacrifice his life. He
knew the fate that awaited him. Immediately after this unexpected
coup-de-théâtre he was arrested as a relapsed heretic with another
dignitary who chose to share his fate, and by order of Philip they were
burned at the stake before the gates of the palace. This brave death
deeply impressed the people, and, as it happened that the pope and the
king died shortly afterwards, the legend spread that the grand master in
the midst of the flames had summoned them both to appear in the course
of the year before the tribunal of God.

Such was the tragic end of the Templars. If we consider that the Order
of Hospitallers finally inherited, although not without difficulties,
the property of the Templars and received many of its members, we may
say that the result of the trial was practically equivalent to the
long-proposed amalgamation of the two rival orders. For the Knights
 (first of Rhodes, afterwards of Malta) took up and carried on elsewhere
the work of the Knights of the Temple.

This formidable trial, the greatest ever brought to light whether we
consider the large number of accused, the difficulty of discovering the
truth from a mass of suspicious and contradictory evidence, or the many
jurisdictions in activity simultaneously in all parts of Christendom
from Great Britain to Cyprus, is not yet ended. It is still passionately
discussed by historians who have divided into two camps, for and against
the order. To mention only the principal ones, the following find the
order guilty: Dupuy (1654), Hammer (1820), Wilcke (1826), Michelet
(1841), Loiseleur (1872), Prutz (1888), and Rastoul (1905); the
following find it innocent: Father Lejeune (1789), Raynouard (1813),
Havemann (1846), Ladvocat (1880), Schottmuller (1887), Gmelin (1893),
Lea (1888), Fincke (1908). Without taking any side in this discussion,
which is not yet exhausted, we may observe that the latest documents
brought to light, particularly those which Fincke has recently extracted
from the archives of the Kingdom of Aragon, tell more and more strongly
in favour of the order.

CHARLES MOELLER
Transcribed by Sean Hyland

>From the Catholic Encyclopedia, copyright © 1913 by the Encyclopedia
Press, Inc. Electronic version copyright © 1997 by New Advent, Inc.
-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End
Kris

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