The Templars
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The Templars

The Legend and Legacy of the Warriors of God

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eBook - ePub

The Templars

The Legend and Legacy of the Warriors of God

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About This Book

Shrouded in myth and conspiracy, the history of the Knights Templar is little understood. Geordie Torr pulls fact from fiction, revealing the astonishing tale of this military-religious order that dominated the politics of the medieval Middle East. Initially created to protect Christian pilgrims to the Holy Land in the wake of the First Crusade, the Templars soon became an institution of incredible power, possessing wealth and influence throughout the courts of Europe. Yet just two centuries later they dramatically fell as its members were accused of heresy and burned at the stake. Set against the dramatic backdrop of the wars between Christians and Muslims, this illustrated book brings to life the legacy of this secretive order and the characters who defined the era.

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Information

Publisher
Arcturus
Year
2020
ISBN
9781839404764

Chapter 1

Introduction

As the eleventh century drew to a close, the Middle East was, as so often in its history, embroiled in a clash of civilizations. Christianity and Islam had become locked in a bloody battle for control of the region, intensified because it contained sites deeply holy to both sides.
With the spread of Islam across the Middle East jeopardizing access to the Holy Land for Christian pilgrims, the Church in Europe mobilized a vast army for the First Crusade in 1096. This brought Jerusalem under Christian control for the first time in almost 500 years, but the Crusaders’ hold on the holy city was precarious. War is one thing, occupation is another, and having gained control of Jerusalem and the adjacent territory (modern Israel/Palestine), the Crusaders were forced to deal with the harsh realities of defending their gains and guaranteeing the safety of the Christians who lived there and who came as pilgrims.
Into this maelstrom strode a new player – an order of warrior monks, devout Christians sworn to defend their brethren. Their role quickly expanded from pilgrim bodyguards to protectors of the realm, with responsibility for maintaining a collection of castles on the frontiers. Such a combination of military duties with monasterial-type piety and austerity was not unique, but this was the first dedicated such order, and perhaps the most influential, in the Catholic Church.
Formed on Christmas Day 1119 in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem, one of Christianity’s most holy places, the order – the Poor Fellow-Soldiers of Christ and the Temple of Solomon, or the Templars for short – was a strange hybrid. It was, first and foremost, a military order, an extraterritorial private army whose only true loyalty was to God and the papacy. But it was also a religious order that built churches and held services; it was a business – to some, the world’s first multinational corporation – a significant landowner, a property developer, a sprawling web of agricultural, maritime and manufacturing operations whose profits were eventually ploughed back into the fight against the infidel; and it was a bank and financier, lending money to nobles, guarding royal treasure for kings and issuing ‘travellers’ cheques’ to pilgrims.
Answerable only to the Pope, who gave the order extraordinary power through a range of special rights and privileges, the Templars attracted generous donations and eager recruits. Devout, well-respected religious men, they slowly became part of the fabric of medieval Europe. Templar houses, their local headquarters, could be found across the continent, leasing land to tenant farmers, running agricultural markets, feeding the poor.
On the battlefield, dressed in a distinctive uniform of a dark tunic and a white mantle with a red cross over the left breast, the Templar knights quickly achieved a reputation for honour, valour, bravery and ferocity in battle. However, even their efforts weren’t ultimately enough to resist the might of the Muslim armies, who were united by powerful military leaders such as Saladin, and the Crusaders – including the Templars – were eventually forced from the Holy Land once more.
With their exile from the Middle East, the Templars were unable to fulfil their primary duty. And then, suddenly, it all came to an end. Within the space of less than five years, the order went from being one of the most powerful organizations in Christendom to ceasing to exist. The Templars’ demise was brought about not by their Muslim enemies, but by their Christian allies, for a combination of unvoiced reasons that were primarily about money and power rather than the claimed religious misdemeanours. In October 1307, less than 200 years after the order was founded, France’s Templars were rounded up and arrested, followed by some who lived in other countries. Accused of numerous heretical crimes, many were tortured and executed. In 1312, the order was suppressed and in 1314, the last Templar Grand Master was burnt at the stake.
Such was the bewildering speed of the downfall that it inevitably led to speculation about the order’s activities both before and after its dissolution. These rumours eventually developed into a full-blown mythology when members of the Freemasons wove the Templars into their own origin story, and ever since, that mythology has been embellished with more and more outlandish theories.
Since the late twentieth century, interest in the Templars’ alleged continuing existence and shadowy, clandestine influence on world affairs has gathered pace. Indeed, it seems that today, most people’s only knowledge of the Templars relates to conspiracies in which they’re supposedly involved and treasure they’re supposed to have hidden.
But their true story is as fascinating as the concocted one, taking in one of the most tumultuous periods in the history of Europe and the Middle East, a time of castles and knights, of epic battles and palace intrigue, of shifting alliances and terrible betrayals, which resonates down the centuries.

Chapter 2

Setting the Scene

To understand the origins of the Templars, it’s necessary to go back to around 800 years before the order’s inception. Over those centuries, two key factors in particular were contributing to a world that would have a place for such an order: the custom of pilgrimage and the shifting sands of power in the Middle East.

Pilgrimage

The practice of pilgrimage – whereby believers travel to holy places in search of enlightenment, forgiveness of sin or physical healing – has been an integral part of religious life for almost as long as there have been religions. Within the Christian Church, its origins lie in the fourth century ce, when Church leaders began to encourage worshippers to visit sites considered holy by the Church as a route to salvation through the forgiveness of sins. God was generally considered to be eminently bribe-able: you could buy good fortune or even a passage to heaven by donating to religious causes or carrying out particularly holy acts. Chief among the latter was pilgrimage.
Some historians pinpoint the beginning of Christian pilgrimage to the 320s and 330s ce. Emperor Constantine – who had converted to Christianity in 312 ce, the first Roman emperor to embrace the religion – refurbished and extended existing pilgrim destinations and created new ones. His mother, Empress Helena, undertook a pilgrimage to Jerusalem herself in 326 ce. Imperial patronage of Christian pilgrimage meant that it increasingly became an important activity among the Roman elite.
There were important Christian shrines in Europe, such as the Church of St James at Santiago de Compostela in Spain and Canterbury Cathedral in England. Nonetheless, the prime destination for Christian pilgrims was the Holy Land, particularly Jerusalem.
Pilgrimage to the Holy Land provided believers with a tangible link to Jesus’ life and death. Among the more popular sites was the River Jordan, which offered the chance to re-enact Jesus’ baptism by John the Baptist, in the hope of receiving spiritual and even physically curative cleansing. Most revered of all, however, was the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem, located on Golgotha, the Hill of Calvary, which the New Testament identifies as the place where Jesus was crucified, buried and reborn. This church was first built over two sites by Constantine in about 326 ce.
When pilgrimages began, the Holy Land was under Christian rule, in the form of the Roman Empire or its successor, the Byzantine Empire. Even with Muslim expansion across the Middle East during the seventh century ce, local rulers typically permitted members of other religions to travel through their land on pilgrimages. Muslims had their own traditions of pilgrimage; a pilgrimage to Mecca was one of the five pillars of Islam. And Christian pilgrims were often welcomed as a valuable source of income – pilgrimage was essentially a proto-tourism industry. Locals were always ready to make a dinar or two from the relatively helpless pilgrims, whether through admission fees, duties, the sale of privileges, protection money or simple extortion.
However, making the pilgrimage was extremely dangerous. The sea routes across the Mediterranean were prone to shipwreck and piracy, while the overland route was even worse. In Europe, pilgrims on their way to the Holy Land were exempted from tolls and protected by heavy penalties facing anyone who attacked them. But once they reached Asia Minor and the Holy Land – typically travelling in small groups – they were a popular target for brigands, who attacked and killed them for the money they had sewn into their clothing. It didn’t help that pilgrims were usually forbidden from carrying arms, so were unable to defend themselves. Their corpses were left to rot where they fell, making the crime even more heinous in the eyes of their fellow Christians as they were denied a proper burial.

Muslim expansion

Between 634 and 641 ce, Muslim forces took control of Syria, Persia, Turkey, Armenia and Palestine in a military campaign led by the Rashidun Caliph Umar, a companion and successor of the prophet Muhammad. Among the many battles they fought, one was to have a particularly profound effect on the region’s future. In April 637 ce, following a six-month siege, Sophronius, Patriarch of Jerusalem, surrendered to Umar, bringing Christian control of the city to an end. It’s said that when Umar reached Jerusalem, he dismounted from his camel and entered the holy city on foot as a sign of respect. And in a gesture of religious tolerance – a position advocated by Muhammad himself – the region’s Muslim rulers mostly continued to allow Christians and Jews to undertake pilgrimages to Jerusalem.
Umar’s successor, Caliph Uthman, continued the Muslim expan­sion, capturing Cyprus and, during an attack on Constantinople, setting fire to the Byzantine fleet. Islam then spread even further under the Umayyad Dynasty, which was established in Damascus in 661 ce. During the eighth century ce, Christian cities on the Iberian Peninsula, including Seville, Granada and Barcelona, were overrun by marauding Umayyad Arab armies. The Muslim invaders even crossed the Pyrenees into France, where they attacked cities such as Bordeaux, Carcassonne and Tours, before they were largely driven back by Charlemagne’s grandfather, Charles Martel, in 732 ce. However, they managed to occupy parts of the Languedoc and Provence for several decades. And elsewhere, Christian lands continued to come under attack.
Despite the aggression involved in this religious conflict, the Muslim rulers of Christian lands generally allowed the original inhabitants to practise their chosen religions; Christian monasteries, churches and communities in Syria and Palestine were largely left unmolested. There were, however, numerous restrictions placed on the practice of non-Muslim religions, including a ban on the building of new churches and synagogues, ringing of church bells and public expressions of faith. Furthermore, Christians and Jews were prohibited from carrying weapons, riding horses, bearing witness against Muslims in law courts and marrying Muslim women, and were forced to wear clothing that distinguished them from Muslims. Anyone caught attempting to convert Muslims to their own religion was executed.

Medieval Europe

Meanwhile, Europe was undergoing a major reorganization of its political, social, economic and cultural structures as the Roman occupation ended, in the mid-to-late fifth century ce, and Germanic peoples began to establish new kingdoms. Although Roman imperial traditions that had previously held sway were swept away, the spread of Christianity, begun during the occupation, gathered pace and eventually took in the whole of Europe.
By the dawn of the second millennium ce, these trends were accelerating. Much of Europe saw significant economic and territorial expansion, as well as demographic and urban growth. By now, Christianity played a central role in people’s lives; many went to church every day and prayed five or more times a day. It was a generally held belief that a spiritual realm existed in parallel to the material realm, and that heaven or hell awaited those who died. The good things in people’s lives were considered to be the result of God’s favour; misfortune was brought upon people by their sins.
The Church was a central pillar of society and was there to mark the various milestones in a person’s life, from baptism to burial via marriage, festivals, confession and last rites. It played a central role in government and could help monarchs to raise an army in times of war. Religious institutions such as monasteries and convents were both centres of learning and rich and powerful actors in society.
Across Europe, Christianity, in the form of what would later be known as Roman Catholicism, was the only recognized religion. Paganism, Judaism and other beliefs existed, but they were frowned upon, treated with suspicion and sometimes persecuted and suppressed. During the Middle Ages, the Catholic Church actively expanded its infrastructure, building vast cathedrals and setting up universities. Church figures such as bishops and archbishops shaped the laws of the land and played leading roles in government. The true power, however, lay in the hands of the papacy, based in Rome. The power of the Pope was so great that he could even excommunicate a king.
But there was trouble brewing within the Church. The break-up of the Roman Empire during the fifth century ce had transferred power to the Greek-speaking Eastern Roman or Byzantine Empire, with its capital in Constantinople (modern-day Istanbul in Turkey). The following centuries saw regular disputes over questions of theology and primacy between the Roman Catholic Church of the West and the Orthodox Church of the East. Eventually, in 1045, these came to a head in what is now known as the Great Schism. The leaders of the two Churches – the Patriarch of Constantinople, Michael Cerularius, and Pope Leo IX – excommunicated each other, creating a rift that never truly healed. This split deepened existing mutual mistrust between Byzantium and Europe, which was worsened by the former’s loss of territory in southern Italy to a Norman invasion not long afterwards.

Growing tensions

In newly Muslim-controlled Jerusalem, relations among the religions had been mostly good. However, over time, tensions began to arise and by the tenth century, Muslims had begun to be more aggressive towards the ‘infidels’ living among them. In 938 ce, a mob attacked Christians taking part in the annual Palm Sunday procession and set fire to the Martyrium of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, also causing significant damage to the adjacent Anastasis rotunda. The church was attacked again in 966 ce, when the Martyrium’s roof was set alight and the Patriarch burnt alive. The eastern entrance to the basilica was seized and converted into a mosque.
Around this time, Arab territorial expansion slowed as the appetite for war began to fade. The Byzantines began to enjoy victories in the eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East, recapturing Crete in 961 ce and Cyprus in 965 ce, and taking Antioch, Aleppo and Latakia from 969 ce. The latter successes meant that the Byzantines now controlled a coastal strip extending through Syria to Tripoli and northern Lebanon. Hoping to extend that control further, in 975 ce Emperor John Tzimiskes launched a campaign to regain control of Jerusalem, which was still an overwhelmingly Christian city. He managed to conquer Damascus; Nazareth and Caesarea also submitted to him. Jerusalem’s Muslim leaders pleaded with him for terms of surrender, but he decided to first attempt to take the remaining Muslim-controlled castles along the Mediterranean coast. He died suddenly, however, and the moment was lost: Jerusalem remained in Muslim hands.
By the beginning of the eleventh century, the situation had deteriorated further for Christians. In 1004, the Shi’ite Muslim ruler of Egypt, North Africa, Palestine and southern Syria, the Fatimid Caliph al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah, launched an anti-Christian campaign that led to the confiscation of church property, the seizure and burning of crosses, and the burning of churches. (Based in Egypt, the leaders of the Fatimid Caliphate claime...

Table of contents

  1. Title Page
  2. Contents
  3. Map of the Holy Land
  4. Chapter 1 • Introduction
  5. Chapter 2 • Setting the Scene
  6. Chapter 3 • The Rise of the Knights Templar, 1119–48
  7. Chapter 4 • Consolidation, 1147–69
  8. Chapter 5 • The Rise of Saladin, 1169–87
  9. Chapter 6 • The Crusades Continue, 1188–1244
  10. Chapter 7 • The Loss of the Holy Land, 1245–1304
  11. Chapter 8 • The End of the Order, 1305–20
  12. Chapter 9 • The Templars and the Reconquista
  13. Chapter 10 • Understanding the Templar Organization
  14. Chapter 11 • The Templar Legacy
  15. Chronology
  16. Glossary
  17. Bibliography
  18. List of Illustrations
  19. Copyright