Knights Templar History and Medieval Resources: Templar Art, Pictures

This site deals primarily with the history of Medieval Knights Templar, largely leaving aside modern followers.There are posts related to the history of the Knights Templar, as well as materials about Medieval History in general: books, movies, online resources etc. I don't avoid dealing with dubious and mythical conceptions regarding the Middle Ages and the Order of the Knights Templar, but I tend to be rather skeptical...

Templar Cross 
Wednesday, March 17, 2010, 02:13 PM - Knights Templar Symbols and Regalia, Templar Art, Pictures
Posted by Knights Templar Vault
Anyone familiar with history of Christianity knows that the symbol of the cross was used in a variety of different ways. And even prior to the time of Crusades thee were stories about crosses showing up on garments. There could have been nothing more suitable for Crusading armies than implementing crosses as a visual distinction. Abbot Guibert in his History of Jerusalem (1.5) says that Pope Urban II instituted this sign both as a sign of military distinction and a symbol that would help Christian knights fight better for God's cause. The Abbot clarifies that the pope ordered the figure of the cross out of any material (ex cujuslibet materia) sown onto tunics and cloaks of the members of the expedition.

Fulcher of Chartres says: "O, how fitting and how pleasing it was for us all to see those crosses, stitched in silk or in gold, or made out of any kind of material, which the Pilgrims, following the order of the Pope, fashioned on their shoulders after pledging to set out on this march".

It is quite evident that there was no color or design required of the Crusaders. If any of the original nine members of the Knights Templar Order came to Palestine during the first crusade they would have worn crosses on their garments, but there is nothing to be said about how exactly those crosses looked.

In 1128 Pope Honorius II granted the Knights Templar the right to use white cloaks for distinction and as a symbol of innocence, but without any crosses ("absque aliqua cruce", says Jacques de Vitry). Only Eugene III (1145-1153) instituted that the Templars wear red crosses as a sign of martyrdom.

It would seem that the specific shape of the cross was not that crucial (sorry for the pun). Considering the Knights Templar humility and their desire to avoid ostentation, a simple cross of two equal beams would have been the most likely to be used at the time. Even a cross with a longer vertical line requires additional measuring in order "to make it look good", right?



I believe that only later the cross that is typically seen as the Templar cross because widely used by the Knights:



The Maltese cross is very similar. It is possible that the Templars did not at all feel that this design is all that different. In addition, the eight points of the Maltese cross have their own special significance as the eight beatitudes of Christianity proclaimed by Christ in the Sermon on the Mount (Mathew 5-7).


The main reason why I would advise modern Templar enthusiasts, writers etc. to use the second design (i.e. the Templar cross proper, the cross patee) is that the Maltese cross is too recognizable and has a longer history as a distinct symbol of the Knights Hospitaller, the order which still exists today under a different name.

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Medieval Knights - Set of Bookends  
Monday, December 15, 2008, 03:26 PM - Knights Templar Books, Templar Art, Pictures
Posted by Administrator
I have a growing collection of Templar related merchandise. Yet I find it silly for an adult to buy toy soldiers, no matter how well they are made. This exquisite set of bookends features Crusader knights in armor. There can hardly be a better way to highlight an area in your home library (should you have one) where you keep books on the Knights Templar, the Middle ages or history in general.



See also:
Bookends in home library design
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Knights Templar Decorative Sword 


FilmSwords is a company makes medieval decorative swords "as seen in the movies." This makes me believe that the Swedish film "Arn: The Knight Templar" is more popular than I thought.

Peter Johnsson (who works as designer for Albion) modelled it on a type of sword being used at the end of the 1100s. A well-known representative of this type exists and is preserved in the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna: the sword of Saint Maurice, part of the imperial regalia of the Holy Roman Empire.

Arn was given his sword by his master and mentor, monk and one-time Templar, Brother Guilbert.

The sword bears an inscription "In hoc signo vinces" - "With this sign though shall be victorious." This motto is not exclusively a Templar device, but it was somewhat favored by the Knights of the Temple. Other than that I have nothing to say about the authenticity of the sword. Buy at your own risk!

Discover more Knights Templar swords
you can buy today!


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Knights Templar in Florentine art? 
Tuesday, March 11, 2008, 08:23 PM - Templar Art, Pictures, The Templar Legacy, Conspiracy, Secret Societies
Posted by Knights Templar Vault
The 58-year-old Hudson resident indulged in one of his intellectual passions: the Crusades-era monk-warriors known as the Knights Templar.

In the third of a series of lectures, Linnell spoke about a specific facet of the much-mythologized group: Templar motifs represented in the art of the 15th century Florence.


http://www.metrowestdailynews.com/news/x1746438761

I would not mind learning more about this connection. Unfortunately, the article somehow missed all the interesting stuff!
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