Knights Templar History and Medieval Resources: The Templar Legacy, Conspiracy, Secret Societies

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...

Umberto Eco's Templar quotes 
Thursday, May 6, 2010, 03:01 PM - Knights Templar Books, The Templar Legacy, Conspiracy, Secret Societies
Posted by Knights Templar Vault
Umberto Eco used the Knights Templar history and lore in his novel Foucault's Pendulum. At least two quotes from this book are occasionally used to summarize the meaning of all things Templar in modern culture.

Ci sono anche i matti senza Templari, ma quelli coi Templari sono i più insidiosi.
There are lunatics who don't talk about the Templars, but those who do are the most insidious.

I Templari c'entrano sempre.
The Templars have something to do with everything.
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Agrippa's quote about the Knights Templar 
Monday, March 1, 2010, 12:53 AM - The Templar Legacy, Conspiracy, Secret Societies, Unsolved Mysteries and Secrets
Posted by Administrator


It seems to me that the role of Cornelius Agrippa in originating modern myths about the Knights Templar has been exagerated. I will not bore the reader with multiple references to the works of modern researchers who borrow from each other's books the quote from Agrippa's De Occulta Philosopha. Nobody even bothers to indicate the exact place in the treatise that the quote originates from. So, first things first.

Chapter 39 of De Occulta Philosophia begins as follows:

Nemo ignorat malos daemones malis ac prophanis artibus allici posse, quemadmodum narrat Psellus gnosticos magos consuevisse, quos penes execrandae et abhominabiles turpitudines exequebantur quales olim in sacris Priapi et in servitio idoli quod vocabatur Panor, cui pudendis discoopertis sacrificabatur. Neque istis dissimile est (si modo veritas et non fabula est) quod legitur de Templariorum detestanda haeresi et similia horum de maleficis mulieribus constant, quae quidem anilis dementia saepe in eiusmodi flagitiis errare deprehenditur.

Everyone knows that evil spirits can be summonned through evil and profane practices (similar to those that Gnostic magicians used to engage in, according to Psellus), and filthy abominations would occur in their presence, as during the rites of Priapus in times past or in the worship of the idol named Panor to whom one sacrificed having bared shameful parts. Nor is any different from this (if only it is truth and not fiction) what we read about the detestable heresy of the Knights Templar, as well as similar notions have been established about witches, whose senile woomanish dementia is often caught causing them to wander astray into shameful deeds of the same variety.

Michael Haag ("The Templars. The History & the Myth") believes that by placing the Templars in the same context with witches Agrippa "thrust the order into the phantasmagoria of occult forces which were subject of the persecuting craze for which the Malleus Maleficarum was a handbook." Obvious anachronism aside (the Templars have been well put away by the early 16th century), Cornelius Agrippa says absolutely nothing that his contemporaries did not know. Marino Sanudo (c. 1260 – 1338) in his Historia Hierosolymitana comfortably discusses the worship of the gilded head, the practice of dissolving the ashes of deceased knights and drinking them for increased strength of their comrades, and of course smearing the idol with fat produced by roasting baby girls engendered Knights Templar. This account is often repeated by later writers. In Agrippa's time, for instance, Pietro Crinito (Peter Crinitus, 1475 - 1507) relates these horrific details in his work De Honesta Disciplina (incidentally, a book used by Nostradamus). The tradition continued in such works as Hofmann's (1635-1706): Lexicon Universale. Nicholas Guertler also mentions these allegations, but clearly does not find them to be grounded in reality.

As far as I am concerned, Cornelius Agrippa's brief mention of the Knights Templar is of very little importance. Agrippa himself certainly did not make much of it.


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Masonic Ring Inscriptions 
Thursday, September 17, 2009, 07:53 PM - Knights Templar Swords and Rings, Masonic Templarism, The Templar Legacy, Conspiracy, Secret Societies
Posted by Administrator


I can imagine there will be added interest in all things Masonic after Dan Brown's new book. How about a little excursion into masonic ring inscriptions?

As the novel would have us believe there is some level of freedom in the inscriptions one chooses to have engraved, there are, however, some traditional inscriptions:

P.D.E.P - (on Masonic Templar rings) stands for Pro Deo et Patria - For God and the Country

In Hoc Signo Vinces (Templar Motto, going back to Emperor Constantine) - With this sign thou shall conquer.

Deus Meumque Jus - (on Inspector General rings, i.e. 33rd degree) - God and my Right.

Virtus junxit, mors non separabit - (14th grade) Virtue has united (us), death shall not part (us). Curiously, I have seen this inscription quoted with the comma after mors and it just does not make much grammatical sense that way.

Ordo ex chao - Order out of chaos.
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Help a building designed by a famous Masonic architect!  
Thursday, April 16, 2009, 05:13 PM - The Templar Legacy, Conspiracy, Secret Societies
Posted by Knights Templar Vault
In Boston, 25 organizations are competing for grant money. One of these buildings is Salem Old Town Hall, designed by Charles Bulfinch, a very influential American Mason, who at one point was appointed the Architect of the Capitol. David Ovason's book "The Secret Architecture of Our Nation's Capital" discusses his role in creating the original dome of the Capitol building. The Bulfinch dome has been since replaced, but he must be credited for much of symbolism one sees in Washington today. It does not get more Templar than that, folks!!!

Salem's Old Town Hall is one of Bulfinch's New England creations. It needs some serious work, including reinforcement of the foundation. You can help this building win a $100,000 grant by voting for it daily until May 17:

Go to OTH's site
Salem Old Town Hall

Or use a direct link
Vote daily for Salem Old Town Hall!

If you want to pass this information around, go ahead!

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Knights Templar Initiation Practices 
Friday, November 14, 2008, 03:10 PM - Medieval Knights Templar History, The Templar Legacy, Conspiracy, Secret Societies
Posted by Knights Templar Vault
Here is a very concise account of the Templar initiation practices. I have seen longer descriptions, as well as various references to the initiation that are contained in Templar documents (and let's not forget the Chinon parchment, where some of the references are potentially incriminating). For a brief account, though, this should suffice.

A knight was received as a Templar in the following manner:

Their chapters or meetings were generally held at night in their church. The candidate remained outside the door, and was three times asked, by messengers from the grand master, if he wished to be made a ' Templar.' When he had answered, he was formally brought in. 'The rules of our order,' the grand master would say, ' are strict, and you are beginning a life of endurance, and not one of ease; one of danger, and one of self-denial. You will have to watch, when perhaps you will be sighing for sleep; to endure fatigue, when you would fain rest; to be hungry and thirsty, when you are longing to eat and to drink; and to leave one country for another without a moment's hesitation, if your vow requires it. Do you really wish to be a Templar? Are you in good health? Are you betrothed or married ? Are you in debt, and cannot pay? Do you belong to any other order?' If the candidate was able to give satisfactory replies to all those searching questions, the vow of the order was administered to him. It consisted of three things — 'poverty, chastity, and obedience,' and was in these words: 'I swear to defend with my life, my strength, and my speech, the holy doctrines of the Trinity and the Catholic faith ; I promise to be obedient and submissive to the grand master; and to travel by sea or by land if need be, to defend my brother Christians against the Infidels. My right hand and sword shall be dedicated to the service of the king and church against the Moslems; and I swear never to shun a combat with any miscreants if only three in number. I will fight them in single combat, and never fly from an enemy.' The principal duty of a Templar was to fight Infidels; and three seemed their especial number, as they were enjoined to communicate three times a year; to hear mass and eat meat three times a week; and if they failed in doing their duty, they were flogged three times in the presence of the whole chapter. If a Templar failed in his especial duty of fighting the Moslems, he was banished for ever from the order.


From "Heroes of the Crusades", by Barbara Hutton, Paolo Priolo


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Templar Chant ("Ensemble Organum") 
Tuesday, August 5, 2008, 08:05 PM - The Templar Legacy, Conspiracy, Secret Societies
Posted by Administrator
A French group called Ensemble Organum has a CD entitled "Le Chant des Templiers." Online reviews mention a twelfth century manuscript that was used as a sources of these liturgical chants. I felt the need to further research this claim. The website of the group (organum-cirma.fr) explains that this manuscript was purchased by Duke d'Aumale at the end of the 19th century, and it is presently housed a the Cantilly castle. Good enough for me, even though I would very much like to see some scans.

1. Antiphona : Crucem Sanctam
2. Responsorium : Benedicat Nos Deus
3. Responsorium : Honor Virtus Et Potestas
4. Antiphona : Te Deum Patrem Ingenitum Magnificat
5. Antiphona : Media Vita In Morte Sumus Nunc Dimittis
6. Kyrie Eleison
7. Antiphona : Da Pacem Domine - Psaume : Fiat Pax In Virtute Tua
8. Antiphona : Salve Regina



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Trial of the century? Knights Templar heirs vs. the Pope 
Monday, August 4, 2008, 02:36 PM - Knights Templar Treasure, Medieval Knights Templar History, The Templar Legacy, Conspiracy, Secret Societies
Posted by Knights Templar Vault
The heirs of the Knights Templar have launched a legal battle in Spain to force the Pope to restore the reputation of the disgraced order which was accused of heresy and dissolved seven centuries ago.
...
The legal move by the Spanish group comes follows the unprecedented step by the Vatican towards the rehabilitation of the group when last October it released copies of parchments recording the trials of the Knights between 1307 and 1312.
...
The Chinon parchment revealed that, contrary to historic belief, Clement V had declared the Templars were not heretics but disbanded the order anyway to maintain peace with their accuser, King Philip IV of France.

Knights Templar heirs in legal battle with the Pope

Ok, first of all, I am not sure that the Chinon parchment can be successfully used as a legal document that pertains to the matter. The Chinon process, as far as I can understand, primarily dealt with a group of individuals, not the Order in its entirety. The subsequent disbandment of the Order was a whole different story. On the other hand, the Chinon document demonstrates that the Vatican owes some explanation. However, the fact that this explanation is demanded by a group that claims to be heirs of the Knights Templar only complicates the situation, because the whoel question of property becomes an issue.

I am most interested, though, in finding out how precisely these Templar heirs are going to prove their lineage. It seems that it would be quite logical for them to know the whereabouts of the Templar treasure!


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