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You are at:Home » This Is The Most Powerful Secret Society In History
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This Is The Most Powerful Secret Society In History

adminBy adminOctober 7, 2023No Comments12 Mins Read
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The title of “most powerful” secret society  ever might have to go to the Knights Templar.   During the Crusades, they were an arm  of the pope and had lots of wealth.   Living by a code called the Rule, they  rose to prominence over the course of  

Several centuries and became a  true force to be reckoned with. The origins of the Knights Templar  are incredibly humble and, frankly,   not even all that mysterious. Basically,  they came about because of the Crusades.  The topic of the Crusades, on the other hand,  is a long conversation. But the important part  

As it relates to the Templars is that Jerusalem  was taken from Muslim hands by Christian armies   around the year 1099. On the surface, that seemed  great for Christendom. Pilgrims from Europe could   take the journey to go and visit the Holy City.  But the reality wasn’t quite as straightforward.  

The journey from mainland Europe to Jerusalem was  a dangerous undertaking, and it wasn’t uncommon   for pilgrims to be robbed, or even killed, as  they passed through Muslim-controlled areas.  It was a problem that the French nobleman Hugues  de Payens wanted to solve. Somewhere around 1118  

Or 1119, he created a group sworn to protect the  Christian pilgrims. He coined his new brotherhood   the Poor Fellow-Soldiers of Christ and the Temple  of Solomon, later known as the Knights Templar,   or just Templars. Thus, one of history’s  most intriguing and powerful orders was born.

Part of what allowed the Templars to become  as powerful and successful as they were   might have been their code of conduct. In some  way, they were like a monastic order. They took   their vows upon entry and then abided by a set of  guidelines called the Rule, with a capital “R”. 

It all started with their clothing: A white cloak  adorned with a red cross. White was a symbol of   their purity and chastity, the exact opposite of  the flashy armor usually associated with knights.   Even something as simple as a  belt was replaced with a wool  

Cord. It was all function without the  fashion. None of what they wore bore   any flourishes, since decorations  of that nature signified arrogance.  But that wasn’t it for the Rule. They were  beholden to the word of their Grand Master.   Permission was required from their superiors  to adjust their stirrups, go into town, or  

Even bathe. Chastity was hugely important, and the  topic of women was completely taboo. They couldn’t   talk about times they had spent with women or even  kiss female members of their families. Mealtimes   were regulated as well. Meals were taken together,  two brothers to a bowl, and meat only every other  

Day, which was done to avoid corruption.  Church services were mandatory, of course. Over time, the Templars started to garner  a reputation as one of the most feared   fighting units of the Crusades. They were  seen as absolutely fearless. With a code   that didn’t permit them from retreating from  battle combined with an insane discipline,  

They were a force to be reckoned with. They were expertly trained with multiple weapons   and exceedingly well equipped, and that was when  their cavalry wasn’t decimating the enemy ranks.   Dan Jones’ The Templars: The Rise and  Spectacular Fall of God’s Holy Warriors  

Paints them as a lynchpin in the Second Crusade,  leading entire armies to battle and fighting   on the front lines to conquer Damascus, one of  the most prominent cities in the region. Plus,   they didn’t just fight, but also helped  fund other military campaigns and battles.  

People living at the time even went so far as  to see them as something close to legendary.  More importantly, though, rulers of different  countries also started to see them as a legitimate   military threat, one with too much experience  and leeway. It was enough that European royalty  

Eventually thought it best that the threat posed  by the Templars should be removed completely. What sets the Templars apart from other secret  societies is their relationship to the law.   Powerful and secretive organizations like the  Freemasons would still have to follow the law  

Of whatever country they were in at the time.  The Templars didn’t have to deal with that.  The order had papal backing, and with it came a  papal bull in 1139 called Omne Datum Optimum. The   language is flowery, but it heaps praise on the  Templars while intimately tying them to the power  

Of the Pope. And with that power came privilege. “Whoever dies here today,   you will certainly be among  them.” “You are a lord.   I must give you the road.” They alone were entitled to any   of the spoils of war that they earned while  fighting against the Muslim armies. None of  

That had to go back to any other country, and the  Templars could use those riches as they saw fit.   They were completely exempt from paying any sort  of taxes, and their papal protection essentially   meant that they answered to almost no one. They  weren’t held to the rule of any kind of local  

Authority and only had to listen to the word  of the Pope. They were almost above the law. Even though the Knights Templar started  as exactly what their name implies,   holy warriors, one of their biggest  impacts wasn’t made on the battlefield. 

The Templar’s financial system functioned a lot  like a private bank. Carrying a lot of money   on the journey to Jerusalem was dangerous  to pilgrims for all the obvious reasons.   Instead, they could deposit money in a Templar  bank in Europe, receive a letter of credit,  

And then show that letter in Jerusalem,  where they could withdraw the money.  But the Templars also offered  other financial services as well,   beyond a simple banking system. Although a  lot of those services were exclusive to their   higher-profile clients. King Henry III planned  to buy the island of Oléron, and the Templars  

Acted as brokers to put that deal together.  There was also a point in time where they   acted as pawnbrokers by holding onto the crown  jewels of Great Britain as security on a loan.  They were also trusted with the financials  of other groups. The Pope used the Templars  

As tax collectors to help move collected funds  to the Crusades. They were also used by English   and French kings to shift money and even put  on financial boards to oversee complicated   economic matters. All this because they were  well known for their honesty and efficiency.

The guidelines set out by the Knights Templar  technically mandated that its members embrace   poverty, but the reality didn’t look like that.  The Templars as a group were insanely rich.  “He’s borrowed money from the Temple. You  tell him we’re here to collect the debt.” 

Part of that came from their battles on  the frontlines. Rules laid out by the   Pope meant that they could keep the riches  they found from the lands they conquered.   But another big part of it came from donations.  Patrons would gift them huge sums of money as a  

Way to confirm their piety. Donating funds to  the Templars essentially protected the donor’s   eternal soul, which given the time period was  a pretty important thing to a lot of people.   It also just happened to benefit the Templars.  And on the plus side, it was a way for anyone  

To prove their devotion without actually  taking part in the fighting of the Crusades.   A much safer alternative, on the whole. Those donations also occasionally included   plots of land, which the Templars could turn into  further revenue streams. They would use them as  

Farmland or vineyards, among other things,  which just went to further their wealth. Aside from growing into one of the most  financially wealthy groups in the medieval   world, the Templars also managed to  turn themselves into an incredibly   property-rich group. At their  height, they ended up owning land  

All across Europe. Their estates were  scattered through England and Ireland,   as well as across Spain, Germany, Italy,  Hungary, and most of mainland Europe.  Aside from their lands on the Continent, they also  held onto a handful of locations in the Holy Land.   This includes castles and fortresses scattered  in strategic locations, stretching as far  

North as Antioch, which is north-east of  Cyprus, and nearly as far south as Egypt.  Speaking of the island of Cyprus, the Templars  also owned that for a while. The whole island.   The Templars bought the island from the  then-king of England, Richard the Lionheart.  

That said, their occupation didn’t go well.  The inhabitants of Cyprus resented the severe   Templar rule and planned a massacre in 1192. The  Templars learned about the plot and slaughtered   people in the streets rather than be besieged in  their stronghold. They ultimately gave the island  

Back to Richard but retained their holdings,  some of them even returning in the late 1200s. The power of the Templars is also exemplified  by the people they associated with.   Because while most of the individual  Templars aren’t named in history books,  

They counted kings and popes among their allies. That was the case from the beginning. Baldwin II,   the king of Jerusalem at the time, took an  immediate liking to the order, giving them the   use of his palace on Temple Mount in 1120. This  amazing location is better known as “The Temple  

Of Solomon,” and the place where the Templars  first got their name. About a decade later,   they were officially recognized by the Catholic  Church and Pope Honorius II. They also had the   backing of Bernard of Clairvaux, a prominent  French abbot, who wrote texts in their favor. 

Their connections only grew from there. They had  close ties to English royalty, and Richard the   Lionheart in particular, who called on them to be  his tithe collectors. They were especially close   with French kings as well, going out of their  way to help them. Louis IX was short on funds,  

So the Templars saw to it that they played  a role in getting his armies to Egypt. Then,   when he was captured, the Templars again  intervened, this time to pay his ransom. By the late 12th century, the Crusades were  starting to lose steam. Muslim armies finally  

Took back Jerusalem, and over the next  century, crusader refuges fell one by one,   with the Templars themselves also  losing their foothold in the Holy Land.   Support for the Crusades dwindled, which let  criticism of the Templars rise. People began to  

Doubt their intentions and fear their influence. King Philip IV of France was the one who acted on   those accusations and vowed to bring them down.  In October 1307, he rounded up a bunch of French   Templars, including their Grand Master, Jacques  de Molay, arresting and torturing them until they  

Confessed to a laundry list of sins, including  heresy, sodomy, and financial corruption.  It’s hard to say whether any of those forced  confessions were true, but in the end,   it didn’t really matter. In 1310, a trial led  to over 50 Templars being burned at the stake.  

In 1312, Philip pressured Pope Clement V  into officially dissolving the Templars.   The final nail in the coffin came  in 1314, when dozens of Templars,   de Molay included, were executed  for those earlier confessions.  “So they are dying for what the pope would command  them to do.” “Yes. But not Christ, I think.”

Even though modern perspectives tend to  see the Templars as a secret society,   their existence was never doubted at the  height of their power. After all, it’s hard   to think that a well-oiled military machine that  could help facilitate wars would be able to go  

Completely undetected and under the radar. But they still fit the profile of a secret   society, despite the renown they won in their  time. For the most part, what they really sought   was privacy, but they weren’t trying to remain  hidden. Among their most private ceremonies were  

Their initiation rituals, and these came  under a lot of fire. Friends and family   weren’t invited to them, and that made others  believe the practices were suspect. For a while,   people believed that the rituals included spitting  on the cross and denying Christ. But many of these  

Claims came from confessions made under torture.  The rituals were nothing near that. They were   mostly a series of questions and vows. Still, questions abound. For instance,   in 2017 the Caynton Caves were discovered, showing  the world a labyrinth of carved caverns. Though  

Extremely unlikely, some believe that the caves  were used by the Templars. But to what end?   Some sort of secret religious ritual,  probably, but the details are sparse. Despite having been dissolved in the early 14th  century, the Knights Templar still manage to  

Capture the wonder and imagination of the modern  world. Even 700 years after the death of the last   Grand Master, myths and legends still abound. Conspiracy theorists still pose questions   about the relics the Templars may or may  not have had in their possession. No,  

They didn’t have the Shroud of Turin, the Holy  Grail, the Ark of the Covenant, or actual pieces   of the cross from the crucifixion. But it’s  fascinating to speculate about if they did.  Then there are myths of a Templar treasure  hoard, taken to some mysterious place just  

Before the persecution they faced in the 1300s.  The Templar fleet did disappear around that time,   but no one knows where or what was contained in  the cargo. Some speculate that they made their way   to Scotland, where they might have inspired  the Freemasons, but no one knows for sure. 

The Templars have lived on in the popular  imagination for centuries since their official   dissolution, whether through the creation  of contemporary branches, works of fiction   like The Da Vinci Code or the Assassin’s  Creed franchise, or through the intrigue of  

Scholars – and anyone who likes a little history. Check out one of our newest videos right here!   Plus, even more Grunge videos about  world history are coming soon.   Subscribe to our YouTube channel and hit  the bell so you don’t miss a single one.

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