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    Warrior Monks submitted by Frere Cliff de Beaumanoir

    Wednesday, November 12, 2008, 07:34 PM [Champions of Chivalry]
    Posted By: Sir Blackwolf

     

    Serving God with the Sword

    Few medieval organizations have aroused such lasting interest as the Knights Templar. Even today, the Order that existed between 1118 and 1314 intrigues history researchers and medieval enthusiasts alike. What was the driving force behind the Order that rose from humble beginnings into a huge fighting force employed by kings and monarchs? How is it possible that such an institution could spring from the medieval world, which by any standard was not well organized? And most interestingly, why was this magnificent body of warriors brought to an ignominious end at the hands of inquisitors and henchmen? The tale is a complex web of conflicting interests, politics, religious zeal, valor, stupidity, and sheer legend.

    The Plight of the Pilgrims


    Even with the Holy City in Christian hands, a pilgrimage was by no means safe. The land route through Constantinople, Nicaea, and Antioch was frequented by roving bands of highway robbers. The sea route was also dangerous, filled with pirates eager to plunder ships and sell the passengers off as slaves.

    The Order, initially a band of nine knights, formed the Pauperes Commilitones Christi (Poor Knights of Christ) to provide safety for Pilgrims traveling to the Holy Land. In return for their life-long service, the knights expected immediate entry into heaven if they died in battle

    In 1118, King Baldwin I of Jerusalem assigned the Temple of Solomon to the knights as their abode. This resulted in a change of the Order's name: Militia Templi Solomonis (Knights of the Temple of Solomon). Soon other military orders followed, such as Knights Hospitallers who maintained hospitals and used their funds for pilgrims and the Teutonic Knights who cared for German pilgrims. Each order had monastic features and the same pro bono requirements as any monastic order

    For the first ten years, the Knights Templar patrolled the route leading from the Mediterranean coast to Jerusalem. It was an arduous task, and within the Order there was confusion as to its function; to kill was against Christian beliefs, yet the Moslems were slaughtering infidel pilgrims. To pair up the knightly profession of arms and the saintly life of a monk was by no means easy, but somehow they managed to help pilgrims reach Jerusalem safely and fulfill their pilgrimage.

    The First Signs of Success

    The new Order was about to strike it rich; in 1128 the church councils at Troyes in France, and St. Bernard of Clairvaux offered their support to the Templars because of their bravery, considerateness and chivalry, unlike the traditional knights of the day. St. Bernard wrote in In Praise of the New Chivalry the following description or the ordinary knight:
    ...you let your hair grow long like women, so that it obstructs your sight; you hamper your movements because of the long, floating tunics; you bury your delicate and tender hands in over-ample sleeves, which float around you.

    Whereas he praises the Knights Templar:
    First of all, there is discipline and unqualified obedience... They live in a community, soberly and in joy, without wife and children. And to reach evangelical perfection, they live in the same house, in the same manner, without calling anything their own... They have a horror of chess and dice; they hate hunting; they don't even enjoy the flight of the falcon. They despise mimes, jugglers, story-tellers, dirty songs, performances by buffoonsall these they regard as vanities and inane follies. They cut their hair short because they know that it is shameful for a man to wear it long. Never overdressed, they bathe rarely and are dirty and hirsute, tanned by the coat of mail and the sun.

    Such praise, of course, increased the Order's prestige and power. New recruits flocked in, bringing with them much wealth, as the new recruits were sworn to poverty and bound to sign over their earthly goods to the Order. Donations also started to trickle in, only to soon turn into a downpour. St. Bernard's encouraging words also helped the spirit of the Order; they could now see themselves clearly in the service of Christ, wielding His sword to bring down the infidels.

    In 1139, the Pope showed his support in Omne Datum Optimum, in which the Rule of the Order was officially approved, papal protection was given, spoils from Moslems promised, and the Order made exempt from tithes and taxes. In 1144, the reigning Pope Celestine II issued Milites Templi, which awarded indulgences to the benefactors of the Order. Perhaps the most influential, though, was Militia Dei of 1145, issued by Lucius II, in which the Holy See awarded the Order the right to build their own churches and bury their dead on church grounds. This freedom eventually raised the false assumption that the Order's high officials were allowed to hear confessions and give absolution, which caused real trouble later on.

    The Road to Glory

    The years 1128 to 1165 were a period of vigorous growth, when the younger sons of the nobility flocked to join the Order, as they had no inheritance.
    All brothers were to be of age, and therefore the Templars had no oblates as with most Catholic Orders. And unlike other brothers who dressed in ordinary black or brown robes, the knights wore a white mantle emblazoned with a red cross.
    As the Order grew, ten provinces were created, each headed by a master and a commander, with the Grand Master of the Order and his Seneschal (deputy) over all. Although the total number of members in the Order reached 15-20,000, by far not all of them were knights. On the contrary, some researchers believe that there was a 1 to 10 ratio between knights and members. One Templar house in France is on record as supporting one knight with a total staff of the house numbering over 80

    By 1165, the Order was firmly established in the Holy Land. The military and political situation in Palestine was complex. There never was a single Crusader state but rather four distinct ones which were constantly at odds with each other. Due to the discord, the Crusader states were never able to stop Moslem armies from passing through their land, and so, often resorted to uneasy truces with the Moslems to keep their areas intact

    Even the first recorded military action of the Templars was an offensive, with Emperor John of Constantinople against the interests of the Kingdom of Jerusalem. The Templars had to bend their rules to participate in such action, carefully shifting between warring factions so as not to appear as traitors.

    Problems in Palestine

    The main opponents of the Crusader states were the great Moslem leaders Zengi, Nur ed-Din, Saladin, and Baybars. It was during Saladin's reign that the Crusader states suffered heavy losses and eventually lost Jerusalem.

    The tactics of the Moslems differed significantly from those of the Europeans. Able to shoot arrows from a galloping horse,the light Moslem horseman did much damage to the heavily armed knight, whose main attack mode was to ride headlong into enemy infantry

    The chain of events leading to the loss of Jerusalem began in 1179 at Jacob's Ford. Saladin started to prepare for a large-scale attack on the Crusader states, and as his first target he chose the Templar outpost of Jacob's Ford. A bitter fight ensued in which most of the defenders of the fortress fell. After that, Saladin had much more space to move his forces in the outskirts of the Latin Kingdom.

    In 1187, the Crusaders lost some 60 knights at Nazareth. Raymond, Count of Tripoli, had made a delicate and hard-to-maintain truce with Saladin, which the other Crusader leaders thought traitorous. Still, King Guy of Jerusalem needed Raymond's help against the Moslems and therefore he sought reconciliation. He chose Gerard de Ridefort, Grand Master of the Order and the most outspoken enemy of Raymond, to head the negotiating party.

    At the same time, Al-Afdal, one of Saladin's sons, asked to cross Raymond's land. According to the rules of the truce, he stopped to request Raymond's permission. When the Grand Master learned that Al-Afdal's forces had made camp just outside Nazareth, he collected a team of 90 Templars and prepared for attack. Both the Master of the Hospitallers and the Marshal of the Templars thought this maneuver unwise and tried to restrain Gerard, but he would not listen

    The Grand Master led his troops in a headlong attack against the numerically superior Moslem contingency. In the process of attack, he managed to get all but himself and three other knights killed. Al-Afdal, on the other hand, had only been attempting a transfer of troops, but by sheer luck managed to wipe out a large group of knights.

    Then, on July 4, 1187, Christians fought and lost the Battle of the Horns of Hattin, a decisive event in the decline of the Latin Kingdom in Palestine.
    Saladin was at Tiberias with 12,000 knights and an army on regular provisions. King Guy of Jerusalem and his army camped at the Springs of Al-Quastad. The Christians left the camp to relieve Tiberias. Saladin's forces stopped their progress at a site where there was no water, shelter or pasturage.

    As night fell, the Moslems set the brushes afire. By morning, the knights were half-crazed from the smoke, lack of water and rest. When Saladin attacked, the Templars fought as best they could but were struck down by the well-rested and strong Moslem forces.

    All remaining Christians were massed together except for the Templars and Hospitallers who were herded into separate groups and beheaded one by one.
    After Hattin, Saladin had no trouble taking Acre, Nablus, Jaffa, Toron, Sidon, Beirut, and Ascalon. Jerusalem fell to him on 20 September 1187. The Christians in the city were ransomed

    With Jerusalem lost and their fighting force decimated, all that remained for the Templars was their function as bankers and advocates to kings. The Templars gradually gained a new army and more importance in Palestine. But in 1291, most of them died defending the fortress of Acre against vastly superior Moslem forces. The Templars left Palestine, never to return.

    The Decline

    Having lost their primary purpose, the downfall of the Order was a question of time. Its membership had degenerated, most of the knights were illiterate and, as such, not well-equipped to navigate in the confusing political situation of the time, and the rotation of leaders prevented them from gaining deep knowledge of problems that needed action. Military failures brought infamy to the Order, and their close relations with Moslems gained them a reputation as traitors

    When the Church saw the lowered state of the Order, it suggested a union between the Knights Hospitallers and the Templars. But the Hospitallers were wary of the plan, and the Templars were vehemently against it.

    Philip "The Fair" IV of France oversaw the end of the Order after his ascent to the throne in 1285. When his permanent cash flow problem verged on the critical, he put his top man, Guillaume de Nogaret, to the task of smearing the Templars with enough vices to warrant a trial to terminate the Order. Nogaret charged them with, among other things:
    -Denying the saints, the Virgin Mary, and Jesus Christ as Savior.
    -Idolatry.
    -Renouncing the holy sacraments and omitting words of consecration in mass.
    -Believing that the Grand Master and other high officials of the Order can hear confession and offer absolution, even though they were laymen.
    -Giving obscene kisses homosexual acts, and misbehaving sexually.
    -Seeking funds unlawfully and misusing donated funds.
    -Holding heavily guarded meetings in secret. (the concept of Operational security being lost on folks that never served in forward deployed hostile positions)

    To assure public support of the trial, Nogaret published the list so the peasants could understand. Posing as the guardian of the Faith, Philip also forced the Pope to refrain from defending the Order.

    In 1307, Philip arrested every Templar in France, but his efforts to have other monarchs do the same for the most part failed. Kings suspected that Philip's reasons were not based on facts, and although some of them actually arrested Templars, most countries did not have the knights tortured to obtain confessions as in France

    Philip's trial of the Templars was a lengthy affair because the accusations were fraudulent and therefore hard to prove. Through torture, he managed to get enough testimonies in support of the accusations to get the trial going, but in 1310, he burned 54 Templars at the stake to break a budding Templar defense.

    Clement decided to settle the matter in a Church Council at Vienna in 1312, but his decision was heavily influenced by Philip's army camped just outside the city. He declared the Order suppressed but did not formally condemn it, and all Templars who confessed were set free and assigned to other Orders. Those who did not confess were burned to death. Templar possessions were given to the Hospitallers, and Philip got some money for his troubles, but the famous Templar treasure was never found.

    Aftermath

    The Order was suppressed in France but in Portugal continued under a new name: The Knights of Christ. Single Templars were allowed to live on the premises of the Templar houses until their death, and one such ex-Templar, Berenger dez Coll, was reported still to live at the Preceptory of Mas Deu in France in 1350

    The Templar legacy is legendary. The Templar treasure has been the subject of avid inquiry since 1307, but no trace of it has been found. In some accounts, Templars escaped Philip's attack by sailing to Scotland, in other stories they reached Cape Cod, and in still others they went to Ethiopia. But the data presented as proof of these tales is unconvincing

    The Templar story is a sad tale of virtue, valor, and effort lost in the sands of Palestine, but its lasting donation to medieval enthusiasts is the wonderful, convoluted, but well-documented saga of knights in the service of both Christ and the temporal kings.

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    Champions of Chivalry - Saladin

    Monday, August 4, 2008, 04:39 PM [Champions of Chivalry]
    Posted By: Sir Blackwolf

     

    Ṣalāḥ ad-Dīn Yūsuf ibn Ayyūb (Arabic: صلاح الدين يوسف بن أيوب‎), was a 12th century Kurd who became Sultan of Egypt and Syria, and a major Muslim political and military leader. At the height of his power, the Ayyubid dynasty, which he founded, ruled over Egypt, Syria, Iraq, Hejaz, and Yemen.  Saladin as he is better known in the Western World  was born in the castle of Tikrit, Iraq in 532 AH (AD 1137-1138) and died just after dawn on 27 Safar 589 AH (4 March 1193 AD) in Damascus.[1] He is best-known for uniting and also leading the Muslim armies during the Crusades and recapturing Jerusalem.

    On July 4, 1187, he faced at the Battle of Hattin the combined forces Guy of Lusignan, King Consort of Jerusalem and Raymond III of Tripoli. In this battle alone the Crusader army was largely annihilated by the motivated army of Saladin in what was a major disaster for the Crusaders and a turning point in the history of the Crusades. Saladin captured Raynald de Chatillon and was personally responsible for his execution in retaliation for previously attacking Muslim pilgrim caravans. Guy of Lusignan was also captured but his life was spared. That night, "with uncharacteristic coldbloodedness", Saladin ordered the execution of the "hundred or so" Templar and Hospitaller knights among the prisoners.  Because of their religious "devotion and rigorous training", they were the "most feared" of the Christian soldiers. D

    Despite his fierce struggle against the crusades, Saladin achieved a great reputation in Europe as a chivalrous knight, so much so that there existed by the fourteenth century an epic poem about his exploits, and Dante included him among the virtuous pagan souls in Limbo. Notwithstanding the differences in beliefs, the Muslim Saladin was respected by Christian lords, Richard the Lion Heart especially. Richard once praised Saladin as a great prince, saying that he was without doubt the greatest and most powerful leader in the Islamic world. Saladin in turn stated that there was not a more honorable Christian lord than Richard. After the treaty, Saladin and Richard sent each other many gifts as tokens of respect, but never met face to face.

    Saladin died on March 4, 1193, at Damascus, not long after Richard's departure. When they opened Saladin's treasury they found there was not enough money to pay for his funeral. He had given most of his money away in charity. Saladin is buried in a mausoleum in the garden outside the Umayyad Mosque in Damascus, Syria. Emperor Wilhelm II of Germany donated a new marble sarcophagus to the mausoleum. Saladin was, however, not placed in it. Instead the mausoleum, which is open to visitors, now has two sarcophagi: one empty in marble and one in wood containing the body of Saladin.

    The image I have placed here is of Saladin portrayed by Ghassan Massoud, a most respected Actor of Syria. I was most impressed by his presentation of the great Muslim Knight which was done with great Dignity and Passion. Even though Saladin's beliefs may be different from yours or mine his life exemplifies the way in which a Knight should conduct their life. He like us all was human and made mistakes and acted in ways that may be thought unchivalrous, yet have not we all? Naytheless he never ceased to be the best Knight he could and served his people to the end of his days. We all should wish for as much.

    I am at your service, Sir Blackwolf

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    Champions of Chivalry - Joan of Arc

    Sunday, May 18, 2008, 08:25 PM [Champions of Chivalry]
    Posted By: Sir Blackwolf

    Also known as Jeanne d'Arc, Joan the Maid, the Maid of Orléans and the Maid of Lorraine, Joan was a simple peasant girl who claimed to hear the voices of saints telling her she must help the Dauphin gain the throne of France. This she did, though whether it was through her leadership or through her use by others as a pawn is still debated. Nevertheless her dedication to her Ideals and her Faith set an excellent example of Chivalry.

    At the battle of Orleans in May 1429, Joan of Arc led the troops to victory over the English. Joan continued fighting the enemy in other locations along the Loire. Fear of troops under her leadership was so formidable that when she approached Lord Talbot's army at Patay, most of the English troops and Commander Sir John Fastolfe fled the battlefield. Fastolfe was later stripped of his Order of the Garter for this act of cowardice. Although Lord Talbot stood his ground, he lost the battle and was captured along with a hundred English noblemen and lost 1800 of his soldiers.

    In 1430 Joan of Arc was captured by the Burgundians while defending Compiegne near Paris and was sold to the English. The English, in turn, handed her over to the ecclesiastical court at Rouen led by Pierre Cauchon, a pro-English Bishop of Beauvais, to be tried for witchcraft and heresy. Much was made of her insistence on wearing male clothing. Joan was told that for a woman to wear men's clothing was a crime against God. Her determination to continue wearing it (because her voices hadn't yet told her to change, as well as for protection from sexual abuse by her jailors) was seen as defiance and finally sealed her fate. Joan was convicted after a fourteen-month interrogation and on May 30, 1431 Joan was burned at the stake in the Rouen marketplace. She was nineteen years old. Charles VII made no attempt to come to her rescue.

     

     

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    Champions of Chivalry - Robert the Bruce

    Thursday, March 20, 2008, 03:42 PM [Champions of Chivalry]
    Posted By: Sir Blackwolf

    Robert Bruce is surely the greatest of all the great Scottish heroes,  it was the patience and cunning of Bruce that Scotland needed, especially facing such formidable enemies as the English, first under Edward I and then under his son and heir Edward II.  By the time of Bannockburn, he was ready.

    The battle of Bannockburn was undoubtedly one of the most spectacular battles of the Scottish Wars of Independence. Although the struggle against the English was to continue for some 13 years more, the Scottish victory was of enormous importance as it secured the future of the throne for Rober the Bruce King of Scots. To avoid confusion, at this point it should be noted that Robert Bruce, shown as a traitor in the film Braveheart, was no such thing. Never on any occasion did Bruce betray Wallace, since in actual fact, Wallace's support lay with the restoration of John Baliol as King, Bruce's rival claimant to the Scottish throne. Baliol was a weak man, this being the main reason that Edward of England favoured him. He was given the name " Toom Tabard" (empty coat) after his coat of arms was taken from him after backing down to English demands . Bruce was a man of outstanding bravery and courage, who with the aid of amazing tactics and pure perseverance, led the Scots through 30 years of war to win their longed-for freedom.

    If Robert Bruce had done no more than defy the power of King Edward, restore the Scottish monarchy and win at Bannockburn, he would still be listed among the giants, but he did more. His view of his nation was truly international. Under the rule of the one who was later to be known as "Good King Robert," Scotland had become the first nation state in Europe, the first to have territorial unity under a single king. Contained in the Declaration of Arbroath of 1320 was a letter to the Pope, who had excommunicated everyone in Scotland unless they swore allegiance to Edward II (such were the ways of medieval popes). In the letter, signed by representatives from all classes of Scots society, it was stated that since ancient times the Scots had been free to choose their own kings, a freedom that was a gift from God. And so it was, but a gift that had needed a Robert Bruce to deliver.

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    Champions of Chivalry - The Knights Hospitaller

    Thursday, February 14, 2008, 04:37 PM [Champions of Chivalry]
    Posted By: Sir Blackwolf

    The Knights Hospitaller were also known as: Hospitalers, the Order of Malta, the Knights of Malta.

    From 1113 to 1309 they were known as the Hospitallers of St. John of Jerusalem; from 1309 to 1522 they went by the Order of the Knights of Rhodes; from 1530 to 1798 they were the Sovereign and Military Order of the Knights of Malta; from 1834 to 1961 they were the Knights Hospitaller of St. John of Jerusalem; and from 1961 to the present they are formally known as the Sovereign Military and Hospitaller Order of St. John of Jerusalem, of Rhodes, and of Malta.

    The Origin of the Hospitallers: In the mid-11th century, a Benedictine abbey was established in Jerusalem by merchants from Amalfi. About 30 years later, a hospital was founded next to the abbey to care for sick and poor pilgrims. After the success of the First Crusade in 1099, Brother Gerard (or Gerald), the hospital's superior, expanded the hospital and set up additional hospitals along the route to the Holy Land.

    On February 15, 1113, the order was formally named the Hospitallers of St. John of Jerusalem and recognized in a papal bull issued by Pope Paschal II.

    Hospitaller Knights: In 1120, Raymond de Puy (a.k.a. Raymond of Provence) succeeded Gerard as leader of the order. He replaced the Benedictine Rule with the Augustinian Rule and actively began to build up the order's power base, helping the organization to acquire lands and wealth. Possibly inspired by the Templars, the Hospitallers began to take up arms in order to protect pilgrims as well as tend their illnesses and injuries. Hospitaller Knights were still monks, and continued to follow their vows of personal poverty, obedience, and celibacy. The order also included chaplains and brothers who did not take up arms.

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