| THE DARK HISTORY OF
THE TEMPLARS
Although the crusaders are commonly thought to have
been motivated by their deep Christian faith, crusades were actually
wars inspired by avarice. At a time of utmost poverty and misery
prevalent in the West, the attractions of the East-in particular,
the Muslim societies' wealth and prosperity-played on the minds
of Europeans, especially those in the Church. These attractions,
bolstered with Christian teachings, begot the crusaders' mindset,
seemly motivated by religion but actually motivated by worldly designs.
This is the reason why Christians, who had followed more or less
peaceful policies in the previous 1,000 years, suddenly began to
display an appetite for war-specifically, the "liberation" of the
holy city of Jerusalem and Palestine as a whole.
 |
| The
crusades were a barbaric attack on the Middle Eastern Muslim
population, living in peace. |
We can retrace the beginnings of the crusades to November
1095, when Pope Urban II gathered the Council of Clermont. Three
hundred members of the clergy convened under his chairmanship. The
pacifist doctrines that had dominated Christendom were abandoned,
laying the foundations for the conquest. At the close of the Council,
Urban II announced this state of affairs in his famous speech to
a congregation that comprised all social classes, demanding that
Christians stop the infighting and warring among themselves. The
Pope called on them-whether rich or poor, aristocrat or peasant-to
unite under one banner and to free the holy land from the Muslims.
To him, this was "a holy war."
Historians describe Urban II as a good orator. He intended
to incite the Christians against Muslim Turks and Arabs, and succeeded
by alleging that the Muslim were assaulting pilgrims and that Christianity's
sacred places were being desecrated.1 Of
course, none of this was true.
As historians have confirmed, the Muslims were very
tolerant towards Christians and Jews, whom they permitted to pray
and worship. All minorities co-existing in the Holy Land benefited
equally from this atmosphere of tranquility, created by the moral
code of Islam. But because means of communication at the time were
terribly primitive compared to today's, medieval Europeans weren't
aware of this. Owing allegiance to the Vatican in Rome and conducting
services in Latin, they knew little about the Eastern Orthodox Church
or the Greek-speaking Byzantium, and even less about Islam.
Since what the common people did know amounted to nothing
more than hearsay, the Pope found it easy to excite their emotions.
Urban II went on to proclaim as an encouragement that for those
who participated in the crusade, all sins would be forgiven. The
exuberant crowd was distributed fabric crosses to emblazon their
garments, and they dispersed to spread the word of the "holy war."
The overwhelming response to this call made history.
In a very short period of time, a massive "crusaders' army" was
assembled, consisting of not only professional warriors, but also
ten thousands of ordinary people.
Some historians suggest that the impoverished kings
of Christendom, eager to exploit the fabled riches of the East,
pressurized the Pope to call a "holy war." Others find an altogether
different motive for Pope Urban II, suggesting that he wished to
gain power and prestige for himself at the expense of a rival claiming
to be pope. But in reality, all the various kings, princes, aristocrats
and others who obliged this call did so for worldly purposes. As
Donald Queller of the University of Illionois put it, "the French
knights wanted more land. Italian merchants hoped to expand trade
in Middle Eastern ports. . . Large numbers of poor people joined
the expeditions simply to escape the hardships of their normal lives."2
On the way, greedy hordes murdered countless Muslims
and Jews in the hope of finding gold and jewels. Among crusaders,
it was common practice to disembowel their victims in the hopes
that they might have swallowed their gold and jewels to hide them.
In the Fourth Crusade, their avarice reached the point where they
looted Christian Constantinople, scratching gold leaf off the frescos
in the Cathedral of Hagia Sophia.
Barbarism of the Crusaders
 |
| A 16th-century
crusader |
In the summer of 1096, this mob of self-appointed crusaders
set off in three separate groups, each taking a different route
to Constantinople, where they met up with one another. The Byzantine
Emperor, Alexius I, did what he could to aid this force, comprising
4,000 mounted knights and 25,000 infantry troops.3
Raymond IV of Saint-Gilles, Count of Toulouse;Bohemond,
Duke of Taranto; Godfrey of Bouillon;Hugh, Count of Vermandois;and
Robert, Duke of Normandy commanded this army. Bishop Adhemar of
le Puy, the close friend of Urban II, was their spiritual leader.4
After ransacking and setting fire to many settlements
and putting countless Muslims to the sword, eventually the crusaders
reached Jerusalem in 1099. After a siege of approximately five weeks,
the city fell. When the victors finally entered Jerusalem, according
to one historian, "They killed all the Saracens and the Turks they
found... whether male of female."5
Crusaders slaughtered everyone they met and looted
everything they could get their hands on. They murdered indiscriminately
those who had taken refuge in the mosques, whether young or old,
and devastated the Muslim and Jewish holy sites and places of worship
setting the city's synagogues aflame, burning alive Jews who had
hidden inside. This slaughter continued until no longer could they
find anyone to kill.6
One of the crusaders, Raymond of Aguiles, boasts of
this incredible cruelty:
Wonderful sights were to be seen. Some of our men (and
this was more merciful) cut off the heads of their enemies; others
shot them with arrows, so that they fell from the towers; others
tortured them longer by casting them into flames. Piles of heads,
hands and feet were to be seen in the streets of the city. It was
necessary to pick one's way over the bodies of men and horses. But
these were small matters compared to what happened at the Temple
of Solomon, a place where religious services are normally chanted
. . . in the temple and the porch of Solomon, men rode in blood
up to their knees and bridle reins.7
  |
| An
engraving depicting the crusaders' occupation of Jerusalem |
A
Medieval Age drawing of Templars in Jerusalem |
In The Monks of War, researcher Desmond Seward
narrates the events of these tragic days:
Jerusalem was stormed in July 1099. The rabid ferocity
of its sack showed just how little the Church had succeeded in Christianising
atavistic instincts. The entire population of the Holy City was
put to the sword, Jews as well as Moslems, 70,000 men, women and
children perished in a holocaust, which raged for three days. In
places men waded in blood up to their ankles and horsemen were splashed
by it as they rode through the streets.8
According to another historical source, the number
of Muslims pitilessly slaughtered was 40,000.9
Whatever the actual number of the dead,
what the crusaders committed in the Holy Land has gone down in history
as an example of matchless barbarism.
The first crusade ended with the fall of Jerusalem
in 1099. After 460 years of Muslim rule, the Holy Land came under
Christian control. The crusaders established a Latin kingdom that
stretched from Palestine to Antioch and made Jerusalem its capital
city.
Thereafter, the crusaders began struggling to establish
themselves in the Middle East. But to sustain the state they had
founded, they needed to organize themselves-and to achieve his,
they established unprecedented military orders. Members of these
orders had emigrated from Europe and, in Palestine, lived a monastic
life of sorts. At the same time, they trained for war against the
Muslims. One of these orders went down a different route, undergoing
a change that would significantly alter the course of history in
Europe and-eventually-the world: the Knights Templar.
Founding of the Knights Templar
14th-century drawing of the Temple of
Solomon
|
About 20 years after the conquest of Jerusalem and
the creation of a Latin Empire, the Templars first appeared on the
scene of history. Otherwise known as Templars or Knights Templar,
the order's full and proper name was Pauperes commilitones Christi
Templique Salomonis, or "Poor Fellow-Soldiers of Christ and the
Temple of Solomon." (A major part of the information we have today
on the Templars was recorded by the 12th century historian Guillaume
of Tyre.) The order was founded in 1118 by nine knights: Hugues
de Payens, Geoffrey de St. Omer, Rossal, Gondamer, Geoffrey Bisol,
Payen de Montdidier, Archambaud de St. Agnat, Andre de Montbard,
and the Hugh Conte de Champagne.
Thus was quietly born one of the most talked-about,
effective and powerful organizations of Medieval Europe. These nine
knights presented themselves to Baldwin II, the Emperor of Jerusalem,
asking him to assign them the responsibility of protecting the lives
and property of the many Christian pilgrims now flocking to Jerusalem
from all over Europe. The Emperor knew Hugues de Payens, the first
Grand Master of the order, well enough to grant the nine their request.
Accordingly, the district where Solomon's Temple once stood (and
by then, included the site of the al-Aqsa Mosque, which survives
to this day), was allocated to the order of the Templars, giving
the order its name.
The Temple Mount thus remained the order's headquarters for the
next 70 years until, following the battle of Hattin, the great Islamic
commander Saladin reconquered Jerusalem for the Muslims.
The Templars had established themselves there by choice,
because the site of the Temple represented the earthly power of
the Prophet Solomon; and the remnants of the temple contained big
secrets. Protecting the Holy Land and the Christian pilgrims was
the official reason the nine founders gave for joining forces and
for creating the order in the first place. But the true reason behind
it all was altogether different.
The Order's Mission
At the time, there were a number of other orders of
warrior monks in Jerusalem, but all acting according to their charters.
Besides training as soldiers, the Knights of St. John-a large organization
also known as the Knights Hospitalers-took care of the sick and
the poor and were performing other good deeds in the Holy Land.
The Templars, however, had taken it upon themselves to protect the
lands between Haifa and Jerusalem-a physical impossibility for the
nine knights to shoulder all by themselves. Even then, it was now
obvious that they sought political as well as economic gains, quite
aside from performing works of charity.

The famous Grand Master Albert Pike,
with his book titled Morals and Dogma |
In Morals And Dogma, one of Freemasonry's most
popular books, Grand Master Albert Pike (1809-1891) reveals the
Templars' true purpose:
In 1118, nine Knights Crusaders in the East, among
whom were Geoffroi de Saint-Omer and Hughes de Payens, consecrated
themselves to religion, and took an oath between the hands of the
Patriarch of Constantinople, a See always secretly or openly hostile
to that of Rome from the time of Photius. The avowed object of the
Templars was to protect the Christians who came to visit the Holy
Places: their secret object was the rebuilding of the Temple of
Solomon on the model prophesied by Ezekiel...10
The Knights Templar, he continued, were from the very
beginning "devoted to . . . opposition to the tiara of Rome and
the crown of its Chiefs. . ." The object of the Templars, he said,
was to acquire influence and wealth, then to "intrigue and at need
fight to establish the Johannite or Gnostic and Kabbalistic dogma.
. ."
Adding to the information that Pike provides, the English
authors of The Hiram Key, Christopher Knight and Robert Lomas-both
Masons-write about the Templars' origin and purpose. According to
them, the Templars discovered "a secret" in the ruins of the temple.
This then changed their worldview; and from then on, they adopted
un-Christian teachings. Their "protection for pilgrims" became a
front behind which they hid their real intent and activities.
There is no evidence that these founding Templars ever
gave protection to pilgrims, but on the other hand, we were soon
to find that there is conclusive proof that they did conduct extensive
excavations under the ruins of Herod's Temple [as Solomon's temple
was called after Herod rebuilt it].11
The authors of The Hiram Key are not the only researchers
finding evidence for this. Writes the French historian,
Gaetan Delaforge:
The real task of the nine knights was to carry out
research in the area, in order to obtain certain relics and manuscripts
which contain the essence of the secret traditions of Judaism and
ancient Egypt…12
In The Hiram Key, Knight and Lomas conclude
that the Templars excavated items of such importance at the site
that they adopted a wholly new world view. Many other historians
draw similar conclusions. The order's founders and their successors
were all of Christian upbringing, yet their philosophy of life was
not a Christian one.
| |
| Some seals and maps
from the era of the crusades: From left to right: A sketch showing
the centers of religious importance in Jerusalem; Seal of Frederick
III; another map of Jerusalem; front and back of the crusader
king Baldwin's seal; front and back of the Cesaree Archbishop's
seal. |
At the end of the 19th century, Charles Wilson of the Royal Engineers,
began conducting archeological research in Jerusalem. He concluded
that the Templars had gone to Jerusalem to study the temple's ruins
and, from the evidence Wilson obtained there, that the Templars
had set themselves up in the vicinity of the temple to facilitate
excavation and research. The tools that the Templars left behind
form part of the evidence Wilson gathered, and are now in the private
collection of the Scottish Robert Brydon.13
According to the authors of The Hiram Key, the Templars'
search was not in vain. They made a discovery that altered their
perception of and outlook on the world entirely. Despite being born
and raised in a Christian society, they adopted wholly un-Christian
practices. Black magic rituals and rites and sermons of perverse
content were common practice. There is a general consensus among
historians that these practices were derived from on the Cabala.
Muslims and Christians during one of
their clashes
|

Map of Palestine showing the crusades |
Cabala literally means "oral tradition." An esoteric branch of
mystical Judaism, the Cabala is also a school that researches the
secret, hidden and meanings of the Torah (or first five Books of
Moses) and other Jewish writings. There's more to it, however. A
close examination of the Cabala reveals that it actually precedes
the Torah. A pagan teaching, it continued to exist after the revelation
of the Torah and lived on to spread amongst the followers of Judaism.
(For further reading on the subject, see Harun Yahya's Global Freemasonry,
Global Publishing, 2002)
For thousands of years, the Cabala has been a resource
for sorcery and practitioners of black magic and now enjoys a strong
following all around the world, not only in the Jewish community.
The Templars were one such group, engaged in research into the Cabala
with the goal of acquiring supernatural powers. As the following
chapters will examine in detail, they were keen on establishing
ongoing relationships with Cabalists in Jerusalem as well as in
Europe-a view widely accepted by researchers working on the subject.14
The Development of the Order
With new members joining their order, the Templars
soon entered a phase of rapid growth. In 1120, Foulgues d'Angers
became a Knight Templar and so did Hugo, Count of Champagne, in
1125. The enigma surrounding the order and its mystic teachings
drew the attention of many European aristocrats. At the Council
of Troyes in 1128, the Papacy officially recognized the order of
the Templars, which further aided their growth.15

A ship carrying the symbols of the Templars
|
Rome's recognition of the Templars is related in the
Turkish Masonic journal, Mimar Sinan:
To obtain the Papacy's approval of the order, Grand
Master Hugues de Payens, accompanied by five knights, paid a visit
to Pope Honorius II. The Grand Master submitted two letters-one
from the patriarch of Jerusalem, the other from King Baudoin II-setting
forth the order's honorable mission, its services to Christianity,
and many another good deed. On the 13th of January, 1128, the Council
of Troyes convened. Present were many high-ranking officials of
the Church, including the Abbot of Citeaux, Etienne Harding, and
Bernard, the Abbot of Clairvaux. The Grand Master presented his
case once more. It was agreed that the Church would officially recognize
the order under the name of Poor Fellow-Soldiers of Christ. Bernard
was commissioned to prepare a Rule for the Templars. So, the order
was officially founded.16
In the order's development and progress, the single most important
person is undoubtedly St. Bernard (1090-1153). Becoming the Abbot
of Clairvaux at the tender age of 25, he had risen in the Catholic
Church's hierarchy to become a respectable spokesman for the Church,
influential with the Pope as well as the French King. It must be
added that he was a cousin of Andre de Montbard, one of the founders
of the order. The Templars' Rule was written according the principles
of the Cistercian Order to which St. Bernard belonged-or short,
the Templars adopted the rules and organization of this monastic
order. But most of their rule never went any further than being
written down and recognized: The Templars continued in their un-Christian
practices that the Church had strictly forbidden.
It's entirely possible that St. Bernard was duped,
and that he never knew the truth about the Templars who, taking
advantage of his trustworthiness and status in the Church and throughout
Christian Europe, used him for their own ends. He wrote a favorable
appraisal of the order, "De Laude Novae Militae" (In Praise of the
New Knighthood) following Grand Master Hugues de Payens's persistent
requests for him to do so.17 Around
that time, St. Bernard had become the second most influential person
in Christendom, after the Pope.

The famous explorer Vasco de Gama was a Templar who set sail
to discover new ocean trading routes. Above: Vasco de Gama's
ship with the Templars Cross on its sails.
|
One source illustrates the importance of Bernard's
support of the Templars:
Bernard's document, "De Laude Novae Militae", swept
through Christendom like a tornado, and in no time the number of
Templar recruits increased. At the same time donations, gifts and
bequests, from Monarchs and Barons throughout Europe, were arriving
regularly on the Templar doorstep. With a staggering rapidity, the
fledgling little band of nine knights grew into what we refer to
as Templar, Inc.18
"Shall I tell you upon whom the satans
descend? They descend on every evil liar. They give them a
hearing and most of them are liars." (Qur'an, 26: 221-223)
The Cabala is a mystic synthesis between pagan teachings preceding
the Torah and Judaism. For centuries, the Cabala has been
associated with sorcery and was a source of inspiration for
the Templars' perverse beliefs. |
With this document, the Templars obtained unprecedented privileges
not granted to other orders and-according to Alan Butler and Stephen
Dafoe, known for their research is this field-became the most successful
military, commercial and financial organization in Medieval Europe.
As their legend and renown spread from mouth to mouth, they became
a multinational company with seemingly unlimited capital and financial
resources and ten of thousands of trained employees:
Recruits, and offers of money and land came flowing
in from far and wide. Soon, numerous presbyteries, castles, farms
and churches, were built and occupied by the Templar Knights and
their servants. The Templars fitted out ships, creating both a merchant
and fighting navy. In time, they became the most famous warriors,
travellers, bankers and financiers of their day.19
In short, the Templars were an autonomous
entity answerable only to the Pope, with no obligation to pay dues
to any king, ruler or diocese. Their wealth increased day by day.
In the Holy Lands, the order's power was legendary and continued
until the fall of Acre (1291). They controlled the shipping routes
from Europe to Palestine used by pilgrims, but all these constituted
just a fraction of the Templars' overall activities.
They had entered the scene as "Poor Fellow-Soldiers
of Christ," but no description could have been less accurate. Amongst
their ranks were to be found the wealthiest people of Europe: leading
bankers from London and Paris, among whose customers were Blanche
of Castile, Alphonso de Poitiers, and Robert of Artois. The finance
ministers of James I of Aragon, and Charles I of Naples and the
chief advisor of Louis VII of France were all Templars.20
By the year 1147, 700 knights and 2,400 servants of
the order were stationed in Jerusalem. Across the known world, 3,468
castles had become the Templars' property. They had established
trading posts and routes on both land and sea, had won war booty
and spoils from the wars they participated in. Among Europe's states,
they were a political power to be reckoned with, often called in
to arbitrate between rulers during times of conflict.
It is estimated that in the 13th century, the Templars
numbered 160,000, of whom 20,000 were knights-in those times, constituting
an undoubted superpower.
In The Temple and the Lodge, authors Michael Baigent
and Richard Leigh document the Templars' incredibly widespread influence
throughout Christian Europe. They were simply everywhere, even playing
a role in the signing of England's Magna Carta. Having amassed huge
wealth, they were the most powerful bankers of their time and also
the largest fighting force in the West. The Templars commissioned
and financed cathedrals, mediated in international transactions,
and even supplied court chamberlains to the ruling houses of Europe.
The Structure of the Order
One of the most interesting aspects of the Templars
was their emphasis on discretion. In the two hundred years between
the order's founding and its liquidation, they never compromised
on secrecy. This, however, is inexplicable by any standard of reason,
logic, or common sense. If they were truly devoted to the Catholic
Church, there was no need for this secrecy: All of Europe was under
the sovereignty of the Papacy. If they were merely following Christian
teachings, then they had nothing to hide and there was no need for
secrecy. Why adopt secrecy as a fundamental principle if you are
in compliance with Church doctrine and your mission is to uphold
and defend Christianity-unless you are engaged in activities incompatible
with the Church?
Discipline was so very strictly observed within the
order's hierarchy that it can only be described as a chain of command.
According to the Templar rule, obedience to the Grand Master and
Masters of the order was paramount:
... if anything be commanded by the Master or by one
to whom he has given his power, it should be done without demur
as if it were a command from God.21
|  
Ruins of castles and fortresses built
by the Templars in Europe and Palestine
|
The Templars were not allowed any personal possessions; everything
remained the property of their order. They also had their own unique
dress code. Over their armor, they wore a long white mantle emblazoned
with a red cross, so that they were recognized as Templars wherever
they went. The Red Cross symbol was assigned to the order by Pope
Eugene III, who, incidentally, had been tutored by St. Bernard.
There were three classes of Templars: Knights and warriors
of various ranks, men of religion, and finally servants. Other rules
specific to the order prohibited marriage, correspondence with relatives
or a private life.22 Meals
were taken together en masse. As portrayed on their seal-which depicted
two knights on one single horse-they were required to go about their
business in pairs, share everything, and eat from the same bowl.
They addressed each other as "my brother," and each Templar had
the right to three horses and one servant. Breach or disrespect
of any of these rules was harshly punished.
Grooming and cleansing were considered an embarrassment,
so Templars rarely washed and went around filthy and stinking of
sweat, from the heat of wearing their armor. But according to history,
the Templars were good seafarers. From the surviving Jews and Arabs
in the Holy Land, they had acquired various maps and learned the
sciences of geometry and mathematics, enabling them to navigate
not only along the shores of Europe and along the African coast,
but to explore lands and seas lying farther away.
Admission to the Order
| 
|
Money and
medallions issued by the Templars, who invented the first
banking system. |
Before one could be considered for admission into the
order, he had to meet a number of preconditions. Among them, a man
had to be in good health, not married or indebted, without any obligations
and not bound by any other order, and willing to accept becoming
a slave and servant of the order.
The initiation ceremony was held in a domed chamber
resembling the Church of The Holy Sepulchre and was to be conducted
in absolute secrecy.23 Just
as in Freemasonry centuries later, esoteric rituals had to be performed
during this ceremony.
In his article titled "Tampliyeler ve Hurmasonlar"
(Templars and Freemasons) mason Teoman Biyikoglu refers to the order's
rule of 1128 about the initiation ceremony:
The Master addresses the congregated brothers of the
order: "Dear brothers, some of you have proposed that Mr. X may
be admitted to the order. If any of you know of any reason to oppose
his initiation, say so now."
If no word of opposition is spoken, the candidate will
be led to the adjoining chamber of the temple. In this chamber,
the candidate is visited by three of the most senior brothers, told
of the difficulties and hardship awaiting him if he is admitted
to the order, and then asked whether he still wishes to be admitted.
If his answer is affirmative, he is asked whether he is married
or engaged to be married, has links to other orders, is indebted
to anyone, is of good health, and whether or not he is a slave.
If his answers to these questions comply with the requirements
of the order, the senior brothers will return to the temple and
say, "We told the candidate of all the hardships awaiting him and
our conditions of admission, but he is insistent on becoming a slave
of the order." Before being readmitted into the temple, the candidate
is again asked whether he still insists on being admitted. If he
still answers yes, the Grand Master addresses the candidate: "Brother,
you are asking much of us. You have seen only the façade of the
order, and you hope to acquire pureblood horses, honorable neighbors,
good food and nice garments. But are you aware of how hard our conditions
really are?" Proceeding to list the difficulties awaiting the candidate,
he continues: "You must not seek admittance for wealth, nor for
status."
f the candidate agrees, he is again led out of the temple. The
Grand Master then asks the brothers whether they have anything to
say about the candidate. If there is nothing said against him, he
is brought back, made to kneel down, and given the Bible. He is
asked if he is married. If he answers no, the oldest or most senior
in the congregation is asked, "Have any questions that need to be
asked been forgotten?" If the answer is no, the candidate is asked
to swear an oath that he will remain loyal to the order and his
brothers until the day he dies, and that he will not reveal to the
outside world a word that is spoken in the temple. After he has
sworn the oath, the Grand Master kisses the new brother on the lips
[according to another source he is kissed on the belly and neck].
He then is given a Templar mantle and a woven belt, which is never
to be taken off.24
"Christian Usurers"
According to Alan Butler and Stephen Dafoe, "The Templars
were expert financiers, using trading techniques quite unknown in
the Europe of their day. They had clearly learned many of these
skills from Jewish sources, but would have much more freedom to
extend their financial empire, in a way that any Jewish financier
of the period would have envied greatly."25
Even though usury was strictly forbidden, they weren't
afraid to lend money on interest. The Templars had acquired such
wealth-and the power that came with it-that nobody dared speak out
against them or do anything about it.26 This
so went to their heads that they went out of control. They were
disobedient to kings and the Pope and in some cases, even challenged
their authority. In 1303, for example, few years before their order
was liquidated, they refused a request for assistance from the French
King Philip IV, as well as his later request in 1306 for the Templars'
order to merge with the Hospitalers.27
Travel could be a hazardous enterprise in the 12th
century. En route, wayfarers could be robbed by bandits anywhere
and at anytime. Transporting money, as well as other precious commodities
essential for trade, was particularly risky. Out of this situation,
the Templars made a fortune by means of a fairly simple system of
banking. For example, if a tradesman wanted to go from London to
Paris, first he would go to the Templars' office in London and hand
over his money. In return, he was given a paper with an encoded
message written on it. On his arrival in Paris, he could hand in
this note in exchange for the money he'd paid in London, minus a
fee and interest. Thus the transaction was completed.
Along with traders, wealthy pilgrims too made use of
this system. "Checks" issued by Templars in Europe could be cashed
in on arrival in Palestine, minus a hefty interest charge for this
service. In The Temple and the Lodge, co-authors Michael Baigent
and Richard Leigh explain the Templars' economic dimension, recording
that the beginnings of modern banking can be traced back to them,
and that no other organization contributed as much as the Templars
to the rise of capitalism.28 History
records Florentine bankers as having invented "checking accounts,"
yet the Templars were using this method of money transfer long before.
It is generally accepted that capitalism first arose in the Jewish
community of Amsterdam, but long before them, the Templars had established
their own medieval capitalism, including banking based on interest.
They lent money on interest rates of up to 60% and controlled a
major proportion of capital flow and liquidity in the economy of
Europe.
Using methods much like those of a modern private bank,
they derived profits from both trade and banking, as well as from
donations and armed conflict. They became as rich as the multinational
company that, in effect, they were. At one time, the finances of
the English and French monarchies were controlled and run by the
Templars' respective offices in Paris and London, and both the French
and English royal families owed the Templars huge amounts of money.29
The kings of Europe were literally at
their mercy, hoping to borrow money, and most royal households had
come to depend on the order. This let them manipulate the kings
and their national policies for their own purposes.
The Enigma of the Templars and Gothic Architecture
 |
| St. Bernard, spiritual leader of the Templars |
After Innocent II was elected Pope with St. Bernard's
backing, he granted the Templars the right to build and run their
own churches. This was a first in the history of the Church, which
ruled as an absolute power at the time. This privilege meant that
from now on, the Templars were answerable only to the Pope and beyond
the reach of other authorities, including kings and lesser rulers.
It also reduced their responsibilities to the Papacy, letting them
hold court, impose their own taxes and collect them. Thus they could
realize their worldly ambitions free of any pressure from the Church.
In the process of planning their churches, they developed
their own style of architecture, later to be known as "Gothic."
In The Sign and the Seal, Graham Hancock states that Gothic architecture
was born in 1134 with the construction of the north tower of Chartres
Cathedral. The person behind this work of architecture was St. Bernard,
the Templars' mentor and spiritual leader. He felt it important
that this construction symbolize in stone the cabbalistic approach
and the esotericism that the Templars esteemed so highly. As Graham
Hancock wrote, St. Bernard, the patron of the Templars, "played
a formative role in the evolution and dissemination of the Gothic
architectural formula in its early days (he had been at the height
of his powers in 1134 when the soaring north tower of Chartres cathedral
had been built, and he had constantly stressed the principles of
sacred geometry that had been put into practice in that tower and
throughout the whole wonderful building.)"
  |
| A medieval engraving showing Jerusalem
at the time of the Templars |
Elsewhere in the same book, the author writes:
The entire edifice had been carefully and explicitly
designed as a key to the deeper religious mysteries. Thus, for example,
the a
rchitects and masons had made use of gematria (an ancient
Hebrew cipher that substitutes numbers for the letters of the alphabet)
to "spell out" obscure liturgical phrases in many of the key dimensions
of the great building. Similarly the sculptors and glaziers-working
usually to the instructions of the higher clergy-had carefully concealed
complex messages about human nature, about the past, and about the
prophetic meaning of the Scriptures in the thousands of different
devices and designs that they had created.

Characteristic examples
of Gothic architecture in some of Europe's cities |
(For example, a tableau in the north porch depicts
the removal, to some unstated destination, of the Ark of the Covenant-which
is shown loaded upon an ox-cart. The damaged and eroded inscription,
"HIC AMICITUR ARCHA CEDERIS," which could be "Here is hidden the
Ark of the Covenant."
Clearly he had regarded the Templars' architectural
skills as almost supernaturally advanced and had been particularly
impressed by the soaring roofs and arches that they had built. .
. Soaring roofs and arches had also been the distinguishing features
of the Gothic architectural formula as expressed at Chartres and
other French cathedrals in the twelfth century-cathedrals that .
. . were regarded by some observers as "scientifically... far beyond
what can be allowed for in the knowledge of the epoch."30
The Battle of Hattin
Following the death of the Latin King Baldwin I in
1186, Guy de Lusignan-who was known to be close to the Templars-succeeded
to the throne in Palestine. Reynald de Chatillon, Prince of Antioch,
became the new king's closest aide. After fighting in the Second
Crusade, Reynald had stayed behind in Palestine, where he became
good friends with the Templars.
|  
|
| Gold
and silver swords belonging to Templars |
Reynald's cruelty was well known in the Holy Land.
On the 4th of July, 1187 the crusader armies fought their bloodiest
battle at Hattin. The army numbered 20,000 infantry and a thousand
mounted knights. Assembling this army stretched to the limit the
resources of towns along the border, leaving the others unprotected
and vulnerable. The battle ended with the virtual annihilation of
the crusaders. Most lost their lives, and every survivor was captured.
Among the prisoners of war were King Guy himself and the leading
commanders of the Christian army
| 
Drawing depicting the Templars' defeat at the Battle of Hattin
|
According to the Templars' own records, Saladin, the
great commander of the Muslim forces, was fair. Despite all the
cruelty inflicted on Palestine's Muslim population over the previous
100 years of Christian rule, the defeated forces were not ill-treated.
While most Christians were pardoned, the Templars had been responsible
for the savage attacks carried out on the Muslim population, and
for this reason, Saladin had the Templars executed, along with the
Grand Master of the order and Reynald de Chatillon, both known for
their inhumane cruelty. King Guy was freed after only one year in
captivity in the town of Nablus.
After Saladin's victory at Hattin, he advanced with his army and
proceeded to free Jerusalem. Despite serious losses, the Templars
survived their defeat in Palestine and along with other Christians,
withdrew to Europe. Most headed for France where, thanks to their
privileged status, they continued to increase their power and wealth.
In time, they became the "state within the state" in many European
countries.
Acre, the crusaders' last stronghold in Palestine,
was captured by the Muslim army in 1291. With this, the original
justification for the Templars' existence-the protection of pilgrims
in the Holy Land-disappeared as well.
Now the Templars could concentrate all their efforts
on Europe, but needed a little time to adapt to this new situation.
During this transitional period, they relied on the help of their
friends in the royal houses of Europe, of whom the best-known was
Richard the Lion-Hearted. His relationship with the Templars was
such that he was regarded as an Honorary Knight Templar.31
Furthermore, Richard had sold to the Templars the Island
of Cyprus, which was to become the temporary base of their order,
while they strengthened their position in Europe to counteract their
losses in Palestine.
Cyprus: A Temporary Base
In order to understand the links between Cyprus and
the order, we need to examine the events that culminated in the
3rd Crusade. By July 4, 1187, Jerusalem was conquered. Guy de Lusignan
was taken prisoner the same day to be freed a year later, after
swearing an oath never to attack the Muslims again.
Germany, France, and England made the joint decision
to launch the 3rd Crusade in order to retake Jerusalem. But before
proceeding to attack the Holy City, they considered it essential
for their success to first capture a harbor, where they could land
troops and supplies. Acre was selected; and King Philip of France
and England's King Richard began their sea journey
After King Richard's naval forces took Cyprus, Templar
Master Robert de Sable entered the scene with a proposal to purchase
Cyprus from Richard the Lion-Hearted. A price was fixed at 100,000
bezants (then gold currency of Byzantium), and de Sable made a down
payment of 40,000 bezants. This sum, available so soon after the
defeat at Hattin, is enough to illustrate the order's financial
strength.
In 1291, Acre fell to the Muslim army. As the Christian
presence in Palestine came to an end, the Templars moved on. Some
settled in Cyprus, later to serve as their temporary base in the
Mediterranean. The Templars had been hoping to acquire a kingdom,
such as the Teutonic Knights had won for themselves in northern
Europe, except they wanted theirs in center of Europe-preferably
in France.
In Europe, under the guidance of their Master based
in France, the rest of the Templars carried on their usual activities,
with an unequalled degree of freedom. The Grand Master enjoyed a
status on a par with kings; the Templars owned land in most countries
of Christendom, from Denmark to Italy. A massive warrior army formed
the basis of their political power. Because all the ruling houses
of Europe were indebted to the Templars, they feared that their
future was threatened.
The throne of England was seriously indebted to the
order. King John had emptied the coffers of the treasury between
1260 and 1266 in order to finance his military operations; and Henry
III, likewise, borrowed heavily from the Knights Templar.32
The situation in France was such that the Templars offices in Paris
housed their own treasury as well as the state's and the treasurer
of the order was also the treasurer of the King. The Royal household's
finances were thus under the control of the Templars and dependent
on them.33
Decadence and Its Unmasking
After Christian presence in the Holy Land ended on
June 16th, 1291, the Templars returned to Europe. Even though their
original purpose-protecting European pilgrims-had ceased to exist,
they kept on strengthening their power base, increasing their number
of soldiers and amassing ever greater fortunes. But from this date
onward, events began to turn against the Templars.
While their numbers and their wealth were on the rise,
their greed, arrogance and tyranny increased accordingly. By now,
the Knights Templar had grown apart from the Catholic Church's teachings,
beliefs, and practices. In general, no longer did any European have
anything to say in their favor. In France, expressions like "to
drink like a Templar" were common and widespread. In Germany, "Tempelhaus"
meant whorehouse, and if anyone acted in an unacceptably arrogant
way, he was said "to be proud as a Templar."34
|  
THE BARBARITY OF RICHARD THE LION-HEARTED
Richard the Lion-Hearted had a close relationship
with the Templars. Despite his glorious title of "Lionheart,"
he was a cruel and merciless ruler.
When he and his crusader army reached Palestine,
they came to Acre, which had then been besieged for two years
by the last remaining Christian army in Palestine. Facing
the crusaders was Saladin's army which, despite many attempts,
hadn't managed to break the siege and relieve the 3,000 Muslims
inside the Acre castle. With the arrival of Richard the Lion-Hearted,
Acre's already weakened resistance was weakened further. In
the end, on July 12th, 1192, Acre fell. This was the crusaders'
first victory after their defeat at the Battle of Hattin.
3,000 Muslims lived in the town, more than
half of them women and children. Richard demanded a huge sum
as ransom for the lives of his 3,000 captives. Saladin agreed,
but could not raise the requested sum at once, so installments
were agreed upon. Some had already been paid when one was
delayed. On August 20th Richard, who had grown tired of sitting
and waiting, decided to slaughter all 3,000 Muslim prisoners.
His soldiers placed the block on the front walls of the castle
and, one by one, beheaded all of the 3,000. It took them three
whole days. On the right, this act of barbarism is depicted
from a Christian perspective. |
The kingdoms of Europe, especially France, were angered by the
Templars' political intrigues and shadowy designs. After having
plenty of opportunity to get acquainted with them, people started
to realize that their order was not comprised of genuinely religious
knights. Finally in 1307, Philip the Fair, King of France, and Pope
Clement V realized that the Templars were seeking to change not
only Europe's religious landscape, but its political balance as
well. In October 1307, they moved in on the Templars, with the view
of liquidating this decadent, treacherous order.35
The Templars' True Face
Modest missionaries, fighting for Christianity-this
was how the Templars presented themselves to the ordinary people.
Undeservedly, they were perceived to be saints of great virtue,
mentors of Christianity, devoted to aiding the poor and the needy.
It's amazing that they managed to create such a positive image while
leading lives contrary to Christian teachings and, on the way acquiring
status and wealth through donations, trade, banking and even looting.
The few who discovered their true identity did not dare to speak
out against this powerful order. Philip, King of France, feared
the dangers their financial strength could create for him.
It
was high time to unmask the Templars. As a Masonic writer of the
18th century explains:
The war, which for the greater number of warriors of
good faith proved the source of weariness, of losses and misfortunes,
became for them [the Templars] only the opportunity for booty and
aggrandizement, and if they distinguished themselves by a few brilliant
actions, their motive soon ceased to be a matter of doubt when they
were seen to enrich themselves even with the spoils of the confederates,
to increase their credit by the extent of the new possessions they
had acquired, to carry arrogance to the point of rivalling crowned
princes in pomp and grandeur, to refuse their aid against the enemies
of the faith... and finally to ally themselves with that horrible
and sanguinary prince named the Old Man of the Mountain Prince of
the Assassins.36
The Templars became increasingly confident and impertinent
in their practices and in disseminating their teachings, trusting
in the unjustifiably positive image they had managed to create throughout
society. This in turn led to an increase in the numbers who witnessed
their perversion and began to whisper about it.
Whatever might the Templars be doing behind the closed
doors of their palaces? The knights' avarice, inhumanity, greed
and zeal, already well known, awakened the curiosity of the locals,
the clergy, and the monarchy. The Papacy was almost certain that
this group, which it could no longer control, was living an irreligious
life and abusing the privileges it had granted them.
Rumors and complaints circulated about the Templars.
There were increasingly credible accusations that they engaged in
forbidden practices and other wrongdoing and that was why they operated
under strict secrecy. People had begun to whisper of secret rites
performed in their palaces, rituals of Satanist worship, and various
immoral relationships.
All these rumors were combined with actual fact-what
servants in Templar palaces and the people living in the vicinity
of them witnessed and reported. The Papacy found itself in a predicament,
not knowing what to do. Clement V, elected Pope in 1305, was trying
to calculate the damage to Christianity-and therefore, to the Vatican-and
how to minimize its effects. At the same time, he had to put an
end to constant pressure from regional dioceses and the King of
France. Meanwhile, in Cyprus, Jacques de Molay, leader of the Templars,
was making preparations for war, as the order had not given up hope
to go back in the Middle East. He was recalled to France and ordered
by the Pope to investigate these allegations.
All this, however, was unacceptable to the French King.
He quickly passed a new law, under which he had the Templars arrested.
On October 13, 1309, they were accused in the courts with the following
charges:
1. That during the reception ceremony, new
brothers were required to deny Christ, God, The Virgin or the Saints
on the command of those receiving them.
2. That the brothers committed various sacrilegious
acts either on the cross or on an image of Christ.
3. That the receptors practiced obscene kisses
on new entrants, on the mouth, navel or buttocks.
4. That the priests of the Order did not consecrate
the host, and that the brothers did not believe in the sacraments.
5. That the brothers practiced idol worship
of a cat or a head.
6. That the brothers encouraged and permitted
the practice of sodomy.
7. That the Grand Master, or other officials,
absolved fellow Templars from their sins.
8. That the Templars held their reception ceremonies
and chapter meetings in secret and at night.
9. That the Templars abused the duties of charity
and hospitality and used illegal means to acquire property and increase
their wealth.37
Perversion in the Templars' Faith and Practice
The documents at hand, together with the allegation
made against the Templars, demonstrated that this was no ordinary
order of knights. It was a darker organization altogether: one of
perverted faith, frightening methods, and cunning strategies. It
was well organized and well prepared, always scheming, always ready
and dangerous, and-unlike anything seen before-forward thinking,
with comprehensive plans for the future.
 |
| The
Templars worshipped the idol Baphomet, thought to symbolize
Satan. |
During their time in the Middle East, the Templars
had established and maintained contact with mystic sects belonging
to different religions and denominations, including sorcerers. They
were known to have close links to the hashashis (assassins) who,
while influential, were regarded as a perverted sect by the Muslim
population. From them, the Templars had learned some mystic teachings
and barbaric strategies, as well as how to organize a sect. As will
be seen in the coming chapters, the order's higher echelons in particular
had also acquainted themselves with-and incorporated into their
practice-beliefs based on the mystic teachings of the Cabala, the
influence of the Bogomils, and Luciferians, thus leaving Christianity
behind. According to the Templars, Jesus was a god ruling in another
world, with little or no power in our present one. Satan was the
lord of this material world of ours.
Now the rumors were confirmed: Candidates for the order
were indeed required to deny God, Christ and the Saints, committed
sacrilegious acts, spit and urinate onto the holy Cross, be kissed
square on the mouth with the "Oscolum Infame" or "The Kiss of Shame"
on the navel and buttocks by the more senior Knights Templars, during
the initiation ceremony. That they freely practiced homosexuality
and other sexual perversions, that the Grand Master wielded total
authority over everything, that they practiced rituals of sorcery
and used Cabalistic symbolism was clear evidence that the order
had had become a sect blasphemous to Christianity. Their questioning
revealed yet another of their unorthodox practices: Without being
specific, they had admitted to idolatry, but during their ongoing
interrogation, it gradually emerged that without any doubt, they
were worshipping Satan. The Templars revered an idol of Baphomet;
a demon with the head of a goat, whose image was later to become
the symbol of The Church of Satan. From Peter Underwood's Dictionary
of the Occult and Supernatural:
Baphomet was the deity worshipped by the Knights Templar,
and in Black Magic was the source and creator of evil; the Satanic
goat of the witches' Sabbath…38
During their trial, almost all Templars
mentioned having worshipped Baphomet. This idol they described as
having a scary human head, a long beard and frightening, shining
eyes. They also mentioned human skulls and idols of cats. The consensus
among historians is that all these figures are objects of Satanic
worship. The demon Baphomet has ever since been an object of Satanic
veneration. Details about Baphomet were later conveyed by Eliphas
Levi; a 19th-century Cabalist and occultist, whose drawings illustrate
Baphomet as having a goat's head with two faces, and a winged human
body that is female above the waist and whose lower half is male.
  |
| Among
the European monarchs indebted to the Templars was the England's
King Henry |
A historic document describing
the abolition of the Knights Templar s |
Most Templars confessed that they didn't believe in Jesus because
they held him to be "a false prophet"; that they had committed acts
of homosexuality during the admission ceremony as well as afterwards,
that they worshipped idols and practiced Satanism. All these admissions
entered the court records, and following their trial, most of the
Templars were imprisoned.
Much has been said about the Templars' homosexual practices,
and it has been suggested that their insignia-of two riders on the
back of one horse-represented this custom. In his novel Foucault's
Pendulum, Umberto Eco extensively touches upon this aspect of the
Templars.39
After their confessions in the courts of the French
King, the Pope himself interrogated 72 of the Templars. They were
asked to swear an oath to tell the truth and then, proceed to confirm
that their previ-
ous confessions were truthful: that they rejected belief
in Jesus, that they spat on the holy cross and committed all the
other acts of perversion they'd admitted to. They then knelt down
and asked for forgiveness.
 |
The Templars' confessions made
references to perverted sexual practices. Homosexuality was
rife between the Knights.
It is said that the Templars' official seal
symbolizes this kind of relationship. |
The interrogation of the Templars culminated in the
dissolution of their order. In 1314, Grand Master Jacques de Molay
was burned at the stake. Templars who had managed to escape arrest
by fleeing to other countries were pursued throughout the whole
of Christendom. Other countries including Italy and Germany followed
suit, arresting and interrogating the Templars they could apprehend.
But for various reasons, some countries offered the Templars refuge.
On November 10, 1307, England's Edward II wrote the Pope that he
would not persecute the Templars and that in his country, they would
remain safe. But two years later, after interrogating the Templars,
the Pope issued a Papal Bull declaring that the Templars' "unspeakable
wickednesses and abominable crimes of notorious heresy" had now
"come to the knowledge of almost everyone." Upon reading it, King
Edward agreed to prosecute the Templars.
Finally, at the Council of Vienne in France in 1312,
the Order of the Knights Templar was officially declared illegal
in all of Europe, and captured Templars were punished. On March
22nd, Clement V issued a Papal Bull under the name of Vox in Excelso
(A Voice from on High), in which the order was declared to be dissolved
and-on paper, at least-its existence erased from the official records:
... Hark, a voice of the people from the city! a voice
from the temple! the voice of the Lord rendering recompense to his
enemies. The prophet is compelled to exclaim: Give them, Lord, a
barren womb and dry breasts. Their worthlessness has been revealed
because of their malice. Throw them out of your house, and let their
roots dry up; let them not bear fruit, and let not this house be
any more a stumbling block of bitterness or a thorn to hurt.
. . . Indeed a little while ago, about the time of
our election as supreme pontiff before we came to Lyons for our
coronation, and afterwards, both there and elsewhere, we received
secret intimations against the master, preceptors and other brothers
of the order of Knights Templar of Jerusalem and also against the
order itself.
. . . [T]he holy Roman church honoured these brothers
and the order with her special support, armed them with the sign
of the cross against Christ's enemies, paid them the highest tributes
of her respect, and strengthened them with various exemptions and
privileges; and they experienced in many and various ways her help
and that of all faithful Christians with repeated gifts of property.
Therefore it was against the lord Jesus Christ himself that they
fell into the sin of impious apostasy, the abominable vice of idolatry,
the deadly crime of the Sodomites, and various heresies.40
The Templars Go Underground
Liquidating the order of the Templars proved harder
than anticipated. Even though Grand Master de Molay and many of
his brothers had been eliminated, the order survived, albeit by
going underground. In France alone, there were more than 9,000 representatives
to be found and across the countries of Europe, thousands of castles
and other strongholds were still in their possession. According
to historical sources of the time, the Inquisition had captured
and punished only 620 out of a total of 2,000 knights. It has since
been estimated that the knights' actual grand total was in the vicinity
of 20,000, each of whom had a team of seven or eight Templars of
other professions at his service. A simple calculation based on
eight Templars per knight gives us a total number of 160,000 organizing
and carrying out the order's activities, including shipping and
commerce. The Pope and the French King couldn't possibly locate
and confiscate all of their property. This network of active members
across Europe and along the Mediterranean coast, 160,000 strong,
was the largest logistical force of their time. In terms of property,
they could measure up to any king and this wealth assured their
protection and safety. Despite the Papacy's claim that the Templars
had been annihilated, not only did they survive the Inquisition
by going underground, but they kept on being active, especially
in England and in Northern Europe:
|  
|
| The
Templars' world view and philosophy were greatly influenced
by the Jewish mystic teachings of the Cabala. Above, a medieval
Cabalic text. |
A
piece of 16th-century Cabalist writing |
[I]n the years following the loss of the Holy Land, the Templars
had shown a continuing desire to create a 'state' of their own.
. . [W]e are now left in no doubt that the Templars indeed manage,
against all odds, to carve out their own nation. It wasn't some
Eldorado in the New World, nor a hidden kingdom of the Prester John
variety in darkest Africa. In fact the Templars remained absolutely
central to everything that was happening in Europe, and what is
more they were partly instrumental in the formation of the Western
World as we know it today. The Templar State was, and is, Switzerland.41
 |
| King Philippe of France, who ordered the
arrest of the Templars |
In order to carry on their activities in safety, Templars
escaping persecution and arrest in France and some other countries
of Europe needed to regroup somewhere. They chose the confederation
of cantons now known as Switzerland. The Templars' influence in
Switzerland's formation and traditional makeup can still be easily
recognized today. Alan Butler, a Mason and co-author of The Warriors
and the Bankers is an expert on the subject of Templars. In a discussion
forum held in 1999, of he said:
There are a few important reasons why this [that the
Knights Templar went to Switzerland after their liquidation] is
likely to have been the case. For example:
1. The founding of the embryonic Switzerland conforms
exactly to the period when the Templars were being persecuted in
France.
2. Switzerland is just to the east of France and would
have been particularly easy for fleeing Templar brothers from the
whole region of France to get to.
3. In the history of the first Swiss Cantons, there
are tales of white-coated knights mysteriously appearing and helping
the locals to gain their independence against foreign domination.
4. The Templars were big in banking, farming and engineering
(of an early type). These same aspects can be seen as inimical to
the commencement and gradual evolution of the separate states that
would eventually be Switzerland.
5. The famous Templar Cross is incorporated into the
flags of many of the Swiss Cantons. As are other emblems, such as
keys and lambs, that were particularly important to the Knights
Templar.42
A significant number of Templars found refuge in Scotland,
the only monarchy in 14th century Europe that didn't recognize the
authority of the Catholic Church. Reorganizing under the protection
of King Robert the Bruce, they soon found the perfect camouflage
to hide their existence in the British Isles. Outside of the state
and local governments, the Masons' Lodges were the most powerful
organizations of the time, and and the Templars first infiltrated
them, then brought them under control. Lodges that had been professional
bodies were turned into ideological and political organizations,
which are now the Freemason Lodges of today. (This is what Masons
call "progress from operational to speculative Masonry")
Another Masonic source estimates that between 30,000
and 40,000 Templars escaped the Inquisition by wearing Masons' cloth
and mingling with them. So as to flee abroad, others obtained and
used the "Laissez passer" (free passage) given to Masons.
Some Templars escaped to Spain and entered orders like
the Caltrava, Alcantra, and Santiago del Espada, while others moved
on to Portugal and they renamed themselves the Order of Christ.
Still others fled to the Holy Roman Empire of the German nation
and joined the Teuton knights, while another large group of Templars
is known to have joined the Hospitalers. In England, the Templars
were arrested and interrogated, but quickly released again. In still
other countries, the Templars remained unmolested.
|  
|
The Templars seemed to have disappeared from the
history until 1804; when Bernard-Raymond Fabré Palaprat became Grand
Master. Truly interesting is an accidental discovery he made in
1814… In one of the bookstalls along the river Seine in Paris, he
came upon a handwritten Bible of the Yuhanna translation in the
Greek language. The Bible's last two chapters were missing; and
in their place were notes divided by-and containing-numerous triangles.
Examining these notes a bit closer, he realized that this was a
document listing the Grand Masters of the Templars, beginning with
the fifth Grand Master, Bertrand de Blanchefort ( 1154), through
the 22nd, Jacques de Molay, the 23rd Larmenius of Jerusalem (1314)
and then on to Grand Master Claudio Mateo Radix de Chevillon (1792).
This document suggested that Jacques de Molay passed the title of
Grand Master on to Larmenius of Jerusalem. It could be concluded
that the Templars never ceased to exist. They live on today in the
lodges of Freemasonry.
In Foucault's Pendulum, Umberto Eco writes:
After Beaujeu, the order has never ceased to exist,
not for a moment, and after Aumont we find an uninterrupted sequence
of Grand Masters of the Order down to our own time, and if the name
and seat of the true Grand Master and the true Seneschals who rule
the Order and guide its sublime labors remain a mystery today, an
impenetrable secret known only to the truly enlightened, it is because
the hour of the Order has not struck and the time is not ripe…43
Many sources suggest that after the death of Jacques
de Molay, survivors of the order planned a conspiracy. Supposedly,
the Templars sought to bring down not only the Papacy, but the kingdoms
that had declared them illegal and executed their Grand Master.
This secret mission was handed down through generations of members,
preserved and maintained by later organizations like the Illuminati
and Freemasons. It's widely accepted that the Masons played a major
role in the downfall of the French monarchy and the ensuing Revolution.
When Louis XVI was guillotined in a public square in Paris, one
of the onlookers shouted, "Jacques de Molay, you have been avenged!"
We'll examine these events in greater detail in the
coming chapters.
1
Encyclopedia Britannica 2001 Deluxe Edition CD, "Crusade, The Council
of Clermont."2 World Book Encyclopedia, "Crusades," Contributor:
Donald E. Queller, 
2Ph.D., Prof. of History, Univ. of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, World
Book Inc., 1998.
3 Encyclopedia Britannica 2001 Deluxe Edition CD, "Crusade, Preparations
for the Crusade."
4 Dr. Tom J. Rees, "The Story of the First Crusade," 1999, http://www.brighton73.freeserve.co.uk/
firstcrusade/Overview/Overview.htm
5 Geste Francorum, or The Deeds of the Franks and the Other Pilgrims
to Jerusalem, trans. Rosalind Hill, London, 1962, p. 91.
6 Dr. E.L. Skip Knox, "Fall of Jerusalem," 2001, http://crusades.boisestate.edu/1st/28.htm.
7 August C. Krey, The First Crusade: The Accounts of Eye-Witnesses
and Participants, Princeton & London, 1921, p. 261.
8 Desmond Seward, The Monks of
War, Penguin Books, London, 1972.
9 August C. Krey, The First Crusade: The Accounts of Eye-Witnesses
and Participants, p. 262.
10 Albert Pike, Morals and Dogma, The Roberts Publishing Co., Washington,
1871.
11 Christopher Knight, Robert Lomas, The Hiram Key, Arrow Books,
1997, p. 37.
12 G. Delafore, The Templar Tradition in the Age of Aquarius; Christopher
Knight, Robert Lomas, The Hiram Key, p. 37.
13 C. Wilson, The Excavation of Jerusalem; Christopher Knight, Robert
Lomas, The Hiram Key, p. 38.
14 Alan Butler, Stephen Dafoe, The Templar Continuum, Templar Books,
Belleville-Ontario, 1999, p. 70.
15 Finke, Papsttum und Untergang des Tempelordens; Henry D. Funk,
"The Trial Of The Knights Templar," The Builder, 1916.
16 Teoman Biyikoglu, "Tampliyeler ve Hurmasonlar" (Templars and
Freemasons), Mimar Sinan, 1997, no. 106.
17 Alan Butler, Stephen Dafoe, The Templar Continuum, p. 55.
18 Ibid., p. 55.
19 Ibid., p. 9.
20 Gmelin, Die Tempelherren; Henry D. Funk, "The Trial Of The Knights
Templar," The Builder, 1916.
21 The Rule of the Templars, as recorded by scribe John Michael
at the Council of Troyes, 1128.
22 John J. Robinson, Born in Blood: The Lost Secrets of Freemasonry,
New York, M. Evans & Company, 1989, pp. 70-71.
23 Ian Wilson, The Shroud of Turin - The Burial Cloth of Jesus Christ?
24 Teoman Biyikoglu, "Tampliyeler ve Hurmasonlar" (Templars And
Freemasons), Mimar Sinan, 1997, no. 106.
25 Alan Butler, Stephen Dafoe, The Templar Continuum, Templar Books,
p. 70.
26 Ibid., p. 73.
27 Langlois, in Deux Mondes, vol. 103; Henry D. Funk, "The Trial
Of The Knights Templar," The Builder, 1916.
28 Michael Baigent, Richard Leigh, The Temple and the Lodge, London:
Corgi Books, 1990, p. 81.
29 Ibid., pp. 78-80.
30 Louis Charpentier, The Mysteries of Chartres Cathedral, cited
in Graham Hancock, "The Sign and the Seal," http://templarium.tripod.com/archskill.htm
31 Michael Baigent, Richard Leigh, The Temple and the Lodge, p.
65.
32 Eleanor Ferris, The Financial Relations of the Knights Templars
to the English Crown, p. 10.
33 Michael Baigent, Richard Leigh, The Temple and the Lodge, p.
69.
34 Henry D. Funk, "The Trial Of The Knights Templar," The Builder,
1916.
35 Genealogy Data, www.gillean.com/Roots/db/dat98.htm
36 Développement des abus introduits dans la Franc-maçonnerie, p.56
(1780).
37 Stephen Dafoe, Unholy Worship?
The Myth of the Baphomet, Templar, Freemason Connection, pp. 33-34.
38 Peter Underwood, Dictionary Of The Occult And Supernatural; wintersteel.homestead.com/files/
JamesArticles/The_Templars_and_the_myth_of_Baphomet.htm
39 Umberto Eco, Foucault's Pendulum, A Helen and Kurt Wolff Book,
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich Publishers, 1989, p.83.
40 Vox in excelso, March 22, 1312; http://www.templar-knights.net/vox_in_excelso_march_22.htm
41 Alan Butler, Stephen Dafoe, The Warriors and the Bankers, p.
84.
42 Did The Templars Form Switzerland? An Interview With Alan Butler
conducted December 28th, 1999 by Bonnie Dinelle; http://www.geocities.com/st_stephens_145/kt12.html
43 Manuscript of 1760, in G. A. Schiffmann, Die Entstehung der Rittergrade
in der Freimauerei um die Mitte des XVIII Jahrhunderts, Leipzig,
Zechel, 1882, pp. 178-190; Umberto Eco, Foucault's Pendulum, p.
132.
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