Templar

Templar
Knights (Knights of the Temple)
Founded in the Holy Land in 1119 to guard the site of the Temple of Solomon and to protect pilgrims en route to visit the site. Because many of the Crusaders returned home after the first crusade and the capture of Jerusalem in 1099, there was a shortage of soldiers to provide this steady stream of pilgrims who where harassed and ambushed by brigands and by Muslim irregular forces. Hugh de Payns and Godefroi de Saint Omer, two knights, swore an oath to defend the pilgrims, taking an oath of poverty, chastity, obedience, stylizing themselves as knights but in the tradition of the monasteries. These were the first ‘monks of the sword,’ men whose devotion to faith as soldiers of Christ bore the full fruit of the church efforts to ‘civilize’ the early knights.
In 1130, Bernard of Clairvaux drew up the rules for the order in the Praise of New Knighthood. Bernard set up the order with two main classes of knighthood, the knights and sergeants or serving brethren. Sergeants or serving brothers wore a black or brown mantle to show their lower status, while the Knights wore a red cross granted by Pope Eugenius III. Married men who joined the order could only join as sergeants, their property coming into the possession of the Order rather than to their wives upon their death.
The Knights Templar were amazingly successful, attracting men of all stations to serve in their illustrious ranks. Famous knights from all over England took up the mantle of the Templars, even William Marshal took a kind of associate membership, being buried in Templar silk. The Templars received lavish gifts both from knights who joined their ranks and from men wanting to increase their fame by demonstrating their largesse, to the point where the Templars set up a huge banking industry and were perhaps the richest single entity, next to the Church, at the point when they were brought down.
This amazing story culminated in 1308 when king Philip IV of France, charged their leader with witchcraft and heresy, seizing the Temple assets for fear of their immense power. Persecution followed this instance, the popular notion of ‘poor knights’ operating a large, successful international banking operation and possessing huge, luxurious estates feeding jealousy and making the irony obvious for everyone. The Templars were destroyed at this point, though some popular legend has them going underground.
Another similar order, the Hospitallers, survived and still exist today.

Medieval glossary. 2014.

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  • Templar — may refer to:* Knights Templar, a medieval Christian military order that was very prominent in the Crusades, from the early 1100s until the early 1300s **Knights Templar (Freemasonry), a York Rite level (degree) of Freemasonry ** Sovereign… …   Wikipedia

  • templar — verbo pronominal 1. Calentarse (una cosa) ligeramente: A mediodía ya se habrá templado el agua del mar. 2. Ponerse (una persona) tranquila: Sus nervios se templaron cuando vio que había aprobado. 3 …   Diccionario Salamanca de la Lengua Española

  • Templar — Tem plar, a. Of or pertaining to a temple. [R.] [1913 Webster] Solitary, family, and templar devotion. Coleridge. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • templar — Se conjuga como: amar Infinitivo: Gerundio: Participio: templar templando templado     Indicativo   presente imperfecto pretérito futuro condicional yo tú él, ella, Ud. nosotros vosotros ellos, ellas, Uds. templo templas templa templamos templáis …   Wordreference Spanish Conjugations Dictionary

  • Templar — [tem′plər] n. [ME templer < OFr templier < ML templarius < L templum: see TEMPLE1: so named from having quarters near the site of Solomon s Temple in Jerusalem] 1. KNIGHT TEMPLAR 2. [t ] a barrister or law student of the Temple in London …   English World dictionary

  • Templar — Tem plar, n. [OE. templere, F. templier, LL. templarius. See {Temple} a church.] 1. One of a religious and military order first established at Jerusalem, in the early part of the 12th century, for the protection of pilgrims and of the Holy… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • templar — Método de dar temple a metales, vidrio u otros materiales mediante el calentamiento y el enfriamiento controlados para hacerlos más maleables y dúctiles. Diccionario Mosby Medicina, Enfermería y Ciencias de la Salud, Ediciones Hancourt, S.A. 1999 …   Diccionario médico

  • tèmplār — m 〈G templára〉 pov. pripadnik katoličkog viteškog reda, osnovanog (1119) da bi štitio hodočasnike na Kristov grob; templari su nosili bijelo odijelo s crvenim križem na ramenu; red je ukinut 1312; božjak ✧ {{001f}}srlat …   Veliki rječnik hrvatskoga jezika

  • templar — templar(se) ‘Dar el tono adecuado [a un instrumento]’, ‘entibiar(se)’ y ‘dar, o adquirir, temple o templanza’. Este verbo, así como su derivado destemplar(se) (‘hacer perder, o perder uno mismo, el temple o la templanza’), es regular en el… …   Diccionario panhispánico de dudas

  • Templar — late 13c., from Anglo Fr. templer, O.Fr. templier (c.1200), from M.L. templaris (mid 12c.), member of the medieval religious/military order known as Knights Templars (c.1118 1312), so called because they had headquarters in a building near… …   Etymology dictionary

  • templar — tèmplār m <G templára> DEFINICIJA pov. pripadnik katoličkog viteškog reda, osnovanog (1119) da bi štitio hodočasnike na Kristov grob; templari su nosili bijelo odijelo s crvenim križem na ramenu; red je ukinut 1312; božjak ETIMOLOGIJA srlat …   Hrvatski jezični portal

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