Templars: History and Myth: From Solomon's Temple to the Freemasons
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Average customer review:Product Description
An order of warrior monks founded to protect pilgrims to Jerusalem, the Templars were among the wealthiest and most powerful bodies in the medieval world. Yet two centuries later, they were arrested, accused of blasphemy, heresy and orgies, and their leaders were burnt at the stake. Part guide, part history, this book investigates the Templar legends and legacy – from the mysteries of Solomon’s Temple in Jerusalem, via nineteenth century development of the Freemasons, through to Templar appearances in Dan Brown and Indiana Jones. This book explains the whole context of Templar history, including the recent evidence discovered by the Vatican that the Templars were not guilty of heresy. It also features a guide to Templar castles and sites.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #3309 in Books
- Published on: 2009-07-02
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 384 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
"* 'Michael Haag, in his well-knit narrative gets through an enormous spread of history'- Daily Telegraph * 'An essential guide for anyone who wants a comprehensive guide to the Templars... a perfect place to begin your quest'- Good Book Guide * 'Admirably comprehensive and balanced'- Birmingham Mail * 'An intriguing and revealing work that surprises and entertains'- Nottingham Evening Post"
Daily Telegraph, 26 July 2008
Michael Haag, in his well-knit narrative, gets through an enormous spread of history, helpfully telling readers what the Bible has to say about the Jewish Temple before running through the Roman, Muslim and Crusader centuries. The after-history of the Templars is dominated by the imaginings of Freemasons and the conspiracy fancies of scarcely distinct alternative historians and novelists.
From the Author
From the author's introduction:
The Templars were a religious order of fighting knights founded in Jerusalem on Christmas Day 1119 at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, on the spot which marks the crucifixion, burial and resurrection of Jesus Christ. Their headquarters was on the Temple Mount, that vast platform rising above the city where King Solomon had built his Temple two thousand years before. Surrounded by these potent historical and sacred associations, the Templars assumed their responsibility to protect pilgrims visiting the holy shrines and to defend the Holy Land.
The Templars soon became a formidable international organisation. Vast donations of properties were made in Europe to maintain this elite taskforce overseas, and special rights and privileges were granted by popes and kings. Dressed in their white tunics emblazoned with a red cross, they became the West's first uniformed standing army and also pioneered an extensive financial network that reached from London and Paris to the Euphrates and the Nile. As an order they became powerful and wealthy, but as individuals their existence was simple and austere. Their bravery was legendary, their dedication was absolute, and their attrition rate was high; at least twenty thousand Templars died, either on the battlefield or after being taken captive and refusing to renounce their faith to save their lives.
Yet in the end the Templars were destroyed not by the Muslims in the East but by their fellow Christians in the West. On Friday 13 October 1307 the Templars were arrested throughout France and soon elsewhere throughout Europe. They were charged with heinous heresies, obscenities, homosexual practices and idol worship; many were tortured and confessed. The end came in 1314 when the Templars' last grand master was burnt alive at the stake.
The shock and mystery of their downfall has excited interest in the Templars for seven centuries since. Some people have conjectured that the Templars' sojourn in the East brought them into contact with Gnosticism, the ancient heresy embraced by the Cathars of France, while the Freemasons have drawn a line of occult knowledge transmitted from the Temple of Solomon via the Templars to themselves. Never has speculation about the Templars been more feverish than today. Did the Templars carry out excavations beneath the Temple Mount and find something extraordinary that explains their rise to power and wealth and, according to some, their continued but clandestine existence to this day? Was it some vast treasure? Or the Ark of the Covenant? The Holy Grail? The secret to the life of Christ and his message? And where did this secret travel when the Templars were suppressed? To Scotland, to America?
What is certainly true is that the rise and fall of the Templars exactly corresponded to the two centuries of the crusading venture in the East, where after a series of outrages against Western pilgrims and Eastern Christians, and in the face of renewed aggression which threatened all of Europe, the First Crusade was launched in 1095 to recover Asia Minor, Syria and Palestine from Muslim occupation. Simultaneously the struggle was being fought in the Iberian peninsula where the Templars eventually helped liberate Spain and Portugal. But the crusading effort in the East, with the Templars at its heart, was never enough to withstand the overwhelming Muslim forces that could be brought into the field when they were united by the likes of Saladin or the Mamelukes. In 1291 when the Mamelukes drove the last Frankish settlers out of the Holy Land, the Templars lost the main purpose of their existence, and soon they fell victim to the rapacious greed and tyrannical ambitions of the king of France.
One of the great mysteries has always been the role played by the papacy in the downfall of the Templars, for the pope was meant to be their protector and to the pope alone the order owed its obedience. Yet to judge from the apparently supine acquiescence of the papacy to the demands of the king of France, the pope either betrayed the Templars or believed them guilty of terrible crimes. Instead this book is the first history of the Templars to take account of the recent discovery of the Chinon parchment in the Vatican Secret Archives which reveals what really happened when the pope heard the testimony of the last grand master of the Templars.
Customer Reviews
The Best of the Templars
Michael Haag's The Templars: History & Myth, is the best book I have read on the history of the Knights Templar. Written for the non-academic reader, it nevertheless is a comprehensive, scholarly approach to a fascinating subject. Anyone who subscribes to some of the modern myths and pseudo histories involving the order should read this book.
Baker's dozen
Comprehensivve history not only of the Templars but also of the interaction of Jewish, Islamic and political background of the times.
knights temolar
This well researched and written book deals with the history and myths surrounding the Knights Templar.The Templars were formed to protect pilgrims on their way to Jerusalem following the First Crusade(1095).
The various chapters record the formation of the Templars,their rise (1099-1150),their years of power(1150-1291)and their fall(1291-1314) covering their trial and dissolution.
There are sections on the aftermath,, present locations of Crusader buildings,and the current status of Templars.
The illustrations are adequate,there is a list of Grand Masters.
