I want to be a 13thC Knight Templar
Moderator: Glen K
-
- Archive Member
- Posts: 1046
- Joined: Sun Jul 10, 2005 8:17 pm
- Location: In a room a thousand years wide
Before 1248, they would be wearing what was essentially a monastic robe over their armour. From 1248 - 1259, they would be wearing a black surcoat with a white cross on the chest, eliminating the cumbersome monastic robes for combat. After 1259, Hospitaller knights would wear a red surcoat with a white cross on the chest, and brother sergeants would continue to wear the black surcoat.NeeSayer wrote:So would portraying a hospitaller of the same time period (early 13th century) have vast differences, or would alot of the info on here for them as well?
In 1279, all Hospitaller brethren would wear the red surcoat.
-
- Archive Member
- Posts: 1046
- Joined: Sun Jul 10, 2005 8:17 pm
- Location: In a room a thousand years wide
Hospitallers were distinctly different from Templars, in that they had an emphasis upon caring for sick pilgrims, before they became a military order. The Templars were always a military order. A good example of what Hospitaller soft kit looks like can be found here:NeeSayer wrote:What would their soft kit be like? Monks robes? I appreciate any help i can get on this, i just dont know what the differences between templars and hospitallers are.
http://www.1186-583.org/rubrique.php3?id_rubrique=28
Look at both the period illustrations, as well as how the people from the group 1186-583 interpret them.
If you try to impersonate a Knights Templar it might be a good idea to know where that persona is expected to live.
Not every Templar household was a fighting one. If you want to 'be' a Templar in Outremer, okay, this will be a fighting job.
But in England, Ireland, Germany, France, Templar households used to be - farms. They were busy with growing vegetables, having animals and all these things that make up good farmers. Selling their items made money which was used to keep the fighting boys do their job.
Not every Templar household was a fighting one. If you want to 'be' a Templar in Outremer, okay, this will be a fighting job.
But in England, Ireland, Germany, France, Templar households used to be - farms. They were busy with growing vegetables, having animals and all these things that make up good farmers. Selling their items made money which was used to keep the fighting boys do their job.
- Attachments
-
- giraut_temp.jpg (37.46 KiB) Viewed 1473 times
A master's thesis that might be of some use.
http://www.skjaere.me.uk/dissertation/introduction.html
http://www.skjaere.me.uk/dissertation/introduction.html
ferrum ferro acuitur et homo exacuit faciem amici sui
- IROR
- Archive Member
- Posts: 226
- Joined: Thu Jul 22, 2010 2:47 pm
- Location: Oakheart, Caolntir
- Contact:
Re: I want to be a 13thC Knight Templar
i am really interested in the Templar's around 1362, after they left Scotland,and their trip to Arcadia.
my question is there enough evidence/documentation to put them in America at that time?
from my estimation there is but i want to hear from the aficionados.
my question is there enough evidence/documentation to put them in America at that time?
from my estimation there is but i want to hear from the aficionados.
Re: I want to be a 13thC Knight Templar
[quote="IROR"]i am really interested in the Templar's around 1362, after they left Scotland,and their trip to Arcadia.
my question is there enough evidence/documentation to put them in America at that time?
from my estimation there is but i want to hear from the aficionados.[/quote]
Ummmmm.... After 1312 there WERE NO Templars.......
Pope Clement , at the Council of Vienne in 1312, issued a series of papal bulls, including "Vox in excelso", which officially dissolved the Order, and "Ad providam", which turned over most Templar assets to the Hospitallers.
By definition the Templars were a Catholic military order. These orders were endorsed by the Pope and when that endorsement was withdrawn, the orders were de-established. The only current order is the Order of Hospitallers (Knights of St. John).
my question is there enough evidence/documentation to put them in America at that time?
from my estimation there is but i want to hear from the aficionados.[/quote]
Ummmmm.... After 1312 there WERE NO Templars.......
Pope Clement , at the Council of Vienne in 1312, issued a series of papal bulls, including "Vox in excelso", which officially dissolved the Order, and "Ad providam", which turned over most Templar assets to the Hospitallers.
By definition the Templars were a Catholic military order. These orders were endorsed by the Pope and when that endorsement was withdrawn, the orders were de-established. The only current order is the Order of Hospitallers (Knights of St. John).
- IROR
- Archive Member
- Posts: 226
- Joined: Thu Jul 22, 2010 2:47 pm
- Location: Oakheart, Caolntir
- Contact:
Re: I want to be a 13thC Knight Templar
So there were no Templars at the Battle of Bannockburn in June of 1314.
Hmm...i guess i want to be a Rouge Templar then.
Hmm...i guess i want to be a Rouge Templar then.
Re: I want to be a 13thC Knight Templar
[quote="IROR"]So there were no Templars at the Battle of Bannockburn in June of 1314.
Hmm...i guess i want to be a Rouge Templar then.[/quote]
You are absolutely correct. There were no Templars at the Battle of Bannockburn. By 1314 the order had been supressed and the members of the order had been taken in by the other Military Orders along with the Order's property.
Dude. A 'Rouge Templar'?
Hmm...i guess i want to be a Rouge Templar then.[/quote]
You are absolutely correct. There were no Templars at the Battle of Bannockburn. By 1314 the order had been supressed and the members of the order had been taken in by the other Military Orders along with the Order's property.
Dude. A 'Rouge Templar'?
- IROR
- Archive Member
- Posts: 226
- Joined: Thu Jul 22, 2010 2:47 pm
- Location: Oakheart, Caolntir
- Contact:
Re: I want to be a 13thC Knight Templar
All except Jacques de Molay and Geoffroi de Charney, who burnt at the stake on March 18th for rescinding their admission of heresy.
yeah thats what i said...dude.
yeah thats what i said...dude.
Re: I want to be a 13thC Knight Templar
[quote="IROR"]All except Jacques de Molay and Geoffroi de Charney, who burnt at the stake on March 18th for rescinding their admission of heresy.
yeah thats what i said...dude.[/quote]
De Molay and de Charney, when they were executed, were not executed becuase they were Templars (and had not been Templars since dissolution of the Order at the Council of Vienne in 1312), they were declared guilty of being relapsed heretics, and they were sentenced to burn alive at the stake in Paris on March 18, 1314. Thus, even though they were alive in 1314, they were no longer Templars as the order had ceased to exist.
I would suggest that you read T-bob's post on the first page of this topic. Then do a little reading on Monastism. This should show you how absurd, in a historical sense, the idea of a 'Rouge Templar' is.
yeah thats what i said...dude.[/quote]
De Molay and de Charney, when they were executed, were not executed becuase they were Templars (and had not been Templars since dissolution of the Order at the Council of Vienne in 1312), they were declared guilty of being relapsed heretics, and they were sentenced to burn alive at the stake in Paris on March 18, 1314. Thus, even though they were alive in 1314, they were no longer Templars as the order had ceased to exist.
I would suggest that you read T-bob's post on the first page of this topic. Then do a little reading on Monastism. This should show you how absurd, in a historical sense, the idea of a 'Rouge Templar' is.
- IROR
- Archive Member
- Posts: 226
- Joined: Thu Jul 22, 2010 2:47 pm
- Location: Oakheart, Caolntir
- Contact:
Re: I want to be a 13thC Knight Templar
well i dont have the energy to continue down this path. thank you for all of your feedback.
- Sergeant Marli
- Archive Member
- Posts: 1901
- Joined: Wed Jul 02, 2008 9:32 am
- Location: Indy
- Contact:
Re: I want to be a 13thC Knight Templar
http://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/161145019 ... 824&sr=8-4
Buy this and read it repeatedly.
One thing to remember with the Templars is that as an Order they were renowned for how religiously devoted they were. Outside of the charges leveled against them they were respected religious men. Their contemporary writers criticized them for various reasons, but not for their religious practices. So with the individual Templars being extremely devote it is hard to believe that a large group would go underground and maintain the Templar Order against direct orders from the Pope.
Although I am open to new evidence currently there is zero proof that the Templars as an Order existed after the Pope disbanded them.
Buy this and read it repeatedly.
One thing to remember with the Templars is that as an Order they were renowned for how religiously devoted they were. Outside of the charges leveled against them they were respected religious men. Their contemporary writers criticized them for various reasons, but not for their religious practices. So with the individual Templars being extremely devote it is hard to believe that a large group would go underground and maintain the Templar Order against direct orders from the Pope.
Although I am open to new evidence currently there is zero proof that the Templars as an Order existed after the Pope disbanded them.
-
- Archive Member
- Posts: 1046
- Joined: Sun Jul 10, 2005 8:17 pm
- Location: In a room a thousand years wide
Re: I want to be a 13thC Knight Templar
[quote="IROR"]All except Jacques de Molay and Geoffroi de Charney, who burnt at the stake on March 18th for rescinding their admission of heresy.
yeah thats what i said...dude.[/quote]
By the time of the dissolution of the Order, Templars were pretty much forbidden to dress, act or present themselves as Templars, on pain of being burnt at the stake like deMolay and deCharney. Many surviving Templars were farmed out to other (stricter) orders and pensioned off, once they confessed and received absolution. By the Battle of Bannockburn, no Templars existed.
A "Rouge Templar" would have been snatched up by Papal authorities on both sides of the Battle of Bannockburn and been burnt at the stake as a heretic.
I recommend you purchase and read The Trial of the Templars by Malcolm Barber (ISBN: 0-521-45727-0). This should give you all the details behind what happened to the Templars...and why.
yeah thats what i said...dude.[/quote]
By the time of the dissolution of the Order, Templars were pretty much forbidden to dress, act or present themselves as Templars, on pain of being burnt at the stake like deMolay and deCharney. Many surviving Templars were farmed out to other (stricter) orders and pensioned off, once they confessed and received absolution. By the Battle of Bannockburn, no Templars existed.
A "Rouge Templar" would have been snatched up by Papal authorities on both sides of the Battle of Bannockburn and been burnt at the stake as a heretic.
I recommend you purchase and read The Trial of the Templars by Malcolm Barber (ISBN: 0-521-45727-0). This should give you all the details behind what happened to the Templars...and why.
- RandallMoffett
- Archive Member
- Posts: 4613
- Joined: Wed May 01, 2002 1:01 am
- Location: SE Iowa
Re: I want to be a 13thC Knight Templar
Has anyone found a copy of the absolution notice that the pope sent out that was found a few years back? I saw something on the History Channel but have found nothing much else. I emailed one of the people in the program and heard nothing back on it either.
I'd love to see it if anyone knows anything about it.
RPM
I'd love to see it if anyone knows anything about it.
RPM
- Knight Sir James
- Archive Member
- Posts: 1509
- Joined: Fri Aug 15, 2008 12:54 am
Re: I want to be a 13thC Knight Templar
[quote="RandallMoffett"]Has anyone found a copy of the absolution notice that the pope sent out that was found a few years back? I saw something on the History Channel but have found nothing much else. I emailed one of the people in the program and heard nothing back on it either.
I'd love to see it if anyone knows anything about it.
RPM[/quote]
Do you mean the Chinon Parchment discovered by Frale in 2007? It was called "Processus Contra Templarios", less than 800 copies were printed, and it cost something north of $7,500 per copy. I don't have a copy, but if you find one, please let me know, I'd love to read it.
I'd love to see it if anyone knows anything about it.
RPM[/quote]
Do you mean the Chinon Parchment discovered by Frale in 2007? It was called "Processus Contra Templarios", less than 800 copies were printed, and it cost something north of $7,500 per copy. I don't have a copy, but if you find one, please let me know, I'd love to read it.
- RandallMoffett
- Archive Member
- Posts: 4613
- Joined: Wed May 01, 2002 1:01 am
- Location: SE Iowa
Re: I want to be a 13thC Knight Templar
Yeah that is it. I was hoping some large University library would end up with on that was open to the public.
RPM
RPM
- Galfrid atte grene
- Archive Member
- Posts: 1382
- Joined: Sat Feb 01, 2003 2:01 am
- Location: Maryland
Re: I want to be a 13thC Knight Templar
According to Worldcat, it is held by plenty of University libraries, but I think most if not all are closed to the public. However, the Library of Congress has a copy (http://lccn.loc.gov/2008570736) which is certainly accessible. You'll have to visit in person though.
-
- Archive Member
- Posts: 373
- Joined: Sun Jun 20, 2010 10:42 pm
- Location: Bethel CT, Barony Beyond the Mountain
Re: I want to be a 13thC Knight Templar
[quote="IROR"]well i dont have the energy to continue down this path. thank you for all of your feedback.[/quote]
IROR,
Documentation and evidence?
Good luck, and let me know if you find it.
Conjecture and hypothetical, lots of that.
IF you really want to discuss the possibility of "rogue templars" find a Freemason, preferably one who has done all the York Rite degree work, and is serious about York Rite.
And for the love of Pete, avoid all the Dan Brown drivel...
In an SCA context, your persona would be like any other heretic or heathen, blending in and avoiding attention.
IROR,
Documentation and evidence?
Good luck, and let me know if you find it.
Conjecture and hypothetical, lots of that.
IF you really want to discuss the possibility of "rogue templars" find a Freemason, preferably one who has done all the York Rite degree work, and is serious about York Rite.
And for the love of Pete, avoid all the Dan Brown drivel...
In an SCA context, your persona would be like any other heretic or heathen, blending in and avoiding attention.
Re: I want to be a 13thC Knight Templar
I think all of you guys mean Rogue Templar. Not rouge. Completely different meanings.
Re:
[quote="Giraut"]If you try to impersonate a Knights Templar it might be a good idea to know where that persona is expected to live.
Not every Templar household was a fighting one. If you want to 'be' a Templar in Outremer, okay, this will be a fighting job.
But in England, Ireland, Germany, France, Templar households used to be - farms. They were busy with growing vegetables, having animals and all these things that make up good farmers. Selling their items made money which was used to keep the fighting boys do their job.[/quote]
A whole lot of armour could be hidden under that robe. Just add a greathelm, basket-hilt-sword and HUGE heater shield and you're golden IMO!
I like it!
-Aaron
Not every Templar household was a fighting one. If you want to 'be' a Templar in Outremer, okay, this will be a fighting job.
But in England, Ireland, Germany, France, Templar households used to be - farms. They were busy with growing vegetables, having animals and all these things that make up good farmers. Selling their items made money which was used to keep the fighting boys do their job.[/quote]
A whole lot of armour could be hidden under that robe. Just add a greathelm, basket-hilt-sword and HUGE heater shield and you're golden IMO!
I like it!
-Aaron
- Robert.Leftehand.Of.Weymouth
- Archive Member
- Posts: 65
- Joined: Sat Apr 07, 2012 12:05 pm
- Location: Western North Carolina - Barony of Hawkwood
Re: I want to be a 13thC Knight Templar
I thought this was also an interesting book. I can see myself going back and reading this one again.
The Templars: The History and the Myth: From Solomon's Temple to the Freemasons by Michael Haag
http://www.amazon.com/The-Templars-Hist ... 172&sr=8-1
The Templars: The History and the Myth: From Solomon's Temple to the Freemasons by Michael Haag
http://www.amazon.com/The-Templars-Hist ... 172&sr=8-1
Darkstar Ridenow
[SCA - Robert Leftehand of Weymouth]
(Mundane - Robert Putnam)
[SCA - Robert Leftehand of Weymouth]
(Mundane - Robert Putnam)
-
- Archive Member
- Posts: 54
- Joined: Thu May 21, 2015 2:30 pm
- Location: barony of Castlemere ,Kingdom of Trimaris
Re: I want to be a 13thC Knight Templar
i think the cross is a simple st andrews style red cross. not sure if on backs but definately centered on chest if a knight over heat /left breast if a sgt.