Posted by David Kopel:
The Templars and other Monastic Military Orders:
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2007_10_14-2007_10_20.shtml#1192338525


   The [1]Parchment of Chinon and the massive forthcoming book Processus
   Contra Templarios--Papal Inquiry into the Trial of the Templars
   [2]prove that the Knights Templar were known to be innocent of the
   charges for which they were persecuted and destroyed.
   Nearly seven centuries after the Knights Templar were eliminated, they
   remain the subject of a vast body of speculation about modern
   conspiracies and secrets. Here's a short introduction to their real
   history, and that of their fellow warrior monks.
   In 1119, Hugh de Payns created a group of fighting monks who patrolled
   the roads outside Jerusalem, and defended pilgrims from highway
   robbers. The impetus for the formation of the group may have been a
   massacre of 300 pilgrims near Jerusalem, just before Easter, by the
   coalition of Muslim forces known as the Saracens.
   The knights' headquarters was the Temple Mount in Jerusalem (site of
   the former Second Jewish Temple), where the Muslims had built the
   al-Aqsa Mosque. Hence, the group took the name of the Order of the
   Poor Knights of the Temple of Solomon--or "Templars" for short. The
   Templars may have been created in imitation of similar orders in the
   Moslem world.
   St. Bernard of Clairvaux, the leader of the Cistercian Order, strongly
   supported the Templars. His Liber Ad Milites Templi De Laude Novae
   Militiae extolled the knights, and made a word play on the contrast
   between malitia (evil) and militia. He wrote, "a new kind of militia
   is reported to have arisen in the world..." The killing of evildoers
   was "not homicide but malicide." Bernard argued that killing
   non-Christians was permissible as a last resort if there was no other
   way to stop them from oppressing Christians.
   The Templars also received enthusiastic support from the Papacy. Pope
   Innocent II in 1139 issued the bull Omne Datum Optimum (Every Good
   Gift) making the Templars responsible only to the Pope directly. In
   1144, Pope Celestine II published Milites Templi to encourage monetary
   donations to the Templars. The next year, Pope Eugenius III issued
   Militia Dei to give the Templars the right to own churches and
   cemeteries, and to collect the associated fees.
   While vernacular translations of the Bible were disfavored, the
   Templars were given vernacular texts of Joshua, Judges, Samuel, and
   Maccabees, so they could learn the military strategy and tactics of
   the Holy Land.
   Templar castles were used as secure store-houses for wealth. Because
   the Templars had a powerful and orderly international organization,
   the Templars played a role in the creation of Europe's early system of
   banks.
   The Templars grew extremely wealthy. They were subject to no-one's
   control, and in their wars in the Holy Land, they made their own
   decisions about concluding truces or starting wars, without deferring
   to the wishes of the local Christian kings. With good cause, they were
   widely regarded as arrogant.
   The unpopularity of the Templars provided an opportunity for France's
   King Philip II (known as "the Fair" because of his good looks, not his
   judgement) to destroy them in order to seize their vast wealth. In
   1306, Philip expelled all the Jews from France, and confiscated their
   assets. He then aimed at the Templars. Templars were arrested and
   tortured, and made to admit to various infamous crimes, such as
   sodomy, profaning Catholic ritual, and so on. The actual evidence
   against the Templars was slight, but Phillip was able to force the
   Pope to support his plot against the Templars, for the Papacy was
   under the control of France. Other monarchs, such as Edward in
   England, followed Philip's example, and helped themselves to Templar
   property.
   The Knights Templar were abolished by the Pope in 1312. In essence,
   they were victims of forfeiture laws. The rule that the government can
   seize the property of a criminal proved irresistibly tempting for
   Philip the Fair and his brother kings. Indeed, forfeiture was
   sometimes a major revenue source for monarchs, and the Templar
   persecution was not the last time that innocent people were convicted
   on phony charges so that the government could enrich itself.
   Next to the Templars, the most famous Catholic military order was the
   Sovereign Military and Hospitaller Order of St. John of Jerusalem,
   also known as the Knights Hospitaller. They built a hospital in
   Jerusalem, but also branched into military affairs, and fought in
   defense of the Crusader kingdoms. Like the Templars, they warred
   bravely, but failed to coordinate with other Christian forces. After
   being driven out of Asia, they headquartered in Cyprus, Rhodes, and
   Malta, ruling the latter island until being defeated by Napoleon in
   1798. Today, they still operate hospitals and ambulances.
   The warrior monks of Prussia were the avaricious and oppressive
   Teutonic Knights, who expanded the realm of Christianity to the north
   and east of Germany.
   The Order of Our Lady of Bethlehem ran hospitals, and was also charged
   by Pope Pius II with defending the island of Lemnos from the Turks in
   1459. (The Turks prevailed.) The Order of St. Stephen was founded in
   1561, as a naval force, and participated in the great Christian naval
   victory at Lepanto.
   In Spain, there were many orders of warrior monks. These included the
   Order of Alcántara, the Order of Calatrava, and the Order of
   Santiago. The Spanish Orders may have provided the decisive force
   which helped the Catholic monarchs push back Muslim rule in Iberia.
   Ironically, the original military orders had arisen as a result of the
   Crusades in the east, but the most significant long-term effect of the
   military orders was a victory, that would endure for centuries,
   against the Muslim invasion of the west.
   The Order of Our Lady of Mercy for the Redemption of Captives (the
   Mercedarians) was founded in 1218 to rescue Christian slaves held by
   Muslims. Originally a military order, the Mercedarians became a mainly
   clerical order in the next century; [3]the order still exists today.
   Sources: Edward Burman, The Templars: Knights of God (Rochester,
   Vermont: Destiny Books, 1986); Roberta L. Harris, The World of the
   Bible (N.Y.: Thames & Hudson, 1995); Michael Walsh, Warriors of the
   Lord: The Military Orders of Christendom (Grand Rapids, Mich.: Wm B.
   Eerdmans, 2003).

References

   1. http://asv.vatican.va/en/doc/1308.htm
   2. http://www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idUSL093422320071012?sp=true
   3. http://www.orderofmercy.org/

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