p. xiii
CONTENTS
CHAPTER I.
Origin of the Templars--The
pilgrimages to Jerusalem--The dangers to which pilgrims were exposed--The
formation of the brotherhood of the poor fellow-soldiers of Jesus Christ to
protect them--Their location in the Temple--A description of the
Temple--Origin of the name Templars--Hugh de Payens chosen Master of the
Temple--Is sent to Europe by King Baldwin--Is introduced to the Pope--The
assembling of the Council of Troyes--The formation of a rule for the
government of the Templars. page 1
CHAPTER II.
Regula Pauperum Commilitonum
Christi et Templi Salomonis.
The most curious parts of the
rule displayed--The confirmation of the rule by the Pope--The visit of Hugh de
Payens, the Master of the Temple, to England--His cordial reception--The
foundation of the Order in this country--Lands and money granted to the
Templars--Their popularity in Europe--The rapid increase of their
fraternity--St. Bernard takes up the pen in their behalf--He displays their
valour and piety. page 15
p. xiv
CHAPTER III.
Hugh de Payens returns to
Palestine--His death--Robert de Craon made Master--Success of the
Infidels--The second Crusade--The Templars assume the Red Cross--Their gallant
actions and high discipline--Lands, manors, and churches granted them in
England--Bernard de Tremelay made Master--He is slain by the
Infidels--Bertrand de Blanquefort made Master--He is taken prisoner, and sent
in chains to Aleppo--The Pope writes letters in praise of the Templars--Their
religious and military enthusiasm--Their war banner called Beauseant--The
rise of the rival religio-military order of the Hospital of St. John. page 36
CHAPTER IV.
The contests between Saladin
and the Templars--The vast privileges of the Templars--The publication of the
bull, omne datum optimum--The Pope declares himself the immediate
Bishop of the entire Order--The different classes of Templars--The
knights--Priests--Serving brethren--The hired soldiers--The great officers of
the Temple--Punishment of cowardice--The Master of the Temple is taken
prisoner, and dies in a dungeon--Saladin's great successes--The Christians
purchase a truce--The Master of the Temple and the Patriarch Heraclius proceed
to England for succour--The consecration of the TEMPLE CHURCH AT LONDON.
page 60
CHAPTER V.
The Temple at London--The vast
possessions of the Templars in England--The territorial divisions of the
order--The different preceptories in this country--The privileges conferred on
the Templars by the kings of England--The Masters of the Temple at
London--Their power and importance. page 81
CHAPTER VI.
The Patriarch Heraclius
quarrels with the king of England--He returns to Palestine without succour--The
disappointments and gloomy forebodings of the Templars--They prepare to resist
Saladin--Their defeat and slaughter.
p. xv
[paragraph continues]
The valiant deeds of the Marshal of the Temple--The fatal battle of Tiberias--The
captivity of the Grand Master and the true Cross--The captive Templars are
offered the Koran or death--They choose the latter, and are beheaded--The fall
of Jerusalem--The Moslems take possession of the Temple--They purify it with
rose-water, say prayers, and hear a sermon--The Templars retire to
Antioch--Their letters to the king of England and the Master of the Temple at
London--Their exploits at the siege of Acre. page 114
CHAPTER VII.
Richard Cœur de Lion joins the
Templars before Acre--The city surrenders, and the Templars establish the
chief house of their order within it--Cœur de Lion takes up his abode with
them--He sells to them the island of Cyprus--The Templars form the van of his
army--Their foraging expeditions and great exploits--Cœur de Lion quits the
Holy Land in the disguise of a Knight Templar--The Templars build the
Pilgrim's Castle in Palestine--The state of the order in England--King John
resides in the Temple at London--The barons come to him at that place, and
demand MAGNA CHARTA--The exploits of the Templars in Egypt--The letters of the
Grand Master to the Master of the Temple at London--The Templars reconquer
Jerusalem. page 141
CHAPTER VIII.
The conquest of Jerusalem by
the Carizmians--The slaughter of the Templars, and the death of the Grand
Master--The exploits of the Templars in Egypt--King Louis of France visits the
Templars in Palestine-He assists them in putting the country into a defensible
state--Henry IL, king of England, visits the Temple at Paris--The magnificent
hospitality of the Templars in England and France--Benocdar, sultan of Egypt,
invades Palestine--He defeats the Templars, takes their strong fortresses, and
decapitates six hundred of their brethren--The Grand Master comes to England
for succour--The renewal of the war--The fall of Acre, and the final
extinction of the Templars in Palestine. page 165
p. xvi
CHAPTER IX.
The downfall of the Templars--The
cause thereof--The Grand Master comes to Europe at the request of the Pope--He
is imprisoned, with all the Templars in France, by command of king
Philip--They are put to the torture, and confessions of the guilt of heresy
and idolatry are extracted from them--Edward II. king of England stands up in
defence of the Templars, but afterwards persecutes them at the instance of the
Pope--The imprisonment of the Master of the Temple and all his brethren in
England--Their examination upon eighty-seven horrible and ridiculous articles
of accusation before foreign inquisitors appointed by the Pope--A council of
the church assembles at London to pass sentence upon them--The curious
evidence adduced as to the mode of admission into the order, and of the
customs and observances of the fraternity. page 193
CHAPTER X.
The Templars in France revoke
their rack-extorted confessions--They are tried as relapsed heretics, and
burnt at the stake--The progress of the inquiry in England--The curious
evidence adduced as to the mode of holding the chapters of the order--As to
the penance enjoined therein, and the absolution pronounced by the Master--The
Templars draw up a written defence, which they present to the ecclesiastical
council--They are placed in separate dungeons, and put to the torture--Two
serving brethren and a chaplain of the order then make confessions--Many other
Templars acknowledge themselves guilty of heresy in respect of their belief in
the religious authority of their Master--They make their recantations, and are
reconciled to the church before the south door of Saint Paul's cathedral--The
order of the Temple is abolished by the Pope--The last of the Masters of the
Temple in England dies in the Tower--The disposal of the property of the
order--Observations on the downfall of the Templars. page 239
CHAPTER XI.
THE TEMPLE CHURCH.
The restoration of the Temple
Church--The beauty and magnificence of the venerable building--The various
styles of architecture displayed in it--The
p. xvii
discoveries made during the
recent restoration--The sacrarium--The marble piscina--The sacramental
niches--The penitential cell--The ancient Chapel of St. Anne--Historical
matters connected with the Temple Church--The holy relics anciently preserved
therein--The interesting monumental remains. page 289
CHAPTER XII.
THE TEMPLE CHURCH.
THE MONUMENTS OF THE
CRUSADERS--The tomb and effigy of Sir Geoffrey de Magnaville, earl of Essex,
and constable of the Tower--His life and death, and famous exploits--Of
William Marshall, earl of Pembroke, Protector of England--Of the Lord de
Ross--Of William and Gilbert Marshall, earls of Pembroke--Of William
Plantagenet, fifth son of Henry the Third--The anxious desire manifested by
king Henry the Third, queen Eleanor, and various persons of rank, to be buried
in the Temple Church. page 309
CHAPTER XIII.
THE TEMPLE.
Antiquities in the Temple--The
history of the place subsequent to the dissolution of the order of the Knights
Templars--The establishment of a society of lawyers in the Temple--The
antiquity of this society--Its connexion with the antient society of the
Knights Templars--An order of knights and serving brethren established in the
law--The degree of frere serjen, or frater serviens, borrowed
from the antient Templars--The modern Templars divide themselves into the two
societies of the Inner and Middle Temple. page 342
CHAPTER XIV.
THE TEMPLE.
The Temple Garden--The erection
of new buildings in the Temple--The dissolution of the order of the Hospital
of Saint John--The law societies become lessees of the crown--The erection of
the magnificent Middle Temple Hall--The conversion of the old hall into
chambers--The grant of the inheritance
p. xviii
of the Temple to the two law
societies--Their magnificent present to his Majesty--Their antient orders and
customs, and antient hospitality--Their grand entertainments--Reader's
feasts--Grand Christmasses and Bevels--The fox-hunt in the hall--The dispute
with the Lord Mayor--The quarrel with the custos of the Temple Church.
page 373
ERRATA.
In note, page
6, for infinitus, read
infinitis.
29, for carrissime, read
carissime.
42, for Angli, read Anglia.
79, for promptia, read
promptior.
79, for principos, read
principes.
80, for Patriarchs, read
patriarcham. |