p. vii
PREFACE
THE extraordinary and romantic career of the
Knights Templars, their exploits and their misfortunes, render their history a
subject of peculiar interest.
Born during the first fervour of the Crusades,
they were flattered and aggrandized as long as their great military power and
religious fanaticism could be made available for the support of the Eastern
church and the retention of the Holy Land, but when the crescent had
ultimately triumphed over the cross, and the religio-military enthusiasm of
Christendom had died away, they encountered the basest ingratitude in return
for the services they had rendered to the christian faith, and were plundered,
persecuted, and condemned to a cruel death, by those who ought in justice to
have been their defenders and supporters. The memory of these holy warriors is
embalmed in all our recollections of the wars of the cross; they were the
bulwarks of the Latin kingdom of Jerusalem during the short period of its
existence, and were the last band of Europe's host that contended for the
possession of Palestine.
To the vows of the monk and the austere life of
the convent,
p. viii
the Templars added the discipline of the camp,
and the stern duties of the military life, joining
"The fine vocation of the sword and lance,
With the gross aims, and body-bending toil
Of a poor brotherhood, who walk the earth
Pitied."
The vulgar notion that the Templars were as
wicked as they were fearless and brave, has not yet been entirely exploded;
but it is hoped that the copious account of the proceedings against the order
in this country, given in the ninth and tenth chapters of the ensuing volume,
will tend to dispel many unfounded prejudices still entertained against the
fraternity, and excite emotions of admiration for their constancy and courage,
and of pity for their unmerited and cruel fate.
Matthew Paris, who wrote at St. Albans,
concerning events in Palestine, tells us that the emulation between the
Templars and Hospitaliers frequently broke out into open warfare to the great
scandal and prejudice of Christendom, and that, in a pitched battle fought
between them, the Templars were slain to a man. The solitary testimony of
Matthew Paris, who was no friend to the two orders, is invalidated by the
silence of contemporary historians, who wrote on the spot; and it is quite
evident from the letters of the pope, addressed to the Hospitaliers, the year
after the date of the alleged battle, that such an occurrence never could have
taken place.
The accounts, even of the best of the antient
writers, should not be adopted without examination, and a careful comparison
with other sources of information. William of Tyre, for instance, tells us
that Nassr-ed-deen, son of sultan Abbas, was taken prisoner by
the Templars, and whilst in their hands became a convert to the Christian
religion; that he had learned the rudiments
p. ix
of the Latin language, and earnestly sought to
be baptized, but that the Templars were bribed with sixty thousand pieces of
gold to surrender him to his enemies in Egypt, where certain death awaited
him; and that they stood by to see him bound hand and foot with chains, and
placed in an iron cage, to be conducted across the desert to Cairo. Now the
Arabian historians of that period tell us that Nassr-ed-deen and his
father murdered the caliph and threw his body into a well, and then fled with
their retainers and treasure into Palestine; that the sister of the murdered
caliph wrote immediately to the commandant at Gaza, which place was garrisoned
by the Knights Templars, offering a handsome reward for the capture of the
fugitives; that they were accordingly intercepted, and Nassr-ed-deen
was sent to Cairo, where the female relations of the caliph caused his body to
be cut into small pieces in the seraglio. The above act has constantly been
made a matter of grave accusation against the Templars; but what a different
complexion does the case assume on the testimony of the Arabian authorities!
It must be remembered that William archbishop
of Tyre was hostile to the order on account of its vast powers and privileges,
and carried his complaints to a general council of the church at Rome. He is
abandoned, in everything that he says to the prejudice of the fraternity, by
James of Vitry, bishop of Acre, a learned and most talented prelate, who wrote
in Palestine subsequently to William of Tyre, and has copied largely from the
history of the latter. The bishop of Acre speaks of the Templars in the
highest terms, and declares that they were universally loved by all men for
their piety and humility. "Nulli molesti erant!" says he, "sed ab
omnibus propter humilitatem et religionem amabantur."
The celebrated orientalist Von Hammer
has recently brought forward various extraordinary and unfounded charges,
destitute
p. x
of all authority, against the Templars; and
Wilcke, who has written a German history of the order, seems to have
imbibed all the vulgar prejudices against the fraternity. I might have added
to the interest of the ensuing work, by making the Templars horrible and
atrocious villains; but I have endeavoured to write a fair and impartial
account of the order, not slavishly adopting everything I find detailed in
antient writers, but such matters only as I believe, after a careful
examination of the best authorities, to be true.
It is a subject of congratulation to us that we
possess, in the Temple Church at London, the most beautiful and perfect
memorial of the order of the Knights Templars now in existence. No one who has
seen that building in its late dress of plaster and whitewash will recognize
it when restored to its antient magnificence. This venerable structure was one
of the chief ecclesiastical edifices of the Knights Templars in Europe, and
stood next in rank to the Temple at Jerusalem. As I have performed the
pilgrimage to the Holy City, and wandered amid the courts of the antient
Temple of the Knights Templars on Mount Moriah, I could not but regard with
more than ordinary interest the restoration by the societies of the Inner and
the Middle Temple of their beautiful Temple Church.
The greatest zeal and energy have been
displayed by them in that praiseworthy undertaking, and no expense has been
spared to repair the ravages of time, and to bring back the structure to what
it was in the time of the Templars.
In the summer I had the pleasure of
accompanying one of the chief and most enthusiastic promoters of the
restoration of the church (Mr. Burge, Q.C.) over the interesting fabric, and
at his suggestion the present work was commenced. I am afraid that it will
hardly answer his expectations, and am sorry that the interesting task has not
been undertaken by an abler hand.
Temple, Nov. 17, 1841.
p. xi
P.S. Mr. Willement, who is preparing some
exquisitely stained glass windows for the Temple Church, has just drawn my
attention to the nineteenth volume of the "MEMOIR ES DE LA SOCIÉTÉ ROYALE DES
ANTIQUAIRES DE FRANCE," published last year. It contains a most curious and
interesting account of the church of Brelevennez, in the department des Cotes-du-Nord,
supposed to have formerly belonged to the order of the Temple, written by the
Chevalier du FREMANVILLE. Amongst various curious devices, crosses, and
symbols found upon the windows and the tombs of the church, is a copper
medallion, which appears to have been suspended from the neck by a chain. This
decoration consists of a small circle, within which are inscribed two
equilateral triangles placed one upon the other, so as to form a six-pointed
star. In the midst of the star is a second circle, containing within it the
LAMB of the order of the Temple holding the banner in its fore-paw, similar to
what we see on the antient seal of the order delineated in the title-page of
this work. Mr. Willement has informed me that he has received an offer from a
gentleman in Brittany to send over casts of the decorations and devices lately
discovered in that church. He has kindly referred the letter to me for
consideration, but I have not thought it advisable to delay the publication of
the present work for the purpose of procuring them.
Mr. Willement has also drawn my attention to a
very distinct impression of the reverse of the seal of the Temple described in
page 106, whereon I read very plainly the interesting motto, "TESTIS SVM AGNI.