By, Nesta Webster
IN the year 1118--nineteen years after the first crusade had
ended with the defeat of the Moslems, the capture of Antioch and
Jerusalem, and the instalment of Godefroi de Bouillon as king of the
latter city--a band of nine French gentilshommes, led by Hugues de Payens
and Godefroi de Saint-Omer, formed themselves into an Order for the
protection of pilgrims to the Holy Sepulchre. Baldwin II, who at this
moment succeeded the throne of Jerusalem, presented them with a house near
the site of the Temple of Solomon--hence the name of Knights Templar under
which they were to become famous. In 1128 the Order was sanctioned by the
Council of Troyes and by the Pope, and a rule was drawn up by St. Bernard
under which the Knights Templar were bound by the vows of poverty,
chastity, and obedience.
But although the Templars distinguished themselves by many deeds of
valour, the regulation that they were to live solely on alms led to
donations so enormous that, abandoning their vow of poverty, they spread
themselves over Europe, and by the end of the twelfth century had become a
rich and powerful body. The motto that the Order had inscribed upon its
banner, "Non nobis, Domine, sed nomini tuo da gloriam," was likewise
forgotten, for, their faith waxing gold, they gave themselves up to pride
and ostentation. Thus, as an eighteenth-century masonic writer has
expressed it:
The war, which for the greater number of warriors of good
faith proved the source of weariness, of losses and misfortunes, became
for them (the Templars) only the opportunity for booty and
aggrandizement, and if they distinguished themselves by a few brilliant
actions, their motive soon ceased to be a matter of doubt when they were
seen to enrich themselves even with the spoils of the confederates, to
increase their credit by the extent of the new possessions they had
acquired, to carry arrogance to the point of rivalling crowned princes
in pomp and grandeur, to refuse their aid against the enemies of the
faith, as the history of Saladin testifies, and finally to ally
themselves with that horrible and sanguinary prince named the Old Man of
the Mountain Prince of the Assassins.(1)
The truth of the last accusation is, however, open to question. For a
time, at any rate, the Templars had been at war with the Assassins. When
in 1152 the Assassins murdered Raymond, Comte de Tripoli, the Templars
entered their territory and forced them to sign a treaty by which they
were to pay a yearly tribute of 12,000 gold pieces in expiation of the
crime. Some years later the Old Man of the Mountain sent an ambassador to
Amaury, King of Jerusalem, to tell him privately that if the Templars
would forgo the payment of this tribute he and his followers would embrace
the Christian faith. Amaury accepted, offering at the same time to
compensate the Templars, but some of the Knights assassinated the
ambassador before he could return to his master. When asked for
reparations the Grand Master threw the blame on an evil one-eyed Knight
named Gautier de Maisnil.(2)
It is evident, therefore, that the relations between the Templars and
the Assassins were at first far from amicable ; nevertheless, it appears
probable that later on an understanding was brought about between them.
Both on this charge and on that of treachery towards the Christian armies,
Dr. Bussell's impartial view of the question may be quoted:
When in 1149 the Emperor Conrad III failed before Damascus,
the Templars were believed to have a secret understanding with e
garrison of that city ; . . . in 1154 they were said to have sold, for
60,000 gold pieces, a prince of Egypt who had wished to become a
Christian ; he was taken home to suffer certain death at the hands his
fanatical family. In 1166 Amaury, King of Jerusalem, hanged twelve
members of the Order for betraying a fortress to Nureddin.
And Dr. Bussell goes on to say that it cannot be disputed hat they had
" long and important dealings " with the Assassin " and were therefore
suspected (not unfairly) of imbibing their precepts and following their
principles."(3)
By the end of the thirteenth century the Templars had become suspect,
not only in the eyes of the clergy, but of the general public. " Amongst
the common people," one of their latest apologists admits, " vague rumours
circulated. They talked of the covetousness and want of scruple of the
Knights, of their passion for aggrandizement and their rapacity. Their
haughty insolence was proverbial. Drinking habits were attributed to them
; the saying was already in use ' to drink like a Templar.' The old German
word Tempelhaus indicated house of ill-fame."(4)
The same rumours had reached Clement V even before his accession to the
papal throne in 1305,(5) and in this same year he summoned the Grand
Master of the Order, Jacques du Molay, to return to France from the island
of Cyprus, where he was assembling fresh forces to avenge the recent
reverses of the Christian armies.
Du Molay arrived in France with sixty other Knights Templar and 150,000
gold florins, as well as a large quantity of silver that the Order had
amassed in the East.(6)
The Pope now set himself to make enquiries concerning the charges of "
unspeakable apostasy against God, detestable idolatry, execrable vice, and
many heresies " that had been " secretly intimated " to him. But, to quote
his own words :
Because it did not seem likely nor credible that men of such
religion who were believed often to shed their blood and frequently
expose their persons to the peril of death for Christ's name and who
showed such great and many signs of devotion both in divine offices as
well as in facts, as in other devotional observances, should be so
forgetful of their salvation as to do these things, we were unwilling .
. . to give ear to this kind of insinuation . . . (hujusmodi
insinuacioni ac delacioni ipsorum . . . aurem noluimus inclinare).(7)
The King of France, Philippe le Bel, who had hitherto been the friend
of the Templars, now became alarmed and urged the Pope to take action
against them ; but before the Pope was able to find out more about the
matter, the King took the law into his own hands and had all the Templars
in France arrested on October 13, 1307. The following charges were then
brought against them by the Inquisitor for France before whom they were
examined:
1. The ceremony of imitation into their Order was
accompanied by insults to the Cross, the denial of Christ, and gross
obscenities.
2. The adoration of an idol which was said to be the image of the
true God.
3. The omission of the words of consecration at Mass.
4. The right that the lay chiefs arrogated to themselves of giving
absolution.
5. The authorization of unnatural vice.
To all these infamies a great number of the Knights, including Jacques
du Molay, confessed in almost precisely the same terms ; at their
admission into the Order, they said, they had been shown the cross on
which was the figure of Christ, and had been asked whether they believed
in Him, when they answered yes, they were told in some cases that this was
wrong (dixit sibi quod male credebat)(8) because He was not God, He was a
false prophet (quia falsus propheta erat, nec erat Deus).(9) Some added
that they were then shown an idol or a bearded head which they were told
to worship(10); one added that this was of such " a terrible aspect that
it seemed to him to be the face of some devil, called in French un maufé,
and that whenever he saw it he was so overcome with fear that he could
hardly look at it without fear and trembling."(11) All who confessed
declared that they had been ordered to spit on the crucifix, and very many
that they had received the injunction to commit obscenities and to
practise unnatural vice. Some said that on their refusal to carry out
these orders they had been threatened with imprisonment, even perpetual
imprisonment ; a few said they had actually been incarcerated(12); one
declared that he had been terrorized, seized by the throat, and threatened
with death.(13)
Since, however, a number of these confessions were made under torture,
it is more important to consider the evidence provided by the trial of the
Knights at the hands of the Pope, where this method was not employed.
Now, at the time the Templars were arrested, Clement V, deeply
resenting the King's interference with an Order which existed entirely
under papal jurisdiction, wrote in the strongest terms of remonstrance to
Philippe le Bel urging their release and even after their trial, neither
the confessions of the Knights nor the angry expostulations of the King
could persuade him to believe in their guilt.(14) But as the scandal
concerning the Templars was increasing, he consented to receive in private
audience " a certain Knight of the Order, of great nobility and held by
the said Order in no slight esteem," who testified to the abominations
that took place on the reception of the Brethren, the spitting on the
cross, and other things which were not lawful nor, humanly speaking,
decent.(15)
The Pope then decided to hold an examination of seventy-two French
Knights at Poictiers in order to discover whether the confessions made by
them before the Inquisitor at Paris could be substantiated, and at this
examination, conducted without torture or pressure of any kind in the
presence of the Pope himself, the witnesses declared on oath that they
would tell " the full and pure truth." They then made confession which
were committed to writing in their presence, and these being afterwards
read aloud to them, they expressly and willingly approved them
(perseverantes in illis eas expresse et sponte, prout recitate fuerunt
approbarunt).(16)
Besides this, an examination of the Grand Master, Jacques du
Molay, and the Preceptors of the Order was held in the presence of " three
Cardinals and four public notaries and .many other good men." These
witnesses, says the official report, " having sworn with their hands on
the Gospel of God " (ad sancta dei evangelia ab iis corporaliter tacta)
that--
they would on all the aforesaid things speak the pure and full truth,
they, separately, freely, and spontaneously, without any coercion and
fear, deposed and confessed among other things, the a denial of Christ and
spitting upon the cross when they were received into the Order of the
Temple. And some of them (deposed and confessed) that under the same form,
namely, with denial of Christ and spitting on the cross, they had received
many Brothers into the Order. Some of them too confessed certain other
horrible and disgusting things on which we are silent. . . . Besides this,
they said and confessed that those things which are contained in the
confessions and depositions of heretical depravity which they made lately
before the Inquisitor (of Paris) were true.
Their confessions, being again committed to writing, were approved by
the witnesses, who then with bended knees and many tears asked for and
obtained absolution.(17)
The Pope, however, still refused to take action against the whole Order
merely because the Master and Brethren around him had " gravely sinned,"
and it was decided to hold a papal commission in Paris. The first sitting
took place in November 1309, when the Grand Master and 231 Knights were
summoned before the pontifical commissioners. " This enquiry," says
Michelet, " was conducted slowly, with much consideration and gentleness
(avec beaucoup de ménagement et de douceur) by high ecclesiastical
dignitaries, an archbishop, several bishops, etc."(18) But although a
number of the Knights, including the Grand Master, now retracted their
admissions, some damning confessions were again forthcoming. It is
impossible within the scope of this book to follow the many trials of the
Templars that took place in different countries--in Italy, at Ravenna,
Pisa, Bologna, and Florence, where torture was not employed and
blasphemies were admitted,(19) or in Germany, where torture was employed
but no confessions were made and a verdict was given in favour of the
Order. A few details concerning the trial in England may, however, be of
interest.
It has generally been held that torture was not applied in England
owing to the humanity of Edward II, who at first, absolutely refused to
listen to any accusations against the Order.(20) On December 10, 1307, he
had written to the Pope in these terms :
And because the said Master or Brethren constant in the
purity of he Catholic faith have been frequently commended by us, and by
all our kingdom, both in their life and morals, we are unable to believe
in suspicious stories of this kind until we know with greater certainty
about these things.
We, therefore, pity from our souls the suffering and losses of the
Sd. Master and brethren, which they suffer in consequence of such
infamy, and we supplicate most affectionately your Sanctity if it please
you, that considering with favour suited to the good character of the
Master and brethren, you may deem fit to meet with more indulgence the
detractions, calumnies and charges by certain envious and evil disposed
persons, who endeavour to turn their good deeds into works of
perverseness opposed to divine teaching ; until the said charges
attributed to them shall have been brought legally before you or your
representatives here and more fully proved.(21)
Edward II also wrote in the same terms to the Kings of Portugal,
Castile, Aragon, and Sicily. But two years later, after Clement V had
himself heard the confessions of the Order and a Papal Bull had been
issued declaring that " the unspeakable wickednesses and abominable crimes
of notorious heresy " had now " come to the knowledge of almost everyone,"
Edward II was persuaded to arrest the Templars and order their
examination. According to Mr. Castle, whose interesting treatise we quote
here, the King would not allow torture to be employed, with the result
that the Knights denied all charges ; but later, it is said, he allowed
himself to be overpersuaded, and torture appears to have been applied on
one or two occasions "(22) with the result that three Knights confessed to
all and were given absolution.(23) At Southwark, however, " a considerable
number of brethren " admitted that " they had been strongly accused of the
crimes of negation and spitting, they did not say they were guilty but
that they could not purge themselves . . . and therefore they abjured
these and all other heresies."(24) Evidence was also given against the
Order by outside witnesses, and the same stories of intimidation at the
ceremony of reception were told.(25) At any rate, the result of the
investigation was not altogether satisfactory, and the Templars were
finally suppressed in England as elsewhere by the Council of Vienne in
1312.
In France more rigorous measures were adopted and fifty-four Knights
who had retracted their confessions were burnt at the stake as " relapsed
heretics " on May 12, 1310. Four years later, on March 14, 1314, the Grand
Master, Jacques du Molay, suffered the same fate.
Now, however much we must execrate the barbarity of this sentence--as
also the cruelties that had preceded it--this is no reason why we should
admit the claim of the Order to noble martyrdom put forward by the
historians who have espoused their cause. The character of the Templars is
not rehabilitated by condemning the conduct of the King and Pope. Yet this
the line of argument usually adopted by the defenders of the Order. Thus
the two main contentions on which they base their defence are, firstly,
that the confessions of the Knights were made under torture, therefore
they must be regarded as null and void ; and, secondly, that the whole
affair was a plot concerted between the King and Pope in order to obtain
possession of the Templars' riches. Let us examine these contentions in
turn.
In the first place, as we have seen, all confessions were not made
under torture. No one, as far as I am aware, disputes Michelet's assertion
that the enquiry before the Papal Commission in Paris, at which a number
of Knights adhered to the statements they had made to the Pope, was
conducted without pressure of any kind. But further, the fact that
confessions are made under torture does not necessarily invalidate them as
evidence. Guy Fawkes also confessed under torture, yet it is never
suggested that the whole story of the Gunpowder Plot was a myth. Torture,
however much we may condemn it, has frequently proved the only method for
overcoming the intimidation exercised over the mind of a conspirator ; a
man bound by the terrible obligations of a confederacy and fearing the
vengeance of his fellow-conspirators will not readily yield to persuasion,
but only to force. If, then, some of the Templars were terrorized by
torture, or even by the fear of torture, it must not be forgotten that
terrorism was exercised by both sides. Few will deny that the Knights were
bound by oaths of secrecy, so that on one hand they were threatened with
the vengeance of the Order if they betrayed its secrets, and on the other
faced with torture if they refused to confess. Thus they found themselves
between the devil and the deep sea. It was therefore not a case of a mild
and unoffending Order meeting with brutal treatment at the hands of
authority, but of the victims of a terrible autocracy being delivered into
the hands of another autocracy.
Moreover, do the confessions of the Knights appear to be the outcome of
pure imagination such as men under the influence of torture might devise ?
It is certainly difficult to believe that the accounts of the ceremony of
initiation given in detail by men in different countries, all closely
resembling each other, yet related in different phraseology, could be pure
inventions. Had the victims been driven to invent they would surely have
contradicted each other, have cried out in their agony that all kinds of
wild and fantastic rites had taken place in order to satisfy the demands
of their interlocutors. But no, each appears to be describing the same
ceremony more or less completely, with characteristic touches that
indicate the personality of the speaker, and in the main all the stories
tally.
The further contention that the case against the Templars was
manufactured by the King and Pope with a view to obtaining their wealth is
entirely disproved by facts. The latest French historian of mediæval
France, whilst expressing disbelief in the guilt of the Templars,
characterizes this counter-accusation as " puerile." " Philippe the Bel,"
writes M. Funck-Brentano, " has never been understood ; from the beginning
people have not been just to him. This young prince was one of the
greatest kings and the noblest characters that have appeared in
history."(26)
Without carrying appreciation so far, one must nevertheless accord to
M. Funck-Brentano's statement of facts the attention it merits. Philippe
has been blamed for debasing the coin of the realm ; in reality he merely
ordered it to be mixed with alloy ; as a necessary measure after the war
with England,(27) precisely as our own coinage was debased in consequence
of the recent war. This was done quite openly and the coinage was restored
at the earliest opportunity. Intensely national, his policy of attacking
the Lombards, exiling the Jews, and suppressing the Templars, however
regrettable the methods by which it was carried out, resulted in immense
benefits to France ; M. Funck-Brentano has graphically described the
prosperity of the whole country during the early fourteenth century--the
increase of population, flourishing agriculture and industry. " In
Provence and Languedoc one meets swineherds who have vineyards, simple
cowherds who have town houses."(28)
The attitude of Philippe le Bel towards the Templars must be viewed in
this light--ruthless suppression of any body of people who interfered with
the prosperity of France. His action was not that of arbitrary authority ;
he " proceeded," says M. Funck-Brentano, " by means of an appeal to the
people. In his name Nogaret (the Chancellor) spoke to the Parisians in the
garden of the Palace (October 13, 1307). Popular assemblies were convoked
all over France " ;(29) " the Parliament of Tours, with hardly a
dissentient vote, declared the Templars worthy of death. The University of
Paris gave the weight of their judgement as to the fullness and
authenticity of the confessions."(30) Even assuming that these bodies were
actuated by the same servility as that which has been attributed to the
Pope, how are we to explain the fact that the trial of the Order aroused
no opposition among the far from docile people of Paris ? If the Templars
had indeed, as they professed, been leading noble and upright lives,
devoting themselves to the care of the poor, one might surely expect their
arrest to be followed by popular risings. But there appears to have been
no sign of this.
As to the Pope, we have already seen that from the outset he had shown
himself extremely reluctant to condemn the Order, and no satisfactory
explanation is given of his change of attitude except that he wished to
please the King. As far a his own interests are concerned, it is obvious
that he could have nothing to gain by publishing to the world a scandal
that must inevitably bring opprobrium on the Church. His lamentations to
this effect in the famous Bull (31) clearly show that he recognized this
danger and therefore desired at all cost to clear the accused Knights, if
evidence could be obtained in their favour. It was only when the Templars
made damning admissions in his presence that he was obliged to abandon
their defence.(32) Yet we are told that he did this out of base compliance
with the wishes of Philippe le Bel.
Philippe le Bel is thus represented as the arch-villain of the whole
piece, through seven long years hounding down a blameless Order--from whom
up to the very moment of their arrest he had repeatedly received loans of
money--solely with the object of appropriating their wealth. Yet after all
we find that the property of the Templars was not appropriated by the
King, but was given by him to the Knights of St. John of Jerusalem !
What was the fate of the Templars' goods ? Philippe le Bel decided that
they should be handed over to the Hospitallers. Clement V states that the
Orders given by the King on this subject were executed. Even the domain of
the Temple in Paris . . . up to the eve of the Revolution was the property
of the Knights of St. John of Jerusalem. The royal treasury kept for
itself certain sums for the costs of the trial. These had been
immense.(33)
These facts in no way daunt the antagonists of Philippe, who, we are
now assured--again without any proof whatever--was overruled by the Pope
in this matter. But setting all morality aside, as a mere question of
policy, is it likely that the King would have deprived himself of his most
valuable financial supporters and gone to the immense trouble of bringing
them to trial without first assuring himself that he would benefit by the
affair ? Would he, in other words, have killed the goose that laid the
golden eggs without any guarantee that the body of the goose would remain
in his possession ? Again, if, as we are told, the Pope suppressed the
Order so as to please the King, why should he have thwarted him over the
whole purpose the King had in view ? Might we not expect indignant
remonstrances from Philippe at thus being baulked of the booty he had
toiled so long to gain ? But on the contrary, we find him completely in
agreement with the Pope on this subject. In November 1309 Clement V
distinctly stated that " Philippe the Illustrious, King of France," to
whom the facts concerning the Templars had been told, was " not prompted
by avarice since he desired to keep or appropriate for himself no part of
the property of the Templars, but liberally and devotedly left them to us
and the Church to be administered," etc.(34)
Thus the whole theory concerning the object for which the Templars were
suppressed falls to the ground--a theory which on examination is seen to
be built up entirely on the plan of imputing motives without any
justification in facts. The King acted from cupidity, the Pope from
servility, and the Templars confessed from fear of torture--on these pure
hypotheses defenders of the Order base their arguments.
The truth is, far more probably, that if the King had any additional
reason for suppressing the Templars it was not envy of their wealth but
fear of the immense power their wealth conferred ; the Order dared even to
defy the King and to refuse to pay taxes. The Temple in fact constituted
an imperium in imperio that threatened not only the royal authority but
the whole social system.(35) An important light is thrown on the situation
by M. Funck-Brentano in this passage :
As the Templars had houses in all countries, they practised
the financial operations of the international banks of our times ; they
were acquainted with letters of change, orders payable at sight, they
instituted dividends and annuities on deposited capital, advanced funds,
lent on credit, controlled private accounts, undertook to raise taxes
for the lay and ecclesiastical seigneurs.(36)
Through their proficiency in these matters--acquired very possibly from
the Jews of Alexandria whom they must have met in the East--the Templars
had become the " international financiers " and " international
capitalists " of their day ; had they not been suppressed, all the evils
now denounced by Socialists as peculiar to the system they describe as "
Capitalism "--trusts, monopolies, and " corners "--would in all
probability have been inaugurated during the course of the fourteenth
century in a far worse form than at the present day, since no legislation
existed to protect the community at large. The feudal system, as Marx and
Engels perceived, was the principal obstacle to exploitation by a
financial autocracy.(37)
Moreover, it is by no means improbable that this order of things would
have been brought about by the violent overthrow of the French
monarchy--indeed, of all monarchies ; the Templars, " those terrible
conspirators," says Eliphas Lévi, threatened the whole world with an
immense revolution."(38)
Here perhaps we may find the reason why this band of dissolute and
rapacious nobles has enlisted the passionate sympathy of democratic
writers. For it will be noticed that these same writers who attribute the
King's condemnation of the Order to envy of their wealth never apply this
argument to the demagogues of the eighteenth century and suggest that
their accusations against the nobles of France were inspired by cupidity,
nor would they ever admit that any such motive may enter into the
diatribes against private owners of wealth to-day. The Templars thus
remain the only body of capitalists, with the exception of the Jews, to be
not only pardoned for their riches but exalted as noble victims of
prejudice and envy. Is it merely because the Templars were the enemies of
monarchy ? Or is it that the world revolution, whilst attacking private
owners of property, has never been opposed to International finance,
particularly when combined with anti-Christian tendencies ?
It is the continued defence of the Templars which, to the present
writer, appears the most convincing evidence against them. For even if one
believes them innocent of the crimes laid to their charge, how is it
possible to admire them in their later stages ? The fact that cannot be
denied is that they were false to their obligations, that they took the
vow of poverty and then grew not only rich but arrogant ; that they took
the vow of chastity and became notoriously immoral.(39) Are all these
things then condoned because the Templars formed a link in the chain of
world revolution ?
At this distance of time the guilt or innocence of the Templars will
probably never be conclusively established either way ; on the mass of
conflicting evidence bequeathed to us by history no one can pronounce a
final judgement.
Without attempting to dogmatize on the question, I would suggest that
the real truth may be that the Knights were both innocent and guilty, that
is to say, that a certain number were initiated into the secret doctrine
of the Order whilst the majority remained throughout in ignorance. Thus
according to the evidence of Stephen de Stapelbrugge, an English Knight, "
there were two modes of reception, one lawful and good and the other
contrary to the Faith."(40) This would account for the fact that some of
the accused declined to confess even under the greatest pressure. These
may really have known nothing of the real doctrines of the Order, which
were confided orally only to those whom the superiors regarded as unlikely
to be revolted by them. Such have always been the methods of secret
societies, from the Ismailis onward.
This theory of a double doctrine is put forward by Loiseleur, who
observes :
If we consult the statutes of the Order of the Temple as
they have come down to us, we shall certainly discover there is nothing
that justifies the strange and abominable practices revealed at the
Inquiry. But . . . besides the public rule, had not the Order another
one, whether traditional or written, authorizing or even prescribing
these practices--a secret rule, revealed only to the initiates ?(41)
Eliphas Lévi also exonerates the majority of the Templars from
complicity in either anti-monarchical or anti-religious designs :
These tendencies were enveloped in profound mystery and the
Order made an outward profession of the most perfect orthodoxy. The
Chiefs alone knew whither they were going ; the rest followed
unsuspectingly.(42)
What, then, was the Templar heresy ? On this point we find a variety of
opinions. According to Wilcke, Ranke, and Weber it was " the unitarian
deism of Islam "(43); Lecouteulx de Canteleu thinks, however, it was
derived from heretical Islamic sources, and relates that whilst in
Palestine, one of the Knights, Guillaume de Montbard, was initiated by the
Old Man of the Mountain in a cave of Mount Lebanon.(44) That a certain
resemblance existed between the Templars and the Assassins has been
indicated by von Hammer,(45) and further emphasized by the Freemason
Clavel :
Oriental historians show us, at different periods, the Order
of the Templars maintaining intimate relations with that of the
Assassins, and they insist on the affinity that existed between the two
associations. They remark that they had adopted the same colours, white
and red ; that they had the same organization, the same hierarchy of
degrees, those of fedavi, refik, and dai in one corresponding to those
of novice, professed, and knight in the other ; that both conspired for
the ruin of the religions they professed in public, and that finally
both possessed numerous castles, the former in Asia, the latter in
Europe.(46)
But in spite of these outward resemblances it does not appear from the
confessions of the Knights that the secret doctrine of the Templars was
that of the Assassins or of any Ismaili sect by which, in accordance with
orthodox Islamism, Jesus was openly held up as a prophet, although,
secretly, indifference to all religion was inculcated. The Templars, as
far as can be discovered, were anti-Christian deists ; Loiseleur considers
that their ideas were derived from Gnostic or Manichean dualists--Cathari,
Paulicians, or more particularly Bogomils, of which a brief account must
be given here.
The Paulicians who flourished about the seventh century A.D., bore a
resemblance to the Cainites and Ophites in their detestation of the
Demiurgus and in the corruption of their morals. Later, in the ninth
century, the Bogomils, whose name signifies in Slavonic " friends of God,"
and who had migrated from Northern Syria and Mesopotamia to the Balkan
Peninsula, particularly Thrace, appeared as a further development of
Manichean dualism. Their doctrine may be summarized thus :
God, the Supreme Father, has two sons, the elder Satanael,
the younger Jesus. To Satanael, who sat on the right hand of God,
belonged the right of governing the celestial world, but, filled with
pride, he rebelled against his Father and fell from Heaven. Then, aided
by the companions of his fall, he created the visible world, image of
the celestial, having like the other its sun, moon, and stars, and last
he created man and the serpent which became his minister. Later Christ
came to earth in order to show men the way to Heaven, but His death was
ineffectual, for even by descending into Hell He could not wrest the
power from Satanael, i.e. Satan.

Baphomet making the sign
of St. John | This belief in the
impotence of Christ and the necessity therefore for placating Satan, not
only " the Prince of this world," but its creator, led to the further
doctrine that Satan, being all-powerful, should be adored. Nicetas
Choniates, a Byzantine historian of the twelfth century, described the
followers of this cult as " Satanists," because "considering Satan
all-powerful they worshipped him lest he might do them harm"; subsequently
they were known as Luciferians, their doctrine (as stated by Neuss and
Vitoduranus) being that Lucifer was unjustly driven out of Heaven, that
one day he will ascend there again and be restored to his former glory and
power in the celestial world.
The Bogomils and Luciferians were thus closely akin, but whilst the
former divided their worship between God and His two sons, the latter
worshipped Lucifer only, regarding the material world as his work and
holding that by indulging the flesh they were propitiating their
Demon-Creator. It was said that a black cat, the symbol of Satan, figured
in their ceremonies as an object of worship, also that at their horrible
nocturnal orgies sacrifices of children were made and their blood used for
making the Eucharistic bread of the sect.(47)
Loiseleur arrives at the conclusion that the secret doctrine of the
Templars was derived from the Bogomils :
Thus the Templars recognize at the same time a good god,
incommunicable to man and consequently without symbolic representation,
and a bad god, to whom they give the features of an idol of fearful
aspect.(48)
Their most fervent worship was addressed to this god of evil, who alone
could enrich them. " They said with the Luciferians : ' The elder son of
God, Satanael or Lucifer alone has a right to the homage of mortals ;
Jesus his younger brother does not deserve this honour.' "(49)
Although we shall not find these ideas so clearly defined in the
confessions of the Knights, some colour is lent to this theory by those
who related that the reason given to them for not believing in Christ was
" that He was nothing, He was a false prophet and of no value, and that
they should believe in the Higher God of Heaven who could save them."(50)
According to Loiseleur, the idol they were taught to worship, the bearded
head known to history as Baphomet, represented " the inferior god,
organizer and dominator of the material world, author of good and evil
here below, him by whom evil was introduced into creation."(51)
The etymology of the word Baphomet is difficult to discover ; Raynouard
says it originated with two witnesses heard at Carcassonne who spoke of "
Figura Baffometi," and suggests hat it was a corruption of " Mohammed,"
whom the Inquisitors wished to make the Knights confess they were taught
to adore.(52) But this surmise with regard to the intentions of he
Inquisitors seems highly improbable, since they must have been well aware
that, as Wilcke points out, the Moslems forbid all idols.(53) For this
reason Wilcke concludes that the Mohammedanism of the Templars was
combined with Cabalism and that their idol was in reality the
macroprosopos, or head of the Ancient of Ancients, represented as an old
man with a long beard, or sometimes as three heads in one, which has
already been referred to under the name of the Long Face in the first
chapter of this book--a theory which would agree with Eliphas Lévi's
assertion that the Templars were initiated into the mysterious doctrines
of the Cabala."(54) But Lévi goes on to define this teaching under the
name of Johannism. It is here that we reach a further theory with regard
to the secret doctrine of the Templars--the most important of all, since
it emanates from masonic and neo-Templar sources, thus effectually
disposing of the contention that the charge brought against the Order of
apostasy from the Catholic faith is solely the invention of Catholic
writers.
In 1842 the Freemason Ragon related that the Templars learnt from the "
initiates of the East " a certain Judaic doctrine which was attributed to
St. John the Apostle ; therefore " they renounced the religion of St.
Peter and became Johannites.(55) Eliphas Lévi expresses the same opinion.
Now, these statements are apparently founded on a legend which was
first published early in the nineteenth century, when an association
calling itself the Ordre du Temple and claiming direct descent from the
original Templar Order published two works, the Manuel des Chevaliers de
l'Ordre du Temple in 1811, and the Lévitikon, in 1831, together with a
version of the Gospel of St. John differing from the Vulgate. These books,
which appear to have been printed only for private circulation amongst the
members and are now extremely rare, relate that the Order of the Temple
had never ceased to exist since the days of Jacques du Molay, who
appointed Jacques de Larménie his successor in office, and from that time
onwards a line of Grand Masters had succeeded each other without a break
up to the end of the eighteenth century, when it ceased for a brief period
but was reinstituted under a new Grand Master, Fabré Palaprat, in 1804.
Besides publishing the list of all Grand Masters, known as the " Charter
of Larmenius," said to have been preserved in the secret archives of the
Temple, these works also reproduce another document drawn from the same
repository describing the origins of the Order. This manuscript, written
in Greek on parchment, dated 1154, purports to be partly taken from a
fifth-century MS. and relates that Hugues de Payens, first Grand Master of
the Templars, was initiated in 1118--that is to say, in the year the Order
was founded--into the religious doctrine of " the Primitive Christian
Church" by its Sovereign Pontiff and Patriarch, Theoclet, sixtieth in
direct succession from St. John the Apostle. The history of the Primitive
Church is then given as follows :
Moses was initiated in Egypt. Profoundly versed in the
physical, theological, and metaphysical mysteries of the priests, he
knew how to profit by these so as to surmount the power of the Mages and
deliver his companions. Aaron, his brother, and the chiefs of the
Hebrews became the depositaries of his doctrine. . . .
The Son of God afterwards appeared on the scene of the world. . . .
He was brought up at the school of Alexandria. . . . Imbued with a
spirit wholly divine, endowed with the most astounding qualities
(dispositions), he was able to reach all the degrees of Egyptian
initiation. On his return to Jerusalem, he presented himself before the
chiefs of the Synagogue. . . . Jesus Christ, directing the fruit of his
lofty meditations towards universal civilization and the happiness of
the world, rent the veil which concealed the truth from the peoples. He
preached the love of God, the love of one's neighbour, and equality
before the common Father of all men. . . .
Jesus conferred evangelical initiation on his apostles and disciples.
He transmitted his spirit to them, divided them into several order after
the practice of John, the beloved disciple the apostle of fraternal
love, whom he had instituted Sovereign Pontiff and Patriarch. . . .
Here we have the whole Cabalistic legend of a secret doctrine
descending from Moses, of Christ as an Egyptian initiate and founder of a
secret order--a theory, of course, absolutely destructive of belief in His
divinity. The legend of the Ordre du Temple goes on to say :
Up to about the year 1118 (i.e. the year the Order of the
Temple was founded) the mysteries and the hierarchic Order of the
initiation of Egypt, transmitted to the Jews by Moses, then to the
Christians by J.C., were religiously preserved by the successors of St.
John the Apostle. These mysteries and initiations, regenerated by the
evangelical initiation (or baptism), were a sacred trust which the
simplicity of the primitive and unchanging morality of the Brothers of
the East had preserved from all adulteration. . . .
The Christians, persecuted by the infidels, appreciating the courage
and piety of these brave crusaders, who, with the sword in one hand and
the cross in the other, flew to the defence of the holy places, and, above
all, doing striking justice to the virtues and the ardent charity of
Hugues de Payens, held it their duty to confide to hands so pure the
treasures of knowledge acquired throughout so many centuries, sanctified
by the cross, the dogma and the morality of the Man-God. Hugues was
invested with the Apostolic Patriarchal power and placed in the legitimate
order of the successors of St. John the apostle or the evangelist.
Such is the origin of the foundation of the Order of the Temple and of
the fusion in this Order of the different kinds of initiation of the
Christians of the East designated under the title of Primitive Christians
or Johannites.
It will be seen at once that all this story is subtly subversive of
true Christianity, and that the appellation of Christians applied to the
Johannites is an imposture. Indeed Fabré Palaprat, Grand Master of the
Ordre du Temple in 1804, who in his book on the Templars repeats the story
contained in the Lévitikon and the Manuel des Chevaliers du Temple, whilst
making the same profession of " primitive Christian " doctrines descending
from St. John through Theoclet and Hugues de Payens to the Order over
which he presides, goes on to say that the secret doctrine of the Templars
" was essentially contrary to the canons of the Church of Rome and that it
is principally to this fact that one must attribute the persecution of
which history has preserved the memory."(56) The belief of the Primitive
Christians, and consequently that of the Templars, with regard to the
miracles of Christ is that He " did or may have done extraordinary or
miraculous things," and that since " God can do things incomprehensible to
human intelligence," the Primitive Church venerates " all the acts of
Christ as they are described in the Gospel, whether it considers them as
acts human science or whether as acts of divine power."(57) Belief in the
divinity of Christ is thus left an open question, and the same attitude is
maintained towards the Resurrection, of which the story is omitted in the
Gospel of St. John possessed by the Order. Fabré Palaprat further admits
that the gravest accusations brought against the Templars were founded on
facts which he attempts to explain away in the following manner :
The Templars having in 1307 carefully abstracted all the
manuscripts composing the secret archives of the Order from the search
made by authority, and these authentic manuscripts having been
preciously preserved since that period, we have to-day the certainty
that the Knights endured a great number of religious and moral trials
before reaching the different degrees of initiation : thus, for example,
the recipient might receive the injunction under pain of death to
trample on the crucifix or to worship an idol, but if he yielded to the
terror which they sought to inspire in him he was declared unworthy of
being admitted to the higher grades of the Order. One can imagine in
this way how beings, too feeble or too immoral to endure the trials of
initiation, may have accused the Templars of giving themselves up to
infamous practices and of having superstitious beliefs.
It is certainly not surprising that an Order which gave such
injunctions as these, for whatever purpose, should have become the object
of suspicion.
Eliphas Lévi, who, like Ragon, accepts the statements of the Ordre du
Temple concerning the " Johannite " origin of the Templars' secret
doctrine, is, however, not deceived by these professions of Christianity,
and boldly asserts that the Sovereign Pontiff Theoclet initiated Hugues de
Payens " into the mysteries and hopes of his pretended Church, he lured
him by the ideas of sacerdotal sovereignty and supreme royalty, he
indicated him finally as his successor. So the Order of the Knights of the
Temple was stained from its origin with schism and conspiracy against
Kings."(58) Further, Lévi relates that the real story told to initiates
concerning Christ was no other than the infamous Toledot Yeshu described
in the first chapter of this book, and which the Johannites dared to
attribute to St. John.(59) This would accord with the confession of the
Catalonian Knight Templar, Galcerandus de Teus, who stated that the form
of absolution in the Order was : " I pray God that He may pardon your sins
as He pardoned St. Mary Magdalene and the thief on the cross " ; but the
witness went on to explain :
By the thief of which the head of the Chapter speaks, is
meant, according to our statutes, that Jesus or Christ who was crucified
by the Jews because he was not God, and yet he said he was God and the
King of the Jews, which was an outrage to the true God who is in Heaven.
When Jesus, a few moments before his death, had his side pieced by the
lance of Longinus, he repented of having called himself God and King of
the Jews and he asked pardon of the true God ; then the true God
pardoned him. It is thus that we apply to the crucified Christ these
words : " as God pardoned the thief on the cross."(60)
Raynouard, who quotes this deposition, stigmatizes it as " singular and
extravagant " ; M. Matter agrees that it is doubtless extravagant, but
that " it merits attention. There was a whole system there, which was not
the invention of Galcerant."(61) Eliphas Lévi provides the clue to that
system and to the reason why Christ was described as a thief, by
indicating the Cabalistic legend wherein He was described as having stolen
the sacred Name from the Holy of Holies. Elsewhere he explains that the
Johannites " made themselves out to be the only people initiated into the
true mysteries of the religion of the Saviour. They professed to know the
real history of Jesus Christ, and by adopting part of Jewish traditions
and the stories of the Talmud, they made out that the facts related in the
Gospels "--that is to say, the Gospels accepted by the orthodox Church-- "
were only allegories of which St. John gives the key."(62)
But it is time to pass from legend to facts. For the whole story of the
initiation of the Templars by the " Johannites " rests principally on the
documents produced by the Ordre du Temple in 1811. According to the Abbés
Grégoire and Münter the authenticity and antiquity of these documents are
beyond dispute. Grégoire, referring to the parchment manuscript of the
Lévitikon and Gospel of St. John, says that " Hellenists versed in
palaeography believe this manuscript to be of the thirteenth century,
others declare it to be earlier and to go back to the eleventh
century."(63) Matter, on the other hand, quoting Münter's opinion that the
manuscripts in the archives of the modern Templars date from the
thirteenth century, observes that this is all a tissue of errors and that
the critics, including the learned Professor Thilo of Halle, have
recognized that the manuscript in question, far from belonging to the
thirteenth century, dates from the beginning of the eighteenth. From the
arrangement of the chapters of the Gospel, M. Matter arrives at the
conclusion that it was intended to accompany the ceremonies of some
masonic or secret society.(64) We shall return to this possibility in a
later chapter.
The antiquity of the manuscript containing the
history of the Templars thus remains an open question on which no one can
pronounce an opinion without having seen the original. In order, then, to
judge of the probability of the story that this manuscript contained it is
necessary to consult the facts of history and to discover what proof can
be found that any such sect as the Johannites existed at the time of the
Crusades or earlier. Certainly none is known to have been called by this
name or by one resembling it before 1622, when some Portuguese monks
reported the existence of a sect whom they described as " Christians of
St. John " inhabiting the banks of the Euphrates. The appellation appears,
however, to have been wrongly applied by the monks, for the sectarians in
question, variously known as the Mandæans, Mandaites, Sabians, Nazoreans,
etc. called themselves Mandaï Iyahi, that is to say, the disciples, or
rather the wise men, of John, the word mandaï being derived from the
Chaldean word manda, corresponding to the Greek word , or wisdom.(65) The
multiplicity of names given to the Mandæans arises apparently from the
fact that in their dealings with other communities they took the name of
Sabians, whilst they called the wise and learned amongst themselves
Nazoreans.(66) The sect formerly inhabited the banks of the Jordan, but
was driven out by the Moslems, who forced them to retire to Mesopotamia
and Babylonia, where they particularly affected the neighbourhood of
rivers in order to be able to carry out their peculiar baptismal
rites.(67)
There can be no doubt that the doctrines of the Mandæans do resemble
the description of the Johannite heresy as given by Eliphas Lévi, though
not by the Ordre du Temple, in that, the Mandæans professed to be the
disciples of St. John--the Baptist, however, not the Apostle--but were at
the same time, the enemies of Jesus Christ. According to the Mandæans'
Book of John (Sidra d'Yahya), Yahya, that is to say, St. John, baptized
myriads of men during forty years in the Jordan. By a mistake--or in
response to a written mandate from heaven saying, " Yahya, baptize the
liar in the Jordan "--he baptized the false prophet Yishu Meshiha (the
Messiah Jesus), son of the devil Ruha Kadishta.(68) The same idea is found
in another book of the sect called the " Book of Adam," which represents
Jesus as the perverter of St. John's doctrine and the disseminator of
iniquity and perfidy throughout the world.(69) The resemblance between all
this and the legends of the Talmud, the Cabala, and the Toledot Yeshu is
at once apparent ; moreover, the Mandæans claim for the " Book of Adam "
the same origin as the Jews claimed for the Cabala, namely, that it was
delivered to Adam by God through the hands of the angel Razael.(70) This
book, known to scholars as the Codex Nasarous, is described by Münter as "
a sort of mosaic without order, without method, where one finds mentioned
Noah, Abraham, Moses, Solomon, the Temple of Jerusalem, St. John the
Baptist, Jesus Christ, the Christians, and Mohammed." M. Matter, whilst
denying any proof of the Templar succession from the Mandæans,
nevertheless gives good reason for believing that the sect itself existed
from the first centuries of the Christian era and that its books dated
from the eighth century(71) ; further that these Mandæans or
Nazoreans--not to be confounded with the pre-Christian Nazarenes or
Christian Nazarenes--were Jews who revered St. John the Baptist as the
prophet of ancient Mosaism, but regarded Jesus Christ as a false Messiah
sent by the powers of darkness.(72) Modern Jewish opinion confirms this
affirmation of Judaic inspiration and agrees with Matter in describing the
Mandæans as Gnostics : " Their sacred books are in an Aramaic dialect,
which has close affinities with that of the Talmud of Babylon. " The
Jewish influence is distinctly visible in the Mandæan religion. It is
essentially of the type of ancient Gnosticism, traces of which are found
in the Talmud, the Midrash, and in a modified form the later Cabala."(73)
It may then be regarded as certain that a sect existed long before the
time of the Crusades corresponding to the description of the Johannites
given by Eliphas Lévi in that it was Cabalistic, anti-Christian, yet
professedly founded on the doctrines of one of the St. Johns. Whether it
was by this sect that the Templars were indoctrinated must remain an open
question. M. Matter objects that the evidence lacking to such a conclusion
lies in the fact that the Templars expressed no particular reverence for
St. John ; but Loiseleur asserts that the Templars did prefer the Gospel
of St. John to that of the other evangelists, and that modern masonic
lodges claiming descent from the Templars possess a special version of
this Gospel said to have been copied from the original on Mount Athos.(74)
It is also said that " Baphomets " were preserved in the masonic lodges of
Hungary, where a debased form of Masonry, known as Johannite Masonry,
survives to this day. If the Templar heresy was that of the Johannites,
the head in question might possibly represent that of John the Baptist,
which would accord with the theory that the word Baphomet was derived from
Greek words signifying baptism of wisdom. This would, moreover, not be
incompatible with Loiseleur's theory of an affinity between the Templars
and the Bogomils, for the Bogomils also possessed their own version of the
Gospel of St. John, which they placed on the heads of their neophytes
during the ceremony of initiation, giving as the reason for the peculiar
veneration they professed for its author that they regarded St. John as
the servant of the Jewish God Satanael.(75) Eliphas Lévi even goes so far
as to accuse the Templars of following the occult practices of the
Luciferians, who carried the doctrines of the Bogomils to the point of
paying homage to the powers of darkness :
Let us declare for the edification of the vulgar . . . and
for the greater glory of the Church which has persecuted the Templars,
burned the magicians and excommunicated the Free-Masons, etc., let us
say boldly and loudly, that all the initiates of the occult sciences . .
. have adored, do and will always adore that which is signified by this
frightful symbol [the Sabbatic goat].(76) Yes, in our profound
conviction, the Grand Masters of the Order of the Templars adored
Baphomet and caused him to be adored by their initiates.(77)
It will be seen, then, that the accusation of heresy brought against
the Templars does not emanate solely from the Catholic Church, but also
from the secret societies. Even our Freemasons, who, for reasons I shall
show later, have generally defended the Order, are now willing to admit
that there was a very real case against them. Thus Dr. Ranking, who has
devoted many years of study to the question, has arrived at the conclusion
that Johannism is the real clue to the Templar heresy. In a very
interesting paper published in the masonic Journal Ars Qautuor
Coronatorum, he observes that " the record of the Templars in Palestine is
one long tale of intrigue and treachery on the part of the Order," and
finally :
That from the very commencement of Christianity there has
been transmitted through the centuries a body of doctrine incompatible
with Christianity in the various official Churches. . .
That the bodies teaching these doctrines professed to do so on the
authority of St. John, to whom, as they claimed, the true secrets had
been committed by the Founder of Christianity.
That during the Middle Ages the main support of the Gnostic bodies
and the main repository of this knowledge was the Society of the
Templars.(78)
What is the explanation of this choice of St. John for the propagation
of anti-Christian doctrines which we shall find continuing up to the
present day ? What else than the method of perversion which in its extreme
form becomes Satanism, and consists in always selecting the most sacred
things for the purpose of desecration ? Precisely then because the Gospel
of St. John is the one of all the four which most insists on the divinity
of Christ, the occult anti-Christian sects have habitually made it the
basis of their rites.

So Mote It
Be
References
1. Développement des abus introduits dans la Franc-maçonnerie,
p.56(1780).
2. Jules Loiseleur, La doctrine secrète des Templiers, p. 89
3. Dr. F.W. Bussell, D.D., Religious Thought And Heresy in the Middle
Ages, pp. 796, 797 note.
4. G. Mollat, Les Papes d'Avignon, p. 233 (1912).
5. Michelet, Procès des Templiers, I.2 (1841). This work largely
consists of the publication in Latin of the Papal bulls and trials of the
Templars before the Papal Commission in Paris contained in the original
document once reserved at Notre Dame. Michelet says that another copy was
sent to the Pope and kept under the triple key of the Vatican. Mr. E.J.
Castle, K.C, however, says that he has enquired about the whereabouts of
this copy and it is no longer in the Vatican (Proceedings against the
Templars in France and in England for Heresy, republished from Ars Quatuor
Coronatorum, Vol. XX. Part III. p. 1).
6. M. Raynouard, Monuments historiques relatifs à la condamnation des
Chevaliers du Temple et de l'abolition de leur Ordre, p, 17 (1813).
7. Michelet, op. cit. I. 2 (1841).
8. Michelet, Procès des Templiers, II. 333.
9. Ibid., 295, 333.
10. Ibid., 290, 299, 300.
11. " Dixit per juramentum suum quod ita est terribilis figure et
aspectus quod videbatur sibi quod esset figura cujusdam demonis, dicendo
gallice d'un maufé, et quod quocienscumque videbat ipsum tantus timor eum
invadebat, quod vix poterat illud respicere nisi cum maximo timore et
tremore."--Ibid., p. 364.
12. Ibid, pp. 284, 338. " Ipse minabatur sibi quod nisi faceret, ipse
ponereteum in carcere perpetuo."--Ibid., p. 307.
13. " Et fuit territus plus quam unquam fuit in vita sua : et statim
unus rum accepit eum per gutur, dicens quod oportebat quod hoc faceret,
vel moreretur."--Ibid., p. 296.
14. Mollat, op. cit., p. 241.
15. Procès des Templiers, I. 3 : Mr. E.J. Castle, op. cit. Part III. p.
3. (It should be noted that Mr. Castle's paper is strongly in favour of
the Templars.)
16. Ibid., I. 4.
17. Procès des Templiers, I. 5.
18. Michelet in Preface to Vol. I. of Procès des Templiers.
19. Jules Loiseleur, La Doctrine Secrète des Templiers, p. 40 (1872).
20. Ibid., p. 16.
21. Proceedings against the Templars in France and England for Heresy,
by E.J. Castle Part I. p. 16, quoting Rymer, Vol. III. p. 37.
22. Ibid., Part II. p.1.
23. Ibid., Part II. pp. 25-7.
24. Ibid., Part II. p. 30.
25. " Another witness of the Minor Friars told the Commissioners he had
heard from Brother Robert of Tukenham that a Templar had a son who saw
through a partition that they asked one professing if he believed in the
Crucified, showing him the figure, whom they killed upon his refusing to
deny Him, but the boy, some time after, being asked if he wished to be a
Templar said no, because he had seen this thing done. Saying this, he was
killed by his father. . . . The twenty-third witness, a Knight, said that
his uncle entered the Order healthy and joyfully, with his birds and dogs,
and the third day following he was dead, and he suspected it was on
account of the crimes he had heard of them ; and that the cause of his
death was he would not consent to the evil deeds perpetrated by other
brethren."--Ibid, Part II. p. 13.
26. F. Funck-Brentano, Le Moyen Age, p. 396 (1922).
27. Ibid., p. 384.
28. F. Funck-Brentano, op. cit., p. 396.
29. Ibid., p. 387.
30. Dean Milman, History of Latin Christianity, VII. 213.
31. E.J. Castle, op. cit., Part I. p. 22.
32. Thus even M. Mollat admits : " En tout cas leurs dépositions,
défavorables à l'Ordre, l'impressionnèrent si vivement que, par une série
de graves mesures, il abandonna une à une toutes ses oppositions."--Les
Papes d'Avignon, p. 242.
33. F. Funck-Brentano, op. cit., p. 392.
34. E.J. Castle, Proceedings against the Templars, A.Q.C., Vol. XX.
Part III. p. 3.
35. Even Raynouard, the apologist of the Templars (op. cit., p. 19),
admits that, if less unjust and violent measures had been adopted, the
interest of the State and the safety of the throne might have justified
the abolition of the Order.
36. Funck-Brentano, op. cit., p. 386.
37. " The bourgeoisie, whenever it has conquered power, has destroyed
all feudal, patriarchal, and idyllic relations. It has pitilessly torn
asunder all the many-coloured feudal bonds which united men to their '
natural superiors,' and has left no tie twixt man and man but naked
self-interest and callous cash payment."--The Communis Manifesto.
38. Eliphas Lévi, Histoire de la Magie, p. 273.
39. E.J. Castle, op. cit., A.Q.C., Vol. XX. Part I. p. 11.
40. Ibid., Part II. p. 24.
41. Loiseleur, op. cit., pp. 20, 21.
42. Histoire de la Magie, p. 277.
43. Dr. F.W. Bussell, Religious Thought and Heresy in the Middle Ages,
p. 803.
44. Les Sectes et Sociétés Secrètes, p. 85.
45. History of the Assassins, p. 80.
46. F.T.B. Clavel, Histoire Pittoresque de la Franc-Maçonnerie, p. 356
(1843).
47. Loiseleur, op. cit., p. 66.
48. Ibid., p. 143.
49. Ibid., p. 141.
50. " Dixit sibi quod non crederet in eum, quia nichil erat, et quod
erat quidam falsus propheta, et nichil valebat ; immo crederet in Deum
Celi superiorem qui poterat salvare."--Michelet, Procès des Templiers, II.
404. Cf. ibid., p. 384 : " Quidem falsus propheta est ; credas solummodo
in Deum Celi, et non in istum."
51. Loiseleur, op. cit. p. 37.
52. Raynouard, op. cit., p. 301.
53. Wilhelm Ferdinand Wilcke, Geschichte des Tempelherrenordens, II.
302-12 (1827).
54. Eliphas Lévi, Histoire de la Magie, p. 273.
55. J. M. Ragon, Cours Philosophique et Interprétatif des Initiations
anciennes et modernes, édition sacrée à l'usage des Loges et des Maçons
SEULEMENT (5,842), p. 37. In a footnote on the same page Ragon, however,
refers to John the Baptist in this connexion.
56. J.B. Fabré Palaprat, Recherches historiques sur les Templiers, p.
31 (1835).
57. Ibid., p. 37.
58. Eliphas Lévi, Histoire de la Magie, p. 277.
59. Eliphas Lévi, La Science des Esprits, pp. 26-9, 40, 41.
60. Raynouard, op. cit., p. 281.
61. Matter, Histoire du Gnosticisme, III. 330.
62. Eliphas Lévi, Histoire de la Magie, p. 275.
63. M. Grégoire, Histoire des Sectes religieuses, II. 407 (1828).
64. Matter, Histoire du Gnosticisme, III. 323.
65. Ibid., III. p. 120.
66. Jewish Encyclopodia, article on Mandæans.
67. Grégoire, op. cit., IV. 241.
68. Jewish Encyclopodia, and Hastings' Encyclopodia of Religion and
Ethics, articles on Mandæans.
69. Codex Nasarous, Liber Adam appellatus, trans. from the Syriac into
Latin by Matth. Norberg (1815), Vol. I. 109 : " Sed, Johanne hac ætate
Hierosolymæ nato, Jordanumque deinceps legente, et baptismum peragente,
veniet Jeschu Messias, summisse se gerens, ut baptismo Johannis
baptizetur, et Johannis per sapientiam sapiat. Pervertet vero doctrinam
Johannis et mutato Jordani baptismo, perversisque justitiæ dictis,
iniquitatem et perfidiam per mundum disseminabit."
70. Article on the Codex Nasarous by Silvestre de Sacy in the Journal
des Savants for November 1819, p. 651 ; cf. passage in the Zohar, section
Bereschith, folio 55.
71. Matter, op. cit., III. 119, 120. De Sacy (op. cit., p. 654) also
attributes the Codex Nasarous to the eighth century.
72. Matter, op. cit., III. 118.
73. Jewish Encyclopodia, article on Mandæans.
74. Loiseleur, op. cit., p. 52.
75. Ibid., p. 51 ; Matter, op. cit., III. 305.
76. The Sabbatic goat is clearly of Jewish origin. Thus the Zohar
relates that " Tradition teaches us that when the Israelites evoked evil
spirits, these appeared to them under the form of he-goats and made known
to them all that they wished to learn."--Section Ahre Moth, folio 70a (de
Pauly, V. 191).
77. Eliphas Lévi, Dogme et Rituel de la Haute Magie, II. 209.
78. Some Notes on various Gnostic Sects and their Possible Influence on
Free-masonry, by D.F. Ranking, reprinted from A.Q.C., Vol. XXIV. pp. 27,
28 (1911).
The Templars Chapter III Secret Societies and Subversive
Movements Nesta Webster
|