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The Emergence of the Military Order in the Twelfth Century
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 March 2011
Extract
At the time when encyclopaedic works on the military orders began to be produced in the late sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, it was widely held that the military order was an institution which had existed for most of the Christian era. Many of the orders catalogued in these volumes were reported to have been founded well before the period of the crusades, although there were often conflicting opinions about the precise antiquity of a particular foundation. Various dates were, for example, given for the establishment of the military order which the knights of the Holy Sepulchre were thought to constitute: although some held that it had been founded shortly after the first crusade, its creation was attributed by others to St James the Less in the first century A.D., while its origins were also placed in the time of Constantine and in that of Charlemagne. The foundation of the order of Santiago, which in fact occurred in 1170, was often traced back to the ninth century; yet while some linked it with the supposed discovery of the body of St James during the reign of Alfonso 11, others associated it with the legendary victory of Clavijo, which was placed in the time of Ramiro i. The accumulation of myth and tradition recorded in these encyclopaedias has exercised a prolonged influence on historians of the military orders: disproof has not always been sufficient to silence a persistent tradition. It is, nevertheless, clear that the Christian military order, in the sense of an institution whose members combined a military with a religious way of life, in fact originated during the earlier part of the twelfth century in the Holy Land.
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References
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28 Règie du Temple, 14, 19–20.
29 Historia ecclesiastica, xii. 29, ed. M. Chibnall, Oxford 1978, vi. 310.
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32 Borrowings from the Benedictine rule are indicated in the text of the Templar rule published by Schnürer, Templerregel, 130–53.
33 Forey, Templars, 283. In any discussion of those serving for a term with the Templars the varied links existing between outsiders and monasteries in the West should not be ignored.
34 Alexiad, x. 8, trans. E. A. S. Dawes, London 1967, 256–7.
35 In some orders members were commanded to have their hair trimmed so that their vision would be unimpaired, but this did not constitute a formal ritual: Règle du Temple, 32 cap. 28 (Lat.), 21 (Fr.); Perlbach, M., Die Statutcn des Deutschen Ordens, Halle 1890, 40 cap. 12Google Scholar; see also O’Callaghan, , ‘Affiliation’, Analecta Sacri Ordinis Cisterciensis, xvi (1960), 1Google Scholar.
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37 P.L., ccxvi. 54–6. That Innocent does not employ a more comprehensive term than plerisque is probably to be explained by the fact that the question at issue was the use of force against Christians.
38 Cf. R. Grégoire, ‘Saeculi actibus se facere alienum. Le “mépris du monde” dans la Littérature monastique latine médiévale’, Revue d’Ascétique et de Mystique, xli (1965), 251–87.
39 Commentaria in regulam sancti Benedicti, in P.L., cii. 696.
40 Carmen ad Rotbertum regent, lines 155–6, ed. C. Carozzi (Classiques de 1’histoire de France a u moyen âge, xxxii), Paris 1979, 12.
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45 i. 8, in P.L., cxxxiii. 647.
46 Liber de vita Christiana, vii. 28, ed. E. Perels, Berlin 1930, 248–9. The importance of Gregory vii's pontificate in this context has been discussed by Robinson, I. S., ‘Gregory vii and the soldiers of Christ’, History, lviii (1973), 169–92CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Before the end of the eleventh century the practice had begun of blessing a knight’s sword ‘quatinus defensio atque protectio possit esse aecclesiarum, viduarum, orphanorum omniumque Deo servientium contra sevitiam paganorum, aliisque insidiantibus sit pavor, terror et formido’: Flori, J., ‘Chevalerie et liturgie. Remise des armes et vocabulaire “chevaleresque” dans les sources liturgiques du IXe au XlVe siècle’, Le Moyen Âge, lxxxiv (1978), 275–8, 436–8Google Scholar.
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58 The subject of conversion is mentioned only very rarely in documents concerning the military orders: Martin, Orígenes, 248–54, doc. 73; Gallego Blanco, Rule of St James, 110, cap. 30.
59 Although in chapter three of the De laude novae militiae St Bernard argued that infidels should not be killed if they could be prevented in other ways from oppressing the faithful, he had earlier appeared to encourage the Templars to seek to kill when he wrote of the miles Christi that ‘cum occidit malefactorem, non homicida, sed, ut ita dixerim, malicida…Mors ergo quam irrogat, Christi est lucrum…In morte pagani christianus gloriatur, quia Christus glorificatur’: Opera, iii. 217.
60 Hiestand, Papsturkunden, 204–10, 214–15, 223, 233–5, docs. 3, 8, 17, 27.
61 Ibid., 330–1, 379–81, docs. 138, 198.
62 Règle du Temple, 58, cap. 48 (Lat.), 56 (Fr.).
63 González, Reino de Castilla, ii. 323–4, 329–30, 376–8, 404–5, docs. 195, 199, 225, 244.
64 Gallego Blanco, Rule of St James, 96, cap. 10; Lomax, Orden de Santiago, 223, cap. 11.
65 Règle du Temple, 120–7, caps. 155–68.
66 Summa theologiae, ii. ii. 188. 6, Blackfriars edn, xlvii, London 1973, 206; cf. John of Salisbury, Policralicus, vii. 21, ed. Webb, ii. 198
67 On martyrdom see Rousset, Première croisade, 47–8, 81–3, 121–3; references are also common in documents referring to the military orders: St Bernard, De laude novae militiae, cap. 1, in Opera, iii. 215; González, Reino de Castillo, ii. 746, doc. 432; Gallego Blanco, Rule of St James, 78.
68 Hagenmeyer, Epistulae, 137; Baldric of Dol, Historia Jerosolimitana, i. 4, in R.H.C. Occ, iv. 15; see also Riley-Smith, J., ‘Crusading as an act of love’, History, lxv (1980), 177–92CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
69 Hiestand, Papsturkunden, 204–10, doc. 3. John xv. 13 was also quoted by many others with reference to the military orders: Ibid., 386, doc. 208; Letters of Peter the Venerable, ed. G. Constable, Cambridge, Mass. 1967, i. 407–9, ep. 172; Gallego Blanco, Rule of St James, 95, cap. 9; Lomax, Orden de Santiago, 223, cap. 10; Cartulaire de la commanderie des Templiers de Sommereux, ed. A. de Menche de Loisne, Paris 1924, 11–12, 70–2, docs. 6, 53–4.
70 Cf. the comment made, though in a different context, by the author of the Libellus de diversis ordinibus etprofessionibus qui sunt in aecclesia, ed. G. Constable and B. Smith, Oxford 1972, 40–2: ‘Aequalem enim uideo esse misericordiam et in defensandis pro posse ab iniquis pauperibus, et in nutriendis uel suscipiendis hominibus’. He was not, however, referring to the use of force.
71 Gesta Dei per Francos, i. I, in R.H.C. Occ, iv. 124.
72 Liber de doctrina, cap. 63, ed. J. Becquet, Scriptores ordinis Grandimontensis (Corpus Christianorum, Continuatio Mediaevalis, viii), Turnhout 1968, 33.
73 St Bernard, De laude novae militiae, cap. 1, in Opera, iii. 214. J. Fleckenstein, ‘Die Rechtfertigung der geistlichen Ritterorden nach der Schrift “De laude novae militiae” Bernhards von Clairvaux’, Die geistlichen Ritterorden Europas, ed. J. Fleckenstein and M. Hellmann (Vorträge und Forschungen, xxvi), Sigmaringen 1980, 18–21, argues that, despite the christianising of knighthood and developments in monasticism, the combining of a military and religious way of life was at variance with accepted norms in the West in the early twelfth century: it was the need to protect pilgrims which led Hugh of Payns and his followers to adopt a new way of life. But he does not explain why men who had recently come from the West should have formed a religious community for this purpose, if it was out of keeping with western views.
74 Liber miraculorum sancte Fidis, i. 26, ed. A. Bouillet, Paris, 1897, 66–70.
75 Raoul Glaber: les cinq limes de ses histoires, ii. 9, ed. M. Prou, Paris 1886, 44–5.
76 Anselm of Liège, Gesta episcoporum Leodiensium, cap. 55, ed. G. H. Pertz, M.G.H., Scriptores, Hanover 1846, vii. 222.
77 Cirot de la Ville, Histoire de I’abbqye et congrégation de Notre-Dame de la Grande Sauve, Paris 1844, i. 297–9, 497–8.
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80 Of the two recorded acquisitions which can be assigned to the earlier 1120s, one was from Fulk of Anjou, who had recently been out to the East, and the other was of property near Marseille, an obvious point of contact between East and West: Ordericus Vitalis, Historia ecclesiastica, xii. 29, ed. Chibnall, vi. 310; Albon, Cartulaire, 1–2 doc. 2. Ordericus says that many followed Fulk’s example, but no documentary evidence survives from the earlier 1120s.
81 See the documents published by Albon, Cartulaire; early expansion in France has been traced by Carrière, V., ‘Les Débuts de l'ordre du Temple en France’, Le Moyen Âge, xxvii (1914), 311–21Google Scholar.
82 Règle du Temple, 16–18.
83 See also t he letter to Hugh of Payns from Guigues of Chartreux: Lettres des premiers chartreux (Sources chrétiennes, lxxxviii), Paris 1962, i. 154–60.
84 Opera, iii. 213.
85 See, for example, Peter the Venerable’s comments at the end of his Summa totius haeresis Saracenorum: Kritzeck, J., Peter the Venerable and Islam, Princeton 1964, 211CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
86 Ep. 31, in Opera, vii. 85–6; cf. E. Vacandard, Vie de Saint Bernard, Paris 1927, i. 236–7; Bulst-Thiele, Sacrae domus magistri, 23–4.
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88 Opera, iii. 214.
89 Claims of this kind were made for the Hospital of St John in the twelfth century: Riley-Smith, J., The Knights of St John in Jerusalem and Cyprus, c. 1050–1310, London 1967, 32–3CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
90 Opera, iii. 219.
91 Dialogues, i. 1, ed. Salet, 34; cf. B. Smalley, ‘Ecclesiastical attitudes to novelty, c. 1 100-c. 1250’, Church, Society and Politics (Studies.in Church History, xii), Oxford 1975, 119–25.
92 Leclercq, ‘Un Document’, 87; Sclafert, ‘Lettre inédite’, 292.
93 At Clermont in 1095 spiritual rewards were offered only to those who went on crusade ‘pro sola devotione, non pro honoris vel pecuniae adeptione’: Mansi, Collectio, xx. 816.
94 Martín, Origenes, 248–54, doc. 73.
95 Gallego Blanco, Rule ofSt James, 110–12, caps. 30–1; Lomax, Orden de Santiago, 225–6, caps. 34–5.
96 Pitra, J. B., Analecta novissima: Spicilegii Solesmensis altera continuatio, Paris 1888, ii. 420Google Scholar.
97 Leclercq, ‘Un Document’, 87; Sclafert, ‘Lettre inedite’, 292.
98 Leclercq, ‘Un Document’, 88; Sclafert, ‘Lettre inedite’, 294, 296.
99 De laude novae militiae, cap. 3, in Opera, iii. 218.
100 Dialogues, i. 10, ed. Salet, 100.
101 Hiestand, Papsturkunden, 204–10, doc. 3.
102 Opera, iii. 217.
103 Ep. 363, in Opera, viii. 311–17.
104 Pitra, Analecta, ii. 419. An example of this kind of criticism is provided by Walter Map, De nugis curialium, i. 20, ed. Wright, 32.
105 Summa theologiae, n. ii. 188.3, Blackfriars edn, xlvii. 188–92.
106 Aquinas also considered the argument that fighting is incompatible with the religious life because the latter is a state of penance, and righting is forbidden to penitents. He pointed out that warfare in the service of God was sometimes imposed as a penance.
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