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Post by templarknight on May 12, 2009 12:20:09 GMT
Hello everyone.
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sushimo
New Member
One tequilla, Two Tequilla, Three Tequilla - Floor.
Posts: 243
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Post by sushimo on May 12, 2009 13:27:44 GMT
Hello! I somehow feel I know you already!
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sweet soul
New Member
Keep The Faith !
Posts: 5,106
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Post by sweet soul on May 12, 2009 19:25:07 GMT
A Templar Knight? How cool! :-)
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sweet soul
New Member
Keep The Faith !
Posts: 5,106
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Post by sweet soul on May 12, 2009 19:38:05 GMT
The Knights Templar trace their origin back to shortly after the First Crusade. Around 1119, a French nobleman from the Champagne region, Hugues de Payens, collected eight of his knight relatives including Godfrey de Saint-Omer, and began the Order, their stated mission to protect pilgrims on their journey to visit The Holy Places. They approached King Baldwin II of Jerusalem, who allowed them to set up headquarters on the southeastern side of the Temple Mount, inside the Al Aqsa Mosque. Since the Temple Mount was the site of biblical King Solomon's Temple the Order took the name "The Poor Knights of the Temple of King Solomon", which later became abreviated to "Knights Templar". Map of Jerusalem, showing the location of the Templar headquarters Little was heard of the Order for their first nine years. But in 1129, after they were officially sanctioned by the church at the Council of Troyes, they became very well-known in Europe. Their fundraising campaigns asked for donations of money, land, or noble-born sons to join the Order, with the implication that donations would help both to defend Jerusalem, and to ensure the charitable giver of a place in Heaven. The Order's efforts were helped substantially by the patronage of Bernard of Clairvaux, the leading churchman of the time, and a nephew of one of the original nine knights. The Order at its outset had been subject to strong criticism, especially of the concept that religious men could also carry swords. In response to these critics, the influential Bernard of Clairvaux wrote a multi-page treatise entitled De Laude Novae Militae ("In Praise of the New Knighthood"), in which he championed their mission and defended the idea of a military religious order by appealing to the long-held Christian theory of just war, which legitimated taking up the sword to defend the innocent and the Church from violent attack.
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sweet soul
New Member
Keep The Faith !
Posts: 5,106
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Post by sweet soul on May 12, 2009 19:46:20 GMT
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