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For several years before the Peasants' Revolt in England in 1381, a group
of disgruntled priests of the lower clergy had traveled the towns,
preaching against the riches and corruption of the church. During the
months before the uprising, secret meetings had been held throughout
central England by men weaving a network of communication. After the
revolt was put down, rebel leaders confessed to being agents of a great
Society, said to be based in London.
Another mystery was the concentrated and especially vicious attacks on the
religious order of the Knights Hospitaller of St. John, now known as the
Knights of Malta. Not only did the rebels seek out their properties for
vandalism and fire, but their prior was dragged from the Tower of London
to have his head struck off [along with the Archbishop of Canterbury and
the Treasurer] and placed on London Bridge, to the delight of the cheering
mob. One captured rebel leader, when asked the reasons for the revolt,
said, First, and above all the destruction of the Hospitallers.
Pope Clement V had directed that all of the extensive properties of the
Templars should be given to the Hospitallers almost seventy years before
the Peasant's Revolt.
Walter the Tyler exploded into English history with his mysterious
uncontested appointment as the supreme commander of the Peasants'
Rebellion on Friday, June 7, 1381, and left it as abruptly when his head
was struck off eight days later on Saturday, June 15. Absolutely nothing
is known of him before those eight days. That alone suggests that he was
not using his real name. In Freemasonry the Tyler, who must be a Master
Mason, is the sentry, the sergeant-at-arms.
Archbishop Courtenay, who became the leading churchman in England as
successor to the archbishop whose head had been lopped off by Wat Tyler,
identified the existence of the Lollard group in the spring of 1382, less
than a year after the Peasants' Rebellion. He drove them out of Oxford and
attempted to crush the entire movement. Lollardy, however, survived his
efforts, and those of other civil and church leaders, for the next two
centuries by the expedient of going underground. The Lollards conducted
business in 'conventicles', or secret meetings, in a network of cells
throughout the country, and they somehow gained the support of certain
members of the aristocracy, especially the knightly class.
In the early 1300s John Wycliffe, a professor of Divinity at Oxford
University, realized that the major problem with the Church in England was
that the Bible could only be read by the educated clergy and nobility
because it was written in Latin. Although the common man was generally
illiterate, Wycliffe decided that if an English translation of the Bible
was available, then general literacy might be stimulated as well.
As Wycliffe translated the Latin text, he organized a group called the
Order of Poor Preachers. They began distributing the new Bible through-out
England to anyone who could read. For the first time, it was possible for
the common man to know what the Bible actually said. Suddenly, peasants
flocked to the village greens and country parsonages to hear preachers
read aloud from the new English translation.
Opponents of Wycliffe's Order of Poor Preachers called them and their
followers 'Lollards', which means 'idle babblers'. The Lollards grew so
quickly, not only among the country folk, but even the artisans and
noblemen that one opponent wrote: 'Every second man one meets is a Lollard'.
The Lollards made such an impact in Britain that eventually Wycliffe's
words were banned and the Pope ordered him to Rome to undergo trial.
Although Wycliff died in 1384 of a stroke before he could undertake the
journey, Lollardy continued to grow. By 1425, forty-one years after his
death, the Roman Church was so infuriated with Wycliffe that they ordered
his bones exhumed and buried together with 200 books he had written.
The church at Kilmartin, near Loch Awe in Argyll, contains many examples
of Templar graves and tomb carvings showing Templar figures; furthermore,
there are many masonic graves in the churchyard.
There was a strong Templar connection with this area of Scotland from the
time when Hugues de Payen married Catherine de St Clair. In fact the first
Templar perceptory outside the Holy Land was built on St Clair land at a
site to the south of Edinburgh now known as Temple. By the beginning of
the fourteenth century the Templars had many estates in Scotland and a
great deal of affection and respect from the people.
The Templars reportedly provided assistance to William Wallace. There was
a battle between the Scots and the English at Roslin in 1303 which was won
with the support of Templar knights, led by a St Clair.
Part of the Templar fleet made the decision to head to Argyll and the
Firth of Forth, where they knew Robert the Bruce was engaged in a
rebellion against England. The fact that Robert the Bruce was
excommunicated combined with the long St Clair family links with Rosslyn
was the greatest attraction of Scotland as a sanctuary - it was one of the
few places on the planet where the Pope could not get at them. Because of
the war with the English the Templars also knew that as skilled warriors,
they would be received with open arms.
The Scots' greatest triumph was the Battle of Bannockburn on 6 November
1314. The battle is recorded as going strongly against Bruce's army until
an intervention by a unknown reserve force quickly turned the tide of the
whole battle and ensured victory for the Scots. Stories quickly spread
that these mysterious warriors had carried the Beausant (the battle flag
of the Templars).
The force was led by the Grand Master of the Scottish Templars, Sir
William St Clair.
Scotland was at war with England at the time [1307], and the consequent
chaos left little opportunity for implementing legal niceties. Thus the
Papal Bulls dissolving the Order were never proclaimed in Scotland - and
in Scotland, therefore, the Order was never technically dissolved.
According to legend - and there is evidence to support it - the Order
maintained itself as a coherent body in Scotland for another four
centuries."
At the bloody Battle of Verneuil in 1424, the Scottish contingents had
acquitted themselves with particular bravery and self-sacrifice. Indeed,
they were virtually annihilated, along with their commander, John Stewart.
The new French army created by Charles VII in 1445 consisted of fifteen 'compagnies
d'ordonnance' of 660 men each - a total of 9000 soldiers. Of these, the
Scottish Company - the 'Compagnie des Gendarmes Ecossois'...was explicitly
accorded premier rank over all other military units and formations, and
would, for example, pass first in all parades. The commanding officer of
the Scottish Company was also granted the rank of 'premier Master of Camp
of French Cavalry'.
In 1474, the numbers were definitely fixed - seventy-seven men plus their
commander in the King's Guard, and twenty-five men plus their commander in
the King's Bodyguard. With striking consistency, officers and commanders
of the Scots Guard were also made members of the Order of St Michael, a
branch of which was later established in Scotland.
The Scots Guard were, in effect, a neo-Templar institution, much more so
than such purely chivalric orders as the Garter, the Star and the Golden
Fleece.
The nobles comprising the Guard were heirs to original Templar traditions.
They were the means by which these traditions were returned to France and
planted there, to bear fruit some two centuries later. At the same time,
their contact with the houses of Guise and Lorraine exposed them in France
to another corpus of 'esoteric' tradition. Some of this corpus had already
found its way back to Scotland through Marie de Guis's marriage to James
V, but some of it was also to be brought back by the families constituting
the Scots Guard. The resulting amalgam was to provide the true nucleus for
a later order - the Freemasons [Scottish Rites].
As late as the end of the sixteenth century, no fewer than 519 sites in
Scotland were listed by the Hospitallers as 'Terrae Templariae' - part,
that is, of the self-contained and separately administered Templar
patrimony.According to legend - and there is evidence to support it - the
Order maintained itself as a coherent body in Scotland for another four
centuries.
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West to America
Josephus, the historian of the Jews in the first century, observed that
the Essenes believed that good souls have their inhabitation beyond the
ocean, in a region that is neither oppressed with storms of rain or snow
nor with intense heat, but refreshed by the gentle breathing of the west
wind which perpetually blows from the ocean. This idyllic land across the
sea to the west (or sometimes the north), is a belief common to many
cultures, from the Jews to the Greeks to the Celts. The Mandeans, however,
believe that the inhabitants of this far land are so pure that mortal eyes
will not see them and that this place is marked by a star, the name of
which is 'Merica'.
When the monk published the information in Introduction to Cosmography it
quickly became part of popular folklore.
If you look at a map of the road network of France, which the Templars had
built and policed, it is very noticeable that all the great long-distance
routes meet at one point - at La Rochelle, on the Atlantic coast. The
harbour of La Rochelle lies in a natural bay, is easyto defend, and it was
laid out and developed by the Templars very early in their history.
Furthermore, the Order owned a huge fleet, and other seaports in the
north, for links with England, and in the south, as a starting-point for
voyages to the Holy Land and the Mediterranean islands. La Rochelle,
however, is far too far north to serve as a viable port of embarkation for
Palestine, and the same applies to voyages to England. For this purpose,
it was far too far south. There were other ports from which one could
cross to Britain far more quickly and simply.
For this reason, La Rochelle must have had some very special significance.
The town was not merely the seat of a simple Commanderie, but also the
capital of a Templar Province. Its population grew quickly over the years.
In which direction did the Temple's shipping lines lead, if it was neither
to the north nor to the south? There can only be one possible explanation
for the position of this seaport - the Order's ships set course from it
due west, to America.
After Napoleon conquered Rome in 1809, some files were brought back to
Paris from the secret archives of the Vatican. Among these were a few
documents relating to the Templar trials. In one of these records was the
statement of Jean de Chalons, a member of the Order from Nemours in the
diocese of Troyes.
The Zeno Narrative tells of a mysterious ocean voyage west one hundred
years later by a Templar descendent, Henry Sinclair, Earl of Orkney.
Indian legends and a number of clues suggest that the landfall was Nova
Scotia.
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Preserving the Secrets
Rosslyn Chapel
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Freres Maçons
Jacques de Molay and his predecessors signed documents over the title
Magister Templi, Master of the Temple. And that temple, taking its name
from the Temple of Solomon, certainly was left unfinished upon the murder
of its masters, who also had been tortured to reveal their secrets by
three assassins who ultimately destroyed them. Not Jubela, Jubelo, and
Jubelum, but Philip the Fair of France, Pope Clement V, and the order of
the Knights of the Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem.
What the secret society needed was men who would affirm their belief in
God, with a desire for brotherhood strong enough to accept any man's
personal religious persuasion as secondary to their principal goal of
survival.
- John J. Robinson, Born in Blood
The formation of the the Illuminati by Freemasons and the instigation of
the French Revolution and anti-papacy movements in the eighteen century
have been seen as a fulfilment of Templar revenge.
The Templars, or Poor Fellow-Soldiery of the Holy House of the Temple,
intended to be re-built, took as their models, in the Bible, the
Warrior-Masons of Zorobabel, who worked, holding the sword in one hand and
the trowel in the other.
Therefore it was that the Sword and the Trowel were the insignia of the
Templars, who subsequently, as will be seen, concealed themselves under
the name of Brethren Masons. [This name, Freres Maçons in the French,
adopted by way of secret reference to the Builders of the Second Temple,
was corrupted in English into Free-Masons].
- General Albert Pike, Morals and Dogma
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