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  • Nov. 1, 1880
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The Masonic Magazine, Nov. 1, 1880: Page 19

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    Article THE SUPPRESSION OF THE TEMPLARS IN ENGLAND. Page 1 of 3 →
Page 19

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Suppression Of The Templars In England.

THE SUPPRESSION OF THE TEMPLARS IN ENGLAND .

( Continued from page 176 . ) THE English Templars were confined in prisons at London , Lincoln , and York . During the summer of 1308 a Bull arrived from the Pope , appointing certain commissioners to hear ancl try the charges made against them .

The commissioners appointed were the Patriarch of Jerusalem , the Archbishops of Canterbury and York , the Bishops of London , Chichester , and Lincoln , Deodafce Abbot of Lagny , ancl Sicard de St . Vaur , Canon of Narbonne , Auditor of the Pope . The commissioners were all ecclesiastics , and as such probably not exempt from the jealousy with which the Order was regarded by Churchmen . One of themhoweverat leastJohn DalderbBishop of

, , , y , Lincoln , was a man of singular piety and uprightness , and , from the notices of the matter contained in his register , we gather that he by no means liked the business on which he was employed . In fact , the way in which he shrank from the part assigned to him , and fenced with the papal requirements , inclines us to believe that he did not believe in the guilt of the men in whose trial and condemnation he was forced to bear an unwilling part . Neither is this to be

wondered at . For the results of the first examination of the English Templars held in London , October 21 st , 1308 , at which it is probable that Bishop Dalderby was present , were as follows : The Templars were interrogated whether the chapters and receptions oi the Knights were held in secret and b y night ; whether in these chapters were committed any offences against Christian morals ancl the faith of the Church ; whether they denied the Redeemer and ' worshipped idols ; whether they held heretical opinions on any of the

sacraments . The Kni ghts , brought one by one before the commissioners , denied calmly , specifically , ancl distinctly , every one of these charges . A chaplain of the Order , Ralph de Burton , was examined at greater length than the others , and his denials were full and specific . Then witnesses were examined ; seventeen who were supposed to be most cognizant of the doings of the Templars were questioned . They were clergy , public notaries , and others . None of

them had anything to allege against the Templars in support of the charges made against them . During the winter of 1308 ancl 1309 various examinations were held . Nothing was elicited to the prejudice of the Order . In June , the Grand Preceptor , William de la Moore , was specially examined on the charge of having presumed as a layman to give absolution . He explained that the form used for a peccant brother was to strike him three blows with the

scourge , and then say to him , " Brother , pray to God to remit thy sins . " He had never used the form , " I absolve thee . " The commissioners could not find anything on which to condemn the Order . Yet , urged on by pressure from the Pope , ancl fearing to go against his decisions , they made a sort of lame condemnation . They do not indeed give any countenance to the charge of immorality , apostacy , and magic , but they seem to assert that the charge of

giving absolution is proved , as also the secrecy of the receptions , and the binding members of the Order by oaths not to reveal what took place at these receptions . Certain evidence which had been tendered to them b y hostile witnesses they kept back . "They seem , " says Deal Milman , "to have been ashamed of it , as well they might . " One of the commissioners , at any rate , did not desire to be further mixed up in the matter . At the beginning of October , 1309 , Bishop Dalderby sent to his brother commissioners what is entered in his register under the title " Excusatio -. "

“The Masonic Magazine: 1880-11-01, Page 19” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01111880/page/19/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
AN ORATION Article 1
THE NAME OF BURNS. Article 3
RABBINICAL PROVERBS AND SAYINGS. Article 4
A SERMON Article 6
RYTHMICAL SAYINGS. Article 11
THE VOICE OF NATURE. Article 16
THE TEMPLE OF MASONRY. Article 18
THE SUPPRESSION OF THE TEMPLARS IN ENGLAND. Article 19
BROTHER! WELL MET! Article 22
THE ANCIENT MYSTERIES. Article 25
AFTER ALL. Article 29
LITERARY AND ANTIQUARIAN GOSSIP. Article 37
"A JINER." Article 40
BRO. SIR CHRISTOPHER WREN.* Article 42
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Page 19

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Suppression Of The Templars In England.

THE SUPPRESSION OF THE TEMPLARS IN ENGLAND .

( Continued from page 176 . ) THE English Templars were confined in prisons at London , Lincoln , and York . During the summer of 1308 a Bull arrived from the Pope , appointing certain commissioners to hear ancl try the charges made against them .

The commissioners appointed were the Patriarch of Jerusalem , the Archbishops of Canterbury and York , the Bishops of London , Chichester , and Lincoln , Deodafce Abbot of Lagny , ancl Sicard de St . Vaur , Canon of Narbonne , Auditor of the Pope . The commissioners were all ecclesiastics , and as such probably not exempt from the jealousy with which the Order was regarded by Churchmen . One of themhoweverat leastJohn DalderbBishop of

, , , y , Lincoln , was a man of singular piety and uprightness , and , from the notices of the matter contained in his register , we gather that he by no means liked the business on which he was employed . In fact , the way in which he shrank from the part assigned to him , and fenced with the papal requirements , inclines us to believe that he did not believe in the guilt of the men in whose trial and condemnation he was forced to bear an unwilling part . Neither is this to be

wondered at . For the results of the first examination of the English Templars held in London , October 21 st , 1308 , at which it is probable that Bishop Dalderby was present , were as follows : The Templars were interrogated whether the chapters and receptions oi the Knights were held in secret and b y night ; whether in these chapters were committed any offences against Christian morals ancl the faith of the Church ; whether they denied the Redeemer and ' worshipped idols ; whether they held heretical opinions on any of the

sacraments . The Kni ghts , brought one by one before the commissioners , denied calmly , specifically , ancl distinctly , every one of these charges . A chaplain of the Order , Ralph de Burton , was examined at greater length than the others , and his denials were full and specific . Then witnesses were examined ; seventeen who were supposed to be most cognizant of the doings of the Templars were questioned . They were clergy , public notaries , and others . None of

them had anything to allege against the Templars in support of the charges made against them . During the winter of 1308 ancl 1309 various examinations were held . Nothing was elicited to the prejudice of the Order . In June , the Grand Preceptor , William de la Moore , was specially examined on the charge of having presumed as a layman to give absolution . He explained that the form used for a peccant brother was to strike him three blows with the

scourge , and then say to him , " Brother , pray to God to remit thy sins . " He had never used the form , " I absolve thee . " The commissioners could not find anything on which to condemn the Order . Yet , urged on by pressure from the Pope , ancl fearing to go against his decisions , they made a sort of lame condemnation . They do not indeed give any countenance to the charge of immorality , apostacy , and magic , but they seem to assert that the charge of

giving absolution is proved , as also the secrecy of the receptions , and the binding members of the Order by oaths not to reveal what took place at these receptions . Certain evidence which had been tendered to them b y hostile witnesses they kept back . "They seem , " says Deal Milman , "to have been ashamed of it , as well they might . " One of the commissioners , at any rate , did not desire to be further mixed up in the matter . At the beginning of October , 1309 , Bishop Dalderby sent to his brother commissioners what is entered in his register under the title " Excusatio -. "

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