The Knights Templar Revealed
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Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 1845293487
ISBN-13: 9781845293482
Publisher: Robinson Publishing
Release Date: January, 2006
Length: 240 Pages
Weight: Unavailable
Dimensions: 9.2 X 6.2 X 0.7 inches
Language: English
   
   

The Knights Templar Revealed

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So state the authors, Alan Butler and Stephen Dafoe, in their much-acclaimed work "The Warriors and the Bankers". But where did they come from, these mysterious white-mantled Knights of Christ, and were they simply a reflection of early twelfth-century Christian thinking? This is a question that Butler and Dafoe set out to answer - the discoveries ...
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  Fabulous!

This is a thorough and interesting work (although only book one of a two book group) that details the rise of the Templars and their fall. While hinting at the fact that they do not believe the Templars died out altogether, this issue is not thoroughly explored - it is promised to those who continue on to the next book.

The authors purport that the Templars arose out of the Cistercian monks - or at the very least were strongly influenced by them - and were the controlling arm of a group they call the "Troyes fraternity" for their location in Troyes in modern-day France. They create a conspiracy out of the fact that many of the towns from around which influential Cistercians and later Templars arose were on what they call "Salt Lines," which follow a specific geographical pattern of latitude and longitude and along which are many ancient cities with similar place names.

It is impossible to be overly specific with this book without ruining the reading of it. I would strongly recommend this to those who are interested in the history of monastic movements in general, the Templars in specific, the history of the chivalric period and/or simply an alternative look at history.