Knights Templar (Freemason degree)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Templar Cross

This article is part of or related
to the Knights Templar series

This page is about a Masonic organization. For the medieval Knights Templar, see Knights Templar, and for other uses, please see Templar (disambiguation).

The full title of this order is The United Religious, Military and Masonic Orders of the Temple and of St John of Jerusalem, Palestine, Rhodes and Malta.

Knights Templar is an international philanthropic masonic order. In the 1700s when freemasonry became public they began to incorporate symbols and traditions of the medieval Knights Templar. The original medieval Order of Knights Templar was established after the First Crusade, and existed from approximately 1118 to 1312. There is no historical evidence to conclusively link the medieval Knights Templar and Masonic Templarism.

Contents

[edit] Description

The Knights Templar is a an additonal order and is not a higher degree within freemasonry. Knights Templars meet in Preceptories or commanderies.

Membership in the Order is open to Master Masons of Christian faith (in some jurisdictions, the order is also open to those of other faiths who are willing to swear to defend the Christian faith) and who have been exalted into the Holy Royal Arch Chapter. As in all Masonic organizations, membership requires that the candidate be of sound moral character, have an exemplary reputation, and believe in a Supreme Being.

[edit] Templar traditions

In spite of Freemasonry's general disclaimer that no one Masonic organization claims a direct heritage to the medieval Knights Templar, certain degrees and orders are obviously patterned after the medieval Order. These are best described as "commemorative orders" or degrees. Nevertheless, in spite of the fraternity's official disclaimers, some Masons, non-Masons and even anti-Masons insist that certain Masonic rites or degrees originally had direct Templar influence.

  • The Knight of Rose-Croix Degree in the "Ancient Accepted Scottish Rite", and honorary Orders like the Royal Order of Scotland are interpreted as evidence of a historical Templar-Masonic connection, though there is no factual basis for this belief.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links

[edit] Masonic Knights Templar organizations