Knights of the Cloister: Templars and Hospitallers in Central-southern Occitania, C.1100-c.1300

Portada
Boydell & Brewer Ltd, 1999 - 261 pàgines
The Templars' and Hospitallers' daily business of recruitment, fund-raising, farming, shipping and communal life explored alongside their commitment to crusading.

The military and religious orders of the Knights Templar (founded 1120) and Knights Hospitaller (founded c.1099) were a driving force throughout the long history of the crusades. This study examines the work of the two orders closely, using original charters to analyse their activities in their administrative heartland in south-west France, and sets them in the context of contemporary religious life and economic organisation. Recruitment, fund-raising, farming, shipping, and communal life are all touched upon, and the orders' commitment to crusading through control and supply of manpower, money, arms and supplies is assessed. Dr Selwood shows the orders at the centre of religious life in Occitania, highlighting their success compared with other new orders such as the Cistercians, and looking at their relationships with the secular and monastic Church. Other themes addressed include the orders' relationshipto Occitanian society and to the laiety, their involvement with pilgrimage to Jerusalem, their innovative administrative structures, and their logistical operations.
DOMINIC SELWOOD gained his Ph.D. at Oxford; he is now a barrister at Lincoln's Inn, and practices from chambers in the Inner Temple.

 

Continguts

Conclusion
30
The Albigensian Crusade
43
EARLY ACTIVITY IN OCCITANIA
49
THE CHURCH AND THE MILITARY ORDERS
72
58
81
The Orders and the monastic world
87
Conclusion
97
ADMINISTRATIVE STRUCTURES
142
THE EASTERN HORIZON
169
SAINT EULALIA
197
Conclusion
207
CONCLUSION
208
Bibliography
215
Index
233
Copyright

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