94.2.7, Barber, Trials of the Templars
(BMMR will encourage reviews and re-reviews of books of some age and
merit by way of reconsidering where some classics of the field stand
now. For now, this reproduces a review of a book fifteen years old that
is now being brought out again by Cambridge University Press in their
series of "Canto" books and is so highlighted for a new generation of
readers.)
Malcolm Barber, The Trial of the Templars. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1978.
Reviewed by Gabrielle M. Spiegel,
The Johns Hopkins University
This review originally appeared in
Speculum, 55 (1980): 329-332
The fourteenth century appears to have come into recent
fashion, if only as a mirror for the troubled conscience of
present-day historians. The arrest, trial, and ultimate
suppression, between 1307 and 1312, of the Crusading Order
of the Knights of the Temple of Solomon, more familiarly
known as the Templars, appealed thus to Professor Malcolm
Barber, who chose to retell the sometimes brutal story because
he finds in it "some relevance to the world of the late
twentieth century so many of whose people have been, and
continue to be, oppressed by regimes which use terror and
torture to enforce conformity of thought and action" (p. vii).
Despite the forthrightly acknowledged present concerns,
Professor Barber has managed, on the whole, to write an
informative and highly readable book about this, in his words,
"medieval tragedy."
Professor Barber's book embraces a triple purpose: to
trace in detail the course of events by which the Templars
were arrested, charged with crimes, and brought to confession
and punishment; to examine the motivation of the chief
participants; and, finally, to assess to what extent were
justified the charges levelled against the order--charges
ranging from heresy to homosexuality, from the denial of
Christ to obscene kissing on mouth, penis, anus, or navel. In
the first and third of these aims the author succeeds admirably,
but in the second and admittedly more difficult goal the book
is marred by a restrained but nonetheless distorting bias that
animates the author's approach to the policies and personages
of the government of Philip the Fair.
By October 1307, when Philip unleashed his baillis and
senechaux upon the unsuspecting brothers, the Knights
Templar were a powerful and, most of all, rich order with
some 764 houses scattered throughout western Christendom,
the largest concentration of which was to be found in France.
In the course of collecting funds in the west to be used in
defense of the Holy Land, the Templars had become an
international baking system, lending and safeguarding monies
throughout the Continent and, in France, assuming the
function of a royal treasury as well, housed in the Temple
outside the walls on the right back of Paris. In 1291 the fall
of Acre and consequent Christian abandonment of mainland
Palestine removed from the Templars the main reason for their
existence. It was, in Barber's view, the fatal combination of
wealth and functional obsolescence that made the order
vulnerable to Philip the Fair's unbounded greed and driving
need to find ever new sources of revenue to finance the
burgeoning Capetian bureaucracy and war machine. Having
experimented with new forms of taxation, lay and clerical,
having despoiled the Jews and Lombards, Philip turned to
expropriate this final reserve of wealth which lay within his
grasp. The result was the secret order for the arrest of
Templars residing in France issues in September, followed by
the early morning round-up and imprisonment on Friday, 13
October.
Barber traces with considerable skill the precise flow of
events leading from arrest to trial and the extraction of
confessions which, more than anything else, lent substance to
the charges brought against the order. Of 138 Templars
questioned in Paris during October and November, 105
admitted that they had denied Christ during their secret
reception into the order, 123 that they had spat at, on, or near
some form of the crucifix, 103 that they had indecently kissed,
usually on the base of the spine or the navel, and 102 implied
that homosexuality among the brothers was encouraged
(although only 3 admitted directly engaging in homosexual
relations) (p. 61). This immediate and virtually unanimous
confession of guilt on the part of the Templars, including the
Grand Master, Jacques de Molay, and the Visitor, Hughes de
Pairaud, cast a pall over the order from which it never
recovered. Although the confessions were extracted by torture
and later denied before papal inquisitors, the Templars had
sentenced themselves out of their own mouths. Barber's richly
detailed discussion of the confessions, of the subsequent
attempt of lesser members of the order to mount a defense
before papal judges, and of the collapse of that effort when,
on 12 May, 1310, Philip hastily had 54 Templars burnt at the
stake outside Paris makes this the finest portion of the book.
Also good, although less detailed, is his handling of the
struggle between the french monarchy and the papacy for
control of the proceedings, the end result of which was to
internationalize the trial under papal leadership. It is in his
analysis of the trial outside France that Barber contributes
significantly to the history of the Templars. The course of the
trials in England, Aragon, Navarre (ruled by Philip the Fair's
eldest son, Louis), Majorca, Castile, Portugal, Italy and
Germany demonstrates incontestably that only in France or in
territories under French influence were there substantial
confessions to the alleged crimes. In England and Aragon,
whose laws of procedure forbade the use of torture,
confessions came only after the papal inquisitors had taken
over and introduced torture. The sole exception was the
admission of the English Templars to a belief in the power of
absolution exercised by the Grand Master and regional
preceptors in chapter, which Barber convincingly explains as a
consequence of Templar confusion over the changing
definition of absolution in the thirteenth century, to which
Templar practice did not conform. The sharp distinction in
obtaining confessions between countries that did and did not
employ torture makes entirely plausible Barber's conclusion
that "it would now be difficult to argue, as some
nineteenth-century historians did, that the Templars were
guilty of the accusations made against them by the regime of
Philip the Fair" (p. 243). This conclusion is all the more
instructive given that Jean Favier's recent biography of Philip
the Fair accepts the validity of Templar guilt and the veracity
of the charges brought against them.
Yet it is precisely in the treatment of the "regime" of
Philip the Fair that Barber's book disappoints most. Having
shown the falsity of the charges against the Templars,the
burden falls on Barber to indicate who, then, devised them, on
what they were based, and why they were invented. In
answering these questions Barber presumes that Philip the Fair
and his ministers were motivated by a brutal indifference to
right and truth in their search for revenue, a view that one
would have though is now outmoded. His rather facile
response to this set of questions is that Nogaret fabricated the
charges at Philip's instigation; that he drew upon the stock of
medieval heretical views and popular superstitions in framing
them, and that he did so in the service of the "twisted
legalism" of Capetian rule, which sought to mask its true
purpose under formally articulated provisions.
Although Barber professes to accept the "modern" view
of Philip the Fair as, in Joseph Strayer's phrase, a
"constitutional king," he uses it only to argue that the moving
force behind the whole sordid affair of the Templars was
Philip himself. Yet it is difficult to believe that a king as
scrupulous and conscientious in other respects as Philip
demonstrably was would have attacked the Templars with
such violence merely for financial gain. While Barber
attempts to link the Templars with other "outgroups" [ n.b.
today we would say "others"] and to consider all equally
victimized by Philip's extortionary practices, the effort remains
unconvincing. It was one thing to harass the despised
Lombards and the Jews, who operated on the border of
permissible Christian behavior, but quite another to proceed
against a monastic order, garnered with all the spiritual
prestige, however momentarily tarnished. of the highest deals
of Christian Europe. Surely a king of Philip's acknowledged
religious sensibilities would have understood the moral
difference between these actions.
Only on the last page of the book does barber raise the
possibility that Philip and his counselors really believed the
accusations of heresy against the Templars. Yet in the final
analysis, this provides the most reasonable explanation for
Philip's actions and solves the problem of why he did not
attack the Hospitalers as well, whose wealth and position were
comparable to the Templars. Barber himself shows that as
early as 1305 Philip was receiving reports of scandalous
practices among the Templars from informers such as Esquieu
de Floyran, who approached the king after having failed to
sell his rumors to James II of Aragon. Why Philip, unlike
James, proved receptive to these reports is, in turn, best
explained by the shift in Philip's personal concerns toward a
more religious bent, which Robert-Henri Bautier has recently
argued took place after the death of this wife, Jeanne of
Navarre, in April 1305 (See R.-H. Bautier, "Diplomatique et
histoire politique: Ce que la critique diplomatique nous
apprend sur la personalite de Philippe le Bel," Revue
Historique , 259 (1978): 3-27). Jeanne's death struck Philip
with great force and appears to have produced in him an
almost fanatical desire to reform himself and his kingdom in
the image of his holy grandfather, St. Louis. barber's
wholesale dismissal of Philip's claim that he acted as an agent
of God "to defend the liberty of the faith of the Church" as
mere rationalization raises a serious issue of how much a
modern interpreter is permitted to disregard the written record
in assessing the motivation of historical actors, accessible only
through their reported words.
In the end, the best evidence suggests that is was not the
desire for specie but the weightier coinage of religious purity
and personal righteousness that motivated Philip the Fair, a
coinage potentially more dangerous to the rights of
nonconformity and dissent than even Professor Barber fears.
.