1737 History of Knights Templar Hospitaller
of Saint John Crusades Malta Rhodes
VERY Desirable Complete Set with
Fascinating Content
The Knights Hospitaller, also known as the
Hospitallers, Order of Hospitallers, Knights of Saint John and Order of Saint
John, were among the most famous of the Western Christian military orders
during the Middle Ages.
Main
author: Vertot, abbe de
Title: Histoire
des chevaliers hospitaliers de S. Jean de Jérusalem, appelez depuis chevaliers
de Rhodes et aujourd'hui chevaliers de Malthe.
Published: Paris : Quillau, 1737. /
complete 5v set
Language: French
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The
Knights Hospitaller, also known as the Hospitallers, Order of Hospitallers,
Knights of Saint John and Order of Saint John, were among the most famous of
the Western Christian military orders during the Middle Ages.
The
Hospitallers probably arose as a group of individuals associated with an
Amalfitan hospital in the Muristan district of Jerusalem, which was dedicated
to St John the Baptist and founded around 1023 by Blessed Gerard Thom to
provide care for poor, sick or injured pilgrims to the Holy Land. (Some
scholars, however, consider that the Amalfitan order and Amalfitan hospital
were different from Gerard's order and its hospital.[1]) After the Latin
Christian conquest of Jerusalem in 1099 during the First Crusade, the
organisation became a religious and military order under its own Papal charter,
and it was charged with the care and defence of the Holy Land. Following the conquest
of the Holy Land by Islamic forces, the Order operated from Rhodes, over which
it was sovereign, and later from Malta where it administered a vassal state
under the Spanish viceroy of Sicily.
The
Order was weakened in the Reformation, when rich commanderies of the Order in
northern Germany and the Netherlands became Protestant (and, largely separated
from the Roman Catholic main stem, remain so to this day), and the Order was
disestablished in England, Denmark, and elsewhere in northern Europe. The Roman
Catholic order was further damaged by Napoleon's capture of Malta in 1798 and
became dispersed throughout Europe. It regained strength during the early 19th
century as it redirected itself toward humanitarian and religious causes. In
1834, the order, by this time known as the Sovereign Military Order of Malta
(SMOM), acquired new headquarters in Rome where it has remained since. As of
2013, the Roman Catholic order has about 13,500 members, 80,000 volunteers, and
25,000 mostly medical employees,[2] and operates in about 120 countries across
the world, including in Muslim nations; the Protestant branches of the order
are smaller but engage in similar work. Until recently the order focused mainly
on developing countries, but following the introduction of austerity in the
Eurozone and the United Kingdom which began in 2010, they have increasingly
turned their attention to Europe, establishing shelters and soup kitchens to
help the homeless and those suffering from hunger.[3]
Five
contemporary, state-recognised chivalric orders which claim modern inheritance
of the Hospitaller tradition all assert that "The Sovereign Military Order
of Malta is the original order" and that four non-Catholic orders stem
from the same root:[4] Protestant orders exist in Germany, the Netherlands and
Sweden, and a non-denominational British revival is headquartered in the United
Kingdom.
Contents [hide]
1
Foundation and early history
2
Knights of Cyprus and Rhodes
3
Knights of Malta
3.1
The Knights in the 16th and 17th centuries: Reconquista of the Sea
3.2
Life in Malta
3.3
Turmoil in Europe
3.4
The loss of Malta
4
Sovereign Military Order of Malta
5
Protestant continuation in continental Europe
6
Revival in Britain as the Venerable Order of St. John of Jerusalem
7
Mimic orders
8 Remnants
9
See also
10
References
11
Further reading
12
External links
Foundation
and early history[edit]
Grand
Master and senior Knights Hospitaller in the 14th century
In
623, Pope Gregory I commissioned the Ravennate Abbot Probus, who was previously
Gregory's emissary at the Lombard court, to build a hospital in Jerusalem to
treat and care for Christian pilgrims to the Holy Land. In 800, Charlemagne,
Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, enlarged Probus' hospital and added a library
to it. About 200 years later, in 1005, Caliph Al Hakim destroyed the hospital
and three thousand other buildings in Jerusalem. In 1023, merchants from Amalfi
and Salerno in Italy were given permission by the Caliph Ali az-Zahir of Egypt
to rebuild the hospital in Jerusalem. The hospital, which was built on the site
of the monastery of Saint John the Baptist, took in Christian pilgrims
travelling to visit the Christian holy sites. It was served by Benedictine
monks.
The
monastic hospitaller order was founded following the First Crusade by the
Blessed Gerard, whose role as founder was confirmed by a Papal bull of Pope
Paschal II in 1113.[2] Gerard acquired territory and revenues for his order
throughout the Kingdom of Jerusalem and beyond. Under his successor, Raymond du
Puy de Provence, the original hospice was expanded to an infirmary[1] near the
Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem. Initially the group cared for
pilgrims in Jerusalem, but the order soon extended to providing pilgrims with
an armed escort, which soon grew into a substantial force. Thus the Order of
St. John imperceptibly became military without losing its eleemosynary
character.[1] The Hospitallers and the Knights Templar became the most
formidable military orders in the Holy Land. Frederick Barbarossa, the Holy
Roman Emperor, pledged his protection to the Knights of St. John in a charter
of privileges granted in 1185.
The
statutes of Roger de Moulins (1187) deal only with the service of the sick; the
first mention of military service is in the statutes of the ninth grand master,
Afonso of Portugal (about 1200). In the latter a marked distinction is made
between secular knights, externs to the order, who served only for a time, and
the professed knights, attached to the order by a perpetual vow, and who alone enjoyed
the same spiritual privileges as the other religious. The order numbered three
distinct classes of membership: the military brothers, the brothers
infirmarians, and the brothers chaplains, to whom was entrusted the divine
service.[1]
The
order came to distinguish itself in battle with the Muslims, its soldiers
wearing a black surcoat with a white cross. In 1248 Pope Innocent IV (1243–54),
approved a standard military dress for the Hospitallers to be worn in battle.
Instead of a closed cape over their armour (which restricted their movements)
they should wear a red surcoat with a white cross emblazoned on it.[5]
Many
of the more substantial Christian fortifications in the Holy Land were built by
the Templars and the Hospitallers. At the height of the Kingdom of Jerusalem,
the Hospitallers held seven great forts and 140 other estates in the area. The
two largest of these, their bases of power in the Kingdom and in the
Principality of Antioch, were the Krak des Chevaliers and Margat in Syria.[2]
The property of the Order was divided into priories, subdivided into
bailiwicks, which in turn were divided into commandries.
As
early as the late 12th century the order had begun to achieve recognition in
the Kingdom of England and Duchy of Normandy. As a result, buildings such as St
John's Jerusalem and the Knights Gate, Quenington in England were built on land
donated to the order by local nobility.[6] An Irish house was established at
Kilmainham, near Dublin, and the Irish Prior was usually a key figure in Irish public
life.
Knights
of Cyprus and Rhodes[edit]
Street
of Knights in Rhodes
The
Knights' castle at Rhodes
Further
information: Siege of Rhodes (1480) and Siege of Rhodes (1522)
The
rising power of Islam eventually expelled the Knights from Jerusalem. After the
fall of the Kingdom of Jerusalem in 1291 (Jerusalem itself fell in 1187), the
Knights were confined to the County of Tripoli and, when Acre was captured in
1291, the order sought refuge in the Kingdom of Cyprus. Finding themselves
becoming enmeshed in Cypriot politics, their Master, Guillaume de Villaret,
created a plan of acquiring their own temporal domain, selecting Rhodes to be
their new home, part of the Byzantine empire. His successor, Fulkes de
Villaret, executed the plan, and on 15 August 1309, after over two years of
campaigning, the island of Rhodes surrendered to the knights. They also gained
control of a number of neighbouring islands and the Anatolian port of Bodrum
and Kastelorizo.
Rhodes
and other possessions of the Knights Hospitallers of St. John.
Pope
Clement V dissolved the Hospitallers' rival order, the Knights Templar, in 1312
with a series of papal bulls, including the Ad providam bull, which turned over
much of their property to the Hospitallers. The holdings were organised into
eight "tongues" (one each in Crown of Aragon, Auvergne, Castile,
England, France, Germany, Italy, and Provence). Each was administered by a
Prior or, if there was more than one priory in the tongue, by a Grand Prior. At
Rhodes and later Malta, the resident knights of each tongue were headed by a
Bailli. The English Grand Prior at the time was Philip De Thame, who acquired
the estates allocated to the English tongue from 1330 to 1358. In 1334, the
Knights of Rhodes defeated Andronicus and his Turkish auxiliaries. In the 14th
century, there were several other battles in which they fought.[7]
On
Rhodes the Hospitallers,[8] by then also referred to as the Knights of
Rhodes,[9] were forced to become a more militarised force, fighting especially
with the Barbary pirates. They withstood two invasions in the 15th century, one
by the Sultan of Egypt in 1444 and another by the Ottoman Sultan Mehmed II in
1480 who, after capturing Constantinople and defeating the Byzantine Empire in
1453, made the Knights a priority target.
In
1494 they created a stronghold on the peninsula of Halicarnassus (now Bodrum).
They used pieces of the partially destroyed Mausoleum, one of the Seven Wonders
of the Ancient World, to strengthen Bodrum Castle.[10]
In
1522, an entirely new sort of force arrived: 400 ships under the command of
Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent delivered 100,000 men to the island[11]
(200,000 in other sources[12]). Against this force the Knights, under Grand
Master Philippe Villiers de L'Isle-Adam, had about 7,000 men-at-arms and their
fortifications. The siege lasted six months, at the end of which the surviving
defeated Hospitallers were allowed to withdraw to Sicily. Despite the defeat,
both Christians and Muslims seem to have regarded the conduct of Villiers de L'Isle-Adam
as extremely valiant, and the Grand Master was proclaimed a Defender of the
Faith by Pope Adrian VI.
Knights
of Malta[edit]
See
also: History of Malta under the Order of Saint John
Grand
culverin of the Knights Hospitallers, 1500–1510, Rhodes. French work, caliber:
165 mm, length: 540 cm, weight: 3,343 kg, ammunition: 15kg iron ball. Arms of
Grand Master Emery d'Amboise. Given by Abdülaziz to Napoleon III in 1862.
Arms
of the Knights Hospitallers, quartered with those of Pierre d'Aubusson, on a
bombard ordered by the latter. The top inscription further reads: "F.
PETRUS DAUBUSSON M HOSPITALIS IHER".
After
seven years of moving from place to place in Europe the Knights became
established in 1530 when Charles I of Spain, as King of Sicily, gave them
Malta,[13] Gozo and the North African port of Tripoli in perpetual fiefdom in
exchange for an annual fee of a single Maltese falcon (Tribute of the Maltese
Falcon), which they were to send on All Souls Day to the King's representative,
the Viceroy of Sicily,[14] (this historical fact was used as the plot hook in
Dashiell Hammett's famous book The Maltese Falcon).
The
Hospitallers continued their actions against the Muslims and especially the
Barbary pirates. Although they had only a few ships they quickly drew the ire
of the Ottomans, who were unhappy to see the order resettled. In 1565 Suleiman
sent an invasion force of about 40,000 men to besiege the 700 knights and 8,000
soldiers and expel them from Malta and gain a new base from which to possibly
launch another assault on Europe.[13]
At
first the battle went as badly for the Hospitallers as Rhodes had: most of the
cities were destroyed and about half the knights killed. On 18 August the
position of the besieged was becoming desperate: dwindling daily in numbers,
they were becoming too feeble to hold the long line of fortifications. But when
his council suggested the abandonment of Vittoriosa and Senglea and withdrawal
to Fort St. Angelo, Grand Master Jean Parisot de la Valette refused.
The
Viceroy of Sicily had not sent help; possibly the Viceroy's orders from Philip
II of Spain were so obscurely worded as to put on his own shoulders the burden
of the decision whether to help the Knights at the expense of his own
defences.[citation needed] A wrong decision could mean defeat and exposing
Sicily and Naples to the Ottomans. He had left his own son with La Valette, so
he could hardly be indifferent to the fate of the fortress. Whatever may have
been the cause of his delay, the Viceroy hesitated until the battle had almost
been decided by the unaided efforts of the Knights, before being forced to move
by the indignation of his own officers.
Re-enactment
of 16th-century military drills conducted by the Knights. Fort Saint Elmo,
Valletta, Malta, 8 May 2005.
On
23 August came yet another grand assault, the last serious effort, as it
proved, of the besiegers. It was thrown back with the greatest difficulty, even
the wounded taking part in the defence. The plight of the Turkish forces,
however, was now desperate. With the exception of Fort St. Elmo, the
fortifications were still intact.[15] Working night and day the garrison had
repaired the breaches, and the capture of Malta seemed more and more
impossible. Many of the Ottoman troops in crowded quarters had fallen ill over
the terrible summer months. Ammunition and food were beginning to run short,
and the Ottoman troops were becoming increasingly dispirited by the failure of
their attacks and their losses. The death on 23 June of skilled commander
Dragut, a corsair and admiral of the Ottoman fleet, was a serious blow. The
Turkish commanders, Piyale Pasha and Mustafa Pasha, were careless. They had a
huge fleet which they used with effect on only one occasion. They neglected
their communications with the African coast and made no attempt to watch and
intercept Sicilian reinforcements.
On 1
September they made their last effort, but the morale of the Ottoman troops had
deteriorated seriously and the attack was feeble, to the great encouragement of
the besieged, who now began to see hopes of deliverance. The perplexed and
indecisive Ottomans heard of the arrival of Sicilian reinforcements in Mellieħa
Bay. Unaware that the force was very small, they broke off the siege and left
on 8 September. The Great Siege of Malta may have been the last action in which
a force of knights won a decisive victory.[16]
View
from Valletta showing Fort Saint Angelo
When
the Ottomans departed, the Hospitallers had but 600 men able to bear arms. The
most reliable estimate puts the number of the Ottoman army at its height at
some 40,000 men, of whom 15,000 eventually returned to Constantinople. The
siege is portrayed vividly in the frescoes of Matteo Perez d'Aleccio in the
Hall of St. Michael and St. George, also known as the Throne Room, in the Grand
Master's Palace in Valletta; four of the original modellos, painted in oils by
Perez d'Aleccio between 1576 and 1581, can be found in the Cube Room of the
Queen's House at Greenwich, London. After the siege a new city had to be built:
the present capital city of Malta, named Valletta in memory of the Grand Master
who had withstood the siege.
In
1607, the Grand Master of the Hospitallers was granted the status of Reichsfürst
(Prince of the Holy Roman Empire, even though the Order's territory was always
south of the Holy Roman Empire). In 1630, he was awarded ecclesiastic equality
with cardinals, and the unique hybrid style His Most Eminent Highness,
reflecting both qualities qualifying him as a true Prince of the Church.