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Stone, Symbol, and Myth - Rethinking the Architecture of the Knights Templar

The Knights Templar have long fascinated historians, architects, and mystics alike. Their commanderies and chapels, scattered across medieval Europe and the Latin East, are often portrayed as repositories of hidden symbolism encoded in stone. But how much of what we call "Templar architecture" is historical reality, and how much is myth?

Sword, Cross, and Empty Tomb - How the Knights Templar Observed Easter

Few medieval institutions blend the martial and the sacred as strikingly as the Knights Templar. These warrior monks swore oaths of poverty, chastity, and obedience yet were fierce fighters. And their trial in 1307 brought accusations of heresy and trampling the cross. But what does the historical record actually tell us about if and how these knights observed the holiest day in the Christian calendar: Easter?

Myth vs Mud - What Archaeology Tells Us About the Knights Templar

For over seven centuries, Templar commanderies have fired the popular imagination as fortified bastions of a warrior brotherhood. Yet systematic archaeological investigation across France tells a strikingly different story: one of farms, chapels, cemeteries, and artisan workshops. Can material evidence alone finally displace the myth with historical reality?