American History Tellers - History Daily: The Execution of the Last Grand Master of the Knights Templar
Episode Date: March 15, 2024March 18, 1314. Jacques de Molay, the last Grand Master of the Knights Templar, is burned at the stake.You can listen ad-free in the Wondery or Amazon Music app. Or for all that and more, go ...to IntoHistory.comHistory Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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It's dawn on October 13, 1307, in a grand, walled residence in Paris, France. Jacques de Molay
sleeps soundly in his bed. Although Jacques is in his sixties, he's in good health. He's the
Grand Master of the Knights Templar, a powerful and wealthy religious order of the Catholic Church.
Jacques has given a lifetime of service to the order. He's become so important that yesterday
he was given the honor
of acting as a pallbearer at a royal funeral, that of Catherine of Courtenay, sister-in-law of the
French king, Philip IV. But Philip is wary of the influence that Jacques wields. The relationship
between the Templars and the French crown is strained. Jacques wakes suddenly. Someone is
pounding on the door to his bedchamber.
So he rises and opens the door to a concerned-looking fellow knight,
who tells Jacques they're under attack.
Hurriedly, Jacques follows the knight downstairs and out into the courtyard,
where shouts from the street beyond the walls echo through the early morning.
But before Jacques can ask who's making such a racket,
the gates to
the Templar compound are forced open and a stream of heavily armed men charges into the courtyard.
A few Templar knights try to stand in their way, but the strangers quickly subdue them.
Then, one of the armed men spots Jacques' distinctive bald head and full beard,
pointing in his direction. Strangers move menacingly toward Jacques and
order him to surrender. Jacques' eyes blaze with anger as he tells them to leave the holy ground
of the Knights Templar, warning them that his order is under the protection of the Pope and
King Philip. But one of the armed men pulls his sword from its sheath and replies that he's here
on behalf of King Philip, and his orders are clear. He's to
arrest Jacques and every other knight here. Faced with such overwhelming force, Jacques has little
choice but to relent, his shoulders slumped as he allows himself to be led away, now a prisoner of
the king. The arrest of Jacques de Molay marks a major escalation in the already fractious relationship
between two of the most powerful men in Christendom,
the Grand Master of the Knights Templar and the King of France.
After Jacques' shocking arrest, seven years of legal wrangling will follow
between the Church and the King before the Knights Templar are finally abolished
and its last Grand Master is executed
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History is made every day.
On this podcast every day, we tell the true stories of the people and events that shaped our world. Today is March 18,
1314, the execution of the last Grand Master of the Knights Templar.
It's an hour before dawn on May 18, 1291, in the port city of Acre in the Kingdom of Jerusalem,
16 years before the arrest of Jacques de Molay. Trumpets sound in the darkness.
Readying his sword, Jacques rushes toward the city walls. He can hear screaming and shouting and the clash of metal. Accra is under attack. Though it's still night, torches cast enough
light for Jacques to see that the walls of the city have already been breached and his fellow
knights are engaged in a frantic, hand-to-hand battle with enemy soldiers. The onslaught that Jacques has been expecting for
weeks has finally begun. Nearly 200 years ago, the Pope called upon the kings of Europe to capture
the Holy Land for Muslim rule and ensure that Jerusalem remained in Christian hands. The First
Crusade, as it became known, was a success. Jerusalem was conquered and
new Christian states were established in the Holy Land. But the fighting didn't end there. Ever since
that First Crusade, Muslim rulers have been battling to regain control of the region, and new
Crusades have been called to fend them off. Recently, though, the tide has turned decisively in favor of
the Mamluk Sultanate,
a Muslim kingdom ruled from Egypt.
Swaths of territory have already fallen to the Mamluks,
and the city of Accra is the last remaining Christian stronghold in the region.
Now, a Mamluk army has the city under siege,
hoping to drive the Christians from the Holy Land once and for all.
Standing in their way are knights from several Christian religious
orders, including the most powerful of them all, the Knights Templar. Jacques de Molay isn't the
order's grandmaster yet, but he is a veteran of many battles in the Holy Land, and as Mamluk
soldiers try to force their way into Accra, Jacques draws his sword and charges into action.
He cuts down dozens of Mamluk soldiers, but it's no use.
The Christian knights are forced to retreat,
and the further back they are pushed,
the more Mamluks get through the breach and into the city.
Jacques sees many of his brethren fall,
among them the Grand Master of the Knights Templar,
who is severely wounded and carried away from battle on a shield,
his face deathly pale.
The injury to their commander disheartens the Christian soldiers.
The remaining Templars fight a desperate rear-guard action
as they slowly retreat through the city toward its docks,
and Jacques makes it onto one of the last ships to leave Acre
before Mamluk troops rush into the harbor.
And when his ship reaches the safety of open water,
Jacques watches the
Mamluks hacking indiscriminately at those left behind on the dockside. It's a sight that leaves
Jacques thirsting for revenge. His ship sails more than 100 miles across the Mediterranean Sea to
Cyprus. With the loss of Acre, the last crusader city has fallen and the Holy Land has been lost.
The Knights Templar themselves have suffered significant casualties,
including their Grand Master, who died of his wounds.
Now the vengeful Jacques is one of the most senior Templar Knights left alive,
and it's not long before he's appointed the new Grand Master.
In this new post, Jacques thinks the priority for the Knights Templar
is to regain a Christian
foothold in the Holy Land. So he soon leaves Cyprus for the royal courts of Europe, seeking
money and soldiers from the Christian kings for a new crusade. But thanks to the catastrophic
defeat at Acre, there's little enthusiasm for the cause. After several years of fruitless lobbying,
Jacques realizes that Europe's leaders are not backing the Templars
because the kings and noblemen no longer think there's a chance of success.
So to prove that recapturing the Holy Land is still possible, Jacques decides to mount a small-scale campaign.
He hopes that a symbolic victory over the Mamluks will kickstart a wider crusade.
He builds a fleet of ships and establishes a base on the tiny Mediterranean
island of Ruad. Beginning in the summer of 1300, Jacques' Templar navy raids Mamluk settlements
along the Egyptian and Syrian coasts. But the Mamluks fight back and invade Ruad in 1302,
raising the Templar base there to the ground. Running out of options, Jacques will return to
Europe for one last attempt to
rally support for an invasion of the Holy Land. But there he will stumble into an equally dangerous
world of political intrigue, and once he steps foot in France, Jacques de Marley will never leave.
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Check out Exhibit C in the Wondery app for all your true crime listening. It's November 1st, 1306, in Poitiers, France, 15 years after the fall of Acre.
Jacques de Molay leaves Poitiers' cathedral after attending Mass to celebrate All Saints' Day.
He hurries along with his brow furrowed, and his entourage of Templar aides must walk quickly to keep up.
Jacques has
a busy day ahead. Later, he's supposed to meet with Pope Clement V, but he's worried. The Pope
was conspicuously absent from the All Saints' Day service, and it doesn't feel like a good omen.
Pope Clement has only been in the role for a year, but already has made a major change to the papacy.
He's moved the headquarters of the Catholic Church from Rome to Poitiers in central France.
That relocation arose from a decade-long power struggle between King Philip IV of France
and a previous pope, Boniface VIII.
Their relationship reached rock bottom in 1303,
when Boniface threatened to excommunicate Philip.
In response, Philip's soldiers broke into the papal palace and beat Boniface threatened to excommunicate Philip. In response, Philip's soldiers broke into the papal palace
and beat Boniface so badly that he died of his injuries a month later.
Then, after Boniface's successor quickly died in mysterious circumstances,
Philip pressured the Catholic cardinals to choose one of his allies as the next pope.
They obliged, and as a result, Philip's close friend became Pope Clement V.
Now Jacques is ready to meet the new pope to discuss Jacques' plans to retake the Holy Land.
But since Clement is little more than Philip's puppet, Jacques knows that it's the king he
really needs to convince. When Jacques arrives at the papal palace, Clement's officials greet
him politely, but they reveal that the pope is unable to meet today because he's unwell. Jacques expresses concern, but the papal aides assure him that
Clement just has an upset stomach. But every time Jacques returns, over the next few days and weeks,
he's told that the Pope is still too ill to receive him. Jacques worries that the Pope is
avoiding him, and his suspicions deepen when Clement sends a letter rescheduling their meeting for May, in six months' time.
While Jacques waits patiently for his papal audience, disturbing news reaches him.
Several former Knights Templar who were ejected from the Order for inappropriate behavior have accused their former brethren of holding heretical beliefs. They say that the Templars engage in homosexual
relationships, spit on the crucifix, deny that Jesus was a prophet, and worship a mummified
body as an idol of Satan. And when Jacques finally has his audience with Pope Clement in May,
he's forced to spend his time defending the Templars against these unfounded allegations
rather than convincing the Pope of the importance
of retaking the Holy Land. Pope Clement does offer half-hearted support for a new crusade,
but also reveals that King Philip wants to seize the Templars' assets and turn over their order's
vast riches to the royal treasury. Hearing that, Jacques finally sees the full picture.
First, Philip engineered a French takeover of the papacy to increase his
own power. Now the king intends to crush the Templars so he can take their wealth. Jacques
spends the next few months trying to keep a low profile, hoping that the controversy will just
blow over, that the king's threats will come to nothing. But when the noblewoman Catherine of
Courtenay dies, Jacques is asked to be a pallbearer. He knows he can't turn
down the request without causing offense, but he also knows it's a trap. The night after the funeral,
when Philip knows exactly where Jacques will be, he strikes. The king orders raids across France,
and every Templar in the kingdom is rounded up. Under torture by French officials, Jacques
confesses to denying Jesus and trampling on the crucifix during Templar initiations.
But in a later meeting with two cardinals sent by the Pope, Jacques retracts his confession.
He's then interrogated again by the king's agents and once more, under torture, confesses.
But when he's questioned by the Pope's inquisitors, he recants and insists that he is innocent.
During all of this, the French king has 54 Templar knights burned at the stake. Questioned by the Pope's inquisitors, he recants and insists that he is innocent.
During all of this, the French king has 54 Templar knights burned at the stake,
but the king doesn't yet feel confident enough to execute the Templar Grand Master.
Instead, Jacques languishes in a French prison.
Five years later, though, with Jacques still behind bars,
Pope Clement will finally abolish the orders of the Knights Templar.
And soon after that, King Philip will decide that there's only one way for him to deal with the last Grand Master, death by fire.
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It's dusk on March 18, 1314 in Paris, seven years after the arrest of Jacques de Molay.
Outside Notre Dame Cathedral, a pyre is being built.
The Archbishop William of Paris glances at the darkening sky and urges the men stacking up the wood to hurry. A crowd of onlookers has already gathered,
eager to see whether the rumored execution will actually take place.
Earlier today, Archbishop William gathered Jacques and three other senior Templars to
publicly announce the sentences imposed on them by a church court, life imprisonment for heresy.
Two of the prisoners accepted the sentences without comment, but Grand Master Jacques de
Mollet and another Templar knight both retracted their confessions and insulted the church court.
When the French king, Philip IV, heard this, he ordered that the men's sentences be changed to
the grisly punishment reserved for unrepentant heretics burning at the stake. Now the archbishop
wants to carry out the sentence and end this sordid affair
once and for all. As the last blocks of wood are placed on the pyre, Jacques and the other man are
led out in chains. As he's fastened to the stake, Jacques turns his body so he can face Notre Dame.
He maintains his composure even as the flames begin to consume his body. In his dying moments,
he calls out that God will avenge him,
and some of the onlookers in the crowd are sure they even hear Jacques promise
that both King Philip and Pope Clement will be dead too within a year.
The death of the Grand Master of the Knights Templar
marks the end of a bitter period of political and religious maneuvering in France,
but King Philip will not enjoy his
victory for long. Jacques' prophecy will prove accurate. Pope Clement will succumb to a fatal
illness just 33 days after Jacques' execution, and Philip will collapse on a hunting trip and
die before the year is out. After this unexpected death of the king, France's ruling dynasty will
fall apart, with Philip's successors all dying young. By the end of the century, France's ruling dynasty will fall apart, with Philip's successors all dying
young. And by the end of the century, the papacy will have left France and returned to Rome. But
despite the demise of their prosecutors, the Knights Templar will also never recover. The 200-year-long
history of the crusading order came to an end when its last Grand Master was executed in Paris
on March 18, 1314.
Next on History Daily, March 19, 1965. The wreck of the Confederate blockade runner S.S. Georgiana
is discovered by a teenage diver exactly 102 years after she sank on her maiden voyage.
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