On This Day In History: Knights Templars’ Jacques de Molay Burned At The Stake – On Mar 18, 1314

AncientPages.com - On March 18 (or 19), 1314, Jacques de Molay, the last grandmaster of the Knights Templars, an order of knighthood founded during the Crusades, was burned at stake.

Jacques de Molay, born in 1243, failed to exercise effective leadership when the suppression of the order by King Philip IV, the Fair of France, and Pope Clement V.

On This Day In History: Knights Templars' Jacques de Molay Burned At The Stake - On Mar 18, 1314

Jacques de Molay, last grandmaster of the Knights Templars was burned at the stake. Credit: Public Domain

He entered the order in 1265, fought in Syria, and after 1291 was at Cyprus. He was elected grand master of the Templars in about 1298.

Summoned to France (1306 or 1307) by Pope Clement V to discuss a new crusade, Molay asked the pope to investigate specific accusations of blasphemy and sodomy that had recently been made against his order.

On October 13, 1307, all the Templars in France, including Molay, were arrested and interrogated by the command of Philip IV, who was intent on crushing the order and seizing its wealth.

On October 24, 1307, Molay, probably under torture, confessed that some charges against the order were accurate.

However, he rejected a charge of sodomy.

He wrote to Templars throughout France, enjoining confession. Still, when the pope sent his delegates to conduct the inquiries, Molay and many of his subjects retracted their statements, saying they had been exacted by torture.

In November 1309 and March 1310, Molay appealed for a personal judgment by the pope.

But Clement decided to suppress the order (March 1312); on March 18 or 19, 1314, a commission of three cardinals condemned Molay and other dignitaries of the order to perpetual imprisonment.

On hearing this sentence, Molay again retracted his confession, and as a final punishment, he was burned as a relapsed heretic by Philip IV’s officers the same afternoon.

But the question many still ask is: Were the Knights Templar guilty or Innocent of the crimes laid against them?

Updated on March 13, 2023

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