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  • Dec. 5, 1868
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Dec. 5, 1868: Page 5

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    Article THE KNIGHTS TEMPLARS. ← Page 3 of 3
    Article CHAPTER X. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 5

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Knights Templars.

chapter-room , ancl saw a person about to be professed slain , because he would not deny Christ . Afterwards , the boy was asked by his father to become a Templar , which he refused to do , telling him what he had seen ; whereupon he was slain . These are but a few of the absurdities deponed to by the witnesses .

Chapter X.

CHAPTER X .

Proceedings in England continned . —De Vaur exhibits two rack-extorted confessions taken in France . —Depositions of Le Mareschal . —BeBemey . —De Gertia . —John Walby de Bust . —Gaspard do Nafferton . —Abandoned -women heard as witnesses against the Order . —The depositions of witnesses read over to the Templars . —They demand

¦ c ' p ies . —Their answer . —The Inquisitors resort to more violent measures . —French Dominicans sent over to apply the torture . —TVJO Serving Brethren and a Chaplain alone confess . —Compromise between the Inquisitors and the Templars . —The Order suppressed . —A . D . 1310-1313 .

Sicard de Vaur , perceiving that little credit would be given to the hearsay evidence of the enemies of the Order , to intimidate the Templars , and incline them to confess to the hideous charges , exhibited two rack-extorted confessions

which had been obtained in France . The Templars whose names were attached to these were Robert de St . Just and Geoffrey de Goneville . St . Just had been received by Imbert de Peraut , the Grand Prior of England , but arrested in

France , be bad been tortured there . His confession runs , that upon his reception he denied Christ , and spat beside the Cross . De Goneville ' s confession will be found in chapter fifth of the present work . Both of these Knights had revoked their confessions , but this was carefully suppressed

by the Inquisitor . The confessions , however , did not forward the views of De Vaur , and William de la More affirmed that the Templars who had made such lied . Ferinsius le Mareschal , a secular Knight ,

beingexamined , deponed , that his grandfather entered the Order as active , healthy , ancl gay as a bird ; but , on the third day from taking the vows , he died , as the witness " now suspects , because he refused to take part in the wickedness practised

by the Templars . " William de Berney , an Augustine monk , had heard a Templar say , in the presence of several respectable people , at the ¦ funeral of the parish priest of Duxworth , near Cambridge , that a man , after death , had no more soul than had a dog . John de Gertia , a Minorite , was told by a woman , named Cotacota , who had

heard it from Exvalethus , Preceptor of London , that one of the servants of the Templars entered the Temple Hall , where the chapter was held , and secreted himself . After the door had been shut and locked by the last Templar who entered , and

the key carried by him to the superior , the assembled brethren went into another room , and took from a closet a certain black figure , with shining eyes , and a cross . They placed the cross before the Master , and the " culuni idoli vel figuraa" they

placed upon the cross , and carried it to the Master , who kissed the idol in ano , ancl all the others did . the same after him . When they had finished kissing the idol , they all spat three times upon the cross , except one , who refused , saying , " I was a bad man in the world , ancl placed myself in this Order for the salvation of my soul . What could

I do worse ? I will not do it . " Upon this the brethren said , " Take heed , ancl do as you see the Order do . " But he declared that he would not ; whereupon they placed him in a well , that stood in the midst of their house , which they covered

up , and left him to perish there . Being asked as to the time when the woman heard this , De Gertia answered , that she had told him of it about fourteen years back , at London , where she kept a shop for her husband , Robert Cotacota . John Walby

de Bust , also a Minorite , had heard John de Dingeston say , that he had heard that there was in . a secret place of the house of the Templars at London , a gilded head , ancl that when one of the Masters was on his death-bed , he summoned

to his presence several of the Preceptors , and tolcl them that , if they wished for power , dominion , and honour they must worship that head .

The evidence of Gaspard de Nafferton , the parish priest of Ryde , is very important , as he deponed to having been at one time a chaplain of the Order . He was in the Order at the time of the reception of William de Pokelington . He

recollected well that this person made his appearance at the Temple on Sunday evening , with the equipage and habit of a member of the Order , accompanied by William de la More ; the Grand Prior of England , William de Grafton , Preceptor

of Ribbestane and Fontebriggs , and other brethren . During the first watch of that same night , they assembled in chapel , ancl caused De Nafferton to be awakened to say mass . After he had celebrated mass , they made him ancl his clerk , go out into the hall beyond the cloister , and then sent for De Pokelington . On his entry into the chapel ,

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1868-12-05, Page 5” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 15 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_05121868/page/5/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CHIPS OP FOREIGN ASHLAR. Article 1
1.—MASONIC DISCIPLINE. Article 2
THE KNIGHTS TEMPLARS. Article 3
CHAPTER X. Article 5
THE SIX DAYS' WORK OF CREATION IN HONOUR OF MASONRY. Article 6
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 7
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 9
MASONIC MEMS. Article 10
UNITED GRAND LODGE. Article 10
METROPOLITAN. Article 14
PROVINCIAL. Article 16
SCOTLAND. Article 17
ROYAL ARCH. Article 18
MARK MASONRY. Article 19
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 19
METROPOLITAN LODGE MEETINGS, ETC., FOR THE WEEK ENDING DECEMBER 12TH, 1868. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Knights Templars.

chapter-room , ancl saw a person about to be professed slain , because he would not deny Christ . Afterwards , the boy was asked by his father to become a Templar , which he refused to do , telling him what he had seen ; whereupon he was slain . These are but a few of the absurdities deponed to by the witnesses .

Chapter X.

CHAPTER X .

Proceedings in England continned . —De Vaur exhibits two rack-extorted confessions taken in France . —Depositions of Le Mareschal . —BeBemey . —De Gertia . —John Walby de Bust . —Gaspard do Nafferton . —Abandoned -women heard as witnesses against the Order . —The depositions of witnesses read over to the Templars . —They demand

¦ c ' p ies . —Their answer . —The Inquisitors resort to more violent measures . —French Dominicans sent over to apply the torture . —TVJO Serving Brethren and a Chaplain alone confess . —Compromise between the Inquisitors and the Templars . —The Order suppressed . —A . D . 1310-1313 .

Sicard de Vaur , perceiving that little credit would be given to the hearsay evidence of the enemies of the Order , to intimidate the Templars , and incline them to confess to the hideous charges , exhibited two rack-extorted confessions

which had been obtained in France . The Templars whose names were attached to these were Robert de St . Just and Geoffrey de Goneville . St . Just had been received by Imbert de Peraut , the Grand Prior of England , but arrested in

France , be bad been tortured there . His confession runs , that upon his reception he denied Christ , and spat beside the Cross . De Goneville ' s confession will be found in chapter fifth of the present work . Both of these Knights had revoked their confessions , but this was carefully suppressed

by the Inquisitor . The confessions , however , did not forward the views of De Vaur , and William de la More affirmed that the Templars who had made such lied . Ferinsius le Mareschal , a secular Knight ,

beingexamined , deponed , that his grandfather entered the Order as active , healthy , ancl gay as a bird ; but , on the third day from taking the vows , he died , as the witness " now suspects , because he refused to take part in the wickedness practised

by the Templars . " William de Berney , an Augustine monk , had heard a Templar say , in the presence of several respectable people , at the ¦ funeral of the parish priest of Duxworth , near Cambridge , that a man , after death , had no more soul than had a dog . John de Gertia , a Minorite , was told by a woman , named Cotacota , who had

heard it from Exvalethus , Preceptor of London , that one of the servants of the Templars entered the Temple Hall , where the chapter was held , and secreted himself . After the door had been shut and locked by the last Templar who entered , and

the key carried by him to the superior , the assembled brethren went into another room , and took from a closet a certain black figure , with shining eyes , and a cross . They placed the cross before the Master , and the " culuni idoli vel figuraa" they

placed upon the cross , and carried it to the Master , who kissed the idol in ano , ancl all the others did . the same after him . When they had finished kissing the idol , they all spat three times upon the cross , except one , who refused , saying , " I was a bad man in the world , ancl placed myself in this Order for the salvation of my soul . What could

I do worse ? I will not do it . " Upon this the brethren said , " Take heed , ancl do as you see the Order do . " But he declared that he would not ; whereupon they placed him in a well , that stood in the midst of their house , which they covered

up , and left him to perish there . Being asked as to the time when the woman heard this , De Gertia answered , that she had told him of it about fourteen years back , at London , where she kept a shop for her husband , Robert Cotacota . John Walby

de Bust , also a Minorite , had heard John de Dingeston say , that he had heard that there was in . a secret place of the house of the Templars at London , a gilded head , ancl that when one of the Masters was on his death-bed , he summoned

to his presence several of the Preceptors , and tolcl them that , if they wished for power , dominion , and honour they must worship that head .

The evidence of Gaspard de Nafferton , the parish priest of Ryde , is very important , as he deponed to having been at one time a chaplain of the Order . He was in the Order at the time of the reception of William de Pokelington . He

recollected well that this person made his appearance at the Temple on Sunday evening , with the equipage and habit of a member of the Order , accompanied by William de la More ; the Grand Prior of England , William de Grafton , Preceptor

of Ribbestane and Fontebriggs , and other brethren . During the first watch of that same night , they assembled in chapel , ancl caused De Nafferton to be awakened to say mass . After he had celebrated mass , they made him ancl his clerk , go out into the hall beyond the cloister , and then sent for De Pokelington . On his entry into the chapel ,

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