AlterNet on MSN: Far-right Knights Templar Int'l ‘deeply offended’ by Trump’s ‘blasphemous image’
Mashable: Stephen Colbert reacts to Trump's AI Jesus post angering the Knights Templar
Stephen Colbert reacts to Trump's AI Jesus post angering the Knights Templar
Hazleton Standard Speaker: Art & Antiques by Dr. Lori: Knights Templar Seals from the Galaskewicz Collection
In contemporary literature, the Order of the Knights Templar was the focus of novels by Dan Brown (“The DaVinci Code”), Umberto Ecco (“Foucault’s Pendulum”), Ken Follett (The Pillars of the Earth), ...
Art & Antiques by Dr. Lori: Knights Templar Seals from the Galaskewicz Collection
MSN: The Knights Templar aren't just in movies, you can find them in RI
The Knights Templar aren't just in movies, you can find them in RI
Religion News Service: 2 knights, 1 horse − how a legendary Knights Templar symbol has puzzled and fascinated since the Middle Ages
2 knights, 1 horse − how a legendary Knights Templar symbol has puzzled and fascinated since the Middle Ages
Knight, now a title of honor bestowed for a variety of services, but originally in the European Middle Ages a formally professed cavalryman. The first medieval knights were professional cavalry warriors, some of whom were vassals holding lands as fiefs from the lords in whose armies they served.
Discover the detailed rankings of knights and the hierarchy of chivalry. Learn about the journey from page to Grand Master and the roles each knight held in medieval society.
Knights were essentially mounted warriors, and in the hierarchy of medieval society, were considered to be part of the lower nobility. Nevertheless, knights could rise to the ranks of the higher nobility as well by acquiring land and becoming landlords.