@@HelpW4nted Revelation 3:20 Behold, I stand at the door, and knock: if any man hear my voice, and open the door, I will come in to him, and will sup with him, and he with me. HEY THERE 🤗 JESUS IS CALLING YOU TODAY. Turn away from your sins, confess, forsake them and live the victorious life. God bless. Revelation 22:12-14 And, behold, I come quickly; and my reward is with me, to give every man according as his work shall be. I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end, the first and the last. Blessed are they that do his commandments, that they may have right to the tree of life, and may enter in through the gates into the city.
There's more! King Philip's decision to have them persecuted was shortly after he had been protected by the knights from an unruly mob. Their execution wasn't just unwarranted, it was an act of betrayal.
@@theslavecrusher5947the man is burning well the Knights of god are watching and enjoying every second of it same with the pope hes also with the king
To be fair, I think he was just playing reasonable odds... They were both in their late 40's and it was an absolutely _horrible_ time to be alive _(HALF of the entire population of Europe would be killed by the Black Death within the next half century)_
King Phillip also owed other people too. He hoped to raid that Templar Knights' holdings to pay off the rest of his debts, but the Knights had managed to hide and remove most of their wealth to somewhere. Nobody knows where.
@@MJBAKANemoStrong I've heard those stories about the supposed desecration of the cross also. The ones who made those claims were actually people who were rejected for membership. It seems to me the demands to curse, piss on, or spit on the cross was a test to see if they would refuse. If they did refuse, they passed the test and were admitted. I know from my dad the Masons have some similar tests. Masons are believed by many to be originated with Templars.
Strictly speaking you're correct. But to be factually correct, Grand Master de Molay was roasted (not in a comedy fashion) over a slow burning fire. He was still conscious to see his legs burn and drop off his blistering thighs. This was considered a better way to teach a lesson to the Templar Knights, that were still waiting to be tortured. In the usual way of being burnt alive, you'd most likely pass out from smoke inhalation. And so wouldn't be conscious of the pain of burning. But poor Jacques' fire was purposely kept low, to ensure he would undergo unbelievable pain, the King had hoped that the Grand Master would be screaming in pain. But all de Molay gave out was his curse, and a slight whimper. BTW Jacques was 69yo & considered to be an old man at this time in history. 😢
@@aquarius021489in our current times with modern medicine and health knowledge people live well on to 90 and even past 100 so people's 40s-60s is called middle aged even if most people still do drop of at 70-80 so the middle should be 30-40
Adult life expectancy hasn't really changed since ancient times, it's just all the dead kids dragging down the average. If you lived past like 12 you had more or less the same life expectancy as someone today
It’s almost like god might not have been a big fan of his earthly representative being an A Hole. The king and the pope certainly thought a lot about that wonderful idea after getting sent downwards
The greatest part, is that roughly 14 years after Philip the Fuckboy died, his lineage was gone too. His sons never produced male heirs, and they all died relatively young. Makes you wonder if dude really did get cursed.
Not true actually... Its true it most likely came from Christian mythology... but the idea of 13 as an evil number and Friday as a day when bad things happens is older than that Also Friday the thirteenth being cursed day is more of an American thing than european
@@sudanemamimikiki1527 The number 13 was unlucky long before the Knights Templar, that’s true. However the stigma around Friday the 13th specifically is most likely because of the prosecution of the Knights Templar.
@@TheCoolerReaper again..not exactly proven or true. Friday was connected to a lot of bad events in Christianity before it, ( such as the crucifixion of jesus) same with the number 13 ( which has even older roots than the crucifixion) and again. The belief is more American than European.. and saw its rise to popularity in the 20th century
@@sudanemamimikiki1527 what I’m saying is that October 13th, 1307, the prosecution of the Knights Templar, could have jumpstarted the assumption that Friday the 13th is unlucky. I’m also aware it’s more American than European, however that doesn’t mean its origin isn’t European.
Philip IV's death started the sequence of events that led to the eradication of his line in civil war and the English branch gaining a claim, which led in turn to the Hundreds Year War. This is the plot of the historical novel series The Cursed Kings, which was adapted for French TV in the 70s and was a major inspiration for GoT
The ignorance of religion . The horrific act that only a religiously constipated delusional human could justify as " God's will" Priests and idiotic dogma are as dangerous as nuclear weapons.
Surely you do not believe that the Templar Grand Master’s curse really killed the French King’s line? Did it also caused the French Revolution? Snort, snort.
@@Egilhelmson the actions against the Knights and the fact the King died within a year may have effected the dealings people had with them. In a deeply religious and superstitious society perception can strongly influence reality. A belief that the ruler has lost favor of god(s) has caused issues. Many a barron has revolted for things like that, whether genuine or just opportunistic. There would have been an effect on the state's ability to borrow money. I don't know much about it specifically but I wouldn't be surprised if it played a small part in the downfall.
Yeah this wasn't touched on in history class at my school and I had to wiki historical figures in that game as they came up (it gives you a little character background at a time and does culminate eventually but I'm impatient and had the internet) Definitely a different way to play a game, and made a way for me to actually remember what I'd read about them.
He also cursed the king "to the 13th Generation", and all 3 of the king's sons died after him within a year, thus eradicating the "Capétiens" branch of the royalty
Imagine being the model king and later a saint as you tell your son you'd rather the Scottish be on the throne than he lead France to sin but discover your grandkids do that anyway.
@@ss-99995 it is considered as a new branch called the "Valois" branch. It was started by the brother of the King, so it is considered as a new Dynasty.
they were more like brinks security. They moved money while taking the risk of transporting it. Sure some of them might have been special forces but others most were not. Also only the biggest group got .
Fun fact: The prosecution of the Knights Templar was the inspiration for both the fall from grace of the Jedi order and the execution of order 66 in Star Wars. 🤓
A lot of what happened to the Knights Templar was similarly awful - some of the most terrible acts of betrayal in history. Sent them off to fight in wars and protect pilgrims, came home with the wealth they earned, and were promptly murdered and tortured en mass, and forced to confess to blasphemy or being satanic. That last part is what they would be remembered for, for centuries.
The templar weren't saints either tho. The crusades wiped out hundreds of advanced cultures and set our species back about 200-300 years in mathematics and scientific revelations .
@@_blank-_ I think he is talking about veterans. They go out, fight our wars, come home and often times end up homeless or are unable to support themselves due to injuries - similarly betrayed by the country they fought for, though not in the same way.
He probably already knew that the Pope was unwell. Late stage cancer is hard to conceal. The hunting "accident" could have been a coincidence or it could have been arranged. There were no Templar knights left but their executions would have angered many factions.
@@XfSwb5bs You can't expect to wield supreme power just 'cause some watery tart threw a sword at you! Listen. Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government. Supreme executive power derives from a mandate from the masses, not from some farcical aquatic ceremony.
"We got jealous so we killed the people most loyal to us and who were fabulous at their jobs" Yea sounds about right, greed and envy and all that being oddly enough the true killers.
The Knights Templar were also convicted of being devil worshippers and satanists, however I feel that this criticism was used plainly as a front to eradicate the Knights Templar, as was originally intended.
I met an old man on a city bus, somewhen in the 1980s, who was packing a sword in a leather case and headed for a meeting of the "Knights of de Molay", I think it was. I knew the names and the history, and we had an interesting chat. He was the head master of the lodge, and he was riding the bus to get there, and dang, he was old.
@@deelococ its crazy because it isn't true, freemasons just have a bad stigma started by the catholic church. Ironically much like the knight's templar
Knights Templar were straight up real life Jedi knights. They were literally warrior monks who would give up all possessions and commit to a life of chastity. They were also actively trying to change the world for the better from what I understand. And they believed in reincarnation so apparently they had a mentality of like: kill me and I’ll be back and I’ll keep coming back forever. Extremely badass.
Bro, that is Hollywood lies who love glorifying the Templars. They were far from Christian Crusaders. They were a Luciferian Kabbalistic secret society and still are to this day. Baphomet came from Eliphas Levi former GM of the Knights Templar. The Templars killed untold numbers of Protestants and Christians during the Inquisition for possessing an English Bible and not converting to Catholicism. They were the Pope's henchmen and they were sodomites big time including with children. NOTHING at all to be glorified and far from "Christian Crusaders". Every one of their GM's were occultist and Kabbalistic Luciferians as they come.
The templars became greedy and corrupt too, as it usually happens when there is a mass of wealth. The men at the top got all the men at the bottom to hand over all their wealth to the templars and spend their short lives fighting. If they fled for their lives they were then tracked down and killed. And the people who killed them got a bounty. They were poor slaves if they were at the bottom of the ranks.
If my history serves me correctly, the Knights Templars still live to this day fighting a war against the Brotherhood of Assassins in the shadows for the notion of free will
@@GroundationOnly am not.... Ok .. I don't know what that is.. 😋 Billy Graham was and he was also a MASON and best mates with POPE JOHN PAUL, The Robson's (James and Betty) and COPELAND! 😳
D' Moley didn't curse king Phillip & the Pope, he died reminding them that every action has an equal & opposite reaction. & as "helpless" as they thought he was now, he's death would leave behind many who would see justice delivered to both king & pope. Which is exactly what happened
Let's be fair, De Molay's words spoke directly towards Philip as much as it did to the Templars themselves. Ironic, those words coming from his mouth, considering his organisation contributed to indiscriminate murder in the Holy Land and established itself as the world's first centralised banking system, amassing riches and political power, both of which the Christ they claimed to serve hated.
It always blows my mind that people just accepted torture as a legitimate means of extracting a confession. Like, "yea turns out she was a witch. We had to break every finger on both hands, but she admitted it.🤷♂️"
@@Billy-by7iwthey were never then nor now interested in truth but results - they need to prove to their bosses they achieve their goals. It’s just like Management in companies today - stupid goals are chased, purely because they are measurable.
The belief was that if they were truly innocent, God would somehow protect them. Thus, if they really suffered, then God must be mad at them for something really bad.
@@idjles except I wouldn’t compare literal torture and burning to death with corporate management… that’s some privileged white people sh*t right there.
@@glenngriffon8032the pope was 'thrown from his horse over a falling wall' which I think means he got bucked over a short wall with a long drop on the other side. During the night while his body was lying in state, lightning struck the church he was in and by the time they put the fire out, the body had already been consumed. Phillip IV suffered a cerebral stroke while on a hunt and died a few weeks later. The throne passed rapidly through the the hands of his sons who all died relatively young (all from various illnesses with one being suspected of poison but no evidence backs it) without producing heirs and within 14 years his male line was extinguished and the throne passed to the line of his brother.
it was also the 14th century so just telling someone they'd be dead within a year probably had a 50-50 shot of coming true. but jacques won the exacta there
Fun fact, there's a youth organization dedicated to remembering Jacques DeMolay and emulating his example of being fiercely loyal to his comrades. It's called DeMolay.
The Teutonic Knights seeing what happened to the returning Knights Templar: You know what, grandmaster, lets just chill as tourists in Venice until our new headquarter at the Nogat is being finished…
A perfect example of an asset quickly turning into a drastic liability. "Owe someone a dollar, thats a problem for you. Owe someone a million dollars, thats a problem for them"
Did they though? They indiscriminately contributed to the slaughter of inhabitants of the Holy Land, Christian, Muslim and Jew alike, and then went on to become what was essentially the world's first centralised banking system, indebting kingdoms unto their red cross. All this whilst they hid behind behind the hypocritical monicker of "poor knights of Christ". They didn't get a raw deal, they went from pillagers to bankers. They enjoyed a decent century-long reign, indebting kingdoms and expanding their power. In the end, they learnt a deadly lesson; in a feudal society, the value of coin means nothing if it isn't sanctioned by a monarch or the Pope.
The Templars betrayal was basically Order 66. On October, Friday the 13th, the knights were simultaneously ambushed by their own French soldiers, by order of the Pope and Philip. Most of them died fighting, but some were captured, tortured and burned. Molay himself held out under steady torture for seven years before apparently confessing. Its a historical blot that the French government tries to excuse to this day. They published a documentary within the last decade, waving around newly "discovered" confessions from Molay and other tortured knights, acting like they were voluntarily admitting to all of the charges.
I've read so much about about the period and am always taken aback at how much the south of France (and its various Templar connections) was truly beaten into cultural submission by the Parisian kings. What's even more depressing is that such subtle oppression exists today, i.e. the suppression of the Occitan language.
Random fact (or speculation): the only remains of the Grand Master's bones was only his skull and femurs and was the inspiration for the Skull and Crossbones
That was one reason why they killed the Templars. The main reason was fear of the Templars. When the Templars returned to Europe, they have gained a huge amount of wealth and political power. Not just the French crown but many royal families across Europe grew extremely nervous of the Templars because the political power they had and the real possibility that they could threaten the monarchs of Europe. So, what did they do?. Killed them of course. Not just the French but many many other European kingdoms went on the rampage and executed all their Templars
It was also some of the earliest proof that torture does not get the truth. They got people to confess to crimes that they knew they did not commit. Yet torture continued for a few more centuries as the primary source of evidence for crime. So many people screwed over so bad for so long. Yet there are people today who want to return to everything wrong with government at that time. I think that these people are too stupid to have a voice in government. Only because they demonstrate how easily they are manipulated to voting against their own well being.
@@justinlavine9209 The Brazilian Military Dictatorship employed torture as a means of producing evidence in a criminal law trial, and only ended in 1985, which is the last legal instance of torture as a means of producing proof in a criminal law trial in the Western world I can think of. So yeah, the notion that torture hasn't been practiced for centuries in the Western world is simply untrue.
St King Louis IX telling his son that he'd rather have Scottish people on the throne than his son lead them down to sin and ruin only to see his great grandkids do it instead and drive the house to extinction as well.
On top of this, Philip's sons all died very quickly into their reign, as did his grandson, who inherited the throne as an infant. This ended of Capet, which was France's longest reigning house and the incredible luck streak that the house of capet had as for nearly every succesion the throne would pass from the father to his eldest living son. Furthermore, Philip had several descendants through his grandaughters and daughter who werent in the line of succession because a woman was not allowed to succeed on the french throne, but his daughter, Isabella "the She Wolf of France" married the King of England and ended up overthrowing him with the help of her lover but then was overthrown herself by her son, it was through her that the english claimed the French throne.
The Knights of Saint John are the same order as the medieval Knights Hospitalet and are still around in Malta, and I believe several Teutonic splinter groups are around, though the Knights Teutonic we're dicks.
I remember reading a book about this in french that vaguely translates to The Cursed Kings: The Iron King. Philip was cruel and evil, he wanted to become a templar but got rejected since he was a prince and now with the kingdom in his hands, he decided to, as said in the video, basically eradicate the entire organization for the money and tortured all the elders of it brutally. Towards the end of his life, the book, who may have heavily romanticized this part, made philip become a better man just to die to the curse of Jacques de Molay. His daughters in law were all banished for adultery on his sons except for his eldest one. The whole story was prett fucked up and is not that bad of a read.
He was the last known public grandmaster. And I know 15 other people has already said that in this thread, but that is a very important thing to acknowledge.
One of the most important things about the templar, what's the banking system they invented. Based on actual math. But, they were on limited resources. So they invented a system of protection. Based on the people around them. Who were also, very well-armed. They decided it was prudent, to put their money, and the people's pockets around them. Sparing them the expense of building vaults. And since the Templar operated out of two restaurants in england, this gave them an opportunity to invent something that still exists to this day. They are called T.I.P.S. Now while some of you insist on believing that text is an acronym that means, to insure proper service. That is not at all what it means. Templar Insurance Protection Safety. In 2023, are you using a banking method, that offers, insurance, protection, and safety. Rhetorical question.
This was a period of time where the Church was acting more like a tyrannical government instead of a religious institution. Their use of God was merely a ruse to justify the horrible things they did, because peasants at the time didn't know any better, because they couldn't read or write, much less Latin like the Church. Plus, the Clergy had been mostly made up of children of Nobility, so it's easy to see how it became so corrupted. The government itself is a different story. They have no such leash, except to simply say they were higher born, so their actions were justified by that alone. I mean, for anyone paying attention in the current era, not much has actually changed. Rich powerful families and their kids becoming politicians to rule over the lower class.
It's absolutely true. I had over a million dollars worth of bitcoin on the oldest bitcoin exchange at the time (and the most stable and secure) name BTC-e. It's server was hosted in Sevastopol, Ukraine. When Russia invaded Ukraine the US took advantage of the chaos and flew in with a military force and hijacked the servers holding billions worth of bitcoin and then ran off with it. I'm a US citizen and the US government robbed me. The US government participated in a bank heists. It's insane, something out of a movie. If they can get away with murder they will, literally.
The surviving knights took the fleet and fled Portugal when the Spanish came for them. They sailed for the New World in the Caribbean, and became the first pirates there, hunting only ships of Catholic countries, operate with a code of rules, all under a new flag. The crossbones in the pirate flag is the Templar cross, laying down as if on the ground, represented as bones with a skull above the to represent the death of the Templar order. Later men and women would engage in piracy in the region, many adopting similar flags and some even the code of conducts, but many just doing theirnown thing. So the original pirates of the Caribbean were former Templars.
@@goldfish6660 Read "Pirates & The Lost Templar Fleet" by David Hatcher Childress. He did a lot of research and leg work and has his sources cited in the back.
@@keithreinsel7842so you have none. A random person publishing a book about a conspiracy hypothesis, with zero use of the historical method or textual criticism, is not a source. Come back with something actually published in a peer reviewed journal.
The Knights Templar had one of the first banks. Travelers would deposit their money so they wouldn’t need to travel with too much. This helped them not be waylaid by highwaymen, and they could retrieve their money when they reached their destination, or anywhere along their route. Rather like travelers checks.
Philip applied for acceptance to the organization a year before. He was rejected as they figured he just wanted access to their finances. So he ended up kidnapping the previous Pope who then died from pneumonia. He helped install a new Pope who he got to drop support for the Templars who he had arrested all over the European continent on Friday the thirteenth. That's how we got it to be an unlucky day.
No, more like the Templars, the Pope and Philip were all members of the Brotherhood of Darkness, all Sith, and Philip and the Pope persecuting the Templars is more like Sith on Sith action.
Molay actually confessed to the crimes under torture, eventually. Of course that does not mean any it was true, that’s the problem with tortured confession, but he did confess under extreme-horrific duress. It was only after being essentially forced to confess when he was being executed that he proclaimed his innocence.
Well it does work if the guy is guilty. Thats the part that people are so conveniently ignorant to. If someone is guilty and they are being tortured they aren’t going to come up with some lie, they are just going to tell the truth. If torture doesn’t work then why has it been used with good results throughout all of human history? Yeah torture is bad but trying to pretend like it doesn’t work just because you don’t like it is dumb.
@@Fck_the_atfHell yeah it works, but it's double-edged since if you torture someone innocent they will eventually confess things they didn't do, but if guilty then the result will be different
@Fck_the_atf I don't believe at any time in history have they ever made sure it's the right guy before starting torture. The general consensus by those who've had a hand in it is that everyone confesses. The difference is only how long it takes. If the tortured died before confessing, then it didn't matter if they were innocent or not.
The Templars were trying to protect the Sword of Eden from the assassins. They all died, even his apprentice, who was killed with an assassin's hidden blade.
That is the Hospitallers. There is no successor organization to the Templars, although the Freemasons claim to be, and the English branch took it fairly seriously when Allenby took Jerusalem from the Turks. They closed the old Temple Bar in London for a service of thanksgiving, that night.
Actually the only true successors of the Templars were The Order of Christ. After the persecutions in Europe the survving Templars were given santuary by King Dinis I of Portugal. There order was reformed in 1309 to The Order of Christ which made them very powerful during the New World discoveries. However they did eventually go extinct in the late 1800s after it was secularised.
@@Egilhelmsonthe Templars didn’t end, only the French ‘Chapter’ if you will came to an end. Other ‘Chapters’ existed in other kingdoms which then rebranded themselves and went underground. An example are the Templars who established themselves in Portugal then rebranded themselves the ‘Order of Christ’ to blend in more with the Christian veneer. The ‘Order of Christ’ financed much of the explorations into the Americas that were guised as finding an alternative route to India. They were searching for the 7 Cities of the Antilles (West) referred to as the Septentronalias and eventually found them in the Americas long before Columbus went who was also a Templar. Columbus married into a prominent Templar family known as the Parastrello themselves were a branch of the Visconti family. Parastrello being the Grand Master of the Templar chapter in Portugal during Columbus time, as a wedding gift gave Columbus his entire library and navigational charts as well as the finances for an America expedition. The Masonry refers to the Templars from England, a faction of whom left as ‘Pilgrims’ established themselves in the America via the Washington Family whom were the Captain General. Per standard protocol the Captain General has rights to Kingship over Land the establish, meaning George Washington had the right to be King of America but refused- this refusal would set us up for corporate slavery later on. The Freemasonry refers to the outcome of the Revolution, where Masons in America had freed themselves from Protestant British persecution. The lodges here became decentralized, with many other foreign branches establishing, resulting in origin Templar lodges to become few. The freemasonry would later be centralized under the Rothschilds grand lodge system who corrupted its purpose to be used as a geopolitical weapon, which is why I the 1900’s many Masons like Manly P Hall broke secrecy acts and revealed the esoteric truths the Masonry preserved so that it doesn’t get corrupted or silenced internally by the Rothschilds. Many Masons left and joined the German SS which was against Masonry for this reason.
Jacques de Molay was also a very oldfashioned crusader who refused to read the sign of the times after the fall of Accre, where the Hospital Knights changed policy, de Molay kept on demanding a new crusade. He worked himself into isolement within the Crusaders world and being rich AND isolated is a receoy for doom.
@@slavenrasic2173 It’s also entirely possible, since the first use of the word Baphomet came during the Siege of Antioch when it’s inhabitants called upon that name (supposedly referring to Muhammad.) The next came from confessions extracted by torture during the Inquisition of the Knights Templar.
@@slavenrasic2173it’s literally the factual events. He owned the Templar an amount of money he couldn’t pay back, came up with lies to turn everyone else who owed them money against them.
Truly cursing your tormentors is one hell of a power move.
And the curse actually fulfills 💀
How convenient for the story he said that! Of course he did not, and it’s just after both men died that this story was brought up.
@@caesar6484sssssssssshhhh it’s a cool fucking curse regardless
Only he didn't didn't get to see this through. So it's an even break
@@caesar6484silence, we want it to be a curse, cause that’s cool
Moral of the story: Never lend anyone money.
Specifically the king
@@Kira-in6dc especially *IF* you're the king lol
Or borrow money, either.
Or never trust politicians or clergy.
And never let them know you are rich.
King: (owes a debt he can not repay)
Also king: "It smells like WITCH IN HERE!"
No, he basically accused them of gay sex.
@@HelpW4nted
Revelation 3:20
Behold, I stand at the door, and knock: if any man hear my voice, and open the door, I will come in to him, and will sup with him, and he with me.
HEY THERE 🤗 JESUS IS CALLING YOU TODAY. Turn away from your sins, confess, forsake them and live the victorious life. God bless.
Revelation 22:12-14
And, behold, I come quickly; and my reward is with me, to give every man according as his work shall be.
I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end, the first and the last.
Blessed are they that do his commandments, that they may have right to the tree of life, and may enter in through the gates into the city.
The knights Templar committed heresy
They burned only one witch during the witch burnings. People especially liberals are being fooled
@@arnimzola1139bro, are you actually falling for a medieval kings blatantly obvious scheme to get out of repaying his outstanding debts?
There's more! King Philip's decision to have them persecuted was shortly after he had been protected by the knights from an unruly mob. Their execution wasn't just unwarranted, it was an act of betrayal.
A dead man can’t repay his debt
@@voedingszuurE338shame he didn’t die
The fires of hell has swallowed him whole
@@theslavecrusher5947the man is burning well the Knights of god are watching and enjoying every second of it same with the pope hes also with the king
Well, kings are politicians.
Imagine burning the guy that looked like the average wizard and then get actually cursed
This is hilarious 😂😂😂
He wasn't a wizard, God just wasn't going to let a real G get murked like that.
@@tylersmith3139 real 👍
@@tylersmith3139 true
To be fair, I think he was just playing reasonable odds... They were both in their late 40's and it was an absolutely _horrible_ time to be alive _(HALF of the entire population of Europe would be killed by the Black Death within the next half century)_
King Phillip also owed other people too. He hoped to raid that Templar Knights' holdings to pay off the rest of his debts, but the Knights had managed to hide and remove most of their wealth to somewhere. Nobody knows where.
Either way the gov owns it now
The Knights of Malta
have it all
@@MJBAKANemoStrong I've heard those stories about the supposed desecration of the cross also. The ones who made those claims were actually people who were rejected for membership. It seems to me the demands to curse, piss on, or spit on the cross was a test to see if they would refuse. If they did refuse, they passed the test and were admitted. I know from my dad the Masons have some similar tests. Masons are believed by many to be originated with Templars.
@@MJBAKANemoStrongsure they did ..
It's in America, of course. Did you not watch the documentary, National Treasure?
Strictly speaking you're correct. But to be factually correct, Grand Master de Molay was roasted (not in a comedy fashion) over a slow burning fire. He was still conscious to see his legs burn and drop off his blistering thighs. This was considered a better way to teach a lesson to the Templar Knights, that were still waiting to be tortured.
In the usual way of being burnt alive, you'd most likely pass out from smoke inhalation. And so wouldn't be conscious of the pain of burning. But poor Jacques' fire was purposely kept low, to ensure he would undergo unbelievable pain, the King had hoped that the Grand Master would be screaming in pain. But all de Molay gave out was his curse, and a slight whimper. BTW Jacques was 69yo & considered to be an old man at this time in history. 😢
Some people actually are built different.
@@aquarius021489in our current times with modern medicine and health knowledge people live well on to 90 and even past 100 so people's 40s-60s is called middle aged even if most people still do drop of at 70-80 so the middle should be 30-40
@@aquarius021489prob not considering the average life span in the medieval period compared to now
70 was like living to 90 at their time.
Adult life expectancy hasn't really changed since ancient times, it's just all the dead kids dragging down the average. If you lived past like 12 you had more or less the same life expectancy as someone today
That curse worked out suspiciously well 🤔
Haha but what exactly ar you suspicious of🤔🤔😂
It’s almost like god might not have been a big fan of his earthly representative being an A Hole.
The king and the pope certainly thought a lot about that wonderful idea after getting sent downwards
@@jmdibonaventuroor the very rich Templers had paid for someone to sort them out before his death. I have to look up how they both died...
@@101stubor he simply knew his knights would retaliate 🤷🏽♂️
@@stonermane621 very possible.
The greatest part, is that roughly 14 years after Philip the Fuckboy died, his lineage was gone too. His sons never produced male heirs, and they all died relatively young. Makes you wonder if dude really did get cursed.
philip the fuckboy 💀💀💀
Most definitely got cursed.
Yes I believe de molay also cursed the bloodline saying they would no longe rule Idk I might b wrong though 🎉
@@stars-hk9uo 🤣🤣😂😅
But through his daughter and female descendants, he was the ancestor of the kings of navarre, france(bourbon), Spain, England, Scotland etc..
The prosecution of the Knights Templar could’ve also been the origin of Friday the 13th being a day of bad luck.
I keep mentioning it every year on October haha
Not true actually...
Its true it most likely came from Christian mythology... but the idea of 13 as an evil number and Friday as a day when bad things happens is older than that
Also Friday the thirteenth being cursed day is more of an American thing than european
@@sudanemamimikiki1527 The number 13 was unlucky long before the Knights Templar, that’s true. However the stigma around Friday the 13th specifically is most likely because of the prosecution of the Knights Templar.
@@TheCoolerReaper again..not exactly proven or true.
Friday was connected to a lot of bad events in Christianity before it, ( such as the crucifixion of jesus) same with the number 13 ( which has even older roots than the crucifixion)
and again. The belief is more American than European.. and saw its rise to popularity in the 20th century
@@sudanemamimikiki1527 what I’m saying is that October 13th, 1307, the prosecution of the Knights Templar, could have jumpstarted the assumption that Friday the 13th is unlucky.
I’m also aware it’s more American than European, however that doesn’t mean its origin isn’t European.
Philip IV's death started the sequence of events that led to the eradication of his line in civil war and the English branch gaining a claim, which led in turn to the Hundreds Year War. This is the plot of the historical novel series The Cursed Kings, which was adapted for French TV in the 70s and was a major inspiration for GoT
The ignorance of religion . The horrific act that only a religiously constipated delusional human could justify as " God's will" Priests and idiotic dogma are as dangerous as nuclear weapons.
What is GoT? I'm interested
@@mishrapriyam7 thanks sr
Surely you do not believe that the Templar Grand Master’s curse really killed the French King’s line? Did it also caused the French Revolution? Snort, snort.
@@Egilhelmson the actions against the Knights and the fact the King died within a year may have effected the dealings people had with them.
In a deeply religious and superstitious society perception can strongly influence reality. A belief that the ruler has lost favor of god(s) has caused issues. Many a barron has revolted for things like that, whether genuine or just opportunistic.
There would have been an effect on the state's ability to borrow money.
I don't know much about it specifically but I wouldn't be surprised if it played a small part in the downfall.
Even funnier, Jaques de Molay cursed the king's dinasty up to his 13th generation. Yes, his 13th generation was Louis XVI
He cursed them with the end of the French Monarchy. Insane stuff.
Louis XVI isnt a descendant of Philippe IV, also Molay's curse is likely a myth
Philip IV died thanks to stroke
Clement V died thanks to thunder
Dude, Louis XVI was from Bourbon dynasty, while Philip IV was from Valois dynasty. You should've check the basic info before posting this crap.
@@Tanaicus you do know that the Bourbons are a cadet branch of the Valois, right?
Oh so this is the opening of Assassin's Creed Unity was about
Yeah this wasn't touched on in history class at my school and I had to wiki historical figures in that game as they came up (it gives you a little character background at a time and does culminate eventually but I'm impatient and had the internet) Definitely a different way to play a game, and made a way for me to actually remember what I'd read about them.
I was thinking the same thing lol
History comes alive in Assassins Creed.
Then you make it dead again.
I was about to comment this
This is the comment I was waiting for
He also cursed the king "to the 13th Generation", and all 3 of the king's sons died after him within a year, thus eradicating the "Capétiens" branch of the royalty
Imagine being the model king and later a saint as you tell your son you'd rather the Scottish be on the throne than he lead France to sin but discover your grandkids do that anyway.
Yeah I can't believe they left that part out
That branch is still alive - via their cadet branches.Probably the oldest European intact royal male lineage.
@@ss-99995 it is considered as a new branch called the "Valois" branch. It was started by the brother of the King, so it is considered as a new Dynasty.
@@Guitaristmalakian its still the same lineage,longest running unbroken lineage in europe,probably the 3rd oldest in the world.
So moral of the story is that if you cant pay your debt just unalive the person.
Ah hell nah my boy was not falsely executed by Lord Farquaad.
falsely accused of doing butt stuff
Actually! Especially the way that assassin’s creed unity depicts him
Honestly it’s not like they didn’t deserve to die for other reasons.
@@NaughtyShepherd who? The templars?
@@NorthSeaRaider yeah
The end is surprisingly ironic
They were navy seals/ delta force of their day. If they say it will happen it will. Semper Fidelous
Only if you aren't smart enough to know what the word ironic means
@@billyelliot4141🤡
@billyelliot4141 More the SAS/SBS of their day, considering a lot of them were English, Welsh and Scottish.
they were more like brinks security. They moved money while taking the risk of transporting it. Sure some of them might have been special forces but others most were not. Also only the biggest group got .
Fun fact: The prosecution of the Knights Templar was the inspiration for both the fall from grace of the Jedi order and the execution of order 66 in Star Wars. 🤓
A lot of what happened to the Knights Templar was similarly awful - some of the most terrible acts of betrayal in history. Sent them off to fight in wars and protect pilgrims, came home with the wealth they earned, and were promptly murdered and tortured en mass, and forced to confess to blasphemy or being satanic. That last part is what they would be remembered for, for centuries.
Kinda like the soldiers in modern times. History repeats itself sadly
@@JamesZ32100 Nothing ever changes.
@@JamesZ32100 ? What you mean?
The templar weren't saints either tho. The crusades wiped out hundreds of advanced cultures and set our species back about 200-300 years in mathematics and scientific revelations .
@@_blank-_ I think he is talking about veterans. They go out, fight our wars, come home and often times end up homeless or are unable to support themselves due to injuries - similarly betrayed by the country they fought for, though not in the same way.
"cursed the king and pope to die after a year"
it wasn't a curse , it was an order and someone executed it
It was a request and God delivered
Here for the OP. That curse was totally an order to the undercover assets that Templars had near to both targets. FAFO
He probably already knew that the Pope was unwell. Late stage cancer is hard to conceal. The hunting "accident" could have been a coincidence or it could have been arranged. There were no Templar knights left but their executions would have angered many factions.
Oh. How did those 2 die ?
@@DavidSmith-vr1nbyup. The Templar were quite well liked at the time, and I doubt many believed the whole “oh they were devil worshippers” bullshit.
Bro called down the wrath of the Lord on those 2 and he listened
He’s the last known Grand Master of the Knights Templar.
😮 Emphasis on "last known", at least until the 1700s.
Templars are still in existence today, they went underground and merged with Freemasonry in the late 1700's.
i gotta get my mind outta tje gutter, this ain't WH40K WWWWWWWWWWAAAAAAGGGGHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
Moral of the story: don’t make someone with absolute authority indebted to you
Or rather, don’t give authority to those indebted to you
Even better do go into debt when you're a king you'll look stupid
@@kaydgaming the king’s the king bro. He didn’t need you to “give him” authority lol. He had it
@@__seeker__from whom?
@@XfSwb5bs You can't expect to wield supreme power just 'cause some watery tart threw a sword at you! Listen. Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government. Supreme executive power derives from a mandate from the masses, not from some farcical aquatic ceremony.
Oh, Philip deserved that curse. Molay and the Knights didn't deserve to die.
Jacques: curses king and pope.
God: I’ll allow it.
God will allow anything
@@toritopihuas I don't think that's true
@@TheyLuvMeKJlook that the world
So, he allow hitler to commit genocide? @@toritopihuas
Uhh @@pineapplelord2422. Correction, “word”
Bro really said ya'll will need to pay with your lives to take me to the underworld. Legend
He literally said that, word for word. Crazy how you knew that.
every great man takes slaves to the afterlife, now Philip and Clement serve him in death with hell awaiting their day of judgement
And then we wonder where loyalty and chivalry have gone. Humanity truly is it's worst enemy..
Assassin's Creed players: I've been there
long live the order
Ac unity
may the father of understanding guide us @@charlesbradley5787
Do not compromise the brotherhood
People who are Demolay: We are around
Great that I learned a history lesson through Assassins Creed Unity
Yeah lmao. The bell in my head started ringing like crazy as soon as I heard the name
And as inaccurate AC potrayed them as
Literally all I was thinking about through the video was AC unity and the scene De Molay dies 😂
Haaaa. A priest accusing someone for Sodomy. How Ironic. Wtf
"We got jealous so we killed the people most loyal to us and who were fabulous at their jobs"
Yea sounds about right, greed and envy and all that being oddly enough the true killers.
Totally not like the templers werent greedy and envious either.
The Knights Templar were also convicted of being devil worshippers and satanists, however I feel that this criticism was used plainly as a front to eradicate the Knights Templar, as was originally intended.
@@josjos-x5sbut not in the same extent as the people who ordered the executions of Templar knights.
@@normaaliihminen722 ye but its like comparing moldy bread to moldier bread lol
@@josjos-x5s
No, it's like comparing moldy bread to radioactive bread with snake venom and lighter fluid in it.
I met an old man on a city bus, somewhen in the 1980s, who was packing a sword in a leather case and headed for a meeting of the "Knights of de Molay", I think it was. I knew the names and the history, and we had an interesting chat.
He was the head master of the lodge, and he was riding the bus to get there, and dang, he was old.
You met a Freemason
Freemason forsure . Knights Templar are also rooted to Freemasonry
Yeah that means he was a Grandmaster. Basically a satanic witchcraft wizard.
@@calamitychaela1994 that's crazy how they actually practice that behind closed doors
@@deelococ its crazy because it isn't true, freemasons just have a bad stigma started by the catholic church. Ironically much like the knight's templar
Why government power should be kept to a minimum.
Knights Templar were straight up real life Jedi knights. They were literally warrior monks who would give up all possessions and commit to a life of chastity. They were also actively trying to change the world for the better from what I understand. And they believed in reincarnation so apparently they had a mentality of like: kill me and I’ll be back and I’ll keep coming back forever. Extremely badass.
One of the reasons they were targeted by the Catholic Church, can't have the serfs knowing the truth about reincarnation of the Soul.
Bro, that is Hollywood lies who love glorifying the Templars. They were far from Christian Crusaders. They were a Luciferian Kabbalistic secret society and still are to this day.
Baphomet came from Eliphas Levi former GM of the Knights Templar.
The Templars killed untold numbers of Protestants and Christians during the Inquisition for possessing an English Bible and not converting to Catholicism. They were the Pope's henchmen and they were sodomites big time including with children.
NOTHING at all to be glorified and far from "Christian Crusaders". Every one of their GM's were occultist and Kabbalistic Luciferians as they come.
The templars became greedy and corrupt too, as it usually happens when there is a mass of wealth. The men at the top got all the men at the bottom to hand over all their wealth to the templars and spend their short lives fighting. If they fled for their lives they were then tracked down and killed. And the people who killed them got a bounty. They were poor slaves if they were at the bottom of the ranks.
"strike me down and I shall become more powerful than you can possible imagine"
@@Thyalwaysseekno truth is they were afraid of how rich and powerful they were becoming
If my history serves me correctly, the Knights Templars still live to this day fighting a war against the Brotherhood of Assassins in the shadows for the notion of free will
Fire game
Bro fr we bouta get that triple helix
to much assassin creed bro?
Yes
Shut up
The Knights of the Templar are still around and have NEVER ceased.
You're playing too much assassin's creed kid
@@GroundationOnly am not.... Ok .. I don't know what that is.. 😋
Billy Graham was and he was also a MASON and best mates with POPE JOHN PAUL, The Robson's (James and Betty) and COPELAND! 😳
Yes, they go to Portugal
D' Moley didn't curse king Phillip & the Pope, he died reminding them that every action has an equal & opposite reaction. & as "helpless" as they thought he was now, he's death would leave behind many who would see justice delivered to both king & pope.
Which is exactly what happened
french was so much roundabout language in that times.. i guees he meantto curse in that style ?
@@ersendal2466 What are you even talking about...
Let's be fair, De Molay's words spoke directly towards Philip as much as it did to the Templars themselves.
Ironic, those words coming from his mouth, considering his organisation contributed to indiscriminate murder in the Holy Land and established itself as the world's first centralised banking system, amassing riches and political power, both of which the Christ they claimed to serve hated.
@@julianmcmillan2867the crusades were justified
But they didn't die at the hands of men.
It always blows my mind that people just accepted torture as a legitimate means of extracting a confession. Like, "yea turns out she was a witch. We had to break every finger on both hands, but she admitted it.🤷♂️"
Whats even crazier is people still do….
@@Billy-by7iwthey were never then nor now interested in truth but results - they need to prove to their bosses they achieve their goals. It’s just like
Management in companies today - stupid goals are chased, purely because they are measurable.
People still do this to this day
The belief was that if they were truly innocent, God would somehow protect them. Thus, if they really suffered, then God must be mad at them for something really bad.
@@idjles except I wouldn’t compare literal torture and burning to death with corporate management… that’s some privileged white people sh*t right there.
you know how mad you gotta be for a curse to work 😭
As a skeptic, it's hard to be a skeptic with an outcome like that.
People were more superstitious back then and took such stuff seriously. A man who is certain he will die will find a way to make it happen.
Well obviously the Templats weren't going to allow pro assassin king/pope be in a position of power lol
@@glenngriffon8032the pope was 'thrown from his horse over a falling wall' which I think means he got bucked over a short wall with a long drop on the other side. During the night while his body was lying in state, lightning struck the church he was in and by the time they put the fire out, the body had already been consumed.
Phillip IV suffered a cerebral stroke while on a hunt and died a few weeks later. The throne passed rapidly through the the hands of his sons who all died relatively young (all from various illnesses with one being suspected of poison but no evidence backs it) without producing heirs and within 14 years his male line was extinguished and the throne passed to the line of his brother.
it was also the 14th century so just telling someone they'd be dead within a year probably had a 50-50 shot of coming true.
but jacques won the exacta there
It is just retconning... that used to happen in history also
His last words were “Dig up Oak Island”.
Obviously
Hahah😂
That's where he buried the one piece
@@timothybarrett7626
Lol
@@timothybarrett7626 If you want my treasure, you can have it
"Burnt to the stake"
Oh dear, it's "Burned at the stake"
Fun fact, there's a youth organization dedicated to remembering Jacques DeMolay and emulating his example of being fiercely loyal to his comrades. It's called DeMolay.
Junior masons, aren't they? Teaching youth loyalty to each other above all - sort of like Nutsy Germany.
@@richardw3470are you implying that that is a good thing or a bad thing?
@@richardw3470 You mean like the Boy Scouts? And no, wrong wrong, wrong.
Hello Brother, SCJ in the House!
Da Moley? ua-cam.com/video/0QrBxWcBXow/v-deo.html
The Teutonic Knights seeing what happened to the returning Knights Templar: You know what, grandmaster, lets just chill as tourists in Venice until our new headquarter at the Nogat is being finished…
Words are powerful. That’s why you gotta be careful about what you say.
When you’re such a pious knight that you can curse those who wrong you and God makes it work.
As with the Medici family the problem for the Templars was that the Church was in debt to them primarily
This topic has always been of interest to me. So many questions that can't be answered.
A perfect example of an asset quickly turning into a drastic liability.
"Owe someone a dollar, thats a problem for you. Owe someone a million dollars, thats a problem for them"
"If you set a trap for others, you will get caught in it yourself. If you roll a boulder down on others, it will crush you instead" (Proverbs 26:27).
Proverbs really said "foisted by your own petard"
@@wtfgreg1246Yep
God deals justly
Also Roadrunner 😅q
I learned more history from Assassin's creed games than from school
The Templars got a raw deal.
Did they though? They indiscriminately contributed to the slaughter of inhabitants of the Holy Land, Christian, Muslim and Jew alike, and then went on to become what was essentially the world's first centralised banking system, indebting kingdoms unto their red cross. All this whilst they hid behind behind the hypocritical monicker of "poor knights of Christ".
They didn't get a raw deal, they went from pillagers to bankers. They enjoyed a decent century-long reign, indebting kingdoms and expanding their power. In the end, they learnt a deadly lesson; in a feudal society, the value of coin means nothing if it isn't sanctioned by a monarch or the Pope.
No matter how it happened, whether it was happenstance, or the Templar Knights that killed them; His words came to fruition.
His curse was very specific, about pope and king,and it's spooky that it all came true!
I can respect a man who lives up to his word.
The Templar's weren't abolished. Look at Abstergo!
I didn't watch the video but stayed for the music...
The Templars betrayal was basically Order 66. On October, Friday the 13th, the knights were simultaneously ambushed by their own French soldiers, by order of the Pope and Philip. Most of them died fighting, but some were captured, tortured and burned. Molay himself held out under steady torture for seven years before apparently confessing.
Its a historical blot that the French government tries to excuse to this day. They published a documentary within the last decade, waving around newly "discovered" confessions from Molay and other tortured knights, acting like they were voluntarily admitting to all of the charges.
I've read so much about about the period and am always taken aback at how much the south of France (and its various Templar connections) was truly beaten into cultural submission by the Parisian kings. What's even more depressing is that such subtle oppression exists today, i.e. the suppression of the Occitan language.
They served so loyally and were betrayed and slain by their “allies”.
God fr said: nah, you ain't doing that to my bois
Random fact (or speculation): the only remains of the Grand Master's bones was only his skull and femurs and was the inspiration for the Skull and Crossbones
That was one reason why they killed the Templars. The main reason was fear of the Templars. When the Templars returned to Europe, they have gained a huge amount of wealth and political power. Not just the French crown but many royal families across Europe grew extremely nervous of the Templars because the political power they had and the real possibility that they could threaten the monarchs of Europe. So, what did they do?. Killed them of course. Not just the French but many many other European kingdoms went on the rampage and executed all their Templars
Sad .. Where did the people and army stand in this regards
It was also some of the earliest proof that torture does not get the truth. They got people to confess to crimes that they knew they did not commit.
Yet torture continued for a few more centuries as the primary source of evidence for crime. So many people screwed over so bad for so long. Yet there are people today who want to return to everything wrong with government at that time. I think that these people are too stupid to have a voice in government. Only because they demonstrate how easily they are manipulated to voting against their own well being.
Excuse me? A few centuries? Apparently you haven't heard of America. WE'RE NUMBER 1 WE'RE NUMBER 1 WE'RE NUMBER 1!!!!!!!!
@@justinlavine9209 The Brazilian Military Dictatorship employed torture as a means of producing evidence in a criminal law trial, and only ended in 1985, which is the last legal instance of torture as a means of producing proof in a criminal law trial in the Western world I can think of.
So yeah, the notion that torture hasn't been practiced for centuries in the Western world is simply untrue.
Bro this sounds like a really good story 😮
Someone should make a movie/series out of it
Rest in Peace. May his soul have peace in heaven
So true
That's a scary curse, you know the last one feared the most
Those charges were uncalled for
St King Louis IX telling his son that he'd rather have Scottish people on the throne than his son lead them down to sin and ruin only to see his great grandkids do it instead and drive the house to extinction as well.
He tried.
I remember this guy from Assassin's Creed Unity.
(One of the) Most famous executions in history and I’ve literally never heard of it even once
Not everything is about you, brother. Just because you have never heard it, doesn’t mean it’s not famous. Cute dog.
@@thenablade858 That doesn’t sound right I’m definitely the most important person according to me
I love that the curse he said upon them came true!😂
Do people actually believe he said that?
@@caesar6484 I read it’s documented. But karma. I’ve never seen a person do wrong and ever truly get away.
On top of this, Philip's sons all died very quickly into their reign, as did his grandson, who inherited the throne as an infant. This ended of Capet, which was France's longest reigning house and the incredible luck streak that the house of capet had as for nearly every succesion the throne would pass from the father to his eldest living son. Furthermore, Philip had several descendants through his grandaughters and daughter who werent in the line of succession because a woman was not allowed to succeed on the french throne, but his daughter, Isabella "the She Wolf of France" married the King of England and ended up overthrowing him with the help of her lover but then was overthrown herself by her son, it was through her that the english claimed the French throne.
The last king of France was a Capet. They lived for longer
...and thats how we Assassins get work done
-Arno
AC Unity players be like "I was there 🗿"
AC is pure fantasy, lame fantasy
@@Martin-zg7hx take yo negative self outta here.
@@Martin-zg7hxtake you cringey ass out of here
@@Martin-zg7hx Get a grip. That's no way to live
I wonder how different the world would be if things like the nights Templar were still a thing and lasted this long into the moder era
They still do exist
The Knights of Saint John are the same order as the medieval Knights Hospitalet and are still around in Malta, and I believe several Teutonic splinter groups are around, though the Knights Teutonic we're dicks.
May the father of understanding guide us
Abstergo approves this message
May Talos guide us
God bless these innocent men. They served well in life and deserves better. Taken down by horrid greed and corruption. RIP
"The One Piece? Find it! I left everything the world has to offer there!"
That may be the only instant that a “curse” were heard as a prayer.
I remember reading a book about this in french that vaguely translates to The Cursed Kings: The Iron King. Philip was cruel and evil, he wanted to become a templar but got rejected since he was a prince and now with the kingdom in his hands, he decided to, as said in the video, basically eradicate the entire organization for the money and tortured all the elders of it brutally. Towards the end of his life, the book, who may have heavily romanticized this part, made philip become a better man just to die to the curse of Jacques de Molay. His daughters in law were all banished for adultery on his sons except for his eldest one. The whole story was prett fucked up and is not that bad of a read.
literally the assassin's Creed unity intro
He was the last known public grandmaster. And I know 15 other people has already said that in this thread, but that is a very important thing to acknowledge.
One of the most important things about the templar, what's the banking system they invented. Based on actual math. But, they were on limited resources. So they invented a system of protection. Based on the people around them. Who were also, very well-armed. They decided it was prudent, to put their money, and the people's pockets around them. Sparing them the expense of building vaults. And since the Templar operated out of two restaurants in england, this gave them an opportunity to invent something that still exists to this day. They are called T.I.P.S.
Now while some of you insist on believing that text is an acronym that means, to insure proper service. That is not at all what it means.
Templar
Insurance
Protection
Safety.
In 2023, are you using a banking method, that offers, insurance, protection, and safety.
Rhetorical question.
No pity. No fear. No remorse.
Power corrupts. Absolute power corrupts absolutely.
So this is what serving the government and the church gets you…😅
This was a period of time where the Church was acting more like a tyrannical government instead of a religious institution. Their use of God was merely a ruse to justify the horrible things they did, because peasants at the time didn't know any better, because they couldn't read or write, much less Latin like the Church. Plus, the Clergy had been mostly made up of children of Nobility, so it's easy to see how it became so corrupted.
The government itself is a different story. They have no such leash, except to simply say they were higher born, so their actions were justified by that alone. I mean, for anyone paying attention in the current era, not much has actually changed. Rich powerful families and their kids becoming politicians to rule over the lower class.
It's absolutely true. I had over a million dollars worth of bitcoin on the oldest bitcoin exchange at the time (and the most stable and secure) name BTC-e. It's server was hosted in Sevastopol, Ukraine. When Russia invaded Ukraine the US took advantage of the chaos and flew in with a military force and hijacked the servers holding billions worth of bitcoin and then ran off with it.
I'm a US citizen and the US government robbed me. The US government participated in a bank heists. It's insane, something out of a movie.
If they can get away with murder they will, literally.
@@Danielle_1234dude if thats true that f*ckin sucks so bad man so sry
Bruh
This is what serving yourself gets you
"Most famous medieval knights", I think El Cid would be higher up the list for that title. Some Templers also survived in Portugal.
They carried on as a new order, the order of Christ
The surviving knights took the fleet and fled Portugal when the Spanish came for them. They sailed for the New World in the Caribbean, and became the first pirates there, hunting only ships of Catholic countries, operate with a code of rules, all under a new flag. The crossbones in the pirate flag is the Templar cross, laying down as if on the ground, represented as bones with a skull above the to represent the death of the Templar order.
Later men and women would engage in piracy in the region, many adopting similar flags and some even the code of conducts, but many just doing theirnown thing.
So the original pirates of the Caribbean were former Templars.
@@keithreinsel7842 source?
@@goldfish6660 Read "Pirates & The Lost Templar Fleet" by David Hatcher Childress. He did a lot of research and leg work and has his sources cited in the back.
@@keithreinsel7842so you have none. A random person publishing a book about a conspiracy hypothesis, with zero use of the historical method or textual criticism, is not a source. Come back with something actually published in a peer reviewed journal.
The Knights Templar had one of the first banks.
Travelers would deposit their money so they wouldn’t need to travel with too much. This helped them not be waylaid by highwaymen, and they could retrieve their money when they reached their destination, or anywhere along their route. Rather like travelers checks.
Philip applied for acceptance to the organization a year before. He was rejected as they figured he just wanted access to their finances. So he ended up kidnapping the previous Pope who then died from pneumonia. He helped install a new Pope who he got to drop support for the Templars who he had arrested all over the European continent on Friday the thirteenth. That's how we got it to be an unlucky day.
"Anti-Pope," I think they're called.
Those dude were betrayed so badly
Damn, Assassin’s Creed goes crazy
Bro it's like the Jedi purge in the prequels. "The Pope IS the Sith Lord!"
No, more like the Templars, the Pope and Philip were all members of the Brotherhood of Darkness, all Sith, and Philip and the Pope persecuting the Templars is more like Sith on Sith action.
Molay actually confessed to the crimes under torture, eventually. Of course that does not mean any it was true, that’s the problem with tortured confession, but he did confess under extreme-horrific duress. It was only after being essentially forced to confess when he was being executed that he proclaimed his innocence.
It hasn't stopped the USA doing it.
Well it does work if the guy is guilty. Thats the part that people are so conveniently ignorant to. If someone is guilty and they are being tortured they aren’t going to come up with some lie, they are just going to tell the truth. If torture doesn’t work then why has it been used with good results throughout all of human history? Yeah torture is bad but trying to pretend like it doesn’t work just because you don’t like it is dumb.
@@Fck_the_atfHell yeah it works, but it's double-edged since if you torture someone innocent they will eventually confess things they didn't do, but if guilty then the result will be different
@@Cala0314 yeah exactly. Thats why you have to make sure you got the right guy first.
@Fck_the_atf I don't believe at any time in history have they ever made sure it's the right guy before starting torture. The general consensus by those who've had a hand in it is that everyone confesses. The difference is only how long it takes. If the tortured died before confessing, then it didn't matter if they were innocent or not.
And so brotherhood prevails
The Templars were trying to protect the Sword of Eden from the assassins. They all died, even his apprentice, who was killed with an assassin's hidden blade.
Fun fact, the Knights Templar still exists and it's something people can still join, however it's very difficult to do so.
That is the Hospitallers. There is no successor organization to the Templars, although the Freemasons claim to be, and the English branch took it fairly seriously when Allenby took Jerusalem from the Turks. They closed the old Temple Bar in London for a service of thanksgiving, that night.
@@Egilhelmson I am not talking about the Hospitallers or the Freemasons, ALTHOUGH you have to be a freemason to join.
Actually the only true successors of the Templars were The Order of Christ. After the persecutions in Europe the survving Templars were given santuary by King Dinis I of Portugal.
There order was reformed in 1309 to The Order of Christ which made them very powerful during the New World discoveries. However they did eventually go extinct in the late 1800s after it was secularised.
@@Egilhelmsonthe Templars didn’t end, only the French ‘Chapter’ if you will came to an end. Other ‘Chapters’ existed in other kingdoms which then rebranded themselves and went underground. An example are the Templars who established themselves in Portugal then rebranded themselves the ‘Order of Christ’ to blend in more with the Christian veneer. The ‘Order of Christ’ financed much of the explorations into the Americas that were guised as finding an alternative route to India. They were searching for the 7 Cities of the Antilles (West) referred to as the Septentronalias and eventually found them in the Americas long before Columbus went who was also a Templar. Columbus married into a prominent Templar family known as the Parastrello themselves were a branch of the Visconti family. Parastrello being the Grand Master of the Templar chapter in Portugal during Columbus time, as a wedding gift gave Columbus his entire library and navigational charts as well as the finances for an America expedition. The Masonry refers to the Templars from England, a faction of whom left as ‘Pilgrims’ established themselves in the America via the Washington Family whom were the Captain General. Per standard protocol the Captain General has rights to Kingship over Land the establish, meaning George Washington had the right to be King of America but refused- this refusal would set us up for corporate slavery later on. The Freemasonry refers to the outcome of the Revolution, where Masons in America had freed themselves from Protestant British persecution. The lodges here became decentralized, with many other foreign branches establishing, resulting in origin Templar lodges to become few. The freemasonry would later be centralized under the Rothschilds grand lodge system who corrupted its purpose to be used as a geopolitical weapon, which is why I the 1900’s many Masons like Manly P Hall broke secrecy acts and revealed the esoteric truths the Masonry preserved so that it doesn’t get corrupted or silenced internally by the Rothschilds. Many Masons left and joined the German SS which was against Masonry for this reason.
Dude thinks assassin's creed is real.
Not only was he a knight he was also a curse user. Truly a jack of all trades
Jacques de Molay was also a very oldfashioned crusader who refused to read the sign of the times after the fall of Accre, where the Hospital Knights changed policy, de Molay kept on demanding a new crusade. He worked himself into isolement within the Crusaders world and being rich AND isolated is a receoy for doom.
The Knights Templar were accused of worshipping Bahopmet but the diety was actually made up by the Pope to justify the charges.
Dumbest comment of the year
@@slavenrasic2173what?
@@slavenrasic2173 It’s also entirely possible, since the first use of the word Baphomet came during the Siege of Antioch when it’s inhabitants called upon that name (supposedly referring to Muhammad.) The next came from confessions extracted by torture during the Inquisition of the Knights Templar.
They actually worshipped a deity named Sophia, which if you use the Templar’s cipher to translate it, it spells Baphomet.
@@slavenrasic2173it’s literally the factual events. He owned the Templar an amount of money he couldn’t pay back, came up with lies to turn everyone else who owed them money against them.
It's "burned AT the stake"... the location of both the fire to be
ignited and the very stake to which they'd be tied.
Miss the day when curse words are curse words