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The Templars | 
enlarge | Author: Piers Paul Read Publisher: Weidenfeld & Nicolson Category: Book
List Price: £10.00 Buy Used: £0.01 You Save: £9.99 (100%)
New (1) Used (27) Collectible (1) from £0.01
Rating: 23 reviews Sales Rank: 320064
Media: Paperback Edition: New Ed Pages: 368 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1 Dimensions (in): 8.5 x 5.5 x 1.2
ISBN: 1842121421 Dewey Decimal Number: 271.7913 EAN: 9781842121429 ASIN: 1842121421
Publication Date: January 18, 2001 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: PAPERBACK. Contents clean and tight, covers rubbed bumped and lightly creased. Some annotations in pen Clean and tight copy with some reading wear. Daily despatch by Royal Mail.
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.co.uk Review The Knights Templar remain the most glamorous, but also the most mysterious of all religious organisations. Romanticised by Walter Scott in his novel Ivanhoe and by Wagner in his opera Parsifal, the Templars have been both celebrated as ascetic martyrs, dying for the greater good of Christianity, and condemned as deviant heretics, thieves and sodomites who sold the Holy Land out to the Muslim Infidels. In his carefully researched study The Templars, the acclaimed novelist Piers Paul Read investigates the truth behind the myth. Placing his account of the rise of the Templars within a wider historical and political context, Read argues that "The Templars were a multinational force engaged in the defence of the Christian concept of a world order: and their demise marks the point when the pursuit of the common good within Christendom became subordinate to the interests of the nation state."This approach takes Read back into the Dark Ages and the context for the first Christian Crusade that culminated in the capture of Jerusalem in 1099.In an attempt to hold on to Jerusalem and one of the holiest sites in Christendom, the Temple of Solomon, the Templars were formed as a strict religious-military order, committed to poverty, chastity and the protection of pilgrims en route to the Holy Land. Read charts their rise to political and financial power and influence throughout Europe and the Holy Land, and their bloody (and ultimately unsuccessful) conflict with the forces of Islam over the subsequent two centuries. Read's account is painstakingly recounted but often lacks the verve and pace demanded by the colourful cast of characters, including Saladin and Richard the Lionheart. The best sections of the book deal with the shockingly cynical destruction of the Order by Pope Clement V and King Philip the Fair in 1312, preceded by the torture and death of hundreds of Templars who had already fought bravely for the cross in the Holy Land. The Templars are fascinating but in his attempt to avoid the more colourful and conspiratorial stories associated with the Order, Read's book may strike some as a little turgid, despite its admirable historical detail. --Jerry Brotton
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| Customer Reviews: Read 18 more reviews...
Must read May 2, 2008 The Author did good research about the subject.Finally today the Church confess delusions about the Templars.They were false accused by Pope Clement V and King Philip in 1312 and unfortunately the Order was destroyed.Interest in the Knights Templar is growing exponentially and today we now they fought bravely for the cross in the Holy Land.Piers Paul Read aim in this book has been to uncover the truth about the Order and he succeeded.
A book on the Templars with no Templars? February 25, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
I have to be honest I was very disappointed with this book. So much text and so much history but very little of it on the Templars. It starts off with asking readers to know a little about the Crusades which is useful background as all the names that are introduced can get bewildering, but in all honesty it should be named as a history of the crusades. Especially early on it touches very little on the Templars and really provides a more general overview of the Crusades. And there are so many books out there that do it much better.
A better book would have focused on the Templars, tried to give some rationale and more insight into some of the charactors. Sadly I have gained very little insight into the Templars reading this book.
History as it Should Be Written January 31, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Ask any schoolboy to give you his version of what a knight looks like and the chances are he will say that a knight wears chainmail, a helmet and a white surcoat with a red cross emblazoned on it. A pretty good description of what a Templar Knight would have looked like to us, had we been there at the time they were joining the crusades to protect pilgrims and save the Holy Land from attacks by the infidels.
Their Order rose to be one of the most powerful in the Western World, until their wealth and power began to frighten people in high places, no less in fact than the French King, who accused the Order of heresy and even immorality. He extracted confessions from the senior members of the order, through torture and even burning at the stake.
Most of the senior members of the Order were murdered and the few who escaped scattered across Europe.
This is an excellent book, descriptive and well written. Nothing like the dusty, dry volumes that I read in large numbers in sixth form college, more years ago than I would care to remember. This book is exciting and has the pace to grip the reader like a novel would, rather than a book with factual content. The truth well told will always beat fiction, at least in my book it will.
Very good, recommended July 27, 2007 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
I believe this is a good read and you should perhaps ignore the 1 or 2 star reviews and that do not give a constructive criticism for this book. Perhaps this book may disaapoint those who want a difintive guide to the Templars but we cannot forget that you have to the Templars in the context in which they are set, along with other orders and religions. The writing is not at all pro-catholic as someone has written;in fact the balance of the book is very sound and does not seem to have any bias at all- its very refreshing. In fact one of the most enjoyable aspects of the book is the way Read considers many scholars opinions when discussing events and not just give his own judgements based upon political and religious motive. I thoroughly enjoyed the book and whereas it may not be considered the absolute authority on the Templars its a very good overview of the history of early Christinity, Islam and the Crusades. From this book I have a deeper interest and knowledge of historical characters ......Read lets us make us our own judgement based upon the facts we know and not political bias.....Read questions several myths about historical characters which is really interesting. I think its a great book and I recommend it....
avoid it June 11, 2007 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
Indeed I was rather disappointed. I must agree with most of the previous reviewers in that the actual history of the Order is only about 1/4 of this book, and all the rest is more of a general history of the Crusades. I strongly suggest you choose Malcolm Barber's books on the subject - "The New Knighthood" and "The Trial of the Templars".
P.S. For Greeks that might be contemplating to read this - don't bother to buy this book translated (that is if no one here convinced you against buying it altogether). The Greek translation sucks big time, as it is apparent that the translator is not a historian (his knowledge of the simplest bits of terminology leaves a great deal to be desired), and this makes it even more boring a read!
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