T E M 



of their land*. taken 



win. 



pt. n 



til ll: Hied ill the OKI Temple. ;.! 





-IclTI 

 - the 



at 01' 



nam 



i RtiL'lnnd. 



i the sruilt r innocence of the Templars 

 .en much 



I that 



>n which the\ were i-oiiilemned 

 lor the HUH! part entirely unfounded, some attempts 



b. 



I 



and called . 

 in hi 



Anas.-! which 



G.C. Wood, ha> 

 larity and connection 

 mid that famous 



hihty that. th. 

 Iain secret p 



. 



I the 



there is an KiKrlish translation 

 . ourcd to establish a simi- 

 i the Tem- 



i a disquisition. 



printed in the sixth volume of hi-; Minets dc 1 < )rie:it,' the 

 ; has attempted to eon\i i par- 



ticipation in the apostasy, idolatry, and impiety of the 



id I iphian. 

 WwMvd liy M. Hitynoiinrd. in a Ion? note piintcd in the 



i Midland's IfUtoirc d. 

 'nl. Sic. : .: MI i! 1 . in two articles in thi 



March and April, lull); and in two otheis. 

 published in the ' HihliothtVjiic Cuivcr-ellc." torn. x.. p. 

 nd torn. \.. p. 3. The documents relating to the 

 condemnation of the Templars were Mist published in a 

 work entitled Trait. ;1 ,),.,, 



Templiers.' par M. I)n Puy, \o., 1'aiis, ll,.">l: uMiinted. 

 with additions, under the title of ' Histoire de la Con- 

 demnation desTemplicrs.' &iv, par Pierre ])a Pny. 'J vols. 

 KVII.. Hru\, lie-. 1713 : and under that of -II 

 I'Ordre Militaire ilea Templiers, avec les Pieces .Insdtica- 



Ito., Bnixelles, 1751. Other works on the 

 ' Nicolai GQrtleri Ilistoriu Templariorutn.' s 

 Ki'.tl. and. with Inriri- additions. ]7(i:t : C! m ,ti;i :1 i Thomasji 



atio d.. Templariornm K<|uitum Ordine Snblnti . 

 ILihie, 17*lo: Kaynouard, ' Mi.num , hitil's 



H la rondiinination des Tern Ni:j; 



chap' 



lmi ; er. ' "'I'drns <li-r Teiii])el- 



herren :" Wiliki ''.mpelheiTPtion 



(he Middle A sri-s ' 'in the ' Lib;, 

 Entertaining Knowledge '), 12mo., Lond., 18^7; an.! 



ry of the K'nii;! , ; ,!,. Cliurch. and 



T K M 



' 

 snbordiiml 



ose teinis havinu' boon si 

 r* 221 co< 



"f the di," 

 v >r tlie arnmu''m 







ficuoo O.P-TI.HAI- 





ht 



the 



. 



11111 



:to.. I.ond.. 



fill.. Loud., 17-11. pp. 

 I books and 

 Templars. 



Latin Templum ') \a known of 



the nations of antiquity is derived 

 chiefly from their temples: for of nil their public edifices 

 ' V(1 '' rHi tin- most numerous, if we 



t fterhaps those of the Homr.us, the rein:. 



IncK theatres, ainiihilli, 



monuments of that class, are as common as their 

 temples, and ha^ ,,]] of 



w "*' termed tl.- 



arcn "' ':ns. Greeks, nm! Ho- 



. temple- ; 



it may bo said to display 

 much 

 two. wit 1 



. or Ihrntttpiece or this .hsi.os,- 



flori -l-in oortil, 



an ex 

 when' other partii-n!:- 



Though so ^rsmolla?- 



"sitioii of the columns withoiii 







I"""' 1 "I 



or body 



em and 



i:," eom- 



nuinbi 



I//A////C in ant, 



the nnlii 1 . or tl; 



examples jii..-tyle and amplnpio-- 



there four rolnmns hetv 



t-lraxtyli- in nlix, and have a.-, ma; 



. of \\hn-li last the peripteral 

 nmnlc. Tile diplci; 



: and tlie hypa lhr;i 



MM^'for it will be M 



U body mpli;. In ; 



i it.* 



Still there is no yaiiety whalevor as u external form, no 

 individual character as to outline or even the r. 



mple itself, either 



1 ele pp.rip- 



1'' '" '"" '' '" """I l"""lylpl i UM KIM ln.<> i.l 

 on the liu<-> of lh.p in fmnl. 



