Militia Dei

Part of a series on the
Knights Templar
Templar Cross
Templar Cross
Poor Fellow-Soldiers of
Christ and of the Temple of Solomon
Overview
Councils
  • Council of Troyes (1129)
  • Council of Pisa (1135)
  • Council of Vienne
Papal bulls
  • Omne datum optimum (1139)
  • Milites Templi (1144)
  • Militia Dei (1145)
  • Pastoralis praeeminentiae (1307)
  • Faciens misericordiam (1308)
  • Vox in excelso (1312)
  • Ad providam (1312)
Locations
Successors
Cultural references
See also
  • Military order (religious society)
  • Catholic orders of chivalry
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Militia Dei (Latin for Soldiers of God) is a papal bull issued by Pope Eugene III in 1145 that consolidated the Knights Templar's independence from local clerical hierarchies by giving the Order the right to take tithes and burial fees and to bury their dead in their own cemeteries.[1] The Knights were allowed to travel through Europe freely.

This bull together with Omne datum optimum (1139) and Milites Templi form the foundation for the Order's future wealth and success.

References

  1. ^ Barber, Malcolm (2012). The New Knighthood: A History of the Order of the Temple. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 58.
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