Modern history

The Modern Memory of the Military-religious Orders

The Modern Memory of the Military-religious Orders

This volume examines the pervasive and persistent appropriations of the military orders across a broad chronology and several regions, including Mexico, Brazil, and Greece, areas beyond the traditional focus of prior research in medievalism.

Templars, Hospitallers, and Teutonic Knights, the military orders are among the most iconic aspects of the crusades and several still survive as chivalric honours or charitable organisations. In popular culture, the orders, particularly the Templars, have been the subject of or inspiration for films, books, television, and video games, from Star Wars to The Da Vinci Code and Assassin’s Creed. In this volume, an overview of the early legacies of the military orders in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries is followed by studies of the Templar conspiracy theories of Rosslyn Chapel, the Venerable Order of St John’s creation of a medieval past, the legacy of the Hospitallers in modern Greece, the military orders in nineteenth-century Mexico, and the use of the Knights Templar by the far-right in Bolsonaro’s Brazil. Ultimately, it expands the scope of the field and indicates further avenues for research.

The Modern Memory of the Military-religious Orders is a valuable resource for students and scholars of the crusades, the military orders, and medievalism.

Introduction

Chapter 1. Memories of the Military Orders in Britain in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries

Chapter 2. Rosslyn Chapel: Templar Pseudo-history, ‘Symbology’, and the Far-right

Chapter 3. Acquiring Heritage: The Venerable Order of St John and the Accumulation of Its Past (1858–1931)

Chapter 4. Reconstructing the Past: The Memory and Tradition of the Order of the Hospitaller Knights of Saint John in Modern Greece (Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries)

Chapter 5. Taking the Cross and Asserting Freedom: Catholic Liberalism, the Military Orders, and the Perception of the Crusades in Mexico in the First Half of the Nineteenth Century

Chapter 6. The Internet Crusade against Communism: Political Neomedievalism in Twenty-first Century Brazil

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