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The Knights
Templar—Welcome to
Nocera Inferiore
or If you were confused
by The Da Vinci
Code, this won't help.
In any event, this first great group of
"warrior monks," the Knights Templar (which name
derives from the "temple" of Solomon, their first
headquarters in Jerusalem) was an important
international military and financial institution
throughout the Christian west until it was charged
with heresy and other crimes by the French Inquisition
under the influence of the French King Philip IV
(Philip the Fair) and was forcibly disbanded in the
early 1300s. At the height of their power and
influence, the order fielded a large army, answered
only to the Church and not the temporal princes of the
earth, had acquired large tracts of land both in
Europe and the Middle East, built churches and
castles, was involved in manufacturing and trade, and
had its own fleet of ships. In their two centuries of
glory, the Templars owned considerable land in
southern Italy; they established themselves in
Barletta, Matera, Brindisi, Foggia, among other
places, and operated monastery-like estates, trading,
and resupplying their soldiers in the Holy Land from
the ports of Puglia. That much has always been
uncontroversial.
In
any case, Nocera is still there, as it has been ever
since it was founded by the Etruscans
in 600 b.c. It was sacked by Hannibal, was a Saracen colony for a while
(hence "paganis"), almost destroyed by Roger, first king of the
Kingdom of Sicily (and Naples), and was smack in the
path of the Anglo-American invasion
at Salerno in WW2. A little more controversy
won't hurt. I have a few students from
Nocera at
the Orientale university in
Naples; they have been unable to confirm or deny that
their home town is cashing in on this. Maybe a Knights
Templar Pizzeria. |