| Location |
Spain
|
|---|---|
| Type | Coin replicas |
| Composition | Silver (.970) |
| Weight | 3.8 g |
| Diameter | 20 mm |
| Thickness | 1.6 mm |
| Shape | Round |
| Technique | Cast |
| Orientation | Medal alignment ↑↑ |
| Demonetized | Yes |
| Number | N# 571294 |
Script: Latin (uncial)
Lettering: ✠ SIGILLVM · MILITVM · XPISTI ·
Lettering (regular font): ✠ SIGILLVM · MILITVM · XPISTI ·
Translation: Seal of the Militia of Christ
Script: Latin (uncial)
Lettering: ✠ DE TEMPLO : CRISTI
Lettering (regular font): ✠ DE TEMPLO : CRISTI
Translation: Dome of the Rock, sanctuary on the Temple Mount in Old City of Jerusalem.
Smooth round
© Jenel Marbera (CC BY-SA)
https://templars.fandom.com/wiki/Templars_Wiki
The Templar Seal showing two knights (perhaps Hugues de Payens and Godfrey de Saint-Omer) on one horse. There are many interpretations of the symbolism of this seal.
Contemporary legend held that the symbol represented the initial poverty of the order; that they could afford only a single horse for every two men.
Still, the Rule of the Order from the outset permitted three horses and no more for each knight, as well as no Templars sharing the same horse.
Several masters adopted this seal from the beginning of the order until at least 1298. It is known to have been in use since 1167.[citation needed] The Rule forbids two riders on the same beast.
According to legend, Hugues de Payens (the first Grand-Master of the Templars) and Godfrey were so poor that between the two of them they had only one horse, and this gave rise to the famous image on the seal of the Templars, of two men riding a single horse. The image of two knights on the horse was widely used:
Matthew Paris in Chronica Majora ca 1250
An English monk and chronicler from St. Albans in Historia Anglorum
At least as early as 1158 as the seal of the Grand Master of the Temple, Bertrand de Blanchefort. This is the earliest known seal for the Grand Master of the Temple forty years after the Order was formed.
Use of this symbol continued under subsequent Grand Masters for as long as the Order survived, however the seal went through more than one incarnation. The Reynaut de Vichiers, who was Master of the Temple from 1255-1259 depict same images, but it is obviously not the same seal.
Please sign in or create an account to manage your collection.
| Date | VG | F | VF | XF | AU | UNC | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Undetermined | |||||||||||||||
| ND | |||||||||||||||
No member from this site currently wants to exchange it.