Culture Explorer Profile picture
Sep 19 19 tweets 7 min read Read on X
Friday the 13th wasn’t always unlucky.

It became cursed the morning the most powerful knights in the world were dragged from their beds in chains.

This is the story of the Knights Templar — warrior monks who built empires, invented banking, and died in fire. 🧵 Image
Formed in 1119, the Templars began as nine knights sworn to protect Christian pilgrims on the dangerous roads to Jerusalem.

They lived atop the Temple Mount itself. Believed to be the site of Solomon’s Temple. That sacred address gave them instant mystique.
They were no ordinary knights.

Templars took vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience. They lived like monks but fought like soldiers, a combination that shocked the medieval world. Image
Their banner was a red cross on white. It soon became a symbol of holy war.

On battlefields from Jerusalem to Acre, they charged in disciplined lines, refusing to retreat even when outnumbered. Image
But their real power wasn’t just military.

They created one of history’s first international banking systems.

On London’s Fleet Street stands Temple Church, consecrated in 1185 as the Templars’ home.

It was a place that served not only as their chapel but also as the city’s first bank for the warrior monks who fought holy wars while running a financial empire.Temple Church, London
Pilgrims could deposit money in Europe and withdraw it safely in the Holy Land.

That system was secure. Historians believe they used encrypted codes to prevent fraud — a medieval form of cryptography centuries ahead of its time. Image
Donations poured in. Nobles left estates, peasants gave coins, and the order amassed land across Europe.

Within a century, the “Poor Soldiers of Christ” were richer than kings. The Locations of Knight Templar Sites during Middle Ages
But wealth attracts enemies.

The Templars’ secrecy fueled rumors of heresy. Whispers spread that their initiations mocked the cross or hid pagan rituals.

None of it was proven, but the mystery stuck. Initiation Well in Quinta da Regaleira, Portugal Quinta da Regaleira is an enchanting estate in Sintra that was built by an eccentric freemason, António Augusto Carvalho Monteiro. The most mysterious part of Monteiro’s estate is the 27-metre-deep Initiation Well with its spiral staircase, nine levels, a plethora of archways and a masonic rose cross on the floor. Thought to have been used, not for the collection of water but for Masonic Initiation ceremonies. Credit: Sophie Pearce
The real danger wasn’t rumor. It was debt.

By 1307, King Philip IV of France owed the Templars a fortune from his endless wars.

He couldn’t repay it, so he chose to erase it.
On Friday, October 13, 1307, Philip struck.

Templars across France were arrested at dawn. The charges: blasphemy, corruption, and heresy.

The evidence: confessions wrung out under torture. Image
In this week's edition of my newsletter, I explored how the Holy Grail became forever tied to the Templars. Subscribe here:
newsletter.thecultureexplorer.com/subscribeSolomon's Temple, King Hiram, Hiram Abiff and the Phoenicians Solomon's Temple was influenced by King Hiram and Hiram Abiff being Phoenicians from the city of Tyre
Their leaders, including Grand Master Jacques de Molay, were imprisoned.

In Paris, de Molay was forced to confess but when he recanted, he was burned alive at the stake in 1314.

As the flames rose, de Molay cursed both the king and the pope who condemned him, calling them to meet God within a year.Image
History records that both were dead by the following year.

The king’s dynasty soon collapsed into the chaos of the Hundred Years’ War. Collage of paintings representing battles of the Hundred Years' War. Clockwise, from top left: La Rochelle, Agincourt, Patay, Orleans. By Blaue Max - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0
The order itself was dissolved. Its lands were handed to the Knights Hospitaller.

Its warriors scattered, some executed, some absorbed into other armies, some vanishing into legend. Krak des Chevaliers. Smoke coming from the castle in August 2013, during the Syrian Civil War.
But the myths were just beginning.

Some said the Templars had spirited away their vast treasure before Philip’s men could seize it.

Gold, relics, perhaps even the Holy Grail itself. Rosslyn Chapel Credit: Thrifty Travel Mama
Others claimed their fleet escaped La Rochelle, sailing to Scotland or Portugal.

There, new orders rose under different names, carrying the Templar spirit forward. Image
The order’s real contributions were staggering:

• A financial system that prefigured modern banking
• A network of castles and fortresses across Europe and the Holy Land
• A disciplined military elite that changed medieval warfare The Great Cloister of the Covenant of Christ, Tomar, Portugal. The convent was initially founded in the 12th-century by the first Grand Master of the Order of the Templars
But their fall leaves the lasting question:

Were they martyrs destroyed by a greedy king?

Or guardians of a secret so dangerous that it had to be erased from history? Credit: Ingvar Lex
The Templars’ wealth and power ended in fire.

But their greatest mystery, the treasure they may have hidden, lives on.

If you enjoyed this thread, share with others and follow my account @CultureExploreX for more content like this. Image

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Culture Explorer

Culture Explorer Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @CultureExploreX

Sep 17
Some restaurants serve food.
These places serve awe and beauty.

Here are 20 of the world’s most breathtaking dining experiences.

Which one would you choose for an Anniversary? 🧵 Kunsthistorisches Museum cafe
1. Le Train Bleu, Paris, France

A Belle Époque palace hidden in Gare de Lyon—frescoes, chandeliers, and royalty in spirit. Le Train Bleu, Paris, France - Travel through time with a meal inside this gilded Belle Époque treasure at Gare de Lyon. More of a restaurant but provides a cafe vibe.  Credit: @WorldScholar_
2. Café New York, Budapest, Hungary (1894)

A café dressed as a palace—dripping gold, frescoes, and overwhelming grandeur.
Read 23 tweets
Sep 13
Why do we stare at faces painted centuries ago?

Because portraits aren’t just about how someone looked. They show us who mattered. What power meant. What beauty was.

Here are 22 portraits that shaped how we see the world — and ourselves. 🧵 Portrait Of Lady Agnew Of Lochnaw by John Singer Sargent at the 	Scottish National Gallery, Edinburgh Year (completed): 1892
This isn’t just a pretty girl.

Vermeer’s Girl with a Pearl Earring (1665) is quiet, almost plain.

But her gaze follows you. Her lips are parted. She’s thinking something.

We just don’t know what.
Mauritshuis, The Hague, Netherlands Image
Not seductive. Not smiling.
But absolutely unforgettable.

John Singer Sargent’s Madame X (1884) shocked Paris.
He had to repaint the strap to stop the scandal.
She became the most famous woman nobody knew.

Met, NYC Image
Read 23 tweets
Sep 12
In 2004, Navy Cmdr. David Fravor chased a white “Tic Tac” that dropped 50,000 feet in seconds, hovered, and darted off faster than a missile.

Radar and infrared confirmed it.

Physics can't explain it.

What if this sighting and others like it connect to visions in scripture? 🧵
Ezekiel, 6th century BC.

He described “wheels within wheels” of fire, full of eyes, rising and darting across the sky.

Scholars call it prophecy.

Yet the imagery—rotating forms, luminous movement—matches reports from pilots millennia later.

Were they both seeing the same reality?Ezekiel's Vision by Raphael, c. 1518 AD
Fatima, 1917.

Seventy thousand people in a Portuguese field claimed the sun spun, plunged, and threw rainbow colors across the sky.

Eyewitnesses included skeptics and reporters.

Miracle? Mass hallucination?

Or the same luminous disc phenomenon tracked today by pilots and radar?
Read 16 tweets
Sep 11
9/11 didn’t just collapse towers, it collapsed belief.

In Institutions and In purpose.

24 years later, what’s rising in its place isn’t chaos.

It’s something more seductive and far more dangerous. 👇 9/11 Never Forget ...  Credit: Hannah Funderburk
Historians William Strauss and Neil Howe called it The Saeculum — a four-phase cycle of human history:

• The High
• The Awakening
• The Unraveling
• The Crisis

We are now deep inside the last one. The Crisis. The Four Turnings of the Strauss-Howe Generational Theory
Every few generations, society hits a Fourth Turning, a total crisis that tears through its myths and rebuilds from the ashes.

• Revolution
• Civil war
• Depression
• Global war

Each cycle ends the same way: something must be reborn. Image
Read 15 tweets
Sep 7
What if the greatest British export isn’t the language or the empire…

…but a sense of timeless beauty etched in stone and paint?

Most people don’t realize how bold British art and architecture really is.

Let me show you the masterpieces they never taught you about: 🧵👇 Piccadilly Circus, London Credit: Pamela Lowrance
Most cities hide their secrets underground.

London built its greatest secret above ground.

The Royal Naval College in Greenwich looks like something out of ancient Rome yet it was designed by Christopher Wren to be “the Versailles of the sea.”

Its twin domes once trained the world's most powerful navy.
How do you immortalize love, sorrow, and empire… with one sculpture?

Answer: the Albert Memorial.

Critics mocked it when it was built. Now they quietly admit it’s one of the most emotionally overwhelming monuments in Europe.

Gothic, golden, and unapologetically romantic. Image
Read 17 tweets
Sep 5
Poland just became a $1 trillion economy without open borders, without giving up religion, and without tearing down its traditions.

What did Poland do that the West won’t? (a thread) 🧵👇 Gdansk, Poland Credit: Elif Odabaş
Back in 1990, Poland was broke and gray.
Fresh out of Soviet control, it had crumbling factories, dull housing blocks, and a weak economy.

No one expected it to become the EU’s quiet success story.

Image: Warsaw (Then and Now) Image
Today, Poland has become a vibrant society.

Old towns have been rebuilt with care.
Churches restored.

Soviet scars replaced with colorful facades and cobbled streets.

Poland proved something no one talks about:
You can build prosperity without destroying beauty.
Read 19 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(