Degrees of the York Rite in the United States in a Knights Templar uniform in 1869. In the United States, a Knights Templar
commandery is traditionally the final body that a member joins in the
York Rite after the
chapter of Royal Arch Masons and a council of
Royal & Select Masters. Some jurisdictions, however, allow members to skip over membership in a council. A local Knights Templar commandery operates under a state-level Grand Commandery, however
American commanderies also operate under The Grand Encampment of the United States. This is less common among American Masonic bodies, as many report to the state level alone. While a chapter bestows the Royal Arch degrees, and a council bestows the Cryptic degrees, a Knights Templar commandery bestows three orders and one preparatory degree onto its members. This is opposed to the standard degree system found elsewhere in Freemasonry, and they are the only ones not to deal with the
Hiramic Legend. The York Rite orders are: •
The Illustrious Order of the Red Cross •
The Degree of Saint Paul (or the Mediterranean Pass) •
The Order of the Knights of Malta (or simply
Order of Malta) •
The Order of the Temple Templar degrees in the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite History and legend concerning the historical Knights Templar also play an important role in the degrees of the Ancient and Accepted
Scottish Rite of Freemasonry, notably in the Rite's 30th Degree,
Knight Kadosh. Other Scottish Rite degrees sometimes styled "Templar Degrees" include the 28th Degree (Knight Commander of the Temple, formerly denominated the 27th Degree in the
Southern Jurisdiction of United States), the 29th Degree (Scottish Knight of Saint Andrew), the 32nd Degree (Master of the Royal Secret), and the 33rd Degree (Inspector General).
Templar themes in wider Freemasonry Despite Freemasonry's general disclaimer that no one Masonic organization claims a direct heritage to the medieval Knights Templar, certain degrees and orders are obviously patterned after the medieval Order. These are best described as "commemorative orders" or degrees. Nevertheless, in spite of the fraternity's official disclaimers, some Masons, non-Masons and even
anti-Masons insist that certain Masonic rites or degrees originally had direct Templar influence. • American Masonic
youth organizations such as the
Order of DeMolay for young men are named after the last Grand Master Templar
Jacques de Molay who was executed in the final suppression of the Templar order in the early 14th century. • The Knight of Rose-Croix Degree in the "Ancient Accepted
Scottish Rite", and honorary Orders like the
Royal Order of Scotland are interpreted as evidence of a historical Templar-Masonic connection, though there is no factual basis for this belief. •
Rosslyn Chapel near
Edinburgh has been suggested to be strong link between the
Knights Templar and
Freemasons due to reliefs combining Templar and Freemason symbolism. Historian
Dr. Louise Yeoman, along with other mediaeval scholars, says the Knights Templar connection is false, and points out that Rosslyn Chapel was built by William Sinclair so that Mass could be said for the souls of his family. In addition, Rosslyn Chapel's connection to Freemasonry, as well as to the Templars, has been vigorously disputed by Robert L. D. Cooper, the Curator of the Grand Lodge of Scotland Museum and Library. It is postulated that any existing
Masonic imagery was likely added at a later date, probably in the 1860s when
James St Clair-Erskine, 3rd Earl of Rosslyn instructed Edinburgh architect
David Bryce, a known Freemason, to undertake restoration work on areas of the church including many of the carvings. • Legends in certain degrees recount that Knights under the command of Sir John De Bermingham, first and last Earl of Louth, aided Scottish King
Robert the Bruce, who had been excommunicated, at the
Battle of Bannockburn; but this account is based on an 18th-century romance and is not supported by any evidence. This story is the basis for the degrees in the
Royal Order of Scotland, an invitational Masonic honorary organization. • Templar connections have also been suggested through the Earls of
Rosslyn (
St. Clair, or
Sinclair) a family with well documented connections with Scottish Freemasonry, one being a
Grand Master of the
Grand Lodge of Scotland. ==See also==