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{{Youmay|the highest rank of the Templar Order|[[Grand Master|other uses]] of the title}}
{{Youmay|the highest rank of the Templar Order|[[Grand Master|other uses]] of the title}}
[[File:Templars.png|thumb|250px|The emblem of the Templar Order]]
[[File:Templars.png|thumb|250px|The emblem of the Templar Order]]
The title of '''Grand Master''' is one of the highest [[Templar rank|ranks]] of the [[Templars|Templar Order]]. Originally, it was the organization's supreme head, but evolution over the centuries led to this status being superseded by newly-created authorities such as the [[Guardians (Templars)|Guardians]] and the [[Generals of the Cross|General of the Cross]]. Since the establishment of the Order's major branches, the title has designated the Order's [[Templar Rite|Rite]] leaders, each corresponding to a specific geographic region, where they serve as the highest authority.<ref name="ACEG">''[[Assassin's Creed: The Essential Guide]]'' – Chapter 5</ref>
The title of '''Grand Master''' is one of the highest ranks of the [[Templars|Templar Order]]. Originally, it was the organization's supreme head, but evolution over the centuries led to this status being superseded by newly-created authorities such as the [[Guardians (Templars)|Guardians]] and the [[Generals of the Cross|General of the Cross]]. Since the establishment of the Order's major branches, the title has designated the Order's [[Templar Rite|Rite]] leaders, each corresponding to a specific geographic region, where they serve as the highest authority.<ref name="ACEG">''[[Assassin's Creed: The Essential Guide]]'' – Chapter 5</ref>


During the times of the [[Order of the Ancients]], the rank was known under different names depending on the region, with the [[Iran|Persian]] branch of the Order using the title of [[Ra's Al-Af'a]] (English: ''Head of the Snake'') to designate its leader,<ref name="ACMir">''[[Assassin's Creed: Mirage]]''</ref> while the [[Anglo-Saxons|Anglo-Saxon]] branch used the title of [[Grand Maegester of the Order of the Ancients|Grand Maegester]] instead. The rank was also synonymous with that of "[[Father of Understanding]]", or simply "The Father". This term was adopted from the similarly-named title within the ruling triumvirate of [[Isu]] society, in which the Father of Understanding ruled alongside the [[Mother of Wisdom]] and the [[Sacred Voice]].<ref name="ACV">''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]]'' – [[The Poor Fellow-Soldier]]</ref> Having previously borne more public faces, most Grand Masters were better known than their [[Assassins|Assassin]] [[Mentor|counterparts]]. However, as the Templars slipped into the shadows following their presumed [[Persecution of the Templars|public defeat]] in the 14th century, their leaders' identities eventually fell from the public consciousness.
During the times of the [[Order of the Ancients]], the rank was known under different names depending on the region, with the [[Iran|Persian]] branch of the Order using the title of [[Ra's Al-Af'a]] (English: ''Head of the Snake'') to designate its leader,<ref name="ACMir">''[[Assassin's Creed: Mirage]]''</ref> while the [[Anglo-Saxons|Anglo-Saxon]] branch used the title of [[Grand Maegester of the Order of the Ancients|Grand Maegester]] instead. The rank was also synonymous with that of "[[Father of Understanding]]", or simply "The Father". This term was adopted from the similarly-named title within the ruling triumvirate of [[Isu]] society, in which the Father of Understanding ruled alongside the [[Mother of Wisdom]] and the [[Sacred Voice]].<ref name="ACV">''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]]'' – [[The Poor Fellow-Soldier]]</ref>
 
Having previously borne more public faces, most Grand Masters were better known than their [[Assassins|Assassin]] [[Mentor|counterparts]]. However, as the Templars slipped into the shadows following their presumed [[Persecution of the Templars|public defeat]] in the 14th century, their leaders' identities eventually fell from the public consciousness.


By the early 17th century, the Templars were no longer ruled by a single Grand Master or independent leaders but instead by two councils of the Order's most prestigious members, the [[Inner Sanctum of the Templar Order|Inner Sanctum]] and the [[Council of Elders]]. The Sanctum was in charge of creating a globalized plan for the Order, ensuring the Rites' members' cooperation, and preventing any corruption of the Templar ideals, while the Council maintained an advisory role meant to maintain the Order's integrity according to the Templar Code. While still in charge of their respective and autonomous Rites, the Grand Masters were nevertheless accountable to the Inner Sanctum and their inquisitor, the feared [[Black Cross]]es. Furthermore, the Inner Sanctum was in charge of promoting the Grand Masters, keeping their numbers under strict control.
By the early 17th century, the Templars were no longer ruled by a single Grand Master or independent leaders but instead by two councils of the Order's most prestigious members, the [[Inner Sanctum of the Templar Order|Inner Sanctum]] and the [[Council of Elders]]. The Sanctum was in charge of creating a globalized plan for the Order, ensuring the Rites' members' cooperation, and preventing any corruption of the Templar ideals, while the Council maintained an advisory role meant to maintain the Order's integrity according to the Templar Code. While still in charge of their respective and autonomous Rites, the Grand Masters were nevertheless accountable to the Inner Sanctum and their inquisitor, the feared [[Black Cross]]es. Furthermore, the Inner Sanctum was in charge of promoting the Grand Masters, keeping their numbers under strict control.


While it was commonly assumed that all [[Templar leader]]s were drawn from the stock of Western nobility, due to the prominence of the front-organization that was the [[Knights Templar]] during the [[Middle Ages]], the truth was that as the Order developed, diversified, and relocated, many different people of various ethnic backgrounds and cultural heritages had assumed the mantle of Grand Master throughout the Templars' longevity.
While it was commonly assumed that all [[Templar leader]]s were drawn from the stock of Western nobility, due to the prominence of the front-organization that was the Knights Templar during the [[Middle Ages]], the truth was that as the Order developed, diversified, and relocated, many different people of various ethnic backgrounds and cultural heritages had assumed the mantle of Grand Master throughout the Templars' longevity.


==Structure==
==Structure==
===Purposes===
===Purposes===
{{Quote|The Order of Ancients argues for a hierarchy that flies in the face of God's purpose. They view men and woman as debased and corrupt, borne of evil intent. Yet they worship men they belive were their makers. Akin to a hammer loving the nail, they cannot see outside of their own hermetic system. They are not wrong to belive that there must be order in the world for peace to flourish. But they are wrong about the source of this order. Man was made in the image of God. God is the source of the universe's order. Therefor man need appeal only to God for guidance. |Alfred The Great on why Templars should lead society instead of the Ancients.|Assassin's Creed Valhalla|Notes from Eivor's travels}}
{{Quote|The Order of Ancients argues for a hierarchy that flies in the face of God's purpose. They view men and woman as debased and corrupt, borne of evil intent. Yet they worship men they belive were their makers. Akin to a hammer loving the nail, they cannot see outside of their own hermetic system. They are not wrong to belive that there must be order in the world for peace to flourish. But they are wrong about the source of this order. Man was made in the image of God. God is the source of the universe's order. Therefore man need appeal only to God for guidance. |Alfred the Great in his commentary, 870s.|Assassin's Creed Valhalla|Notes from Eivor's travels}}
During the transition from the Order of the Ancients to the Templar Order, King [[Alfred the Great|Alfred]] of [[Wessex]] inherited the title of [[Grand Maegester of the Order of the Ancients|Grand Maegester]] from his older brother [[Æthelred I, King of Wessex|Æthelred I]] following the latter's death.<ref name="GSChapter 17">''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla – Geirmund's Saga]]'' — Chapter 17</ref><ref name="AlfredDatabase">''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]]'' – [[Database: Aelfred]]</ref> As his ascension had been involuntary and he secretly despised the Ancients' veneration of the Isu, Alfred began planning the downfall of the Order using the pseudonym of "A Poor Fellow-Soldier of Christ", recruiting [[Winchester|Wincestre]]'s [[reeve]] [[Goodwin]] as his personal informant and using a hidden study in [[The Old Minster]] as a base of operations.<ref name="Poor Fellow">''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]]'' – [[The Poor Fellow-Soldier]]</ref><ref name="Breaking the Order">''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]]'' – [[Breaking the Order]]</ref>
 
[[File:ACV The Reeve of Wincestre 8.jpg|thumb|250px|left|Alfred requesting Eivor's help to eliminate the Order in Wincestre]]
[[File:ACV The Reeve of Wincestre 8.jpg|thumb|250px|left|Alfred requesting Eivor's help to eliminate the Order in Wincestre]]
During the transition from the [[Order of the Ancients]] to the [[Templars|Templar Order]], the title of [[Grand Maegester of the Order of the Ancients|Grand Maegester]] of the Ancients was inherited from his older brothers, once [[Æthelred I, King of Wessex|Æthelred I]] died from his wound,<ref name="GSChapter 17">''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla – Geirmund's Saga]]'' — Chapter 17</ref><ref name="AlfredDatabase">''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]]'' – [[Database: Aelfred]]</ref> Alfred began planning the downfall of the Ancients using the pseudonym of "A Poor Fellow-Soldier of Christ", recruited [[Winchester|Wincestre]]'s [[reeve]] [[Goodwin]] as his personal informant, and operated from a study in [[The Old Minster]] as a base of operations.<ref name="Poor Fellow">''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]]'' – [[The Poor Fellow-Soldier]]</ref><ref name="Breaking the Order">''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]]'' – [[Breaking the Order]]</ref> Once Alfred learned that the [[Assassins|Hidden One]] [[Hytham]] ran his group's operations from [[Ravensthorpe bureau|within]] the Raven Clan's settlement of [[Ravensthorpe]], Alfred used Hytham's affiliation with Eivor to make them unwittingly destroy the Order<ref name="Poor Fellow" /> in the cities of [[London|Lunden]],<ref name="Walls and Shadows">''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]]'' – [[Walls and Shadows]]</ref> [[York|Jorvik]],<ref name="TheWelcomingParty">''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]]'' – [[The Welcoming Party]]</ref> and in Wincestre, after [[Palatinus]] [[Fulke]] uncovered Alfred's "association" with the Poor Fellow-Soldier and sought to eliminate Alfred by tasking the Order members [[Selwyn]], [[Hilda]], and [[Ealhferth]] with ensuring Alfred was "burned to ash" for his betrayal.<ref name="Impaling the Seax">''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]]'' – [[Impaling the Seax]]</ref>
Once Alfred learned that the [[Assassins|Hidden One]] [[Hytham]] ran his group's operations from [[Ravensthorpe bureau|within]] the [[Raven Clan]]'s settlement of [[Ravensthorpe]], he used Hytham's affiliation with [[Eivor Varinsdottir]] to make the latter unwittingly aid his schemes by eliminating the Order's agents<ref name="Poor Fellow" /> in the cities of [[London|Lunden]]<ref name="Walls and Shadows">''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]]'' – [[Walls and Shadows]]</ref> and [[York|Jorvik]].<ref name="TheWelcomingParty">''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]]'' – [[The Welcoming Party]]</ref> When the Order's[[Palatinus]] [[Fulke]] uncovered Alfred's "association" with the Poor Fellow-Soldier and tasked her fellow Ancients [[Selwyn]], [[Hilda]], and [[Ealhferth]] with ensuring the king was "burned to ash" for his betrayal, Alfred personally enlisted Eivor's aid to eliminate the Order members hunting him.<ref name="Impaling the Seax">''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]]'' – [[Impaling the Seax]]</ref>
 
Following the Vikings' [[Battle of Chippenham|pyrrhic victory]] against his army at [[Chippenham|Cippanhamm]],<ref name="GSChapter 30">''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla – Geirmund's Saga]]'' — Chapter 30</ref> Alfred lived in exile as a commoner in the village of [[Athelnay]] in the west of [[Hampshire|Hamtunscire]] and sent a final letter to Hytham that invited Eivor to the village to discuss the Order and his true allegiance.<ref name="The Letter">''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]]'' – [[The Letter]]</ref> Eivor accepted the invitation and was told of Alfred's identity as both the Poor Fellow-Soldier and the Order's Grand Maegest, while the king also elaborated on his motives for bringing down the Ancients.<ref name="Poor Fellow" />


Following the Vikings' [[Battle of Chippenham|pyrrhic victory]] against his army at [[Chippenham|Cippanhamm]], Alfred<ref name="GSChapter 30">''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla – Geirmund's Saga]]'' — Chapter 30</ref> lived in exile as a commoner in the village of [[Athelnay]] in the west of [[Hampshire|Hamtunscire]] and sent a final letter to Hytham that invited Eivor to the village to discuss the secret society.<ref name="The Letter">''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]]'' – [[The Letter]]</ref>
Eivor accepted the invitation and was told of his identity as the Poor Fellow-Soldier, revealing that the person she sought was himself and elaborated on his motives for bringing down the Order.<ref name="Poor Fellow" />
[[File:ACV The Last Chapter Promo 3.jpg|thumb|250px|right|Alfred's final meeting with Eivor]]
[[File:ACV The Last Chapter Promo 3.jpg|thumb|250px|right|Alfred's final meeting with Eivor]]
Eventually, Alfred returned from exile and rallied another army to defeat Guthrum's force at the [[Battle of Edington]]. This led to the {{Wiki|Treaty of Wedmore}}, which saw Guthrum's conversion to Christianity and departure from Wessex, and the official establishment of [[Danelaw]] in eastern and northern England.<ref name="Wiki"/> Circa 889, Alfred called on Eivor to meet him at the Old Minster in Wincestre, where he disclosed to her that Guthrum had indeed surrendered and sworn a treaty. He then extended her an offer to serve him and Christ as a lord of Mercia and join his rapidly growing Order, but Eivor politely turned him down and returned the cross he had given her years ago.<ref name="Farewell">''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]] – [[The Last Chapter]]'' – [[Fare Thee Well, Aelfred Rex]]</ref>
Eventually, Alfred returned from exile and rallied another army to defeat [[Guthrum]]'s forces at the [[Battle of Edington]]. This led to the {{Wiki|Treaty of Wedmore}}, which saw Guthrum's conversion to Christianity and departure from Wessex, and the official establishment of [[Danelaw]] in eastern and northern England.<ref>{{WP|Alfred the Great}}</ref> Circa 889, Alfred called on Eivor to meet him at the Old Minster in Wincestre one last time, where he disclosed to her that Guthrum had indeed surrendered and sworn a treaty. He then extended her an offer to serve him and Christ as a lord of Mercia and join his rapidly growing Order, but Eivor politely turned him down.<ref name="Farewell">''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]] – [[The Last Chapter]]'' – [[Fare Thee Well, Aelfred Rex]]</ref>


As the first Grand Master of the Templar Order, Alfred created the foundations for the future of the Templar Order, with the purpose being an universal order meant to work towards the betterment of man in God's name.<ref name="Poor Fellow" /> A central value was the establishment of a strict opposition to the Ancients' Isu paganism, viewing it as a heretical belief that viewed less of humanity, while agreeing on the matter of the need for there being an organization fighting for peace in the world.<ref name="Commentaries">''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]]'' – [[Notes from Eivor's travels]]: "Alfred's Commentaries"</ref> This purpose would remain a central value of the Templar Order even until 2017, when the then-[[Black Cross]] [[Juhani Otso Berg]] began investigating the modern Templars' corruption,<ref name="ACT">''[[Assassin's Creed: Templars]]''</ref><ref name="ACUp">''[[Assassin's Creed: Uprising]]''</ref> discovered [[Instruments of the First Will]] spies who worked to reestablish Isu control of society,<ref name="ACT"/><ref name="ACUp"/><ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Odyssey]] – [[The Fate of Atlantis: Fields of Elysium]]'' – [[21st century conversations|Modern day]]</ref><ref name="ACEG" /> and successfully purged them after collaborating with the Assassins. Much like Alfred's beliefs, the Templars discovered to be Instruments were accused of "blasphemy" against humanity.<ref name="ACT"/><ref name="ACUp"/>
As the first Grand Master, Alfred created the foundations for the future of the Templar Order, whose primary purpose was to be an universal order welcoming members from all walks of life, united by a common desire to seek the betterment of man in God's name.<ref name="Poor Fellow" /> A central value was the establishment of a strict opposition to the Ancients' Isu paganism, which Alfred viewed as heretical, although he did agree with one aspect of the Ancients' belief system: their pursuit of world peace.<ref name="Commentaries">''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]]'' – [[Notes from Eivor's travels]]: "Alfred's Commentaries"</ref> This purpose would remain a central value of the Templar Order well into the 21st century, when the then-[[Black Cross]] [[Juhani Otso Berg]] began investigating the modern Templars' corruption,<ref name="ACT">''[[Assassin's Creed: Templars]]''</ref><ref name="ACUp">''[[Assassin's Creed: Uprising]]''</ref> uncovered the existence of the [[Instruments of the First Will]] who sought to restore the Isu as humanity's rulers,<ref name="ACT"/><ref name="ACUp"/><ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Odyssey]] – [[The Fate of Atlantis: Fields of Elysium]]'' – [[21st century conversations|Modern day]]</ref><ref name="ACEG" /> and successfully purged them after collaborating with the Assassins. Much like Alfred, the Templars believed the Instruments' veneration of the Isu to be "blasphemy" against humanity.<ref name="ACT"/><ref name="ACUp"/>


===Training===
===Training===
{{Quote|It is a requirement when you are raised in the manner that I was. Perception is fundamental to the Order. It guides the feet when running and climbing. Informs the hands when striking and fighting. But most important, it transforms the senses. And we begin to know the world in a different way.|Haytham Kenway discussing his training with Charles Lee, 1754.|Assassin's Creed III|The Surgeon}}
{{Quote|It is a requirement when you are raised in the manner that I was. Perception is fundamental to the Order. It guides the feet when running and climbing. Informs the hands when striking and fighting. But most important, it transforms the senses. And we begin to know the world in a different way.|Haytham Kenway discussing his training with Charles Lee, 1754.|Assassin's Creed III|The Surgeon}}
The Templar Order requires that any member trained to become a Grand Master is prepared to make difficult decisions and confident in their own leadership abilities before being promoted. To uphold the Templar belief of killing for efficiency instead of emotional grounds, they are expected to be resourceful to further the Templars' ideals in pursuit of the greater good.<ref name="Forsaken">''[[Assassin's Creed: Forsaken]]''</ref>
The Templar Order requires that any member trained to become a Grand Master is prepared to make difficult decisions and confident in their own leadership abilities before being promoted. To uphold the Templar belief of killing for efficiency instead of emotional grounds, they are expected to be resourceful to further the Templars' ideals in pursuit of the greater good.<ref name="Forsaken">''[[Assassin's Creed: Forsaken]]''</ref>
[[File:ACU Elise sword training.jpg|thumb|250px|left|Élise de la Serre training with Frederick Weatherall]]
[[File:ACU Elise sword training.jpg|thumb|250px|left|Élise de la Serre training with Frederick Weatherall]]
The strongest minds among the Order are meant to bear the responsibility of the peoples' will for freedom and responsibility;<ref name="ACUN">[[Assassin's Creed: Unity (novel)|''Assassin's Creed: Unity'' novel]]</ref> therefore they themselves seek to take the mantle of leadership in society and expect the people to fall in line because, in their view, "[[Human|mankind]] was [[Project Anthropos|built]] to serve".<ref name="LeesLastStand">''[[Assassin's Creed III]]'' – [[Lee's Last Stand]]</ref> Additionally, both combat and stratagem are part of their training.<ref name="ACUN"/><ref name="Forsaken"/> The training itself is under another Grand Master, where it is a chosen Templar being trained,<ref name="Forsaken"/> or it is a birthright in a Templar lineage that ruled a Rite.<ref name="ACUN"/><ref name="AnAppleADay">''[[Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood]]'' – [[An Apple a Day]]</ref> After the Inner Sanctum's foundation, promotions to Grand Master came under their control.<ref name="ACT">''[[Assassin's Creed: Templars]]''</ref>
The strongest minds among the Order are meant to bear the responsibility of the peoples' will for freedom and responsibility;<ref name="ACUN">[[Assassin's Creed: Unity (novel)|''Assassin's Creed: Unity'' novel]]</ref> therefore they themselves seek to take the mantle of leadership in society and expect the people to fall in line because, in their view, "[[Human|mankind]] was [[Project Anthropos|built]] to serve".<ref name="LeesLastStand">''[[Assassin's Creed III]]'' – [[Lee's Last Stand]]</ref> Additionally, both combat and stratagem are part of their training.<ref name="ACUN"/><ref name="Forsaken"/> The training itself is under another Grand Master, where it is a chosen Templar being trained,<ref name="Forsaken"/> or it is a birthright in a Templar lineage that ruled a Rite.<ref name="ACUN"/><ref name="AnAppleADay">''[[Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood]]'' – [[An Apple a Day]]</ref> After the Inner Sanctum's foundation, promotions to Grand Master came under their control.<ref name="ACT">''[[Assassin's Creed: Templars]]''</ref>
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{{Main|Templar Rite}}
{{Main|Templar Rite}}
{{Quote|As a Master Templar, you have learned your lessons well, and have earned this opportunity. You are my eyes and ears in the New World now. Do not fail me, Lawrence.|Reginald Birch in a letter to Lawrence Washington, 1738.|Assassin's Creed: Rogue|War Letters}}
{{Quote|As a Master Templar, you have learned your lessons well, and have earned this opportunity. You are my eyes and ears in the New World now. Do not fail me, Lawrence.|Reginald Birch in a letter to Lawrence Washington, 1738.|Assassin's Creed: Rogue|War Letters}}
A Grand Master controls a specific geographic region and their Rite is named after it.<ref name="ACEG"/> Under their leadership was the ability to appoint a [[Lieutenant of the Templar Order|Lieutenant]] as their second-in-command and<ref name="P307-324">[[Assassin's Creed: Unity (novel)|''Assassin's Creed: Unity'' (novel)]] – 5 October 1789</ref><ref name="Rank">''Assassin's Creed: Unity'' – [[A Cautious Alliance]]</ref> Master Templars would serve as [[Templar leader|leaders]] under their command.<ref>[[Assassin's Creed: Rogue]] – [[The Storm Fortress]]</ref><ref>[[Assassin's Creed: Templars]] – [[Assassin's Creed: Templars – Volume 1: Black Cross]]</ref>  holding the highest attainable rank within their Rite, a Grand Master is not all-powerful and is dependent on the support of their fellow Templars and other Rites around the world. Nevertheless, their duties are essential to the proper functioning of the Templar Order as a whole, so Grand Masters may elect to have bodyguards to protect them at all times, as were the cases with [[Frederick Weatherall]] for the [[de la Serre family]],<ref name="ACUN"/> and [[El Tiburón]] for [[Laureano de Torres y Ayala]].<ref name="AC4">''[[Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag]]''</ref> With the Grand Master themselves being the ruling authority for their own Rite's plans, all members required their superior's approval to enact any changes.<ref name="BirdsOfAFeather">''[[Assassin's Creed II]]'' – [[Birds of a Feather]]</ref><ref name="Kenway">''[[Assassin's Creed III]]'' – [[The Braddock Expedition (memory)]]</ref><ref name="MisterWalpole"">''[[Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag]]'' – [[Mister Walpole, I Presume?]]</ref> The subordinative Templar ranks answering to the entire leadership are Seneschals, Advisors, Commanders, Preceptors, Knights, Warriors, Clerics, and finally, the Disciples.<ref name="ACBH m/p">''[[Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood]]'' – [[Multiplayer]]</ref>
A Grand Master controls a specific geographic region and their Rite is named after it.<ref name="ACEG"/> Under their leadership was the ability to appoint a [[Lieutenant of the Templar Order|Lieutenant]] as their second-in-command and main advisor.<ref name="P307-324">[[Assassin's Creed: Unity (novel)|''Assassin's Creed: Unity'' novel]] – 5 October 1789</ref><ref name="Rank">''[[Assassin's Creed: Unity]]'' – [[A Cautious Alliance]]</ref> Despite holding the highest attainable rank within their Rite, a Grand Master is not all-powerful and is dependent on the support of their fellow Templars and other Rites. Nevertheless, their duties are essential to the proper functioning of the Templar Order as a whole, so Grand Masters may elect to have bodyguards to protect them at all times, as were the cases with [[Frederick Weatherall]] for the [[de la Serre family]],<ref name="ACUN"/> and [[El Tiburón]] for [[Laureano de Torres y Ayala]].<ref name="AC4">''[[Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag]]''</ref> With the Grand Master themselves being the ruling authority for their own Rite's plans, all members required their superior's approval to enact any changes.<ref name="BirdsOfAFeather">''[[Assassin's Creed II]]'' – [[Birds of a Feather]]</ref><ref name="Kenway">''[[Assassin's Creed III]]'' – [[The Braddock Expedition (memory)|The Braddock Expedition]]</ref><ref name="MisterWalpole"">''[[Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag]]'' – [[Mister Walpole, I Presume?]]</ref> The subordinative Templar ranks answering to the entire leadership are Seneschals, Advisors, Commanders, Preceptors, Knights, Warriors, Clerics, and finally, the Disciples.<ref name="ACBH m/p">''[[Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood]]'' – [[Multiplayer]]</ref>
[[File:Shayandcharles.PNG|thumb|250px|right|Shay recovering the Precursor Box from Charles in Versailles]]
A Grand Master's power can extend beyond their own Rite, as their higher rank allows them to have influence over other Rites' members, including [[Master Templar]]s.<ref name="AC3">''[[Assassin's Creed III]]''</ref><ref name="ACRG">''[[Assassin's Creed: Rogue]]''</ref><ref name="AC2D">''[[Assassin's Creed II: Discovery]]''</ref> To extend their reach further without breaking their own duties, Grand Masters could appoint agents to investigate the Order's operations elsewhere, such as Grand Master Birch charging the British Templar [[John Harrison]] with finding Isu sites and artifacts<ref name="WarLetters">''[[Assassin's Creed: Rogue]]'' – [[War Letters]]''</ref> and Grand Master Haytham ordering [[Master Templar]] Shay Cormac with finding the [[Precursor box]].<ref name="NonNobisDomine">''[[Assassin's Creed: Rogue]]'' – [[Non Nobis Domine]]</ref> Other tasks have included funds collecting<ref name="SivertDatabase">''[[Assassin's Creed: Unity]]'' – [[Database: Charles Gabriel Sivert]]</ref> and backing either local rebels or established governments by providing needed manpower, arms, medical supplies, and food in exchange for a Rites' intelligence and support.<ref name="Naval Campaign">''[[Assassin's Creed: Rogue]]'' – [[The Naval Campaign]]</ref><ref name="WarLetters"/> If needed, sending a prominent Templar member to support specific campaigns can also be done.<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Rogue]] – [[The Battle of Labrador (memory)]]</ref><ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Rogue]]'' – [[The Battle of Quiberon Bay (memory)]]</ref>


However, this does not mean they can neglect the duties of their own Rite to actively participate in the duties of another Grand Master and their Rite. A prominent example of this was Grand Master and Pope Rodrigo Borgia, who was so influential over European Templars and their leaders that the Order became blinded by greed and personal ambition above the Templar principles; this era is considered a Dark Age of the Templar Order and considered among mistakes of the era by modern Templars.<ref name="EncyclopediaCh2">''[[Assassin's Creed Encyclopedia]]'' – Chapter 2</ref><ref name="ACEG"/><ref name="AbstergoFile13">''[[Assassin's Creed: Revelations]]'' – [[Abstergo Files]]: "File.0.13\Hst_LibidoDominand"</ref><ref name="contracts">''[[Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood]]'' – [[Contracts (Italian Brotherhood)]]</ref>
[[File:Non Nobis Domine 19.png|thumb|250px|right|Haytham Kenway tasking Shay Cormac to recover the Precursor box]]
A Grand Master's power can extend beyond their own Rite, as their higher rank allows them to have influence over other Rites' members, including [[Master Templar]]s.<ref name="AC3">''[[Assassin's Creed III]]''</ref><ref name="ACRG">''[[Assassin's Creed: Rogue]]''</ref><ref name="AC2D">''[[Assassin's Creed II: Discovery]]''</ref> To extend their reach further without breaking their own duties, Grand Masters could appoint agents to investigate the Order's operations elsewhere, such as Grand Master [[Reginald Birch]] charging [[John Harrison]] with finding Isu sites and artifacts<ref name="WarLetters">''[[Assassin's Creed: Rogue]]'' – [[War Letters]]''</ref> and [[Haytham Kenway]] ordering [[Shay Cormac]] to recover the [[Precursor box]].<ref name="NonNobisDomine">''[[Assassin's Creed: Rogue]]'' – [[Non Nobis Domine]]</ref> Other tasks include collecting funds<ref name="SivertDatabase">''[[Assassin's Creed: Unity]]'' – [[Database: Charles Gabriel Sivert]]</ref> and backing either local rebels or established governments by providing needed manpower, arms, medical supplies, and food in exchange for a Rite's intelligence and support.<ref name="Naval Campaign">''[[Assassin's Creed: Rogue]]'' – [[The Naval Campaign]]</ref><ref name="WarLetters"/> If needed, sending a prominent Templar member to support specific campaigns can also be done.<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Rogue]]'' – [[The Battle of Labrador (memory)|The Battle of Labrador]]</ref><ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Rogue]]'' – [[The Battle of Quiberon Bay (memory)|The Battle of Quiberon Bay]]</ref>


In stark contrast, the 18th century [[British Rite of the Templar Order|British Templar]] [[Reginald Birch]] entrusted [[Haytham Kenway]] with searching for the [[Grand Temple]]'s location and founding a new [[American Rite of the Templar Order|Colonial Rite]], but Birch himself purposefully remained behind in England to maintain his Rite's other goals.<ref name="ADeadlyPerformance">''[[Assassin's Creed III]]'' – [[A Deadly Performance]]</ref><ref name="Forsaken"/>
However, this does not mean a Grand Master can neglect their own Rite's goals to actively participate in the duties of other Templars. A prominent example of this was Grand Master [[Rodrigo Borgia]] of the [[Roman Rite of the Templar Order|Roman Rite]], who was so influential over the other European Templars that the Order became blinded by greed and personal ambition above the Templar principles; for this reason, this era is regared as a "Dark Age of the Order" by modern Templars.<ref name="EncyclopediaCh2">''[[Assassin's Creed Encyclopedia]]'' – Chapter 2</ref><ref name="ACEG"/><ref name="AbstergoFile13">''[[Assassin's Creed: Revelations]]'' – [[Abstergo Files]]: "File.0.13\Hst_LibidoDominand"</ref> In stark contrast, Reginald Birch, despite his fanatical obsession with the Isu, did not neglect his duties as Grand Master in [[England]], appointing Haytham Kenway to lead the search for the [[Grand Temple]] while he focused on the Rite's other goals.<ref name="ADeadlyPerformance">''[[Assassin's Creed III]]'' – [[A Deadly Performance]]</ref><ref name="Forsaken"/>
[[File:ACIII-BraddockExpedition 18.png|thumb|250px|left|Haytham Kenway inducting Charles Lee into the Order]]
 
The Grand Master would also occasionally meet with other Rites' Templars to discuss domestic and global politics, and the Order's own conditions,<ref name="ACUN"/> while also communicating through their various businesses and organizations such as Templar fleets, like [[Shay Cormac's fleet]].<ref name="ACRG"/> An advantage of being Grand Master is a personal network that functions as their eyes and ears everywhere, and they get regular updates from agents, especially Templars directly under their command.<ref name="Forsaken"/> Another responsibility of the Grand Master is the [[Initiation into the Templar Order|initiation]] of new Templar members,<ref name="Kenway"/><ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Rogue]]'' – [[Scars]]</ref><ref name="MisterWalpole"/> as well as the exile of those who have betrayed the Order, either directly or indirectly.<ref name="ACU">''[[Assassin's Creed: Unity]]''</ref>
[[File:ACIII-BraddockExpedition 18.png|thumb|250px|left|Haytham inducting Charles Lee into the Order]]
The Grand Master would also occasionally meet with other Rites' Templars to discuss domestic and global politics, and the Order's own conditions,<ref name="ACUN"/> while also communicating through their various businesses and organizations such as Templar fleets, like the [[Shay Cormac's fleet|one]] commanded by Shay Cormac.<ref name="ACRG"/> An advantage of being Grand Master is a personal network that functions as their eyes and ears everywhere, and they get regular updates from agents, especially Templars directly under their command.<ref name="Forsaken"/> Another responsibility of the Grand Master is the [[Initiation into the Templar Order|initiation]] of new Templar members,<ref name="Kenway"/><ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Rogue]]'' – [[Scars]]</ref><ref name="MisterWalpole"/> as well as the exile of those who have betrayed the Order, either directly or indirectly.<ref name="ACU">''[[Assassin's Creed: Unity]]''</ref>


After the Inner Sanctum's founding, the Grand Masters' powers were kept under check by the [[Black Cross]]es, whose main objective was to keep the various Rites free of corruption. If a Grand Master was found guilty of breaking the Order's principles, the Black Cross held the authority to execute them on the spot. During an ongoing investigation, all Templars, including the Grand Master, were obliged to assist the Black Cross by providing them with any information or resources they demanded, but were otherwise forbidden from interfering with the investigation or even speaking of their interactions with the Black Cross.<ref name="ACT"/> As of the 21st century, the Inner Sanctum also strictly regulates the number of Grand Masters worldwide, all of whom became answerable to Guardians and the General of the Cross.<ref name="ACU"/>
After the Inner Sanctum's founding, the Grand Masters' powers were kept under check by the [[Black Cross]]es, whose main objective was to keep the various Rites free of corruption. If a Grand Master was found guilty of breaking the Order's principles, the Black Cross held the authority to execute them on the spot. During an ongoing investigation, all Templars, including the Grand Master, were obliged to assist the Black Cross by providing them with any information or resources they demanded, but were otherwise forbidden from interfering with the investigation or even speaking of their interactions with the Black Cross.<ref name="ACT"/> As of the 21st century, the Inner Sanctum also strictly regulates the number of Grand Masters worldwide, all of whom became answerable to Guardians and the General of the Cross.<ref name="ACU"/>
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{{Quote|When our brother Templars see the old institutions crumble, they will adapt.|François-Thomas Germain to Élise de la Serre and Arno Dorian, 1794.|Assassin's Creed: Unity|The Temple}}
{{Quote|When our brother Templars see the old institutions crumble, they will adapt.|François-Thomas Germain to Élise de la Serre and Arno Dorian, 1794.|Assassin's Creed: Unity|The Temple}}
[[File:Apple a day 4.png|250px|thumb|right|Cesare arguing with Rodrigo about power]]
[[File:Apple a day 4.png|250px|thumb|right|Cesare arguing with Rodrigo about power]]
A Templar aiming to become the Grand Master must quickly recruit members within the group before initiating a coup, and would ideally also contact other Rites to convince them that the action is necessary, though the latter step is more of a courtesy.<ref name="ACUN"/><ref name="ACU"/> During the [[Renaissance]], the [[Roman Rite of the Templar Order|Italian Templar]] [[Cesare Borgia]] gathered supporters and assumed ''de facto'' leadership of the Rite from his father [[Rodrigo Borgia|Rodrigo]], the Grand Master who operated under the public façade of [[Papacy|Pope]] Alexander VI. With his elder brother [[Juan Borgia the Elder|Juan]] providing funds, the [[French Army]] general [[Octavian de Valois]] offering military support,<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood]]'' – [[The Plan]]</ref> and his executioner [[Micheletto Corella]] ensuring that puppets<ref name="ACBH">''[[Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood]]''</ref> and generals<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Ascendance]]''</ref> obeyed him, Cesare led the Templars to untold power over [[Italy]], though this was all for personal ambition above Templar principles.<ref name="EncyclopediaCh2"/><ref name="ACEG" /> When Rodrigo refused to fund Cesare's unauthorized campaigns<ref name="AnAppleADay"/> following both Juan's<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood]]'' – [[In and Out]]</ref> and and Octavian's deaths,<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood]]'' – [[Au Revoir]]</ref> Cesare killed him in a rage. As Rodrigo's main support then was the church, which was unaware the Pope was a Templar, Cesare had uncontested claim to the title of Grand Master.<ref name="AnAppleADay"/>
A Templar aiming to become the Grand Master must quickly recruit members within the group before initiating a coup, and would ideally also contact other Rites to convince them that the action is necessary, though the latter step is more of a courtesy.<ref name="ACUN"/><ref name="ACU"/> During the [[Renaissance]], the [[Roman Rite of the Templar Order|Italian Templar]] [[Cesare Borgia]] gathered supporters and assumed ''de facto'' leadership of the Rite from his father Rodrigo. With his cousin [[Juan Borgia the Elder|Juan]] providing funds, the [[French Army]] general [[Octavian de Valois]] offering military support,<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood]]'' – [[The Plan]]</ref> and his executioner [[Micheletto Corella]] ensuring that puppets<ref name="ACBH">''[[Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood]]''</ref> and generals<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Ascendance]]''</ref> obeyed him, Cesare led the Templars to untold power over [[Italy]], though this was all for personal ambition above Templar principles.<ref name="EncyclopediaCh2"/><ref name="ACEG" /> When Rodrigo refused to fund Cesare's unauthorized campaigns<ref name="AnAppleADay"/> following both Juan's<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood]]'' – [[In and Out]]</ref> and and Octavian's deaths,<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood]]'' – [[Au Revoir]]</ref> Cesare killed him in a blind rage and becafme the uncontested Grand Master.<ref name="AnAppleADay"/>
 
Conversely, should a competitor fail to attract sufficient backing, as happened to the 19th-century British Templar [[Cavanagh]] when he sought to overthrow [[Crawford Starrick]] with an [[Apple of Eden 7|Apple of Eden]], they will only facilitate their own end, since Starrick soon learned of Cavanagh's intentions and ordered his death.<ref name="ACUW">''[[Assassin's Creed: Underworld]]''</ref> This likewise applies to defending incumbents, as seen not just in the Renaissance with Rodrigo Borgia but again in the late 18th century with the [[Parisian Rite of the Templar Order|Parisian Rite]].<ref name="HighSociety">''[[Assassin's Creed: Unity]]'' – [[High Society]]</ref>
 
In the lead up to the [[French Revolution]], Grand Master [[François de la Serre]] was unaware that his entire inner circle<ref name="HighSociety"/> except [[Chrétien Lafrenière]]<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Unity]]'' – [[The Estates General]]</ref><ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Unity]]'' – [[The Prophet]]</ref> had pledged allegiance<ref name="HighSociety"/> to the recently-exiled [[François-Thomas Germain]], who had successfully petitioned the [[American Rite of the Templar Order|American]], Italian, and [[Spanish Rite of the Templar Order|Spanish Rites]] for support following his banishment. After Germain had de la Serre assassinated in a coup and began purging all French Templars opposing him, Chrétien and François' daughter [[Élise de la Serre|Élise]]<ref name="ACUN"/>—who had been presumed the heir apparent<ref name="HighSociety"/>—petitioned other Rites for aid, but they only lent their sympathies, believing there was no need for intervention since the Rite ran smoothly under Germain's control.<ref name="ACUN"/>


Conversely, should a competitor fail to attract sufficient backing, as happened to the 19th century British Templar [[Cavanagh]] when he sought to overthrow [[Crawford Starrick]] with an [[Apple of Eden 7|Apple of Eden]], they will only facilitate their own end, since Starrick soon learned of Cavanagh's intentions and ordered his death.<ref name="ACUW">''[[Assassin's Creed: Underworld]]''</ref> This likewise applies to defending incumbents, as seen not just in the Renaissance with Rodrigo but again in the late 18th century with the [[Parisian Rite of the Templar Order|Parisian Rite]]. In the lead up to the [[French Revolution]], Grand Master [[François de la Serre]] was unaware that his entire inner circle<ref name="HighSociety">''[[Assassin's Creed: Unity]]'' – [[High Society]]</ref> except [[Chrétien Lafrenière]]<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Unity]]'' – [[The Estates General]]</ref><ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Unity]]'' – [[The Prophet]]</ref> pledged allegiance<ref name="HighSociety"/> to the recently-exiled [[François-Thomas Germain]], who had successfully petitioned the [[American Rite of the Templar Order|American]], Italian, and [[Spanish Rite of the Templar Order|Spanish Rites]] for support following his banishment. After Germain had de la Serre assassinated in a coup and began purging all French Templars opposing him, Chrétien and François' daughter [[Élise de la Serre|Élise]]<ref name="ACUN"/>—who had been presumed the heir apparent<ref name="HighSociety"/>—petitioned other Rites for aid, but they only lent their sympathies, believing there was no need for intervention since the Rite ran smoothly under Germain's control.<ref name="ACUN"/>
[[File:High Society 12.png|thumb|250px|left|François de la Serre killed in Germain's coup]]
[[File:High Society 12.png|thumb|250px|left|François de la Serre killed in Germain's coup]]
In the event of a Grand Master's untimely death, a successor may be appointed as a Rite's ''de facto'' leader until a new Grand Master is officially elected, as was the case during the [[Third Crusade]] when [[Basilisk]] assumed temporary leadership of the Knights Templar following Grand Master [[Gerard de Ridefort]]'s death.<ref name="ACAC">''[[Assassin's Creed: Altaïr's Chronicles]]''</ref> The same is true in the case of Templar leaders who did not hold the title of Grand Master, such as [[James Wardrop]] succeeding [[Lawrence Washington]] as leader of the Templars in the [[United States|Thirteen Colonies]].<ref name="ACRG"/> There have also been several instances of a Grand Master being chosen by the Rite itself for their own qualities as leaders, such as [[Ahmet]] becoming Grand Master of the [[Byzantine Rite of the Templar Order|Byzantine Rite]] while the long-time Templar [[Manuel Palaiologos]] was demoted to his second-in-command,<ref name="ACEG"/> and Crawford Starrick's rise in the British Rite until he was appointed Grand Master.<ref name="ACUW"/>
In the event of a Grand Master's untimely death, a successor may be appointed as a Rite's ''de facto'' leader until a new Grand Master is officially elected, as was the case during the [[Third Crusade]] when [[Basilisk]] assumed temporary leadership of the Knights Templar following Grand Master [[Gerard de Ridefort]]'s death.<ref name="ACAC">''[[Assassin's Creed: Altaïr's Chronicles]]''</ref> The same is true in the case of Templar leaders who did not hold the title of Grand Master, such as [[James Wardrop]] succeeding [[Lawrence Washington]] as leader of the Templars in the [[United States|Thirteen Colonies]].<ref name="ACRG"/> There have also been several instances of a Grand Master being chosen by the Rite itself for their own qualities as leaders, such as [[Ahmet]] becoming Grand Master of the [[Byzantine Rite of the Templar Order|Byzantine Rite]] while the long-time Templar [[Manuel Palaiologos]] was demoted to his second-in-command,<ref name="ACEG"/> and Crawford Starrick's rise in the British Rite until he was appointed Grand Master.<ref name="ACUW"/>
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===Reforms===
===Reforms===
{{Quote|They become increasingly aware of our existence. We can no longer rely on the divine right of the aristocracy to maintain control. We need a new system, something much more subtle.|An unidentified Templar about the Order's transition from feudal monarchies to capitalism.|Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood|Rifts}}
{{Quote|They become increasingly aware of our existence. We can no longer rely on the divine right of the aristocracy to maintain control. We need a new system, something much more subtle.|An unidentified Templar about the Order's transition from feudal monarchies to capitalism.|Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood|Rifts}}
The first major reform of the Templar Order was done by the [[France|French]] knight and Grand Master [[Hugues de Payens]] and his Templar colleague [[Bernard de Clairvaux]] in the 12th century, to accomplish an alliance with the Church, Bernard sent 9 trusted men to the Holy Land searching for the Temple of Solomon. 9 Years later and the Templar Order itself was reformed after the return of the 9 men and Payens and Bernard co-created the [[Latin Rule]] and gained support by the Church. For their efforts to reform the Templar Order to a public organization, the Templars were recognized and confirmed as the Order of Knights Templars during the Council of Troyes in 1129. Creating a Golden Age for the Templar Order that lasted almost two hundred years were they influenced kings, popes, and men of science alike until the early 14th century.<ref name="ACEG"/><ref name="EncyclopediaCh2"/><ref name="File.0.02">''[[Assassin's Creed: Revelations]]'' – [[Abstergo Files]]: "File.0.02\Hst_Beginning"</ref>
The first major reform of the Templar Order was done by the [[France|French]] knight and Grand Master [[Hugues de Payens]] and his Templar colleague [[Bernard de Clairvaux]] in the 12th century. To secure an alliance with the Church, Bernard sent nine trusted men to the Holy Land in search of the [[Solomon's Temple|Temple of Solomon]]. After the Templars returned nine years later, the Order was reformed when Payens and Bernard co-created the [[Latin Rule]] and gained the support of the Church. For their efforts to turn the Templar Order into a public organization, the organization was officially recognized as the Order of Knights Templars during the Council of Troyes in 1129. This marked the beginning of a Golden Age for the Order that lasted almost two centuries, during which the Templars influenced countless kings, popes, and men of science.<ref name="ACEG"/><ref name="EncyclopediaCh2"/><ref name="File.0.02">''[[Assassin's Creed: Revelations]]'' – [[Abstergo Files]]: "File.0.02\Hst_Beginning"</ref>
 
[[File:Tragedy of Jacques de Molay 12.png|thumb|right|250px|King Philip IV's men arresting de Molay]]
[[File:Tragedy of Jacques de Molay 12.png|thumb|right|250px|King Philip IV's men arresting de Molay]]
During another major reform,<ref name="ACEG"/> the Templar Order already were supportive of the {{Wiki|classical liberalism}} ideals that emerged during the [[Age of Enlightenment]], in which intellectuals such as [[Isaac Newton]], [[Baruch Spinoza]], [[John Locke]], and [[Francis Bacon]] represented a new emerging society of science and technology.<ref name="EncyclopediaCh2"/> After Germain joined the Parisian Rite and became Grand Master de la Serre's [[Lieutenant of the Templar Order|lieutenant]],<ref name="Cautious Alliance">''[[Assassin's Creed: Unity]]'' – [[A Cautious Alliance]]</ref> Germain discovered [[Jacques de Molay]]'s ''[[Codex Pater Intellectus]]'' in the vault beneath the [[Temple, Paris|Parisian Temple]] and advocated for abolishing the [[monarchy]] to create a [[Capitalism|capitalist]] society.<ref name="Temple">''[[Assassin's Creed: Unity]]'' – [[The Temple]]</ref> However, de la Serre expelled Germain for espousing ideals from de Molay's controversial work deemed heresy,<ref name="ACEG"/><ref name="Cautious Alliance" /><ref name="Hoarders">''[[Assassin's Creed: Unity]]'' – [[Hoarders]]</ref> but was oblivious to Germain recruiting followers.<ref name="Le Roi Est Mort">''[[Assassin's Creed: Unity]]'' – [[Le Roi Est Mort]]</ref><ref name="Rise of the Assassin">''[[Assassin's Creed: Unity]]'' – [[Rise of the Assassin]]</ref> The reformed Rite aimed to bring about de Molay's proposed changes for a society dominated by finance,<ref name="Temple"/> and with critical support from the American, Italian, and Spanish Rites, gradually redirected the entire Templar Order to adopt this mindset.<ref name="ACUN"/>  
During another major reform,<ref name="ACEG"/> the Templars already were supportive of the {{Wiki|classical liberalism}} ideals that emerged during the [[Age of Enlightenment]], in which intellectuals such as [[Isaac Newton]], [[Baruch Spinoza]], [[John Locke]], and [[Francis Bacon]] represented a new emerging society of science and technology.<ref name="EncyclopediaCh2"/> After François-Thomas Germain joined the Parisian Rite and became Grand Master de la Serre's [[Lieutenant of the Templar Order|lieutenant]],<ref name="Cautious Alliance">''[[Assassin's Creed: Unity]]'' – [[A Cautious Alliance]]</ref> he discovered [[Jacques de Molay]]'s ''[[Codex Pater Intellectus]]'' and advocated for abolishing the [[monarchy]] to create a [[Capitalism|capitalist]] society.<ref name="Temple">''[[Assassin's Creed: Unity]]'' – [[The Temple]]</ref> However, de la Serre expelled Germain for espousing ideals from de Molay's controversial work deemed heresy,<ref name="ACEG"/><ref name="Cautious Alliance" /><ref name="Hoarders">''[[Assassin's Creed: Unity]]'' – [[Hoarders]]</ref> but was oblivious to Germain recruiting followers.<ref name="Le Roi Est Mort">''[[Assassin's Creed: Unity]]'' – [[Le Roi Est Mort]]</ref><ref name="Rise of the Assassin">''[[Assassin's Creed: Unity]]'' – [[Rise of the Assassin]]</ref> The reformed Rite aimed to bring about de Molay's proposed changes for a society dominated by finance,<ref name="Temple"/> and with critical support from the other Rites, gradually redirected the entire Templar Order to adopt this mindset.<ref name="ACUN"/>  


==History==
==History==
=== Order of the Ancients===
===Order of the Ancients===
{{Main|Grand Maegester of the Order of the Ancients}}
{{Main|Grand Maegester of the Order of the Ancients}}
{{Main|Ra's Al-Af'a}}
{{Main|Ra's Al-Af'a}}
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In the 9th century, the Order's leader in the [[Abbasid Caliphate]] was called the [[Ra's Al-Af'a]], or the "Head of the Snake".<ref name="ACMir"/> By the 860s, the position had been attained by the royal [[concubine]] [[Qabiha]], whose Order eventually fell to the Hidden Ones based in [[Alamut]] while Qabiha herself was killed by the [[Master Assassin]] [[Roshan]].<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Mirage]]'' – [[The Serpent's Nest]]</ref>
In the 9th century, the Order's leader in the [[Abbasid Caliphate]] was called the [[Ra's Al-Af'a]], or the "Head of the Snake".<ref name="ACMir"/> By the 860s, the position had been attained by the royal [[concubine]] [[Qabiha]], whose Order eventually fell to the Hidden Ones based in [[Alamut]] while Qabiha herself was killed by the [[Master Assassin]] [[Roshan]].<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Mirage]]'' – [[The Serpent's Nest]]</ref>
[[File:ACVBB - Aelfred and Aethelred.png|thumb|250px|Alfred and Æthelred, Kings of Wessex and Grand Maegesters of the Order]]
 
[[File:ACVBB - Aelfred and Aethelred.png|thumb|250px|left|Alfred and Æthelred, Kings of Wessex and Grand Maegesters of the Order]]
In the case of the Order's [[Anglo-Saxons|Anglo-Saxon]] branch based in [[Great Britain]], the organization was headed by a [[Grand Maegester of the Order of the Ancients|Grand Maegester]], who was also known by the title of "The Father".<ref name="ACV"/> During the 9th century, the position was held by members of the [[House of Wessex]], beginning with King [[Æthelwulf, King of Wessex|Æthelwulf]]. After his death, King [[Ælla of Northumbria]], another high-ranking Order member, was expected to succeed him as Grand Maegester, but due to his own demise at the hands of the [[Great Heathen Army]], the title passed down to Æthelwulf's son [[Æthelred I, King of Wessex|Æthelred I]].<ref name="Poor Fellow Soldier">''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]]'' – [[The Poor Fellow-Soldier]]</ref>
In the case of the Order's [[Anglo-Saxons|Anglo-Saxon]] branch based in [[Great Britain]], the organization was headed by a [[Grand Maegester of the Order of the Ancients|Grand Maegester]], who was also known by the title of "The Father".<ref name="ACV"/> During the 9th century, the position was held by members of the [[House of Wessex]], beginning with King [[Æthelwulf, King of Wessex|Æthelwulf]]. After his death, King [[Ælla of Northumbria]], another high-ranking Order member, was expected to succeed him as Grand Maegester, but due to his own demise at the hands of the [[Great Heathen Army]], the title passed down to Æthelwulf's son [[Æthelred I, King of Wessex|Æthelred I]].<ref name="Poor Fellow Soldier">''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]]'' – [[The Poor Fellow-Soldier]]</ref>


Line 75: Line 85:
===Middle Ages===
===Middle Ages===
The first publicly known Grand Master of the Templar Order was the [[France|French]] knight [[Hugues de Payens]]. When he and his colleague [[Bernard de Clairvaux]] realized they needed the protection of the Church for their endeavors, they transformed the Templars into the publicly recognized military and monastic Order of the Knights Templar, trusted with the protection of pilgrims to the Holy Land, with Hugues becoming its first Grand Master in 1129.<ref name="Encyclopedia">''[[Assassin's Creed Encyclopedia]]''</ref>
The first publicly known Grand Master of the Templar Order was the [[France|French]] knight [[Hugues de Payens]]. When he and his colleague [[Bernard de Clairvaux]] realized they needed the protection of the Church for their endeavors, they transformed the Templars into the publicly recognized military and monastic Order of the Knights Templar, trusted with the protection of pilgrims to the Holy Land, with Hugues becoming its first Grand Master in 1129.<ref name="Encyclopedia">''[[Assassin's Creed Encyclopedia]]''</ref>
[[File:Siege of Masyaf Templars.png|thumb|250px|left|Robert de Sablé leading the Templars to Masyaf]]
 
[[File:Siege of Masyaf Templars.png|thumb|250px|Robert de Sablé leading the Templars to Masyaf]]
After two years without a Grand Master following [[Gerard de Ridefort]]'s death, [[Robert de Sablé]] joined the Templar Order and reigned as the Grand Master of the Knights Templar during the year 1191. During his reign, he sought a [[Piece of Eden]], specifically an [[Apple of Eden 2|Apple of Eden]], intending to use it to achieve the Order's goal of establishing a [[New World Order]]. After losing the Apple, he launched an [[Defense of Masyaf|attack]] on the [[Levantine Assassins]]' stronghold of [[Masyaf]] to recover it, but was defeated. Later on, during the [[Battle of Arsuf]], he was killed by his rival, the Assassin [[Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad]].<ref name="AC">''[[Assassin's Creed]]''</ref><ref name="The Essential Guide">''[[Assassin's Creed: The Essential Guide]]''</ref>
After two years without a Grand Master following [[Gerard de Ridefort]]'s death, [[Robert de Sablé]] joined the Templar Order and reigned as the Grand Master of the Knights Templar during the year 1191. During his reign, he sought a [[Piece of Eden]], specifically an [[Apple of Eden 2|Apple of Eden]], intending to use it to achieve the Order's goal of establishing a [[New World Order]]. After losing the Apple, he launched an [[Defense of Masyaf|attack]] on the [[Levantine Assassins]]' stronghold of [[Masyaf]] to recover it, but was defeated. Later on, during the [[Battle of Arsuf]], he was killed by his rival, the Assassin [[Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad]].<ref name="AC">''[[Assassin's Creed]]''</ref><ref name="The Essential Guide">''[[Assassin's Creed: The Essential Guide]]''</ref>


Line 83: Line 94:


===Renaissance===
===Renaissance===
[[File:In and Out 8.png|thumb|250px|Cesare Borgia and his father Rodrigo]]
[[File:In and Out 8.png|thumb|250px|left|Cesare Borgia and his father Rodrigo]]
In 1476, the Italian Rite came under the leadership of the [[Spain|Spanish]]-born Rodrigo Borgia, originally a [[cardinal]] under Pope [[Sixtus IV]]. Operating from [[Rome]], Rodrigo's primary objective was to unite [[Italy]] under the Templar banner,<ref name="AC2">''[[Assassin's Creed II]]''</ref> however, the Italian Templars strayed far from the main Templar ideology and used the Order as a way to achieve and sustain power for themselves.<ref name="Encyclopedia"/><ref name="ACEG"/> Despite facing complications from the [[Italian Brotherhood of Assassins|Italian Assassins]], mainly [[Ezio Auditore da Firenze|Ezio Auditore]], Rodrigo managed to bribe the other cardinals and was appointed Pope during the {{Wiki|1492 papal conclave}} convened after Pope [[Innocent III]]'s death, taking on the name Alexander VI.<ref name="AC2"/>
In 1476, the Italian Rite came under the leadership of the [[Spain|Spanish]]-born Rodrigo Borgia, originally a [[cardinal]] under Pope [[Sixtus IV]]. Operating from [[Rome]], Rodrigo's primary objective was to unite [[Italy]] under the Templar banner,<ref name="AC2">''[[Assassin's Creed II]]''</ref> however, the Italian Templars strayed far from the main Templar ideology and used the Order as a way to achieve and sustain power for themselves.<ref name="Encyclopedia"/><ref name="ACEG"/> Despite facing complications from the [[Italian Brotherhood of Assassins|Italian Assassins]], mainly [[Ezio Auditore da Firenze|Ezio Auditore]], Rodrigo managed to bribe the other cardinals and was appointed Pope during the {{Wiki|1492 papal conclave}} convened after Pope [[Innocent III]]'s death, taking on the name Alexander VI.<ref name="AC2"/>


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===Colonial era===
===Colonial era===
[[File:Mister Walpole I Presume 9.png|thumb|250px|left|Laureano Torres (far right) explaining his plans with the Observatory]]
[[File:Mister Walpole I Presume 9.png|thumb|250px|Laureano Torres explaining his plans with the Observatory]]
During the time of colonial expansion by the major European empires, the [[Cuba]]n governor Laureano de Torres y Ayala assumed the role of the [[West Indies Rite of the Templar Order|Caribbean Templars]]' Grand Master. Operating out of [[Havana]], he sought the fabled [[Observatory (Isu)|Observatory]] in order to spy upon and thus bend the leaders of the European colonial empires to Templar will, ensuring peace through order. Before he could succeed in his goal, the pirate-turned-Assassin [[Edward Kenway]] killed him in 1722.<ref name="AC4"/>
During the time of colonial expansion by the major European empires, the [[Cuba]]n governor Laureano de Torres y Ayala assumed the role of the [[West Indies Rite of the Templar Order|Caribbean Templars]]' Grand Master. Operating out of [[Havana]], he sought the fabled [[Observatory (Isu)|Observatory]] in order to spy upon and thus bend the leaders of the European colonial empires to Templar will, ensuring peace through order. Before he could succeed in his goal, the pirate-turned-Assassin [[Edward Kenway]] killed him in 1722.<ref name="AC4"/>


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During the [[Seven Years' War]], the Colonial Rite grew in power, acquiring such influence that they soon posed a serious threat to the [[American Brotherhood of Assassins|Colonial Assassins]] under [[Achilles Davenport]]. At the time, the Assassins were more preoccupied with investigating Pieces of Eden and largely ignored the organization's new leadership, an error that proved fatal.<ref name="ACRG"/>
During the [[Seven Years' War]], the Colonial Rite grew in power, acquiring such influence that they soon posed a serious threat to the [[American Brotherhood of Assassins|Colonial Assassins]] under [[Achilles Davenport]]. At the time, the Assassins were more preoccupied with investigating Pieces of Eden and largely ignored the organization's new leadership, an error that proved fatal.<ref name="ACRG"/>
[[File:ACIII-BraddockExpedition 3.png|thumb|250px|Haytham Kenway leading the Colonial Templars]]
 
[[File:ACIII-BraddockExpedition 3.png|thumb|250px|left|Haytham Kenway leading the Colonial Templars]]
Shortly after founding the Colonial Rite, Haytham led the rite in an [[Colonial Assassin purge|assault]] against the Assassins.<ref name="ACRG"/> Aided by the Assassin turncoat [[Shay Cormac]] and led on the field by Haytham himself, the Templars removed key figures in the Brotherhood, greatly reducing the Assassins' presence.<ref name="ACRG"/> This cumulated in an attack on the [[Davenport Homestead]] in 1763, where the remaining Assassins were killed and Achilles was exiled on the condition that he never revive the Brotherhood, thus effectively exterminating the Colonial branch.<ref name="AC3"/>
Shortly after founding the Colonial Rite, Haytham led the rite in an [[Colonial Assassin purge|assault]] against the Assassins.<ref name="ACRG"/> Aided by the Assassin turncoat [[Shay Cormac]] and led on the field by Haytham himself, the Templars removed key figures in the Brotherhood, greatly reducing the Assassins' presence.<ref name="ACRG"/> This cumulated in an attack on the [[Davenport Homestead]] in 1763, where the remaining Assassins were killed and Achilles was exiled on the condition that he never revive the Brotherhood, thus effectively exterminating the Colonial branch.<ref name="AC3"/>


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===Early modern era===
===Early modern era===
[[File:ACS Overdose 10.png|thumb|250px|left|Grand Master Crawford Starrick of the British Rite]]
[[File:ACS Overdose 10.png|thumb|250px|Grand Master Crawford Starrick of the British Rite]]
By 1868, the British Rite was controlled by Crawford Starrick, who expanded the Templars' reach to every major corner of industrialized society, from the highest official to the lowest criminal.<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Syndicate]]'' – [[Somewhere That's Green]]</ref> He was [[Liberation of London|opposed]] by the few remaining Assassins in [[London]], namely, [[Jayadeep Mir|Henry Green]], and the Frye twins [[Jacob Frye|Jacob]] and [[Evie Frye|Evie]],<ref name="ACS">''[[Assassin's Creed: Syndicate]]''</ref> who killed Starrick during his quest for a [[Shroud of Eden 2|Shroud of Eden]], freeing London from Templar influence.<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Syndicate]]'' – [[A Night to Remember]]</ref>
By 1868, the British Rite was controlled by Crawford Starrick, who expanded the Templars' reach to every major corner of industrialized society, from the highest official to the lowest criminal.<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Syndicate]]'' – [[Somewhere That's Green]]</ref> He was [[Liberation of London|opposed]] by the few remaining Assassins in [[London]], namely, [[Jayadeep Mir|Henry Green]], and the Frye twins [[Jacob Frye|Jacob]] and [[Evie Frye|Evie]],<ref name="ACS">''[[Assassin's Creed: Syndicate]]''</ref> who killed Starrick during his quest for a [[Shroud of Eden 2|Shroud of Eden]], freeing London from Templar influence.<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Syndicate]]'' – [[A Night to Remember]]</ref>


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==References==
==References==
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{{Templars nav}}
{{Templars nav}}
[[hu:A Templomos Rend Nagymestere]]
[[hu:A Templomos Rend Nagymestere]]

Revision as of 23:25, 8 October 2024

This article is about the highest rank of the Templar Order. You may be looking for other uses of the title.
The emblem of the Templar Order

The title of Grand Master is one of the highest ranks of the Templar Order. Originally, it was the organization's supreme head, but evolution over the centuries led to this status being superseded by newly-created authorities such as the Guardians and the General of the Cross. Since the establishment of the Order's major branches, the title has designated the Order's Rite leaders, each corresponding to a specific geographic region, where they serve as the highest authority.[1]

During the times of the Order of the Ancients, the rank was known under different names depending on the region, with the Persian branch of the Order using the title of Ra's Al-Af'a (English: Head of the Snake) to designate its leader,[2] while the Anglo-Saxon branch used the title of Grand Maegester instead. The rank was also synonymous with that of "Father of Understanding", or simply "The Father". This term was adopted from the similarly-named title within the ruling triumvirate of Isu society, in which the Father of Understanding ruled alongside the Mother of Wisdom and the Sacred Voice.[3]

Having previously borne more public faces, most Grand Masters were better known than their Assassin counterparts. However, as the Templars slipped into the shadows following their presumed public defeat in the 14th century, their leaders' identities eventually fell from the public consciousness.

By the early 17th century, the Templars were no longer ruled by a single Grand Master or independent leaders but instead by two councils of the Order's most prestigious members, the Inner Sanctum and the Council of Elders. The Sanctum was in charge of creating a globalized plan for the Order, ensuring the Rites' members' cooperation, and preventing any corruption of the Templar ideals, while the Council maintained an advisory role meant to maintain the Order's integrity according to the Templar Code. While still in charge of their respective and autonomous Rites, the Grand Masters were nevertheless accountable to the Inner Sanctum and their inquisitor, the feared Black Crosses. Furthermore, the Inner Sanctum was in charge of promoting the Grand Masters, keeping their numbers under strict control.

While it was commonly assumed that all Templar leaders were drawn from the stock of Western nobility, due to the prominence of the front-organization that was the Knights Templar during the Middle Ages, the truth was that as the Order developed, diversified, and relocated, many different people of various ethnic backgrounds and cultural heritages had assumed the mantle of Grand Master throughout the Templars' longevity.

Structure

Purposes

"The Order of Ancients argues for a hierarchy that flies in the face of God's purpose. They view men and woman as debased and corrupt, borne of evil intent. Yet they worship men they belive were their makers. Akin to a hammer loving the nail, they cannot see outside of their own hermetic system. They are not wrong to belive that there must be order in the world for peace to flourish. But they are wrong about the source of this order. Man was made in the image of God. God is the source of the universe's order. Therefore man need appeal only to God for guidance. "
―Alfred the Great in his commentary, 870s.[src]-[m]

During the transition from the Order of the Ancients to the Templar Order, King Alfred of Wessex inherited the title of Grand Maegester from his older brother Æthelred I following the latter's death.[4][5] As his ascension had been involuntary and he secretly despised the Ancients' veneration of the Isu, Alfred began planning the downfall of the Order using the pseudonym of "A Poor Fellow-Soldier of Christ", recruiting Wincestre's reeve Goodwin as his personal informant and using a hidden study in The Old Minster as a base of operations.[6][7]

Alfred requesting Eivor's help to eliminate the Order in Wincestre

Once Alfred learned that the Hidden One Hytham ran his group's operations from within the Raven Clan's settlement of Ravensthorpe, he used Hytham's affiliation with Eivor Varinsdottir to make the latter unwittingly aid his schemes by eliminating the Order's agents[6] in the cities of Lunden[8] and Jorvik.[9] When the Order'sPalatinus Fulke uncovered Alfred's "association" with the Poor Fellow-Soldier and tasked her fellow Ancients Selwyn, Hilda, and Ealhferth with ensuring the king was "burned to ash" for his betrayal, Alfred personally enlisted Eivor's aid to eliminate the Order members hunting him.[10]

Following the Vikings' pyrrhic victory against his army at Cippanhamm,[11] Alfred lived in exile as a commoner in the village of Athelnay in the west of Hamtunscire and sent a final letter to Hytham that invited Eivor to the village to discuss the Order and his true allegiance.[12] Eivor accepted the invitation and was told of Alfred's identity as both the Poor Fellow-Soldier and the Order's Grand Maegest, while the king also elaborated on his motives for bringing down the Ancients.[6]

Alfred's final meeting with Eivor

Eventually, Alfred returned from exile and rallied another army to defeat Guthrum's forces at the Battle of Edington. This led to the Treaty of Wedmore, which saw Guthrum's conversion to Christianity and departure from Wessex, and the official establishment of Danelaw in eastern and northern England.[13] Circa 889, Alfred called on Eivor to meet him at the Old Minster in Wincestre one last time, where he disclosed to her that Guthrum had indeed surrendered and sworn a treaty. He then extended her an offer to serve him and Christ as a lord of Mercia and join his rapidly growing Order, but Eivor politely turned him down.[14]

As the first Grand Master, Alfred created the foundations for the future of the Templar Order, whose primary purpose was to be an universal order welcoming members from all walks of life, united by a common desire to seek the betterment of man in God's name.[6] A central value was the establishment of a strict opposition to the Ancients' Isu paganism, which Alfred viewed as heretical, although he did agree with one aspect of the Ancients' belief system: their pursuit of world peace.[15] This purpose would remain a central value of the Templar Order well into the 21st century, when the then-Black Cross Juhani Otso Berg began investigating the modern Templars' corruption,[16][17] uncovered the existence of the Instruments of the First Will who sought to restore the Isu as humanity's rulers,[16][17][18][1] and successfully purged them after collaborating with the Assassins. Much like Alfred, the Templars believed the Instruments' veneration of the Isu to be "blasphemy" against humanity.[16][17]

Training

"It is a requirement when you are raised in the manner that I was. Perception is fundamental to the Order. It guides the feet when running and climbing. Informs the hands when striking and fighting. But most important, it transforms the senses. And we begin to know the world in a different way."
―Haytham Kenway discussing his training with Charles Lee, 1754.[src]-[m]

The Templar Order requires that any member trained to become a Grand Master is prepared to make difficult decisions and confident in their own leadership abilities before being promoted. To uphold the Templar belief of killing for efficiency instead of emotional grounds, they are expected to be resourceful to further the Templars' ideals in pursuit of the greater good.[19]

Élise de la Serre training with Frederick Weatherall

The strongest minds among the Order are meant to bear the responsibility of the peoples' will for freedom and responsibility;[20] therefore they themselves seek to take the mantle of leadership in society and expect the people to fall in line because, in their view, "mankind was built to serve".[21] Additionally, both combat and stratagem are part of their training.[20][19] The training itself is under another Grand Master, where it is a chosen Templar being trained,[19] or it is a birthright in a Templar lineage that ruled a Rite.[20][22] After the Inner Sanctum's foundation, promotions to Grand Master came under their control.[16]

Authority

Main article: Templar Rite
"As a Master Templar, you have learned your lessons well, and have earned this opportunity. You are my eyes and ears in the New World now. Do not fail me, Lawrence."
―Reginald Birch in a letter to Lawrence Washington, 1738.[src]-[m]

A Grand Master controls a specific geographic region and their Rite is named after it.[1] Under their leadership was the ability to appoint a Lieutenant as their second-in-command and main advisor.[23][24] Despite holding the highest attainable rank within their Rite, a Grand Master is not all-powerful and is dependent on the support of their fellow Templars and other Rites. Nevertheless, their duties are essential to the proper functioning of the Templar Order as a whole, so Grand Masters may elect to have bodyguards to protect them at all times, as were the cases with Frederick Weatherall for the de la Serre family,[20] and El Tiburón for Laureano de Torres y Ayala.[25] With the Grand Master themselves being the ruling authority for their own Rite's plans, all members required their superior's approval to enact any changes.[26][27][28] The subordinative Templar ranks answering to the entire leadership are Seneschals, Advisors, Commanders, Preceptors, Knights, Warriors, Clerics, and finally, the Disciples.[29]

Haytham Kenway tasking Shay Cormac to recover the Precursor box

A Grand Master's power can extend beyond their own Rite, as their higher rank allows them to have influence over other Rites' members, including Master Templars.[30][31][32] To extend their reach further without breaking their own duties, Grand Masters could appoint agents to investigate the Order's operations elsewhere, such as Grand Master Reginald Birch charging John Harrison with finding Isu sites and artifacts[33] and Haytham Kenway ordering Shay Cormac to recover the Precursor box.[34] Other tasks include collecting funds[35] and backing either local rebels or established governments by providing needed manpower, arms, medical supplies, and food in exchange for a Rite's intelligence and support.[36][33] If needed, sending a prominent Templar member to support specific campaigns can also be done.[37][38]

However, this does not mean a Grand Master can neglect their own Rite's goals to actively participate in the duties of other Templars. A prominent example of this was Grand Master Rodrigo Borgia of the Roman Rite, who was so influential over the other European Templars that the Order became blinded by greed and personal ambition above the Templar principles; for this reason, this era is regared as a "Dark Age of the Order" by modern Templars.[39][1][40] In stark contrast, Reginald Birch, despite his fanatical obsession with the Isu, did not neglect his duties as Grand Master in England, appointing Haytham Kenway to lead the search for the Grand Temple while he focused on the Rite's other goals.[41][19]

Haytham inducting Charles Lee into the Order

The Grand Master would also occasionally meet with other Rites' Templars to discuss domestic and global politics, and the Order's own conditions,[20] while also communicating through their various businesses and organizations such as Templar fleets, like the one commanded by Shay Cormac.[31] An advantage of being Grand Master is a personal network that functions as their eyes and ears everywhere, and they get regular updates from agents, especially Templars directly under their command.[19] Another responsibility of the Grand Master is the initiation of new Templar members,[27][42][28] as well as the exile of those who have betrayed the Order, either directly or indirectly.[43]

After the Inner Sanctum's founding, the Grand Masters' powers were kept under check by the Black Crosses, whose main objective was to keep the various Rites free of corruption. If a Grand Master was found guilty of breaking the Order's principles, the Black Cross held the authority to execute them on the spot. During an ongoing investigation, all Templars, including the Grand Master, were obliged to assist the Black Cross by providing them with any information or resources they demanded, but were otherwise forbidden from interfering with the investigation or even speaking of their interactions with the Black Cross.[16] As of the 21st century, the Inner Sanctum also strictly regulates the number of Grand Masters worldwide, all of whom became answerable to Guardians and the General of the Cross.[43]

Accession

"When our brother Templars see the old institutions crumble, they will adapt."
―François-Thomas Germain to Élise de la Serre and Arno Dorian, 1794.[src]-[m]
Cesare arguing with Rodrigo about power

A Templar aiming to become the Grand Master must quickly recruit members within the group before initiating a coup, and would ideally also contact other Rites to convince them that the action is necessary, though the latter step is more of a courtesy.[20][43] During the Renaissance, the Italian Templar Cesare Borgia gathered supporters and assumed de facto leadership of the Rite from his father Rodrigo. With his cousin Juan providing funds, the French Army general Octavian de Valois offering military support,[44] and his executioner Micheletto Corella ensuring that puppets[45] and generals[46] obeyed him, Cesare led the Templars to untold power over Italy, though this was all for personal ambition above Templar principles.[39][1] When Rodrigo refused to fund Cesare's unauthorized campaigns[22] following both Juan's[47] and and Octavian's deaths,[48] Cesare killed him in a blind rage and becafme the uncontested Grand Master.[22]

Conversely, should a competitor fail to attract sufficient backing, as happened to the 19th-century British Templar Cavanagh when he sought to overthrow Crawford Starrick with an Apple of Eden, they will only facilitate their own end, since Starrick soon learned of Cavanagh's intentions and ordered his death.[49] This likewise applies to defending incumbents, as seen not just in the Renaissance with Rodrigo Borgia but again in the late 18th century with the Parisian Rite.[50]

In the lead up to the French Revolution, Grand Master François de la Serre was unaware that his entire inner circle[50] except Chrétien Lafrenière[51][52] had pledged allegiance[50] to the recently-exiled François-Thomas Germain, who had successfully petitioned the American, Italian, and Spanish Rites for support following his banishment. After Germain had de la Serre assassinated in a coup and began purging all French Templars opposing him, Chrétien and François' daughter Élise[20]—who had been presumed the heir apparent[50]—petitioned other Rites for aid, but they only lent their sympathies, believing there was no need for intervention since the Rite ran smoothly under Germain's control.[20]

François de la Serre killed in Germain's coup

In the event of a Grand Master's untimely death, a successor may be appointed as a Rite's de facto leader until a new Grand Master is officially elected, as was the case during the Third Crusade when Basilisk assumed temporary leadership of the Knights Templar following Grand Master Gerard de Ridefort's death.[53] The same is true in the case of Templar leaders who did not hold the title of Grand Master, such as James Wardrop succeeding Lawrence Washington as leader of the Templars in the Thirteen Colonies.[31] There have also been several instances of a Grand Master being chosen by the Rite itself for their own qualities as leaders, such as Ahmet becoming Grand Master of the Byzantine Rite while the long-time Templar Manuel Palaiologos was demoted to his second-in-command,[1] and Crawford Starrick's rise in the British Rite until he was appointed Grand Master.[49]

Reforms

"They become increasingly aware of our existence. We can no longer rely on the divine right of the aristocracy to maintain control. We need a new system, something much more subtle."
―An unidentified Templar about the Order's transition from feudal monarchies to capitalism.[src]-[m]

The first major reform of the Templar Order was done by the French knight and Grand Master Hugues de Payens and his Templar colleague Bernard de Clairvaux in the 12th century. To secure an alliance with the Church, Bernard sent nine trusted men to the Holy Land in search of the Temple of Solomon. After the Templars returned nine years later, the Order was reformed when Payens and Bernard co-created the Latin Rule and gained the support of the Church. For their efforts to turn the Templar Order into a public organization, the organization was officially recognized as the Order of Knights Templars during the Council of Troyes in 1129. This marked the beginning of a Golden Age for the Order that lasted almost two centuries, during which the Templars influenced countless kings, popes, and men of science.[1][39][54]

King Philip IV's men arresting de Molay

During another major reform,[1] the Templars already were supportive of the classical liberalism ideals that emerged during the Age of Enlightenment, in which intellectuals such as Isaac Newton, Baruch Spinoza, John Locke, and Francis Bacon represented a new emerging society of science and technology.[39] After François-Thomas Germain joined the Parisian Rite and became Grand Master de la Serre's lieutenant,[55] he discovered Jacques de Molay's Codex Pater Intellectus and advocated for abolishing the monarchy to create a capitalist society.[56] However, de la Serre expelled Germain for espousing ideals from de Molay's controversial work deemed heresy,[1][55][57] but was oblivious to Germain recruiting followers.[58][59] The reformed Rite aimed to bring about de Molay's proposed changes for a society dominated by finance,[56] and with critical support from the other Rites, gradually redirected the entire Templar Order to adopt this mindset.[20]

History

Order of the Ancients

Main article: Grand Maegester of the Order of the Ancients
Main article: Ra's Al-Af'a

Prior to the establishment of the Templar Order, the Order of the Ancients used various titles to denote the leaders of its different branches around the world. In 44 BCE, when the Hidden One Aya the Ancient Lucius Septimius if Gaius Julius Caesar was the King of the Order, Septimius corrected her, claiming that Caesar was the "Father of Understanding". Following the Hidden Ones' assassination of Caesar,[60] his adoptive son Octavian succeeded him as leader of the Order, though he did not inherit the title of Father of Understanding and the name eventually fell out of use.[61]

In the 9th century, the Order's leader in the Abbasid Caliphate was called the Ra's Al-Af'a, or the "Head of the Snake".[2] By the 860s, the position had been attained by the royal concubine Qabiha, whose Order eventually fell to the Hidden Ones based in Alamut while Qabiha herself was killed by the Master Assassin Roshan.[62]

Alfred and Æthelred, Kings of Wessex and Grand Maegesters of the Order

In the case of the Order's Anglo-Saxon branch based in Great Britain, the organization was headed by a Grand Maegester, who was also known by the title of "The Father".[3] During the 9th century, the position was held by members of the House of Wessex, beginning with King Æthelwulf. After his death, King Ælla of Northumbria, another high-ranking Order member, was expected to succeed him as Grand Maegester, but due to his own demise at the hands of the Great Heathen Army, the title passed down to Æthelwulf's son Æthelred I.[63]

In 871, Æthelred died from wounds sustained during the Battle of Meretun,[64] and his younger brother Alfred succeeded him as both King of Wessex and Grand Maegester of the Order. Unlike his father and brother, however, Alfred was against the Order's beliefs and secretly sought to bring about its collapse.[63]

Working under the pseudonym of a "Poor Fellow-Soldier of Christ", Alfred manipulated the Viking Eivor Varinsdottir into helping him achieve his goal, rendering the Order in Great Britain extinct and the title of Grand Maegester obsolete by 878.[65] Alfred subsequently set about rebuilding the Order into a new organization that more closely followed his Christian beliefs, and became its first Grand Master.[63]

Middle Ages

The first publicly known Grand Master of the Templar Order was the French knight Hugues de Payens. When he and his colleague Bernard de Clairvaux realized they needed the protection of the Church for their endeavors, they transformed the Templars into the publicly recognized military and monastic Order of the Knights Templar, trusted with the protection of pilgrims to the Holy Land, with Hugues becoming its first Grand Master in 1129.[66]

Robert de Sablé leading the Templars to Masyaf

After two years without a Grand Master following Gerard de Ridefort's death, Robert de Sablé joined the Templar Order and reigned as the Grand Master of the Knights Templar during the year 1191. During his reign, he sought a Piece of Eden, specifically an Apple of Eden, intending to use it to achieve the Order's goal of establishing a New World Order. After losing the Apple, he launched an attack on the Levantine Assassins' stronghold of Masyaf to recover it, but was defeated. Later on, during the Battle of Arsuf, he was killed by his rival, the Assassin Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad.[67][68]

After Robert's death, Armand Bouchart took on the mantle of Grand Master as he and the Templars retreated to Cyprus. However, Altaïr pursued him and the two fought in the Templar Archive after the Assassin foiled the Grand Master's plans, resulting in Altaïr's victory and the Templars losing another leader.[69]

During the early 14th century, the French Assassins influenced King Philip IV into conspiring against the Templars, who he branded as heretics. Hundreds of them were ordered arrested, with the last official Grand Master, Jacques de Molay, understanding that the Order would not survive as a public organization. With this, he allowed himself to be burned at the stake, saving the lives of his brethren and making his enemies believe that the Templars were finished, though in reality, the Order continued to exist underground.[66]

Renaissance

Cesare Borgia and his father Rodrigo

In 1476, the Italian Rite came under the leadership of the Spanish-born Rodrigo Borgia, originally a cardinal under Pope Sixtus IV. Operating from Rome, Rodrigo's primary objective was to unite Italy under the Templar banner,[70] however, the Italian Templars strayed far from the main Templar ideology and used the Order as a way to achieve and sustain power for themselves.[66][1] Despite facing complications from the Italian Assassins, mainly Ezio Auditore, Rodrigo managed to bribe the other cardinals and was appointed Pope during the 1492 papal conclave convened after Pope Innocent III's death, taking on the name Alexander VI.[70]

Rodrigo then secured the Church's power for the Templars, and from the Vatican, he oversaw the progress of the other Templars in Europe, including England and Spain.[45] However, by 1500, Rodrigo's resolve had weakened, and control over the order fell to his son Cesare Borgia, who acted as the de facto Grand Master.[22]

After Cesare killed his father in August 1503,[22] he became the official Grand Master of the Order,[71] though without his father's power in the church, he could not maintain the same influence in Europe that his father had. With Pope Julius II's ascension in December, he ordered Cesare's arrest and imprisonment[72] in the Castillo de la Mota, but Cesare escaped two years later and fled to his Navarrese brother-in-law King John III in Spain.[71] Ezio ultimately killed the Grand Master during Cesare's siege of Viana in 1507,[73] destabilizing the Templars in Europe and causing them to temporarily withdraw.[74]

Circa 1509, the Ottoman Prince Ahmet became the Byzantine Rite's Grand Master[66] and sought to acquire the Masyaf Keys and open the library of Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad, believing the knowledge inside could lead the Order into a new era. However, Ezio also opposed his efforts with assistance from the Ottoman Assassins, successfully driving the Templars out of the Empire while Ahmet's brother Selim I killed personally killed him for betraying his country.[74]

Colonial era

Laureano Torres explaining his plans with the Observatory

During the time of colonial expansion by the major European empires, the Cuban governor Laureano de Torres y Ayala assumed the role of the Caribbean Templars' Grand Master. Operating out of Havana, he sought the fabled Observatory in order to spy upon and thus bend the leaders of the European colonial empires to Templar will, ensuring peace through order. Before he could succeed in his goal, the pirate-turned-Assassin Edward Kenway killed him in 1722.[25]

In Britain, the local Rite's Grand Master was Reginald Birch, an Englishman who used the pretext of business to cover his affiliations. He was responsible for the growth of Templar influence in the British colonies, sending over Haytham Kenway to lead them.[41][19] Upon his arrival in the colonies, Haytham gathered his co-conspirators, who had been recruited and located by Birch, and became the first Grand Master of the newly-founded Colonial Rite.[30]

During the Seven Years' War, the Colonial Rite grew in power, acquiring such influence that they soon posed a serious threat to the Colonial Assassins under Achilles Davenport. At the time, the Assassins were more preoccupied with investigating Pieces of Eden and largely ignored the organization's new leadership, an error that proved fatal.[31]

Haytham Kenway leading the Colonial Templars

Shortly after founding the Colonial Rite, Haytham led the rite in an assault against the Assassins.[31] Aided by the Assassin turncoat Shay Cormac and led on the field by Haytham himself, the Templars removed key figures in the Brotherhood, greatly reducing the Assassins' presence.[31] This cumulated in an attack on the Davenport Homestead in 1763, where the remaining Assassins were killed and Achilles was exiled on the condition that he never revive the Brotherhood, thus effectively exterminating the Colonial branch.[30]

In 1781, the title of Grand Master was bestowed upon Charles Lee, following Haytham's death during the siege of Fort George at the hands of his son, the Assassin Connor.[21] Lee, as the only Templar conspirator left from Haytham's rule, attempted to flee back to England by ship after his initial plan to kill Connor failed.[75] He was unsuccessful however, and Connor assassinated him inside the tavern Last Drink in 1782.[76]

In Europe, François de la Serre had risen to the position of Grand Master of the Parisian Rite. However, he was ultimately deposed in a coup d'etat orchestrated by François-Thomas Germain, who usurped the position of Grand Master following de la Serre's death. Germain's ascension was opposed by de la Serre's daughter Élise, who worked with her lover, the French Assassin Arno Dorian, to hunt the Grand Master and his allies, eventually succeeding in killing Germain in 1794.[43]

Early modern era

Grand Master Crawford Starrick of the British Rite

By 1868, the British Rite was controlled by Crawford Starrick, who expanded the Templars' reach to every major corner of industrialized society, from the highest official to the lowest criminal.[77] He was opposed by the few remaining Assassins in London, namely, Henry Green, and the Frye twins Jacob and Evie,[78] who killed Starrick during his quest for a Shroud of Eden, freeing London from Templar influence.[79]

In 1925, Assassins killed the Chinese Rite's Grand Master Sun Yat-sen. He was succeeded by Stirling Fessenden, who hoped to recruit Chiang Kai-shek into the Order and have him become the new Grand Master. However, Chiang ultimately rejected Fessenden's offer and ended his alliance with the Templars after they helped him gain control of Shanghai.[16]

By 1927, Thaddeus Gift had become the Grand Master of the British Rite, although he was a corrupt leader who used the Templars' connections to embezzle money for his personal gain. In retaliation for breaking the Order's principles, Gift was later assassinated by the Black Cross Albert Bolden.[16]

Contemporary era

In 1937, the "Founders" created Abstergo Industries, which from that point on served as the Templars' public front. Though its highest-ranking employees all held leadership in the Order,[80] there were multiple Grand Masters who still maintained control over their operations. As of 2014, there are three known Grand Masters operating respectively in Cuba, Mexico, and the United States. During this period, the Grand Masters were no longer the Templars' highest rank, instead answerable to the Guardians, who in turn answered to the General of the Cross.[81]

Known Grand Masters

Order of the Ancients

Fathers of Understanding

Main article: Father of Understanding

Ra's Al-Afa's

Main article: Ra's Al-Af'a

Grand Maegesters

Main article: Grand Maegester of the Order of the Ancients

Order of the Knights Templar

Trivia

  • Assassin's Creed material occasionally identifies Assassins, including Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad, Mario Auditore, Mirabeau and Mujir as Grand Masters of the Assassin Order.

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hu:A Templomos Rend Nagymestere pt-br:Grão-Mestre ru:Великий Магистр Тамплиеров fr:Grand Maître