
The Teutonic Order (usually, hospitale
sancte Marie Theutonicorum Jerosolimitanum - the Hospital of St. Mary of
the Germans of Jerusalem or der orden des Düschen huses - the order of
the German houses, in the sources) was one of the three major knightly or
military orders that originated and evolved during the twelfth and
thirteenth centuries. The Templars and Hospitallers are the other major
orders.
The Castle
The military orders were "true orders" of the Roman church
governed by regulations similar to those governing monks, generally
variants of the Benedictine or Augustinian Rules. For most purposes, they
were technically answerable only to the pope. They did have some feudal
responsibilities to lay and other clerical entities as dictated by
circumstances of place and time. Large numbers of knights became monks but
often were found in military fortifications rather than monasteries. The
members of most orders took vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience.
Origins of the Teutonic Order
According to tradition, early in the
twelfth century a wealthy German couple built a hospital in Jerusalem at
their own expense to care for poor and sick pilgrims who spoke German. The
hospital and an accompanying chapel were dedicated to the Virgin Mary.
This story is similar to the traditions of the origin of the Hospital of
St. John of Jerusalem founded by Amalfitans. The German hospital
apparently was affiliated with the Hospital of St. John, at least, in the
observance of the rule of St. Augustine. After Saladin's conquest of
Jerusalem in 1187, there are no more records of the German hospital there.
There was no indication that the German hospital ever had a military
mission.
During the siege of Acre during the Third
Crusade (probably 1190), Germans from Lübeck and Bremen established a
field hospital for German soldiers reportedly using ships' sails as cover
from the elements. Duke Frederick of Swabia placed his chaplain Conrad in
charge of the hospital and soon transformed the organization into a
religious order responsible to the local Latin bishop. Although some
scholars question its authenticity, Pope Clement III (1187- -1191)
apparently approved the Order on February 6, 1191. The Order was taken
under Pope Celestine III's (1191--1198) protection on December 21, 1196,
with the name of the "Hospital of St. Mary of the Germans in
Jerusalem." The name is possibly the only connection with the earlier
German hospital although some argue a more direct relationship with the
earlier hospital.
A ceremony purportedly held on March 5,
1198, altered the Order's raison d'etre. The patriarch of Jerusalem, the
king of Jerusalem, the head of the crusading army, and the masters of the
Templars and the Hospital of St. John attended the celebration
establishing the Teutonic Knights as a military order. A bull by Pope
Innocent III (1198--1216) dated February 19, 1199, confirmed the event and
specified the Order would care for the sick according to the rule of the
Hospitallers. It would conduct its other business by following the Templar
rule and would wear the Temple's distinctive white cloak. Its black cross
would differentiate the Teutonic Order from the Temple.
Internal Structure
During the first twenty years of its
existence, the institutional structure of the Order developed and
stabilized. The Teutonic Order followed the lead of the Templars and
Hospitallers by creating a system of provinces. Unlike monastic orders
composed of independent abbeys, the Teutonic Knights had a hierarchical
chain of command with commanderies (house, Kommende) at the lowest level.
Provinces or bailiwicks (Ballei, Komturei) were parts of
"countries" that composed the Order as a whole. Its first
independent rule was adopted in 1264.
The officials governing the Teutonic Order
at the various levels were commander (Komtur, preceptor) at the local
level, province commander (Landkomtur), national commander (Landmeister),
and grand master (Hochmeister, magister). The highest leadership positions
(including grand master, grand commander [Grosskomtur], marshal [Ordensmarschall],
draper or quartermaster [Trapier], hospitaller [Spittler], and treasurer [Tressler])
were elected by the general chapter.
Membership of this mostly German-speaking
order was composed of various, distinct classes: knights, priests, and
other brothers (lay brothers, sisters, and "familiars"). There
was a large number of people who supported the professed members of the
Order, ranging from auxiliary knights to slaves. The highest ranking were
secular knights, serving for free. Turcopoles (Greek for "son of
Turk") were originally probably lightly-armed, half-breed cavalry
whose name applied to Turkish mercenaries employed in the Byzantine army,
later the term was adopted by the military orders. There were attendants
called squires (knechte), and sergeants-at-arms. Footsoldiers were usually
coerced from the local peasantry. Sister-aids (halpswesteren) were
employed as domestics as were halpbrüderen; they took religious vows.
Married and single lay domestics also were employed by the Order. Artisans
and laborers (e.g., gardeners, carpenters, masons) worked for charity or
wages. Many serfs and slaves were owned by the Order.
Rapid Expansion
From the outset, the possessions and wealth
of the Teutonic Order grew astoundingly fast and its numbers skyrocketed,
especially under Grand Master Hermann von Salza (c. 1210--1239). Von Salza
was successful in gaining many favors for the Order because he was a
confidante to both the German emperor Frederick II (1211--1250) and the
popes. His immediate successors also did well. Between 1215 and 1300, one
or more commanderies were founded each year, usually through gifts.
The Teutonic Order was invited into Greece
(1209), Hungary (1211), and Prussia (1226) by secular rulers to perform
military duties on their behalf. In the Peloponnesus the Frankish Prince
of Achaia provided fiefs near Kalamata for the Teutonic Knights in return
for military service; there are traces of the Order's continuous service
there until 1500. The Hungarian King Andrew II (1205--1235) expelled the
Order in 1225 when it became strong and may have threatened his rule. The
conquest of Prussia began in 1230 (after the Order's Grand Master was
named prince of the Holy Roman Empire) and lasted until 1283.
In addition to the Holy Land and these
other "theaters of war," the order's members could be found
elsewhere in the Mediterranean and western Europe: Armenia, Cyprus,
Sicily, Apulia, Lombardy, Spain, France, Alsace, Austria, Bohemia, the
Lowlands, Germany, and Livonia. Only in the frontier areas (the Holy Land,
Armenia, Greece, Hungary, Prussia, Spain, and Livonia) was military
service required of members.
By 1221 the German Order was given the same
privileges as the Templars and Hospitallers by Pope Honorius III
(1216--1227). Both senior orders fought the autonomy of the Teutonic Order
until about 1240. The German Order may not have quite equaled in wealth
and possessions the other two military orders which were more than 80
years older, but it became the only other order to rival them in
international influence and activity.
The Baltic
After the crusaders were defeated at Acre
in 1291, the Teutonic Order moved its headquarters to Venice, a long-time
ally. In 1309, the Order moved again, this time to Marienburg in Prussia.
Here the Order had subdued the pagan inhabitants and established a
theocratic form of government.
The position of the knights in the Baltic
region had been strengthened in 1237 when a knightly order in Livonia, the
Brothers of the Sword (Schwertbr(der), joined the Teutonic Order. The
history of the German knights in Prussia and Livonia is one of almost
perpetual revolts, uprisings, raids, conquests, victories, and defeats.
Many secular knights from western Europe (e.g., Chaucer's knight in the
Canterbury Tales) would go to the Baltic to help the Order in
"crusading activities" for a season or more. The Grand Master's
prizes and feasting for especially heroic knights became legendary and
reminds one of various aspects of King Arthur's knights of the Round
Table.
During the fourteenth century, dozens of
towns and about 2000 villages were created in Prussia by the Order. The
Order was successful in trade. For example, as a Hanseatic League
participant, it provided western Europe with some of its cheapest grain.
The nations of Poland and Lithuania,
perennial enemies of the Order, became stronger and stronger in the late
fourteenth and early fifteenth centuries. In 1410 at Tannenberg, the Order
was crushed in a battle against a coalition led by these powers. The
result was a bankrupting of the Order and significant reduction in its
military and political capabilities. In 1467, the whole of western Prussia
was ceded to Poland and the eastern part acknowledged the suzerainty of
the king of Poland.
1525 to 1797
Martin Luther's (1483-1546) Reformation
affected the Teutonic Order significantly. In 1525, Grand Master Albrecht
von Brandenburg converted to the Lutheran faith. He then was enfoeffed by
the Polish king as Duke of Prussia. As a medieval, crusading entity, the
German Order essentially ended at this time.
In 1526, the Teutonic Order master of the
German lands became the "Administrator of the Grandmastery in Prussia
and Master in German and Romance Countries." Mergentheim became the
main seat of the Order.
There was a great deal of confusion in
Germany in the aftermath of the Reformation, its resulting wars, and the
political changes. The bailiwicks of Saxony, Messe, and Th(ringia became
Protestant until Napoleonic times. The office of Landkomtur alternated
among Lutheran, Reformed, and Catholic leaders in the sixteenth and
seventeenth centuries. The bailiwick of Utrecht was Calvinist until modern
times. A new rule was adopted in 1606 in an attempt to accommodate the
changes in the Order.
In European affairs, from time to time, the
Order still participated militarily. Some 1000 troops were raised to help
the Austrians against the Turks. After 1696, there was a regiment of the
"Grand and German Master." But the numbers and wealth of the
Order dwindled. Little other military activity is recorded.
The French Revolution and After
As the anticlerical French government
expanded its political control in the 1790's, the Order lost its
commanderies in Belgium and those west of the Rhine (1797). Many east of
the Rhine were lost in 1805. In 1809, Napoleon dissolved the Order in all
countries under his dominion, leaving only the properties in the Austrian
Empire.
Even in Austria, the Order had to exist
secretly for a number of years until 1839 when Austrian Emperor Ferdinand
I reconstituted the Order as the Order of the Teutonic Knights (Deutscher
Ritterorden). The mission fulfilled by the Order was mainly the caring for
wounded soldiers.
In 1866, the "Honorable Knights of the
Teutonic Order" was founded. Knights were required to provide annual
contributions for hospitals. The Marianer des Deutschen Ordens, for women,
was created in 1871.
In 1914, some 1,500 sponsors from the
Austrian nobility supported the caregiving efforts of the Order. During
World War I, the Order took care of about 3,000 wounded soldiers in their
facilities.
In 1923, masters of the Order were allowed
to come from among the clerics rather than the "knighthood" for
the first time. Under National Socialist rule, the Order was dissolved in
Austria in 1938 and Czechoslovakia in 1939. The leaders of the Third Reich
abused the history of the Teutonic Order. After World War II, the Order
began anew in Germany. Its possessions in Austria were returned. In Italy,
the Order had changed little. A great deal of support for the caretaking
and missionary Order has been found in Germany, Austria, Italy, Belgium,
and even in North and Central America. The Order's headquarters, treasury,
and archives are now located in Vienna, Austria.
- Eric Opsahl
With special thanks to www.crystalinks.com
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