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Vatican publishes Knights Templar papers

by Christopher Byrne | October 12, 2007 at 01:28 pm | 400 views | 2 comments | 15 recommendations

Too bad i do not have that kind of budget. Perhaps they might send me a review copy?



VATICAN CITY - It's not the Holy Grail, but for fans of "The Da Vinci Code" and its tantalizing story line about the Knights Templar, it could be the next best thing.


Ignored for centuries, documents about the heresy trial of the ancient Christian order discovered in the Vatican's secret archives are being published in a limited edition — with an $8,377 price tag.

They include a 14th-century parchment showing that Pope Clement V initially absolved the Templar leaders of heresy, though he did find them guilty of immorality and planned to reform the order, according to the Vatican archives Web site.

But pressured by King Philip IV of France, Clement later reversed his decision and suppressed the order in 1312.

Only 799 copies of the 300-page volume, "Processus Contra Templarios," — Latin for "Trial against the Templars" — are for sale, said Scrinium publishing house, which prints documents from the Vatican's secret archives. Each will cost $8,377, the publisher said Friday.

An 800th copy will go to Pope Benedict XVI, said Barbara Frale, the researcher who found the long-overlooked parchment tucked away in the archives in 2001.

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Kaitlin
  • news wrangler
Kaitlin
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 14:02 on October 12th, 2007

Christopher Byrne, thanks for this. Great stuff...I bet there's a few Hollywood producers willing to shell out that kind of cash for development rights.

BigT
BigT
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 20:33 on October 12th, 2007

Christopher Byrne, good stuff.

The best part about this whole thing is that the Vatican has a publisher who publishes things only from the "secret" archives. 

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October 12, 2007 at 01:28 pm by Christopher Byrne, 400 views, 2 comments

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