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Templar
[tem-pler]
noun
a member of a religious military order founded by Crusaders in Jerusalem about 1118, and suppressed in 1312.
a barrister or other person occupying chambers in the Temple, London.
a member of the Masonic order, Knights Templars.
Templar
/ ˈtɛmplə /
noun
a member of a military religious order ( Knights of the Temple of Solomon ) founded by Crusaders in Jerusalem around 1118 to defend the Holy Sepulchre and Christian pilgrims; suppressed in 1312
(sometimes not capital) a lawyer, esp a barrister, who lives or has chambers in the Inner or Middle Temple in London
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of Templar1
Example Sentences
The project was recently funded to the end of 2025 with a £1,000 donation from Templars Square shopping centre, where the charity is based.
His predecessor sort of looked like Palpatine in Prada shoes, and his contemporary detractors are perhaps best typified by verified X accounts with Knights Templar profile pictures making threads about how “DEI killed Christ.”
His big break came in 1962, playing Simon Templar in the TV series, The Saint.
Back then, the Familia Michoacana and later the Knights Templar cartels burned down packing houses. imposed crop prices, demanded protection money and even told growers on which days they could harvest their crop.
Mora himself acknowledged that the 2013 movement, in which farmers and ranchers banded together to resist constant threats and extortion from the Knights Templar cartel, wound up infiltrated by members of other drug gangs.
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