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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Jul 2006
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Default Sailor's Superstition not the basis for Friday the 13th.....

Hope everybody made it through Friday the 13th OK.

Those of us with an interest in the subject are aware of just how many
of our common, everyday words and phrases (as well as superstitions)
can be traced to seaman's lore from years gone by.

Instead, Friday the 13th is considered "unlucky" due to an even that
occured 699 years ago, on Friday, October 13.

(From one of several available sources):

Some also say that the arrest of Jaques de Molay, Grand Master of the
Knights Templar, and 60 of his senior knights on Friday, October 13,
1307 by King Philip IV of France is the origin of this superstition.
That day thousands of Templars were arrested and subsequently tortured.
They then 'confessed' and were executed. From that day on, Friday the
13th was considered by followers of the Templars as an evil and unlucky
day.



As the story goes .... King Philip IV of France was known as an
uncommonly handsome man. He was called Philip le Bel, the Beautiful, an
ironic epithet for a king of Gothic pitilessness. Because of the French
king's constant financial problems, relations between Paris and Rome
had degenerated into a ludicrous state.

King Philip IV had exhausted all the usual medieval methods for
balancing the books. He had stolen property, arrested all the Jews, and
devalued his currency. As a last resort, he tried to tax the church.

Pope Boniface VIII was a fat and dissolute pontiff. One contemporary
described him as "nothing but eyes and tongue in a wholly putrefying
body . . . a devil." Philip the Beautiful openly referred to him as,
"Your Fatuity." But Boniface knew the rules of the game as well.

In retaliation for France's new fiscal arrangements, the pope issued a
dictum forbidding the taxation of the clergy. So the Beautiful closed
French borders to the exportation of gold bullion, cutting off Rome's
trans-alpine money supply. To rub it in, he arrested the bishop of
Pamiers and charged him with blasphemy, sorcery, and fornication.

In retaliation the pope issued a bull condemning the arrest and revoked
some of the Beautiful's papal privileges. The Beautiful burned his copy
of the bull in public. The pope delivered a stinging sermon filled with
ominous warnings that the church was a creature with one head, not a
monster with two. The Beautiful issued charges, in absentia, against
the pope himself, alleging blasphemy, sorcery, and sodomy.

The pope excommunicated the Beautiful. He compared the French to dogs
and hinted that they lacked souls. His nuncios leaked a rumor that the
pontiff might well excommunicate the entire country.

The peasants were stirred by such threats and the Beautiful quickly
grasped that revolution was a better future to them than
excommunication. So he acted fast, dispatching an army to Anagni, where
the pope was staying. He placed the eighty-six-year-old pontiff under
house arrest.

The locals managed to save him, but a month later Boniface passed away.
Some allege he succumbed to shock at the outrage; other sources say
that he beat his head against a wall until he died.

After a pliable pope assumed office, the Beautiful returned to his
economic problems. His wife died in 1305, and since he no longer would
have to kiss a woman's lips, he applied for membership in the Knights
Templar.

The permanent knights of the Paris Temple may have suspected that his
intentions were less than pious and did something almost unspeakable:
they blackballed the king.

The following year, the grand master of the Knights Templar, Jacques de
Molay, returned to Europe from the Mediterranean in a show of luxury.
He was accompanied by sixty knights and a baggage train of mules laden
with gold and jewels. Around that time the Beautiful was more desperate
than ever to solve his messy state finances: he tripled the price of
everything in France overnight.

Open rebellion broke out in the streets. Rioters threatened to kill
him. As a result Philip fled to the Parisian temple and begged the
knights for protection. It was all very humiliating.

In the fall of 1307, the Beautiful arranged a state action impressive
even in these days of data highways and rapid deployment teams.

On September 14 he mass-mailed a set of sealed orders to every bailiff,
seneschal, deputy and officer in his kingdom. The functionaries were
forbidden under penalty of death to open the papers before Thursday
night, October 12. The following Friday morning, alert to their secret
instructions, armies of officials slipped out of their barracks. By
sundown nearly all the Knights Templar throughout France were in jails.
One estimate puts the arrests at two thousand, another as high as five
thousand. Only twenty escaped.

The initial charges were vague - "A bitter thing, a lamentable thing, a
thing horrible to think of and terrible to hear, a detestable crime, an
execrable evil, an abominable act, a repulsive disgrace, a thing almost
inhuman, indeed alien to all humanity, has, thanks to the reports of
several trustworthy persons, reached our ear, smiting us grievously and
causing us to tremble with the utmost horror."

What followed was so foul, according to folklore, that Templar
sympathizers cursed the day itself, condemning it as evil - Friday the
thirteenth - whose reputation never recovered.

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