THE SOVEREIGN MILITARY AND HOSPITALLER ORDER OF SAINT LAZARUS OF

Ancient tradition tells us that the birthplace of the Order of Saint Lazarus was a leper hospital built outside the walls of Jerusalem by the High Priest John Hycranus who ruled over the Jewish people between the years 135 and 105 B. C. According to a tradition to which reference was made in letters patent issued in 1343 by Jean, Duke of Normandy, later King of France under the name Jeon II, le Bon, the brotherhood, later formed into an hospitaller order is said to have been founded in the year 72 A.D. It is generally agreed by most historians and further stated by Pope Pius IV in his bull "Inter Assiduas," that the Order existed when Saint Damascus I was Pope, and at the time when Saint Basil the Great was Archbishop of , in 369 A. D. It is this sainted archbishop who is considered the traditional Father of the Order by virtue of his having established a large hospital for lepers near Caesarea.

Established since the fifth century at Acre and Constantinople, the HosDitallers of Saint Lazarus founded their principal hospital at lerusalem in 530 A. D. Here they cared for and protected pilgrims to the holy places, and especially directed their efforts towards the amelioration of lepers.

After the fall of Jerusalem to the crusaders in 1098, leprous of the Orders of Saint John of Jerusalem, of the Temple, and of the Order of the Holy Sepulchre, as well as others who contracted the dread disease, were placed under the care of the Hospitallers of Saint Lazarus. Inasmuch as the disease developed slowly in many cases, it was inevitable that these warriors should sooner or later convert the Order into a knightly militia as well as an hospitaller brotherhood. The Order was held in great esteem by the Christian kings of Jerusalem, and by all those who came in touch with their work of charity and protection. Baldwin the leper king of Jerusalem, was especially generous to the Order, but gifts of lands and kind were re- ceived from men and women of all ranks.

With the renewal of the war between the Christians and the Moslems the Order gained added laurels, but at a sad price. After sustaining losses in lesser engagements all the leper knights of the Order were slain in the battle of Gaza in 1244. Those of the Knights who were not present at that ill-fated battle joined the crusaders who remained, to fight a forlorn hope. They accompanied Saint Louis of France in his Egyptian Crusade and took part in his expedition into during the years 1250 to 1254. When Saint Jean d’Acre finally fell to the Mohammedans in 1291 the existence of the Order in the Holy Land ceased. Sometime before the loss of their last stronghold in the Latin kingdom of the Holy Land a group of knights of the Order established themselves in Europe. They founded hospitals, coun-

INSIGNIA OF THE ORDER

1. CRoss OF COI~IMANDER, CATEGORY OF DEVOTION; 2. STAR; 3. CROSS OF JUSTICE;

4. OFFICER’S CROSS OF MERIT; 5. CROSS OF DEVOTION; 6. CROSS OF HONOR.

THE MEDAL COLLECTOR Page Two THE MEDAL COLLECTOR Page Three try houses, preceptories or commanderies in almost all the countries of Europe and in England. The most famous of these were the preceptories established at Boigny in France in 1154 and at Capua in Italy.

In 1489 Pope Innocent VIII attempted to amalgamate several orders, including the Order of Saint Lazarus,; the Order of the Holy Sepulchre, and others, into the Order of Saint John of’Jerusalem, also known as the Order, of Malta. The papal bull to this effect could not be enforced owing to the sovereign tradition of these orders. This action did result, however, in splitting the Order into two branches; that under the rule of the preceptory at Boigny, and the other under the authority of the priory at Capua.

The latter preceptory had been founded in the year 1211. Pope Leo X gave it extraordinary privileges. From 1517 the leaders of this branch called themselves "Grand Master of the Order Within the Kingdom of Sicily, and Elsewhere." In 1572 Pope Gregory XIII united this branch in perpetuity with the . The reigning duke of that day, Philibert III, hastened to fuse it with the recently founded Savoyan Order of Saint l~aurice, and thenceforth the title of "Grand Master of the Order of Saint Maurice and Saint Lazarus" has been hereditary in the ducal and royal House of Savoy and Italy.

In 1578, following the issuance of the papal bull of 1572, Florentine Francois Salviati, Commander of Boigny and Grand Master of the Order, ruled that the action of Pope Gregory XIII, in surrendering the Priory of Capua and the Order in Italy to the House of Savoy, did not affect the Grand Magistracy and the Order in Boigny. This action preserved for all time the sovereignty of the Order of Saint Lazarus.

Other, and less important, branches gravitated around these two main branches. In England the Master of the Hospital of Burton, founded in 1135, was a vicar-general of the Grand Magistracy of Boigny for England; in Spain, the Kingdom of Spain having been expressly excluded from the bull of 1572, the Spanish Knights of the Order came under the jurisdiction of the Grand Magistracy of Boigny. The Commander of the Convent of Seedorf, founded in Switzerland in 1134, bore the title of Master of Saint Lazarus. In Thuringia, the Commander of the Hospital of Saint Magdalene of Gotha was Provincial Commander; the Commander of Strigonia, in Hungary, was Vicar General of the Grand Magistracy of Boigny for Hungary. It can be seen, therefore, that around the Grand Magistracy of Boigny were grouped the principal European branches of the Order. Thus Boigny may be said to be the perpetuator of the sovereign existence of the Order.

In 1608 the Order was placed under a mutual Grand Magistracy with the Order of Our Lady of Mount Carmel, which had been lately founded by Henry IV, King of France. Neither order was suppressed nor was there an amalgamation of the two. The privileges of both orders were the same. Until 1779 knights were admitted simultaneously into the two orders and owed allegiance to a common grand master. Neither order lost its sovereign identity.

Under this organization the Order continued its existence up to the . Its membership was recruited from the aristocracy of

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