Background
He was born around 1109, although no exact date is recorded.
Grand Masters of the Knights Templar
He was born around 1109, although no exact date is recorded.
He is known as a great reformer of the order. His earliest action as Grand Master was with Baldwin III of Jerusalem, with whom he fought against Nur ad-Din Zangi. However, he was taken prisoner after King Baldwin was defeated at Banyas in 1157.
The defeat allowed an ambush to be set for Blanchefort, who had dismissed his Frankish soldiers after battle ceased.
He was held in captivity for three years in Aleppo before being released to Byzantine emperor Manuel I Comnenus when the emperor made peace with Nur ad-Din. Bertrand accompanied King Amalric I during the expedition against Egypt in 1163.
Bertrand refused to participate in a second expedition in 1168, as heavy losses were almost certain. Blanchefort petitioned the Pope to use the title, "Master by Grace of God", which fitted the Templar"s position as rising stars in the church, a favor which Rome gladly granted.
His internal reforms were more important however.
He wrote the "Retraits", which established structure within the order. This meant knights had clearer roles and protocols. He also established checks within the leaderships of the order, which stopped future Grand Masters deciding the direction of the Templars, without the backing of the knights.
His work on creating negotiating roles within the order is also worth noting.
After the failed expedition to Egypt, it was the Templars that helped draw up a peace treaty. From the 1960s onwards it has erroneusly been asserted that Bertrand de Blanchefort was related to a family of the same name located near Rennes-le-Château This erroneus assertion was first discredited in France in 1984.