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Knights of St John

  • Knights Hospitaller
  • Fraternitas Hospitalaria
  • Order of Hospitallers
  • Knights of Saint John (of Jerusalem)
  • Knights of Rhodes, Knights of Malta
Flag of the Order of St. John (various).svg
Active c. 1099–present
Allegiance Papacy
Type Catholic military order
Headquarters Jerusalem
Rhodes
Birgu
Valletta
Rome
Nickname(s) The "Religion"
Patron
Colors Black and white
Red and white
Engagements Other service in European navies.
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Jean Parisot de Valette, Garnier de Nablus

The Order of Knights of the Hospital of Saint John of Jerusalem (Latin: Ordo Fratrum Hospitalis Sancti Ioannis Hierosolymitani), also known as the Order of Saint John, Order of Hospitallers, Knights Hospitaller, Knights Hospitalier or Hospitallers, is the medieval Catholic military order that continued into the contemporary Sovereign Military Order of Malta, which remains a sovereign subject of international law. It was headquartered variously in the Kingdom of Jerusalem, Rhodes and Malta, until it became known by its current name.

The Hospitallers arose, in the early 12th century, at the time of the great monastic reformation, as a group of individuals associated with an Amalfitan hospital in the Muristan district of Jerusalem, dedicated to John the Baptist and founded around 1023 by Gerard Thom to provide care for sick, poor or injured pilgrims coming to the Holy Land. Some scholars, however, consider that the Amalfitan order and hospital were different from Gerard Thom's order and its hospital. After the conquest of Jerusalem in 1099 during the First Crusade, the organisation became a religious and military order under its own Papal charter, charged with the care and defence of the Holy Land. Following the conquest of the Holy Land by Islamic forces, the knights operated from Rhodes, over which they were sovereign, and later from Malta, where they administered a vassal state under the Spanish viceroy of Sicily. The Hospitallers were the smallest group ever to colonise parts of the Americas; at one point in the mid-17th century, they acquired four Caribbean islands, which they turned over to the French in the 1660s.


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