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Its
origins
The Sacred
Military Constantinian Order of St. George dates back
to the "Constantinian Golden Chivalry” (golden
because of the collar made of pure gold and worn by
the highest dignitaries), established by Emperor Constantine
in 312 AD after his final victory over Maxentius at
Ponte Milvio, which made him the unquestioned Emperor
of the Roman Empire and which he could achieve thanks
to the divine favour of the vision of the Cross in the
sky bearing a motto which read "In Hoc Signo Vinces".
He ordered that this motto had to be put on his armour
and his sons’ and officials’.

Vision
of Constantine - Fresco, Raffaellino del Colle (detail)
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To
thank the Lord for his victory, Constantine established
the first Knightly Order in history and he himself
invested the first fifty knights, among which
his sons, future Emperors. As everybody knows,
he granted final freedom of worship to Christians
all across the Empire. As evidence of this, there
is the medallion of Constant I (337-350), Constantine’s
son, holding the labarum with Christ’s monogram
"XP". Long discussions have been made
about the direct origins of the Order, and the
most credited historical opinion acknowledges
that in 1190 the Order was ruled by the Grand
Master Isaac II Angelo Flavio Comneno, Emperor
of the Eastern Roman Empire, author of the first
Statute (at least the first we have, although
not complete) and the Comneno Family ruled the
Order in the subsequent centuries, also after
the loss of the Throne in 1453 due to the Muslim
conquest .
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Among
the most prestigious knights recorded in history during
the Middle Ages, there are Emperors and Kings such as
Frederick Barbarossa, Richard Lionhearth, Philip II
of France, Casimiro of Poland, Alfonso II of Aragon,
William II of Sicily, Sancio VI of Navarre, Alfonso
IX of Castile, etc .
The second document that we have dates back to 1522:
it is another Statute of the Order, drafted by Angelo
di Drivasto :
the family of Angeli di Drivasto, princes of Thessaly,
holders of the Grand Magistery of the Order, were descendants
of the Comneno.

Medallion
of Constant,
son of Constantine the Great,
holding the Labarum with Christ’s monogram
"XP". |
But
in reality we have earlier evidence of the existence
of the Order. The first written Rules drafted
for the management of the Order and historically
documented are those dictated by Bishop St. Basil
,
Rules approved in 456 by Pope St. Leo I the Great,
with the famous letter sent to Emperor Marcian.
This letter, a copy of which is kept at the Historical
Archive of Naples, opens as follows: «Leo
Bishop to Marcian Emperor. I would never feel
enough admiration for your devotion and your love
towards those who profess the Catholic faith,
Glorious Emperor. It is therefore with the utmost
joy that I have received your letter and the letter
of the valiant Prince Alessio Angelo, by which
you demand my apostolic authority for the Rule
of Bishop Basil of Caesarea, Rule that he gave
to our Constantinian Christian brothers who bear
the coat of arms of a red cross, as a sign of
confirmation by you and Prince Alessio, supreme
guide of these brothers» .
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Moreover,
at the Historical Archive of Naples, among the “Constantinian
documents”, there is a document contemporary with
the letter of Pope Leo I and called Descursus
aurati seu calcaris aurei, which reads as
follows: «It is shown that
these Knights have their origin in the Holy Father St.
Sylvester and Emperor Constantine the Great, and therefore
the right to invest these Knights is to be given to
the Holy Father and the Emperor or to those who receive
this authority by the Holy Father and the Emperor. It
is also shown that the Constantinian Order of St. George
is originated from those Knights» .
From these considerations we understand that the Constantinian
knights were originally created either by the Pontiff
or by the Emperor independently.
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