In the turbulent 11th century, Europe was a continent fractured by feudalism, dominated by fear, and unified solely by a faith that was everything: a refuge, an identity, and a promise of eternal salvation. From that convulsive world emerged one of the most audacious institutional experiments in Western history: the Order of the Knights Templar. Dawn of the Order traces the path leading from the outbreak of the First Crusade—with the legendary cry of 'God wills it' echoing across the fields of Clermont—to the consolidation of a fraternity that challenged all categories of its era. Through its chapters, the reader accompanies terrified pilgrims on the roads of the Holy Land, marches alongside armies decimated by hunger and thirst under the Anatolian sun, and witnesses the exact moment when a handful of anonymous knights presented the King of Jerusalem with an idea that would forever change the relationship between faith and violence: to be, at once, perfect monks and perfect warriors.