Louis VII of France, on his return from the Second Crusade, gave it the Château of Broigny, near Orléans in 1154. Hospitals dependent on the Jerusalem leprosarium were eventually established in other towns in the Holy Land, notably in Acre, and in various countries in Europe particularly in Southern Italy ( Capua), Hungary, Switzerland, France (Boigny), and England ( Burton Lazars). The Lazarists wore a green cross upon their mantle. It has been claimed that the Order assumed a military role in the 12th century, but this date may not be supported by verifiable evidence. Lazarus was purely an order of hospitallers in the beginning, and adopted the hospital Rule of St. According to Charles Moeller, "this pretension is apocryphal" but documentary evidence does confirm that the edifice was a functioning concern in 1073. Lazarus claimed to be the continuation, in order to have the appearance of remote antiquity and to pass as the oldest of all orders. There had been earlier leper hospitals in the East, of which the Knights of St. The military order of Saint Lazarus of Jerusalem originated in a leper hospital founded in the twelfth century by crusaders of the Latin Kingdom. The word lazarette (in some languages being synonymous with leprosarum) is believed to also be derived from the hospitaller Order of Saint Lazarus, these edifices being adopted into quarantine stations in the 15th century, when leprosy was no longer the scourge it had been in earlier centuries. It formally lost its royal protection in 1830 and then ceased to remain listed as having royal protection in the French Royal Almanac. It suffered the consequences of the French Revolution and went into exile along with its grand master, Louis-Stanislas-Xavier de Bourbon, Count of Provence (the future King Louis XVIII). This branch became closely linked to the French Crown during the 18th century, with the serving grand masters then being members of the French royal family. In 1608, King Henry IV of France, with the approval of the Holy See, the jurisdiction of the head of the Catholic Church, linked the French branch administratively to the Order of Our Lady of Mount Carmel to form the Royal Military and Hospitaller Order of Our Lady of Mount Carmel and Saint Lazarus of Jerusalem united. The Duke of Savoy only managed to gain control of those benefices situated in the Duchy of Savoy. These were transformed into ecclesiastical benefices. However, the merger excluded the order's holding in the southern part of Italy, then forming part of the Spanish realm. In 1572, the Order of Saint Lazarus in Italy was merged with the Order of Saint Maurice under the House of Savoy to form the Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus, which still exists today and is recognised as a dynastic successor of the Italian branch. The Knights Hospitaller only managed to appropriate the order's holdings in what is now Germany. This was resisted by the larger part of the jurisdictions of the Order of Saint Lazarus, including those in France, Southern Italy, Hungary, Switzerland and England. In 1489, Pope Innocent VIII attempted to merge the order and its land holdings with the Knights Hospitaller. After the fall of the Kingdom of Jerusalem, the order split into two main branches – in Italy and in France (at the Château Royal de Boigny-sur-Bionne). The titular seat was successively situated at Jerusalem, then Acre. Although they were centred on their charism of caring for those afflicted with leprosy, the knights of the Order of Saint Lazarus notably fought in the Battle of La Forbie in 1244 and in the Defense of Acre in 1291. It was recognised by King Fulk in 1142 and canonically recognised as a hospitaller and military order of chivalry under the rule of Saint Augustine in the Papal bull Cum a Nobis Petitur of Pope Alexander IV in 1255. The Order of Saint Lazarus of Jerusalem, also known as the Leper Brothers of Jerusalem or simply as Lazarists, was a Catholic military order founded by Crusaders around 1119 at a leper hospital in Jerusalem, Kingdom of Jerusalem, whose care became its original purpose, named after its patron saint, Lazarus.
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