Rumours of a plot broke out in the spring of 1321 and terrified the people of
southern France. Torture of lepers ensued, and eventually, confessions were forced out. These initially blamed lepers only, but later, in June 1321, stated that the lepers were acting on the orders of Jews, who in turn had been bribed by the
Muslims of Spain, in an attempt to "poison the Christian population of Europe". In the confession of the leper Johan de Bosco on 16 May 1321 to the officials of Regale Ville, he says that Geraldus, leper and proctor of the leprosarium of Alterque, had brought bags of powder and ordered him to put them in fountains and rivers so that anyone who drank from them would die or become leprous. The records of
Jacques Fournier, Bishop of Pamiers (who will later be elected as Pope Benedict XII), contain the 9 June 1321 deposition of Guillaume Agasse, the head of the leper house in
Pamiers. Agasse said that "50 or 60" representatives, leaders, and ministers of leper houses from across France met in one place and conspired to poison the populace with the aid of the Muslim King of Granada. The heads of the houses, it was claimed, were required to deny 'Christ's faith and his law' and in return were to become the masters of the localities their houses served. The alleged plot flourished in the wake of the previous year's
Shepherds' Crusade, which saw young rural men and women form a mob and attack Jews in France and the neighbouring
Crown of Aragon, despite being ordered to stop by
Pope John XXII,
King Philip V of France and
King James II of Aragon. Already in 1320, some of the apprehended and later hanged "crusaders" claimed to have found barrels filled with rotten bread while pillaging a
leper colony (possibly near
Le Mas-d'Agenais), and made a strikingly uncommon accusation, alleging that the lepers had intended to use the bread to prepare poisons for contaminating well water. The rumours that sparked the violence in 1321 may have started here. While the Shepherds' Crusade was led by rioters, the persecution of lepers was orchestrated by municipal authorities, making it judicial though extralegal (judicial power being royal prerogative). King Philip was on a regional tour when the stories started circulating. He found himself in a difficult he could openly neither condone nor condemn the unstoppable persecution, as the former would have led to more violence, while the latter would have undermined his authority. The Dominican inquisitor
Bernard Gui was instructed to conduct extensive investigation. On 21 June, Philip ordered by edict that all lepers be imprisoned and examined under torture. Those found guilty were to be
burnt at the stake. Since their crimes were declared
lèse-majesté, the lepers' property was to be confiscated by the Crown. Unfortunately for Philip, many local lords had already executed lepers and confiscated their goods. He was persuaded by the barons, prelates, and nobles, who said they had by ancient custom the right to administer leproseries and take immediate steps against the plotters, to give way and accept their actions through a second ordinance on August 18. == Aragon ==