near the
Pyrenees, which was
besieged as part of the
Albigensian Crusade. The origin of the Cagots is not known for certain, though through history many legends and hypotheses have been recorded providing potential origins and reasons for their ostracisation. The Cagots were not a distinct ethnic or religious group, but a racialised caste. They spoke the same language as the people in an area and generally kept the same religion as well, with later researchers remarking that there was no evidence to mark the Cagots as distinct from their neighbours. Their only distinguishing feature was their descent from families long identified as Cagots. Records of Cagots go as far back as the year 1000 CE, with the charter of the under the name and the ancient charter of Navarre that referred to them as .
Biblical legends Various legends placed the Cagots as originating from biblical events, including being descendants of the carpenters who made the cross that
Jesus was crucified on, or being descendants of the bricklayers who built
Solomon's Temple after being expelled from
ancient Israel by
God due to poor craftsmanship. Similarly a more detailed legend places the origins of the Cagots in Spain as being descendants of a Pyrenean master carver named Jacques, who traveled to ancient Israel via
Tartessos, to cast
Boaz and Jachin for Solomon's Temple. While in Israel he was distracted during the casting of Jachin by a woman, and due to the imperfection this caused in the column his descendants were cursed to suffer leprosy.
Religious origin Another theory is that the Cagots were descendants of the
Cathars, who had been persecuted for
heresy in the
Albigensian Crusade. Some comparisons include the use of the term to refer to Cagots, which evokes the name that the Cathars gave to themselves, . A delegation by Cagots to
Pope Leo X in 1514 made this claim, though the Cagots predate the Cathar heresy and the Cathar heresy was not present in Gascony and other regions where Cagots were present. The historian Daniel Hawkins suggests that perhaps this was a strategic move, as in the statutes such discrimination and persecution for those convicted of heresy expired after four generations and if this was the cause of their marginalisation, it also gave grounds for their emancipation. Others have suggested an origin as
Arian Christians. The earliest recorded mention of the Cagots is in the charter of the under the name . Another early mention of the Cagots is from 1288, when they appear to have been called or . Other terms seen in use prior to the
16th century include , , and , which in medieval texts became inseparable from the term , and so in
Béarn became synonymous with the word
leper. Thus, another theory is that the Cagots were early converts to
Christianity, and that the hatred of their
pagan neighbors continued after they also converted, merely for different reasons.
Medical origin Another possible explanation of their name or is to be found in the fact that in medieval times all
lepers were known as , and that, whether Visigoths or not, these Cagots were affected in the Middle Ages with a particular form of leprosy or a condition resembling it, such as
psoriasis. Thus would arise the confusion between Christians and Cretins, and explain the similar restrictions placed on lepers and Cagots.
Guy de Chauliac wrote in the 14th century, and
Ambroise Paré wrote in 1561 of the Cagots being lepers with "beautiful faces" and skin with no signs of leprosy, describing them as "white lepers" (people afflicted with "white leprosy"). Later dermatologists believe that Paré was describing
leucoderma. Early edicts apparently refer to lepers and Cagots as different categories of undesirables, With this distinction being explicit by 1593. The Parlement of Bordeaux and the
Estates of Lower Navarre repeated customary prohibitions against them, with Bordeaux adding that when they were also lepers, if there still are any, they must carry (rattles). One belief in Navarre were that the were descendants of French immigrant lepers to the region. Later English commentators supported the idea of an origin among a community of lepers due to the similarities in the treatment of Cagots in churches and the measures taken to allow lepers in England and Scotland to attend churches. From the 1940s to 1950s a study of blood type analysis was performed on the Cagots of in Navarre. The blood type distribution showed more similarity with those observed in France among the French than those observed among the local Basque. Geneticist Pilar Hors uses this as support for the theory that the Cagots in Spain are descendants of French migrants, most likely from leper colonies.
Other origins ; the anti-Cagot prejudice existed in northern Spain, Western France, and Southern France, roughly coinciding with the main routes In Bordeaux, where they were numerous, they were called . This name has the same form as the
Old French word , meaning leper (ultimately derived from Latin ). It also has the same form as the
Gascon word for thief (ultimately derived from Latin , and cognate to the Catalan and the Spanish meaning robber or looter), which is similar in meaning to the older, probably
Celtic-origin Latin term (or bagad), a possible origin of . The alleged physical appearance and ethnicity of the Cagots varied wildly between legends and stories; some local legends (especially those that held to the leper theory) indicated that Cagots had blonde hair and blue eyes, while those favouring the Arab descent story said that Cagots were considerably darker. In
Pío Baroja's work , he comments that Cagot residents of had both individuals with "Germanic" features as well as individuals with "Romani" features, this is also supported by others who investigated the Cagots in Bearn and the Basque Country, such as who stated the "ethnic type" and names of Cagots were the same as the Basque within Navarre. Though people who set out to research the Cagots found them to be a diverse class of people in physical appearance, as diverse as the non-Cagot communities around them. One common trend was to claim that Cagots had no ears or no
earlobes, or that one ear was longer than the other, with other supposed identifiers including webbed hands and/or feet, or the presence of
goitres. Biographer
Graham Robb finds most of the above theories unlikely, highlighting the lack of distinguishing features among the Cagots, arguing that the only real differences were "after eight centuries of persecution, they tended to be more skillful and resourceful than the surrounding populations, and more likely to emigrate to America. They were feared because they were persecuted and might therefore seek revenge." Robb proposed the hypothesis that the Cagots are the descendants of a fallen medieval
guild of carpenters. This hypothesis could explain their being restricted in their choice of trade. He further suggests that red webbed-foot symbol Cagots were sometimes forced to wear might have been the guild's original emblem. There was a brief construction boom on the
Way of St. James pilgrimage route in the 9th and 10th centuries; this could have brought the guild both power and suspicion. A subsequent collapse of their business would have left a scattered, yet cohesive group in the areas where Cagots are known. Robb's guild hypothesis, alongside much of the work in his
The Discovery of France, has been heavily criticised for "[failing] to understand most of the secondary works in his own bibliography" and being a "recycling of nineteenth-century myths", and that while it offers many detailed impressions of history, it does not provide much in the way of extended analyses and argumentations. For similar reasons due to their restricted trades, the philosopher suggests in his work (
The invention of racism: Antiquity and the Middle Ages), that a possible origin is as a culturally distinct community of woodsmen who were
Christianised relatively late. The medievalist Benoît Cursente, has proposed that the Cagots developed as a group due to the rapidly changing social relations in the region of
Béarn, coinciding with, and influenced by, the period when lepers were becoming segregated across France and Spain in the 13th century. == Geography ==