, as depicted by the Spanish artist
Pedro Berruguete In 1147,
Pope Eugene III sent a
legate to the Cathar district in order to arrest the progress of the Cathars. The few isolated successes of
Bernard of Clairvaux could not obscure the poor results of this mission, which clearly showed the power of the sect in the Languedoc at that period. The missions of Cardinal Peter of Saint Chrysogonus to Toulouse and the Toulousain in 1178, and of
Henry of Marcy,
cardinal-bishop of Albano, in 1180–81, obtained merely momentary successes. Henry's armed expedition, which took the stronghold at
Lavaur, did not extinguish the movement. Decisions of Catholic Church councils—in particular, those of the
Council of Tours (1163) and of the
Third Council of the Lateran (1179)—had scarcely more effect upon the Cathars. When
Pope Innocent III came to power in 1198, he was resolved to deal with them. At first, Innocent tried peaceful conversion, and sent a number of legates into the Cathar regions. They had to contend not only with the Cathars, the nobles who protected them, and the people who respected them, but also with many of the bishops of the region, who resented the considerable authority the Pope had conferred upon his legates. In 1204, Innocent III suspended a number of bishops in
Occitania. In 1205, he appointed a new and vigorous
bishop of Toulouse, the former
troubadour Foulques. In 1206,
Diego of Osma and his canon, the future
Saint Dominic, began a programme of conversion in Languedoc. As part of this, Catholic–Cathar public debates were held at
Verfeil,
Servian,
Pamiers,
Montréal and elsewhere. Dominic met and debated with the Cathars in 1203 during his mission to the Languedoc. He concluded that only preachers who displayed real sanctity, humility and asceticism could win over convinced Cathar believers. The institutional Church as a general rule did not possess these spiritual warrants. His conviction eventually led to the establishment of the
Dominican Order in 1216. The order was to live up to the terms of his rebuke, "Zeal must be met by zeal, humility by humility, false sanctity by real sanctity, preaching falsehood by preaching truth." However, even Dominic managed only a few converts among the Cathars.
Albigensian Crusade excommunicating the Albigensians (left), massacre of the Albigensians by the crusaders (right) In January 1208, the papal legate,
Pierre de Castelnau, a
Cistercian monk, theologian and canon lawyer, was sent to meet the ruler of the area,
Raymond VI, Count of Toulouse. Known for excommunicating noblemen who protected the Cathars, Castelnau
excommunicated Raymond for
abetting heresy, following an allegedly fierce argument during which Raymond supposedly threatened Castelnau with violence. Shortly thereafter, Castelnau was murdered as he returned to Rome, Raymond of Toulouse was excommunicated, the second such instance, in 1209. in 2007 This war pitted the nobles of France against those of the Languedoc. The widespread northern enthusiasm for the Crusade was partially inspired by a papal decree that permitted the confiscation of lands owned by Cathars and their supporters. This angered not only the lords of the south, but also the King Philip II of France, who was at least nominally the
suzerain of the lords whose lands were now open to seizure. King Philip II wrote to Pope Innocent in strong terms to point this out—but Pope Innocent refused to change his decree. As the Languedoc was supposedly teeming with Cathars and Cathar sympathisers, this made the region a target for northern French noblemen looking to acquire new fiefs. The first target for the barons of the North were the lands of the
Trencavel, powerful lords of Carcassonne, Béziers, Albi, and the Razes. Little was done to form a regional coalition, and the crusading army was able to take Carcassonne, the Trencavel capital, incarcerating
Raymond Roger Trencavel in his own citadel, where he died within three months. Champions of the
Occitan cause claimed that he was murdered. Simon de Montfort was granted the Trencavel lands by Pope Innocent, thus incurring the enmity of
Peter II of Aragon, who previously had been aloof from the conflict, even acting as a mediator at the time of the siege of Carcassonne. The remainder of the first of the two Cathar wars now focused on Simon de Monfort's attempt to hold on to his gains through the winters. With a small force of confederates operating from the main winter camp at
Fanjeaux, he was faced with the desertion of local lords who had sworn fealty to him out of necessity—and attempts to enlarge his newfound domain during the summer. His forces were then greatly augmented by reinforcements from northern France, Germany, and elsewhere. De Montfort's summer campaigns recaptured losses sustained in winter months, in addition to attempts to widen the crusade's sphere of operation. Notably he was active in the
Aveyron at
St. Antonin and on the banks of the
Rhône at
Beaucaire. Simon de Monfort's greatest triumph was the victory against superior numbers at the
Battle of Muret in 1213—a battle in which de Montfort's much smaller force, composed entirely of cavalry, decisively defeated the much-larger, by some estimates 5–10 times larger and combined-force allied armies of Raymond of Toulouse, his Occitan allies, and
Peter II of Aragon. The battle saw the death of Peter II, which effectively ended the ambitions and influence of the house of Aragon/Barcelona in the Languedoc. In 1214, Philip II's
victory at Bouvines near Lille ended the
Anglo-French War of 1213–1214, dealt a death blow to the
Angevin Empire, and freed Philip II to concentrate more of his attentions to the Albigensian Crusade underway in the south of France. In addition, the victory at Bouvines was against an Anglo-German force that was attempting to undermine the power of the French crown. An Anglo-German victory would have been a serious setback to the crusade. Full French royal intervention in support of the crusade occurred in early 1226, when
Louis VIII of France led a substantial force into southeastern France.
Massacre The crusader army came under the command, both spiritually and militarily, of the papal legate
Arnaud Amalric,
Abbot of
Cîteaux. In the first significant engagement of the war, the town of
Béziers was
besieged on 22 July 1209. The Catholic inhabitants of the city were granted the freedom to leave unharmed, but many refused and opted to stay and fight alongside the Cathars. The townsmen spent much of 1209 fending off the crusaders. The Béziers army attempted a
sortie but was quickly defeated, then pursued by the crusaders back through the gates and into the city.
Arnaud Amalric, the
Cistercian abbot-commander, wrote to Pope Innocent III, that during negotiations his soldiers had taken the initiative without waiting for orders. The doors of the church of St Mary Magdalene were broken down and the refugees dragged out and slaughtered. Reportedly, at least 7,000 men, women and children were killed there by Catholic forces, though some scholars dispute this number. Elsewhere in the town, many more thousands were mutilated and killed. Prisoners were blinded, dragged behind horses, and used for target practice. What remained of the city was razed by fire. Arnaud Amalric wrote "Today your Holiness, twenty thousand heretics were put to the sword, regardless of rank, age, or sex." The permanent population of Béziers at that time was then between 10,000 and 14,500, but local refugees seeking shelter within the city walls could conceivably have increased the number to 20,000, though scholars dispute the figure as figurative. According to a report thirty years later by a non-witness, Arnaud Amalric is supposed to have been asked how to tell Cathars from Catholics. His alleged reply, according to
Caesarius of Heisterbach, a fellow Cistercian, was —"Kill them all, the Lord will recognise His own". After the success of his siege of Carcassonne, which followed the massacre at Béziers in 1209, Simon de Montfort was designated as leader of the Crusader army. Prominent opponents of the Crusaders were
Raymond Roger Trencavel, viscount of Carcassonne, and his feudal overlord
Peter II of Aragon, who held fiefdoms and had a number of
vassals in the region. Peter died fighting against the crusade on 12 September 1213 at the
Battle of Muret. Simon de Montfort was killed on 25 June 1218 after maintaining
a siege of Toulouse for nine months.
Treaty and persecution The official war ended in the
Treaty of Paris (1229), by which the king of France dispossessed the
House of Toulouse of the greater part of its
fiefs, and the house of the
Trencavels of the whole of their fiefs. The independence of the princes of the Languedoc was at an end. In spite of the wholesale massacre of Cathars during the war, Catharism was not yet extinguished, and Catholic forces would continue to pursue Cathars. In 1215, the bishops of the Catholic Church met at the
Fourth Council of the Lateran under Pope Innocent III. Part of the agenda was combating the Cathar heresy. The Inquisition was established in 1233 to uproot the remaining Cathars. Operating in the south at Toulouse, Albi, Carcassonne and other towns during the whole of the 13th century, and a great part of the 14th, it succeeded in crushing Catharism as a popular movement, driving its remaining adherents underground. Cathars who refused to recant or relapsed were hanged, or burnt at the stake. On Friday 13 May 1239, in
Champagne, 183 men and women convicted of Catharism were burned at the stake on the orders of the
Dominican inquisitor and former Cathar Perfect
Robert le Bougre. Mount Guimar, in
northeastern France, had already been denounced as a place of heresy in a letter of the Bishop of
Liège to
Pope Lucius II in 1144. From May 1243 to March 1244, the Cathar fortress of
Montségur was besieged by the troops of the
seneschal of Carcassonne and the
archbishop of Narbonne. On 16 March 1244, a large and symbolically important massacre took place, wherein over 200 Cathar Perfects were burnt in an enormous pyre at the ("field of the burned") near the foot of the castle. The Church, at the 1235
Council of Narbonne, decreed lesser chastisements against laymen suspected of sympathy with Cathars. A popular though as yet unsubstantiated belief holds that a small party of Cathar Perfects escaped from the fortress prior to the massacre at . It is widely held in the Cathar region to this day that the escapees took with them "the Cathar treasure". What this treasure consisted of has been a matter of considerable speculation: claims range from sacred
Gnostic texts to the Cathars' accumulated wealth, which might have included the
Holy Grail (see below). Hunted by the Inquisition and deserted by the nobles of their districts, the Cathars became more and more scattered fugitives, meeting surreptitiously in forests and mountain wilds. Later insurrections broke out under the leadership of
Roger-Bernard II, Count of Foix,
Aimery III of Narbonne, and
Bernard Délicieux, a
Franciscan friar later prosecuted for his adherence to another heretical movement, that of the
Spiritual Franciscans at the beginning of the 14th century. By this time, the Inquisition had grown very powerful. Consequently, many presumed to be Cathars were summoned to appear before it. Precise indications of this are found in the registers of the Inquisitors
Bernard of Caux, Jean de St Pierre,
Geoffroy d'Ablis, and others. The
perfects, it was said, only rarely recanted, and hundreds were burnt. Repentant
lay believers were punished, but their lives were spared as long as they did not relapse. Having recanted, they were obliged to sew yellow crosses onto their outdoor clothing and to live apart from other Catholics, at least for a time.
Annihilation After several decades of harassment and re-proselytising, and, perhaps even more important, the systematic destruction of their religious texts, the sect was exhausted and could find no more
adepts. In April 1310, the leader of a Cathar revival in the
Pyrenean foothills,
Peire Autier, was captured and executed in
Toulouse. After 1330, the records of the Inquisition contain very few proceedings against Cathars. In the autumn of 1321, the last known Cathar
perfect in the Languedoc,
Guillaume Bélibaste, was executed. From the mid-12th century onwards, Italian Catharism came under increasing pressure from the Pope and the Inquisition, "spelling the beginning of the end." Other movements, such as the
Waldensians and the pantheistic
Brethren of the Free Spirit, which suffered persecution in the same area, survived in remote areas and in small numbers through the 14th and 15th centuries. The Waldensian movement continues today. Waldensian ideas influenced other
proto-Protestant sects, such as the
Hussites,
Lollards, and the
Moravian Church.
Genocide == Later history ==