During the
Albigensian Crusade in May 1216, Raymond set out from
Marseille and besieged
Beaucaire, which he captured on 24 August. He fought to reconquer the county of Toulouse from
Simon de Montfort, 5th Earl of Leicester and later Simon's son
Amaury VI of Montfort. He succeeded his father in 1222. At the moment of his accession, he and the new
count of Foix,
Roger Bernard II the Great, besieged
Carcassonne. On 14 September 1224, the
Albigensian Crusaders surrendered and the war came to an end, each southern lord making peace with the church. However, in 1225, the
council of Bourges excommunicated him and launched a
crusade against him, the
king of France,
Louis VIII, called
the Lion, wanting to renew the conflict in order to enforce his royal rights in
Languedoc. Roger-Bernard tried to keep the peace, but the king rejected his embassy and the counts of Foix and Toulouse took up arms again. The war was largely a discontinuous series of skirmishes and, in January 1229, Raymond, defeated, was forced to sign the
Treaty of Paris (also known as the "Treaty of Meaux"). By this treaty he ceded the former viscounty of
Trencavel to
Louis IX and his daughter
Joan was forced to marry
Alphonse, brother of the king. In 1242, Raymond allied with Count
Hugh of La Marche and King
Henry III of England against Louis IX during the
Saintonge War. Louis sent against him an army under the Constable
Imbert de Beaujeu and Bishop
Hugh of Clermont. He was forced to surrender the castle of
Saverdun and
Bram. When Raymond died, Alphonse became count of Toulouse, and after Alphonse's death the county was annexed by
France. Raymond VII was buried beside his mother Joan in
Fontevrault Abbey. ==References==