The Cathars
were a religious group who appeared in Europe in the eleventh century,
their beliefs something of a mystery. Records from the Roman Church
mention them under various names and in various places, occasionally
throwing light on basic beliefs The Roman Church debated with itself
whether they were Christian heretics or whether they were not Christians
at all.
In the Languedoc, famous at the time for its high culture, tolerance
and liberalism, Catharism took root and gained more and more adherents
during the twelfth century. By the early thirteenth century it was
probably the majority religion in the area, supported by the nobility
as well as the common people. This was too much for the Roman Church,
some of whose own priests had become Cathars. Worst of all, Cathars
refused to pay their tithes.
Innocent III, called a formal crusade, appointing a series of leaders,
to head his holy army. There followed over forty years of war against
the indigenous population. During this period, some 600,000 men women
and children were massacred; the Counts of Toulouse, their vassals
were dispossessed and humiliated, and their lands annexed to France.
Educated and tolerant rulers were replaced by relative barbarians;
the Dominican Order was founded and the Inquisition, was established
to wipe out the last vestiges of resistance; persecutions of Jews
and other minorities were initiated; the height culture of the Troubadours
was lost; lay learning was discouraged; tithes were enforced; the
Languedoc started its economic decline, and the language of the area,
Occitan started its descent from one of the foremost languages in
Europe to a regional dialect.
At the end of the extirpation of the Cathars, the Church had convincing
proof that a sustained campaign of genocide can work. It also had
the precedent of an internal Crusade within Christendom, and the
machinery of the first police state. This crusade was one of the
greatest disasters ever to befall Europe. Catharism is often said
to have been completely eradicated by the end of the fourteenth
century. Yet there are more than a few vestiges even today, apart
from the enduring memory of their martyrdom and the ruins of the
famous castles. There are even people claiming to be modern Cathars.
Credit: James McDonald, Château de St-Ferriol, Esperanza, Aude |