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The Albigensian Crusades: Wars Like Any Other?

 

By Malcolm Barber

 

from: Dei gesta per Francos: Etudes sur les croisades deditees a Jean Richard (2001) 

 

There are three great clichés in our view of the Albigensian Crusades which most historians 
find hard to resist. These are, first, the words supposedly spoken by Arnaud Amalric, the 
papal legate, during the crusader attack upon Beziers on 22 July 1209, where, according to his 
fellow Cistercian Caesarius of Heisterbach, in response to a question from the soldiers, he was 
supposed to have replied, "Kill them. For God will know those who are his"; secondly, the 
hurling of Girauda, dame of Lavaur, down a well where she died under a barrage of stones, 
after the fall of her town to the crusaders on 3 May 1211; and, finally, the ironic gloss on the 
epitaph on Simon of Montfort, the leader of the crusade, killed besieging Toulouse on 25 June 
1218, as set down by the anonymous continuator of William of Tudela's Chanson, which, in 
powerful rhetoric the original author could never have matched, culminates in the lines "if by 
kindling evil and quenching good, by killing women and slaughtering children, a man can in 
this world win Jesus Christ, certainly Count Simon wears a crown and shines in heaven 
above."

1

 

Although only the second of these is of any real value for the historian attempting to 
reconstruct the events of the Albigensian crusades, the unavoidable collective impression is 
that this was a conflict in which all the normal conventions of warfare in the early thirteenth 
century were abandoned and that the prime responsibility for this belongs to northern 
crusaders whose brutal demeanour created a depth of bitterness between the Languedoil and 
the Languedoc which still has echoes today. A typical consequence has been, for example, the 
treatment of Pierre Belperron's La Croisade contre les Albigeois (published in 1942), in 
which he argued that this was a war no more brutal or bitter than any other conquests of the 
kings of France and that it had been sentimentalised by certain persons for their own 
purposes.

2

  In 1998 Pierre Martel's sarcastic comment was that "we do not advise anyone who 

wishes to know about Catharism to read Belperron; but if they wish to understand how 
l'ideologie petainiste functioned, his contribution seems to us fundamental."

3

 

What, therefore, is the case for arguing that the Albigensian conflict transcended all 

norms of contemporary warfare in Latin Christendom? The basic evidence has to be drawn 
from four narrative accounts, that of the Cistercian Peter of Les Vaux-de-Cernay, heavily pro-
crusader and a fervent admirer of Montfort, the two authors of the Chanson de la croisade 
albigeoise
, William of Tudela and his anonymous continuator, the latter of whom was as 
devoted to Languedoc as Peter of Les Vaux-de-Cernay was to the cause of the crusaders, and 
William of Puylaurens, a clerk from the Toulousain, who, like the others, was a 
contemporary, but who wrote from the longer perspective of the third quarter of the thirteenth 
century. As the most detailed narrative, based on both his own observation and that of others 
close to the events, Peter of Les-Vaux-de-Cernay is the key witness. Setting aside the 
executions of the heretics at Minerve, Termes, Lavaur, and Les Casses in 1210 and 1211 
(where to a considerable extent the victims co-operated in their own destruction), he 
incorporates fifteen incidents in his narrative which might be described as "atrocities"; not 
surprisingly, all but three are attributed to the southerners. The exceptions are the massacre of 
the population of Beziers in July 1209; Montfort's blinding of the garrison at Brain in March 

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1210; and the execution of Aimery of Montreal, his sister, Girauda of Lavaur, and the knights 
who had defended Lavaur in May 1211. In Peter's view these were fully justified. At Beziers, 
the heretics had said that Mary Magdalene was Christ's concubine, they had killed their lord 
and assaulted their bishop, "so it was right that these shameless dogs should be captured and 
destroyed on the feast day of the woman they had so insulted." When Brain fell over a 
hundred of the defenders were blinded and their noses were cut off, apparently in retaliation 
for the killing and mutilation of Montfort's men at Puisserguier by a former ally of his, Giraud 
of Pepieux, in November 1209, while a clerk captured there to whom Montfort had entrusted 
the castle of Montreal, only for him to hand it back to its lord, Aimery, was degraded so that 
Montfort could punish him by having him dragged by a horse through Carcassonne and then 
hanged, a punishment which Peter sees as a fitting penalty. And at Lavaur, Aimery was a 
"foul traitor" who had "deserted God and the count" [i.e. Montfort], and Girauda was "a 
heretic of the worst sort.

4

 

Peter of Les Vaux-de-Cernay's list of southern atrocities is of course much longer, 

showing a particular obsession with the actions of the count of Foix and his son.

5

  For Peter it 

was soon evident that no trust could be reposed in the southerners or their allies. Girard of 
Pepieux's betrayal at Puisserguier was emphasised by the murder of Montfort's sergeants - 
thrown in the fosse and covered with rubbish - and the blinding and mutilation of the two 
knights in command, followed by their expulsion naked in weather so severe that one died of 
exposure and the other was saved only by chance. For Peter it was a story which "cannot be 
heard without tears." In the winter of 1209, when over forty fortresses defected from 
Montfort's cause, this reaction became general: "most of those whom the count had left to 
guard the castra in the area were either killed or mutilated by local traitors." The next year, 
between July and November, while Montfort was besieging Termes, the men of Cabaret (just 
to the north of Carcassonne) harassed the crusaders and "whenever they came across any of 
our men either condemned them to a shameful death or, to show their contempt for God and 
our side, most cruelly put out their eyes and cut off their noses and other members, and sent 
them back to the army." They could not be trusted to deal decently with either prisoners or the 
dead: Raymond Roger, count of Foix, reneged on his promise to treat honourably with 
Lambert of Thury and Walter Langton, two crusader knights. Once they had surrendered, they 
were thrown into a dark dungeon, so small they could neither lie down nor stand up. In 1212, 
Roger Bernard, the count's son, captured some crusaders near Narbonne, took them back to 
Foix, where he and his men spent their time devising "new and original tortures" for them 
including suspension by their genitals. Forces from Toulouse acted similarly: in 1213 crusader 
knights "were dragged by horses about the city streets and then hanged from gibbets." During 
the siege of the city in 1217-18, captured crusaders could expect a similar fate: victims had 
their eyes put out, their tongues removed, were dragged behind horses, stoned, dropped from 
the ramparts, or drowned with mill-stones around their necks. Even corpses were not safe: at 
Moissac, in August 1212, dead crusaders were hacked with swords, for "it was not enough for 
them to see one of our number killed," while during the siege of Toulouse in 1218 captured 
knights were killed, their hands and feet were cut off, and the feet then hurled into the 
Chdteau Narbonnais, still occupied by crusader forces.

6

 

The other sources confirm the general circumstances described by Peter of Les Vaux-

de-Cernay, even though they offer less detail and sometimes distribute blame differently. 
William of Tudela portrays the ribauds who began the attack in Beziers as "in a frenzy, quite 
unafraid of death, killing everyone they could find." The leaders were cooler, but no less 
bloody, agreeing in advance that "at every castle the army approached, a garrison that refused 
to surrender should be slaughtered wholesale, once the castle had been taken by storm. They 

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would then meet with no resistance anywhere, as men would be so terrified at what had 
already happened." The crusader seizure of St Marcel (in the Albigeois, north of the Tam) on 
20 May 1212 cost the citizens twenty-eight killed or drowned, while the men and women who 
had fled into the church were stripped naked and robbed.

 Peter of Les Vaux-de-Cernay says 

nothing of this, but it is clear from his narrative that St Marcel suffered because of past 
disloyalty and because at one point it had been entrusted to Giraud of Pepieux.

 William of 

Tudela's continuator begins his account in 1213. By this time Montfort had already been 
campaigning for four years although in fact he offers no specific instance of the general 
indictment he made of Montfort at his death. However, Montfort's removal seems to have 
done nothing to diminish the ferocity of the conflict. When Marmande fell to the forces of 
Louis of France and Amaury of Montfort in June 1219, the crusaders indulged in a general 
massacre of the population.  

                Lords, ladies and their little children, women and men stripped naked, all these men 
slashed and cut to pieces with keen-edged swords. Flesh,                    blood and brains, trunks, 
limbs and faces hacked in two, lungs, livers and guts torn out and tossed aside on the open 
ground as if they had                    rained down from the sky. Marshland and good ground, all 
was red with blood. Not a man or a woman was left alive, neither old nor young, no    
                living creature, unless any had managed to hide. Marmande was razed and set 
alight.

9

  

The perspective offered by William of Puylaurens is quite different because he was 

writing a generation or more later. He lacks the immediacy and passionate partisanship of 
Peter of Les Vaux-de-Cernay and the anonymous author of the Chanson, yet he is both anti-
heretical and pro-northem.

l0

  However, he does describe two incidents which confirm that 

after 1218 the warfare continued at the same pitch as it had done in the days of Montfort's 
campaigning. In 1220 Raymond, son of Raymond VI of Toulouse and the future count, 
captured Foucaud of Berzy, and his brother John, two crusaders whose reputations had been 
established in the region since at least 1212. Raymond had them decapitated and the severed 
heads placed on poles as a public spectacle. For William of Puylaurens it was no more than 
they deserved because of their cruelty and arrogance.  

            He [Foucaud] held himself to this law, it was said, that all prisoners-of-war, unless 
they could give him 100 sous, would be killed. He tortured his                captives with hunger 
in an underground prison, and when he let them out, dead or half dead, he threw them on a 
dung heap. It was said, and is still                said today, that, leaving for the recent conflict, 
which was the last, he had two wretches hung, father and son, who were prisoners, and forced 
the                father to hang the son, then departed for this matter, from which he did not 
return.  

As for his entourage, they not only kept concubines but "some took the wives of others." 
Royal forces which followed up the crusade of Louis VIII after the king's death in October 
1226 were equally ruthless in their ravaging of the populace and the pays. Led by the royal 
seneschal, Humbert of Beaujeu, in 1228 they massacred the population of Labecede which, as 
most of the fighting men had fled, consisted mainly of non-combatants, and in the same year, 
reduced the inhabitants of Toulouse to near starvation by the systematic and daily devastation 
of the crops upon which they depended.

11 

 More than anything else, this brought Count 

Raymond of Toulouse to the negotiations which ended in the heavily one-sided Treaty of 
Paris in 1229. 

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This litany of violence has not been presented gratutitously. It is necessary to provide 

perspective upon Belperron's attempt to desentimentalize the conflict or upon a more recent 
comment by Yves Dossat that "perhaps this brutality was less striking to the men of the 
thirteenth century than to ourselves."

12

  Both Belperron and Dossat imply that contemporaries 

had no standards by which to judge the actions of the combatants in the Albigensian crusades, 
that in fact they were wars just like any other. Michel Roquebert disagrees. When Girauda of 
Lavaur was thrown down the well, William of Tudela goes on to say that "the other 
noblewomen were all set free by a kind and courteous Frenchman, who behaved most 
honourably."

13 

 For Roquebert this is proof that some were cruel and that some were not, and 

that "the mentality of the times" cannot be used to explain the conduct of Simon of Montfort 
or, for that matter, of Raymond Roger, count of Foix.

14

 

Roquebert's comment points the way to a solution. How did the chroniclers and poets 

who describe these incidents view them within the mores of their own time? The very fact 
that Peter of Les Vaux-de-Cernay felt it necessary to follow his account of the mutilation of 
the garrison at Bram with a peroration on Montfort's qualities is indicative, since he clearly 
did not think that this was "normal" behaviour, despite his blinkered support for "the count."  

             The count had this punishment carried out, not because such mutilation gave him any 
pleasure but because his opponents had been the first to                 indulge in atrocities [set 
quia adversarii sui hoc inceperant
] and, cruel executioners that they were, were given to 
butchering any of our men                 that they might capture by dismembering them. It was 
right that they should fall into the pit they had dug themselves and drink from time to time 
of                 the cup they so often administered to others. The count never took delight in 
cruelty or in the torture of his enemies. He was the kindest of men                 and the saying of 
the poet fitted him most aptly: "a prince slow to punish, and quick to reward, who grieved 
when driven to be hard."

15 

 

Even allowing for the slightly creative translation of set quia adversard sui hoc 

inceperant, Peter's unease is nevertheless clear. His comments on the massacre at Beziers 
confirm this impression. Although he does not condemn it, nevertheless he presents it as the 
work of the ribauds, "without the knowledge of the chiefs of the army and quite without 
consulting them."

16

 Atrocities by the enemy naturally present him with no such problems, but 

again his comments suggest that he had a perception of what constituted "proper conduct." 
Thus Giraud of Pepieux's mutilation of Montfort's knights in 1209 was "unheard of cruelty"; 
the violation of the bodies at Moissac in 1212 was "a despicable form of battle"; the treatment 
of captured crusader knights near Toulouse in 1213 showed that the Toulousans were "worse 
than infidels"; when, in 1218, the citizens of Toulouse used a mangonel to throw the 
dismembered limbs of captured crusaders into the Chateau Narbonnais, it was "a shameful 
mode of warfare, a victory without honour." Indeed, for Peter, deaths in these conflicts took 
on the aspect of Christian martyrdom, for he claims that Roger Bernard, the son of the count 
of Foix, acted in such a way in 1212 that his tortures "could claim equality in their iniquity 
with Diocletian and Domitian." In 1218 Bernard Escrivan, a priest from Toulouse who 
supported the crusaders, "was in every respect a martyr," in that he was buried up to his 
shoulders, stoned and attacked with arrows, and then set alight, the parallels with the early 
Christians being all too obvious.

17

 

William of Tudela, although pro-Catholic, is much less partisan than Peter of Les 

Vaux-de-Cernay, but he too has a concept of honourable behaviour in warfare which he 
clearly expects to carry resonance with his intended audience.

18 

 He is therefore indignant at 

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the suggestion that the early death of Raymond Roger Trencavel, the young viscount of 
Carcassonne and Beziers, in November 1209, while in captivity at Carcassonne, was in some 
way the consequence of the foul play about which there must evidently have been rumours. 
He died, he says, from dysentery, not by murder. "Not for anything in the world, by Jesus in 
heaven! would Count Simon ever have allowed such a thing." When Termes fell to the 
crusaders in November 1210 and some of its inhabitants were captured in flight and brought 
to Montfort, he "behaved very well and took nothing from the ladies, not even the value of a 
penny coin or a Le Puy farthing." The following March, when Peter Roger of Cabaret decided 
that he could resist no longer, he first released his prisoner, Bouchard of Marly, whom until 
then he had kept in irons. He told Bouchard that he would take the risk that he would treat 
him fairly if he released him, to which Bouchard replied that he had "never done or 
commanded anything dishonourable," a boast which his later actions confirmed. Peter Roger 
had him properly bathed and his hair cut, he had new clothes given to him and "a pacing 
palfrey," and an escort of three nobles as he left Cabaret.

19

  This strong feeling for the 

sensibilities of the noble class makes William's strictures more convincing than those of Peter 
of Les Vaux-de-Cernay. There had, he said, not been "so terrible a slaughter" since the time of 
the Saracens as there was at Beziers, while at Lavaur "there was so great a killing that I 
believe it will be talked of till the end of the world." Moreover, the execution of a man of the 
stature of Aimery of Montreal was unprecedented. "Never so far as I know has so great a lord 
been hanged in all Christendom, nor with so many knights hanged at his side." Indeed, the 
willingness of the crusaders to go beyond the accepted norms pervades William of Tudela's 
whole narrative, for the plan to massacre garrisons which had refused to surrender was 
intended to frighten defenders into submission.

20

  By definition, such tactics would have been 

pointless had they not had the power to strike terror into the hearts of men. 

While events of this kind were not exclusive to the crusades - the deaths of 1,500 

people in the church at Vitry, burnt down by the troops of King Louis VII in 1143 springs to 
mind - it is perhaps significant that the most famous recent massacre was also perpetrated by 
crusaders, although in this case against Muslims, not heretics. In August 1191 Richard I 
ordered 2,700 Muslim prisoners to be beheaded at Acre when he believed that Saladin was 
refusing serious negotiation. Despite the attempts which have been made to explain Richard's 
action by placing it in a realistic context,

21

 it is evident that contemporaries saw the event as 

quite exceptional. It is recorded in similar terms by both the main narrative sources, the poet, 
Ambroise, and the anonymous author of the Itinerarium.

22

 Here is the version in Ambroise:  

             And when he [Richard] knew that he [Saladin] would do nothing for him and that he 
had no care for those who had defended Acre for him, then                 the matter was 
examined at a council, where the great men gathered and decided that they would kill most of 
the Saracens and keep the others,                 those of high birth, in order to redeem their own 
hostages.  

In Ambroise's poem, deaths occur every few lines, but it is evident that the author is distinctly 
uneasy about these, despite a display of insouciance, since he finds it necessary to include a 
special passage justifying it. It was appropriate vengeance.  

             The army had been at Acre for two winters and a summer at great cost and loss, until 
the middle of August when the king carried out the killings                 of those who had 
merited death for what they did to God and his pilgrims, because of whom there were left 
behind so many orphans, so many                 unprotected girls, so many widowed wives, so 

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many abandoned inheritances, so many families brought down, so many bishoprics and so 
many                 churches left alone.  

Although Ambroise and the Itinerarium cover much of the same ground, including the 
massacre of the prisoners, it is noticeable that a reference by the author of the Itinerarium to 
the defenders of Acre as "outstanding and memorable warriors who were men of admirable 
prowess, exceptional valour, very energetic in the practice of war and renowned for their great 
deeds"

23

 is not to be found in Ambroise.  These were the same men killed on Richard's orders. 

Ambroise knew very well how this would be seen by the Muslims. When Richard finally 
decided to settle for what he had already conquered in the Treaty of Jaffa (September 1192), 
provision was made for the parties of pilgrims to visit Jerusalem. Their nervousness is quite 
palpable. Unarmed and close to the Muslim forces at Jerusalem, Ambroise can clearly 
imagine his own reaction if the situation were reversed.  

             The next day the Saracens came before Saladin and knelt at his feet, begging and 
beseeching him, saying, "Oh, true Sultan, now it is right and it is                 time for us to take 
vengeance for the massacre which they did to us before Acre. My lord, let us avenge our 
fathers, our kinsmen, our sons and                 our brothers, whom these men killed and hacked. 
Now each man can wreak his vengeance.”

24

  

It has been strongly argued by both Strickland and Gillingham that there was a 

fundamental difference between the Vikings and the Anglo-Saxons on the one hand, and the 
Normans and the French, on the other, in their perception of the way warfare should be 
conducted; indeed, Gillingham goes so far as to argue that "there is much to be said for the 
view that he [William the Conqueror] was the first chivalrous ruler in English history." By 
chivalry he means "a secular code of values" in which "the compassionate treatment of 
defeated high-status enemies is a defining characteristic." None of this of course ever applied 
to those perceived to be of low status or who were seen as mercenaries.

25

 Although in no way 

claiming that such conventions were invariably applied, Strickland believes that in the world 
of the Anglo-Norman and French aristocracy (which was the world from which Simon of 
Montfort and most of his fellow crusaders were drawn) certain constraints operated which had 
the effect of mitigating extremes of brutality which might otherwise have occurred and, 
indeed, had occurred, in the Viking and Anglo-Saxon era. These included the high value 
placed upon a reputation for honour; a sense of professional solidarity with other knights, 
even if they were fighting on the other side; the search for profit in the form of ransoms; and 
the need to reduce the expense and damage of prolonged sieges by reaching a negotiated 
surrender. Certain circumstances could override these constraints, most commonly in the case 
of rebellion, especially when perceived as treason, and when dealing with peoples considered 
to be in some way outside the social and racial elite of northern European aristocracy.

26 

 In the 

latter case mutual cultural incomprehension - as shown for example, in the contrasting 
attitudes towards the decapitation of defeated opponents displayed by the English and the 
Welsh in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries 

27

 -exacerbated the bitterness of such conflicts, 

so that no quarter was likely to be given to those seen as belonging to barbarous nations. 

Viewed within this context, it can be seen that the Albigensian crusades went far 

beyond the normal conventions of early thirteenth-century warfare, in the scale of the 
slaughter, in the execution of high-status opponents, male and female, in the mutilation of 
prisoners, in the humiliation and shaming of the defeated, and in the quite overt use of terror 
as a method of achieving one's goals. Simon of Montfort was not a man without honour, as 
can be seen by his famous refusal to attack the Christians of Zara during the Fourth Crusade 

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in 1202, but he either believed from the beginning, or quickly became convinced, that 
"chivalric" standards had no place in the type of war in which he was involved in Languedoc. 
Mutual respect for knightly values did not exist in a world so divided by religious, cultural 
and linguistic differences. In northern convention "treacherous" behaviour clearly forfeited 
the right to humane treatment, a conception strengthened by Innocent III's definition of heresy 
as treason,

28

 while for southerners concerned to defend their patria against those whom they 

saw as "foreigners," their retaliatory "atrocities" were fully justified.

29

  Indeed, the tactics used 

by Peter Roger of Cabaret during the siege of Termes were not dissimilar from modern 
guerilla warfare against occupying forces. For Montfort, killing prisoners may have seemed 
the only way of gaining revenge upon an enemy that would not confront the crusaders 
directly.

30

  For the crusaders, heretics and their defenders evidently fell into the same category 

as "Saracens," a conviction hardened by the belief that the southerners habitually employed 
routiers, condemned by the Third Lateran Council of 1179 in the same decree which called 
for the elimination of heresy.

31

 As Strickland shows, the image of routiers as "the epitome of 

cruelty and brutality," along with the Scots and the Galwegians, was firmly embedded in the 
minds of Anglo-Norman and French knights.

32

 When the opportunity arose therefore, 

treatment of those employed by the enemy was accordingly merciless. 

In one way the crusades made a powerful contribution to the concept of chivalry, 

imbuing their Christian participants with what they believed to be a noble cause, for which 
they fought in a spirit of self-sacrifice. However, in another sense, they marked a qualitative 
degeneration in behaviour for those involved, for they engendered and strengthened hostile 
attitudes towards those who were different from the perceived norm and opened the way for 
the development of an ingrained superiority towards those who did not follow the banner of 
Christ as interpreted in the Latin West. These enemies find their lineal descent in the 
demonised peoples of the New World, whose behaviour showed that they were not of the 
same species as their conquerors and therefore need not be treated as human beings at all. As 
the anthropologist, Inga Clendinnen, shows, this appears in its starkest form in the conflict 
between Cortes and the Mexica or Aztecs, in which "the sustained act of cooperation" 
necessary to create conditions in which two opponents could operate, was conspicuously 
absent, so that the Mexica fought Cortes to the point of their own destruction, while the 
uncomprehending Spaniards "denied them the way to acquiesce in their own defeat."

33

 

 

End Notes  

1. Caesarius of Heisterbach, Dialogus Miraculorum, ed. Joseph Strange, 1 (Cologne, 1851), p. 
302; Peter of Les Vaux-de-Cernay, Hystoria Albigensis, ed. Pascal Guebin and Ernest Lyon, 3 
vols. (Paris, 1926-39), 1, para. 227, pp. 227-28 (hereafter PVC) - trans. William A. and 
Michael D. Sibly, The History of the Albigensian Crusade (Woodbridge, 1998); Chanson de 
la croisade albigeoise
, ed. and trans. Eugene Martin-Chabot, 3 vols. (Paris, 1931), 1, laisse 
71, pp. 172-73; vol.3, laisse 208, pp. 228-29 (hereafter Chanson) trans. Janet Shirley, The 
Song of the Cathar Wars. A History of the Albigensian Crusade. William of Tudela and an 
Anonymous Successor
 (Aldershot, 1996).  

2. Roger of Howden, Chronica, ed. William Stubbs, 4 vols. (London, 1871), 4:54. He 
describes how, in 1198, the king of France found what he calls "a new type of violent 
oppression" in that he "caused many of the men of the king of England whom he had captured 
to be blinded," with the result that he "thus provoked the king of England, although reluctant, 

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to similar acts of impiety." However, the chronicler clearly thought these actions were 
reprehensible and not "normal."  

3. Pierre Martel, "Qui n' a pas son albigeois? Le souvenir de la Croisade et ses utilisations 
politiques," in Catharisme: L'Edifice Imaginaire. 7e Session d'histoire medievale du 29 aout 
au 2 septembre 1994
, Rennes les Bains (Villegly, 1998), pp. 341-42.  

4. PVC, vol. 1, paras. 90-91, pp. 91-93; paras. 135 and 142, pp. 138-39, 147-49; para. 227, pp. 
227-28 (trans. Sibly and Sibly, pp. 50-51, 73, 78-79, 117). This view of Girauda of Lavaur 
appears to have been propagated in the north, see Chronica Albrici Monarchi Trium Fontium, 
MGHS
 23:892, where she is called pessima Albigensis.  

5. PVC (vol. 1, para. 218, pp. 217-19) was particularly incensed at what he believed was an 
outrage by Raymond Roger of Foix, his son, Roger Bernard, and the man he saw as the arch-
traitor, Girard of Pepieux, upon a group of crusaders, at Montgey, near Puylaurens, in May 
1211. Peter presents this as an ambush upon unprepared crusaders, although William of 
Tudela (vol.2, laisse 69, pp. 168-71) describes a hard battle in which the crusaders were 
defeated. To the modern observer it looks like a fairly ordinary engagement, typical of 
medieval warfare, but Catholic propagandists made considerable capital out of it in the north. 
See John H. Mundy, The Repression of Catharism at Toulouse. The Royal Diploma of 1279 
(Toronto, 1985), p. 22.  

6. PVC, vol. 1, para. 127, pp. 131-32; para. 136, pp. 139-40; para. 173, pp. 175-76; para. 248, 
pp. 247-49; vol. 2, para. 361, pp. 60-61; para. 435, pp. 126-27; para. 606C, pp. 307-09; para. 
582, p. 275 (trans. Sibly and Sibly, pp. 70, 74, 92, 127, 169, 198, 27475, 261).  

7. Chanson, vol.l, laisse 20, pp. 56-57; laisse 21, pp. 56-59; laisse 113, pp. 252-53 (trans. 
Shirley, pp. 20-1,57).  

8. PVC, vol.2, paras. 312-16, pp. 11-16 (trans Sibly and Sibly, pp. 151-53).  

9. Chanson, vol. 3, laisse 212, pp. 290-91(trans. Shirley, pp. 188-89).  

10. See Yves Dossat, "La Croisade vue par les chroniqueurs," in Cahiers de Fanjeaux 4 
(1969), 242. "Tour a tour le pretre et la patriote peuvent s'exprimer."  

11. Chronica magistri Guillelmi de Podio Laurentii, ed. and trans. Jean Duvernoy (Paris, 
1976), XXXI, pp. 108-11; XXXV, pp. 126-27; XXXVI, pp. 128-31.  

12. Yves Dossat, "Simon de Montfort," Cahiers de Fanjeaux 4 (1969), 286.  

13. Chanson, vol. 1, laisse 71, pp. 172-73 (trans. Shirley, pp. 42-43).  

14. Michel Roquebert, L'Epopee Cathare, 1198-1212: 1: L'invasion (Paris, 1970), p. 397.  

15. PVC, vol. 1, para. 142, pp. 148-49 (trans. Sibly and Sibly, pp. 78-79). 

16. PVC, vol. 1, para. 90, p. 91 (trans. Sibly and Sibly, p. 50).  

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17. PVC, vol. 2, para. 582, p. 275; para. 361, pp. 60-61; para. 606C, pp. 307-09 (trans. Sibly 
and Sibly, pp. 261, 169, 274).  

18. Both authors of the Chanson wrote within a genre which used real events as a means not 
only of information but of instruction and entertainment as well, so their selection and 
presentation of material and their judgements upon it must have been related to the attitudes 
which they expected to find in their listeners. See Nancy F. Partner, Serious Entertainments: 
The Writing of History in Twelfth-Century England
 (Chicago and London, 1977), for 
comparison.  

19. Chanson, vol. 1, laisse 37, pp. 94-95; laisse 57, pp. 140-41; laisses 63 and 64, pp. 154-59 
(trans. Shirley, pp. 28, 36-37, 40).  

20. Chanson, vol. 1, laisse 21, pp. 56-59; laisse 68, pp. 166-67 (trans. Shirley, pp. 21, 41). The 
point is not that this tactic was unique to the Albigensian crusades, but that it was seen as a 
method of terrorising the enemy qualitatively different from contemporary norms. Thus, in 
1108, Suger of Saint-Denis presented the future Louis VI campaigning against the castle of 
Sainte-Severe in Berry, as threatening that he would not desist until he had completely 
destroyed the castle, when he "would either fix its noble men to a gibbet or rip our their 
eyes.". Suger, Vie de Louis VI le Gros, ed. and trans. Henri Waquet (Paris, 1929), p. 59; 
English trans. Richard C. Cusimano and John Moorhead, The Deeds of Louis the Fat 
(Washington, 1992), p. 60.  

21. e.g. John Gillingham, Richard I (New Haven and London, 1999), pp. 167-71. See, too, 
John Keegan, The Face of Battle (London, 1976), pp. 107-12, on the reasons why Henry V 
ordered the prisoners to be killed at Agincourt in 1415. 

22. Ambroise, L'Estoire de la Guerre Sainte, ed. Gaston Paris (Paris, 1897), pp. 144-48; 
Itinerarium Peregrinorum et Gesta Regis Ricardi, ed. William Stubbs (London, 1864), pp. 
240-R3. The quotation from Ambroise is from a new translation by Marianne Ailes to be 
published in 2001. Cf. Ambroise, p. 53, on the atrocities committed by Isaac Comnenus, 
"emperor" of Cyprus, against Richard I's men, whom he had captured.  

23. Itinerarium, p. 233; trans. Helen J. Nicholson, Chronicle of the Third Crusade. A 
Translation of the Itinerarium Peregrinorum et Gesta Regis Ricardi
 (Aldershot, 1997), p. 
220. See, too, Nicholson's comments on the massacre, p. 231.  

24. Ambroise, p. 321 (trans. Ailes). 

25. Matthew Strickland, "Slaughter, Slavery or Ransom: the Impact of the Conquest on 
Conduct in Warfare," in England in the Eleventh Century. Proceedings of the 1990 Harlaxton 
Symposium
, ed. Carola Hicks (Stanford, 1992), pp. 41-59; John Gillingham, "1066 and the 
Introduction of Chivalry into England," in Law and Government in Medieval England and 
Normandy
, ed. George Garnett and John Hudson (Cambridge, 1994), pp. 31-55, esp. pp. 54, 
32.  

26. Matthew Strickland, War and Chivalry. The Conduct and Perception of War in England 
and Normandy, 1066-1217
 (Cambridge, 1996).  

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27. Frederick Suppe, "The Cultural Significance of Decapitation in High Medieval Wales and 
the Marches," The Bulletin of the Board of Celtic Studies 36 (1989), 147-60.  

28. See Walter Ullmann, "The Significance of Innocent III's Decretal Vergentis," in Etudes 
d'histoire du droit canonique dediees a Gabriel Le Bras
 (Paris, 1965), pp. 729-41. This 
decretal was issued in 1199.  

29. On treachery in these campaigns, see Claire Dutton, Aspects of the Institutional History of 
the Albigensian Crusades, 1198-1229
 (Ph.D., 1993, Royal Holloway and Bedford New 
College, University of London), pp. 284-86. The chronicler of Saint-Evroul, Orderic Vitalis, 
describes the blinding of three nobles by Henry I in 1124 on the grounds of treason, a 
punishment which in other circumstances would have been regarded as contrary to Norman 
and Flemish custom: The Ecclesiastical History of Orderic Vitalis, ed. and trans. Marjorie 
Chibnall (Oxford, 1978), 6:352-53. On the idea of defence of patria, see Strickland, 
"Slaughter, Slavery and Ransom," pp. 53-54. Suger of Saint-Denis, who was a powerful 
propagandist for the Capetian house, apparently believed (p. 222) that defence of the 
dynasty's lands from an outsider invader justified treating them "as if they had been 
Saracens," that is subjecting them to wholesale slaughter. "The unburied bodies of the 
barbarians [the Germans] would be abandoned to wolves and ravens, to their everlasting 
shame; and great slaughter and cruelty would be justified because the land was being 
defended." (trans. Cusimano and Moorhead, p. 129). The anonymous author of the Chanson 
presents (laisse 196, p.104, trans. Shirley, p. 150) the Toulousans as complaining about a pope 
who orders their deaths at the hands of "foreigners" (per una gente estranha).  

30. See Strickland, War and Chivalry, p. 310.  

31. Norman J. Tanner, ed., Decrees of the Ecumenical Councils, 1, Nicaea I to Lateran V 
(London, 1990), p. 224. Montfort, of course, like other contemporary Christian rulers, also 
made use of mercenaries.  

32. Strickland, War and Chivalry, p. 291. 

33. Inga Clendinnen, "Cortes, Signs and the Conquest of Mexico," in The Transmission of 
Culture in Early Modern Europe
, ed. Anthony Grafton and Ann Blair (Philadelphia, 1990), 
pp. 87-130. See also the comments of Keegan, The Face of Battle, p. 296. 
 

 

This article was first published in Dei gesta per Francos: Etudes sur les croisades deditees a 
Jean Richard
, edited by Michel Balard, Benjamin Z. Kedar and Jonathan Riley-Smith 
(Aldershot: Ashgate, 2001).  We thank Malcolm Barber and 

Ashgate Publishing

 for their 

permission to republish this section. 

http://www.deremilitari.org/resources/articles/barber2.htm