CHAPTER
IV
THE
ALBIGENSIAN CRUSADE.
10
FIRST SIEGE OF TOULOUSE.
As
soon as the citizens heard of this design they sent an embassy to the
Crusaders to deprecate it. They had been reconciled to the Church, and had
assisted at the siege of Lavaur, but they were sternly told that they would not
be spared unless they would eject Raymond from the city and renounce their
allegiance to him. This they refused unanimously. All the old civic quarrels
were forgotten, and as one man they prepared for resistance. It is a noteworthy
illustration of the strength of the republican institution of the civic
commune, that the siege of Toulouse was the first considerable check received
by the Crusaders. The town was well fortified and garrisoned; the Counts of
Foix and Comminges had come at the summons of their suzerain, and the citizens
were earnest in defence. They not only kept their gates open, but made breaches
in the walls to facilitate the furious sallies which cost the besiegers
heavily. The latter retired, June 29th, under cover of the night, so hastily
that they abandoned their sick and wounded, having accomplished nothing except
the complete devastation of the land—dwellings, vineyards, orchards, women and
children were alike indiscriminately destroyed in their wrath—and de Montfort
turned from the scene of his defeat to carry the same ravage into Foix. This
final effort of self-defence was naturally construed as fautorship of heresy
and drew from Innocent a fresh excommunication of Raymond and of the city for persecuting
de Montfort and the Crusaders.
Encouraged
by his escape, Raymnond now took the offensive, but with little result. The
siege of Castelnaudary was a failure, and a good deal of desultory fighting occurred,
mostly to the advantage of de Montfort, whose military skill was exhibited to
the best advantage in his difficult position. The crusade was still industriously
preached throughout Christendom, and his forces were irregularly renewed with
fresh swarms of “pilgrims” for forty-days’ service, so that he would frequently
find himself at the head of a considerable army, which again would soon melt
away to a handful. To utilize this varying stream of strangers of all nationalities
in a difficult country which was bitterly hostile required capacity of a high
order, and de Montfort proved himself thoroughly equal to it. His opponents,
though frequently greatly superior in numbers, never ventured on a pitched
battle, and the war was one of sieges and devastations, conducted on both sides
with savage ferocity. Prisoners were frequently hanged, or less mercifully
blinded or mutilated, and mutual hate grew stronger and fiercer as de Montfort
gradually extended his boundaries and Raymond’s territories grew less and less.
The defection of his natural brother Baldwin, whom he had always treated with
suspicion, and who had been won over by de Montfort when captured at Montferrand,
before the siege of Toulouse, had been a severe blow to the national cause; how
deeply felt was seen when, in 1214, he was treacherously given up and Raymond
hanged him, with difficulty granting his last prayer for the consolations of
religion.
Early
in 1212 the Abbot of Vaux-Cernay received in the bishopric of Carcassonne the
reward of his zeal in furthering the crusade, and Legate Arnaud obtained the
great archbishopric of Narbonne on the death or degradation of the negligent
Berenger. Not content with the ecclesiastical dignity, Arnaud claimed to be
likewise duke, giving rise to a vigorous quarrel with de Montfort, who,
notwithstanding his devotion to the Church, had no intention of surrendering to
it his temporal possessions.
Possibly it was the commencement of coolness
between them that induced Arnaud to favor the crusade preached at the request
of Alonso IX of Castile, at that time threatened by a desperate effort of the
Moors, largely reinforced from Africa, to regain their Spanish possessions.
Much as de Montfort needed every man, the new Archbishop of Narbonne marched
into Spain at the head of a large force of Crusaders to swell the army with
which the kings of Aragon, Castile, and Navarre advanced against the Saracen.
It is characteristic of the tenacity of the man that, when the French
contingent grew weary of the service and refused to advance after the capture of
Calatrava, returning ingloriously home, Arnaud remained with those whom he
could persuade to stay, and shared in the glory of Las Navas de Tolosa, where a
cross in the sky encouraged the Christians, and two hundred thousand Moors were
slain.
The
spring and summer of 1212 saw an almost unbroken series of successes for de
Montfort, until Raymond’s territories were reduced to Montauban and Toulouse,
and the latter city, crowded with refugees from the neighboring districts, was
virtually beleaguered, as the Crusaders from their surrounding strongholds made
forays up to the very gates. De Montfort desired the papal confirmation of his
new acquisitions, and for this application was made to Rome by the legates.
Innocent seems to have been aroused to a sense of the scandal created by the
faithful carrying out of his policy, for Raymond, though constantly claiming a
trial, had never been heard or convicted, and yet had been punished by the
seizure of nearly all his dominions. Innocent accordingly assumed a tone of
grave surprise. It is true, he said, that the count had been found guilty of
many offences against the Church, for which he had been excommunicated and his
lands exposed to the first comer; but the loss of most of them had served as a
punishment, and it must be remembered that, although suspected of heresy and of
the murder of the legate, he had never been convicted, nor did the pope know
why his commands to afford him an opportunity of purging himself had never been
carried out. In the absence of a formal trial and conviction his lands could
not be adjudged to another. The proper forms must be observed, or the Church might
be deemed guilty of fraud in continuing to hold the castles made over to it in
pledge. Innocent evidently felt that his representatives, involved in the
passions and ambitions of the strife, had done what could not be justified, and
he wound up by ordering them to report to him the full and simple truth.
Another letter, in the same sense, to Master Theodisius and the Bishop of Riez,
cautioned them not to be remiss in their duty, as they were said to have thus
far been, which undoubtedly refers to their withholding from Raymond the
opportunity of justification. At the same time, a prolonged correspondence on
the subject of the hearth-tax, and the acceptance of an opportune donation of a
thousand marks from de Montfort, place Innocent in an unfortunate light as an
upright and impartial judge.
To
this Theodisius and the Bishop of Riez replied with the transparent falsehood
that they had not been remiss, but had repeatedly summoned Raymond to justify
himself, and that Raymond had neglected to make reparation to certain prelates
and churches, which was quite likely, seeing that de Montfort had been giving
him ample occupation. They proceeded, however, to make a bustling show of
activity in compliance with Innocent’s present commands, and they called a
council at Avignon to give a colorable pretext for pushing Raymond to the wall.
Avignon, however, was fortunately unhealthy, so that many prelates refused to
attend, and Theodisius had a timely sickness, rendering a postponement
necessary. Another council was therefore summoned to convene at Lavaur, a
castle not far from Toulouse, in the hands of de Montfort, who, at the request
of Pedro of Aragon, graciously granted an eight days’ suspension of hostilities
for the purpose.
INTERVENTION
OF KING PEDRO.
The
matter, in fact, had assumed a shape which could no longer be eluded. Pedro of
Aragon, fresh from the triumph of Las Navas, was a champion of the faith who was
not to be treated with contempt, and he had finally come forward as the
protector of Raymond and of his own vassals. As overlord he could not passively
see the latter stripped of their lands, and his interests in the whole region
were too great for him to view with indifference the establishment of so
overmastering a power as de Montfort was rapidly consolidating. The conquered
fiefs were being filled with Frenchmen; a parliament had just been held at
Pamiers to organize the institutions of the country on a French basis, and
everything looked to an overturning of the old order. It was full time for him
to act. He had already sent a mission to Innocent to complain of the
proceedings of the legates as arbitrary, unjust, and subversive of the true
interests of religion, and he came to Toulouse for the avowed purpose of
interceding for his ruined brother-in-law. By assuming this position he was
assuring the supremacy of the House of Aragon over that of Toulouse, with which
it had had so many fruitless struggles in the past.
Pedro’s
envoys drew from Innocent a command to de Montfort to give up all lands seized
from those who were not heretics, and instructions to Arnaud not to interfere
with the crusade against the Saracens by using indulgences to prolong the war
in the Toulousain. This action of Innocent, coupled with the powerful
intercession of Pedro, created a profound impression, and all the
ecclesiastical organization of Languedoc was summoned to meet the crisis. When
the council assembled at Lavaur, in January, 1213, a petition was presented by
King Pedro, humbly asking mercy rather than justice for the despoiled nobles.
He produced a formal cession executed by Raymond and his son and confirmed by
the city of Toulouse, together with similar cessions made by the Counts of Foix
and Comminges and by Gaston of Bearn, of all their lands, rights, and
jurisdictions to him, to do with as he might see fit in compelling them to obey
the commands of the pope in case they should prove recalcitrant. He asked
restitution of the lands conquered from them, on their rendering due
satisfaction to the Church for all misdeeds; and if Raymond could not be heard,
the proposal was made that he should retire in favor of his young son—the
father serving with his knights against the infidel in Spain or Palestine, and
the youth being retained in careful guardianship until he should show himself
worthy the confidence of the Church. All this, in fact, was virtually the same
as the offers already transmitted by Pedro to Innocent.
No
submission could be more complete; no guarantees more absolute could be
demanded. There was no pretence of shielding heretics, who could, under such a
settlement, be securely exterminated; but the prelates assembled at Lavaur
were under the domination of passions and ambitions and hatreds, the memory of
wrongs suffered and inflicted, and the dread of reprisals, which rendered them
deaf to everything that might interfere with the predetermined purpose. The
ruin of the house of Toulouse was essential to their comfort —they might well
believe even to their personal safety— and it was pressed unswervingly. As
legates, Master Theodisius and the Bishop of Riez presided, while the assembled
prelates of the land were led by the intractable Arnaud of Narbonne. All forms
were duly observed. The legates, as judges, asked the opinion of the prelates
as assessors, whether Raymond should be admitted to purgation. A written answer
was returned in the negative, not only for the reason previously alleged, that
he was too notorious a perjurer to be listened to, but also because of fresh
offences committed during the war, the slaying of Crusaders who were attacking
him being seriously included among his sins. As a further subterfuge it was
agreed that the excommunication under which he lay could only be removed by the
pope. Shielding themselves behind this answer, the legates notified Raymond
that they could proceed no further without special license from the pope —a
repetition of the eternal shifting of responsibility, like a shuttlecock from
one player in the game to another— and when Raymond implored for mercy and
begged an interview, he was coldly told that it would be useless trouble and
expense for both parties. There remained the appeal of King Pedro to be
disposed of, and this was treated with the same disingenuous evasion. The
prelates undertook to answer this without the legates, so as to be able to say
that Raymond's affairs were out of their hands, as he had himself committed
them to the legates; and, besides, his excesses had rendered him unworthy of
all mercy or kindness. As for the other three nobles, their crimes were
recited, especially their self-defence against the Crusaders, and it was added
that if they would satisfy the Church and obtain absolution, their complaints
would be hastened to; but no method was indicated by which absolution could be
obtained, and no notice was deigned to the guarantees offered in Pedro's
petition. Indeed, Arnaud of Narbonne, in his capacity of legate, wrote to him ill violent terms, threatening him with excommunication for consorting with
excommunicants and accused heretics, and his request for a truce until
Pentecost, or at least until Easter, was refused on the ground that it would
interfere with the success of the crusade, which was still preached in France
with a vigor justifying doubts of the sincerity of Innocent's orders to the
contrary.
THE BATTLE OF MURET.