CHAPTER
IV
THE
ALBIGENSIAN CRUSADE.
7
NATIONAL
CHARACTER OF THE WAR.
The
war, it should be observed, despite its religious origin, was already assuming
a national character. The position taken by Raymond and the rejected submission
of the Viscount of Beziers, in fact, deprived the Church of all colorable
excuse for further action; but the men of the North were eager to complete the
conquest commenced seven centuries before by Clovis, and the men of the South,
Catholics as well as heretics, were virtually unanimous in resisting the
invasion, notwithstanding the many pledges given by nobles and cities at the
commencement. We hear nothing of religious dissensions among them, and
comparatively little of assistance rendered to the invaders by the orthodox,
who might be presumed to welcome the Crusaders as liberators from the domination
or the presence of a hated antagonistic faith. Toleration had become habitual
and race-instinct was too strong for religious feeling, presenting almost the
solitary example of the kind during the Middle Ages, when nationality had not
yet been developed out of feudalism and religious interests were universally
regarded as dominant. This explains the remarkable fact that the pusillanimous
course of Raymond was distasteful to his own subjects, who were constantly
urging him to resistance, and who clung to him and his son with a fidelity that
no misfortune or selfishness could shake, until the extinction of the House of
Toulouse left them without a leader.
Raymond
Roger of Beziers had fortified and garrisoned his capital, and then, to the
great discouragement of his people, had withdrawn to the safer stronghold of
Carcassonne. Reginald, Bishop of Beziers, was with the crusading forces, and
when they arrived before the city, humanely desiring to save it from destruction, he
obtained from the legate authority to offer it full exemption if the heretics,
of whom he had a list, were delivered up or expelled. Nothing could be more
moderate, from the crusading standpoint, but when he entered the town and
called the chief inhabitants together the offer was unanimously spurned.
Catholic and Catharan were too firmly united in the bonds of common citizenship
for one to betray the other. They would, as they magnanimously declared,
although abandoned by their lord, rather defend themselves to such extremity
that they should be reduced to eat their children. This unexpected answer
stirred the legate to such wrath that he swore to destroy the place with fire
and sword—to spare neither age nor sex, and not to leave one stone upon
another. While the chiefs of the army were debating as to the next step,
suddenly the camp-followers, a vile and unarmed folk as the legates reported,
inspired by God, made a rush for the walls and carried them, without orders
from the leaders and without their knowledge. The army followed, and the
legate’s oath was fulfilled by a massacre almost without parallel in European
history. From infancy in arms to tottering age, not one was spared—seven
thousand, it is said, were slaughtered in the Church of Mary Magdalen to which
they had fled for asylum—and the total number of slain is set down by the
legates at nearly twenty thousand, which is more probable than the sixty
thousand or one hundred thousand reported by less trustworthy chroniclers.
A
fervent Cistercian contemporary informs us that when Arnaud was asked whether
the Catholics should be spared, he feared the heretics would escape by feigning
orthodoxy, and fiercely replied, “kill them all, for God knows his own!” In the
mad carnage and pillage the town was set on fire, and the sun of that awful
July day closed on a mass of smoldering ruins and blackened corpses—a holocaust
to a deity of mercy and love whom the Cathari might well be pardoned for
regarding as the Principle of Evil. To the orthodox the whole was so manifestly
the work of God that the Crusaders did not doubt that the blessing of Heaven attended
their arms. Indeed, other miracles were not wanting to encourage them. Although
in their senseless havoc they destroyed all the mills within their reach, bread
was always miraculously plentiful and cheap in the camp—thirty loaves for a
denier was the ordinary price; and during the whole campaign it was noted as an
encouragement from heaven that no vulture, or crow, or other bird ever flew
over the host.
Similar
good-fortune had attended the smaller crusading armies on their way to join
the main body. One, under the Viscount of Turenne and Gui d'Auvergne, had
captured the almost impregnable castle of Chasseneuil after a short siege. The
garrison obtained terms and were allowed to depart, but the inhabitants were
left to the discretion of the conquerors. The choice between conversion and
the stake was offered them, and, proving obstinate in their errors, they were
pitilessly burned—an example which was generally followed.
The other force,
under the Bishop of Puy, had put to ransom Caussade and St. Antonin, and was
generally censured for this misplaced avaricious mercy. Such terror pervaded
the land that when a fugitive came to the Castle of Villemur falsely reporting
that the Crusaders were coming and would treat it like the rest, the
inhabitants abandoned it under cover of the night and themselves set it on
fire. Innumerable strongholds, in fact, were surrendered without a blow, or
were found vacant, though amply provisioned and strengthened for a siege, and a
mountainous region bristling with castles, which would have cost years to
conquer if obstinately defended, was occupied in a campaign of a month or two.
The populous and mutinous town of Narbonne, to save itself, adopted the
severest laws against heresy, raised a large subvention in aid of the crusade,
and surrendered sundry castles as security.
SIEGE
OF CARCASSONNE.
Without
dallying over the ruins of Beziers, the Crusaders, still under the guidance of
Raymond, moved swiftly to Carcassonne, a place regarded as impregnable, where
Raymond Roger had elected to make his final stand. The wiser heads among the invaders,
looking to a permanent occupation of the country, had no desire to repeat the
example already given, and have on their hands a land without defenses.
Arriving before the walls on August 1st, only nine days after the sack of
Beziers, a regular siege was commenced. The outer suburb, which was scarce
defensible, was carried and burned after a desperate resistance. The second suburb,
strongly fortified, cost a prolonged effort, in which all the resources of the
military art of the day were brought into play on both sides, and when it was
no longer tenable the besieged evacuated and burned it. There remained the
city itself, the capture of which seemed hopeless.
Tradition related that
Charlemagne had vainly besieged it for seven years and had finally become its
master only by a miracle. Terms were offered to the viscount; he was free to
depart with eleven of his own choosing, if the city and its people were
abandoned to the discretion of the Crusaders, but he rejected the proposal with
manly indignation. Still, the situation was becoming insupportable; the town
was crowded with refugees from the surrounding country; the summer had been cursed
with drought, and the water supply had given out, causing a pestilence under
which the wretched people were daily dying by scores. In his anxiety for peace
the young viscount allowed himself to be decoyed into the besieging camp, where
he was treacherously detained as a prisoner—dying shortly after, it was said,
of dysentery, but not without well-grounded suspicions of foul play. Deprived
of their chief, the people lost heart; but to avoid the destruction of the
city, they were allowed to depart, carrying with them nothing but their
sins—the men in their breeches and the women in their chemises—and the place
was occupied without further struggle. Curiously enough, we hear nothing of any
investigation into their faith, or any burning of heretics.
The
siege of Carcassonne brings before us two men, with whom we shall have much to
do hereafter, representing so typically the opposing elements in the contest
that we may well pause for a moment to give them consideration. These are Pedro
II of Aragon and Simon de Montfort. Pedro was the suzerain of Beziers, and the
young viscount was bound to him with ties of close friendship. Though when
appealed to in advance for aid he had declined, yet when he heard of the sack
of Beziers he hurried to Carcassonne to mediate if possible for his vassal,
though his efforts were fruitless. He was everywhere regarded as a model for
the chivalry of the South. Heroic in stature and trained in every knightly
accomplishment, he was ever in the front of battle; and on the tremendous day
of Las Navas de Tolosa, which broke the Moorish power in Spain, it was he, by
common consent, among all the kings and nobles present, who won the loftiest
renown. In the bower he was no less dangerous than in the field. His
gallantries were countless, and his licentiousness notorious, even in that age
of easy morals. He was munificent to prodigality, fond of magnificent display,
courteous to all comers, and magnanimous to all enemies. Like his father,
Alonso II, moreover, he was a troubadour, and his songs won applause, none the
less hearty, perhaps, that he was a liberal patron of rival poets. With all
this his religious zeal was ardent, and he gloried in the title of el Catolico.
This he manifested not only in the savage edict against the Waldenses, referred
to in a previous chapter, but by an extraordinary act of devotion to the Holy
See.
In 1095 his ancestor, Pedro I, had placed the kingdom of Aragon under the
special protection of the popes, from whom his successors were to receive it
on their accession and to pay an annual tribute of five hundred mancuses. In
1204 Pedro II resolved to perform this act of fealty in person. With a splendid
retinue he sailed for Rome, where he took an oath of allegiance to Innocent,
including a pledge to persecute heresy. He was crowned with a crown of
unleavened bread, and received from the pope the sceptre, mantle, and other royal
insignia, which he reverently laid upon the altar of St. Peter, to whom he
offered his kingdom, taking in lieu his sword from Innocent, subjecting his realm
to an annual tribute, and renouncing all rights of patronage over churches and
benefices. As an equivalent for all this he was satisfied with the title of
First Alferez or Standard-bearer of the Church and the privilege for his
successors of being crowned by the Archbishop of Tarragona in his cathedral
church.
The nobles of Aragon, however, regarded this as an inadequate return
for the taxes occasioned by his etravagance and for the loss of Church
patronage, and their dissatisfaction was expressed in forming the confederation
known as La Union, which for generations was of dangerous import to his successors.
Impulsive and generous, Pedro’s career reads like a romance of chivalry, and,
with such a character, it was impossible for him to avoid participating in the
Albigensian wars, in which he had a direct interest, owing to his claims upon
Provence, Montpellier, Bearn, Roussillon, Gascony, Comminges, and Beziers.
SIMON DE MONTFORT.