CHAPTER
IV
THE
ALBIGENSIAN CRUSADE.
8
SIMON DE MONTFORT
In
marked contrast with this splendid knight-errantry was the solid and earnest
character of de Montfort, who had distinguished himself, as was his wont, at
the siege of Carcassonne. He was the first to lead in the assault on the outer
suburb; and when an attack upon the second had been repulsed and a Crusader
was left writhing in the ditch with a broken thigh, de Montfort with a single
squire leaped back into it, under a shower of missiles, and bore him off in
safety. The younger son of the Count of Evreux, a descendant of Rollo the
Norman, he was Earl of Leicester by right of his mother the heiress, and had
won a distinguished name for prowess in the field and wisdom and eloquence in
the council. Religious to bigotry, he never passed a day without hearing mass;
and the true-hearted affection which his wife, Alice of Montmorency, bore him,
shows that his reputation for chastity—a rare virtue in those days—was probably
not undeserved.
In 1201 he had joined the crusade of Baldwin of Flanders; and
when, during the long detention in Venice, the Crusaders sold their services to
the Venetians for the destruction of Zara, de Montfort alone refused, saying
that he had come to fight the infidel and not to make war on Christians. He
left the host in consequence, made his way to Apulia, and with a few friends
took ship to Palestine, where he served the cross with honor. It is curious to
speculate what change there might have been in the destiny of both France and
England had he remained with the crusade to the capture of Constantinople, when
he, and his yet greater son, Simon of Leicester, might have founded principalities
in Greece or Thessaly and have worn out their lives in obscure and forgotten
conflicts.
When the Albigensian crusade was preached, one of the Cistercian
abbots who devoted himself most earnestly to the work was Gui of Vaux-Cernay,
who had been a Crusader with de Montfort at Venice. It was owing to his
persuasion that the Duke of Burgundy took the cross on the present occasion,
and he was the bearer of letters from the duke to de Montfort making him
splendid offers if he would likewise take up arms. At de Montfort’s castle of Rochefort,
Gui found the pious count in his oratory, and set forth the object of his mission.
De Montfort hesitated, and then, taking up a psalter, opened it at random and
placed his finger on a verse which he asked the abbot to translate for him. It
read :
“For
he shall give his angels charge over thee, to keep thee in all thy ways. They
shall bear thee in their hands, that thou hurt not thy foot against a stone” .XCI.
The
divine encouragement was manifest. De Montfort took the cross, which was to be
his life’s work, and the brilliant valor of the Catalan knight proved no match
for the deep earnestness of the Norman, who felt himself an instrument in the
hand of God.
With
the capture of Carcassonne the Crusaders seem to have felt that their mission
was accomplished; at least, the brief service of forty days which sufficed to
earn the pardon was rendered, and they were eager to return home. The legate
naturally held that the conquered territory was to be so occupied and organized
that heresy should have no further foothold there, and it was offered first to
the Duke of Burgundy and then successively to the Counts of Nevers and St. Pol,
but all were too wary to be tempted, and alleged in refusal that the Viscount
of Beziers had already been sufficiently punished. Then two bishops and four
knights, with Arnaud at their head, were appointed to select the one on whom
the confiscated land should be bestowed; and these seven, under the manifest
influence of the Holy Ghost, unanimously selected de Montfort. We may well
believe, from his reputation for sagacity, that his unwillingness to accept the
offer was unfeigned, and that after prayers had proved unavailing, he yielded
only to the absolute commands of the legate, speaking with all the authority of
the Holy See. He made it a condition, however, that the continued and efficient
support which he foresaw would be requisite should be given him. This was duly
promised, with little intention of fulfillment. The Count of Severs, between
whom and the Duke of Burgundy a mortal quarrel had arisen, withdrew almost immediately
after the capture of Carcassonne, and with him the great body of the Crusaders.
The duke remained for a short time, when he likewise turned his face homewards,
and de Montfort was left with but about forty-five hundred men, mostly
Burgundians and Germans, for whose services he was obliged to
offer double pay.
De
Montfort’s position was perilous in the extreme. It mattered
little that in August, during the full flush of success, the legates had held a council
in Avignon which ordered all bishops to swear every knight, noble, and magistrate
in their dioceses to exterminate heresy, or that such an oath had already been
forced upon Montpelier and other cities which were trembling before the wrath
to come. Such oaths, extorted by fear, were but an empty form, and the homage
which de Montfort received from his new vassals was equally
hollow It is true that he regulated his boundaries with Raymond,
who promised to marry his son with de Montfort’s daughter, and he styled
himself Viscount of Beziers and Carcassonne, but Pedro of Aragon refused to
receive his homage, and secretly comforted the castellans who still held out
with promises of early assistance, hile
others who had submitted revolted, and castles which had been occupied were recaptured.
The country was recovering
from its terror. An annoying partisan warfare sprang up; small parties of his
men were cut off, and his rule extended no farther than the reach of his lance.
At one time it was with difficulty that he
restrained those who were with him in Carcassonne from flight; and when he set
forth to besiege Termes it was almost impossible to find a
knight willing to assume command of Carcassonne, so dangerous was the post
considered. Yet with all this he succeeded in subduing additional strongholds,
and extended his dominion over the Albigeois and into the territory of the Count of Foix. He hastened, moreover, to acquire the good graces of
Innocent, whose confirmation of his new dignity was requisite, and whose
influence for further succor he earnestly implored. All tithes and
first-fruits were to be rigorously paid to the churches; any one remaining
under excommunication for forty days was to be heavily fined according to his
station; Rome, in return for the treasures of salvation so lavishly expended,
was to receive from a devastated land an annual tax of three deniers on every
hearth, while a yearly tribute from the count himself was vaguely promised. To
this, in November, Innocent replied, full of joy at the wonderful success which
had wrested five hundred cities and castles from the grasp of heretics. He
graciously accepted the offered tribute, and confirmed de Montfort’s title to
both Beziers and Albi, with an adjuration to be sleepless in the extirpation of
heresy; but he could scarce have appreciated the Crusader’s perilous position,
for he excused himself from efficient aid on the score of complaints which
reached him from Palestine that the succor sorely needed there had been
diverted to subdue heretics nearer home. He therefore only called upon the
Emperor Otho, the Kings of Aragon and Castile, and sundry cities and nobles
from whom no real aid could be expected. The archbishops of the whole infected
region were directed to persuade their clergy to contribute to him a portion of
their revenues, and his troops were exhorted to be patient and to ask no pay
until the following Easter; neither of which requests were likely to yield
results. Somewhat more fruitful was the release of all Crusaders from any
obligations which they might have assumed to pay interest on sums borrowed; but
the most practical measure was one which forcibly illustrates the friendly and
confidential intercourse which had existed between the heretics and the clergy
in southern France, for all abbots and prelates throughout Narbonne, Beziers,
Toulouse, and Albi were directed to confiscate for de Montfort’s benefit all
deposits placed by obstinate heretics for safe-keeping in their hands, the
amount of which was said to be considerable.
After
losing most of his conquests, de Montfort’s position became more hopeful
towards the spring of 1210, as his forces were swelled by the arrival of
successive bands of “pilgrims”—as these peaceful folk were accustomed to style
themselves—and his ambitions views expanded. The short term for which the
cross was assumed rendered it necessary to turn the new-comers to immediate
account, and de Montfort was unceasingly active in recovering his ground and in
reducing the castles which still held out. It is not worth our while to follow
in detail these exploits of military religious ardor, which, when successful,
were usually crowned by putting the garrison to the sword and offering the
non-combatants the choice between obedience to Rome and the stake—a choice which
gave occasion to zealous martyrdom on the part of hundreds of obscure and
forgotten enthusiasts. Lavaur, Minerve, Casser, Termes, are names which suggest
all that man can inflict and man can suffer for the glory of God. The spirit of
the respective parties was well exhibited at the capitulation of Minerve, where
Robert Mauvoisin, de Montfort’s most faithful follower, objected to the clause
which spared the heretics who should recant, and was told by Legate Arnaud that
he need not fear the conversion of many, as ample experience had shown their
prevailing obstinacy. Arnaud was right; for, with the exception of three
women, they unanimously refused to secure safety by apostasy, and saved their
captors the trouble of casting them on the blazing pyre by leaping exultingly
into the flames. If the playful zeal of the pilgrims sometimes manifested
itself in eccentric fashion, as when they blinded the monks of Bolbonne and cut
off their noses and ears till there was scarce a trace of the human visage
left, we must remember the sources whence the Church drew her recruits, and
the immunity which she secured for them, here and hereafter.
RAYMOND
DEMANDS A HEARING