The Albigensian Crusade
By (Author) Jonathan Sumption
Faber & Faber
Faber & Faber
1st July 2005
23rd August 1999
Main
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
944.802
Paperback
288
Width 135mm, Height 217mm, Spine 20mm
340g
Languedoc is among the most varied and beautiful parts of France, but eight centuries ago it was far from certain that it would become part of France at all. The rich, semi-independent principality on the Mediterranean, ruled by the house of Toulouse, seemed far apart from the world of the feudal north. It was here that a persuasive heresy of eastern origin challenged the orthodoxy of Catholicism. For more than fifty years the Church retreated in the face of a rival whose teaching appeared to question the very foundations of Christian thought. Finally, in 1208, the Church proclaimed a crusade against the "infidels". This is an account of the ensuing war and the concomitant destruction of the Languedoc cultural tradition - a tradition that created the troubador, the basilica of Saint Sernin, and the castles of Cabaret and Carcassonne.
"An admirably luicid account of the tragic demise of Languedoc's unique civilisation . . . Scholarship carried with elan."--"R.L. Storey, The Times (London)"
"Excellent . . . A model of sound history written with style and intelligence for the non-specialist reader."--"Listener"
"Sumption writes with fluent scholarship and with amiable and ironic succinctness. He never fails to keep his narrative lively with the particular and the pertinent. He is excellent on the tactics and spirit of medieval warfare."
--Frederic Raphael, "Sunday Times"
Jonathan Sumption is a former History Fellow of Magdalen College, Oxford, and a practising QC. He is the author of Pilgrimage and The Albigensian Crusade, as well as the first three volumes in his celebrated history of the Hundred Years War - Trial by Battle, Trial by Fire and Divided Houses. He was awarded the 2009 Wolfson History Prize for Divided Houses.