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Montaillou: Cathars and Catholics in a French Village, 1294-1324 Pdf FREE MONTAILLOU: CATHARS AND CATHOLICS IN A FRENCH VILLAGE, 1294-1324 PDF Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie,Barbara Bray | 400 pages | 30 Aug 1990 | Penguin Books Ltd | 9780140137002 | English | London, United Kingdom [PDF] Montaillou, Cathars and Catholics in a French village, | Semantic Scholar Cookies are used to provide, analyse and improve our services; provide chat tools; and show you relevant content on advertising. You can learn more about 1294-1324 use of cookies here. Are you happy to accept all cookies? Accept all Manage Cookies Cookie Preferences We use cookies and similar tools, including those used by approved third parties collectively, "cookies" for the purposes described below. You can learn more about how we plus approved third 1294-1324 use cookies and how to change your settings by visiting the Cookies notice. The choices you make here will apply to your interaction with this service on this device. 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Home Contact us Help Free delivery worldwide. Free delivery worldwide. Bestselling Series. Harry Potter. Popular Features. Home Learning. Montaillou : Cathars and Catholics in a French Village Description An enthralling account of day-to-day life in a medieval French village. Using records gathered by the Catholic Church in its pursuit of heretics, the book recreates the lives of a 1294-1324 cast of village characters. Table of contents Part 1 The ecology of Montaillou - the house and the shepherd: environment and authority; the domus; a dominant house - the Clergue family; the shepherds; the great migrations; the life of the shepherds in the Pyrenees; the shepherd's mental outlook. Part 2 An archaeology of Montaillou - from body language to myth: body language and sex; the libido of the Clergues; temporary unions; marriage and love; marriage 1294-1324 the condition of women; childhood and other ages in life; death in Montaillou; cultural exchanges; social relationships; concepts of time and space; fate, magic and salvation; religion in practice; morality, wealth and labour; magic and the other world. He is a professor atthe College de France and chair of the department of the History of Modern Civilization. Rating details. Book ratings by Goodreads. Goodreads is the world's largest site for readers with over 50 million reviews. We're featuring millions of their reader ratings on our book pages to help you find your new favourite book. Close X. Learn about 1294-1324 offers and get more deals by Montaillou: Cathars and Catholics in a French Village our newsletter. Sign up now. Follow us. Coronavirus delivery updates. Montaillou: The Promised Land of Error by Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie Goodreads helps you keep track of books you want to read. Want to Read saving…. Want to Read Currently Reading Read. Other editions. Enlarge cover. Error rating book. Refresh and try again. Open Preview See a Problem? Details if other :. Thanks for telling Montaillou: Cathars and Catholics in a French Village about the problem. Return to Book Page. Barbara Bray translator. Get A Copy. Paperbackpages. More Details Original Title. Pope Benedict XII. Montaillou France. Other Editions Friend Reviews. To see what your friends thought of this book, please sign up. To ask other readers questions about Montaillouplease sign up. Lists with This Book. Community Reviews. Showing Average rating 3. Rating details. More filters. Sort order. Montaillou was a small community of some souls, farmers and shepherds, of no particular interest except that it became the subject of this extraordinarily detailed and exhaustive inquisition. I purchased this book on a whim about twenty years ago. The sad looking ruin on a rather desolate hillside appealed to me for some obscure reason as did the subject of the Cathars and catholics during the mediaeval period. Unfortunately it has lain lost and forlorn on one of my upper bookshelves where only dust has kept it company all these years. Yes, the reason I discovered it was that I was dusting that section of the Montaillou: Cathars and Catholics in a French Village shelf, just below the ceiling. They did not go bathing or swimming. On the other hand, there was a great deal of delousing, which was an ingredient of friendship, whether heretical or purely social. Remarkable really. The Clergues, as leading citizens, had no difficulty in finding women to relieve them of their insect life. As we are dealing with heresy here, there is an excellent glossary at the end which shows which of the main families were, or were not, heretical households. On reflection, yes, this book on the one hand Montaillou: Cathars and Catholics in a French Village somewhat dry in parts but then on the other, this is one of those books that can be opened at any chapter and will continually interest the reader. View all 8 comments. Into the Pyrenees, almost every wooded slope is topped with a picturesque ruined chateau. Which in itself is a bit weird. But Catharism has become a tourist attraction. The Cathars are hailed as an inspiration by various neo-Gnostic groups, praised for their pioneering vegetarianism, their feminism, their antiestablishment free-thinking, their nature-loving eco-friendliness, take your pick. It's a strange fate for a movement that was an almost unbroken record of suffering and repression for over a century. The Catholic Church had identified it as a clear heresy back in the s, and a twenty-year Crusade was duly waged against the Cathars of Languedoc from — — after which it lingered in scattered remote parts of the Pyrenees until the Inquisition burned the last few believers in the early s. By the mid-fourteenth century it was all over. Why was it such a problem? Obviously this wouldn't sit well with the Church establishment, but it still seems rather strange to think of them launching a Crusade — an actual Crusade, with crusading knights, like what they sent to Jerusalem! The key to understanding this Montaillou: Cathars and Catholics in a French Village to wander round Languedoc and appreciate that the whole area, in the thirteenth century, was not France but rather a massive patchwork of little semi-independent feudal territories of which Andorra has somehow survived to Montaillou: Cathars and Catholics in a French Village present day; to imagine early-medieval Languedoc, start by picturing a network of Andorras. Even at the height of Catharism, Cathar believers were probably never a majority, and they certainly weren't 1294-1324 the time of the Crusade against them. The sieges and battles of the Albigensian Crusade were never about Christian armies fighting Cathar armies: they were about French armies fighting Occitanian armies. It's the 1294-1324 that before the Crusade, the area was owned by the Counts of Toulouse, the Trencavel viscounts, the Aragonese king, and so on; after the Crusade, it was all owned by France. This political dimension was clear from what happened after the battles. Statutes introduced by Simon de Montford the legendarily ruthless early leader of the Crusadefor instance, banned Occitanian noblewomen from marrying local men; instead, they had to give their hands, and their tempting dowries, to Frenchmen. Which is not to say that religion was not a factor; in fact, it may be that the cruelty of the Crusade can only be explained with some reference 1294-1324 religious fanaticism. Twenty thousand people were massacred. It was just the first of many disproportionate and unpleasant acts that would characterise the whole conflict. But the story of Catharism has an interesting postscript, which O'Shea covers Montaillou: Cathars and Catholics in a French Village a brief final chapter and which is dealt with more fully by Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie in his classic microhistory Montaillou. Montaillou Montaillou: Cathars and Catholics in a French Village a tiny village in the mountains, where it seems that Catharism lingered on into the 1294-1324 we know this because the entire village was eventually rounded up and questioned by the Bishop of Pamiers, working in conjunction with the Inquisition in Carcassonne.
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