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Innocent
III, was born Lotario de' Conti, son of Count Trasimund
of Segni and nephew of Pope Clement III. Innocent
was a keen supporter of Crusades, including the disastrous
Fourth Crusade.
Mass desertions from the Roman Church to the Cathars in the Languedoc (and the consequent loss of prestige and revenue) had already suggested to him the idea of a Crusade against his fellow Christians. Arnaud Amaury, Abbot of Cîteaux had been conducting a preaching campaign that had proved an even greater failure than the one run by Dominic Guzman (St-Dominic).
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The luxurious lifestyle of Arnaud and his Cistercian monks excited mockery rather than envy in the Languedoc. Arnaud, personally humiliated, was now out for blood. The murder of a papal legate - a Cistercian monk - provided the ideal excuse for action. At Arnaud's prompting, Innocent III ordered a crusade against the people of the Languedoc. Their sovereign, Raymond VI, Count of Toulouse, appealed for an impartial investigation. Innocent sent a lawyer called Milo, ostensibly to to carry out a fair assessment, but with secret instructions to take orders from Arnaud - Raymond's mortal enemy. Arnaud was therefore able to slake his thirst for blood and was soon leading the papal crusade. He personally adopted the role of its first military commander. His crusader troops - the dregs of France - enjoyed the same privileges as those who fought the Moslems. Killing Cathars, like killing Moslems, assured the killer the highest place in Heaven. |
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Innocent III opened the Fourth Lateran Council on 15 November 1215. This was the most important council of the Middle Ages. Besides deciding on another crusade to the Holy Land, it issued seventy decrees, the first of which was a creed (Firmiter credimus) against the Cathars and Waldensians, in which the term "transubstantiation" received its first ecclesiastical sanction. Click on the following link to read a more detailed
article about Pope
Innocent III Click on the following link for a translation of
Canon
Three of the Fourth Lateran Council (1215)
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