Languedoc   Introduction   Things to See   Things to Do   Holidays   Languedoc Life   Getting There   Property   History   Cathars   Geography   Weather   More Info 





Cathars and Catharism in the Languedoc:   Cathar Castles:   Marmande

Marmande was a bastide founded about 1195 on the site of a more ancient town by King Richard I (Coeur de Lion or Lionheart).  It had passed into the hands of the counts of Toulouse, and was besieged three times during the Cathar crusades. 

In June 1219, the town had already been besieged for weeks by Amaury de Montfort when Louis, the king's son, Louis, arrived. Louis had been in England - and well on the way to winning the thone of England - largely at the invitation of the barons who had had enough of King John. But when John died suddenly in October 1216, the incomparable William Marshal stepped in as Regent for the infant King of England, Henry III. Not even kings relished the prospect of facing William Marshal and the whole purpose of Louis' presence in England was now gone. The young Louis was wise enough to make peace with and withdraw after a couple of quick but severe thumpings at the hands of Marshal.

Now Louis was in the Languedoc, a much better prospect for plunder having been exhaused by years of war waged by the French Catholic armies. He arrived with 20 bishops, 30 counts, 600 knights and 10,000 foot soldiers. 

The city of some 7000 people fell after the first assault, and was sacked.  The massacre that followed shocked even the crusaders' own allies.  Here is a contemporary account from the Song of the Cathar Wars (laisse 212): 

E comensa•l martiris e•l chaplamens temutz
Que•ls baros e la donas e los efans menutz
E•ls homes e las femnas, totz despulhatz e nutz,
Detrencan e detalhan am los brans esmolutz;
Ela carns e lo sancs e los cervels e•ls brucz
E membres e personas maitadatz e fendutz
E fetges e coradas decebratz e romputz
Estan per meg las plassas, co si eran plogutz,
Car de lo sanc espars qui lai s'es espandutz
Es la terra vermelha e•l sols e la palutz,
No i remas hom ni femna ni joves ni canutz.
Ni nulha creatura, si no s'es rescondutz.
La vila es destruita e lo focs escendutz.
Apres no tarzec gaire que lo reis es mogutz
    per venir a Tholoza.

…terror and massacre began; 
Lords, ladies and their little children,
Men and women stripped naked,
All were slashed and cut to shreds by keen edged swords. 
Flesh, blood, brains, torsos,
Limbs and faces hacked in two;
Lungs, livers and guts torn out and thrown away -
Laying on the open ground
As if they had rained down from the heavens. 
Marshland and firm ground, all was red with blood. 
Not a man or woman was left alive, neither young nor old,
No living creature, except perhaps some well-hidden infant. 
Marmond was razed and set alight
Very soon afterwards the king [Louis] left
    for Toulouse.

 



Back.   Back to: Toulouse  Up  a level to the main Cathar Castles page Next page: Castelnaudry  Castelnaudry.
Languedoc Home      About this Site      Site Map      Links      Contact Webmaster      Copyright and Legal      Search site for: 
The Languedoc: property,holidays,climate,naturist beaches,wildlife,wines,history,geography and Cathar castles: the Languedoc Home Page
 Level 1 -  Languedoc Home Page: Languedoc climate & weather, holidays & vacations, tourism & travel, naturism and naturist beaches,property & accomodation, Cathars & cathar castles, food & wine, history & geography, French sports & games, mountains & and lakes, and everyday life in the Languedoc-Roussillon in the South of France.
 Level 2 - Click here to go back to the main Cathars Page.
 Level 3 - Click here to go back to the main  Cathar Castles Page.
 Level 4 - Languedoc website. You are at level 4.
 Level 5 - Languedoc links not available from here.

Glossary of castle related terminology

   

Cathar Castles: Marmande