In 1208 Pope Innocent III called for a Crusade--this time, against a
country of fellow Christians. The new enemy: Raymond VI, Count of
Toulouse, prince of all the territories in southern France where the
langue d'oc was spoken. Thus began the Albigensian Crusade, which
culminated in 1244 at the mountain fortress of Montsegur with the
massacre of the Cathars, or "pure ones"--a faith more ancient than Roman
Catholicism. This fascinating history captures all the drama of a
conflict that threatened not only a religion but the very survival of
the Languedoc itself as an autonomous region of France.