Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Questions about the Cathars
- 2 The Paradigm of Catharism; or, the Historians’ Illusion
- 3 The Cathar Middle Ages as a Methodological and Historiographical Problem
- 4 The Heretical Dissidence of the ‘Good Men’ in the Albigeois (1276–1329): Localism and Resistance to Roman Clericalism
- 5 The Heretici of Languedoc: Local Holy Men and Women or Organized Religious Group? New Evidence from Inquisitorial, Notarial and Historiographical Sources
- 6 Cathar Links with the Balkans and Byzantium
- 7 Pseudepigraphic and Parabiblical Narratives in Medieval Eastern Christian Dualism, and their Implications for the Study of Catharism
- 8 The Cathars from Non-Catholic Sources
- 9 Converted-Turned-Inquisitors and the Image of the Adversary: Ranier Sacconi Explains Cathars
- 10 The Textbook Heretic: Moneta of Cremona's Cathars
- 11 ‘Lupi rapaces in ovium vestimentis’: Heretics and Heresy in Papal Correspondence
- 12 Looking for the ‘Good Men’ in the Languedoc: An Alternative to ‘Cathars’?
- 13 Principles at Stake: The Debate of April 2013 in Retrospect
- 14 Goodbye to Catharism?
- Index
- Miscellaneous Endmatter
3 - The Cathar Middle Ages as a Methodological and Historiographical Problem
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 31 March 2017
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Questions about the Cathars
- 2 The Paradigm of Catharism; or, the Historians’ Illusion
- 3 The Cathar Middle Ages as a Methodological and Historiographical Problem
- 4 The Heretical Dissidence of the ‘Good Men’ in the Albigeois (1276–1329): Localism and Resistance to Roman Clericalism
- 5 The Heretici of Languedoc: Local Holy Men and Women or Organized Religious Group? New Evidence from Inquisitorial, Notarial and Historiographical Sources
- 6 Cathar Links with the Balkans and Byzantium
- 7 Pseudepigraphic and Parabiblical Narratives in Medieval Eastern Christian Dualism, and their Implications for the Study of Catharism
- 8 The Cathars from Non-Catholic Sources
- 9 Converted-Turned-Inquisitors and the Image of the Adversary: Ranier Sacconi Explains Cathars
- 10 The Textbook Heretic: Moneta of Cremona's Cathars
- 11 ‘Lupi rapaces in ovium vestimentis’: Heretics and Heresy in Papal Correspondence
- 12 Looking for the ‘Good Men’ in the Languedoc: An Alternative to ‘Cathars’?
- 13 Principles at Stake: The Debate of April 2013 in Retrospect
- 14 Goodbye to Catharism?
- Index
- Miscellaneous Endmatter
Summary
Introduction: making and unmaking heresies
We have been here before. Ideas and arguments transmigrate between locales, reappearing reworked in different contexts, undoubtedly changed somewhat but hopefully subtly improved with each cycle of rebirth and revision. The sense of ‘heresy’ as a construct of orthodoxy – accompanied in its strongest (‘absolute’) version by the implication that the reality of heresy is ‘made up’ by orthodoxy – is not by any means limited to current debate around Catharism. Other ‘heresies’ in other times and places have similarly been taken apart, demonstrated to be wholly or (in the ‘mitigated’ version of the idea) partly phantasmic, and then, after a pause, often put back together again, albeit differently and more subtly, in a rush of post-revisionist enthusiasm.
One of the earliest and most influential incarnations of the debate was Robert Lerner's demonstration, in 1972, that the ‘Heresy of the Free Spirit’ was an inquisitorial fantasy, woven together from disparate threads of lay reformist enthusiasm, torture, and the willingness of a few idiosyncratic witnesses to flesh out the picture in accord with the inquisitor's script. Ten years later there followed, of course, R. I. Moore's hugely inspiring analysis of how medieval Europe became a ‘persecuting society’, and how, in so doing, it amplified and fantasized elements and connections (rhetorical or real) between disparate marginal groups. Discussion of late antique heresiography – ‘handbooks of heresy’ and the like – has long recognized that, in a period when orthodoxy was notably fluid, a main purpose of such texts was to provide rhetorical tools for the denunciation of one's opponents, and in that sense to ‘make up’ at least the more outre and scurrilous elements of the heresies they condemned. More recently Karen King has given us a very interesting sense of what this means for the reality or otherwise of one particular heresy itself. To zoom to the other chronological pole of these debates, for some long while early modernists have been arguing over the reality or otherwise of ‘Puritanism’ and of particular Puritan sects.
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- Information
- Cathars in Question , pp. 53 - 78Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2016