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Who's Who In The Cathar War:   French Kings

Philip II: (Philip Augustus, reigned 1180-1223). Though pressured by Innocent III to take an active role in the Crusade against the Cathars, Philip repeatedly declined, though he did encourage his vassals to join the crusade.

Seal of Prince Louis (later Louis VIII). Louis VIII: (1223-1226). Louis was a more active crusader, and distinguished himself by massacres that disturbed even his own war hardened troops, notably the atrocity at Marmande, in 1219. He died on his way back to France from the Languedoc after a reign of only 3 years.

Blanche de Castile (1188-1252), Regent of France (1226-1236). Blanche was the third daughter of Alphonso VIII, King of Castile, and of Eleanor of England, daughter of Henry II.  Under a treaty between Philip Augustus and King John of England, she had married Louis VIII. When Philip died Louis, their son and the heir to Kingdom of France (Louis IX), was twelve years old.  Blanche ruled as regent until he came of age in 1236.  She proved an effective ruler, breaking up a league of the barons (1226), repelling King Henry III of England (1230), and extracting favourable terms from her close relative Ramon (or Raymond) VII of Toulouse, with help from the papal legate Frangipani, following further military action in the Languedoc. It was the legate who received the submission of Raymond VII at Paris, in front of Notre-Dame.  This submission put an end to the Second Cathar war and prepared the annexation of the Languedoc to France by the Treaty of Paris (April 1229).

The saintly king supervising the burning alive of men for the crime of holding opinions that differed from those of the Catholic ChurchLouis IX: (1215-1270), St Louis, King of France (1236-1270). The regency of Blanche of Castile (1226-1234) had been marked by the victorious struggle of the Crown against Raymond VII.  In the first years of the king's personal government, the Crown fought off an attack led by the Count de la Marche, in league with Raymond's close relative, Henry III, King of England.  St. Louis's victory over this coalition at Taillebourg, 1242, destroyed any hope of success for the uprising planned in Ramon VII's territories to expel the French invaders. 

Some actions during this period were led by Hughes des Arcis, the King's representative (seneschal of Carcassonne). For example he led the siege of the Château of Montségur ( The Name in Occitan. Click here to find out more about occitan. Montsegùr) in 1243-4.

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Arms of the Kings of France.
   


Who's Who
in the War

Blanche
de Castile