|
Castle of Les Cassés (
Castèl de Les Cassés Vielh)
Les Cassés is a commune in the Aude départementet
of the Languedoc-Roussillon région. The modern village of
around 200 occupants lies a couple of miles away from a Medieval
Village of the same name. Nothing remains of the ancient village,
Les Cassés Vielh, except the spur of land on which
it sat, and the foundations of its windmill. The site of the castrum
is now known as "Le Fort".
The castrum was commanded by Raymond and Bernard de Roqueville,
who held it under the suzerainity of Raymond VI, Count of Toulouse.
In 1211 the village, a castrum, sheltered some 94 Cathars. After
the fall of Lavaur and the massacre at Montgey, Simon de Montfort
and his Crusaders besieged the castrum, on 20 May 2011, taking it,
and burning alive 60 Cathar Parfaits who declined to abjure their
faith. According to The
Song of the Cathar Wars the Cathars were led out of the village
. A large fire was lit, and the unfortunates were burned alive "with
great joy".
The Crusaders went on the besiege Montferrand, Commanded by Baudouin,
brother of the Count of Toulouse.
See sepate sections below on:
Address / Maps
/ Location
History
Architecture
Photographs
|
|
|
Location
Cassés owes its name to the Occitan Casse, meaning oak,
so the town's name translates as The Oaks.
The village lies in the Lauragais on the Rigole de la Plaine,
near to the boundary of the Haute-Garonne département.
We do not know exactly where the burnings took place, but in 1985
during the creation of irrigation channels, layers of ash 10 cm
thick were found in two different places, stretching for 15 to 20
meters. (Scandalously, no analysis was performed to date the ashes)
|
|
|
History
A reconstruction of the ancient castrum,
perched on its spur, based on tax records.
In 1542 there were 38 small houses, plus two in ruins ("lougades")
. It was still protected by a ditch ("valat") and
a rear-ditch ("reyre valat").
There were 11 further houses and a windmill outside the defences.
Records from 1592 mention a barbican and
three tours.
|
|
Pre Cathar Period
A text of 1199 relates a curious incident at Cassés. The
castrum was besieged by enemies, but the lords of Cassés
were not there to protect it. In their absence, the wife of Raymond
VI, Jeanne of England (sister of Richard Coeur de Lion) defended
it. Although "full of courage and zeal" she was betrayed
by her own forces. She was obliged to surrender and was lucky to
escape with her life.
The Cathar Period
During the early years of the Cathar Crusade, the castrum of Les
Cassés was command by Raymond and Bernard de Roqueville,
who held it under the suzerainity of Raymond VI, Count of Toulouse.
In 1211 the village, a castrum, sheltered some 94 Cathars.
After the fall of Lavaur and the massacre at Montgey, Simon de
Montfort and his Crusaders besieged the castrum. The Count of Toulouse,
at Castelnaudary, did not come to the aid of his vassals. The crusaders
took it on 20 May 2011, and burning alive 60 Cathar Parfaits who
declined to abjure their faith. According to The
Song of the Cathar Wars the Cathars were led out of the village,
a large fire was lit, and the unfortunates were burned alive "with
great joy".
The Crusaders went on the besiege Montferrand, Commanded by Baudouin,
brother of the Count of Toulouse.
Les Casses was home to a number of Cathar leaders, notably Bernard
Boufilh along with his brother and his son (Cathar Deacon of Saint
Felix and Des Casses). The area north of the castrum is called Boufilh.
The three escaped burning in 1211 and were back here by 1225.
Arnaud Des Casses, a knight and Lord of Casses was a known parfait.
Two brothers Raymond and Etienne Isarn Des Casses were burned alive
at the massacre of Montsegur in 1244.
Alazais of Roqueville, mother of Raymond and Bernard, lived in
Les Cassés; she was a parfait who seems to have escaped.
Raymond's wife Raymonde was later arrested and burned in 1245.
In 1247 all of the inhabitants of Les Casses were interrogated
by the Inquisition. The registers attest to a great deal of Cathar
activity here, including the participation of the knights of Les
Casses, protecting Cathars and guiding them from one hiding place
to another.
|
|
The spur "eperon" on which the
castrum of Des Casses stood. There is no trace of the village
except the contours and the defensive ditches.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
" In memory of the 60 goodmen and goodwomen
burned in this place on 20 May 1211 by the Crusaders of Simon
de Montfort"
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Architecture
in 2011 the village of Les Casses constructed a monument to mark
the 800th anniversary of the massacre at Les Cassés Vielh.
It is located on the site of Les Cassés Vielh.
The site is not difficult to find. First locate the "Rue du
Fort" in the modern village. Follow the road out of town, even
after it turns into a track. At the end of the track, you have reached
Les Cassés Vielh, easily identifiable by the vestiges
of the old windmill.
The site of the monument is clearly sign-posted - just follow the
panels marked "Site du Fort - Mémorial Cathare"
The monument is very simple, a work in iron reproducing an image
of an heretic being burned at the stake (taken from a sketch in
a contemporary Vatican manuscript).
Surrounding it are subsidiary monuments marking the sites of other
nearby sieges and massacres, with names and dates. They are arranged
to face (roughly) the location named.
|
Memorial site at the "Fort"
|
|
|
|
|