Skip to product information
1 of 1

The Corruption of Angels

Regular price $47.00
Sale price $47.00 Regular price $47.00
Sale Sold out
On two hundred and one days between May 1, 1245, and August 1, 1246, more than five thousand people from the Lauragais were questioned in Toulouse about the heresy of the good men and the good wome...
Read More
  • Format:
  • 14 August 2005
View Product Details

On two hundred and one days between May 1, 1245, and August 1, 1246, more than five thousand people from the Lauragais were questioned in Toulouse about the heresy of the good men and the good women (more commonly known as Catharism). Nobles and diviners, butchers and monks, concubines and physicians, blacksmiths and pregnant girls--in short, all men over fourteen and women over twelve--were summoned by Dominican inquisitors Bernart de Caux and Jean de Saint-Pierre. In the cloister of the Saint-Sernin abbey, before scribes and witnesses, they confessed whether they, or anyone else, had ever seen, heard, helped, or sought salvation through the heretics. This inquisition into heretical depravity was the single largest investigation, in the shortest time, in the entire European Middle Ages.


Mark Gregory Pegg examines the sole surviving manuscript of this great inquisition with unprecedented care--often in unexpected ways--to build a richly textured understanding of social life in southern France in the early thirteenth century. He explores what the interrogations reveal about the individual and communal lives of those interrogated and how the interrogations themselves shaped villagers' perceptions of those lives. The Corruption of Angels, similar in breadth and scope to Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie's Montaillou, is a major contribution to the field. It shows how heretical and orthodox beliefs flourished side by side and, more broadly, what life was like in one particular time and place. Pegg's passionate and beautifully written evocation of a medieval world will fascinate a diverse readership within and beyond the academy.

files/i.png Icon
Price: $47.00
Pages: 248
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Imprint: Princeton University Press
Publication Date: 14 August 2005
ISBN: 9780691123714
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

HISTORY / Europe / France, European history

"This is an attractive and readable book on a sombre theme."---Colin Morris, Times Literary Supplement
Mark Gregory Pegg is Associate Professor of History at Washington University in St. Louis.