Raymond VI, Count of Toulouse
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Raymond VI (Template:Langx; 27 October 1156 – 2 August 1222) was Count of Toulouse and Marquis of Provence from 1194 to 1222. He was also Count of Melgueil (as Raymond IV) from 1173 to 1190. Raymond's conflicts with Pope Innocent III over his tolerance of the Cathars led into his excommunication and the beginning of the Albigensian Crusade.
Early life
Raymond was born at Saint-Gilles, Gard, the son of Raymond V and Constance of France.Template:Sfn His maternal grandparents were Louis VI of France and his second wife Adélaide de Maurienne. His maternal uncles included Louis VII of France. In 1194 he succeeded his father as count of Toulouse. He immediately re-established peace with both Alfonso II of Aragon and with the Trencavel family.
Problems with the Church
Raymond VI was arguably the first target of the Albigensian crusade (1209–1229).Template:Sfn
Raymond VI held vast territories but his control of them was problematic. Aside from theoretically owing allegiance to the King of France, Raymond held Provence as a vassal of the Holy Roman Emperor.<ref name=Setton>Setton, Kenneth Meyer; Wolff, Robert Lee and Hazard, Harry W. A History of the Crusades, Vol. 2, Univ of Wisconsin Press, 1969 Template:ISBN</ref> Henry II of England controlled neighboring Aquitaine through his wife Eleanor of Aquitaine, who had a claim to Toulouse through her grandmother, Philippa of Toulouse, daughter of William IV, Count of Toulouse. Alfonso II of Aragon was involved in the affairs of Languedoc, stimulating emigration from the north to colonize newly reconquered lands in Aragon.
In Toulouse, Raymond maintained the communal freedoms, extended exemptions from taxation, and extended his protection to the communal territory. A poet and a man of culture, he hated war but did not lack energy.Template:Citation needed
According to Henri Pirenne, "At the end of the 12th century Languedoc was swarming with those mystics who aspired to lead the Church and the age back to apostolic simplicity, condemning both the religious hierarchy and the social order".<ref name=Pirenne>Pirenne, Henri. A History of Europe, Routledge, 2010 Template:ISBN</ref> At first Innocent III tried to deal with the Cathars by peaceful conversion, sending into the affected regions a number of legates or representatives.<ref>"The Cathars: an Introduction", International School of Toulouse</ref> Count Raymond declined to assist, although constantly embroiled with his vassals, and given the autonomy of the towns, Kenneth Setton questions whether Raymond "could have coped effectively with the challenge of heresy even if he had wished to do so".<ref name=Setton/>
The legates sent from Rome and France received little support as they were considered foreign reformers. Papal legate Pierre de Castelnau was sent to address Raymond's tolerance for the practice of the Cathars, but withdrew for six months in 1206 out of concerns for his safety.Template:Citation needed
Pierre's assassination on 15 January 1208, led to Raymond's excommunication.Template:Sfn This was followed by the capture and massacre of Béziers, the siege and capture of Carcassonne, and the death of Raymond Roger Trencavel, all in 1209. That same year Raymond had journeyed to Rome in an attempt to reconcile with Pope Innocent III, yet despite his overtures Innocent chose to allow crusade leaders a freehand.Template:Sfn In 1211, Raymond's excommunication was reiterated by papal legates, while the Council of Montpellier placed an Interdict over the County of Toulouse.Template:Sfn More of a diplomat than a soldier, he was unable to stop the advance of Simon de Montfort, who conquered Toulouse. Following the Battle of Muret, Raymond was exiled to England under his former brother-in-law John, King of England.Template:Sfn
In November 1215, Raymond and his son (the later Raymond VII, Count of Toulouse) were in Rome with Raymond-Roger, Count of Foix on the occasion of the Fourth Lateran Council to vindicate themselves and dispute the loss of their territories. Raymond's son-in-law, Pierre-Bermond II of Sauve, was also there to lay claim to the county of Toulouse, but this claim failed. Raymond and his son went from Rome to Genoa and thence to Marseille in February 1216. Raymond's son set out from Marseille to regain the family territories in Provence; in May 1216 he besieged Beaucaire and captured it on August 24.Template:Citation needed
Meanwhile, Raymond went to Aragon, hoping to rally support. From there he engaged in secret negotiations with leaders in Toulouse during 1216.<ref>Chanson de la Croisade Albigeoise laisse 171; Guillaume de Puylaurens, Chronica 27.</ref> Simon de Montfort possibly believed that Raymond was on his way to the city in September 1216;<ref>Peter of les Vaux-de-Cernay, Historia Albigensis 585.</ref> at any rate he returned in great haste from Beaucaire and conducted a partial sack of the city, apparently intended as punishment. Finally, on 12 September 1217, Raymond re-entered Toulouse again.Template:Sfn Simon de Montfort immediately besieged the city once more. Simon was killed during the siege (25 June 1218);Template:Sfn his son Amaury VI of Montfort took his place, and for five years the Crusade faltered. The failure of Louis VIII's campaigns, from 1219 to 1226, finally permitted Raymond, and his son and successor, to recover most of their territories.Template:Sfn
Berry College military history professor Laurence W. Marvin made Raymond the subject of his entry in the 2022 anthology The Worst Military Leaders in History. Raymond's early diffidence in the face of Church sanctions such as excommunication and interdict cost him serious credibility with allies later on, to the point that they dismissed sound military advice based on his experience. They also recalled his desultory prosecution of the 1211 siege of Castelnaudary. There, Raymond had built his own heavily fortified camp a great distance from the town, as if he were more worried about being attacked himself, and failed to blockade the area, allowing Simon to regularly resupply. At the time he was also ridiculed for restricting himself to the use of catapults against the walls and not attacking Simon's soldiers on sorties outside the walls to repair the damage.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Death
Following an abrupt and unexpected illness that left him mostly speechless, Raymond died in August 1222.Template:Sfn But from what was said, he was still able to remember and understand things because he extended his hands in a show of devotion to the Abbot of Saint-Sernin, as soon as the Abbot hurried to his side.Template:Sfn He kissed a pall bearing a cross when the Brothers of the Hospital of St. John (the Knights Hospitaller) threw it over him, and then he died unexpectedly.Template:Sfn His body was taken to their home, but it was never buried there and is still unburied as of now.Template:Sfn
In 1998, there was a new twist to this story: during excavations at the Hôtel Saint-Jean in Toulouse, the site of the former Grand Priory of the Knights Hospitaller, a medieval sarcophagus was discovered, and for a moment it was believed that it might contain the bones of Raymond VI. The mayor of Toulouse, Dominique Baudis, took the opportunity to ask the Pope to lift Raymond VI's excommunication, without success.<ref name="blog_occitan">Template:Citation</ref>
Marriages
Raymond was married five times:
- On 11 December 1172, to Ermessende of Pelet, Countess of Melgueil.Template:Sfn She died in 1176 without issue.
- In 1178 to Beatrice of Béziers, sister of Roger II Trencavel.Template:Sfn She left Raymond and retired to a nunnery.Template:Sfn Raymond VI and Beatrice had one daughter:
- Constance of Toulouse,Template:Sfn who was married first to King Sancho VII of Navarre,Template:Sfn and secondly to Pierre-Bermond II of Sauve, Lord of Anduze.
- In October 1196 at Rouen to Joan of England,Template:Sfn daughter of Henry II of England and Eleanor of Aquitaine. Their marriage included Richard I's renunciation of his claim to Toulouse, ending the feud with the ducal house of Aquitaine. She died on 4 September 1199, in childbirth as a veiled nun at Fontevraud Abbey. Joan and Raymond VI had three children:
- Raymond VII, Count of Toulouse (1197–1249);
- Joan of Toulouse (1198–1255), second wife of Bernard II de la Tour, Lord of la Tour;
- Richard of Toulouse (1199), lived just long enough to be baptised.
- In 1200 to the daughter of Isaac Komnenos of Cyprus. They divorced in late 1202, and she remarried to Thierry of Flanders by early 1203.
- In January 1204 to Eleanor of Aragon, daughter of King Alfonso II of Aragon and Sancha of Castile.Template:Sfn
In older historiography Raymond is said to have married Burgundia of Lusignan, a daughter of King Aimery of Cyprus. She is now thought to have been confused with the Byzantine "damsel of Cyprus", who did marry Raymond.Template:Sfn
In art
Raymond VI is represented as one of four figures on the ceiling of the Minnesota Supreme Court in the United States. His painting is next to Moses, Confucius, and Socrates, each painting representing an aspect of law. Raymond VI's painting is entitled "The Adjustment of Conflicting Interests", and the scene is of Raymond VI of Toulouse standing before the papal legate in 1208. Raymond argued successfully for city freedoms, extended exemptions from taxation, and protection of the communal territory from the church. Not wanting to target his Cathar vassals, he also defended, albeit with less success—since it became one of the causes of the Albigensian Crusade—the idea of religious freedom. The paintings were made by John LaFarge in 1903.<ref>Template:Cite newsTemplate:Dead link</ref>
In 1889, in a painting exhibited at the Capitole in Toulouse and entitled "Raimond VI Count of Toulouse, the excommunicated 1156-1222", the painter René-Henri Ravaut depicted Raymond VI left at the door of the Church.Template:Citation needed
References
Sources
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External links
- Raymond VI entry at the Catholic Encyclopedia