The Counts of Toulouse and the Jews Toleration
and favour shown to the Jews was one of the main complaints of the Roman Church
against the Counts of Toulouse. Following the Crusaders'
successful wars against Ramon VI and Ramon VII, The Counts were required to discriminate
against Jews like other Christian rulers. In 1209, stripped to the waist and barefoot,
Raimon VI was obliged to swear in front of a relic-laden alter, in the presence
of nineteen bishops and three archbishops, that he would no longer allow Jews
to hold public office. In 1229 his son and heir, Raimon VII, underwent a similar
ceremony where he was obliged to prohibit the public employment of Jews, this
time at Notre Dame in Paris. Explicit provisions on the subject were included
in the Treaty of Meaux (1229). By the next generation
a new, zealously Catholic, ruler was arresting and imprisoning Jews for no crime,
raiding their houses, seizing their cash, and removing their religious books.
They were then released only if they paid a new "tax".
As an English historian of the Cathar crusade puts it: "Organised and official
persecution of the Jews became a normal feature of life in the south only after
the Crusade because it was only then that the Church became powerful enough to
insist on the application of positive measures of discrimination". (Michael
Costen, The Cathars and the Albigensian Crusade, p 38.)
Click on the following link to read a detailed
article on the Christian
Church and its promotion of anti-Semitism
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