There is no evidence that Cathars were given to practice Bestiality.
The accusation is based on the idea that heretics were interested in, and given to kissing, the backside of cats. There seems to be no genuine evidence for this practice, nor any plausible explanation of how the accusation arose. One Catholic Authority, writing about 1182, tells us about "many" reformed Cathars who admitted that at night groups of heretics :
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It
is notable that such accusations were made against other
groups that the Roman Church regarded as its enemies.
For example, the same accusation was used a century later
against the Knights Templars and then against supposed witches.
One factor is that Catholics imagined that the devil
liked to adopt the form of a cat - which also explains why
cats are still associated with witches in the mainstream
Christian mind.
The most likely explanation seems to be the fevered imagination of some unknown medieval churchman. All it would take was one deranged Episcopal inquisitor plagued by fantasies of the feline podex. Such an Inquisitor could extract whatever confession he wanted from anyone who came into his power. The confession would then establish an accepted view of how heretics and the devil operated. This could be confirmed by any number of further confessions extracted under torture or duress. Positive feedback loops like this proved any number of unlikely accusations - sailing in sieves, flying through the air, taking animal form, demonic visitations, and so on.
The name Cathar may be derived from a German word referring to this particular calumny about cats' backsides, but it rather backfired when everyone assumed that the name must come from the Greek word for pure.



