Before France became France its territories included Occitania,
roughly the present-day province of Languedoc. The city of Narbonne
was a center of Occitanian commerce and culture during the eleventh
and twelfth centuries. For most of the second half of the twelfth
century, that city and its environs were ruled by a remarkable
woman, Ermengard, who negotiated her city's way through a maze of
everchanging dynastic alliances.
Fredric L. Cheyette's masterful and beautifully illustrated book
is a biography of an extraordinary warrior woman and of a unique,
vulnerable, doomed society. Throughout her long reign, viscountess
Ermengard roamed Occitania receiving oaths of fidelity, negotiating
treaties, settling disputes among the lords of her lands, and
camping with her armies before the walls of besieged cities. She
was born into a world of politics and warfare, but from the
Mediterranean to the North Sea her name echoed in songs that
treated the arts of love.
The land between the Rhone and the Pyrenees was a delicately
balanced world in which honor, dispute, and the fragile communities
of loyalty and family held a "stateless" society together. In
Cheyette's prose there rises before us a world we had not imagined,
in which women were powerful lords, moving back and forth across
what we now call Spain, France, and Italy to play the harsh
political games essential to the preservation of their realms. But
the region was also fertile ground for religious practices deemed
heretical by the Church. The attempt to eradicate them would spawn
the Albigensian Crusade, which destroyed the cosmopolitan world of
Ermengard and the troubadours the world that lives again in this
book."
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