Albigenses in the Antipodes: An Australian and the Cathars
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This article is a wide‐ranging discussion of the “conventional picture of Catharism” and why everything traditionally understood by most scholars about these heretics is wrong. It arises out of Peter Biller's criticism that, “as an Australian historian who works in the United States,” I am leading the “troops” in a sweeping campaign “to dismantle our picture of Catharism.” The stakes are high in this debate. If heresy is fundamentally misunderstood, then Latin Christianity is fundamentally misunderstood, and so what it means to study the medieval world is fundamentally misunderstood.
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DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-9809.2011.01143.x
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<author><name sortKey="Pegg, Mark Gregory" uniqKey="Pegg M">MARK GREGORY PEGG</name>
<affiliation><mods:affiliation>Washington University</mods:affiliation>
<wicri:noCountry code="no comma">Washington University</wicri:noCountry>
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<affiliation><mods:affiliation>Correspondence: Mark Gregory Pegg is Professor of History at Washington University.</mods:affiliation>
<wicri:noCountry code="no comma">Correspondence: Mark Gregory Pegg is Professor of History at Washington University.</wicri:noCountry>
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<front><div type="abstract" xml:lang="eng">This article is a wide‐ranging discussion of the “conventional picture of Catharism” and why everything traditionally understood by most scholars about these heretics is wrong. It arises out of Peter Biller's criticism that, “as an Australian historian who works in the United States,” I am leading the “troops” in a sweeping campaign “to dismantle our picture of Catharism.” The stakes are high in this debate. If heresy is fundamentally misunderstood, then Latin Christianity is fundamentally misunderstood, and so what it means to study the medieval world is fundamentally misunderstood.</div>
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