source: http://cescm.hypotheses.org/
Date : Jeudi 3 et vendredi 4 mai 2018
Lieu : CESCM, Hôtel Berthelot – 24 rue de la Chaîne, Poitiers
The career of Simon of Montfort encompassed the entirety of Western Europe—as well as the Levantine crusade—at the turn of the thirteenth century. Born and raised in the orbit of the French royal court at Paris, he inherited and was dispossessed of an English earldom and the royal stewardship. Moreover, he twice took the cross: first to the Holy Land on the ill-fated Fourth Crusade, where he publicly dissented from the diversion to Constantinople, and later against the heretics in the Midi, where he established a semi-independent crusader principality. All this came to an end with his death before the walls of Toulouse eight hundred years ago, yet his life did not fail to leave a mark on his contemporaries nor on posterity. Most of Christendom hailed him as a pious hero, an ideal miles Christi, both during his lifetime and after his supposed martyrdom, struggling against heretical depravity. However, in the Midi and Spain his reputation was frequently that of a brigand, a barbarian, a greedy and unscrupulous foreign interloper. The latter judgement, with some exceptions, has largely been his legacy since the nineteenth century. But the Simon of Montfort that this conference will seek to discuss is a man of contradictions: the principled crusader to the East who mutilated a defeated garrison in the Languedoc, the victor over the king of Aragon who voluntarily submitted his conquests to the king of France, the man who despoiled legitimate lords in the south while providing legal protections for widows and clergy. This conference will centre on studying Simon both as a product of his time and an agent who helped to form it, an actor in his lifetime and a cipher for posterity, the successor to a dynasty and the origin of inheritances across Europe, a conqueror and a failure.
Jeudi 3 mai / 9h-12h
Martin Aurell, Gregory Lippiatt, Laurent Macé : Introduction
Simon et la croisade albigeoise
Jean-Louis Biget (École Normale Supérieure) : Tenir le pays : Montfort entre villes et châteaux d’Occitanie
Gregory Lippiatt (University of East Anglia (Norwich)-CESCM) : The Statutes of Pamiers: Simon and Baronial Reform in Early Thirteenth-Century Europe
Martín Alvira (Universidad complutense de Madrid) : Simon et Pierre II d’Aragon : faits et mémoire
Damian Smith (Saint Louis University, Missouri) : James I of Aragon, Simon and the Papacy (1211-1218)
Jeudi 3 mai / 14h-18h
Simon : le baron, ses hommes et ses représentations
Christine Chana Keck (Université de Frankfort) : L’entourage de Simon
Nicholas Vincent (University of East Anglia, Norwich) : Simon as Earl of Leicester
Laurent Macé (Université de Toulouse-Jean Jaurès) : Princeps et monarcha : le sceau de majesté de Simon (1216-1218)
Daniel Power (University of Swansea) : La croisade albigeoise après Simon (1218-1224)
Vendredi 4 mai / 9h-12h
Les fils de Simon, la Gascogne et l’Angleterre
Lindy Grant (University of Reading) : Amaury V (d. 1241), his Siblings, and the Capetians
Sophie Ambler (University of Lancaster) : Simon VI (†1265) and Montfortian Identity
Amicie Pélissié du Rausas, Université de Poitiers-CESCM, « Le gouvernement de Simon VI en Gascogne (1248-1252) »
Rodolphe Billaud (University of Canterbury) : Simon VI et l’occupation du comté de Chester (1264-1265)
Vendredi 4 mai / 14h-17h
La culture des Montfort
Catalina Girbea (Université de Bucarest-CESCM,) : Les Montfort d’Italie, commanditaires de manuscrits arthuriens
Björn Weiler (University of Abersystwyth) : Mathew Paris and the Montfort Family
Alexis Charansonnet (Université de Lyon II) : Saints ou démons ? L’image posthume des Montfort au XIIIe siècle
Martin Aurell (Université de Poitiers-CESCM) : Conclusions
Organisé par le CESCM (Poitiers) avec notamment Alexis Charansonnet
CESCM, Hôtel Berthelot – 24 rue de la Chaîne, Poitiers