Catharism

1930

The late 13th- to early-14th-century document, the Fournier Register, discovered in the Vatican archives in the 1960s and edited by Jean Duvernoy, is the basis for Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie's work Montaillou: The Promised Land of Error. ==Historical and current scholarship== The publication of the early scholarly book Crusade Against the Grail by the young German Otto Rahn in the 1930s rekindled interest in the connection between the Cathars and the Holy Grail, especially in Germany.

1960

The late 13th- to early-14th-century document, the Fournier Register, discovered in the Vatican archives in the 1960s and edited by Jean Duvernoy, is the basis for Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie's work Montaillou: The Promised Land of Error. ==Historical and current scholarship== The publication of the early scholarly book Crusade Against the Grail by the young German Otto Rahn in the 1930s rekindled interest in the connection between the Cathars and the Holy Grail, especially in Germany.

1990

The philosopher and Nazi government official Alfred Rosenberg speaks favourably of the Cathars in The Myth of the Twentieth Century. Academic books in English first appeared at the beginning of the millennium: for example, Malcolm Lambert's The Cathars and Malcolm Barber's The Cathars. Starting in the 1990s and continuing to the present day, historians like R. I.

2013

Moore's work is indicative of a larger historiographical trend towards examination of how heresy was constructed by the church. In 2016, Cathars in Question edited by Antonio Sennis presents a range of conflicting views of academics of medieval heresy including Feuchter, Stoyanov, Sackville, Taylor, D'avray, Biller, Moore, Bruschi, Pegg, Hamilton, Arnold and Théry-Astruc who had met at University College London and the Warburg Institute in London in April 2013.

2016

Moore's work is indicative of a larger historiographical trend towards examination of how heresy was constructed by the church. In 2016, Cathars in Question edited by Antonio Sennis presents a range of conflicting views of academics of medieval heresy including Feuchter, Stoyanov, Sackville, Taylor, D'avray, Biller, Moore, Bruschi, Pegg, Hamilton, Arnold and Théry-Astruc who had met at University College London and the Warburg Institute in London in April 2013.




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