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OverviewA Story of the Troubadours Occitania 1165-1246 You are the end point of an unbroken chain of survival. Every person who came before you - through plague, war, famine, and flood - lived long enough to pass forward what was necessary for you to exist. You did not begin when you were born. You began when humanity began. Everything that happened between that beginning and this moment is not the past in any abstract sense. It is the story of the making of you. This book takes you to one of the most extraordinary moments in that story. Occitania, Southern France. 1165-1246 CE. A civilization invented the idea that love makes you better. For a century, the greatest singers in the western world performed in stone halls above the Mediterranean. Then a papal army arrived from the north and burned it all. But not the songs. The songs survived. A Song of Pure Nothing asks what it meant to be inside that moment. Not as a lord. Not as a bishop. But as a joglar - the ordinary singer who carried the songs in his throat across sixty years of courts, roads, and burning cities. What does it feel like to hold two hundred songs in your memory when the halls they were made in are ash? What was the tradition that turned longing into the foundation of all Western love poetry? What do we owe the exiles who refused to let the songs die? The facts are extraordinary enough. The troubadours invented fin'amor - the idea that love ennobles - and it became Dante, Petrarch, and every love poem written since. Of 2,500 troubadour texts, fewer than 250 melodies survived, rescued by Italian scribes copying from the memories of exiles. The Albigensian Crusade of 1209 opened with the sack of Béziers. Every person inside the city was killed in a single morning. One melody by a named woman composer survives. One. The last Cathars walked willingly into a pyre at Montségur in 1244. The songs walked out. History is not a sequence of dates. It is the record of billions of lives lived forward through a present as urgent as your own. In a stone hall in the Limousin hills, a boy hears a song for the first time and cannot sleep. The fire burns. The hall goes quiet. The first note rises. In Italy, forty years after the burning, an old man sets his hand on a finished book of songs and says: the house has moved. They were curious about the same things we are curious about. They sang something that is still asking us questions. This book is the attempt of one ordinary witness - a man who understood things by listening - to answer. For homeschooling families: You are already doing the most important thing - putting the story of humanity directly into your children's hands. The Beyond His Story We Stand series was written for you. Each book takes one moment in human history and makes it lived rather than memorised, felt rather than filed away. Not a textbook. Not a syllabus. A story your child will not want to put down - and that will leave them asking the questions that no curriculum can generate for them. The questions that only wonder produces. A Song of Pure Nothing is part of the Beyond His Story We Stand series - a chronological journey through human history, told through the eyes of the people official history forgot to record. The song outlasted the hall. The hall is gone. The song is here. And now it belongs to you. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Michael McGilbournePublisher: Independently Published Imprint: Independently Published Volume: 46 Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 21.60cm Weight: 0.363kg ISBN: 9798198447738Pages: 312 Publication Date: 24 May 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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