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OverviewA Story of the Cathar World 1209 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. Languedoc, southern France. Summer, 1209. An army is marching south. A civilization is in its final summer. In Béziers, seven thousand people died in a single morning. In Carcassonne, a weaver's daughter crosses a dye market that smells of madder and warm stone. The inquisitors who came afterward recorded everything - and preserved the very people they were sent to destroy. The arguments about what the Cathars believed have never stopped. In the Language of the People asks what it meant to be inside that moment. Not as a cardinal or a legate. But as the weaver's daughter - who knew every lane by heart, who heard the Gospel in her own language since she was seven - and who one night was given a linen-wrapped book and told to carry it south. What do you do when what you believe becomes dangerous to hold? What is the difference between a heretic and a neighbour? What survives when everything built to contain it is burned? The facts are extraordinary enough. The Cathars translated the Gospel into Occitan. To hear scripture in your own tongue was rebellion. At Béziers, the papal legate said: Kill them all. God will know his own. The Inquisition's registers became the most detailed record of medieval peasant life ever assembled. At Montségur in 1244, two hundred and twenty perfecti walked into the fire rather than recant. The Rituel Cathare de Lyon was found five centuries later hidden in a book's binding. In Occitan. Intact. The dye market at dawn, madder-red cloth between limestone walls. The shuttle in the loom before the household woke. The weight of oiled linen in your hands, and the army one day's march to the north. They wrote the Word in the language of the people, carried it across the mountains in the dark, and it survived. 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. In the Language of the People - 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 bread was blessed in Occitan. The book survived in a stranger's binding for five hundred years. The language is still spoken in the valleys where all of this happened. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Michael McGilbournePublisher: Independently Published Imprint: Independently Published Volume: 31 Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 1.40cm , Length: 21.60cm Weight: 0.286kg ISBN: 9798258121462Pages: 242 Publication Date: 20 April 2026 Audience: Young adult , Teenage / Young adult 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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