On March 16, 1244, approximately 225 men and women walked into a fire at the foot of a mountain fortress called Montségur. They had been offered a choice: renounce their faith or burn. They burned. The Inquisition recorded the event. The mythology industry has been rewriting it ever since.
The Cathars investigates the most over-mythologized and under-understood religious movement of the Middle Ages. The documented history: a dualist community destroyed by twenty years of crusade and a century of institutional persecution-the massacres at Béziers, Minerve, and Lavaur; the fall of Montségur; the Inquisition registers that recorded intimate lives under the threat of punishment; the last perfectus burned in 1321 and the silence that followed. The mythology: Peyrat's romantic nationalism, Rahn's SS-funded Grail hunt, the Priory of Sion hoax, and a modern spiritual industry selling past-life regressions and refrigerator magnets stamped with a cross the medieval Cathars never used. The scholarly war: whether "Catharism" as a coherent organized movement ever existed at all-or whether the Inquisition constructed the very category it claimed to be investigating.
The investigation examines all three stories. It presents the documented evidence, the mythology, and the scholarly debate at full strength on all sides. It does not debunk. It does not promote. Where the evidence is clear, the investigation says so. Where it is contested, both positions are presented. Where it is absent, the gap is noted and the investigation moves on.
Every factual claim sourced to the primary record-Inquisition registers, crusade chronicles, surviving Cathar texts, the peer-reviewed scholarship of Barber, Pegg, Moore, and the field's leading voices. Every scholarly position presented with structural equality. No conspiracy endorsement. No anti-Catholic polemic. No New Age validation.
The evidence is the story. The reader assesses.
Secret Societies Revisited is a fifty-book investigative nonfiction series examining the organizations built around secrecy, initiation, and concealed knowledge-from the Eleusinian Mysteries to the Bavarian Illuminati, from the Hashashin to the Freemasons. Each book investigates a single subject from a position of rigorous neutrality: neither debunking nor promoting. The documents are examined. The mythology is tested. The reader decides.
Each book stands alone. Each follows the evidence wherever it leads.