|
|
|||
This web-page will look much better in a browser that supports worldwide web standards although it is accessible to any browser. You appear to be using an older browser that does not support current standards. Please consider upgrading your browser. We suggest the latest version of any one of the following: MS Internet Explorer, Opera, Mozilla or Firefox.
t is thought
that Wolfram began writing his poem Parzival in about 1200. At this time there was a
sect in what is now southern France, the Oc region or Languedoc. One of their centres was the
town of Albi. It has been suggested (in the writings of Otto Rahn, E. Anitchkof and
J. Evola) that some of the ideas provided to Wolfram by the mysterious Kyot originated with
this sect, with whom Kyot may have come into contact in Provence or the Languedoc. The
Albigensians or Cathars, were a sect with dualistic beliefs similar to those of the Manicheans.
Although they seem only to have studied the canonical Gospels, their beliefs seem more closely
related to some of the Gnostic Gospels. The word Cathar comes from the Greek καθαροι, meaning Pure Ones.
Little is known about them, because in 1208 Pope Innocent III launched a Crusade against these
heretics that, in a succession of campaigns over a period of forty years, destroyed their
communities with great cruelty. Later, the Catholic Church created the Inquisition, initially
with the purpose of eliminating all traces of Cathar heresy from France, Spain and northern
Italy.
hat is known
about the Cathars includes the following. The Pure Ones were strict vegetarians, abstaining from all animal products. They were celibate,
although many of the ordinary believers were married. They worshipped a deity who was above
Yahweh, the God of the Old Testament. The latter seems to have been identified with the devil
or Lucifer, and thus the Catholic Church (and presumably also the Jewish believers, although
they seem to have been treated with unusual tolerance in this region) were regarded as
devil-worshippers. The world had been created by Lucifer and belonged to the devil. They
believed that Lucifer had waged war against Heaven, as a result of which souls had been trapped
in fleshly bodies. We may note, in passing, that one of the stories about the origin of the Grail says that it was a jewel that fell from Lucifer's crown. According
to Wolfram and to the Wartburgskrieg, the Grail was a stone
that was brought to the earth by the neutral angels, i.e. those who did not take sides in the
warfare between God and Lucifer.
he Cathars
awaited a Messiah who would be the son of a widow; like Parzival. One of their symbols was the dove, which
according to Wolfram was the bird that brought a wafer to the Grail on
each Good Friday. It is also said that they believed in reincarnation, and that through good works one could obtain redemption from sins committed in a previous life.