Cathars and Catharism in the Languedoc: Cathar Castles: Lastours
(or Cabaret)
 An
unusual arrangement of three castle towers (Las Tours, The
Towers) this fortification belonged to the Lords of Cabaret,
who held in fief from the Trencavels.
In the thirteenth century there were three towers here,
built on the same rocky outcrop. They are called Cabaret
(to the north), Quertinheux and Surdespine (to the south).
The towers stand on a hill crest above the village of Lastours,
flanked by the River Grésilhou to the west and the
River Orbiel to the east.

The Seigneurs of Cabaret received troubadours
here, including Raymond de Miraval and Peire Vidal, who dedicated
verses to the Cathar Ladies of the place.
During the Cathar Crusade this was one of the most ardent
centres of resistance to the French Crusaders, In 1209 it
was besieged unsuccessfully, by Simon
de Montfort. It was here a year later that a line
of a hundred men appeared on foot, having snaked their way
from Bram,
their eyes torn out, their noses cropped and their lips
cut off by the Holy Catholic soldiers of Christ.
In March 1211, after the fall of Termes,
Pierre-Roger de Cabaret, negotiated the surrender of the
château, under diplomatic rather than military pressure.
In 1223 he recovered his property. Once again Cabaret
became the foremost centre of resistance against the French
invaders. The Cathar bishop of Carcassonne, Pierre
Isarn, was given refuge here until 1226.
After the Council of Toulouse in 1229
the Seigneurs of Cabaret were obliged to abandon their stronghold.
They regained it, briefly, when they accompanied their liege
Lord, Tranceval, in his reconquest in 1240.
Today , you will find four towers at Lastours. The
fourth, known as the Tour Régine, was built by the
French around 1260.
Lastours lies in the Aude
departément just north of Carcassonne.
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