The Alchemist's Secret

The Alchemist's Secret Read Online Free PDF

Book: The Alchemist's Secret Read Online Free PDF
Author: Scott Mariani
Tags: thriller, Suspense, adventure, Contemporary, Crime, Mystery
and authority.’
    ‘Were the Cathars alchemists?’ Ben asked. ‘The part about transforming base matter sounds very like the ideas of alchemy.’
    ‘I don’t think anyone knows that for certain,’ Rose said. ‘As a historian, I wouldn’t stick my neck out on that one. But you’re quite right. The alchemical concept of purifying base matter into something more perfect and incorruptible is certainly well in tune with Cathar beliefs. We’ll never know for sure, because the Cathars never lived long enough to tell the tale.’
    ‘What happened to them?’
    ‘In a nutshell, mass extermination,’ Rose said. ‘When Pope Innocent III came to power in 1198, the alleged heresies of the Cathars gave him a magnificent excuse to extend and reinforce the Church’s powers. Ten years later he put together a formidable army of knights, the biggest ever seen in Europe at that time. These were hardened soldiers, many of who had seen service fighting in the Holy Land. Under the command of former crusader Simon de Monfort, who was also the Duke of Leicester, this huge military force invaded the Languedoc and one by one they massacred every fortress, town and village with even the remotest Cathar connection. De Monfort became known as the “glaive de l’eglise”.’
    ‘The sword of the Church,’ Ben translated.
    Rose nodded. ‘And he meant business. Reports at the time spoke of a hundred thousand men, women and children slaughtered at Béziers alone. Over the next few years the Pope’s army swept over the entire region, destroying everything in its path and burning alive anyone who didn’t die under the sword. At Lavaur in 1211 they threw four hundred Cathar heretics on the pyre.’
    ‘Nice,’ Ben said.
    ‘It was a vile affair,’ Rose continued. ‘And it was during this time that the Catholic Church formed its Inquisition, a new wing of Church officialdom to lend greater authority to the atrocities performed by the army. They oversaw duties of interrogation, torture and execution. They were answerable only to the Pope personally. Their power was absolute. At one point in 1242, the Inquisitors were acting so bloodthirstily that a detachment of disgusted knights broke away from their station and slaughtered a whole bunch of them at a place called Avignonet. Of course, the rebel knights were quickly suppressed. Then, finally in 1243, after the Cathar resistance had held out much longer than anyone had anticipated, the Pope decided it was time to finish them off once and for all. Eight thousand knights laid siege to the last Cathar stronghold, the mountaintop castle of Montségur, firing enormous rocks at its ramparts from their catapults for ten solid months until the Cathars were finally betrayed and forced to surrender. Two hundred of the poor souls were brought down the mountain and roasted alive by the Inquisitors. And that was more or less the end of them. The end of one of the most scandalous holocausts of all time.’
    ‘I can see alchemical heresy might have been a risky thing to get into,’ Ben said.
    ‘Still is, in some ways,’ Rose replied playfully.
    Ben was taken aback. ‘What?’
    The professor threw his head back and laughed. ‘I don’t mean they’re still executing heretics in the public square. I was thinking of the danger for people like myself, academics or scientists. The reason nobody wants to touch this subject with a bargepole is the reputation you’d get for being a crank. Every so often someone takes a bite of the forbidden apple and their head rolls. Some poor sod got the sack for just that reason, a while ago.’
    ‘What happened?’
    ‘It was at a Parisian university. American biology lecturer got into hot water over some unauthorized research…’
    ‘On alchemy?’
    ‘Something of that sort. Wrote some articles in the press that rubbed a few people up the wrong way.’
    ‘Who was this American?’ Ben asked.
    ‘I’m trying to remember the name,’ Rose said. A Dr…Dr Roper, no,
Read Online Free Pdf

Similar Books

Murder at Locke Abbey

Catherine Winchester

The Price of Fame

Hazel Gower

Our Daily Bread

Lauren B. Davis

Stroke of Midnight

Bonnie Edwards

Kaleidoscope Hearts

Claire Contreras