Cagot
Template:Short description Script error: No such module "Distinguish". Script error: No such module "redirect hatnote". Template:Good article Template:Use dmy dates Template:Short description Script error: No such module "infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". The Cagots (Script error: No such module "IPA".) were a persecuted minority who lived in the west of France and northern Spain: the Navarrese Pyrenees, Basque provinces, Béarn, Aragón, Gascony and Brittany. Evidence of the group exists as far back as 1000 CE. The name they were known by varied across the regions where they lived.Template:Efn
The origins of the Cagots remain uncertain, with various hypotheses proposed throughout history. Some theories suggest they were descendants of biblical or legendary figures cursed by God, or the descendants of medieval lepers, while others propose they were related to the Cathars or even a fallen guild of carpenters. Some suggest descent from a variety of other marginalized racial or religious groups. Despite the varied and often mythical explanations for their origins, the only consistent aspect of the Cagots was their societal exclusion and the lack of any distinct physical or cultural traits differentiating them from the general population.
The discriminatory treatment they faced included social segregation and restrictions on marriage and occupation. Despite laws and edicts from higher levels of government and religious authorities, this discrimination persisted into the 20th century.
The Cagots no longer form a separate social class and were largely assimilated into the general population. Very little of Cagot culture still exists, as most descendants of Cagots have preferred not to be known as such.
Name
Etymology
The origins of both the term Script error: No such module "Lang". (and Script error: No such module "Lang"., Script error: No such module "Lang"., Script error: No such module "Lang"., etc.) and the Cagots themselves are uncertain. It has been suggested that they were descendants of the VisigothsTemplate:Sfnp[1] defeated by Clovis I at the Battle of Vouillé,Template:R[2] and that the name Script error: No such module "Lang". derives from Script error: No such module "Lang". ("dog") and the Old Occitan for Goth Script error: No such module "Lang". around the 6th century.[3] Yet in opposition to this etymology is the fact that the word Script error: No such module "Lang". is first found in this form in 1542 in the works of François Rabelais.Template:Sfnp Seventeenth century French historian Pierre de Marca, in his Script error: No such module "Lang"., propounds the reverse – that the word signifies "hunters of the Goths", and that the Cagots were descendants of the SaracensTemplate:R[4] and MoorsTemplate:Sfnp of Al-Andalus (or even Jews)Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp after their defeat by Charles Martel,[5]Template:SfnpTemplate:R although this proposal was comprehensively refuted by the Prior of Livorno, Abbot Template:Ill as early as 1754.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp Antoine Court de Gébelin derives the term cagot from the Latin Script error: No such module "Lang"., Script error: No such module "Lang". meaning "false, bad, deceitful", and Script error: No such module "Lang". meaning "god", due to a belief that Cagots were descended from the Alans and followed Arianism.Template:SfnpTemplate:R
Variations
Their name differed by province and the local language:
- In Gascony they were called Script error: No such module "Lang".,Template:Sfnp Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Sfnp and Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Sfnp[6]
- In Bordeaux they were called Script error: No such module "Lang".,Template:Sfnp Script error: No such module "Lang".[7] or Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Sfnp[8]Template:R
- In the Spanish Basque country they were called Script error: No such module "Lang".,Template:R[9] Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:SfnpTemplate:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp and Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp
- In the French Basque Country the forms Script error: No such module "Lang". and Script error: No such module "Lang". were also used.[10]Template:Sfnp
- In Anjou, Languedoc, and Armagnac they were called Script error: No such module "Lang".,Template:SfnpTemplate:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp and Script error: No such module "Lang". (marsh people)
- In Brittany they were called Script error: No such module "Lang"., Script error: No such module "Lang". (possibly from the Breton word Script error: No such module "Lang". meaning leprous),Template:SfnpTemplate:R Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Sfnp and Script error: No such module "Lang".. They were also sometimes referred to as Script error: No such module "Lang".,Template:Sfnp Script error: No such module "Lang".,Template:R Script error: No such module "Lang".,[11] Script error: No such module "Lang"., and Script error: No such module "Lang".,Template:R names of the local Caquins of Brittany due to similar low stature and discrimination in society.Template:R
- In Bigorre they were also called Script error: No such module "Lang". and Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Sfnp
- In Aunis, Poitou, and Saintonge they were also called Script error: No such module "Lang".,Template:RTemplate:Sfnp a name taken from the former class of Script error: No such module "Lang"..Template:EfnTemplate:Sfnp
- Script error: No such module "Lang". or Script error: No such module "Lang"., alongside the French spellings Script error: No such module "Lang". and Script error: No such module "Lang"., are also found in records, referencing Gehazi the servant of Elisha who was cursed with leprosy due to his greed.[12] With the Template:Ill recording Script error: No such module "Lang". as an insult regularly used against Cagots.Template:Sfnp Script error: No such module "Lang". is seen in the writings of Dominique Joseph Garat.[13]Template:Sfnp Elizabeth Gaskell records the anglicised Gehazites in her work An Accursed Race.Template:Sfnp
- Other recorded names include Script error: No such module "Lang".,Template:R Script error: No such module "Lang".,Template:Sfnp Script error: No such module "Lang".,Template:Sfnp Script error: No such module "Lang".,Template:Sfnp Script error: No such module "Lang".,Template:Sfnp Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp and Script error: No such module "Lang". (most likely from the Old French Script error: No such module "Lang". meaning leper).Template:Sfnp
Previously some of these names had been viewed as being similar yet separate groups from the Cagots.Template:SfnpTemplate:R
Origin
The origin of the Cagots is not known for certain, though through history many legends and hypotheses have been recorded providing potential origins and reasons for their ostracisation.Template:Sfnp The Cagots were not a distinct ethnic or religious group, but a racialised caste. They spoke the same language as the people in an area and generally kept the same religion as well, with later researchers remarking that there was no evidence to mark the Cagots as distinct from their neighbours.Template:Sfnp Their only distinguishing feature was their descent from families long identified as Cagots.Template:Sfnp Records of Cagots go as far back as the year 1000 CE, with the charter of the Template:Ill under the name Script error: No such module "Lang". and the ancient charter of Navarre that referred to them as Script error: No such module "Lang"..Template:SfnpTemplate:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp
Biblical legends
Various legends placed the Cagots as originating from biblical events, including being descendants of the carpenters who made the cross that Jesus was crucified on,Template:Sfnp or being descendants of the bricklayers who built Solomon's Temple after being expelled from ancient Israel by God due to poor craftsmanship.Template:Sfnp Similarly a more detailed legend places the origins of the Cagots in Spain as being descendants of a Pyrenean master carver named Jacques, who traveled to ancient Israel via Tartessos, to cast Boaz and Jachin for Solomon's Temple. While in Israel he was distracted during the casting of Jachin by a woman, and due to the imperfection this caused in the column his descendants were cursed to suffer leprosy.Template:Sfnp
Religious origin
Another theory is that the Cagots were descendants of the Cathars,Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp who had been persecuted for heresy in the Albigensian Crusade.Template:Sfnp Some comparisons include the use of the term Script error: No such module "Lang".[15] to refer to Cagots, which evokes the name that the Cathars gave to themselves, Script error: No such module "Lang"..Template:Sfn A delegation by Cagots to Pope Leo X in 1514 made this claim,Template:Sfnp though the Cagots predate the Cathar heresyTemplate:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp and the Cathar heresy was not present in Gascony and other regions where Cagots were present.[16] The historian Daniel Hawkins suggests that perhaps this was a strategic move, as in the Script error: No such module "Lang". statutes such discrimination and persecution for those convicted of heresy expired after four generations and if this was the cause of their marginalisation, it also gave grounds for their emancipation.Template:Sfnp Others have suggested an origin as Arian Christians.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp
One of the earliest recorded mentions of Cagotes is in the charters of Navarre, developed around 1070.Template:Sfnp Another early mention of the Cagots is from 1288, when they appear to have been called Script error: No such module "Lang". or Script error: No such module "Lang"..Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp Other terms seen in use prior to the 16th century include Script error: No such module "Lang"., Script error: No such module "Lang"., Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Sfnp and Script error: No such module "Lang".,Template:Sfnp which in medieval texts became inseparable from the term Script error: No such module "Lang"., and so in Béarn became synonymous with the word leper.[17] Thus, another theory is that the Cagots were early converts to Christianity, and that the hatred of their pagan neighbors continued after they also converted, merely for different reasons.Template:Sfnp
Medical origin
Another possible explanation of their name Script error: No such module "Lang". or Script error: No such module "Lang". is to be found in the fact that in medieval times all lepers were known as Script error: No such module "Lang"., and that, whether Visigoths or not, these Cagots were affected in the Middle Ages with a particular form of leprosy or a condition resembling it, such as psoriasis. Thus would arise the confusion between Christians and Cretins,Template:Sfnp and explain the similar restrictions placed on lepers and Cagots.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp Guy de Chauliac wrote in the 14th century,[18] and Ambroise Paré wrote in 1561 of the Cagots being lepersTemplate:Sfnp with "beautiful faces" and skin with no signs of leprosy, describing them as "white lepers" (people afflicted with "white leprosy").Template:SfnpTemplate:RTemplate:R Later dermatologists believe that Paré was describing leucoderma.Template:Sfnp Early edicts apparently refer to lepers and Cagots as different categories of undesirables,Template:Sfnp With this distinction being explicit by 1593. The Parlement of Bordeaux and the Estates of Lower Navarre repeated customary prohibitions against them, with Bordeaux adding that when they were also lepers, if there still are any, they must carry Script error: No such module "Lang". (rattles).Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp One belief in Navarre were that the Script error: No such module "Lang". were descendants of French immigrant lepers to the region.Template:Sfnp Later English commentators supported the idea of an origin among a community of lepers due to the similarities in the treatment of Cagots in churches and the measures taken to allow lepers in England and Scotland to attend churches.Template:Sfnp
From the 1940s to 1950s a study of blood type analysis was performed on the Cagots of Template:Ill in Navarre. The blood type distribution showed more similarity with those observed in France among the French than those observed among the local Basque. Geneticist Pilar Hors uses this as support for the theory that the Cagots in Spain are descendants of French migrants, most likely from leper colonies.Template:Sfnp
Other origins
In Bordeaux, where they were numerous, they were called Script error: No such module "Lang".. This name has the same form as the Old French word Script error: No such module "Lang"., meaning leper (ultimately derived from Latin Script error: No such module "Lang".). It also has the same form as the Gascon word for thief (ultimately derived from Latin Script error: No such module "Lang"., and cognate to the Catalan Script error: No such module "Lang". and the Spanish Script error: No such module "Lang". meaning robber or looter), which is similar in meaning to the older, probably Celtic-origin Latin term Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Sfnp (or bagad), a possible origin of Script error: No such module "Lang"..
The alleged physical appearance and ethnicity of the Cagots varied wildly between legends and stories; some local legends (especially those that held to the leper theory) indicated that Cagots had blonde hair and blue eyes,Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp while those favouring the Arab descent story said that Cagots were considerably darker.Template:Sfnp In Pío Baroja's work Script error: No such module "Lang"., he comments that Cagot residents of Template:Ill had both individuals with "Germanic" features as well as individuals with "Romani" features,[19] this is also supported by others who investigated the Cagots in Bearn and the Basque Country,Template:Sfnp[20] such as Template:Ill who stated the "ethnic type" and names of Cagots were the same as the Basque within Navarre.Template:Sfnp Though people who set out to research the Cagots found them to be a diverse class of people in physical appearance, as diverse as the non-Cagot communities around them.[21] One common trend was to claim that Cagots had no earsTemplate:Sfnp or no earlobes,Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp or that one ear was longer than the other,Template:SfnpTemplate:SfnpTemplate:Pn with other supposed identifiers including webbed hands and/or feet, or the presence of goitres.Template:SfnpTemplate:PnTemplate:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp
Biographer Graham Robb finds most of the above theories unlikely, highlighting the lack of distinguishing features among the Cagots,Template:Sfnp arguing that the only real differences were "after eight centuries of persecution, they tended to be more skillful and resourceful than the surrounding populations, and more likely to emigrate to America. They were feared because they were persecuted and might therefore seek revenge."Template:Sfnp Robb proposed the hypothesis that the Cagots are the descendants of a fallen medieval guild of carpenters.Template:Sfnp This hypothesis could explain their being restricted in their choice of trade. He further suggests that red webbed-foot symbol Cagots were sometimes forced to wear might have been the guild's original emblem. There was a brief construction boom on the Way of St. James pilgrimage route in the 9th and 10th centuries; this could have brought the guild both power and suspicion. A subsequent collapse of their business would have left a scattered, yet cohesive group in the areas where Cagots are known.Template:Sfnp
Robb's guild hypothesis, alongside much of the work in his The Discovery of France, has been heavily criticised for "[failing] to understand most of the secondary works in his own bibliography" and being a "recycling of nineteenth-century myths",[22] and that while it offers many detailed impressions of history, it does not provide much in the way of extended analyses and argumentations.Template:Sfnp
For similar reasons due to their restricted trades, the philosopher Template:Ill suggests in his work Script error: No such module "Lang". (The invention of racism: Antiquity and the Middle Ages), that a possible origin is as a culturally distinct community of woodsmen who were Christianised relatively late.Template:Sfnp
The medievalist, Benoît Cursente, has proposed that the Cagots developed as a group due to the rapidly changing social relations in the region of Béarn, coinciding with, and influenced by, the period when lepers were becoming segregated across France and Spain in the 13th century.Template:Sfnp
Geography
Distribution
The Cagots were present in France in Gascony to the Basque Country, but also in the north of Spain (in Aragon, south and north Navarre, and Asturias) where they are referred to commonly by the term Agotes.Template:Sfnp
Cagots were typically required to live in separate quarters,Template:Sfnp[23]Template:SfnpTemplate:Pn these hamlets were called Script error: No such module "Lang". and then from the 16th century Script error: No such module "Lang".,Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp which were often on the far outskirts of the villages. On the scale of Béarn, for example, the distribution of Cagots, often carpenters, was similar to that of other craftsmen, who were numerous mainly in the piedmont. Far from congregating in only a few places, the Cagots were scattered in over 137 villages and towns. Outside the mountains, 35 to 40% of communities had Cagots, especially the largest ones, excluding very small villages.Template:Sfnp The buildings making up the Script error: No such module "Lang". are still present in many villages.Template:Sfnp
Toponomy
Due to the segregated housing that Cagots were required to live in, many toponyms feature the names which they were known by locally, indicating where the Cagots formerly lived.Template:Sfnp This toponymy and topography indicate that the places where the Cagots were found have constant characteristics; these are gaps, generally across rivers or outside town walls,Template:R called "Script error: No such module "Lang"." (and derivatives) or "Script error: No such module "Lang"." (Laplace names are frequent) next to water points, places allocated to live and to practice their trades.Template:Sfnp
Various street names are still in use such as Script error: No such module "Lang". in the municipalities of Montgaillard[25] and Lourdes,[26] Script error: No such module "Lang". in Laurède, Script error: No such module "Lang". in Roquefort, Script error: No such module "Lang". in Saint-Girons, and Script error: No such module "Lang". in the municipalities of Mézin, Sos, Vic-Fezensac,[27] Aire-sur-l'Adour, Eauze, and Gondrin.
In Aubiet, there is a locality called "Script error: No such module "Lang".". It was in this hamlet, that the cagots (Script error: No such module "Lang".) of Aubiet lived, on the left bank of the Arrats, separated from the village by the river. The discovery of the name of the place allowed teachers to discover the local history of the Cagots and to start educational work.[28] Until the beginning of the 20th century, several districts of Cagots still bore the name of Script error: No such module "Lang". ("Carpenter").Template:R
Treatment
Cagots were shunned and hated; while restrictions varied by time and place, with many discriminatory actions being codified into law in France in 1460,Template:Sfnp[29] they were typically required to live in separate quarters.Template:Sfnp Cagots were excluded from various political and social rights.[30] The Cagots did have a culture of their own, but very little of it was written down or preserved; as a result, almost everything that is known about them relates to their persecution.Template:Sfnp The repression lasted through the Middle Ages, Renaissance, and Industrial Revolution, with the prejudice fading only in the 19th and 20th centuries.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp
Religious treatment
While Cagots followed the same religion as the non-Cagots who lived around them,Template:Sfnp they were subject to variety of discriminatory practices in religious rites and buildings, this included being forced to use a side entrance to churches, often an intentionally low one to force Cagots to bowTemplate:Sfnp and remind them of their subservient status.Template:Sfnp[31] This practice, done for cultural rather than religious reasons, did not change even between Catholic and Huguenot areas, as shown by historian Raymond A. Mentzer, who records how even when Cagots converted from Catholicism to Calvinism they were still subject to the same discriminatory practices, including in religious rites and rituals.Template:Sfnp Cagots were expected to slip into churches quietly and congregate in the worst seats. They had their own holy water fonts set aside for Cagots, and touching the normal font was strictly forbidden.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp These restrictions were taken seriously; with one story collected by Elizabeth Gaskell explaining the origin of the skeleton of a hand nailed to the church door in Quimperlé, Brittany, where in the 18th century, a wealthy Cagot had his hand cut off and nailed to the church door for daring to touch the font reserved for "clean" citizens.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp
Treatment by governments
Cagots were not allowed to marry non-Cagots[32] leading to forced endogamy,[33] though in some areas in the later centuries (such as Béarn) they were able to marry non-Cagots though the non-Cagot would then be classed as a Cagot.Template:Sfnp They were not allowed to enter taverns or use public fountains.Template:Sfnp The marginalization of the Cagots began at baptism where chimes were not rung in celebration as was the case for non-Cagots and that the baptisms were held at nightfall.Template:SfnpTemplate:PnTemplate:SfnpTemplate:Pn Within parish registries the term Script error: No such module "Lang"., or its scholarly synonym Script error: No such module "Lang"., was entered.Template:Sfnp From 1500, cagots were buried in cemeteries separate from non-Cagots[34] with reports of riots occurring if bishops tried to have the bodies moved to non-Cagot cemeteries.Template:Sfnp Commonly Cagots were not given a standard last name in registries and records but were only listed by their first name, followed by the mention "Script error: No such module "Lang"." or "Script error: No such module "Lang".",Template:Sfnp such as on their baptismal certificate,Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp They were allowed to enter a church only by a special doorTemplate:Sfnp[35] and, during the service, a rail separated them from the other worshippers.Template:SfnpTemplate:R They were forbidden from joining the priesthood.Template:Sfnp Either they were altogether forbidden to partake of the sacrament, or the Eucharist was given to them on the end of a wooden spoon,Template:SfnpTemplate:PnTemplate:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp while a holy water stoup was reserved for their exclusive use.Template:Sfnp They were compelled to wear a distinctive dress to which, in some places, was attached the foot of a goose or duckTemplate:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp (whence they were sometimes called Script error: No such module "Lang".),Template:Sfnp and latterly to have a red representation of a goose's foot in fabric sewn onto their clothes.[36] Whilst in Navarre a court ruling in 1623 required all Cagots to wear cloaks with a yellow trim to identify them as Cagots.Template:SfnpTemplate:PnTemplate:Sfnp
In Spanish territories Cagots were subject to the Script error: No such module "Lang". statutes (cleanliness of blood).Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp These statutes established the legal discrimination, restriction of rights, and restriction of privileges of the descendants of Muslims, Jews, Romani, and Cagots.Template:Sfnp
Work
Cagots were prohibited from selling food or wine,Template:Sfnp touching food in the market, working with livestock,Template:Sfnp or entering mills.Template:Sfnp The Cagots were often restricted to craft trades including those of carpenter,Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp[38] mason, woodcutter,Template:Sfnp wood carver,[39] cooper,Template:SfnpTemplate:PnTemplate:Sfnp butcher,Template:Sfnp and rope-maker.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp They were also often employed as musicians in Navarre.Template:SfnpTemplate:R Cagots who were involved in masonry and carpentry were often contracted to construct major public buildings, such as churches, an example being the Template:Ill.Template:Sfnp Due to association with woodworking crafts, Cagots often worked as the operators of instruments of torture and execution, as well as making the instruments themselves.Template:SfnpTemplate:SfnpTemplate:PnTemplate:Sfnp Such professions may have perpetuated their social ostracisation.Template:SfnpTemplate:Pn
Cagot women were often midwives until the 15th century.Template:SfnpTemplate:PnTemplate:Sfnp Due to social exclusion, in France the Cagots were exempt from taxation until the 18th century.Template:SfnpTemplate:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp By the 19th century these restrictions seem to have been lifted, but the trades continued to be practiced by Cagots, along with other trades such as weaving and blacksmithing.Template:SfnpTemplate:R Because the main identifying mark of the Cagots was the restriction of their trades to a few small options, their segregation has been compared to the caste system in India,Template:Sfnp[40] with the Cagots being compared to the Dalits.Template:Sfnp
Accusations and pseudo-medical beliefs
Few consistent reasons were given as to why Cagots were hated; accusations varied from them being cretins,Template:Sfnp lepers,Template:Sfnp heretics,Template:Sfnp cannibals,Template:Sfnp sorcerers,Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp werewolves,Template:Sfnp sexual deviants, to actions they were accused of such as poisoning wells,[41]Template:Sfnp or for simply being intrinsically evil. They were viewed as untouchables, with Christian Delacampagne noting how it was believed that they could cause children to fall ill by touching them or even just looking at them,Template:Sfnp being considered so pestilential that it was a crime for them to walk common roads barefootedTemplate:Sfnp or to drink from the same cup as non-Cagots. It was also a common belief that the Cagots gave off a foul smell.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp Template:Ill recorded that many believed Cagots were born with a tail.Template:R Many Bretons believed that Cagots bled from their navel on Good Friday.Template:Sfnp
The belief of Cagots as a special class of lepers is recorded, and in part disproven, as early as 1390, where some Cagots who had migrated from the Basque country to Monzón in Aragon were accused by some Basques living in the town of being lepers of an especially virulent kind.Template:Sfnp The Cagots sought remediation from the town's magistrate, where every Cagot was then subjected to public medical examinations from multiple physicians. The result was that every Cagot was declared free of any disease, and those who levied the accusations had to formally apologise.Template:Sfnp Though despite this result, the accusations and their ill treatment persisted.Template:Sfnp
The French early psychiatrist Jean-Étienne Dominique Esquirol wrote in his 1838 works that the Cagots were a subset of "idiot", and separate from "cretins".Template:Sfnp By the middle of the 19th century,Template:Sfnp previous pseudo-medical beliefs and beliefs of them being intellectually inferiorTemplate:Sfnp had waned and German doctors, by 1849, regarded them as "not without the ability to become useful members of society."[42] Though various French and British doctors were continuing to label the Cagots as a race inherently afflicted with congenital disabilities to the end of the 19th century.Template:Sfnp Daniel Tuke wrote in 1880 after visiting communities where Cagots lived, noted how local people would not subject "cretins" born to non-Cagots to living with Cagots.Template:Sfnp
Cagot as pejorative
Philosopher Template:Ill highlights how even from as far back as the work of François Rabelais in the 16th century, the term Script error: No such module "Lang". was used as a synonym for people viewed as deceitful and hypocritical.Template:Sfnp In contemporary language the term Script error: No such module "Lang". has been further separated from it being the name of a distinct caste of people to being a pejorative term for any person who is "lazy" or "shameful".Template:Sfnp Similar transformations have occurred with the Spanish equivalent name Script error: No such module "Lang"..[43]
Cagot allies
An appeal by the Cagots to Pope Leo X in 1514 was successful, with a papal rescript issued in 1515, instructing that the Cagots be treated "with kindness, in the same way as the other believers." Still, little changed, as most local authorities ignored the bull.[44]
The nominal though usually ineffective allies of the Cagots were the government, the educated, and the wealthy. This included Charles V who officially supported tolerance of and improvements to the lives of Cagots.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp It has been suggested that the odd patchwork of areas which recognized Cagots has more to do with which local governments tolerated the prejudice, and which allowed Cagots to be a normal part of society. In a study in 1683, doctors examined the Cagots and found them no different from normal citizens. Notably, they did not actually suffer from leprosy or any other disease that could clarify their exclusion from society. The parlements of Pau, Toulouse and Bordeaux were informed of the situation, and money was allocated to improve the situation of the Cagots, but the populace and local authorities resisted.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp
Through many of the centuries Cagots in France and Spain came under the protection and jurisdiction of the church.Template:Sfnp In 1673, the Ursúa lords of the municipality of Baztán advocated the recognition of the local Cagots as natural residents of the Baztán.Template:Sfnp Also in the 17th century Jean-Baptiste Colbert officially freed Cagots in France from their servitude to parish churches and from restrictions placed upon them, though in practicality nothing changed.Template:Sfnp
By the 18th century Cagots made up considerable portions of various settlements, such as in Baigorri where Cagots made up 10% of the population.Template:R
In 1709, the influential politician Template:Ill planned and constructed the manufacturing town of Nuevo Baztán (after his native Baztan Valley in Navarre) near Madrid.Template:Sfnp He brought many Cagot settlers to Nuevo Baztán, but after some years, many returned to Navarre, unhappy with their work conditions.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp
Starting in 1723 the Parlement of Bordeaux instituted fines for anyone insulting any individual as "alleged descendants of the Giezy race, and treating them as agots, cagots, gahets or ladres", with the decree being reissued with an ever increasing fine until it reached of 500 French livres due to people ignoring the decree.Template:Sfnp[45] ordering that they will be admitted to general and particular assemblies, to municipal offices and honors of the church, they may even be placed in the galleries and other places of the said church where they will be treated and recognized as the other inhabitants of the places, without any distinction; as also that their children will be received in the schools and colleges of the cities, towns and villages, and will be admitted in all the Christian instructions indiscriminately.[45]
During the French Revolution substantive steps were taken to end discrimination toward Cagots.[46]Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp Revolutionary authorities claimed that Cagots were no different from other citizens,Template:R and de jure discrimination generally came to an end.[47] And while their treatment did improve compared to previous centuries,Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp local prejudice from the non-Cagot populace persisted,[48] though the practice began to decline. Also, during the revolution, Cagots stormed record offices and burned birth certificates in an attempt to conceal their heritage.Template:Sfnp These measures did not prove effective, as the local populace still remembered. Rhyming songs kept the names of Cagot families known.Template:Sfnp
Modern status
Kurt Tucholsky wrote in his book on the Pyrenees in 1927: "There were many in the Argelès valley, near Luchon and in the Ariège district. Today they are almost extinct, you have to search hard if you want to see them".Template:Sfnp Examples of prejudice still occurred into the 19th and 20th century,Template:Sfnp including a scandal in the village of Lescun where in the 1950s a non-Cagot woman married a Cagot man.[49]
There was a distinct Cagot community in Navarre until the early 20th century, with the small northern village called Arizkun in Basque (or Arizcun in Spanish) being the last haven of this segregation,Template:Sfnp where the community was contained within the neighbourhood of Bozate.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp Between 1915 and 1920 the Ursúa noble family sold the land that Cagots had worked for the Ursúa for centuries in the area of Baztan to the Cagot families.Template:R Family names in Spain still associated with having Cagot ancestors include: Bidegain, Errotaberea, Zaldua, Maistruarena, Amorena, and Santxotena.Template:Sfnp
The Cagots no longer form a separate social class and were largely assimilated into the general population.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp Very little of Cagot culture still exists, as most descendants of Cagots have preferred not to be known as such.Template:Sfnp
There are two museums dedicated to the history of the Cagots, one in the neighborhood of Bozate in the town of Arizkun, Spain, the Script error: No such module "Lang". (Ethnographic Museum of the Agotes), opened by the sculptor and Cagot, Template:Ill in 2003,Template:RTemplate:Sfnp and a museum in the Château des Nestes[50] in Arreau, France.[51]
In 2021 and 2022 anti-vaccination and anti-vaccine passport protestors in France started wearing the red goose's foot symbol that Cagots were forced to wear, and handed out cards explaining the discrimination against the Cagots.[52][53]
In media
References to Cagots as well as Cagots as characters have appeared in works throughout the past millennia. One of the earliest examples is the legend of the battle of 1373 that led to The Tribute of the Three Cows, the people of the French Template:Ill are said to have been led by a Cagot with four ears.[54] References to Cagots occur semi-regularly in French literary works such as in the 1793 French play Script error: No such module "Lang"., by Sylvain Maréchal. The liberated subjects of the kings of Europe provide critiques of and insult their former rulers, where they say the Spanish king has "stupidity, cagotism and despotism [...] imprinted on his royal face".[55]
Multiple references to Cagots have appeared in the poems of the 19th century French poet Édouard Pailleron.[56]
Multiple travellers to the Pyrenees upon learning about and seeing the Cagots were inspired to write of their conditions both in fictional and non-fictional works. Such travellers included the Irish author and diplomat Thomas Colley Grattan, whose 1823 story The Cagot's Hut details the otherness he perceived in the Cagots during his travels in the French Pyrenees, detailing many of the mythical features that became folklore about the Cagots appearance.[57]Template:Sfnp In July 1841 the German poet Heinrich Heine visited the town of Cauterets and learned of the Cagots and their discrimination by others, subsequently becoming the topic of his poem Canto XV in Atta Troll.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp After travelling in southern France in 1853, Elizabeth Gaskell published her non-fiction work An Accursed Race, detailing the contemporary condition of the Cagots.Template:Sfnp
More recently, the Basque director Template:Ill released a Spanish-language film titled Baztan in 2012. The film deals with a young man fighting against the discrimination he and his family have suffered for centuries due to being Cagots.Template:Sfnp
Cagotic architecture
-
Sculpture of a "Cagot" in the Église Saint-Girons in Monein, which was built by the local cagot craftsmen in 1464.[58][59]
-
Cagot houses in the Mailhòc district (wooden mallet), Saint-Savin, 1906.
-
Template:Ill which was built by the local Cagots.
-
The interior of Halle de Campan.
-
The Script error: No such module "Lang"., and the "Script error: No such module "Lang"." in Mézin, Lot-et-Garonne. The Script error: No such module "Lang". was formerly inhabited by the Script error: No such module "Lang". (Cagots) of the town.
Fonts
-
Font for Cagots in the church of Bassoues, dating from the 15th century.
-
Font for Cagots in the Église Saint-Girons in Monein, with a small sculpture of what is presumed to be a Cagot.
-
Font for Cagots in the Template:Ill in Saint-Aubin, Landes.
Doors
-
Door of the Cagots of the church of Sauveterre-de-Béarn.
-
Former door for Cagots in Bahus-Soubiran at the Church of Saint-Jean-Baptiste.
-
Door of the Cagots in La Bastide-Clairence at the Church of Notre-Dame-de-l'Assomption.
-
Former door for Cagots in the Template:Ill in Moustey.
-
Door for Cagots in the Church of Saint-Aubin in Saint-Aubin, Landes.
-
Door for Cagots in the Template:Ill in Duhort-Bachen.
-
Door for Cagots in the Template:Ill in Saint-Étienne-de-Baïgorry.
See also
- Burakumin, a similarly historically persecuted group in Japan.
- Caquins of Brittany, a derogatory term used to describe coopers and ropemakers.
- Script error: No such module "Lang"., an ethnic group in the Spanish Basque country and the French Basque coast possibly related to the Cagots.Template:Sfnp
- Script error: No such module "Lang"., an ethnic minority in Spain and Portugal.
- Template:Ill, an ethnic group in Spain who were also discriminated against and have unknown origins.Template:Sfnp
- Sanka (ethnic group), an ethnic minority in Japan
- Script error: No such module "Lang"., a discriminated group of cowherders in Northern Spain.
- Script error: No such module "Lang"., a persecuted ethnic minority in Mallorca, often referenced in works discussing the persecution of Cagots in Spain.
Notes
References
<templatestyles src="Reflist/styles.css" />
- ↑ Template:Harvp: Script error: No such module "Lang". [Certain Families in the Kingdoms of Aragon and Navarre, and the Principality of Bearne, descendants of the Goths, who without more guilt than their leaders formerly tyrannizing those Provinces, are treated with the greatest contempt and abasement, in civil matters as well as in Religion: and they even say that they are born with tails.]
- ↑ Template:Harvp: "Script error: No such module "Lang"." ["4) What would that people be, which after its subjugation would be present only in these miserable ones? In no way are the opinions of the writers so divided. Some consider them to be the descendants of the first inhabitants conquered by the Romans and later by the Franks - the Gauls. Court de Gebelin in his Script error: No such module "Lang". chooses the Alans and cites the battle of 463, in which they were defeated with the Visigoths. Marca regards them as the remains of the Sarazans defeated by Carl Martel led by the Abdalrahman. Ramond in his Journey to the Pyrenees derives them from the Arian-minded peoples who, under the Clodoveus in the year 507 at Vouglé (in Campo or Campania Vocladensi) under the leadership of Alaric, beaten, scattered, abused ten miles from Poitiers, and treated with equal bitterness and contempt by the inhabitants of the Loire and the Sévre the mouths of these two rivers were driven. Who is right here must first be decided later, and before this can happen, the matter must be examined more closely."]
- ↑ Template:Harvp; Template:Harvp; Template:Harvp; Template:Harvp; Template:Harvp: "called Script error: No such module "Lang"., cagots (Pr. Script error: No such module "Lang". a dog, and Script error: No such module "Lang". = Goth)."; Template:Harvp: "Script error: No such module "Lang"." ["The first and most natural question arises about the name. Where did the strange name Cagot come from? Scaliger's opinion, deriving it from Script error: No such module "Lang". Goth, Script error: No such module "Lang"., seems to take for granted its Gothic origin, which has yet to be proved, and this derivation seems too artificial and forced."]
- ↑ Template:Harvp; Template:Harvp; Template:Harvp
- ↑ Template:Harvp: Script error: No such module "Lang". [They are descendants of Saracens who remained in Gascony after Charles Martel had defeated Abdel-Rahman. They converted and became Christians.]
- ↑ Template:Harvp: "Script error: No such module "Lang"." ["The gafets or gahets of Guyenne make their appearance in history towards the end of the 13th century, at the same time as the Cagots. They, too, were considered wretches; they had in the church a door, a place and a stoup reserved, and they were buried separately. The custom of Mas-d'Agenais, written in 1388, forbids anyone "to buy, to sell, cattle or poultry from gafet or gafete, or to rent gafet or gafete for harvesting." The custom of Marmande forbids gafets to go barefoot through the streets and without a "signal" of red cloth applied to the left side of the dress, to buy or to stay in the city on a day other than Monday; she enjoins them, if they meet man or woman, to stand apart as much as possible until the passer-by has moved away."]
- ↑ Template:Harvp: "Script error: No such module "Lang"." ["They are known in Brittany under the name of Cacous or Caqueux. They can be found in Aunis, especially on the island of Maillezais, as well as in La Rochelle, where they are called Coliberts. In Guyenne and Gascogne, near Bordeaux, they appear under the name of the Cahets, and can be found in the most uninhabitable swamps, swamps and heaths. In the two Navarres they are called Caffos, Cagotes, Agotes."]
- ↑ Template:Harvp; Template:Harvp; Template:Harvp
- ↑ Template:Harvp; Template:Harvp; Template:Harvp; Template:Harvp
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Template:Harvp: "Script error: No such module "Lang"." ["The question arises 2) Do the caquets or caqueux in Brittany and the cagots in Bearn, like the cassos in Navarre, belong to one and the same family? We think we can answer the question with Ramond in the affirmative. The close affinity of names, the similarity of their condition, the same contempt in all places, and the same spirit emanating from all the ordinances concerning them, seem to prove this."]
- ↑ Template:Harvp; Template:Harvp; Template:Harvp; Template:Harvp
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Template:Harvp: "Script error: No such module "Lang"." ["Leuce attacks the body less deeply, and it is this that doctors of the Middle Ages particularly attribute to Caquots, Capots and Cagots, which they call by their name white ladres. The main characters are, according to Guy de Chauliac, an old author of the fourteenth century: "a certain ugly color that jumps out at the eyes, the morphea or pale tint of the skin, etc"."]
- ↑ Template:Harvp: Script error: No such module "Lang". [Wide, bunion face, strong skeleton, prominent cheekbones, strong bizygomatic distance, large blue or light green eyes, somewhat oblique. Brachycephalic skull, white, pale complexion and brown or blonde hair; It doesn't look anything like classic Basque. It is a central European or northern type. There are old men in Bozate who look like portraits of Dürer, with a Germanic air. There are also others with a longer and darker face that are reminiscent of the gypsy.]
- ↑ Template:Harvp: "Script error: No such module "Lang"." ["Webster rejects the idea that the agotes were a people distinct from the Basque, for linguistic reasons. According to the wise Englishman, a people, foreigners, who live isolated from the society that surrounds them and with very severe barriers, have not been able to completely forget their ancestral language. The agotes, however, speak Basque exactly like the Basques around them."]
- ↑ Template:Harvp: "Script error: No such module "Lang"." ["M. Roussel persists in seeing blond descendants of the Goths in the Cagots of the Pyrenees. But they are in reality very diverse, more often brown than blond, brachy and dolichocephalic, similar to the background of the population where they live; They speak the language or patois of the country."]
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
- ↑ Template:Harvp: "Script error: No such module "Lang". ["In all the localities where the Cagots were present, a residential area, whose name differs for each village, was reserved for them. This district is generally located on the margins of the habitat and is not in direct continuity with the rest of the village. When the Cagots accessed land, it was first on the margins of the cultivated land, at the limit of the communal on land less suitable for agriculture."]
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Template:Harvp: "Script error: No such module "Lang"." ["that in 1460 they were the subject of a complaint by the Bearnese estates, which demanded that they should be forbidden to walk with bare feet because of contagion, under threat of the punishment that their feet should be struck with an iron in the event of trespass. The standing orders also insisted that they should continue to wear their former distinctive mark, the goose - or duck - foot on their clothes."]
- ↑ Template:Harvp; Template:Harvp; Template:Harvp;Template:Pn Template:Harvp;Template:Pn Template:Harvp
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Template:Harvp; Template:Harvp; Template:Harvp; Template:Harvp;Template:Pn Template:Harvp
- ↑ Template:Harvp: "Script error: No such module "Lang"." ["The extent of marital areas and the distribution of surnames are the main indices of cagot mobility. F. Bériac links the extension of the matrimonial areas of the Cagots of the different localities studied (from 20 to more than 35 km) to the importance and the relative density of the groups of cagots, correlating the search for distant spouses with the exhaustion of possibilities local. Template:Ill and Y. Guy, using the Gers documentation exploited by G. Loubès and the documents published by Fay for Béarn and Chalosse (15th–17th century) conclude that the endogamy of Cagots seems to operate within three subsets that correspond to those distinguished by terminology from the 16th century: agotes, cagots, capots. Within each of them, the average intermarriage distances are relatively long: between 12 and 15 km in Béarn and Chalosse, more than 30 km in the Gers, in a society where more than half of marriages took place at home, inside the same village."]
- ↑ Template:Harvp; Template:Harvp; Template:Harvp; Template:Harvp; Template:Harvp
- ↑ Template:Harvp: "Script error: No such module "Lang"." ["that they were not allowed to enter the churches other than through separate doors, and in these had their own stoups and chairs for themselves and their families."]
- ↑ Template:Harvp; Template:Harvp; Template:Harvp; Template:Harvp: "Script error: No such module "Lang"." ["So they were kept prudently apart: those from the cities were relegated to a special suburb where healthy people were careful not to set foot and where they could not get out themselves without wearing on their clothes and well in evidence a piece of red cloth cut in crow's or duck's feet"]
- ↑ Template:Harvp: "Script error: No such module "Lang"." ["During interviews carried out recently by P. Antolini in the village of Arizcun in Navarre, it appears that the cagots in this region had trades and little land: carpenter, joiner, blacksmith, quarryman, miller, flute player and drummer, hunter, weaver. They also worked on the lands of Lord Ursua as sharecroppers, or as laborers for the village farmers and herders. Around 1915-1920, the Ursua house sold the land they worked to the cagots: they are now almost all owners of their houses and their land, but the majority are still artisans."]
- ↑ Template:Harvp: "Script error: No such module "Lang"." ["Apart from splitting wood and carving, they are not allowed to do any other craft: these two occupations have become contemptible and dishonorable because of this."]
- ↑ Template:Harvp: "Script error: No such module "Lang"." ["On the western coast of this country, from St. Malo to deep up the Pyrenees, there is a class of people who come very close to the Indian pariah, and are on the same level of humiliation with them. They have been scattered in these areas, from time immemorial to the present day, under constant disparagement from their more fortunate fellow citizens. With their best-known and most general designation they are called Cagots, and it remains doubtful whether the hypocrites gave them or they gave them their names, although the last one seems more credible to me."]
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Template:Harvp; Template:Harvp; Template:Harvp; Template:Harvp; Template:Harvp;Template:Pn Template:Harvp; Template:Harvp
- ↑ a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
- ↑ Template:Harvp: "Script error: No such module "Lang"." ["The latest and most recent news is dated 1787 and is also included in Ramond's Travels. "I have seen, writes this eyewitness, some families of these unfortunates. They imperceptibly approach the villages from which they were banished. The side doors through which they went into the churches become useless. A little pity finally mixes with them the contempt and loathing they inspired. Yet I have also found remote huts where these unfortunate ones still fear being mistreated by judgment, and expect visits only from pity.""]
- ↑ Template:Harvp: "Script error: No such module "Lang"." ["On the other hand, everyone likes to cite what is given to be the last effective manifestation of the phenomenon of segregation: the last marriage "which caused a scandal" in Lescun between a girl from a large family and a cagot, in the 1950s."]
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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Bibliography
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Further reading
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External links
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