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As if there wasn't an attempt to reform them first? Plus the murder of his diplomat? Also, it was a political issue as well:Except for the Crusades against religious Communities declared "heretical" by the Catholic Church (the Cathars in Southern France, for example), where the Catholic Church's leadership (Pope Innocent III) gathered and sent a fighting force to convert/eliminate those holding to the "heresy".
The "Albigensian Crusade", by which this is commonly known, ... was responsible for the deaths of an estimated 2 million persons over the course of 20 years (1209 - 1229) ...
Albigensian Crusade - Wikipedia
On becoming Pope in 1198, Innocent III resolved to deal with the Cathars and sent a delegation of friars to the province of Languedoc to assess the situation. The Cathars of Languedoc were seen as not showing proper respect for the authority of the French king or the local Catholic Church, and their leaders were being protected by powerful nobles,[20] who had clear interest in independence from the king.
One of the most powerful, Count Raymond VI, Count of Toulouse, openly supported the Cathars and their independence movement. He refused to assist the delegation. He was excommunicated in May 1207 and an interdict was placed on his lands. The senior papal legate, Pierre de Castelnau, seen as responsible for these actions, was killed and his death was attributed to supporters of the count.[10] This brought down more penalties on Count Raymond, but he soon agreed to reconcile with the Church and the excommunication was lifted. At the Council of Avignon (1209) Raymond was again excommunicated for not fulfilling the conditions of ecclesiastical reconciliation.[10] King Philip II of France decided to act against those nobles who permitted Catharism within their lands and undermined secular authority. Though the actual crusade lasted only two months, the internal conflict between the north and the south of France continued for some twenty years.
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