An analysis of records of the trial of Cathar and Waldensian heretics that sheds light on itinerancy within heretical movements.By analysing medieval records of the trial of Cathar and Waldensian heretics in the South of France, Caterina Bruschi sheds light on itinerancy within heretical movements, challenges old methodologies in the study of dissent and examines the different fears felt by deponents and how those fears affected their actions.By analysing medieval records of the trial of Cathar and Waldensian heretics in the South of France, Caterina Bruschi sheds light on itinerancy within heretical movements, challenges old methodologies in the study of dissent and examines the different fears felt by deponents and how those fears affected their actions.How should historians read sources which record inquisitorial trials in the Middle Ages? How can we understand the fears felt by those on trial? By analysing six volumes of depositions in the trial of Cathar and Waldensian heretics in Languedoc between the late twelfth and the fourteenth century, in this book, Caterina Bruschi challenges old methodologies in the study of dissent. She examines the intrinsic narratological problems related to the sources and, using approaches from the social sciences, analyses the different fears felt by deponents and how those fears affected their actions and decisions. In so doing, she sheds light on itinerancy within the ecclesial structure of non-conformist movements and contextualises the problem of itinerancy as a benchmark for the definition of heresy. Focusing on the lives and attitudes of trial witnesses, this innovative account is a major contribution to our understanding of the nature of religious non-conformity in the Middle Ages.Introduction; 1. Stories, and how to read them; 2. Catharism and its mobility; 3. Heretical itinerancy; 4. Patterns of fear and risk; Conclusions (and starting points); Bibliography. Caterina Bruschi undertakes the seemingly quixotic task of attel#(