Grazide Lizier

Grazide Lizier

Grazide Lizier née Fauré was a peasant in the Comté de Foix in the late thirteenth and early fourteenth century. A number of facts about her life are recorded in the Fournier Register, and her life, along with those of her fellow villagers, was analyzed in Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie's "Montaillou".

Grazide was the daughter of Pons and Frabrice Rives, her mother was the town wine seller. At the age of fifteen or sixteen she became the mistress to her cousin Pierre Clergue, the local priest. A year later, at Clergue's behest, she married Pierre Lizier. The affair between her and Clergue continued, however, with the consent of her husband. The marriage lasted only four years with Pierre Lizier dying when Grazide was twenty. Soon after Grazide also ended the relationship with Pierre Clergue.

External links

* [http://www2.sjsu.edu/depts/english/Fournier/grazide.htm Grazide Lizier's testimony to the inquisition]

References

*Le Roy Ladurie, Emmanuel. "Montaillou: The Promised Land of Error." translated by Barbara Bray. New York: G. Braziller, c1978.


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  • Pierre Clergue — was a priest in the village of Montaillou, France in the late thirteenth and early fourteenth century. He is the central figure in Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie s book Montaillou , a pioneering work of microhistory. Since then he has appeared in a… …   Wikipedia

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