Simon de Montfort (born 1165?—died June 25, 1218, Toulouse, France) was a French leader of the Albigensian Crusade declared by Pope Innocent III against the Cathari, an unorthodox religious group in southern France.
In 1190 Simon married Alice de Montmorency (died 1221). During the Fourth Crusade (1202–04) he participated in the siege of Zara and later fought in Syria. Beginning in 1209, he led the fight against the Cathari (better known as Albigenses after the town of Albi) in a Crusade that quickly became a war of conquest by the northern French against the nobility of the south. Having conquered Béziers and Carcassonne, he was chosen to govern those lands. When most of the Crusaders departed after the 40-day term they had promised to serve, he was left with large territories still to conquer. After he won the important Battle of Muret in 1213, the lands of Raymond VI, count of Toulouse, were adjudged to Simon by the fourth Lateran Council (1215) because of Raymond’s failure to root out heretics. He now styled himself count of Toulouse, viscount of Béziers and Carcassonne, and duke of Narbonne, but Raymond did not accept defeat. He occupied Toulouse in September 1217. Simon was killed while besieging the city. His son Amaury (died 1241) soon abandoned the Crusade and ceded the Montfort lands in southern France to King Louis VIII.