A History of The Inquisition of The Middle Ages Volume I Part 37
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[281] Concil. Arelatens. ann. 1234 c. 5.--Concil. Turonens. ann. 1239 c.
1.--Concil. Biterrens. ann. 1246 c. 1.--Concil. Albiens. ann. 1254 c.
1.--Archives de l'Inq. de Carca.s.sonne (Coll. Doat, x.x.x.
250).--Vaissette, III. Pr. pp. 385-6.--Raynald Annal. ann. 1237, No.
32.--Archives de France, J. 430, No. 19-20.--Archivio di Firenze, Riformagioni, Cla.s.se v. fol. 80.--Archives de l'Inq. de Carca.s.sonne (Doat, x.x.xI. 230).
[282] Lami, Antichita Toscane, pp. 484, 504, 524.--Muratori Antiq. Ital.
Diss. LX. (T. XII. p. 447).--D'Achery Spicileg. III. 588, 598.--Charvaz, Origine dei Valdesi, Torino, 1838, App. No. xxii.--Isambert, Anc. Loix Fran. I. 228.--Corio, Hist. Milanese, ann. 1228-9.--Hist. Diplom. Frid.
II. T. III. p. 466.
[283] De Lagreze, La Navarre Francaise, I. xxi; II. 6.--Concil. Lateran.
IV. c. 3 (C. 13 Extra v. vii.).
[284] Hist. Diplom. Frid. II. T. II. pp. 4-6, 422; T. IV. pp. 6-8, 299-302; T. V. pp. 201, 279-80. The coronation-edict, which formed the basis of all subsequent legislation against heresy, was drawn up by the papal curia, and sent, a fortnight before the ceremony, to the Legate Bishop of Tusculum, with orders to procure the imperial signature and return it, so that it could be published under the emperor's name in the church of St. Peter (Raynald. ann. 1220, No. 19.--Hist. Dipl. I. II.
880). Nothing could seem a plainer duty to an ecclesiastic of the time than that the Church should stimulate the temporal ruler to the sharpest persecution of heresy.
It was doubtless the outlawry of heretics p.r.o.nounced by the edicts of Frederic which enabled the Inquisition to establish the settled principle that the heretic could be captured and despoiled at any time and by any person, and that the spoiler could retain his goods--provided always that he was not an official of the Holy Office (Tract. de Inquisitione, Doat, x.x.xVI.).
[285] Hist. Diplom. Frid. II. T. II. p. 7.--Post Libb. Feudorum.--Post constt. iv. xix. Cod. I. v.--Innoc. PP. IV. Bull. _c.u.m adversus_, 1243, 1252, 1254; Bull. _Orthodox_, 27 Apr., 14 Maii, 1252.--Alex. PP. IV.
Bull. _c.u.m adversus_, 1258.--Ejusd. Bull. _Cupientes_, 1260.--Clement.
PP. IV. Bull. _c.u.m adversus_, 1265.--Wadding. Annal. Minor. ann. 1261, No. 3; ann. 1289, No. 20.--Urbani PP. IV. Bull. _Licet ex omnibus_, 1262, -- 12.--Epistt. Saeculi XIII. No. 191 (Monument. Hist.
German.).--Eymerici Direct. Inquis. Ed. Pegnae, 1607, p. 392.--Innoc. PP.
IV. Bull. _Ad aures_, 2 Apr. 1253.--Sclopis, Antica Legislazione del Piemonte, p. 440.--Bernardi Comens. Lucerna Inquisit. s.v. _Executio_, No. 3.--Archivio di Firenze, Riformagioni, Cla.s.se II. Distinz. 1, No.
14.--Potthast No. 7672.--C. 2 in Septimo, v. 3.
[286] Isambert, Anc. Loix Fran. I. 230-33; III. 126.--Harduin. Concil.
VII. 203-8--Guill. de. Pod. Laur. c. 42.--etabliss.e.m.e.nts, Liv. I. ch.
85, 123.--Livres de Jostice et de Plet, Liv. I. t.i.t. iii. -- 7.
[287] Archives Nat. de France, J. 426, No. 4.--Martene Ampliss. Collect.
VII. 123-4.--Bernard. Guidon. Practica P. IV. (Coll. Doat, x.x.x.).--Clem.
PP. IV. Bull. _Prae cunctis_, 23 Feb. 1266.
In 1229 the Council of Toulouse had already prohibited all laymen from possessing any of the Scriptures, even in Latin (Concil. Tolosan. ann.
1229, c. 14).
[288] Raynald. Annal. ann. 1231, No. 13, 18.--Ripoll I. 38.--Ricobaldi Ferrar. Hist. Impp. ann. 1234.--Paramo de Orig. Offic. S. Inq. p.
177.--Richardi di S. Germano Chron. ann. 1231.--C. 15 Extra v. vii. (In this canon "noluerint" is evidently an error for "voluerint").--Hartzheim Concil. German. III. 540.
[289] Const.i.t. Sicular. Lib. I. t.i.t. 1.--Hist. Diplom. Frid. II. T. IV.
pp. 435, 444.--Rich. de S. Germano Chron. ann. 1233.--Giannone, Istoria Civile di Napoli, Lib. XVII. c. 6; XIX. 5.
[290] Lami, Antichita Toscane, pp. 493-4, 509-10, 546.
[291] Lami op. cit. 511, 519-22, 528, 531, 543-4, 546-7, 554, 557, 559.--Archiv. di Firenze. Prov. S. Maria Novella 1227, Giugn. 20; 1229, Giugn. 24; 1235, Agost. 23.--Ugh.e.l.li, Italia Sacra, III. 146-7.--Ripoll I. 69, 71.
[292] Ripoll I. 45, 47.--C. 8 -- 8, s.e.xto v. 2.--Gregor. PP. XI. Bull.
_Ille humani generis; Licet ad capiendos_.--Potthast No. 9143, 9152, 9235.--Arch, de l'Inq. de Carca.s.sonne (Doat, x.x.xI. 21, 25).
[293] Potthast No. 9263; cf. No. 9386, 9388.--Guill. de Pod. Laur. c.
43.--Coll. Doat, XXI. 143, 153.--Ripoll I. 66.
Guillem Arnaud generally qualifies himself as acting under commission from the legate, but sometimes as appointed by the Dominican provincial.
In several sentences on the Seigneurs de Niort, in February and March, 1236, he acts with the Archdeacon of Carca.s.sonne, both under legatine authority. As yet there was evidently no settled organization (Coll.
Doat, XXI. 160, 163, 165, 166).
[294] Vaissette, III. Pr. 364, 370-1.--Concil. Tolosan. ann.
1229.--Concil. Biterrens. ann. 1234.--Concil. Arelatens. ann.
1234.--Concil. Narbonn. ann. 1244.--Coll. Doat, XXI. 143, 155, 158.
[295] Vaissette, III. 452.--Concil. Biterrens. ann. 1246.--Berger, Les Registres d'Innocent IV. No. 2043, 3867, 3868.--Arch. de l'Inq. de Carca.s.s. (Doat, x.x.xI. 68, 74, 75, 77, 80, 152, 182).--Potthast No.
12744, 15805.--MSS. Bib. Nat., fonds latin, No. 9992.--Concil. Valentin.
ann. 1248 c. 10.--Baluz. Conc. Narbonn. App. p. 100.
The system devised by the councils of Languedoc became generally current. In 1248 Innocent IV. ordered the Archbishop and Inquisitor of Narbonne to send a copy of their rules of procedure to the Provincial of Spain and Raymond of Pennaforte, to be followed in the Peninsula (Baluz.
et Mansi I. 208); and their canons are frequently cited in the manuals of the mediaeval Inquisition.
[296] Concil. Biterrens. ann. 1246.--Arch. de l'Inq. de Carca.s.s. (Doat.
XXVII. 7, 156; x.x.x. 107-9; x.x.xI. 149, 180, 216).--Vaissette, III. Pr.
479, 496-7.--Martene Thesaur. I. 1045.--Ripoll I. 194.--Innoc. PP. IV.
Bull. _Licet ex omnibus_, 30 Mai, 1254.--Concil. Albiens. ann. 1254 c.
24.--Alex. PP. IV. Bull. _Licet ex omnibus_, 20 Jan. 1257; Ejusd. Bull.
_Ad capiendum_, ann. 1257.--Clement. PP. IV. Bull. _Licet ex omnibus_, 17 Sept. 1265.--Gregor. PP. X. Bull. _Prae cunctis mentis_, 20 Apr.
1273.--Lib. Sententt. Inq. Tolosan. _pa.s.sim_.--C. 17 s.e.xto v.
2.--Eymeric. Direct. Inq. p. 580.--Albert. Repert. Inq. s. v.
_Episcopus_.--Zanchini Tract. de Haeret. XV.--Isambert, II. 747.--Pegnae Comment, in Eymeric. p. 578.
[297] Wadding. Annal. Minorum ann. 1288, No. 17.--C. 1 Extrav. Commun.
v. iii.
[298] Innoc. PP. IV. Bull. _Ad extirpanda_, ann. 1252 (Mag. Bull. Roman.
I. 91).--Ejusd. Bull. _Orthodoxae_, 1252 (Ripoll I. 208, cf. VII.
28).--Ejusd. Bull. _Ut commissum_, 1254 (Ibid. I. 250).--Ejusd. Bull.
_Volentes_, 1254 (Ib. I. 251).--Ejusd. Bull. _c.u.m venerabilis_, 1253 (Mag. Bull. Roman. I. 93-4).--Ejusd. Bull. _c.u.m in const.i.tutionibus_, 1254 (Pegnae App. p. 19).--Alex. PP. IV. Bull. _c.u.m secundum_, 1255 (M.
B. R. I. 106).--Ejusd. Bull. _Exortis in agro_, 1256 (Pegnae App. p.
20).--Ejusd. Bull. _Exortis in agris_, 1256 (Ripoll I. 297).--Ejusd.
Bull. _Delecti filii_, 1256 (Ripoll I. 312).--Ejusd. Bull. _c.u.m vos_, 1256 (Ripoll I. 314).--Ejusd. Bull. _Flicis recordationis_, 1257 (M. B.
R. I. 106).--Ejusd. Bull. _Implacida_, 1257 (M. B. R. I. 113).--Ejusd.
Bull. _Implacida_, 1258 (Potthast No. 17302).--Ejusd. Bull. _Ad extirpanda_, 1259 (Pegnae App. p. 30).--Clement. PP. IV. Bull. _Ad extirpanda_, 1265 (M. B. R. I. 148-51).--Ejusd. Bull. _Ad extirpanda_, 1266 (Pegnae App. p. 43).--Archivio di Firenze, Riformagioni, Cla.s.se II.
Distinzione, 1, No. 14.
About 1330 Bernard Gui (Practica P. IV.--Coll. Doat, x.x.x.) quotes the provisions of the bull as still among the privileges of the Italian inquisitors.
[299] Bernard. Guidon. Gravamina (Coll. Doat, x.x.x. 90 sqq.).--Concil.
Narbonn. ann. 1229 c. 1, 2.--Concil. Albiens. ann. 1254 c. 3, 5, 8.--Archives de l'Inq. de Carca.s.s. (Doat, x.x.x. 110-11, 127; x.x.xI.
250).--Vaissette, III. Pr. 528-9, 536.--Archivio di Napoli, Registro 6, Lett. D. fol. 180.--Eymerici Direct. Inquis. pp. 390-1, 560-1.--Bernardi Guidon. Practica P. IV. (Doat, x.x.x.).
It was sometimes a work of some labor and time for the inquisitor to obtain his royal letters-patent. When, in 1269, the Franciscans Bertrand de Roche and Ponce des Rives were appointed inquisitors of Forcalquier, they were obliged to travel to Palermo, where Charles of Anjou happened to be residing, and whence he gave them letters, August 4, 1269, to his seneschal and other officials.--Archivio di Napoli, Registro 6, Lett. D, fol. 180.--Cf. Regist. 20, Lett. B, fol. 91.
A History of The Inquisition of The Middle Ages Volume I Part 37
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