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[449] Hoffmann, Geschichte der Inquisition, II. 384-90.--C. Schmidt, Real-Encyklop. s. V. Winkeler.
[450] Martini Append, ad Mosheim pp. 652-66, 674-5.--Mosheim pp. 409-10, 430-1.--Hartzheim V. 676--Haupt. Zeitschrift fur K. G. 1885, pp. 565-7.
[451] Mosheim de Beghardis pp. 225-8, 383-4.--Martini Append, ad Mosheim pp. 656-7.--Herm. Corneri Chron. ann. 1402-3 (Eccard. Corp. Hist. II.
1185-6).--Raynald. ann. 1403, No. 23.
[452] Chron. Cornel. Zantfliet ann. 1400 (Martene Amplis. Coll. V.
358.)--Haupt. Zeitschrift fur K. G. 1885, pp. 513-15.--Chron.
Gla.s.sberger ann. 1410 (a.n.a.lecta Franciscana II. 233-5).--Martini Append.
ad Mosheim p. 559.--Mosheim p. 455.--Serrarii Lib. V. (Scriptt. Rer.
Mogunt. I. 724).
In 1399 an outbreak very similar to that of the Flagellants took place in Italy, stimulated by a pestilence which was ravaging the land. The pilgrims were known as _Bianchi_, from the white linen vestments which they wore, and they first brought to popular notice the "Stabat Mater," which was their favorite hymn. The only reference to flagellation, however, is that in Genoa they were joined by the old fraternities of the Verberati or guilds, founded in 1306, which publicly used the scourge. The Archbishop of Genoa and many of the Lombard bishops lent the movement their countenance; universal peace was proclaimed, enemies forgave each other, and even the strife of Guelf and Ghibelline for a moment was forgotten. When we are told that twenty-five thousand Modenese made the pilgrimage to Bologna, we can readily understand why suspicious rulers, such as Galeazzo Visconti and the Signory of Venice, forbade the entry of their states to such armies.
Boniface IX. probably felt the same alarm when the movement reached Rome, and the whole population, including some of the cardinals, put on white garments and marched in procession through the neighboring towns.
He caused one of the leaders to be seized at Aquapendente; the free use of torture brought a confession that the whole affair was a fraud, and the poor wretch was burned, when the movement collapsed.--Georgii Stella Annal. Genuens. ann. 1399 (Muratori, S. R. I. XVII. 1170).--Mattaei de Griffonibus Memor. Historial. ann. 1399 (Ib. XVIII. 207).--Cronica di Bologna ann. 1399 (Ib. XVIII. 565).--Annal. Estens. ann. 1398 (Ib.
XVIII. 956-8).--Conrad Urspurgens. Chron. Contin. ann. 1399.--Theod. a Niem de Schismate, Lib. II. c. 26.
[453] Nider Formicar. Lib. III. c. 2.--Haupt, Zeitschrift fur K. G.
1885, pp. 510-11.--Gersoni de Consolat. Theolog. Lib. IV. Prosa iii.; Ejusd. de Mystica Theol. speculat. P. I. consid. viii.; Ejusd. de Distinct, verar. Vision. a falsis, Signum V.
[454] Baluz. et Mansi I. 288-93.--Altmeyer, Les Precurseurs de la Reforme aux Pays-Bas, I. 84.
[455] Theod. Vrie, Hist. Concil. Constant. Lib. IV. Dist. 13.--Marieta, Los Santos de Espana, Lib. XI. c. xxviii.--Gobelini Person. Cosmodrom.
aet. VI. c. 93.--Chron. S. aegid. in Brunswig (Leibnitii S. R. Brunsv.
III. 595).--Gieseler, Lehrbuch der Kirchengeschichte, II. III.
317-18.--Herm. Corneri Chron. ann. 1416 (Eccard. Corp. Hist. II.
1206).--Andreae Gubernac. Concil. P. IV. c. 11 (Von der Hardt VI.
194)--Chron. Magdeburgens. ann. 1454 (Meibom. Rer. German. II.
363).--Haupt, Zeitschrift fur Kirchengeschichte, 1887, 114-18.--Herzog, Abriss. II. 405.
In 1448, when pestilence and famine in Italy brought men to a sense of their sins, the eloquence of Fra Roberto, a Franciscan, excited mult.i.tudes to repentance, and the streets of the cities were again filled with Flagellants, disciplining themselves and weeping (Illescas, Historia Pontifical, II. 130).
[456] Conc. Constant. Decret. Reform. Lib. III. t.i.t. X. c. 13; t.i.t. V.
c. 5 (Von der Hardt, I. 715-17).--Hemmerlin Glosa quarund. Bullar. (Opp.
c. d.).--De Rebus Malthaei Grabon (Von der Hardt, III. 107-20).
[457] Von der Hardt, IV. 1518.--Concil. Salisburg. x.x.xIV. c. 32 (Dalham, Concil Salisb. p. 186).
[458] Hemmerlin Glosa quarund. Bullar; Ejusd. Lollardorum Descriptio.--Nider Formicar. III. 5, 7, 9.
[459] Concil. Herbipolens. ann. 1446 (Hartzheim V. 336).. Mosheim de Beghardis pp. 173-9, 190, 194-5.--Addis and Arnold's Catholic Dictionary, p. 73.
[460] Trithem. Chron. Hirsaug. ann. 1460.--.Hartzheim V. 464, 507, 560, 578.--Wadding, ann. 1492, No. 8.--Martini Append, ad Mosheim p. 579.
[461] Concil. Senens. ann. 1423 (Harduin. VIII. 1016-17).--.Ullumnn's Reformers before the Reformation, Menzies' Transl. I. 383-4.--Flac.
Illyr. Catal. Test. Veritatis Lib. XIX. p. 1836 (Ed. 1608).--Comba, Histoire des Vaudois d'Italie, I. 97.--Hoffmann, Geschichte der Inquisition, II. 390-1.
[462] Wattenbach, Sitzungsberichte der Preuss. Akad. 1886, pp. 57-8,
[463] Hist. Persecut. Eccles. Bohem. pp. 71-2 (s. 1. 1648). Camerarii Hist. Frat. Orthodox, pp. 116-17 (Heidelbergae, 1605).--Ripoll III. 577.]
[464] Ullmann, op. cit. I. 195-207.--aen. Sylvii Epist. 400 (Opp. 1571, p. 932).--Fasciculus Rerum Expetendarum et Fugiendarum II. 115-28 (Ed.
1690).--Freber et Struv. II. 187-266.--Wadding. ann. 1461, No.
5.--Ripoll III. 466.--Chron. Gla.s.sberger ann. 1462.
[465] Trithem. Chron. Hirsaug. ann. 1476.--Ullmann, op. cit. I. 377 sqq.
[466] D'Argentre I. II. 291-8.--Ullmann, op.cit. I. 258-9, 277-94, 356-7.--Trithem. Chron. Hirsaug. ann. 1479.--Conr. Ursperg. Chron.
Continuat. ann. 1479,--Melanchthon. Respons. ad Bavar. Inquis., Witebergae, 1559, Sig. B 3.
[467] Ripoll IV. 5.--Synod Bamberg. ann. 1491, t.i.t. 44 (Ludewig Scriptt.
Rer. Germ. I. 1242-44).--D'Argentre I. II. 342.
[468] Pauli Langii Chron. Citicens. (Pistorii Rer. Germ. Scriptt. I.
1276-6.)--Gieseler, Lehrbuch der Kirchengeschichte II. IV. 532 sq.--Herzog, Abriss, II. 397-401.--Spalatini Annal. ann. 1515 (Menken.
II. 591).--Eleuth. Bizeni Joannis Reuchlin Encomion (sine nota. sed c.
ann. 1516).--II. Corn. Agrippae Epist. II. 54
[469] Ripoll IV. 378.--Lutheri Opp., Jenae, 1564, I. 185 sqq.--Henke, Neuere Kirchengeschichte, I. 42-6.
[470] Dubrav. Hist. Bohem. Lib. 14 (Ed. 1587, pp. 380-1).
[471] Palacky, Beziehungen der Waldenser, Prag, 1869, p. 10.--Potthast No. 11818.
Palacky (pp. 7-8) conjectures that these heretics were Cathari, but his reasoning is quite inadequate to overcome the greater probability that they were of Waldensian origin. He is, however, doubtless correct in suggesting that the allusion to princes and magnates may properly connect the movement with the commencement of the conspiracy which finally dethroned King Wenceslas I. in 1253. Wenceslas was a zealous adherent of the papacy and opponent of Frederic II., and the connection between antipapal politics and heresy was too close for us to discriminate between them without more details than we possess.
[472] Wadding. ann. 1257, No. 16.--Potthast No. 16819.--Hofler, Prager Concilien. Einleitung, p. xix.
[473] Palacky. op. cit. pp. 11-13.--Schrodl, Pa.s.savia Sacra, Pa.s.sau, 1879, p. 242.--Dubravius (Hist. Bohem. Lib. 20) relates that in 1315 King John burned fourteen Dolcinists in Prague. Palacky (ubi sup.) argues, and I think successfully, that this relates to the above affair and that there were no executions.
[474] Wadding. ann. 1318, No. 2-6.--Ripoll II. 138-9, 174-6.--Gustav Schmidt, Pabstliche Urkunden und Regesten, Halle, 1886, p.
105.--Raynald. ann. 1319, No. 43.
[475] Palacky, op. cit. pp. 15-18.--Flac. Illyr. Catal. Test. Veritatis Lib. XV. p. 1505 (Ed. 1608).--Raynald. ann. 1335, No. 61-2.--Wadding.
ann. 1335, No. 3-4.
[476] Krasinsky, Reformation in Poland, London, 1838, I. 55-6.--Raynald.
ann. 1341, No. 27.
[477] Werunsky Excerptt. ex Registt. Clem. VI. pp. 28, 47.--Raynald.
ann. 1347, No. 11.
[478] n. Sylvii Hist. Bohem. c. 36.--Naucleri Chron. ann.
1360.--Hofler, Prager Concilien, pp. 2, 3, 5, 7.--Loserth, Hus und Wicklif, Prag, 1884, pp. 261 sqq.--Werunsky Excerptt. ex Registt. Clem.
VI. pp. 1, 2, 3, 13, 25.
Dispensations for children to hold preferment were an abuse of old date, as we have seen in a former chapter. In 1297 Boniface VIII. authorized a boy of Florence, twelve years old, to take a benefice involving the cure of souls.--Faucon, Registres de Boniface VIII. No. 1761, p. 666.