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THE INQUISITION OF THE MIDDLE AGES
BOOK 1
- ORIGIN AND ORGANIZATION OF THE INQUISITION
CHAPTER VI
14
THEIR MUTUAL QUARRELS AS INQUISITORS.
The especial field of activity of the Mendicants, however,
which more particularly concerns us, was that of the conversion and persecution
of heretics — of the Inquisition, which they made their own. It was inevitable
that this should fall into their hands as soon as the inadequacy of the ancient
episcopal courts required the organization of a new system. The discovery and
conviction of the heretic was no easy task. It required special training, and
that training was exactly what the Orders sought to give their neophytes to fit
them for the work of preaching and conversion. With no ties of locality,
soldiers of the Cross ready to march to any point at the word of command, they
could be dispatched at a moment’s notice whenever their services were required.
Moreover, their peculiar devotion to the Holy See rendered them specially
useful in organizing the papal Inquisition which was to supersede by degrees
the episcopal jurisdiction, and prove so efficient an instrument in reducing
the local churches to subjection.
That Dominic was the founder of the Inquisition and
the first inquisitor-general has become a part of Roman tradition. It is
affirmed by all the historians of the Order, and by all the panegyrists of the
Inquisition; it has the sanction of infallibility in the bull Invictarum of Sixtus V, and it is confirmed
by quoting a bull of Innocent III appointing him inquisitor-general. Yet it is
safe to say that no tradition of the Church rests on a slenderer basis. That
Dominic devoted the best years of his life to combating heresy there is no
doubt, and as little that, when a heretic was deaf to argument or persuasion,
he would cheerfully stand by the pyre and see him burned, like any other
zealous missionary of the time; but in this he was no more prominent than
hundreds of others, and of organized work in this direction he was utterly
guiltless. Indeed, from the year 1215, when he laid the foundation of his
Order, he was engrossed in it to the exclusion of all other objects, and was
obliged to forego his cherished design of ending his days as a missionary to
Persia. We shall see that it was not until more than ten years after his death,
in 1221, that such an institution as the papal Inquisition can be said to have
existed. The prominent part assigned in it to his successors easily explains
the legend which has grown around his name, a legend which may safely be
classed with the enthusiastic declaration of an historian of the Order that more
than a hundred thousand heretics had been converted by his teaching, his
merits, and his miracles.
A similar legendary halo exaggerates the exclusive
glory, claimed by the Order, of organizing and perfecting the Inquisition. The
bulls of Gregory IX alleged in support of the assertion are simply special
orders to individual Dominican provincials to depute brethren fitted for the
purpose to the duty of preaching against heresy and examining heretics, and
prosecuting their defenders. Sometimes Dominicans are sent to special districts
to proceed against heretics, with an apology to the bishops and an explanation
that the friars are skilful in convincing heretics, and that the other
episcopal duties are too engrossing to enable the prelates to give proper
attention to this. The fact simply is that there was no formal confiding of the
Inquisition to the Dominicans any more than there was any formal founding of
the Inquisition itself. As the institution gradually assumed shape and
organization in the effort to find some effectual means to ferret out concealed
heretics, the Dominicans were the readiest instrument at hand, especially as
they professed the function of preaching and converting as their primary
business. As conversion became less the object, and persecution the main
business of the Inquisition, the Franciscans were equally useful, and the honors
of the organization were divided between them. Indeed, there was no hesitation
in confiding inquisitorial functions to clerics of any denomination when
occasion required. As early as 1258 we find two canons of Lodeve acting under
papal commissions as inquisitors of Albi, and we shall meet hereafter, at the
close of the fourteenth century, Peter the Celestinian discharging the duties
of papal inquisitor with abundant energy from the Baltic to Styria.
Yet the earliest inquisitors, properly so called, were
unquestionably Dominicans. When, after the settlement between Raymond of
Toulouse and St. Louis, the extirpation of heresy in the Albigensian
territories was seriously undertaken, and the episcopal organization proved
unequal to the task, it was Dominicans who were sent thither to work under the
direction of the bishops. In northern France the business gradually fell almost
exclusively into the hands of Dominicans. In Aragon, as early as 1232, they are
recommended to the Archbishop of Tarragona as fitting instruments, and in 1249
the institution was confided to them. Eventually southern France was divided
between them and the Franciscans, the western portion being given to the
Dominicans, while the Comtat Venaissin, Provence, Forcalquier, and the states
of the empire in the provinces of Arles, Aix, and Embrun were under charge of
the Franciscans. As for Italy, after some confusion arising from the
conflicting pretensions of the two Orders, it was, in 1254, formally divided
between them by Innocent IV, the Dominicans being assigned to Lombardy,
Romagnola, Tarvesina, and Genoa, while the central portion of the peninsula
fell to the Franciscans; Naples, as yet, being free from the institution. This
division, however, was not always strictly observed, for at times we find
Franciscan inquisitors in Milan, Romagnola, and Tarvesina. In Germany and
Austria the Inquisition, as we shall see, never took deep root, but, in so far
as it was organized there, it was in Dominican hands, while Bohemia and Dalmatia
were under the care of Franciscans.
Sometimes the two orders were conjoined. In 1237 the
Franciscan Etienne de Saint Thibery was associated with the Dominican Guillem
Arnaud in Toulouse, in hopes that the reputation of his Order for greater
mildness might diminish the popular aversion for the new institution. In April,
1238, Gregory IX appointed the provincials of the two Orders in Aragon as
inquisitors for that kingdom, and in the same year the same policy was pursued
in Navarre. In 1255 the Franciscan Guardian of Paris was associated with the
Dominican prior as the heads of the Inquisition in France; in 1267 we find both
Orders furnishing inquisitors for Burgundy and Lorraine; and in 1311 we hear of
two Dominicans and one Franciscan as inquisitors in the province of Ravenna. It
was found the wisest course, however, to define sharply the boundaries of their
respective jurisdictions, for the active and incessant jealousy between the two
bodies rendered any concurrence or competition between them an explosive mine able
to be started by a spark. Their mutual hatreds began early, and the
unscrupulous means by which they were gratified were a perpetual scandal and
danger to the Church. In 1266, for instance, a lively quarrel arose between the
Dominicans of Marseilles and the Franciscan inquisitor of that city. The
dissension spread until the two Orders were embroiled throughout Provence, Forcalquier,
Avignon, Arles, Beaucaire, Montpellier, and Carcassonne, and everywhere they
were preaching against and insulting each other in public. Several briefs of
Clement IV show that the pope was obliged to intervene, and his command that in
future inquisitors shall forbear to use their powers to prosecute each other,
no matter how guilty the offending party may apparently be, indicates that the
sharpest weapons of the Holy Office had been used in the strife. When, as late
as 1479, Sixtus IV forbade inquisitors of either Order to sit in judgment on
brethren of the other, it would indicate that the intervening two centuries had
not diminished the tendency. The jealousy with which their respective limits
were defended is illustrated by troubles which occurred in 1290 about the
Tarvesina. This was Dominican territory, but for many years the office of
inquisitor at Treviso was filled by the Franciscan Fihppo Bonaccorso. When, in
1289, he accepted the episcopate of Trent, the Dominicans expected the office
to be restored to them, and were indignant at seeing it given to another
Franciscan, Fra Bonajuncta. The Dominican inquisitor of Lombardy, Fra Pagano,
and his vicar, Fra Viviano, went so far in their resistance that serious
disturbances were excited in Verona, and it became necessary for Nicholas IV to
intervene in 1291, when he punished the recalcitrants by perpetual deprivation
of their functions. To the heretics it must have offered excusable delight to
see their persecutors persecuting each other. So ineradicable was the hostility
between the two Orders that Clement IV established the rule that there should
be a distance of at least three thousand feet between their respective
possessions—a regulation which only led to new and more intricate disputes. They
even quarrelled as to the right of precedence in processions and funerals,
which was claimed by the Dominicans, and settled in their favor by Martin V in
1423. We shall see hereafter how important in the development of the medieval
Church was this implacable rivalry.
In the busy world of the thirteenth century there was
thus no agency more active than that of the Mendicant Orders, for good and for
evil. On the whole perhaps the good preponderated, for they undoubtedly aided
in postponing a revolution for which the world was not yet ready. Though the
self-abnegation of their earlier days was a quality too rare and perishable to
be long preserved, and though they soon sank to the level of the social order
around them, yet had their work not been altogether lost. They had brought
afresh to men’s minds some of the forgotten truths of the gospel, and had
taught them to view their duties to their fellows from a higher plane. How well
they recognized and appreciated their own services is shown by the story,
common to the legend of both Orders, which tells that while Dominic and Francis
were waiting the approval of Innocent III a holy man had a vision in which he
saw Christ brandishing three darts with which to destroy the world, and the Virgin
inquiring his purpose. Then said Christ, “The world is full of pride, avarice,
and lust; I have borne with it too long, and with these darts will I consume it”.
The Virgin fell on her knees and interceded for man, but in vain, until she
revealed to him that she had two faithful servants who would reduce it to his
dominion. Then Christ desired to see the champions; she showed him Dominic and
Francis, and he was content. The pious author of the story could hardly have
foreseen that in 1627 Urban VIII. would be obliged to deprive the Mendicant
Friars of Cordova of their dearly prized immunity, and to subject them to
episcopal jurisdiction, in the hope of restraining them from seducing their
spiritual daughters in the confessional.
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