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THE INQUISITION OF THE MIDDLE AGES
BOOK 1
- ORIGIN AND ORGANIZATION OF THE INQUISITION
CHAPTER VIII.
7
COOPERATION OF TRIBUNALS.
With such an organization as this, in the hands
of able, vigorous, and earnest men, it shows the marvellous constancy of the
heretics that the Cathari for a hundred years opposed to it the simple
resistance of inertia, and that the Waldenses were never trampled out. The
effectiveness of the organization was unhampered by any limits of
jurisdiction, and was multiplied by the cooperation of the tribunals
everywhere, so that there was no resting-place, no harbor of refuge for the
heretic in any land where the Inquisition existed. Vainly might he change his
abode, it was ever on his track. A suspicious stranger would be observed and
arrested; his birthplace would be ascertained, and as soon as swift messengers
could traverse the intervening distance, full official documents as to his
antecedents would be received from the Holy Office of his former home. It was a
mere matter of convenience whether he should be tried where he was caught or
sent back, for every tribunal had full jurisdiction over all offences committed
within its district, and over all such offenders wherever they should stray.
When Jacopo della Chiusa, one of the assassins of St. Peter Martyr, discreetly
absented himself, notices commanding his capture were sent as far as the
Inquisition of Carcassonne. Of course, questions sometimes arose which seemed
likely to give trouble. Before the Inquisition was thoroughly organized, Jayme
I of Aragon, in 1248, complained of the Tolosan inquisitor,
Bernard de Caux, for citing his subjects to appear, and Innocent IV commanded
that the abuse should cease, an order which received but slack obedience; and
with the growth of the Holy Office such reclamations were not likely to be
repeated. Cases, of course, occurred, in which, two tribunals would claim the
same culprit, and in this the rule of the Council of Narbonne, in 1214, was
generally observed, that he should be tried by the inquisitor who had first
commenced prosecution. Considering, indeed, the abundant causes of jealousy,
and especially the bitter rivalry between the Dominican and Franciscan Orders,
the cases of quarrel seem to have been singularly few. Whatever there were,
they were hushed up with prudent reserve, and with occasional exceptions we
find a hearty and zealous cooperation in the holy work to which all were alike
devoted.
The implacable energy with which the resources of this
organization were employed may be understood from one or two instances. Under
the Hohenstaufens the two Sicilies had served as a refuge for many heretics
self-exiled by the rigor of the Inquisition of Languedoc, and merciless as was
Frederic when it suited him, his system was by no means so searching and
unintermittent as that of the Holy Office. After his death, the active warfare
between Manfred and the papacy doubtless left the heretics in comparative
peace, but when Charles of Anjou conquered the kingdom as the vassal of Rome,
it was at once thrown open and the French inquisitors made haste to pursue
those who had eluded them. But seven months after the execution of Conradin,
Charles issued his letters-patent, May 31, 1269, to all the nobles and
magistrates of the realm, setting forth that the inquisitors of France were
about coming or sending agents to track and seize the fugitive heretics who
had sought refuge in Italy, and ordering his subjects to give them safe-conduct
and assistance whenever they might require it. In fact, the inquisitor's jurisdiction was personal as
well as local, and it accompanied him. When, in 1359, some renegade
converted Jews escaped from Provence to Spain, Innocent VI authorized the
Provencal inquisitor, Bernard du Puy, to follow them, arrest, try, condemn, and
punish them wherever he might find them, with power to coercc the aid of the
secular authorities everywhere; and he wrote at the same time to the kings of
Aragon and Castile, instructing them to give to Bernard all neccssary
assistance.
How the same tireless and unforgiving zeal was
habitually brought to bear upon the humblest objects is seen in the case of
Arnaud Ysarn, who, when a youth of fifteen, was condemned at Toulouse in
1309, after an imprisonment of two years, to wear crosses and perform certain
pilgrimages, his sole offence being that he had once "adored" a
heretic at the command of his father. He wore the insignia of his shame for
more than a year, when, finding that they prevented him from earning a
livelihood, he threw them off and obtained employment as a boatman on the
Garonne between Moissac and Bordeaux. In his obscurity he might well fancy
himself safe; but the inquisitorial police was too well organized, and he was
discovered. Cited in 1312 to appear, he was afraid to do so, though urged by
his father to take the chance of mercy. In 1315 he was excommunicated for
contumacy, and, remaining under the censure for a year, he was finally declared
a heretic, and was condemned as such in the auto de fé of 1319. In June, 1321,
by command of Bernard Gui, he was captured at Moissac, but escaped on the road
to be recaptured and taken to Toulouse. He had been guilty of no act of heresy
during the interval, but his contumacious rejection of the parental
chastisement of the Inquisition was an offence worthy of death, and he was
mercifully treated in being condemned, in 1322, to imprisonment for life on
bread and water. The net of the Inquisition extended everywhere, and no prey
was too small to elude its meshes.
The whole organization of the Church was
at its service. In 1255 a Dominican of Alessandria, Frà Niccolò da Vercelli,
confessed voluntarily some heretical beliefs to his sub-prior, who thereupon
promptly ejected him. He entered a neighboring
Cistercian convent, and then, fearing the pursuit of the Inquisition, quietly
disappeared to some other convent beyond the Alps. There would not seem much
to be feared from a heretic who would bury himself in the rigid Cistercian
Order, and yet at once Alexander IV issued letters to all Cistercian abbots
and to all archbishops and bishops everywhere, commanding them to seize him and
send him to Rainerio Saccone, the Lombard inquisitor.
INQUISITORS GENERAL
To render it an instrumentality perfect for the work
assigned to it, all that was wanting to the Inquisition was its subjection to a
chief who should command the implicit obedience of its members and weld the
organization into an organic whole. This function the pope could perform but
imperfectly amid the overwhelming diversity of his cares, and he needed a
minister who, as inquisitor-general, could devote his undivided attention to
the innumerable questions arising from the conflict between orthodoxy and
heresy, and between papal supremacy and local episcopal independence. The
importance of such a measure seems to have made itself felt at a comparatively
early period, and in 1262 Urban IV created a virtual inquisitor-general when
he ordered all inquisitors to report, either in person or by letter, to
Caietano Orsini, Cardinal of S. Niccolò in carcere Tulliano, all impediments to
the due performance of their functions, and to obey the instructions which he
might give. Cardinal Orsini speaks of himself as inquisitor-general, and he
labored to bring the several tribunals into the closest relations with each
other and subjection to himself. May 19,1273, we find him ordering the Italian
inquisitors to furnish to the inquisitors of France facilities for the
transcription of all the depositions of witnesses already on record in their
archives, as well as of all future ones. The perpetual migration of Catharans
and Waldenses between France and Italy rendered this information most valuable,
and the French inquisitors had requested it of him, but the excessive
diffuseness of the inquisitorial documents made the task appalling in magnitude
and cost, and the terms of the cardinal's missive show that it was not expected
to be welcome. Whether any further attempt was made to carry out this
gigantic plan, which would have so greatly multiplied the
effectiveness of the Inquisition, does not appear, but its conception shows the
view entertained by Orsini of the powers of his office and of the
possibilities of what the Inquisition might become under energetic
supervision. Another letter of his, dated May 24, 1273, to the inquisitors of
France, indicates that for a time at least the general instructions to the
functionaries of the Holy Office were issued through him.
We have no further evidence of his activity, but his
elevation to the papacy in 1277, as Nicholas III, may possibly indicate that
the position was one which afforded abundant opportunities of influence,
perhaps rendering its possessor disagreeably, if not dangerously powerful,
and when Nicholas appointed his nephew, Cardinal Latino Malebranca, as his
successor in the office vacated by his elevation, he may have felt it necessary
to secure himself by keeping the position in his family. Malebranca was Dean of
the Sacred College, and his influence was shown when, in 1294, he ended the
weary conflict of the conclave by procuring the election of the hermit, Pietro
Morrone, as pope, under the name of Celestin V. He did not survive the short
pontificate of Celestin, and the proud and vigorous Boniface VIII regarded it
as impolitic or unnecessary to continue the office. It remained in abeyance
under the Avignonese popes, until Clement VI revived it for William, Cardinal
of S. Stefano in Monte Celio, who signalized his zeal by burning several
heretics, and in other ways. After his death the post remained vacant, and at
no time does it appear to have exercised any special influence over the
development and activity of the Inquisition.
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