Page:A history of the Inquisition of the Middle Ages, volume 2.djvu/284

 ITALY 268 zoo In Savoy, the statutes published - l^^^ -t^^^ ^^tl^ honored provisions ^«^^f^-Pf™^ ^r"^^^^^^ tions to all pubhc o^<;^^^^oj^^ - -f/^^ confiscations. Con- whose expenses are to be betrayed oui ^^ ^^^^ tinned persecution was thus P^^^ed o ' nor was xt in 1530 the Waldenses opened negotiations « itn ine of Sw 'tiland, resulting m their final incorporation with the Cal vinists. ^iKr lorl +A pmi oration on an ex- These incessant ravages naturally led to ^^^^^ j^. tended scale, which, as we have --'^^f.^^^; J^^^^^^^^ bria and Apulia, where the ^^^^'-^l^^fJ^lZf the'popula- peace for nearly two centuries. A ^^^S^jf^^^^^^^^^ aJset-
 * • ^f TTrAvqsinieres, for instance, expatriated tnemseivei, .1

T^ t ^re vaUey of Volturara. The Inquisition was virtually tied m the valley 01 flfteenth century, extinct in the kingdom o^^^P^'^"^."''^. „„^t reserve. They and the heretics had earned 'f^-^l^ll^ZZeh^V^^^ attended mass «—a Uy a^^^^^^^^^^^ .^ by the priests, and Avhat was mo P ^^^.^^^^_ tithes with exemplary ^'^S^l^^^f '^f'^''^ fearing husband- torily under the incessant ^^^^^^ ^f^en^^"^ <^^^^^^ ^e- ^en. The — in va^^^^^^^^^^ 'jtt'l, orchards and vine n ^"?SobS on .^ose lands they had settled under f onnal yards, ine noDies on contributed so A^.^gon, the l..».t.cs •»8" »« **3'„„ ^„e„l. with F,** th. "««"«^^JJ^' ™ ™ i.««l .Ota.».. Th.y ffeutrg,Coll.Judic.I.i.l05-7.