colspan="2">Uncertainty as to Form of Punishment
220 |
Burning Alive Adopted in the Thirteenth Century |
221 |
Evasion of Responsibility by the Church |
223 |
The Temporal Authority Coerced to Persecute |
224 |
Persecution of the Dead |
230 |
Motives Impelling to Persecution |
233 |
Cruelty of the Middle Ages |
234 |
Exaggerated Detestation of Heresy |
236 |
Influence of Asceticism |
238 |
Conscientious Motives |
239 |
|
CHAPTER VI.—The Mendicant Orders. |
Material for Reform within the Church |
243 |
Foulques de Neuilly |
244 |
Durán de Huesca anticipates Dominic and Francis |
246 |
St. Dominic, his Career and Character |
248 |
|
His Order founded in 1214.—Its Success |
251 |
St. Francis of Assisi |
256 |
|
His Order Founded.—Injunction of Poverty |
257 |
|
He Realizes the Christian Ideal |
260 |
|
Extravagant Laudation of Poverty |
264 |
Influence of the Mendicant Orders |
266 |
Emotional Character of the Age.—The Pastoureaux.—The Flagellants |
268 |
The Mendicants Rendered Independent of the Prelates |
273 |
Their Utility to the Papacy |
274 |
Antagonism between them and the Secular Clergy |
278 |
The Battle Fought out in the University of Paris |
281 |
Victory of the Mendicants.—Unappeasable Hostility |
289 |
Degeneracy of the Orders |
294 |
Their Activity as Missionaries |
297 |
Their Functions as Inquisitors |
299 |
Inveterate Hostility between the Orders |
302 |
|
|