Page:A history of the Inquisition of the Middle Ages, volume 2.djvu/435

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HANS OF NIKLAUSHADSEN. and the lust of the priesthood, and that the world would be de stroyed m consequence of their wickedness, unless they ImBtt" & ^^j uu preservea. As the fame of these revplflfmnc addrifedTldf^^^^^^^ T'^ "' *'^^^^' «<^ ^»^^^ ^* ^™- he touch hin. deeded then.sel.ef In^ifi d aM f !^,;^ garments were treasured as relics, so that his dothfsTet rl in P eces whenever he appeared, and a new suit was requisite da 1 That no one doubted the truth of th^ ^r • , i '®^"*®"® «aily. the clergy shows the nature of tf f denunciations of Church,?^ the vast LTdTlh, calZt; tl'f ^"^ °' ^'^ downfall of Ran. tJ,« ;!. T ^ ? ^ potentates, for after the Werthe m sutrain of S T '"'' ^'"^^'^ *^^ Count of ^1111, suzerain ot JNiklaushausen, the Bishori nf w- u »<1 h» metropolis, fc Archbishop ot i^„ tW 1^.7°; Bishop Eudolph of Wiirzburg repeatedly forb^H. tl, •, • sent a party of o-uard, wi.. /xr ^° ^*'^ ""^«"It, but