Page:A History of the Inquisition of the Middle Ages-Volume I .pdf/321

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
AS INQUISITORS.
301

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 Lodève 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.[1]

Yet the earhest 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 Yenaissin, Provence, Forcalquier, and the states of the empire in the provinces of Aries, 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


  1. Grcgor. PP. IX. Bull. Ille hmnani generis. Ap. 22, 1233.— Potthast Regesta, No. 9143, 9152, 9153, 9155, 9386, 9388, 9995, 10362.— Innoc. PP. IV. Bull. Inter alia, 20 Oct. 1248 (Baluze ct Mansi I. 208). — Archives de Tlnq. dc Carcassonne (Coll. Doat, XXXI. fol. 21).— Archives de l’Évêehé d'Albi (lb. XXXI. 255).