| |
| | History of the Christian Church, Volume V: The Middle Ages. A.D. 1049-1294. (ii.xii.x) |
 | | During the administration of Bernard Guy, as inquisitor of Toulouse, 1306–1323, forty-two persons were burnt to death, sixty-nine bodies were exhumed and burnt, three hundred and seven were imprisoned, and one hundred and forty-three were condemned to wear crosses. |
 | | The lists of the accused and of those executed in the flames and by other means include Waldenses, Beguines, Beghards, Apostolicals, Lollards, and other sectaries. |
 | | According to Charles’law the confiscated property of heretics was divided into three parts which went respectively for alms, to the Inquisitors, and to municipalities for the repair of streets and walls. |
| www.ccel.org /ccel/schaff/hcc5.ii.xii.x.html (2309 words) |
|