- The Waldensians, also
known as
Waldenses (/wɔːlˈdɛnsiːz, wɒl-/), Vallenses, Valdesi, or Vaudois, are
adherents of a
church tradition that
began as an...
- him to mean
Lucius II, Pope from 1144 to 1145, and
concludes that the
Waldenses were
active before 1145.
Bernard also says that the same Pope
Lucius condemned...
-
Apostolic poverty is a
Christian doctrine professed in the
thirteenth century by the
newly formed religious orders,
known as the
mendicant orders, in direct...
-
University Press. p. 65. Tice, P.; Wickliffe, H.J.T.L. (2003).
History of the
Waldenses: From the
Earliest Period to the
Present Time. Book Tree. p. 19. ISBN 978-1-58509-099-0...
- Pâques vaudoises) was a
series of m****acres on
Waldensians (also
known as
Waldenses or Vaudois) by
Savoyard troops in the
Duchy of
Savoy in 1655.
Alexis Muston...
-
College Dublin in
March 2023 has
since published the
Waldenses Prose do****ent
Processus Contra Waldenses which contains a copy of the bull in MS 266. The...
- baptism, "
Waldenses | Description, History, & Beliefs". Britannica.com.
Retrieved 2021-10-27. "Pierre
Valdo (1140-1217) and the
Waldenses". Musée protestant...
- thought. In 1207, a
religious conference was held
between Catholics and
Waldenses at Pamiers. Parti****ting in the
conference were
Bishop Fulk of Toulouse...
- ISBN 978-0-19-954785-2. Cameron, Euan (1984). The
Reformation of the Heretics: The
Waldenses of the Alps, 1480–1580.
Clarendon Press. Cantoni,
Davide (May 2012). "Adopting...
-
hunted down
adherents of "heretical"
religious minorities, such as the
Waldenses in the Alps the
Cathars in the Languedoc,
Anabaptists in Germany, and...