A History of the Inquisition of the Middle Ages; volume I
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About This Book
The author provides a comprehensive account of how medieval ecclesiastical power, social conditions, and legal practices produced the inquisitorial system. Chapters survey clerical abuses and Church jurisdiction, the rise of heterodox movements—notably dualist sects—and the political and military campaigns launched against them. The work traces the development of inquisitorial procedure and punishments, the role of secular authorities, and the influence of reforming mendicant orders, combining archival research with analysis of jurisprudence to explain institutional evolution and the motives, methods, and consequences of persecution during the Middle Ages.
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