[1405] Ibidem, Lib. 565, fol. 394.
[1406] Ibidem, Lib. 877, fol. 239.
[1407] Ibidem, Lib. 890.
[1408] These are records of autos. In the Catalogue of Toledo cases prepared by Don Miguel Gómez del Campillo (see Appendix) there are thirty-four attributed to prohibited books. Of these, five are anterior to 1575; then there are none until 1771, followed by six between that year and 1794, but none of them seem to have been pushed to a conclusion except one which was suspended.
[1409] Archivo hist. nacional, Inq. de Valencia, Leg. 100.
[1410] Innocent. PP. III, Regest. II, 141, 142, 235.—Lib. IV, Extra, vii, 12.—Constitutions de Cathalunya, Lib. I, Tit. i, cap. 12.—Martene et Durand Amplis. Collect., VII, 123.—Concil. Tolosan., ann. 1229, Cap. 14 (Harduin., VII, 178).—Repertor. Inquisitor, S. V. Scriptura.
[1411] Villanueva, De la Leccion de la Sagrada Escritura, p. 8; Append. II, pp. cxxxii sqq. (Valencia, 1791).
[1412] Archivo de Simancas, Inq., Sala 40, Lib. 4, fol. 126.—See Appendix.
[1413] Reusch, Die Indices, pp. 74, 76.—The Tridentine Index (Regula 4) while asserting that experience had shown that the indiscriminate popular use of the Bible wrought more harm than good, yet permits bishops and inquisitors to allow vernacular versions to those whom parish priests and confessors recommend as trustworthy.
[1414] Reusch, op. cit., pp. 234-5.—Archivo de Simancas, Inq., Lib. 82, fol. 149; Lib. 940, fol. 5.