[170] Wadding. ann. 1335, No. 10-11; ann. 1336, No. 1; ann. 1337, No. 1; ann. 1339. No. 1.—Raynald. ann. 1335, No. 63; ann. 1336, No. 63, 64, 66-7; ann. 1337, No. 30; ann. 1375, No, 64.—Comba, La Riforma in Italia, I. 328.—Vit. Prima Benedicti XII. ann. 1337 (Muratori S. R. I. III. II. 531).
[171] D’Argentré I. I. 345.—Eymeric. p. 486.
[172] Werunsky Excerptt. ex Registt. Clem. PP. VI. pp. 23-4.—Raynald. ann. 1346, No. 70.—Comba, La Riforma, I. 326-7, 387.—Lami, Antichità Toscane, pp. 528, 595.
[173] Comba, La Riforma, I. 568-71.
[174] Tocco, Archivio Storico Napoletano, 1887, Fasc. I.—Comba, La Riforma, I. 321-4.
[175] Martini Append. ad Mosheim de Beghardis p. 505.
[176] Jac. de Marchia Dial. (Baluz. et Mansi II. 595 sqq.).
[177] Raynald. ann. 1344, No. 8; 1357, No. 12; 1374, No. 14.—Jac. de Marchia Dial. (l. c. 599, 608-9).
It may surprise a modern infallibilist to learn that so thoroughly orthodox and learned an inquisitor as the blessed Giacomo della Marca admits that there have been heretic popes—popes who persisted and died in their heresy. He comforts himself, however, with the reflection that they have always been succeeded by Catholic pontiffs (l. c. p. 599).
[178] Werunsky, Excerptt. ex Registt. Clem. VI. et Innoc. VI. p. 91.—Raynald. ann. 1354, No. 31; ann. 1368, No. 16.—Wadding. ann. 1354, No. 6-7; 1368, No. 4-6.—Comba, La Riforma, I. 327. 329-37.—Cantù, Erctici d’ Italia, I. 133-4.—Eymeric. p. 328.