[68] Id. p. 257. [↑]

[69] Id. p. 258. As to the wide extent of the discussion see Reuter, Geschichte der religiösen Aufklärung im Mittelalter, i, 112. [↑]

[70] In 945, however, Atto, Bishop of Verceil, is found complaining that some people from the Italian border had introduced heresies. [↑]

[71] Mosheim, 10 Cent. pt. ii, ch. v, § 3; Poole, Illustrations, p. 91. [↑]

[72] Hardwick, p. 203. [↑]

[73] Kurtz, History of the Christian Church, Eng. tr. 1868, i, 435. [↑]

[74] Hénault, Abrégé chronologique, ann. 1022; Neander, Hist. of the Chr. Relig. and Church, Eng. tr. Bohn ed. vi, 349 sq.; Mosheim, 10 Cent. pt. ii, ch. v, § 3; De Potter, L’Esprit de l’Église, vi, 18–19; Poole, pp. 96–98; Lea, History of the Inquisition, i, 104, 108–109, 218; Gieseler, Per. III, Div. ii, § 46. The contemporary accounts say nothing as to the heretics being Manicheans. Neander, p. 350, note. [↑]

[75] Cp. Murdock’s note on Mosheim, Reid’s ed. p. 386; Monastier, Hist. of the Vaudois Church, p. 33; Waddington, p. 356; Hardwick, p. 203, note, and p. 207. [↑]

[76] De Potter, pp. 20–21; Gieseler, as cited, p. 497; Lea, i, 104, 109. [↑]

[77] Mosheim, as last cited, § 4; Gieseler, ii, 496 (§ 46); Hardwick, pp. 203, 204. [↑]