“Also because a part of them crossed the Alps, they were called Transmontani.

“After Joseph, one of Waldo’s disciples who preached in the bishopric of Dije, Lower Dauphine, they were called Josephists.

“In England they were called Lollards, after Lollardus, one of those who preached there.

“After two priests, Henry and Esperon, who taught the doctrine of Waldo in Languedoc, they were called Henricians and Esperonists.

“After Arnold, one of their pastors or teachers, who preached in Albigeois, they were called Arnoldists.

“In Provence they were called, in an unknown tongue, Siccars.

“In Italy they were called Fratricellii, that is, Little Brothers, because they lived like brothers in true unity.

“Also, as they observed no other day of rest or holiday, than Sunday, they were styled Insabbathi or Insabbathas, that is, Sabbathless, or not observing Sabbaths.

“Because they were continually subject to, and underwent sufferings, they were called Patarins or Patariens, that is, Sufferers, from the Latin word pati, to suffer.

“Because they, as poor wanderers, fled and traveled from country to country, they were termed Passagenes, that is, Travelers or Vagrants.