History of the Crusades Against the Albigenses: In the Thirteenth CenturyWightman and Cramp, 1826 - 266 עמודים |
מתוך הספר
תוצאות 1-5 מתוך 49
עמוד 27
... castles , as a pledge of his intentions . Upon these conditions 1 Historia de las Armas , p . 4 , 5 , 6. Hist . de Languedoc , liv . XXI , ch . xlii , p . 157. Hist . Albigens . Petri Vallis Cern . c . ix , p . 566 . 2 Guillelmi de ...
... castles , as a pledge of his intentions . Upon these conditions 1 Historia de las Armas , p . 4 , 5 , 6. Hist . de Languedoc , liv . XXI , ch . xlii , p . 157. Hist . Albigens . Petri Vallis Cern . c . ix , p . 566 . 2 Guillelmi de ...
עמוד 31
... castles , as a pledge of his fidelity ; he permitted the consuls of his best cities to engage to abandon him if he should depart from the conditions imposed upon him ; he sub- mitted beforehand , to the judgment which the legate should ...
... castles , as a pledge of his fidelity ; he permitted the consuls of his best cities to engage to abandon him if he should depart from the conditions imposed upon him ; he sub- mitted beforehand , to the judgment which the legate should ...
עמוד 33
... castles , to summon their peasants , and to provision themselves there , that they might be able to resist the first ... castle was afterwards given up to pillage.1 But Raymond Roger had chiefly calculated on the defence of his two great ...
... castles , to summon their peasants , and to provision themselves there , that they might be able to resist the first ... castle was afterwards given up to pillage.1 But Raymond Roger had chiefly calculated on the defence of his two great ...
עמוד 36
... castles which had not been judged capable of defence , had taken refuge in this city , which was regarded as exceedingly strong ; and even those who had remained to guard the strong castles , had , for the most part , sent their wives ...
... castles which had not been judged capable of defence , had taken refuge in this city , which was regarded as exceedingly strong ; and even those who had remained to guard the strong castles , had , for the most part , sent their wives ...
עמוד 37
... castles , in the two dioceses of Beziers and Carcassonne , was immense ; but the crusaders found more than a hundred of them deserted . They still advanced , however , unsatiated with blood , and on the 1st of August arrived before ...
... castles , in the two dioceses of Beziers and Carcassonne , was immense ; but the crusaders found more than a hundred of them deserted . They still advanced , however , unsatiated with blood , and on the 1st of August arrived before ...
מהדורות אחרות - הצג הכל
מונחים וביטויים נפוצים
abbot of Citeaux accused afterwards Albi Albigenses Albigeois amongst archbishop archbishop of Narbonne Arles army Arnold authority Avignon barons besieged Beziers bishop of Toulouse Carcassonne cardinal castle catholic cause Cern Christians church of Rome Citeaux Cominges council count of Foix count of Toulouse count Raymond countship crusaders death defend Eccles enemies engaged excommunication faicts de Tolosa faith favour fiefs Frederic French gén Guil Guill heresy heretics Hist Histoire de Languedoc Holy Land Honorius inhabitants Innocent Innocentii inquisition inquisitors king of Aragon king of England king of France knights Languedoc legate lords Louis VIII monks Narbonne negociations Paris persecution Peter Petri Val Petri Vallis Philip Augustus Podio Laur Podio Laurentii pope possession Præclara preach prelates Preuves priests prince province Raymond VII Raynaldi Ann reformation Saint sect siege Simon de Montfort tion vassals Vaux-Cernay viscount Waldenses whilst XXIII XXIV zeal
קטעים בולטים
עמוד xxi - Therefore watch, and remember that by the space of three years, I ceased not to warn every one night and day with tears.
עמוד xxi - Take heed, therefore, unto yourselves, and to all the flock over the which the Holy Ghost hath made you overseers, to feed the church of God, which he hath purchased with his own blood. 29 For I know this, that after my departing shall grievous wolves enter in among you, not sparing the flock.
עמוד xxi - ... who opposeth and exalteth himself above all that is called God, or that is worshipped; so that he as God sitteth in the temple of God, shewing himself that he is God. Remember ye not, that, when I was yet with you, I told you these things?
עמוד 77 - Resistance was impossible; ftnd the only care of Simon de Montfort was to prevent the crusaders from instantly falling upon the inhabitants, and to beseech them rather to make prisoners. that the^ priests of the living God might not be deprived of their promised joys.
עמוד 6 - We cannot, therefore, be astonished if they have represented them to us with all those characters which might render them the most monstrous, mingled with all the fables which would serve to irritate the minds of the people against those who professed them.
עמוד 77 - The count,, seeing that this would produce great delay, ordered the rest to be massacred ; and the pilgrims, receiving the order with the greatest avidity, very soon massacred them all upon the spot.
עמוד 37 - Beziers, and had pillaged the houses of all that they thought worth carrying off, they set fire to the city, in every part at once, and reduced it to a vast funeral pile. Not a house remained standing, not one human being alive. Historians differ as to the number of victims. The abbot of Citeaux, feeling some shame for the butchery which he had ordered, in his letter to Innocent III reduces it to fifteen thousand ; others make it amount to sixty.
עמוד 128 - ... of the citizens, were, on every occasion, seized with a rapacious hand, and divided at discretion, amongst the crusaders. No calculation can ascertain, with any precision, the dissipation of wealth, or the destruction of human life, which were the consequences of the crusade against the Albigenses.
עמוד 28 - We counsel you, with the apostle Paul, to employ guile with regard to this Count, for in this case it ought to be called prudence. We must attack separately those who are separated from unity : leave for a time the count of Thoulouse, employing toward him a wise dissimulation, that the other heretics may be the more easily defeated, and that afterwards we may crush him when he shall be left alone...