The Friar of Carcassonne: Revolt against the Inquisition in the Last Days of the Cathars

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The Friar of Carcassonne: Revolt against the Inquisition in the Last Days of the Cathars

The Friar of Carcassonne: Revolt against the Inquisition in the Last Days of the Cathars

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Whether Lanta was ever able to coordinate with Reformed Church members within Toulouse remains unknown, but he did begin to levy troops throughout the villages around his country estate (including Blagnac, Colomiers, and Seilh). [4] Lanata's return and his suspicious activities did not go unnoticed by agents of Blaise de Lasseran-Massencôme, seigneur de Montluc the Catholic military lieutenant in Gascony. Montluc forwarded his suspicions to Mansencal, president of the Parlement of Toulouse, saying that he believed Lanta was set to take the city with 1,200 troops on Pentecost (April 18). [2] [4] The Parlement immediately met in emergency session. Thirty-seven parlementaires signed a document charging over twenty of their colleagues with heresy. [2] Some were viewed as unacceptably moderate ( Politiques or Nicodemites), some for being humanists, others on suspicion of Protestant sympathies (not for being Protestants themselves but for allowing their wives or family members to attend Protestant services), [1] [23] still others were viewed as convinced Calvinists. [2] Fully purged, the Parlement issued decrees to counter the planned insurrection by requesting additional military assistance from Anne de Joyeuse to garrison strategic locations in the city including fortifying the Hôtel de Ville. [2] [4] They also discussed how to ban Reformed Church services within the walls of Toulouse. [4] Under the terms of the truce an investigation charged 106 people with incitement, six of which were condemned to death. [4] Ignoring the terms of the truce, the Catholic-dominated Parlement interfered, pardoning all the condemned Catholics, so the only people executed for the riot were four Reformed members hung on April 11 at the four corners of the Place Saint-Georges. [4] The body of the woman over which the riot had begun, had been buried in a Catholic cemetery by priests who helped seize it. [11] Notre Dame-des Landes Communities from nearby towns prevent an airport from being built on Notre Dame-des Landes forest and agricultural fields. The edict also demanded that any Protestants who had taken possession of church buildings and ecclesiastical property had to restore them immediately. It also forbade Protestants from destroying Catholic religious imagery and crucifixes, outlawed them from meeting within the walls of cities (but thereby allowed them to meet outside the walls), and made it a crime for Protestants to go armed to any meeting unless they were of the privileged classes. [14] Though the city was about 500 miles north of Toulouse, the Massacre of Vassy that occurred on March 1, 1562, was seen as a dread event by Protestants throughout France. In Languedoc at (Béziers, Cahors, Carcassonne, Castelnaudary and Grenade) spontaneous Protestant revolts occurred upon hearing of the massacre. [4]

Carcassonne - UNESCO World Historic Fortified City of Carcassonne - UNESCO World

Police meanwhile said one of the passengers in the car driven by Nahel M, who had turned himself in, had been questioned to determine the exact circumstances of the shooting.Des villages de Cassini aux communes d'aujourd'hui: Commune data sheet Carcassonne, EHESS (in French). a b "IN SITU 2018 – CONCENTRIQUES EXCENTRIQUES". tourism-carcassonne.co.uk. 2018. Archived from the original on 30 June 2018 . Retrieved 10 May 2018. Commission extra-municipale des jumelages". carcassonne.org (in French). Carcassonne . Retrieved 12 November 2019.

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By the next day, parlement president Jean de Mansencal (whose own son, studying at university, had converted to the Reformed Church) [4] was able to present terms and secure the truce with the Reformed Church members agreeing to disarm and withdraw to the faubourgs. [2] The truce allowed the Reformed Church members to maintain two hundred unarmed guards in line with the Edict of Saint-Germain, the Catholics were allowed a similar number to serve under four professional captains and answer to the capitouls, all other soldiers were forced to withdraw and the ringing of the tocsin upon the Reformed's withdrawal was forbidden. [4] Rioting in Vaulx-en-Velin after a young man of Spanish origin was killed in a motorbike crash allegedly caused by police. [3]French Revolution of 1848, street fighting in Paris resulting in the overthrow of the July Monarchy and proclamation of the French Second Republic.



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