FOX'S BOOK OF MARTYRS
CHAPTER VI
An Account of the Persecutions in Italy, Under the Papacy
We shall now enter on an account of the persecutions in Italy, a country
which has been, and still is,
- 1. The center of popery.
- 2. The seat of the pontiff.
- 3. The source of the various errors which have spread themselves over other countries,
deluded the minds of thousands, and diffused the clouds of superstition and bigotry
over the human understanding.
- In pursuing our narrative we shall include the most remarkable
persecutions which have happened, and the cruelties which have been practised,
- 1. By the immediate power of the pope.
- 2. Through the power of the Inquisition.
- 3. By the bigotry of the Italian princes.
In the twelfth century, the first persecutions under the papacy began in Italy,
at the time that Adrian, an Englishman, was pope, being occasioned by the following
circumstances:
A learned man, and an excellent orator of Brescia, named Arnold, came to Rome,
and boldly preached against the corruptions and innovations which had crept into
the Church. His discourses were so clear, consistent, and breathed forth such a pure
spirit of piety, that the senators and many of the people highly approved of, and
admired his doctrines.
This so greatly enraged Adrian that he commanded Arnold instantly to leave the
city, as a heretic. Arnold, however, did not comply, for the senators and some of
the principal people took his part, and resisted the authority of the pope.
Adrian now laid the city of Rome under an interdict, which caused the whole body
of clergy to interpose; and, at length he persuaded the senators and people to give
up the point, and suffer Arnold to be banished. This being agreed to, he received
the sentence of exile, and retired to Germany, where he continued to preach against
the pope, and to expose the gross errors of the Church of Rome.
Adrian, on this account, thirsted for his blood, and made several attempts to
get him into his hands; but Arnold, for a long time, avoided every snare laid for
him. At length, Frederic Barbarossa arriving at the imperial dignity, requested that
the pope would crown him with his own hand. This Adrian complied with, and at the
same time asked a favor of the emperor, which was, to put Arnold into his hands.
The emperor very readily delivered up the unfortunate preacher, who soon fell a martyr
to Adrian's vengeance, being hanged, and his body burnt to ashes, at Apulia. The
same fate attended several of his old friends and companions.
Encenas, a Spaniard, was sent to Rome, to be brought up in the Roman Catholic
faith; but having conversed with some of the reformed, and having read several treatises
which they put into his hands, he became a Protestant. This, at length, being known,
one of his own relations informed against him, when he was burnt by order of the
pope, and a conclave of cardinals. The brother of Encenas had been taken up much
about the same time, for having a New Testament in the Spanish language in his possession;
but before the time appointed for his execution, he found means to escape out of
prison, and retired to Germany.
Faninus, a learned layman, by reading controversial books, became of the reformed
religion. An information being exhibited against him to the pope, he was apprehended,
and cast into prison. His wife, children, relations, and friends visited him in his
confinement, and so far wrought upon his mind, that he renounced his faith, and obtained
his release. But he was no sooner free from confinement than his mind felt the heaviest
of chains; the weight of a guilty conscience. His horrors were so great that he found
them insupportable, until he had returned from his apostasy, and declared himself
fully convinced of the errors of the Church of Rome. To make amends for his falling
off, he now openly and strenuously did all he could to make converts to Protestantism,
and was pretty successful in his endeavors. These proceedings occasioned his second
imprisonment, but he had his life offered him if he would recant again. This proposal
he rejected with disdain, saying that he scorned life upon such terms. Being asked
why he would obstinately persist in his opinions, and leave his wife and children
in distress, he replied, "I shall not leave them in distress;
I have recommended them to the care of an excellent trustee." "What
trustee?" said the person who had asked the question, with some surprise: to
which Faninus answered, "Jesus Christ is the trustee I mean, and I think I could
not commit them to the care of a better." On the day of execution he appeared
remarkably cheerful, which one observing, said, "It is strange you should appear
so merry upon such an occasion, when Jesus Christ himself, just before his death,
was in such agonies, that he sweated blood and water." To which Faninus replied:
"Christ sustained all manner of pangs and conflicts, with hell and death, on
our accounts; and thus, by his sufferings, freed those who really believe in him
from the fear of them." He was then strangled, his body was burnt to ashes,
and then scattered about by the wind.
Dominicus, a learned soldier, having read several controversial writings, became
a zealous Protestant, and retiring to Placentia, he preached the Gospel in its utmost
purity, to a very considerable congregation. One day, at the conclusion of his sermon,
he said, "If the congregation will attend to-morrow, I will give them a description
of Antichrist, and paint him out in his proper colors."
A vast concourse of people attended the next day, but just as Dominicus was beginning
his sermon, a civil magistrate went up to the pulpit, and took him into custody.
He readily submitted; but as he went along with the magistrate, he made use of this
expression: "I wonder the devil hath let me alone so long." When he was
brought to examination, this question was put to him: "Will you renounce your
doctrines?" To which he replied: "My doctrines! I maintain no doctrines
of my own; what I preach are the doctrines of Christ, and for those I will forfeit
my blood, and even think myself happy to suffer for the sake of my Redeemer."
Every method was taken to make him recant for his faith, and embrace the errors of
the Church of Rome; but when persuasions and menaces were found ineffectual, he was
sentenced to death, and hanged in the market place.
Galeacius, a Protestant gentleman, who resided near the castle of St.
Angelo, was apprehended on account of his faith. Great endeavors being used by
his friends he recanted, and subscribed to several of the superstitious doctrines
propogated by the Church of Rome. Becoming, however, sensible of his error, he publicly
renounced his recantation. Being apprehended for this, he was condemned to be burnt,
and agreeable to the order was chained to a stake, where he was left several hours
before the fire was put to the fagots, in order that his wife, relations, and friends,
who surrounded him, might induce him to give up his opinions. Galeacius, however,
retained his constancy of mind, and entreated the executioner to put fire to the
wood that was to burn him. This at length he did, and Galeacius was soon consumed
in the flames, which burnt with amazing rapidity and deprived him of sensation in
a few minutes.
Soon after this gentleman's death, a great number of Protestants were put to death
in various parts of Italy, on account of their faith, giving a sure proof of their
sincerity in their martyrdoms.
An Account of the Persecutions of Calabria
In the fourteenth century, many of the Waldenses of Pragela and Dauphiny, emigrated
to Calabria, and settling some waste lands, by the permission of the nobles of that
country, they soon, by the most industrious cultivation, made several wild and barren
spots appear with all the beauties of verdure and fertility.
The Calabrian lords were highly pleased with their new subjects and
tenants, as they were honest, quiet, and industrious; but the priests of the
country exhibited several negative complaints against them; for not being able
to accuse them of anythying bad which they did do, they founded accusations on
what they did not do, and charged them,
With not being Roman Catholics.
With not making any of their boys priests.
With not making any of their girls nuns.
With not going to Mass.
With not giving wax tapers to their priests as offerings.
With not going on pilgrimages.
With not bowing to images.
The Calabrian lords, however, quieted the priests, by telling them that these
people were extremely harmless; that they gave no offence to the Roman Catholics,
and cheerfully paid the tithes to the priests, whose revenues were considerably increased
by their coming into the country, and who, of consequence, ought to be the last persons
to complain of them.
Things went on tolerably well after this for a few years, during which the Waldenses
formed themselves into two corporate towns, annexing several villages to the jurisdiction
of them. At length they sent to Geneva for two clergymen; one to preach in each town,
as they determined to make a public profession of their faith. Intelligence of this
affair being carried to the pope, Pius the Fourth, he determined to exterminate them
from Calabria.
To this end he sent Cardinal Alexandrino, a man of very violent temper and a furious
bigot, together with two monks, to Calabria, where they were to act as inquisitors.
These authorized persons came to St. Xist, one of the towns built by the Waldenses,
and having assembled the people, told them that they should receive no injury, if
they would accept of preachers appointed by the pope; but if they would not, they
should be deprived both of their properties and lives; and that their intentions
might be known, Mass should be publicly said that afternoon, at which they were ordered
to attend.
The people of St. Xist, instead of attending Mass, fled into the woods, with their
families, and thus disappointed the cardinal and his coadjutors. The cardinal then
proceeded to La Garde, the other town belonging to the Waldenses, where, not to be
served as he had been at St. Xist, he ordered the gates to be locked, and all avenues
guarded. The same proposals were then made to the inhabitants of La Garde, as had
previously been offered to those of St. Xist, but with this additional piece of artifice:
the cardinal assured them that the inhabitants of St. Xist had immediately come into
his proposals, and agreed that the pope should appoint them preachers. This falsehood
succeeded; for the people of La Garde, thinking what the cardinal had told them to
be the truth, said they would exactly follow the example of their brethren at St.
Xist.
The cardinal, having gained his point by deluding the people of one town, sent
for troops of soldiers, with a view to murder those of the other. He, accordingly,
despatched the soldiers into the woods, to hunt down the inhabitants of St. Xist
like wild beasts, and gave them strict orders to spare neither age nor sex, but to
kill all they came near. The troops entered the woods, and many fell a prey to their
ferocity, before the Waldenses were properly apprised of their design. At length,
however, they determined to sell their lives as dear as possible, when several conflicts
happened, in which the half-armed Waldenses performed prodigies of valor, and many
were slain on both sides. The greatest part of the troops being killed in the different
rencontres, the rest were compelled to retreat, which so enraged the cardinal that
he wrote to the viceroy of Naples for reinforcements.
The viceroy immediately ordered a proclamation to be made thorughout all the Neapolitan
territories, that all outlaws, deserters, and other proscribed persons should be
surely pardoned for their respective offences, on condition of making a campaign
against the inhabitants of St. Xist, and continuing under arms until those people
were exterminated.
Many persons of desperate fortunes came in upon this proclamation, and being formed
into light companies, were sent to scour the woods, and put to death all they could
meet with of the reformed religion. The viceroy himself likewise joined the cardinal,
at the head of a body of regular forces; and, in conjunction, they did all they could
to harass the poor people in the woods. Some they caught and hanged up upon trees,
cut down boughs and burnt them, or ripped them open and left their bodies to be devoured
by wild beasts, or birds of prey. Many they shot at a distance, but the greatest
number they hunted down by way of sport. A few hid themselves in caves, but famine
destroyed them in their retreat; and thus all these poor people perished, by various
means, to glut the bigoted malice of their merciless persecutors.
The inhabitants of St. Xist were no sooner exterminated, than those of La Garde
engaged the attention of the cardinal and viceroy.
It was offered, that if they should embrace the Roman Catholic persuasion, themselves
and families should not be injured, but their houses and properties should be restored,
and none would be permitted to molest them; but, on the contrary, if they refused
this mercy, (as it was termed) the utmost extremities would be used, and the most
cruel deaths the certain consequence of their noncompliance.
Notwithstanding the promises on one side, and menaces on the other, these worthy
people unanimously refused to renounce their religion, or embrace the errors of popery.
This exasperated the cardinal and viceroy so much, that thirty of them were ordered
to be put immediately to the rack, as a terror to the rest.
Those who were put to the rack were treated with such severity that several died
under the tortures; one Charlin, in particular, was so cruelly used that his belly
burst, his bowels came out, and he expired in the greatest agonies. These barbarities,
however, did not answer the purposes for which they were intended; for those who
remained alive after the rack, and those who had not felt the rack, remained equally
constant in their faith, and boldly declared that no tortures of body, or terrors
of mind, should ever induce them to renounce their God, or worship images.
Several were then, by the cardinal's order, stripped stark naked, and whipped
to death iron rods; and some were hacked to pieces with large knives; others were
thrown down from the top of a large tower, and many were covered over with pitch,
and burnt alive.
One of the monks who attended the cardinal, being naturally of a savage and cruel
disposition, requested of him that he might shed some of the blood of these poor
people with his own hands; when his request being granted, the barbarous man took
a large sharp knife, and cut the throats of fourscore men, women, and children, with
as little remorse as a butcher would have killed so many sheep. Every one of these
bodies were then ordered to be quartered, the quarters placed upon stakes, and then
fixed in different parts of the country, within a circuit of thirty miles.
The four principal men of La Garde were hanged, and the clergyman was thrown from
the top of his church steeple. He was terribly mangled, but not quite killed by the
fall; at which time the viceroy passing by, said, "Is the dog yet living? Take
him up, and give him to the hogs," when, brutal as this sentence may appear,
it was executed accordingly.
Sixty women were racked so violently, that the cords pierced their arms and legs
close to the bone; when, being remanded to prison, their wounds mortified, and they
died in the most miserable manner. Many others were put to death by various cruel
means; and if any Roman Catholic, more compassionate than the rest, interceded for
any of the reformed, he was immediately apprehended, and shared the same fate as
a favorer of heretics.
The viceroy being obliged to march back to Naples, on some affairs of moment which
required his presence, and the cardinal being recalled to Rome, the marquis of Butane
was ordered to put the finishing stroke to what they had begun; which he at length
effected, by acting with such barbarous rigor, that there was not a single person
of the reformed religion left living in all Calabria.
Thus were a great number of inoffensive and harmless people deprived of their
possessions, robbed of their property, driven from their homes, and at length murdered
by various means, only because they would not sacrifice their consciences to the
superstitions of others, embrace idolatrous doctrines which they abhorred, and accept
of teachers whom they could not believe.
Tyranny is of three kinds, viz., that which enslaves the person, that which seizes
the property, and that which prescribes and dictates to the mind. The two first sorts
may be termed civil tyranny, and have been practiced by arbitrary sovereigns in all
ages, who have delighted in tormenting the persons, and stealing the properties of
their unhappy subjects. But the third sort, viz., prescribing and dictating to the
mind, may be called ecclesiastical tyranny: and this is the worst kind of tyranny,
as it includes the other two sorts; for the Romish clergy not only do torture the
body and seize the effects of those they persecute, but take the lives, torment the
minds, and, if possible, would tyrannize over the souls of the unhappy victims.
Account of the Persecutions in the Valleys of Piedmont
Many of the Waldenses, to avoid the persecutions to which they were continually
subjected in France, went and settled in the valleys of Piedmont, where they increased
exceedingly, and flourished very much for a considerable time.
Though they were harmless in their behavior, inoffensive in their conversation,
and paid tithes to the Roman clergy, yet the latter could not be contented, but wished
to give them some distrubance: they, accordingly, complained to the archbishop of
Turin that the Waldenses of the valleys of Piedmont were heretics, for these reasons:
- 1. That they did not believe in the doctrines of the Church of Rome.
- 2. That they made no offerings or prayers for the dead.
- 3. That they did not go to Mass.
- 4. That they did not confess, and receive absolution.
- 5. That they did not believe in purgatory, or pay money to get the souls of their
friends out of it.
Upon these charges the archbishop ordered a persecution to be commenced, and many
fell martyrs to the superstitious rage of the priests and monks.
At Turin, one of the reformed had his bowels torn out, and put in a basin before
his face, where they remained in his view until he expired. At Revel, Catelin Girard
being at the stake, desired the executioner to give him a stone; which he refused,
thinking that he meant to throw it at somebody; but Girard assuring him that he had
no such design, the executioner complied, when Girard, looking earnestly at the stone,
said, "When it is in the power of a man to eat and digest this solid stone,
the religion for which I am about to suffer shall have an end, and not before."
He then threw the stone on the ground, and submitted cheerfully to the flames. A
great many more of the reformed were oppressed, or put to death, by various means,
until the patience of the Waldenses being tired out, they flew to arms in their own
defence, and formed themselves into regular bodies.
Exasperated at this, the bishop of Turin procured a number of troops, and sent
against them; but in most of the skirmishes and engagements the Waldenses were successful,
which partly arose from their being better acquainted with the passes of the valleys
of Piedmont than their adversaries, and partly from the desperation with which they
fought; for they well knew, if they were taken, they should not be considered as
prisoners of war, but tortured to death as heretics.
At length, Philip VII, duke of Savoy, and supreme lord of Piedmont, determined
to interpose his authority, and stop these bloody wars, which so greatly disturbed
his dominions. He was not willing to disoblige the pope, or affront the archbishop
of Turin; nevertheless, he sent them both messages, importing that he could not any
longer tamely see his dominions overrun with troops, who were directed by priests
instead of officers, and commanded by prelates instead of generals; nor would he
suffer his country to be depopulated, while he himself had not been even consulted
upon the occasion.
The priests, finding the resolution of the duke, did all they could to prejudice
his mind against the Waldenses; but the duke told them, that though he was unacquainted
with the religious tenets of these people, yet he had always found them quiet, faithful,
and obedient, and therefore he determined they should be no longer persecuted.
The priests now had recourse to the most palpable and absurd falsehoods:
they assured the duke that he was mistaken in the Waldenses for they were a wicked
set of people, and highly addicted to intemperance, uncleanness, blasphemy, adultery,
incest, and many other abominable crimes; and that they were even monsters in nature,
for their children were born with black throats, with four rows of teeth, and bodies
all over hairy.
The duke was not so devoid of common sense as to give credit to what the priests
said, though they affirmed in the most solemn manner the truth of their assertions.
He, however, sent twelve very learned and sensible gentlemen into the Piedmontese
valleys, to examine into the real character of the inhabitants.
These gentlemen, after travelling through all their towns and villages, and conversing
with people of every rank among the Waldenses returned to the duke, and gave him
the most favorable account of these people; affirming, before the faces of the priests
who vilified them, that they were harmless, inoffensive, loyal, friendly, industrious,
and pious: that they abhorred the crimes of which they were accused; and that, should
an individual, through his depravity, fall into any of those crimes, he would, by
their laws, be punished in the most exemplary manner. "With respect to the children,"
the gentlemen said, "the priests had told the most gross and ridiculous falsities,
for they were neither born with black throats, teeth in their mouths, nor hair on
their bodies, but were as fine children as could be seen. And to convince your highness
of what we have said, (continued one of the gentlemen) we have brought twelve of
the principal male inhabitants, who are come to ask pardon in the name of the rest,
for having taken up arms without your leave, though even in their own defence, and
to preserve their lives from their merciless enemies. And we have likewise brought
several women, with children of various ages, that your highness may have an opportunity
of personally examining them as much as you please."
The duke, after accepting the apology of the twelve delegates, conversing with
the women, and examining the children, graciously dismissed them. He then commanded
the priests, who had attempted to mislead him, immediately to leave the court; and
gave strict orders, that the persecution should cease throughout his dominions.
The Waldenses had enjoyed peace many years, when Philip, the seventh duke of Savoy,
died, and his successor happened to be a very bigoted papist. About the same time,
some of the principal Waldenses proposed that their clergy should preach in public,
that every one might know the purity of their doctrines: for hitherto they had preached
only in private, and to such congregations as they well knew to consist of none but
persons of the reformed religion.
On hearing these proceedings, the new duke was greatly exasperated, and sent a
considerable body of troops into the valleys, swearing that if the people would not
change their religion, he would have them flayed alive. The commander of the troops
soon found the impracticability of conquering them with the number of men he had
with him, he, therefore, sent word to the duke that the idea of subjugating the Waldenses,
with so small a force, was ridiculous; that those people were better acquainted with
the country than any that were with him; that they had secured all the passes, were
well armed, and resolutely determined to defend themselves; and, with respect to
flaying them alive, he said, that every skin belonging to those people would cost
him the lives of a dozen of his subjects.
Terrified at this information, the duke withdrew the troops, determining to act
not by force, but by stratagem. He therefore ordered rewards for the taking of any
of the Waldenses, who might be found straying from their places of security; and
these, when taken, were either flayed alive, or burnt.
The Waldenses had hitherto only had the New Testament and a few books of the Old,
in the Waldensian tongue; but they determined now to have the sacred writings complete
in their own language. They, therefore, employed a Swiss printer to furnish them
with a complete edition of the Old and New Testaments in the Waldensian tongue, which
he did for the consideration of fifteen hundred crowns of gold, paid him by those
pious people.
Pope Paul the third, a bigoted papist, ascending the pontifical chair, immediately
solicited the parliament of Turin to persecute the Waldenses, as the most pernicious
of all heretics.
The parliament readily agreed, when several were suddenly apprehended and burnt
by their order. Among these was Bartholomew Hector, a bookseller and stationer of
Turin, who was brought up a Roman Catholic, but having read some treatises written
by the reformed clergy, was fully convinced of the errors of the Church of Rome;
yet his mind was, for some time, wavering, and he hardly knew what persuasion to
embrace.
At length, however, he fully embraced the reformed religion, and was apprehended,
as we have already mentioned, and burnt by order of the parliament of Turin.
A consultation was now held by the parliament of Turin, in which it was agreed
to send deputies to the valleys of Piedmont, with the following propositions:
- 1. That if the Waldenses would come to the bosom of the Church of Rome, and embrace
the Roman Catholic religion, they should enjoy their houses, properties, and lands,
and live with their families, without the least molestation.
- 2. That to prove their obedience, they should send twelve of their principal
persons, with all their ministers and schoolmasters, to Turin, to be dealt with at
discretion.
- 3. That the pope, the king of France, and the duke of Savoy, approved of, and
authorized the proceedings of the parliament of Turin, upon this occasion.
- 4. That if the Waldenses of the valleys of Piedmont refused to comply with these
propositions, persecution should ensue, and certain death be their portion.
To each of these propositions the Waldenses nobly replied in the following manner,
answering them respectively:
- 1. That no considerations whatever should make them renounce their religion.
- 2. That they would never consent to commit their best and most respectable friends,
to the custody and discretion of their worst and most inveterate enemies.
- 3. That they valued the approbation of the King of kings, who reigns in heaven,
more than any temporal authority.
- 4. That their souls were more precious than their bodies.
These pointed and spirited replies greatly exasperated the parliament of Turin;
they continued, with more avidity than ever, to kidnap such Waldenses as did not
act with proper precaution, who were sure to suffer the most cruel deaths. Among
these, it unfortunately happened, that they got hold of Jeffery Varnagle, minister
of Angrogne, whom they committed to the flames as a heretic.
They then solicited a considerable body of troops of the king of France, in order
to exterminate the reformed entirely from the valleys of Piedmont; but just as the
troops were going to march, the Protestant princes of Germany interposed, and threatened
to send troops to assist the Waldenses, if they should be attacked. The king of France,
not caring to enter into a war, remanded the troops, and sent word to the parliament
of Turin that he could not spare any troops at present to act in Piedmont. The members
of the parliament were greatly vexed at this disappointment, and the persecution
gradually ceased, for as they could only put to death such of the reformed as they
caught by chance, and as the Waldenses daily grew more cautious, their cruelty was
obliged to subside, for want of objects on whom to exercise it.
After the Waldenses had enjoyed a few years tranquillity, they were again disturbed
by the following means: the pope's nuncio coming to Turin to the duke of Savoy upon
business, told that prince he was astonished he had not yet either rooted out the
Waldenses from the valleys of Piedmont entirely, or compelled them to enter into
the bosom of the Church of Rome. That he could not help looking upon such conduct
with a suspicious eye, and that he really thought him a favorer of those heretics,
and should report the affair accordingly to his holiness the pope.
Stung by this reflection, and unwilling to be misrepresented to the pope, the
duke determined to act with the greatest severity, in order to show his zeal, and
to make amends for former neglect by future cruelty. He, accordingly, issued express
orders for all the Waldenses to attend Mass regularly on pain of death. This they
absolutely refused to do, on which he entered the Piedmontese valleys, with a formidable
body of troops, and began a most furious persecution, in which great numbers were
hanged, drowned, ripped open, tied to trees, and pierced with prongs, thrown from
precipices, burnt, stabbed, racked to death, crucified with their heads downwards,
worried by dogs, etc.
Those who fled had their goods plundered, and their houses burnt to the ground:
they were particularly cruel when they caught a minister or a schoolmaster, whom
they put to such exquisite tortures, as are almost incredible to conceive. If any
whom they took seemed wavering in their faith, they did not put them to death, but
sent them to the galleys, to be made converts by dint of hardships.
The most cruel persecutors, upon this occasion, that attended the duke, were three
in number, viz. 1. Thomas Incomel, an apostate, for he was brought up in the reformed
religion, but renounced his faith, embraced the errors of popery, and turned monk.
He was a great libertine, given to unnatural crimes, and sordidly solicitous for
plunder of the Waldenses. 2. Corbis, a man of a very ferocious and cruel nature,
whose business was to examine the prisoners. 3. The provost of justice, who was very
anxious for the execution of the Waldenses, as every execution put money in his pocket.
These three persons were unmerciful to the last degree; and wherever they came,
the blood of the innocent was sure to flow. Exclusive of the cruelties exercised
by the duke, by these three persons, and the army, in their different marches, many
local barbarities were committed. At Pignerol, a town in the valleys, was a monastery,
the monks of which, finding they might injure the reformed with impunity, began to
plunder the houses and pull down the churches of the Waldenses. Not meeting with
any opposition, they seized upon the persons of those unhappy people, murdering the
men, confining the women, and putting the children to Roman Catholic nurses.
The Roman Catholic inhabitants of the valley of St. Martin, likewise, did all
they could to torment the neighboring Waldenses: they destroyed their churches, burnt
their houses, seized their properties, stole their cattle, converted their lands
to their own use, committed their ministers to the flames, and drove the Waldenses
to the woods, where they had nothing to subsist on but wild fruits, roots, the bark
of trees, etc.
Some Roman Catholic ruffians having seized a minister as he was going to preach,
determined to take him to a convenient place, and burn him. His parishioners having
intelligence of this affair, the men armed themselves, pursued the ruffians, and
seemed determined to rescue their minister; which the ruffians no sooner perceived
than they stabbed the poor gentleman, and leaving him weltering in his blood, made
a precipitate retreat. The astonished parishioners did all they could to recover
him, but in vain: for the weapon had touched the vital parts, and he expired as they
were carrying him home.
The monks of Pignerol having a great inclination to get the minister of a town
in the valleys, called St. Germain, into their power, hired a band of ruffians for
the purpose of apprehending him. These fellows were conducted by a treacherous person,
who had formerly been a servant to the clergyman, and who perfectly well knew a secret
way to the house, by which he could lead them without alarming the neighborhood.
The guide knocked at the door, and being asked who was there, answered in his own
name. The clergyman, not expecting any injury from a person on whom he had heaped
favors, immediately opened the door; but perceiving the ruffians, he started back,
and fled to a back door; but they rushed in, followed, and seized him. Having murdered
all his family, they made him proceed towards Pignerol, goading him all the way with
pikes, lances, swords, etc. He was kept a considerable time in prison, and then fastened
to the stake to be burnt; when two women of the Waldenses, who had renounced their
religion to save their lives, were ordered to carry fagots to the stake to burn him;
and as they laid them down, to say, "Take these, thou wicked heretic, in recompense
for the pernicious doctrines thou hast taught us." These words they both repeated
to him; to which he calmly replied, "I formerly taught you well, but you have
since learned ill." The fire was then put to the fagots, and he was speedily
consumed, calling upon the name of the Lord as long as his voice permitted.
As the troops of ruffians, belonging to the monks, did great mischief about the
town of St. Germain, murdering and plundering many of the inhabitants, the reformed
of Lucerne and Angrogne, sent some bands of armed men to the assistance of their
brethren of St. Germain. These bodies of armed men frequently attacked the ruffians,
and often put them to the rout, which so terrified the monks, that they left the
monastery of Pignerol for some time, until they could procure a body of regular troops
to guard them.
The duke not thinking himself so successful as he at first imagined he should
be, greatly augmented his forces; he ordered the bands of ruffians, belonging to
the monks, to join him, and commanded that a general jail-delivery should take place,
provided the persons released would bear arms, and form themselves into light companies,
to assist in the extermination of the Waldenses.
The Waldenses, being informed of the proceedings, secured as much of their properties
as they could, and quitted the valleys, retired to the rocks and caves among the
Alps; for it is to be understood that the valleys of Piedmont are situated at the
foot of those prodigious mountains called the Alps, or the Alpine hills.
The army now began to plunder and burn the towns and villages wherever they came;
but the troops could not force the passes to the Alps, which were gallantly defended
by the Waldenses, who always repulsed their enemies: but if any fell into the hands
of the troops, they were sure to be treated with the most barbarous severity.
A soldier having caught one of the Waldenses, bit his right ear off, saying, "I
will carry this member of that wicked heretic with me into my own country, and preserve
it as a rarity." He then stabbed the man and threw him into a ditch.
A party of the troops found a venerable man, upwards of a hundred years of age,
together with his granddaughter, a maiden, of about eighteen, in a cave. They butchered
the poor old man in the most inhuman manner, and then attempted to ravish the girl,
when she started away and fled from them; but they pursuing her, she threw herself
from a precipice and perished.
The Waldenses, in order the more effectually to be able to repel force by force,
entered into a league with the Protestant powers of Germany, and with the reformed
of Dauphiny and Pragela. These were respectively to furnish bodies of troops; and
the Waldenses determined, when thus reinforced, to quit the mountains of the Alps,
(where they must soon have perished, as the winter was coming on,) and to force the
duke's army to evacuate their native valleys.
The duke of Savoy was now tired of the war; it had cost him great fatigue and
anxiety of mind, a vast number of men, and very considerable sums of money. It had
been much more tedious and bloody than he expected, as well as more expensive than
he could at first have imagined, for he thought the plunder would have dischanged
the expenses of the expedition; but in this he was mistaken, for the pope's nuncio,
the bishops, monks, and other ecclesiastics, who attended the army and encouraged
the war, sunk the greatest part of the wealth that was taken under various pretences.
For these reasons, and the death of his duchess, of which he had just received intelligence,
and fearing that the Waldenses, by the treaties they had entered into, would become
more powerful than ever, he determined to return to Turin with his army, and to make
peace with the Waldenses.
This resolution he executed, though greatly against the will of the ecclesiastics,
who were the chief gainers, and the best pleased with revenge. Before the articles
of peace could be ratified, the duke himself died, soon after his return to Turin;
but on his deathbed he strictly enjoined his son to perform what he intended, and
to be as favorable as possible to the Waldenses.
The duke's son, Charles Emmanuel, succeeded to the dominions of Savoy, and gave
a full ratification of peace to the Waldenses, according to the last injunctions
of his father, though the ecclesiastics did all they could to persuade him to the
contrary.
An Account of the Persecutions in Venice
While the state of Venice was free from inquisitors, a great number of Protestants
fixed their residence there, and many converts were made by the purity of the doctrines
they professed, and the inoffensiveness of the conversation they used.
The pope being informed of the great increase of Protestantism, in the year 1542
sent inquisitors to Venice to make an inquiry into the matter, and apprehend such
as they might deem obnoxious persons. Hence a severe persecution began, and many
worthy persons were martyred for serving God with purity, and scorning the trappings
of idolatry.
Various were the modes by which the Protestants were deprived of life; but one
particular method, which was first invented upon this occasion, we shall describe;
as soon as sentence was passed, the prisoner had an iron chain which ran through
a great stone fastened to his body. He was then laid flat upon a plank, with his
face upwards, and rowed between two boats to a certain distance at sea, when the
two boats separated, and he was sunk to the bottom by the weight of the stone.
If any denied the jurisdiction of the inquisitors at Venice, they were sent to
Rome, where, being committed purposely to damp prisons, and never called to a hearing,
their flesh mortified, and they died miserably in jail.
A citizen of Venice, Anthony Ricetti, being apprehended as a Protestant, was sentenced
to be drowned in the manner we have already described. A few days previous to the
time appointed for his execution, his son went to see him, and begged him to recant,
that his life might be saved, and himself not left fatherless. To which the father
replied, "A good Christian is bound to relinquish not only goods and children,
but life itself, for the glory of his Redeemer: therefore I am resolved to sacrifice
every thing in this transitory world, for the sake of salvation in a world that will
last to eternity."
The lords of Venice likewise sent him word, that if he would embrace the Roman
Catholic religion, they would not only give him his life, but redeem a considerable
estate which he had mortgaged, and freely present him with it. This, however, he
absolutely refused to comply with, sending word to the nobles that he valued his
soul beyond all other considerations; and being told that a fellow-prisoner, named
Francis Sega, had recanted, he answered, "If he has forsaken God, I pity him;
but I shall continue steadfast in my duty." Finding all endeavors to persuade
him to renounce his faith ineffectual, he was executed according to his sentence,
dying cheerfully, and recommending his soul fervently to the Almighty.
What Ricetti had been told concerning the apostasy of Francis Sega, was absolutely
false, for he had never offered to recant, but steadfastly persisted in his faith,
and was executed, a few days after Ricetti, in the very same manner.
Francis Spinola, a Protestant gentleman of very great learning, being apprehended
by order of the inquisitors, was carried before their tribunal. A treatise on the
Lord's Supper was then put into his hands and he was asked if he knew the author
of it. To which he replied, "I confess myself to be the author of it, and at
the same time solemnly affirm, that there is not a line in it but what is authorized
by, and consonant to, the holy Scriptures." On this confession he was committed
close prisoner to a dungeon for several days.
Being brought to a second examination, he charged the pope's legate, and the inquisitors,
with being merciless barbarians, and then represented the superstitions and idolatries
practised by the Church of Rome in so glaring a light, that not being able to refute
his arguments, they sent him back to his dungeon, to make him repent of what he had
said.
On his third examination, they asked him if he would recant his error. To which
he answered that the doctrines he maintained were not erroneous, being purely the
same as those which Christ and his apostles had taught, and which were handed down
to us in the sacred writings. The inquisitors then sentenced him to be drowned, which
was executed in the manner already described. He went to meet death with the utmost
serenity, seemed to wish for dissolution, and declaring that the prolongation of
his life did but tend to retard that real happiness which could only be expected
in the world to come.
An Account of Several Remarkable Individuals, Who Were Martyred in Different
Parts of Italy, on Account of Their Religion
John Mollius was born at Rome, of reputable parents. At twelve years of age they
placed him in the monastery of Gray Friars, where he made such a rapid progress in
arts, sciences, and languages that at eighteen years of age he was permitted to take
priest's orders.
He was then sent to Ferrara, where, after pursuing his studies six years longer,
he was made theological reader in the university of that city. He now, unhappily,
exerted his great talents to disguise the Gospel truths, and to varnish over the
error of the Church of Rome. After some years residence in Ferrara, he removed to
the university of Behonia, where he became a professor. Having read some treatises
written by ministers of the reformed religion, he grew fully sensible of the errors
of popery, and soon became a zealous Protestant in his heart.
He now determined to expound, accordingly to the purity of the Gospel, St.
Paul's Epistle to the Romans, in a regular course of sermons. The concourse of
people that continually attended his preaching was surprising, but when the priests
found the tenor of his doctrines, they despatched an account of the affair to Rome;
when the pope sent a monk, named Cornelius, to Bononia, to expound the same epistle,
according to the tenets of the Church of Rome. The people, however, found such a
disparity between the two preachers that the audience of Mollius increased, and Cornelius
was forced to preach to empty benches.
Cornelius wrote an account of his bad success to the pope, who immediately sent
an order to apprehend Mollius, who was seized upon accordingly, and kept in close
confinement. The bishop of Bononia sent him word that he must recant, or be burnt;
but he appealed to Rome, and was removed thither.
At Rome he begged to have a public trial, but that the pope absolutely denied
him, and commanded him to give an account of his opinions, in writing, which he did
under the following heads:
Original sin. Free-will. The infallibility of the church of Rome. The infallibility
of the pope. Justification by faith. Purgatory. Transubstantiation. Mass. Auricular
confession. Prayers for the dead. The host. Prayers for saints. Going on pilgrimages.
Extreme unction. Performing services in an unknown tongue, etc., etc.
All these he confirmed from Scripture authority. The pope, upon this occasion,
for political reasons, spared him for the present, but soon after had him apprehended,
and put to death, he being first hanged, and his body burnt to ashes, A.D. 1553.
The year after, Francis Gamba, a Lombard, of the Protestant persuasion, was apprehended,
and condemned to death by the senate of Milan. At the place of execution, a monk
presented a cross to him, to whom he said, "My mind is so full of the real merits
and goodness of Christ that I want not a piece of senseless stick to put me in mind
of Him." For this expression his tongue was bored through, and he was afterward
burnt.
A.D. 1555, Algerius, a student in the university of Padua, and a man of great
learning, having embraced the reformed religion, did all he could to convert others.
For these proceedings he was accused of heresy to the pope, and being apprehended,
was committed to the prison at Venice.
The pope, being informed of Algerius's great learning, and surprising natural
abilities, thought it would be of infinite service to the Church of Rome if he could
induce him to forsake the Protestant cause. He, therefore, sent for him to Rome,
and tried, by the most profane promises, to win him to his purpose. But finding his
endeavors ineffectual, he ordered him to be burnt, which sentence was executed accordingly.
A.D. 1559, John Alloysius, being sent from Geneva to preach in Calabria, was there
apprehended as a Protestant, carried to Rome, and burnt by order of the pope; and
James Bovelius, for the same reason, was burnt at Messina.
A.D. 1560, Pope Pius the Fourth, ordered all the Protestants to be severely persecuted
throughout the Italian states, when great numbers of every age, sex, and condition,
suffered martyrdom. Concerning the cruelties practiced upon this occasion, a learned
and humane Roman Catholic thus spoke of them, in a letter to a noble lord:
"I cannot, my lord, forbear disclosing my sentiments, with respect to the
persecution now carrying on: I think it cruel and unnecessary; I tremble at the manner
of putting to death, as it resembles more the slaughter of calves and sheep, than
the execution of human beings. I will relate to your lordship a dreadful scene, of
which I was myself an eye witness: seventy Protestants were cooped up in one filthy
dungeon together; the executioner went in among them, picked out one from among the
rest, blindfolded him, led him out to an open place before the prison, and cut his
throat with the greatest composure. He then calmly walked into the prison again,
bloody as he was, and with the knife in his hand selected another, and despatched
him in the same manner; and this, my lord, he repeated until the whole number were
put to death. I leave it to your lordship's feelings to judge of my sensations upon
this occasion; my tears now wash the paper upon which I give you the recital. Another
thing I must mention-the patience with which they met death: they seemed all resignation
and piety, fervently praying to God, and cheerfully encountering their fate. I cannot
reflect without shuddering, how the executioner held the bloody knife between his
teeth; what a dreadful figure he appeared, all covered with blood, and with what
unconcern he executed his barbarous office."
A young Englishman who happened to be at Rome, was one day passing by a church,
when the procession of the host was just coming out. A bishop carried the host, which
the young man perceiving, he snatched it from him, threw it upon the ground, and
trampled it under his feet, crying out, "Ye wretched idolaters, who neglect
the true God, to adore a morsel of bread." This action so provoked the people
that they would have torn him to pieces on the spot; but the priests persuaded them
to let him abide by the sentence of the pope.
When the affair was represented to the pope, he was so greatly exasperated that
he ordered the prisoner to be burnt immediately; but a cardinal dissuaded him from
this hasty sentence, saying that it was better to punish him by slow degrees, and
to torture him, that they might find out if he had been instigated by any particular
person to commit so atrocious an act.
This being approved, he was tortured with the most exemplary severity, notwithstanding
which they could only get these words from him, "It was the will of God that
I should do as I did."
The pope then passed this sentence upon him.
- 1. That he should be led by the executioner, naked to the middle, through the
streets of Rome.
- 2. That he should wear the image of the devil upon his head.
- 3. That his breeches should be painted with the representation of flames.
- 4. That he should have his right hand cut off.
- 5. That after having been carried about thus in procession, he should be burnt.
When he heard this sentence pronounced, he implored God to give him strength and
fortitude to go through it. As he passed through the streets he was greatly derided
by the people, to whom he said some severe things respecting the Romish superstition.
But a cardinal, who attended the procession, overhearing him, ordered him to be gagged.
When he came to the church door, where he trampled on the host, the hangman cut
off his right hand, and fixed it on a pole. Then two tormentors, with flaming torches,
scorched and burnt his flesh all the rest of the way. At the place of execution he
kissed the chains that were to bind him to the stake. A monk presenting the figure
of a saint to him, he struck it aside, and then being chained to the stake, fire
was put to the fagots, and he was soon burnt to ashes.
A little after the last-mentioned execution, a venerable old man, who had long
been a prisoner in the Inquisition, was condemned to be burnt, and brought out for
execution. When he was fastened to the stake, a priest held a crucifix to him, on
which he said, "If you do not take that idol from my sight, you will constrain
me to spit upon it." The priest rebuked him for this with great severity; but
he bade him remember the First and Second Commandments, and refrain from idolatry,
as God himself had commanded. He was then gagged, that he should not speak any more,
and fire being put to the fagots, he suffered martyrdom in the flames.
An Account of the Persecutions in the Marquisate of Saluces
The Marquisate of Saluces, on the south side of the valleys of Piedmont, was in
A.D. 1561, principally inhabited by Protestants, when the marquis, who was proprietor
of it, began a persecution against them at the instigation of the pope. He began
by banishing the ministers, and if any of them refused to leave their flocks, they
were sure to be imprisoned, and severely tortured; however, he did not proceed so
far as to put any to death.
Soon after the marquisate fell into the possession of the duke of Savoy, who sent
circular letters to all the towns and villages, that he expected the people should
all conform to go to Mass. The inhabitants of Saluces, upon receiving this letter,
returned a general epistle, in answer.
The duke, after reading the letter, did not interrupt the Protestants for some
time; but, at length, he sent them word that they must either conform to the Mass,
or leave his dominions in fifteen days. The Protestants, upon this unexpected edict,
sent a deputy to the duke to obtain its revocation, or at least to have it moderated.
But their remonstrances were in vain, and they were given to understand that the
edict was absolute.
Some were weak anough to go to Mass, in order to avoid banishment, and preserve
their property; others removed, with all their effects, to different countries; and
many neglected the time so long that they were obliged to abandon all they were worth,
and leave the marquisate in haste. Those, who unhappily stayed bheind, were seized,
plundered, and put to death.
An Account of the Persecutions in the Valleys of Piedmont, in the Seventeenth
Century
Pope Clement the Eighth, sent missionaries into the valleys of Piedmont, to induce
the Protestants to renounce their religion; and these missionaries having erected
monasteries in several parts of the valleys, became exceedingly troublesome to those
of the reformed, where the monasteries appeared, not only as fortresses to curb,
but as sanctuaries for all such to fly to, as had any ways injured them.
The Protestants petitioned the duke of Savoy against these missionaries, whose
insolence and ill-usage were become intolerable; but instead of getting any redress,
the interest of the missionaries so far prevailed, that the duke published a decree,
in which he declared, that one witness should be sufficient in a court of law against
a Protestant, and that any witness, who convicted a Protestant of any crime whatever,
should be entitled to one hundred crowns.
It may be easily imagined, upon the publication of a decree of this nature, that
many Protestants fell martyrs to perjury and avarice; for several villainous papists
would swear any thing against the Protestants for the sake of the reward, and then
fly to their own priests for absolution from their false oaths. If any Roman Catholic,
of more conscience than the rest, blamed these fellows for their atrocious crimes,
they themselves were in danger of being informed against and punished as favorers
of heretics.
The missionaries did all they could to get the books of the Protestants into their
hands, in order to burn them; when the Protestants doing their utmost endeavors to
conceal their books, the missionaries wrote to the duke of Savoy, who, for the heinous
crime of not surrendering their Bibles, prayer books, and religious treatises, sent
a number of troops to be quartered on them. These military gentry did great mischief
in the houses of the Protestants, and destroyed such quantities of provisions, that
many families were thereby ruined.
To encourage, as much as possible, the apostasy of the Protestants, the duke of
Savoy published a proclamation wherein he said, "To encourage the heretics to
turn Catholics, it is our will and pleasure, and we do hereby expressly command,
that all such as shall embrace the holy Roman Catholic faith, shall enjoy an exemption,
from all and every tax for the space of five years, commencing from the day of their
conversion." The duke of Savoy, likewise established a court, called the council
for extirpating the heretics. This court was to enter into inquiries concerning the
ancient privileges of the Protestant churches, and the decrees which had been, from
time to time, made in favor of the Protestants. But the investigation of these things
was carried on with the most manifest partiality; old charters were wrested to a
wrong sense, and sophistry was used to pervert the meaning of everything, which tended
to favor the reformed.
As if these severities were not sufficient, the duke, soon after, published another
edict, in which he strictly commanded, that no Protestant should act as a schoolmaster,
or tutor, either in public or private, or dare to teach any art, science, or language,
directly or indirectly, to persons of any persuasion whatever.
This edict was immediately followed by another, which decreed that no Protestant
should hold any place of profit, trust, or honor; and to wind up the whole, the certain
token of an approaching persecution came forth in a final edict, by which it was
positively ordered, that all Protestants should diligently attend Mass.
The publication of an edict, containing such an injunction, may be compared to
unfurling the bloody flag; for murder and rapine were sure to follow. One of the
first objects that attracted the notice of the papists was Mr. Sebastian Basan, a
zealous Protestant, who was seized by the missionaries, confined, tormented for fifteen
months, and then burnt.
Previous to the persecution, the missionaries employed kidnappers to steal away
the Protestants' children, that they might privately be brought up Roman Catholics;
but now they took away the children by open force, and if they met with any resistance,
they murdered the parents.
To give greater vigor to the persecution, the duke of Savoy called a general assembly
of the Roman Catholic nobility and gentry when a solemn edict was published against
the reformed, containing many heads, and including several reasons for extirpating
the Protestants, among which were the following:
- 1. For the preservation of the papal authority.
- 2. That the church livings may be all under one mode of government.
- 3. To make a union among all parties.
- 4. In honor of all the saints, and of the ceremonies of the Church of
Rome.
This severe edict was followed by a most cruel order, published on January 25,
A.D. 1655, under the duke's sanction, by Andrew Gastaldo, doctor of civil laws. This
order set forth, "That every head of a family, with the individuals of that
family, of the reformed religion, of what rank, degree, or condition soever, none
excepted inhabiting and possessing estates in Lucerne, St. Giovanni, Bibiana, Campiglione,
St. Secondo, Lucernetta, La Torre, Fenile, and Bricherassio, should, within three
days after the publication thereof, withdraw and depart, and be withdrawn out of
the said places, and translated into the places and limits tolerated by his highness
during his pleasure; particularly Bobbio, Angrogne, Vilario, Rorata, and the county
of Bonetti.
"And all this to be done on pain of death, and confiscation of house and
goods, unless within the limited time they turned Roman Catholics."
A flight with such speed, in the midst of winter, may be conceived as no agreeable
task, especially in a country almost surrounded by mountains. The sudden order affected
all, and things, which would have been scarcely noticed at another time, now appeared
in the most conspicuous light. Women with child, or women just lain-in, were not
objects of pity on this order for sudden removal, for all were included in the command;
and it unfortunately happened, that the winter was remarkably severe and rigorous.
The papists, however, drove the people from their habitations at the time appointed,
without even suffering them to have sufficient clothes to cover them; and many perished
in the mountains through the severity of the weather, or for want of food. Some,
however, who remained behind after the decree was published, met with the severest
treatment, being murdered by the popish inhabitants, or shot by the troops who were
quartered in the valleys. A particular description of these cruelties is given in
a letter, written by a Protestant, who was upon the spot, and who happily escaped
the carnage. "The army (says he) having got footing, became very numerous, by
the addition of a multitude of the neighboring popish inhabitants, who finding we
were the destined prey of the plunderers, fell upon us with an impetuous fury. Exclusive
of the duke of Savoy's troops, and the popish inhabitants, there were several regiments
of French auxiliaries, some companies belonging to the Irish brigades, and several
bands formed of outlaws, smugglers, and prisoners, who had been promised pardon and
liberty in this world, and absolution in the next, for assisting to exterminate the
Protestants from Piedmont.
"This armed multitude being encouraged by the Roman Catholic bishops and
monks fell upon the Protestants in a most furious manner. Nothing now was to be seen
but the face of horror and despair, blood stained the floors of the houses, dead
bodies bestrewed the streets, groans and cries were heard from all parts. Some armed
themselves, and skirmished with the troops; and many, with their families, fled to
the mountains. In one village they cruelly tormented one hundred and fifty women
and children after the men were fled, beheading the women, and dashing out the brains
of the children. In the towns of Vilario and Bobbio, most of those who refused to
go to Mass, who were upwards of fifteen years of age, they crucified with their heads
downwards; and the greatest number of those who were under that age were strangled."
Sarah Ratignole des Vignes, a woman of sixty years of age, being seized by some
soldiers, they ordered her to say a prayer to some saints, which she refusing, they
thrust a sickle into her belly, ripped her up, and then cut off her head.
Martha Constantine, a handsome young woman, was treated with great indecency and
cruelty by several of the troops, who first ravished, and then killed her by cutting
off her breasts. These they fried, and set before some of their comrades, who ate
them without knowing what they were. When they had done eating, the others told them
what they had made a meal of, in consequence of which a quarrel ensued, swords were
drawn, and a battle took place. Several were killed in the fray, the greater part
of whom were those concerned in the horrid massacre of the woman, and who had practiced
such an inhuman deception on their companions.
Some of the soldiers seized a man of Thrassiniere, and ran the points of their
swords through his ears, and through his feet. They then tore off the nails of his
fingers and toes with red-hot pincers, tied him to the tail of an ass, and dragged
him about the streets; they finally fastened a cord around his head, which they twisted
with a stick in so violent a manner as to wring it from his body.
Peter Symonds, a Protestant, of about eighty years of age, was tied neck and heels,
and then thrown down a precipice. In the fall the branch of a tree caught hold of
the ropes that fastened him, and suspended him in the midway, so that he languished
for several days, and at length miserably perished of hunger.
Esay Garcino, refusing to renounce his religion, was cut into small pieces; the
soldiers, in ridicule, saying, they had minced him. A woman, named Armand, had every
limb separated from each other, and then the respective parts were hung upon a hedge.
Two old women were ripped open, and then left in the fields upon the snow, where
they perished; and a very old woman, who was deformed, had her nose and hands cut
off, and was left, to bleed to death in that manner.
A great number of men, women, and children, were flung from the rocks, and dashed
to pieces. Magdalen Bertino, a Protestant woman of La Torre, was stripped stark naked,
her head tied between her legs, and thrown down one of the precipices; and Mary Raymondet,
of the same town, had the flesh sliced from her bones until she expired.
Magdalen Pilot, of Vilario, was cut to pieces in the cave of Castolus; Ann Charboniere
had one end of a stake thrust up her body; and the other being fixed in the ground,
she was left in that manner to perish, and Jacob Perrin the elder, of the church
of Vilario, and David, his brother, were flayed alive.
An inhabitant of La Torre, named Giovanni Andrea Michialm, was apprehended, with
four of his children, three of them were hacked to pieces before him, the soldiers
asking him, at the death of every child, if he would renounce his religion; this
he constantly refused. One of the soldiers then took up the last and youngest by
the legs, and putting the same question to the father, he replied as before, when
the inhuman brute dashed out the child's brains. The father, however, at the same
moment started from them, and fled; the soldiers fired after him, but missed him;
and he, by the swiftness of his heels, escaped, and hid himself in the Alps.
Further Persecutions in the Valleys of Piedmont, in the Seventeenth Century
Giovanni Pelanchion, for refusing to turn papist, was tied by one leg to the tail
of a mule, and dragged through the streets of Lucerne, amidst the acclamations of
an inhuman mob, who kept stoning him, and crying out, "He is possessed with
the devil, so that, neither stoning, nor dragging him through the streets, will kill
him, for the devil keeps him alive." They then took him to the river side, chopped
off his head, and left that and his body unburied, upon the bank of the stream.
Magdalen, the daughter of Peter Fontaine, a beautiful child of ten years of age,
was ravished and murdered by the soldiers. Another girl of about the same age, they
roasted alive at Villa Nova; and a poor woman, hearing that the soldiers were coming
toward her house, snatched up the cradle in which her infant son was asleep, and
fled toward the woods. The soldiers, however, saw and pursued her; when she lightened
herself by putting down the cradle and child, which the soldiers no sooner came to,
than they murdered the infant, and continuing the pursuit, found the mother in a
cave, where they first ravished, and then cut her to pieces.
Jacob Michelino, chief elder of the church of Bobbio, and several other Protestants,
were hung up by means of hooks fixed in their bellies, and left to expire in the
most excruciating tortures.
Giovanni Rostagnal, a venerable Protestant, upwards of fourscore years of age,
had his nose and ears cut off, and slices cut from the fleshy parts of his body,
until he bled to death.
Seven persons, viz. Daniel Seleagio and his wife, Giovanni Durant, Lodwich Durant,
Bartholomew Durant, Daniel Revel, and Paul Reynaud, had their mouths stuffed with
gunpowder, which being set fire to, their heads were blown to pieces.
Jacob Birone, a schoolmaster of Rorata, for refusing to change his religion, was
stripped quite naked; and after having been very indecently exposed, had the nails
of his toes and fingers torn off with red-hot pincers, and holes bored through his
hands with the point of a dagger. He then had a cord tied round his middle, and was
led through the streets with a soldier on each side of him. At every turning the
soldier on his right hand side cut a gash in his flesh, and the soldier on his left
hand side struck him with a bludgeon, both saying, at the same instant, "Will
you go to Mass? will you go to Mass?" He still replied in the negative to these
interrogatories, and being at length taken to the bridge, they cut off his head on
the balustrades, and threw both that and his body into the river.
Paul Garnier, a very pious Protestant, had his eyes put out, was then flayed alive,
and being divided into four parts, his quarters were placed on four of the principal
houses of Lucerne. He bore all his sufferings with the most exemplary patience, praised
God as long as he could speak, and plainly evinced, what confidence and resignation
a good conscience can inspire.
Daniel Cardon, of Rocappiata, being apprehended by some soldiers, they cut his
head off, and having fried his brains, ate them. Two poor old blind women, of St.
Giovanni, were burnt alive; and a widow of La Torre, with her daughter, were driven
into the river, and there stoned to death.
Paul Giles, on attempting to run away from some soldiers, was shot in the neck:
they then slit his nose, sliced his chin, stabbed him, and gave his carcass to the
dogs.
Some of the Irish troops having taken eleven men of Garcigliana prisoners, they
made a furnace red hot, and forced them to push each other in until they came to
the last man, whom they pushed in themselves.
Michael Gonet, a man of ninety, was burnt to death; Baptista Oudri, another old
man, was stabbed; and Bartholomew Frasche had holes made in his heels, through which
ropes were put; then he was dragged by them to the jail, where his wounds mortified
and killed him.
Magdalene de la Piere being pursued by some of the soldiers, and taken, was thrown
down a precipice, and dashed to pieces. Margaret Revella, and Mary Pravillerin, two
very old women, were burnt alive; and Michael Bellino, with Ann Bochardno, were beheaded.
The son and the daughter of a counsellor of Giovanni were rolled down a steep
hill together, and suffered to perish in a deep pit at the bottom. A tradesman's
family, viz.: himself, his wife, and an infant in her arms, were cast from a rock,
and dashed to pieces; and Joseph Chairet and Paul Carniero were flayed alive.
Cypriania Bustia, being asked if he would renounce his religion and turn Roman
Catholic, replied, "I would rather renounce life, or turn dog"; to which
a priest answered, "For that expression you shall both renounce life, and be
given to the dogs." They, accordingly, dragged him to prison, where he continued
a considerable time without food, until he was famished; after which they threw his
corpse into the street before the prison, and it was devoured by dogs in the most
shocking manner.
Margaret Saretta was stoned to death, and then thrown into the river;
Antonio Bartina had his head cleft asunder; and Joseph Pont was cut through the
middle of his body.
Daniel Maria, and his whole family, being ill of a fever, several papist ruffians
broke into his house, telling him they were practical physicians, and would give
them all present ease, which they did by knocking the whole family on the head.
Three infant children of a Protestant, named Peter Fine, were covered with snow,
and stifled; an elderly widow, named Judith, was beheaded, and a beautiful young
woman was stripped naked, and had a stake driven through her body, of which she expired.
Lucy, the wife of Peter Besson, a woman far gone in her pregnancy, who lived in
one of the villages of the Piedmontese valleys, determined, if possible, to escape
from such dreadful scenes as everywhere surrounded her: she, accordingly took two
young children, one in each hand, and set off towards the Alps. But on the third
day of the journey she was taken in labor among the mountains, and delivered of an
infant, who perished through the extreme inclemency of the weather, as did the two
other children; for all three were found dead by her, and herself just expiring,
by the person to whom she related the above particulars.
Francis Gros, the son of a clergyman, had his flesh slowly cut from his body into
small pieces, and put into a dish before him; two of his children were minced before
his sight; and his wife was fastened to a post, that she might behold all these cruelties
practiced on her husband and offspring. The tormentors at length being tired of exercising
their cruelties, cut off the heads of both husband and wife, and then gave the flesh
of the whole family to the dogs.
The sieur Thomas Margher fled to a cave, when the soldiers shut up the mouth,
and he perished with famine. Judith Revelin, and seven children, were barbarously
murdered in their beds; and a widow of near fourscore years of age, was hewn to pieces
by soldiers.
Jacob Roseno was ordered to pray to the saints, which he absolutely refused to
do: some of the soldiers beat him violently with bludgeons to make him comply, but
he still refusing, several of them fired at him, and lodged a great many balls in
his body. As he was almost expiring, they cried to him, "Will you call upon
the saints? Will you pray to the saints?" To which he answered "No! No!
No!" when one of the soldiers, with a broadsword, clove his head asunder, and
put an end to his sufferings in this world; for which undoubtedly, he is gloriously
rewarded in the next.
A soldier, attempting to ravish a young woman, named Susanna Gacquin, she made
a stout resistance, and in the struggle pushed him over a precipice, when he was
dashed to pieces by the fall. His comrades, instead of admiring the virtue of the
young woman, and applauding her for so nobly defending her chastity, fell upon her
with their swords, and cut her to pieces.
Giovanni Pulhus, a poor peasant of La Torre, being apprehended as a Protestant
by the soldiers, was ordered, by the marquis of Pianesta, to be executed in a place
near the convent. When he came to the gallows, several monks attended, and did all
they could to persuade him to renounce his religion. But he told them he never would
embrace idolatry, and that he was happy at being thought worthy to suffer for the
name of Christ. They then put him in mind of what his wife and children, who depended
upon his labor, would suffer after his decease; to which he replied, "I would
have my wife and children, as well as myself, to consider their souls more than their
bodies, and the next world before this; and with respect to the distress I may leave
them in, God is merciful, and will provide for them while they are worthy of his
protection." Finding the inflexibility of this poor man, the monks cried, "Turn
him off! turn him off!" which the executioner did almost immediately, and the
body being afterward cut down, was flung into the river.
Paul Clement, an elder of the church of Rossana, being apprehended by the monks
of a neighboring monastery, was carried to the market place of that town, where some
Protestants had just been executed by the soldiers. He was shown the dead bodies,
in order that the sight might intimidate him. On beholding the shocking subjects,
he said, calmly, "You may kill the body, but you cannot prejudice the soul of
a true believer; but with respect to the dreadful spectacles which you have here
shown me, you may rest assured, that God's vengeance will overtake the murderers
of those poor people, and punish them for the innocent blood they have spilt."
The monks were so exasperated at this reply that they ordered him to be hanged directly;
and while he was hanging, the soldiers amused themselves in standing at a distance,
and shooting at the body as at a mark.
Daniel Rambaut, of Vilario, the father of a numerous family, was apprehended,
and, with several others, committed to prison, in the jail of Paysana. Here he was
visited by several priests, who with continual importunities did all they could to
persuade him to renounce the Protestant religion and turn papist; but this he peremptorily
refused, and the priests finding his resolution, pretended to pity his numerous family,
and told him that he might yet have his life, if he would subscribe to the belief
of the following articles:
- 1. The real presence of the host.
- 2. Transubstantiation.
- 3. Purgatory.
- 4. The pope's infallibility.
- 5. That masses said for the dead will release souls from purgatory.
- 6. That praying to saints will procure the remission of sins.
M. Rambaut told the priests that neither his religion, his understanding, nor
his conscience, would suffer him to subscribe to any of the articles, for the following
reasons:
- 1. That to believe the real presence in the host, is a shocking union of both
blasphemy and idolatry.
- 2. That to fancy the words of consecration perform what the papists call transubstantiation,
by converting the wafer and wine into the real and identical body and blood of Christ,
which was crucified, and which afterward ascended into heaven, is too gross an absurdity
for even a child to believe, who was come to the least glimmering of reason; and
that nothing but the most blind superstition could make the Roman Catholics put a
confidence in anything so completely ridiculous.
- 3. That the doctrine of purgatory was more inconsistent and absurd than a fairy
tale.
- 4. That the pope's being infallible was an impossibility, and the pope arrogantly
laid claim to what could belong to God only, as a perfect being.
- 5. That saying Masses for the dead was ridiculous, and only meant to keep up
a belief in the fable of purgatory, as the fate of all is finally decided, on the
departure of the soul from the body.
- 6. That praying to saints for the remission of sins is misplacing adoration;
as the saints themselves have occasion for an intercessor in Christ. Therefore, as
God only can pardon our errors, we ought to sue to him alone for pardon.
The priests were so highly offended at M. Rambaut's answers to the articles to
which they would have had him subscribe, that they determined to shake his resolution
by the most cruel method imaginable: they ordered one joint of his finger to be cut
off every day until all his fingers were gone: they then proceeded in the same manner
with his toes; afterward they alternately cut off, daily, a hand and a foot; but
finding that he bore his sufferings with the most admirable patience, increased both
in fortitude and resignation, and maintained his faith with steadfast resolution
and unshaken constancy they stabbed him to the heart, and then gave his body to be
devoured by the dogs.
Peter Gabriola, a Protestant gentleman of considerable eminence, being seized
by a troop of soldiers, and refusing to renounce his religion, they hung a great
number of little bags of gunpowder about his body, and then setting fire to them,
blew him up.
Anthony, the son of Samuel Catieris, a poor dumb lad who was extremely inoffensive,
was cut to pieces by a party of the troops; and soon after the same ruffians entered
the house of Peter Moniriat, and cut off the legs of the whole family, leaving them
to bleed to death, as they were unable to assist themselves, or to help each other.
Daniel Benech being apprehended, had his nose slit, his ears cut off, and was
then divided into quarters, each quarter being hung upon a tree, and Mary Monino
had her jaw bones broke and was then left to anguish till she was famished.
Mary Pelanchion, a handsome widow, belonging to the town of Vilario, was seized
by a party of the Irish brigades, who having beat her cruelly, and ravished her,
dragged her to a high bridge which crossed the river, and stripped her naked in a
most indecent manner, hung her by the legs to the bridge, with her head downwards
towards the water, and then going into boats, they fired at her until she expired.
Mary Nigrino, and her daughter who was an idiot, were cut to pieces in the woods,
and their bodies left to be devoured by wild beasts: Susanna Bales, a widow of Vilario,
was immured until she perished through hunger; and Susanna Calvio running away from
some soldiers and hiding herself in a barn, they set fire to the straw and burnt
her.
Paul Armand was hacked to pieces; a child named Daniel Bertino was burnt;
Daniel Michialino had his tongue plucked out, and was left to perish in that condition;
and Andreo Bertino, a very old man, who was lame, was mangled in a most shocking
manner, and at length had his belly ripped open, and his bowels carried about on
the point of a halbert.
Constantia Bellione, a Protestant lady, being apprehended on account of her faith,
was asked by a priest if she would renounce the devil and go to Mass; to which she
replied, "I was brought up in a religion by which I was always taught to renounce
the devil; but should I comply with your desire, and go to Mass, I should be sure
to meet him there in a variety of shapes." The priest was highly incensed at
what she said, and told her to recant, or she would suffer cruelly. The lady, however,
boldly answered that she valued not any sufferings he could inflict, and in spite
of all the torments he could invent, she would keep her conscience pure and her faith
inviolate. The priest then ordered slices of her flesh to be cut off from several
parts of her body, which cruelty she bore with the most singular patience, only saying
to the priest, "What horrid and lasting torments will you suffer in hell, for
the trifling and temporary pains which I now endure." Exasperated at this expression,
and willing to stop her tongue, the priest ordered a file of musqueteers to draw
up and fire upon her, by which she was soon despatched, and sealed her martyrdom
with her blood.
A young woman named Judith Mandon, for refusing to change her religion and embrace
popery, was fastened to a stake, and sticks thrown at her from a distance, in the
very same manner as that barbarous custom which was formerly practiced on Shrove-Tuesday,
of shying at rocks, as it was termed. By this inhuman proceeding, the poor creature's
limbs were beat and mangled in a terrible manner, and her brains were at last dashed
out by one of the bludgeons.
David Paglia and Paul Genre, attempting to escape to the Alps, with each his son,
were pursued and overtaken by the soldiers in a large plain. Here they hunted them
for their diversion, goading them with their swords, and making them run about until
they dropped down with fatigue. When they found that their spirits were quite exhausted,
and that they could not afford them any more barbarous sport by running, the soldiers
hacked them to pieces, and left their mangled bodies on the spot.
A young man of Bobbio, named Michael Greve, was apprehended in the town of La
Torre, and being led to the bridge, was thrown over into the river. As he could swim
very well, he swam down the stream, thinking to escape, but the soldiers and the
mob followed on both sides of the river, and kept stoning him, until receiving a
blow on one of his temples, he was stunned, and consequently sunk and was drowned.
David Armand was ordered to lay his head down on a block, when a soldier, with
a large hammer, beat out his brains. David Baridona being apprehended at Vilario,
was carried to La Torre, where, refusing to renounce his religion, he was tormented
by means of brimstone matches being tied between his fingers and toes, and set fire
to; and afterward, by having his flesh plucked off with red-hot pincers, until he
expired; and Giovanni Barolina, with his wife, were thrown into a pool of stagnant
water, and compelled, by means of pitchforks and stones, to duck down their heads
until they were suffocated.
A number of soldiers went to the house of Joseph Garniero, and before they entered,
fired in at the window, to give notice of their approach. A musket ball entered one
of Mrs. Garniero's breasts, as she was suckling an infant with the other. On finding
their intentions, she begged hard that they would spare the life of the infant, which
they promised to do, and sent it immediately to a Roman Catholic nurse. They then
took the husband and hanged him at his own door, and having shot the wife through
the head, they left her body weltering in its blood, and her husband hanging on the
gallows.
Isaiah Mondon, an elderly man, and a pious Protestant, fled from the merciless
persecutors to a cleft in a rock, where he suffered the most dreadful hardships;
for, in the midst of the winter he was forced to lie on the bare stone, without any
covering; his food was the roots he could scratch up near his miserable habitation;
and the only way by which he could procure drink, was to put snow in his mouth until
it melted. Here, however, some of the inhuman soldiers found him, and after having
beaten him unmercifully, they drove him towards Lucerne, goading him with the points
of their swords. Being exceedingly weakened by his manner of living, and his spirits
exhausted by the blows he had received, he fell down in the road. They again beat
him to make him proceed: when on his knees, he implored them to put him out of his
misery, by despatching him. This they at last agreed to do; and one of them stepping
up to him shot him through the head with a pistol, saying, "There, heretic,
take thy request."
Mary Revol, a worthy Protestant, received a shot in her back, as she was walking
along the street. She dropped down with the wound, but recovering sufficient strength,
she raised herself upon her knees, and lifting her hands towards heaven, prayed in
a most fervent manner to the Almighty, when a number of soldiers, who were near at
hand, fired a whole volley of shot at her, many of which took effect, and put an
end to her miseries in an instant.
Several men, women, and children secreted themselves in a large cave, where they
continued for some weeks in safety. It was the custom for two of the men to go when
it was necessary, and by stealth, procure provisions. These were, however, one day
watched, by which the cave was discovered, and soon after, a troop of Roman Catholics
appeared before it. The papists that assembled upon this occasion were neighbors
and intimate acquaintances of the Protestants in the cave; and some were even related
to each other. The Protestants, therefore, came out, and implored them, by the ties
of hospitality, by the ties of blood, and as old acquaintances and neighbors, not
to murder them. But superstition overcomes every sensation of nature and humanity;
so that the papists, blinded by bigotry, told them they could not show any mercy
to heretics, and, therefore, bade them prepare to die. Hearing this, and knowing
the fatal obstinacy of the Roman Catholics, the Protestants all fell prostate, lifted
their hands and hearts to heaven, prayed with great sincerity and fervency, and then
bowing down, put their faces close to the ground, and patiently waited their fate,
which was soon decided, for the papists fell upon them with unremitting fury, and
having cut them to pieces, left the mangled bodies and limbs in the cave.
Giovanni Salvagiot, passing by a Roman Catholic church, and not taking off his
hat, was followed by some of the congregation, who fell upon and murdered him; and
Jacob Barrel and his wife, having been taken prisoners by the earl of St. Secondo,
one of the duke of Savoy's officers, he delivered them up to the soldiery, who cut
off the woman's breasts, and the man's nose, and then shot them both through the
head.
Anthony Guigo, a Protestant, of a wavering disposition, went to Periero, with
an intent to renounce his religion and embrace popery. This design he communicated
to some priests, who highly commended it, and a day was fixed upon for his public
recantation. In the meantime, Anthony grew fully sensible of his perfidy, and his
conscience tormented him so much night and day that he determined not to recant,
but to make his escape. This he effected, but being soon missed and pursued, he was
taken. The troops on the way did all they could to bring him back to his design of
recantation; but finding their endeavors ineffectual, they beat him violently on
the road. When coming near a precipice, he took an opportunity of leaping down it
and was dashed to pieces.
A Protestant gentleman, of considerable fortune, at Bobbio, being nightly provoked
by the insolence of a priest, retorted with great severity; and among other things,
said, that the pope was Antichrist, Mass idolatry, purgatory a farce, and absolution
a cheat. To be revenged, the priest hired five desperate ruffians, who, the same
evening, broke into the gentleman's house, and seized upon him in a violent manner.
The gentleman was terribly frightened, fell on his knees, and implored mercy; but
the desperate ruffians despatched him without the least hesitation.
A Narrative of the Piedmontese War
The massacres and murders already mentioned to have been committed in the valleys
of Piedmont, nearly depopulated most of the towns and villages. One place only had
not been assaulted, and that was owing to the difficulty of approaching it; this
was the little commonalty of Roras, which was situated upon a rock.
As the work of blood grew slack in other places, the earl of Christople, one of
the duke of Savoy's officers, determined, if possible, to make himself master of
it; and, with that view, detached three hundred men to surprise it secretly.
The inhabitants of Roras, however, had intelligence of the approach of these troops,
when captain Joshua Gianavel, a brave Protestant officer, put himself at the head
of a small body of the citizens, and waited in ambush to attack the enemy in a small
defile.
When the troops appeared, and had entered the defile, which was the only place
by which the town could be approached, the Protestants kept up a smart and well-directed
fire against them, and still kept themselves concealed behind bushes from the sight
of the enemy. A great number of the soldiers were killed, and the remainder receiving
a continued fire, and not seeing any to whom they might return it, thought proper
to retreat.
The members of this little community then sent a memorial to the marquis of Pianessa,
one of the duke's general officers, setting forth, 'That they were sorry, upon any
occasion, to be under the necessity of taking up arms; but that the secret approach
of a body of troops, without any reason assigned, or any previous notice sent of
the purpose of their coming, had greatly alarmed them; that as it was their custom
never to suffer any of the military to enter their little community, they had repelled
force by force, and should do so again; but in all other respects, they professed
themselves dutiful, obedient, and loyal subjects to their sovereign, the duke of
Savoy.'
The marquis of Pianessa, that he might have the better opportunity of deluding
and surprising the Protestants of Roras, sent them word in answer, 'That he was perfectly
satisfied with their behavior, for they had done right, and even rendered a service
to their country, as the men who had attempted to pass the defile were not his troops,
or sent by him, but a band of desperate robbers, who had, for some time, infested
those parts, and been a terror to the neighboring country.' To give a greater color
to his treachery, he then published an ambiguous proclamation seemingly favorable
to the inhabitants.
Yet, the very day after this plausible proclamation, and specious conduct, the
marquis sent five hundred men to possess themselves of Roras, while the people as
he thought, were lulled into perfect security by his specious behavior.
Captain Gianavel, however, was not to be deceived so easily: he, therefore, laid
an ambuscade for this body of troops, as he had for the former, and compelled them
to retire with very considerable loss.
Though foiled in these two attempts, the marquis of Pianessa determined on a third,
which should be still more formidable; but first he imprudently published another
proclamation, disowning any knowledge of the second attempt.
Soon after, seven hundred chosen men were sent upon the expedition, who, in spite
of the fire from the Protestants, forced the defile, entered Roras, and began to
murder every person they met with, without distinction of age or sex. The Protestant
captain Gianavel, at the head of a small body, though he had lost the defile, determined
to dispute their passage through a fortified pass that led to the richest and best
part of the town. Here he was successful, by keeping up a continual fire, and by
means of his men being all complete marksmen. The Roman Catholic commander was greatly
staggered at this opposition, as he imagined that he had surmounted all difficulties.
He, however, did his endeavors to force the pass, but being able to bring up only
twelve men in front at a time, and the Protestants being secured by a breastwork,
he found he should be baffled by the handful of men who opposed him.
Enraged at the loss of so many of his troops, and fearful of disgrace if he persisted
in attempting what appeared so impracticable, he thought it the wisest thing to retreat.
Unwilling, however, to withdraw his men by the defile at which he had entered, on
account of the difficulty and danger of the enterprise, he determined to retreat
towards Vilario, by another pass called Piampra, which though hard of access, was
easy of descent. But in this he met with disappointment, for Captain Gianavel having
posted his little band here, greatly annoyed the troops as they passed, and even
pursued their rear until they entered the open country.
The marquis of Pianessa, finding that all his attempts were frustrated, and that
every artifice he used was only an alarm signal to the inhabitants of Roras, determined
to act openly, and therefore proclaimed that ample rewards should be given to any
one who would bear arms against the obstinate heretics of Roras, as he called them;
and that any officer who would exterminate them should be rewarded in a princely
manner.
This engaged Captain Mario, a bigoted Roman Catholic, and a desperate ruffian,
to undertake the enterprise. He, therefore, obtained leave to raise a regiment in
the following six towns: Lucerne, Borges, Famolas, Bobbio, Begnal, and Cavos.
Having completed his regiment, which consisted of one thousand men, he laid his
plan not to go by the defiles or the passes, but to attempt gaining the summit of
a rock, whence he imagined he could pour his troops into the town without much difficulty
or opposition.
The Protestants suffered the Roman Catholic troops to gain almost the summit of
the rock, without giving them any opposition, or ever appearing in their sight: but
when they had almost reached the top they made a most furious attack upon them; one
party keeping up a well-directed and constant fire, and another party rolling down
huge stones.
This stopped the career of the papist troops: many were killed by the musketry,
and more by the stones, which beat them down the precipices. Several fell sacrifices
to their hurry, for by attempting a precipitate retreat they fell down, and were
dashed to pieces; and Captain Mario himself narrowly escaped with his life, for he
fell from a craggy place into a river which washed the foot of the rock. He was taken
up senseless, but afterwards recovered, though he was ill of the bruises for a long
time; and, at length he fell into a decline at Lucerne, where he died.
Another body of troops was ordered from the camp at Vilario, to make an attempt
upon Roras; but these were likewise defeated, by means of the Protestants' ambush
fighting, and compelled to retreat again to the camp at Vilario.
After each of these signal victories, Captain Gianavel made a suitable discourse
to his men, causing them to kneel down, and return thanks to the Almighty for his
providential protection; and usually concluded with the Eleventh Psalm, where the
subject is placing confidence in God.
The marquis of Pianessa was greatly enraged at being so much baffled by the few
inhabitants of Roras: he, therefore, determined to attempt their expulsion in such
a manner as could hardly fail of success.
With this view he ordered all the Roman Catholic militia of Piedmont to be raised
and disciplined. When these orders were completed, he joined to the militia eight
thousand regular troops, and dividing the whole into three distinct bodies, he designed
that three formidable attacks should be made at the same time, unless the people
of Roras, to whom he sent an account of his great preparations, would comply with
the following conditions:
- 1. To ask pardon for taking up arms. 2. To pay the expenses of all the expeditions
sent against them. 3. To acknowledge the infallibility of the pope.
- 4. To go to Mass. 5. To pray to the saints. 6. To wear beards. 7. To deliver
up their ministers. 8. To deliver up their schoolmasters. 9. To go to confession.
10. To pay loans for the delivery of souls from purgatory. 11. To give up Captain
Gianavel at discretion. 12. To give up the elders of their church at discretion.
The inhabitants of Roras, on being acquainted with these conditions, were filled
with an honest indignation, and, in answer, sent word to the marquis that sooner
than comply with them they would suffer three things, which, of all others, were
the most obnoxious to mankind, viz.
- 1. Their estates to be seized. 2. Their houses to be burned. 3. Themselves to
be murdered.
- Exasperated at this message, the marquis sent them this laconic epistle:
To the Obstinate Heretics Inhabiting Roras
You shall have your request, for the troops sent against you have strict injunctions
to plunder, burn, and kill. PIANESSA.
The three armies were then put in motion, and the attacks ordered to be made thus:
the first by the rocks of Vilario; the second by the pass of Bagnol; and the third
by the defile of Lucerne.
The troops forced their way by the superiority of numbers, and having gained the
rocks, pass, and defile, began to make the most horrid depradations, and exercise
the greatest cruelties. Men they hanged, burned, racked to death, or cut to pieces;
women they ripped open, crucified, drowned, or threw from the precipices; and children
they tossed upon spears, minced, cut their throats, or dashed out their brains. One
hundred and twenty-six suffered in this manner on the first day of their gaining
the town.
Agreeable to the marquis of Pianessa's orders, they likewise plundered the estates,
and burned the houses of the people. Several Protestants, however, made their escape,
under the conduct of Captain Gianavel, whose wife and children were unfortunately
made prisoners and sent under a strong guard to Turin.
The marquis of Pianessa wrote a letter to Captain Gianavel, and released a Protestant
prisoner that he might carry it him. The contents were, that if the captain would
embrace the Roman Catholic religion, he should be indemnified for all his losses
since the commencement of the war; his wife and children should be immediately released,
and himself honorably promoted in the duke of Savoy's army; but if he refused to
accede to the proposals made him, his wife and children should be put to death; and
so large a reward should be given to take him, dead or alive, that even some of his
own confidential friends should be tempted to betray him, from the greatness of the
sum.
To this epistle, the brave Gianavel sent the following answer.
My Lord Marquis,
There is no torment so great or death so cruel, but what I would prefer
to
the abjuration of my religion: so that promises lose their effects, and menaces
only strengthen me in my faith.
With respect to my wife and children, my lord, nothing can be more afflicting
to me than the thought of their confinement, or more dreadful to my imagination,
than their suffering a violent and cruel death. I keenly feel all the tender sensations
of husband and parent; my heart is replete with every sentiment of humanity; I would
suffer any torment to rescue them from danger; I would die to preserve them.
But having said thus much, my lord, I assure you that the purchase of their lives
must not be the price of my salvation. You have them in your power it is true; but
my consolation is that your power is only a temporary authority over their bodies:
you may destroy the mortal part, but their immortal souls are out of your reach,
and will live hereafter to bear testimony against you for your cruelties. I therefore
recommend them and myself to God, and pray for a reformation in your heart. -- JOSHUA
GIANAVEL.
This brave Protestant officer, after writing the above letter, retired to the
Alps, with his followers; and being joined by a great number of other fugitive Protestants,
he harassed the enemy by continual skirmishes.
Meeting one day with a body of papist troops near Bibiana, he, though inferior
in numbers, attacked them with great fury, and put them to the rout without the loss
of a man, though himself was shot through the leg in the engagement, by a soldier
who had hid himself behind a tree; but Gianavel perceiving whence the shot came,
pointed his gun to the place, and despatched the person who had wounded him.
Captain Gianavel hearing that a Captain Jahier had collected together a considerable
body of Protestants, wrote him a letter, proposing a junction of their forces. Captain
Jahier immediately agreed to the proposal, and marched directly to meet Gianavel.
The junction being formed, it was proposed to attack a town, (inhabited by Roman
Catholics) called Garcigliana. The assault was given with great spirit, but a reinforcement
of horse and foot having lately entered the town, which the Protestants knew nothing
of, they were repulsed; yet made a masterly retreat, and only lost one man in the
action.
The next attempt of the Protestant forces was upon St. Secondo, which they attacked
with great vigor, but met with a strong resistance from the Roman Catholic troops,
who had fortified the streets and planted themselves in the houses, from whence they
poured musket balls in prodigious numbers. The Protestants, however, advanced, under
cover of a great number of planks, which some held over their heads, to secure them
from the shots of the enemy from the houses, while others kept up a well-directed
fire; so that the houses and entrenchments were soon forced, and the town taken.
In the town they found a prodigious quantity of plunder, which had been taken
from Protestants at various times, and different places, and which were stored up
in the warehouses, churches, dwelling houses, etc. This they removed to a place of
safety, to be distributed, with as much justice as possible, among the sufferers.
This successful attack was made with such skill and spirit that it cost very little
to the conquering party, the Protestants having only seventeen killed, and twenty-six
wounded; while the papists suffered a loss of no less than four hundred and fifty
killed, and five hundred and eleven wounded.
Five Protestant officers, viz., Gianavel, Jahier, Laurentio, Genolet and Benet,
laid a plan to surprise Biqueras. To this end they marched in five respective bodies,
and by agreement were to make the attack at the same time. The captains, Jahier and
Laurentio, passed through two defiles in the woods, and came to the place in safety,
under covert; but the other three bodies made their approaches through an open country,
and, consequently, were more exposed to an attack.
The Roman Catholics taking the alarm, a great number of troops were sent to relieve
Biqueras from Cavors, Bibiana, Feline, Campiglione, and some other neighboring places.
When these were united, they determined to attack the three Protestant parties, that
were marching through the open country.
The Protestant officers perceiving the intent of the enemy, and not being at a
great distance from each other, joined forces with the utmost expedition, and formed
themselves in order of battle.
In the meantime, the captains, Jahier and Laurentio, had assaulted the town of
Biqueras, and burnt all the out houses, to make their approaches with the greater
ease; but not being supported as they expected by the other three Protestant captains,
they sent a messenger, on a swift horse, towards the open country, to inquire the
reason.
The messenger soon returned and informed them that it was not in the power of
the three Protestant captains to support their proceedings, as they were themselves
attacked by a very superior force in the plain, and could scarce sustain the unequal
conflict.
The captains, Jahier and Laurentio, on receiving this intelligence, determined
to discontinue the assault on Biqueras, and to proceed, with all possible expedition,
to the relief of their friends on the plain. This design proved to be of the most
essential service, for just as they arrived at the spot where the two armies were
engaged, the papist troops began to prevail, and were on the point of flanking the
left wing, commanded by Captain Gianavel. The arrival of these troops turned the
scale in favor of the Protestants: and the papist forces, though they fought with
the most obstinate intrepidity, were totally defeated. A great number were killed
and wounded, on both sides, and the baggage, military stores, etc., taken by the
Protestants were very considerable.
Captain Gianavel, having information that three hundred of the enemy were to convoy
a great quantity of stores, provisions, etc., from La Torre to the castle of Mirabac,
determined to attack them on the way. He, accordingly, began the assault at Malbec,
though with a very inadequate force. The contest was long and bloody, but the Protestants
at length were obliged to yield to the superiority of numbers, and compelled to make
a retreat, which they did with great regularity, and but little loss.
Captain Gianavel advanced to an advantageous post, situated near the town of Vilario,
and then sent the following information and commands to the inhabitants.
- 1. That he should attack the town in twenty-four hours.
- 2. That with respect to the Roman Catholics who had borne arms, whether they
belonged to the army or not, he should act by the law of retaliation, and put them
to death, for the numerous depredations and many cruel murders they had committed.
- 3. That all women and children, whatever their religion might be, should be safe.
- 4. That he commanded all male Protestants to leave the town and join him.
- 5. That all apostates, who had, through weakness, abjured their religion, should
be deemed enemies, unless they renounced their abjuration.
- 6. That all who returned to their duty to God, and themselves, should be received
as friends.
The Protestants, in general immediately left the town, and joined Captain Gianavel
with great satisfaction, and the few, who through weakness or fear, had abjured their
faith, recanted their abjuration and were received into the bosom of the Church.
As the marquis of Pianessa had removed the army, and encamped in quite a different
part of the country, the Roman Catholics of Vilario thought it would be folly to
attempt to defend the place with the small force they had. They, therefore, fled
with the utmost precipitation, leaving the town and most of their property to the
discretion of the Protestants.
The Protestant commanders having called a council of war, resolved to make an
attempt upon the town of La Torre.
The papists being apprised of the design, detached some troops to defend a defile,
through which the Protestants must make their approach; but these were defeated,
compelled to abandon the pass, and forced to retreat to La Torre.
The Protestants proceeded on their march, and the troops of La Torre, on their
approach, made a furious sally, but were repulsed with great loss, and compelled
to seek shelter in the town. The governor now only thought of defending the place,
which the Protestants began to attack in form; but after many brave attempts, and
furious assaults, the commanders determined to abandon the enterprise for several
reasons, particularly, because they found the place itself too strong, their own
number too weak, and their cannon not adequate to the task of battering down the
walls.
This resolution taken, the Protestant commanders began a masterly retreat, and
conducted it with such regularity that the enemy did not choose to pursue them, or
molest their rear, which they might have done, as they passed the defiles.
The next day they mustered, reviewed the army, and found the whole to amount to
four hundred and ninety-five men. They then held a council of war, and planned an
easier enterprise: this was to make an attack on the commonalty of Crusol, a place
inhabited by a number of the most bigoted Roman Catholics, and who had exercised,
during the persecutions, the most unheard-of cruelties on the Protestants.
The people of Crusol, hearing of the design against them, fled to a neighboring
fortress, situated on a rock, where the Protestants could not come to them, for a
very few men could render it inaccessible to a numerous army. Thus they secured their
persons, but were in too much hurry to secure their property, the principal part
of which, indeed, had been plundered from the Protestants, and now luckily fell again
to the possession of the right owners. It consisted of many rich and valuable articles,
and what, at that time, was of much more consequence, viz., a great quantity of military
stores.
The day after the Protestants were gone with their booty, eight hundred troops
arrived to the assistance of the people of Crusol, having been despatched from Lucerne,
Biqueras, Cavors, etc. But finding themselves too late, and that pursuit would be
vain, not to return empty handed, they began to plunder the neighboring villages,
though what they took was from their friends. After collecting a tolerable booty,
they began to divide it, but disagreeing about the different shares, they fell from
words to blows, did a great deal of mischief, and then plundered each other.
On the very same day in which the Protestants were so successful at Crusol, some
papists marched with a design to plunder and burn the little Protestant village of
Rocappiatta, but by the way they met with the Protestant forces belonging to the
captains, Jahier and Laurentio, who were posted on the hill of Angrogne. A trivial
engagement ensued, for the Roman Catholics, on the very first attack, retreated in
great confusion, and were pursued with much slaughter. After the pursuit was over,
some straggling papist troops meeting with a poor peasant, who was a Protestant,
tied a cord round his head, and strained it until his skull was quite crushed.
Captain Gianavel and Captain Jahier concerted a design together to make an attack
upon Lucerne; but Captain Jahier, not bringing up his forces at the time appointed,
Captain Gianavel determined to attempt the enterprise himself.
He, therefore, by a forced march, proceeded towards that place during the whole,
and was close to it by break of day. His first care was to cut the pipes that conveyed
water into the town, and then to break down the bridge, by which alone provisions
from the country could enter.
He then assaulted the place, and speedily possessed himself of two of the outposts;
but finding he could not make himself master of the place, he prudently retreated
with very little loss, blaming, however, Captain Jahier, for the failure of the enterprise.
The papists being informed that Captain Gianavel was at Angrogne with only his
own company, determined if possible to surprise him. With this view, a great number
of troops were detached from La Torre and other places: one party of these got on
top of a mountain, beneath which he was posted; and the other party intended to possess
themselves of the gate of St. Bartholomew.
The papists thought themselves sure of taking Captain Gianavel and every one of
his men, as they consisted but of three hundred, and their own force was two thousand
five hundred. Their design, however, was providentially frustrated, for one of the
popish soldiers imprudently blowing a trumpet before the signal for attack was given,
Captain Gianavel took the alarm, and posted his little company so advantageously
at the gate of St. Bartholomew and at the defile by which the enemy must descend
from the mountains, that the Roman Catholic troops failed in both attacks, and were
repulsed with very considerable loss.
Soon after, Captain Jahier came to Angrogne, and joined his forces to those of
Captain Gianavel, giving sufficient reasons to excuse his before-mentioned failure.
Captain Jahier now made several secret excursions with great success, always selecting
the most active troops, belonging both to Gianavel and himself. One day he had put
himself at the head of forty-four men, to proceed upon an expedition, when entering
a plain near Ossac, he was suddenly surrounded by a large body of horse. Captain
Jahier and his men fought desperately, though oppressed by odds, and killed the commander-in-chief,
three captains, and fifty-seven private men, of the enemy. But Captain Jahier himself
being killed, with thirty-five of his men, the rest surrendered. One of the soldiers
cut off Captain Jahier's head, and carrying it to Turin, presented it to the duke
of Savoy, who rewarded him with six hundred ducatoons.
The death of this gentleman was a signal loss to the Protestants, as he was a
real friend to, and companion of, the reformed Church. He possessed a most undaunted
spirit, so that no difficulties could deter him from undertaking an enterprise, or
dangers terrify him in its execution. He was pious without affectation, and humane
without weakness; bold in a field, meek in a domestic life, of a penetrating genius,
active in spirit, and resolute in all his undertakings.
To add to the affliction of the Protestants, Captain Gianavel was, soon after,
wounded in such a manner that he was obliged to keep his bed. They, however, took
new courage from misfortunes, and determining not to let their spirits droop attacked
a body of popish troops with great intrepidity; the Protestants were much inferior
in numbers, but fought with more resolution than the papists, and at length routed
them with considerable slaughter. During the action, a sergeant named Michael Bertino
was killed; when his son, who was close behind him, leaped into his place, and said,
"I have lost my father; but courage, fellow soldiers, God is a father to us
all."
Several skirmishes likewise happened between the troops of La Torre and Tagliaretto,
and the Protestant forces, which in general terminated in favor of the latter.
A Protestant gentleman, named Andrion, raised a regiment of horse, and took the
command of it himself. The sieur John Leger persuaded a great number of Protestants
to form themselves into volunteer companies; and an excellent officer, named Michelin,
instituted several bands of light troops. These being all joined to the remains of
the veteran Protestant troops, (for great numbers had been lost in the various battles,
skirmishes, sieges, etc.) composed a respectable army, which the officers thought
proper to encamp near St. Giovanni.
The Roman Catholic commanders, alarmed at the formidable appearance and increased
strength of the Protestant forces, determined, if possible, to dislodge them from
their encampment. With this view they collected together a large force, consisting
of the principal part of the garrisons of the Roman Catholic towns, the draft from
the Irish brigades, a great number of regulars sent by the marquis of Pianessa, the
auxiliary troops, and the independent companies.
These, having formed a junction, encamped near the Protestants, and spent several
days in calling councils of war, and disputing on the most proper mode of proceeding.
Some were for plundering the country, in order to draw the Protestants from their
camp; others were for patiently waiting till they were attacked; and a third party
were for assaulting the Protestant camp, and trying to make themselves master of
everything in it.
The last of them prevailed, and the morning after the resolution had been taken
was appointed to put it into execution. The Roman Catholic troops were accordingly
separated into four divisions, three of which were to make an attack in different
places; and the fourth to remain as a body of reserve to act as occasion might require.
One of the Roman Catholic officers, previous to the attack, thus haranged his
men:
"Fellow-soldiers, you are now going to enter upon a great action, which will
bring you fame and riches. The motives of your acting with spirit are likewise of
the most important nature; namely, the honor of showing your loyalty to your sovereign,
the pleasure of spilling heretic blood, and the prospect of plundering the Protestant
camp. So, my brave fellows, fall on, give no quarter, kill all you meet, and take
all you come near."
After this inhuman speech the engagement began, and the Protestant camp was attacked
in three places with inconceivable fury. The fight was maintained with great obstinacy
and perseverance on both sides, continuing without intermission for the space of
four hours: for the several companies on both sides relieved each other alternately,
and by that means kept up a continual fire during the whole action.
During the engagement of the main armies, a detachment was sent from the body
of reserve to attack the post of Castelas, which, if the papists had carried, it
would have given them the command of the valleys of Perosa, St. Martino, and Lucerne;
but they were repulsed with great loss, and compelled to return to the body of reserve,
from whence they had been detached.
Soon after the return of this detachment, the Roman Catholic troops, being hard
pressed in the main battle, sent for the body of reserve to come to their support.
These immediately marched to their assistance, and for some time longer held the
event doubtful, but at length the valor of the Protestants prevailed, and the papists
were totally defeated, with the loss of upwards of three hundred men killed, and
many more wounded.
When the Syndic of Lucerne, who was indeed a papist, but not a bigoted one, saw
the great number of wounded men brought into that city, he exclaimed, "Ah! I
thought the wolves used to devour the heretics, but now I see the heretics eat the
wolves." This expression being reported to M. Marolles, the Roman Catholic commander-in-chief
at Lucerne, he sent a very severe and threatening letter to the Syndic, who was so
terrified, that the fright threw him into a fever, and he died in a few days.
This great battle was fought just before the harvest was got in, when the papists,
exasperated at their disgrace, and resolved on any kind of revenge, spread themselves
by night in detached parties over the finest corn fields of the Protestants, and
set them on fire in sundry places. Some of these straggling parties, however, suffered
for their conduct; for the Protestants, being alarmed in the night by the blazing
of the fire among the corn, pursued the fugitives early in the morning, and overtaking
many, put them to death. The Protestant captain Bellin, likewise, by way of retaliation,
went with a body of light troops, and burnt the suburbs of La Torre, making his retreat
afterward with very little loss.
A few days later, Captain Bellin, with a much stronger body of troops, attacked
the town of La Torre itself, and making a breach in the wall of the convent, his
men entered, driving the garrison into the citadel and burning both town and convent.
After having effected this, they made a regular retreat, as they could not reduce
the citadel for want of cannon.
An Account of the Persecutions of Michael de Molinos, a Native of Spain
Michael de Molinos, a Spaniard of a rich and honorable family, entered, when young,
into priest's orders, but would not accept of any preferment in the Church. He possessed
great natural abilities, which he dedicated to the service of his fellow creatures,
without any view of emolument to himself. His course of life was pious and uniform;
nor did he exercise those austerities which are common among the religious orders
of the Church of Rome.
Being of a contemplative turn of mind, he pursued the track of the mystical divines,
and having acquired great reputation in Spain, and being desirous of propagating
his sublime mode of devotion, he left his own country, and settled at Rome. Here
he soon connected himself with some of the most distinguished among the literati,
who so approved of his religious maxims, that they concurred in assisting him to
propagate them; and, in a short time, he obtained a great number of followers, who,
from the sublime mode of their religion, were distinguished by the name of Quietists.
In 1675, Mol |