Page:A history of the Inquisition of the Middle Ages, volume 2.djvu/170

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FRANCE 154 These multiplied efforts at length began to telh Charles issu^^^ T 1 ft™ the leash His foravs against the miserable popula- slipped irom the leasn. j-ai" . i -i-oi PntP ("or Val-Louise) tions of Frevssinieres, I'Argentiere. and al-1 ute (or Val ^o; Lve conferred onhim a sinister reputation, '^-f^J-f^^^^'/^^s efficient aid which he contributed to regammg the liberties nt — St?success which rewarded these efforts^- - Lir^incr as to bring new cause for sohcitude. The tishop T,nf nJel-y is concerned about the housing and support of ?rciwdfol"'retches who had been captured In spite o nv. the cioncib obstinate, the prisons of the " one. «*-> -;- s zzi^^zrz^^- %Z:X^TI;.<^i ««™ to «.. the prison., »d «gM ' ■ Td the Lirtions of ,v™glv->«,.™a tnnds. .-ith . rT.v , e« no "or, amen.ble to .noh argument, than tho.. diocese, and that any one J/.^i^/7/i excommunication and the secular arm. Tins ^^as .o^r: XT. 11 1Q _D^Arcrentr6, op. cit. I. I. 394.-Ripoll II. . Waaaing, ^2!S-^t-L2^m.i. de ^^n^. de Gap, p. 39. 289. — Eaynald. ann. lo/o, i>"- -*"• '