Page:A history of the Inquisition of the Middle Ages, volume 2.djvu/265

This page needs to be proofread.

VENICE. ^^^ did not erect it into a separate tribunal, but instructed the Holy sM^r f'^'t'^'^'-J^^ that its jurisdiction extended over both sides of the Faro. Yet the introduction of the Inquisition in the re^'drtrT"^^ r^ r." ^^^^ ^^^^^p*' ^^ - vi . • h regard to the Templars, and Sicily long remained a safe refu!?e t^ tdTr* l' "^.f ""' Doubtlesslrnaldo de Vilatvfeon tnbuted to this by the picture which he presented to Frederic of n^ nC: "' *'^ '^^•. ^^^ ^^'^- ^ ^'-«l-l pest, trafflck 2 th S thM rrT"°^ r^'^^ ^'^'^ ^^~' "-- edify, mg the taithful, but rather making them infidels a^ t),«,r oi doned themselves to hatred, greed,'and lus^wftt;: onerLt The Republic of Venice was always a law unto itself Ti, i, orming part of the March of Treviso'its pridomt ttel^^^^^^^ the thirteenth century lay to the east of the Adriatic rdTt.M • Salimbene, p. 330.-Grandjean, Re^istres de Benott XI No 8S4 . p , Heterodoxos Espanoles, 1. 730.-La Mantia, Origine e V cendf deM t" ^~ ^^° in Siciha, Torino, 1886, p. 12. vicende dell Inquisizione