Page:A history of the Inquisition of the Middle Ages, volume 2.djvu/278

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262 ITALY. with the ruthless proselytism of Borel. It is true that he caught Isabel Ferreria, the wife of Giovanni Gabriele, one of the mur- derers of Antonio Pavo, and had the satisfaction of torturing her, but he could get no evidence against her, and could only learn that her husband had died in 1386. Some other suspects he tortured and penanced with crosses : apparently he had no prisons at his dis- posal in which to incarcerate them. Accusations and denuncia- tions poured in to him by the hundred, showing that the land was alive with heretics, but he was powerless to inflict on them punish- ment that would make an impression. One of his first cases had been a certain Lorenzo Bandoria, who had abjured before Antonio Pavo, and who under torture confessed to continued heresy. Here was a clear case of relapse, and accordingly, on March 31, he was abandoned to the secular arm and all his property declared con- fiscated to the Inquisition. This proved a mere hrutwn fulmen, for on May 6 Fra Antonio was obliged to issue a mandate to Ugonetto Bruno, Lord of Ozasco, ordering him, under pain of a hundred marks, to capture Lorenzo and present him before the tribunal the next day, while the treasurer of Ozasco was required, under threat of excommunication, to appear at the same time with an inventory of ah the convict^s property. As Lorenzo had been handed over to the Castellan of Pignerol for execution, it is evi- dent that the officials refused to carry out the sentences of the in- quisitor, nor does this new effort appear to have had any better result. Many of his citations were disregarded, and when, on May 19, he ordered the lords of Ozasco to arrest three heretics under penalty of a hundred marks, no attention seems to have been paid to the command. This insubordination increased, and as the season advanced we observe that when an accused refuses to confess, the dread entry "the lord inquisitor is not content" is not followed by the customary torture, but that the culprit is mercifully dismissed under bail. One case gave Fra Antonio in- finite disgust. On June 27 he cited Giacomo Do and Sanzio Margarit of Sangano ; they did not appear, but on August 6 he found them in Turin and seized them. For fifteen days he kept them in chains, when they broke jail, but by the help of God he caught them again and carried them to the castle of Avegliana, where they remained ten days. He had been unable to get them tortured, and they would not confess without it; the magistrates