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Untitled Article
against tift- ' a * d *« wS ; Ma ^ 4 ifi ** & &MiAnMifWaj ^ Sftf l& « j £ ;* && : * Ss ^ vfetit , the cfiaiftte ^ it * & dltegfed ; ikrt ; agreeing with his cpjBstfttttioiif H ^ vtagOfetyaen the appointment of ^ k > r or a monas-Trtse remo
tery ^ t Lubca ^ in ^ yay , $ e ved Ills residence to tfeat eity . * Although Martyr liad been active in disseminating the doctrine ^ of the Reformation at Naples , it appears , from his acceptance of this promotion , that he had not whoHy withdrawn himself from the communion of the' Church of
Rome ; and we shaft see hereafter , that he held an appointment under it for some time longer . Previously to Martyr ' s departure from Naples , Bernardmus Oeblnus , a capuchin friar , who was deemed the most eloquent preacher of his age , arrived in that city on a preaching 1
mission . Havingbccoole acquainted with Martyr and Valdesso , and pertised some of the writings of the Reformers which they had placed in his hands , he was led to give up some of his old opinions , and to adopt some of the new tenets , especially in respect to justification . It # oes not appear , however , that he made , at this period , any open avowal of the change of his sentiments , beyond the circle of his new friends , or took any decisive part in
promoting the infant cause . The proceedings of Valdesso and his associates , owing , probably , to the notoriety they had acquired through the prosecution which was instituted against Martyr , attracted the particular attention , and excited the
determined hostility , of the civil magistrate . The Viceroy , Don Pedro di Toledo , issued a severe edict against heretical books ; and some of the writings of Erasmus and Melancthon were oraered to be publicly burnt . He suppressed , also , several academies winch had been formed for the advancement of
learning , under a suspicion ^ at they were subservi ng t ^ e cause of the Reformers . Not satisfied > vit | i these violent measures , he next attempted to introduce the Inquisition itito Naples , and for this purpose applied , it is daid by the
• Bock flist . Antitrinif . VoL I . pp . «> et seq /; perdes Specimen ItaW ^ ^^^ pp * 75 , <* fax-waaabr Adam VtiWi ¥ fetr irtttiKfett ^ fHoHMft
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Einperor ' s dr ^ eos , i » i&& Ropfe >»^ fispalcb sorae of it ^ ) d ^ pl * i © 8 ^ 05-jBlli city , in thid imjrofarfar ja 3 iiN ^ ltr 0 f % wad strenuously oppa&ed by th ^ lfiiit
pie at large ; ^ They J ^ joke o * it ?« open revolt , mid the most Se * iini $ re 0 » sequences migrht have ensued had &ot hostilities been terminated by a conciliatory arrangement , j ^ 4 the abandonment of the design . *
The measures resorted to by the Viceroy Toledo appear to have answered their purpose , in dispersing Vaidesso ' s society , and suppress ^ g the Reformation in the Neapolitan territory . Most of these who had joined themselves to the Reformers ,
when the season of danger came , made their peace and obtamed their pardon , by a public reeanta&ion . -f Some , htiwever , adhered to their principles , and when they could no longer act upon their convictions * ia their native land , went into voluntary exile to Germany or to Switzerland . This was the noble
conduct of two confessors among this little society , who are entitled to honourable mention . The iiFSt was Isabella Manricha , % a lady of a dist £ & > -
* Mosheim , IV , 387 , w&th the translator ' s npte . -f- Among the principal of those who apostatized to the Church of Rome , after taking an active part with the Reformer * , was Laurentius Romanus , a Sicilian , who first taught the doctrines of Zwingliufi at Caserta , in the Neapolitan territories v
and afterwards employed himself in . 4 isgeminating the tenets of the Refoi ; med-at Naples . Being prosecuted for his heresy , he went to Rome , where he made Ills recantation , and whs sentenced to mafeti a public abjuration , and submit to various other penances . * = * A Rom ^ - ^ -il fit , " says ' Giannone , ** la confession de ses errsars , et I in ( au Cardinal Th ^ atin ) ^ coi # Ui ; qu'il avoit dans Naples et dans 1 £ Boy « aume , plusieurs discipies / entre ^ tss ^ pwl * ^ toient des personnes du pre mier raag , iet > plusieurs dames titles , qui apprenoieci ^ r les Belles Lettres . II Cut coQ 4 amn ^ - . & \ f ^ ire une abjuration publique dang les , i 8 ie iN et i ^¦ "
« ' M ' ' " ' O - iSgnses catheara ^ apies ae r serte , ei : de 1 ^ recoadttit k Romje > pwi ^ s subir dautres p £ oiteiMXes * ^ WiiT ^ supra , p . 79 . * ;; * ¦ r '' - ¦ i ^?^ \ i > ¦ t Bernard Ochin dedka *^^^ fi ^ , , alia p ™***^^®®*^^ ^ ir ^ a ^^ m ^ l ^^ lH ^ SS Si ^ lK ^^^^' w - . ** ^ ^' , w ^ 53 l "' . J ¦ ^ % V > i ! avS ^ , H ( ISj # 2 A - .. ¦ ¦; •* < S ¦ jtv- ' i . ' . V'lfiSuii /^ iJ . ' . - . ¦ " ¦ iJmm ^ iM
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' ? % & Ndriitnfophthtr Ntf . XK 1 U . \ *
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Jan. 2, 1822, page 5, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2508/page/5/
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