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The Waldensian Recourse to Violence
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2009
Extract
From their origins in the twelfth century to their support for and involvement in the Reformation in the sixteenth, the Waldensian heretics professed nonviolence as one of their beliefs. Later Protestant and Catholic polemicists equated the profession of nonviolence with a policy and bestowed upon the sect a reputation as one of the precursors of religious pacifism. More recent scholars have noted that the heretics at least occasionally employed violence. I will argue that lay Waldensian believers, called credentes, reacted violently to persecution and learned to employ aggression in pursuit of political goals. In the later Middle Ages, at least, Waldensians resorted to violence on enough occasions and in enough different locations to justify dropping the idea that they were a nonviolent group. Their use of violence did become more sophisticated—that is, more closely connected to political goals—during the fifteenth century as access to representatives of the state increased.
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References
1. The Waldensian movement began with the evangelical activities of the merchant Waldes of Lyons. The year 1174 is celebrated as the year of origin; probably the movement took shape during the succeeding decade. It became the most widespread and long-lived of medieval heretical movements.
2. See the discussion of the intertwined political and aggressive reactions of the Dauphinois Waldensians to the crusade of Cattaneo, Albert in Cameron, Euan, The Reformation of the Heretics: The Waldenses of the Alps, 1480–1580 (Oxford, 1984), pp. 17–24.Google Scholar I disagree with Cameron's assertion that “Waldensian organization was, in short, very lay and very materialist; it was concerned with the defense of property, by litigation and by force.” If that were the case, there would have been no reason for Cattaneo's crusade. Rather, the Waldensians were willing at this point to use force to defend their beliefs. This had been the case in Germany and earlier in Piedmont and Dauphiné. I have tried to show the continuity and development of the Waldensians' willingness to employ violence.
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25. Ibid.
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40. Ibid., p. 66.
41. Ibid., p. 108.
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