? ¦ ' ; I :n\'' ) ,1 i' f ! ' A SHORT HISTORY OF THE ITALIAN WALDENSES MAP OF THE WALDENSIAN VALLEYS ; THE CHURCHES AXD STAllONS OF THE MISSION, A SHORT HISTORY OF The Italian Waldenses WHO HAVE INHABITED THE VALLEYS OF THE COTTIAN ALPS iFrom ^nnmt SCimes to ftjz ^xmnt BY SOPHIA V. BOMPIANI > • < AUTHOR OF "ITALIAN EXPLORERS IN AFRICA'' NEW YORK A. S. BARNES AND COMPANY LONDON: HODDER & STOUGHTON 1897 Copyright, 1897, By A. S. Barnes & Co. AU rights reserved. MeR5- Bt3 SKntbetstta ?Ptess John Wilson and Son, Cambridge, U.S.A. PREFACE. The present generation of Italian Waldenses, with that firmness characteristic of the race, believe that their forefathers lived in the Val leys of the Cottian Alps from " time imme morial." Without documents to prove their existence as evangelical Christians in these Valleys previous to the time of Peter Waldo in the twelfth century, they yet obstinately rej'ect the theory that he was their founder. They pay him no especial honor as do Lu therans to Luther ; Wesleyans to Wesley ; Calvinists to Calvin ; Mahometans to Ma homet; Buddhists to Buddha. Unable to prove these traditions of their more ancient origin, they listen with respect, but without assent, to the documented histories of their race, dating from Peter Waldo, written by some of their most learned professors. In Preface truth there is httle to say against these conclu sions except the traditions and convictions of an ancient race fixed for centuries in the same locality, and the rare traces of them found in the writings of their enemies. These few argu ments found in the writings of other historians of the Waldenses I have gathered for this modest little work. S. B. Rome, Italy, 1897. CONTENTS. Chapter Page I. The Israel of the Alps i II. The Diocese of Bishop Claudio of Turin in the Ninth Century 12 III. -Who -were the Albigenses? 20 I-V. Antiquity of the -Waldenses before Peter -Waldo 25 V, The "Noble Lesson" 32 ¦VI. Calumnies and Oppressions of the In quisitors 40 ¦VII. Geographical Position and Colonies . 48 VIII. The Ministers, or " Barbes " 55 IX. Persecution begun in the year 1476 . . 63 X. Persecution of A.D. 1561 70 XI. Persecution of Easter, 1655 78 XII. The Glorious Return in 1689 , . . 86 XIII, Extirpation of the Colony in Calabria 94 XIV. Language changed after the Pest in 1630 102 XV. Heroes 11 1 Contents Chapter Page XVI. Martyrs 120 XVII. ¦Women , 130 XVIII. Friends — General Beckwith 140 XIX. Emancipation in 1848 148 XX. A,D. 1889. — Bi-Centenary of "Glorious Return" 156 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. Map of the Waldensian Valleys ; the Churches AND Stations of the Mission . , , Frontispiece Torre Pellice, the Capital of the Valleys To face p. 5 Entrance to Torre Pellice, Roman Catholic Church 15 Waldensian Church at San Giovanni . , . , 23 Cascade of the Pis at Massello 57 School of the Barbes at PrA del Torno, An grogna , 57 Waldensian Church at Angrogna 63 From Angrogna to PrA del Torno 67 Angrogna 75 Route of Return of Waldensian People from Switzerland through Savoy 87 Portrait of Catinat 89 Portrait of Henri Arnaud 91 Portrait of Victor Amedeus, Duke of Savoy and Prince of Piedmont 93 From an engravijig by De I'Amerssini, published in Paris, 1684. Prangins, Lake Leman, from a print . , . , 115 Siege of Balsiglia, from an old print . , . . 157 Waldensian Residence and Museum 159 Badges 159 A SHORT HISTORY OF THE ITALIAN WALDENSES CHAPTER I THE ISRAEL OF THE ALPS In the valleys of the Cottian Alps, between Mount Cenis and Mount Viso, a Bible-loving people have lived from "time immemorial." They have been persecuted and exiled by the Bible-hating power which has its seat in Rome ; but after exile they returned to their green valleys, and after persecution they were not destroyed. Now, like a healthy vine which has its roots in those valleys, the branches of this primitive Church spread out over all the Italian peninsula. It has churches in all the great cities, — in Turin, Milan, Venice, Florence, Genoa, Rome, Naples, Palermo, Messina, and even at Vittoria, a small town at the extremity of Sicily. It has forty-four pastors and fifty- 2 The Italian Waldenses four hundred members in the mission churches of the peninsula, and twenty-two pastors and thirteen thousand five hundred members in the valleys. This hath God wrought for the Waldenses. They " kept the faith so pure of old," spite of torture, cold, destitution, and loss of life on the Alpine mountains. They were burned; they were cast into damp and horrid dungeons; they were smothered in crowds in mountain caverns, — mothers and babes, and old men and women together; they were sent out into exile of a winter night, unclothed and unfed, to climb the snowy mountains ; they were hurled over the rocks; their heads were used as footballs; their houses and lands were taken from them, and their little children were stolen to be educated in the religion they abhorred. Yet they refused to acknowledge the Roman pon tiff as the Vicar of Christ ; to bow down to the wafer and believe it the body of Christ ; to confess to priests, or to give up the Bible. Long before the German Reformation they were an evangelical people, loving the Bible above all things: making translations of it into the vulgar tongue ; spreading it abroad in Bohemia, in Germany, in France and in Italy. They taught their children to memorize whole The Israel of the Alps 3 chapters, so that whatever might befall the written copies of the Bible, large portions of it might be secure in the memories of their youths and maidens. In secret meetings, when they went by night barefooted, or with shoes bound with rags, so that they might not be heard in passing, it was their custom to listen to the Gospels recited in turn by the young, each one responsible for a certain portion. In spite of all their sorrows, often occa sioned by the weakness or bigotry of the dukes and duchesses of Savoy, of whom they were the subjects, the Waldenses never failed in patriotic love and service to their country. They are and always have been Italians, but were often driven by the persecutions of the middle ages into the French valleys, where they found brethren of the same faith, and learned their language. Beaten about like the waves of the sea, backward and forward, they had no rest. At one time thirteen out of fifteen of their pastors died of the plague, and they were obliged to send to Geneva for French pastors, who introduced the French language into the valleys. Their prince, Victor Amedeus XL, Duke of Savoy, urged to do so by Louis XIV, of France, and by the 4 The Italian Waldenses Pope, drove them with cruel persecution into Switzerland. Yet, when the tide changed, and they by an heroic march had returned, — when he had need of them to guard the Alps against the inroads of that same Louis XIV. who had persuaded him to drive them away, — they gave him true and loyal service. Until the year 1848 they were shut up in their moun tains without civil rights, — the very pariahs and outcasts of Italy. A Waldensian could not exercise a learned profession, or take a regular course of study in the universities of Italy, or worship according to his faith out side of the valleys. Yet they were ever ready to greet their princes with respect and fealty on the rare visits made them, and no Italians have been more faithful to the established government since their admission by the statute to equal civil and religious rights with other citizens. Fervent prayers are sent up every Sunday to the throne of grace from every Waldensian pulpit in Italy for the wel fare of "King Humbert, Queen Margaret, Victor Emanuel Ferdinand, Prince of Naples; for the Senate, the Parliament, and all others in authority," No trace of bitterness or revenge is evident w ?J wa;Hb o?Jo HK<: oa w wo The Israel of the Alps 5 against those who once persecuted their race to the death. But yet they are faithful to the oath taken two hundred years ago at Sibaud, in the valleys, when, on their return from three years and a half of exile, they swore to drag their fellow-countrymen away by every means in their power from the Babylonian woe. This missionary spirit has possessed them always. Their pastors or barbes went, two by two, dressed in long brown woollen gowns, over all Italy to evangelize in the thirteenth, four teenth, and fifteenth centuries. They had churches and adherents in every town and city, and were always the guests of their own people. With the dawn of liberty in 1848, they awoke to new missionary life and vigor. Churches and stations were established, and a committee of five pastors was appointed to collect money from Protestant Christians in other countries. Seventy thousand dollars are now needed annually for the wants of the mission churches. All this must be collected little by little, — a heavy task for those who engage in the arduous work. The Waldenses own their church buildings in the principal cities. The beautiful edifice on the Via 6 The Italian Waldenses Nazionale, in Rome, dedicated in the year 1885, is built on a foundation of gray granite brought from the valleys. The very rocks that were often bathed in the blood of maidens and babes and old men, — innocent or conscious martyrs to their faith, — now rest on the soil of persecuting Rome, and support that building which is the ever-present witness to the goodness of God to his people. The origin of the Waldenses is lost in the night of centuries. Their traditions assert that they were driven from southern Italy, in the time of the second and third centuries, to the Alpine valleys, where they have ever since lived. But they possess no written evidence of this antiquity, and only believe it because from time to time, from one generation to another, their forefathers have constantly asserted it. The profound conviction of an entire race, with few exceptions, may well be considered valuable, even in the absence of written documents. Of these they have none previous to the year iioo, when the "Noble Lesson " was written. But many arguments in favor of their early Christian origin exist which are found chiefly in the voluminous writings in Latin left by their enemies. The Israel of the Alps 7 There, amidst many calumnies and false representations, are found, like pearls in the mud, the confessions of faith of the martyrs and the claims they made for the antiquity and purity of their Church, An Inquisitor, Reinerius Sacco, in the thirteenth century, calling them the "Leonists," said: "There is not one of the sects of ancient heretics more pernicious to the Church than that of the Leonists ; first, because it has been of longer continuance, for some say it has lasted from the time of Pope Sylvester, others from the time of the apostles; second, because it is more diffused, for there is scarcely any land in which this sect exists not ; and third, be cause the Leonists have a great semblance of piety, inasmuch as they live justly before men, and believe, together with all the doc trines contained in the creed, every point respecting the Deity, But they blaspheme the Roman Church and clergy," Another writer of the thirteenth century says that "the people who claimed to have existed from the time of Pope Sylvester were the Waldenses ; " while Claude Seyssel, Arch bishop of Turin in the sixteenth century, says that " the Valdenses of Piedmont derived from a person named Leo, who, in the time 8 The Italian Waldenses of the Emperor Constantine, execrating the avarice of Pope Sylvester and the immoderate endowment of the Roman Church, seceded from that communion, and drew after him all those who entertained the same ideas, " The Waldenses, or Valdenses, or Vaudois, — men of the valleys, or dalesmen, — and the Leonists are therefore the same. Long before the time of Peter the Waldo of Lyons, they bore the name of Leonists from one of their teachers, named Leo, But even he is not considered their founder, and some of the present Waldenses believe their origin is in a direct, unbroken line from the primitive Christians. This traditional Leo of the Waldenses is no other than the famous Vigilantius Leo, or Vigilantius, the Leonist of Lyons, in Aqui taine, upon the borders of the Pyrenees, and a presbyter of the church of Barcelona in Spain. This holy man charged Jerome with too great a leaning to the opinions of Origen, and wrote a treatise against the celibacy of the clergy; the excessive veneration of the martyrs and blind reverence of their relics; the boasted sanctity of monasticism and pil grimages to Jerusalem or other sanctuaries. This work of Vigilantius Leo has been lost. The Israel of the Alps g but the violent answer made to it by Jerome still exists, "I have seen," says Jerome, "that monster called Vigilantius. I tried by quoting passages of Scripture to enchain that infuriated one; but he is gone; he has escaped to that region where King Cottius reigned, be tween the Alps and the -waves of the Adriatic. From thence he has cried out against me, and, ah, wickedness ! there he has found bishops who share his crime." This region, where King Cottius reigned, once a part of Cisalpine Gaul, is the precise country of the Waldenses. Here Leo, or Vigilantius, retired for safety from persecu tion, among a people already established there of his own way of thinking, who received him as a brother, and who thenceforth for several centuries were sometimes called by his name. Here, .shut up in the Alpine valleys, they handed down through the generations the doc trines and practices of the primitive Church, while the inhabitants of the plains of Italy were daily sinking more and more into the apostasy foretold by the Apostles. The hero of the glorious return from exile in 1689, Colonel Henri Arnaud, who led nine hundred Waldenses over the Alps to their homes, writes : " The Vaudois are descendants IO The Italian Waldenses of those refugees from southern Italy, who, after St, Paul had there preached the gospel, were persecuted, and abandoned their beauti ful country; fleeing like the woman mentioned in the Apocalypse, to these wild mountains, where they have to this day handed down the gospel from father to son in the same purity and simplicity as it was preached by St. Paul," The confession which they presented, A, D, 1544, to the French king, Francis I., said: "This is that confession which we have re ceived from our ancestors, even from hand to hand, according as their predecessors in all times and in every age have taught and delivered." And in the year 1559, in their supplica tion to Emanuel Philibert of Savoy, they say : "Let your highness consider that this religion in which we live is not merely our religion of the present day, but it is the religion of our fathers and of our grandfathers, yea, of our forefathers and of our predecessors still more remote. It is the religion of the saints and of the martyrs, of the confessors and of the Apostles," When addressing the German Reformers of the sixteenth century, they say : "Our ancestors have often recounted to us that we have existed from the time of the The Israel of the Alps ii Apostles," They agreed with the Reformers in all points of doctrine, but refused to be called a Reformed Church, as they said they had never swerved from the true Christian faith, and needed no reformation. CHAPTER II THE DIOCESE OF BISHOP CLAUDIO OF TURIN IN THE NINTH CENTURY The Waldenses are known to have existed in the ninth century in the valleys of the Cottian Alps. The evidence of this must have been clear to their enemy, Rorenco, prior of St. Rock, at Turin, who in 1630 studied the history of the " Heresies of the Valleys," He owns that "the Waldenses were so ancient as to afford no certainty in regard to the time of their origin, but that in the ninth century they were rather to be deemed a race of fomenters and encouragers of opinions which had preceded them." Dungal, an ecclesiastic, who was the bitter enemy of Claude, Bishop of Turin in the year 820, said that the people of Claude's diocese were divided into two parts "concerning the images and the holy pictures of the Lord's passion; the Catholics saying that that picture is good and useful, and almost as profitable as Holy Scripture itself, and the heretics, on the The Diocese of Bishop Claudio 13 contrary, saying that it is a seduction into error, and no other than idolatry." Dungal makes constant reference to Vigilan tius, and charges Claude and his Vallenses with teaching the same doctrines as the Leonist. Vigilantius, he said, was the neigh bor and spiritual ancestor of Claude, — both being natives of Spain, — and the author of "his madness." But this was a holy madness, which they both learned from Scripture and from the primitive Church. The writings of Dungal prove that after a lapse of four centuries the memory and influence of Vigilantius remained among the men of the valleys, and that, although the faithful preaching of Claude encouraged and strengthened their faith, they did not owe to him its origin. Claude was the court chaplain of Louis the Meek, the son of Charlemagne. He was appointed by that Emperor, Bishop of Turin, which city he found " full of images." " When, sorely against my will," he says, "I under took, at the command of Louis the Pious, the burden of a Bishoprick, I found all the churches of Turin stuffed full of vile and accursed images. " He alone began to destroy what all were "sottishly worshipping," and 14 The Italian Waldenses had the Lord not helped him they would have swallowed him up quick. He became a reproach to some of his neighbors, but God, the Father of Mercies, comforted him in all his afflictions, so that he might comfort others who "were weighed down with sorrow, " These "others" were the partakers of his affliction, kindred souls, objects like hiraself of scorn and hate; the successors of those whom Jerome vituperated, inhabiting the mountain valleys in the diocese of Turin. Turin was "wholly given to idolatry," but the Valdenses held firmly with their Bishop the doctrines of the Gospel. They, with him, rejected image worship, and saint worship, and bone and ash worship, and cross worship, and pilgrimages to Rome, and papal suprem acy. "All these things," said Claude, "are mighty ridiculous," He continued to com bat error and keep the Church committed to him free from idolatrous rites and anti- Christian dogmas, teaching no new doctrine, but keeping to the pure truth, and opposing to the uttermost all superstitions, " I repress sects," he said, — his definition of a sect being any departure from the truth of Scripture, His sermons are models of simplicity and truth, "Why do you prostrate yourselves ENTRANCE TO TORRE PELLICE. Roman Catholic Church. The Diocese of Bishop Claudio 15 before images? Bow not down to them, for God made you erect, with the face towards heaven and towards Him. Look up there ! Seek God above and lift up your heart to Him," Claude wrote commentaries on the Epistles, on Genesis, Leviticus and Matthew. Some of the manuscripts still exist; one in the Abbey of Fleury, near Orleans; one in the library of St. Remi at Rheims, and one in England. The only one ever printed was the Commentary on the Epistle to the Galatians, nearly all the copies of which were destroyed by his enemies. But fragments of his works have been preserved in the manuscripts of his opponent and former friend, Jonas of Orleans, who thus unconsciously rendered him a service. Jonas, while himself believing in the adora tion of the cross, quotes these words of Claude against it, — " Nothing pleases them in our Lord but what delighted even the impious, the opprobrium of His passion, and the ignominy of His death. Why not, then, adore the cradle, the manger, the ship, the crown of thorns, the spike, the lance ? God commands one thing, those men another. God commands to bear the cross, not to adore it. To serve God in this manner is to forsake Him." 1 6 The Italian Waldenses The opposition of Claude and a part of his diocese to the worship of images was sus tained, in the year 794, by the Council of Frankfort, when Charlemagne was present, and in 826 by the Council of Paris, But his enemies in Turin persecuted and reviled him. Dungal calls him "a mad blasphemer" and "a hissing serpent," for his "error" in oppos ing all kinds of image-worship. And Claude used no less vigorous language, for, being called to appear before a synod of bishops to answer for his conduct in banishing images from the churches, he refused on the ground that they were congregatio asinorum. The bishop who girded the sword over his white surplice to fight the Saracen in that period of Moslem invasion might be expected to give such a sturdy answer as this. Claude sealed his faith by martyrdom in the year 839, after having for many years courageously battled with his enemies. From that date the Valdenses were without a bishop, and confined as a race to the narrow limits of the valleys. The church of Jesus Christ and the Apostles shrank away from the errors of the Roman Church, and retired into the "wil derness," where it remained imprisoned for centuries. God sealed it up there for the day The Diocese of Bishop Claudio 17 of tribulation, when He tried it like as gold is tried in the refiner's fire. In all the plains of Lombardy the voice of truth was silenced. There, from the fourth to the ninth century, many had professed the early Christian faith in its purity. The Waldensian Church is be lieved to have extended its influence from Turin to Milan, as in all its existence it has been possessed by the missionary spirit. Ambrose, Bishop of Milan, who died in the year 397, was called "the Rock of the Church, " on account of his reverence for the Scriptures and opposition to all idolatrous practices. Another bishop of Milan, in the ninth century, "rejoiced in the goodness of God, which had raised up Claude, a true Christian champion." The ancient emblem of the Waldensian church is a candlestick with the motto, — Lux lu.cet i-n tenebris. A candlestick in the oriental imagery of the Bible is a Church, and this Church had power from God to prophesy in sackcloth and ashes twelve hundred and sixty days or symbolic years. " Lo, I am with you always," Christ said to His Church before leaving it, promising to keep it in life and in purity until his return. No other Church calling itself Christian can claim to have 1 8 The Italian Waldenses had through all these centuries the spiritual presence of our Lord. Like a good olive tree it has borne abundant fruit of martyrs ; like a faithful prophet it has testified against the idolatry and corruption of the Roman Church ; like a light shining in a dark place, it has spread the gospel abroad. But two witnesses were to prophesy so long in sorrow; two olive trees and two candle sticks were to stand before God on the earth, and were not these the Waldenses and the Albigenses.? The true title of the Church situated in the valleys of Piedmont is the " Church of the united Vallenses and Albi genses, " Persecuted for their doctrines, sim ilar to those of the Waldenses, the Albigenses of France fled at different times, from 1 165 to 1405 A,D,, to the Alps for refuge. Welcomed by their friends, the Waldenses, who had been in those mountains from "time immemorial," they lived together for several centuries in amity, but keeping their separate names and organizations. Then, tried by a series of hor rible persecutions, the two suffering churches united like two drops of rain, and were hence forth known under one name. From this time the name of the Albigenses is lost, but the memory of their sufferings in the perse- The Diocese of Bishop Claudio 19 cutions of the thirteenth century, made by Pope Innocent III., survived in the hearts of their descendants. War was made, and reg ular armies were enrolled against them, until, slaughtered and routed, despoiled of property and dignities, they fled in every direction. The poor remnant which escaped from the racks and fires of the Inquisitors and Crusaders to the Alps preserved there, at least, its doc trines and its existence. The victims of these persecutions were innumerable, as, according to the Inquisitors, almost the whole popula tion of that part of France was " infected with heresy." The "blessed Dominic,'' founder of the order of preachers which exists to this day, that "glorious servant of God," who, to gether with Simon de Montfort, directed this crusade, was canonized for his services, and admitted to the order of celestial nobility by Pope Gregory IX. Miraculous fragrance issued from the open sepulchre of this Beatus Domenicus, and he was seen by a prior trans lated to heaven, which opened to receive him. CHAPTER III who were the albigenses? Who were these Albigenses, so numerous in Provence, Aquitaine, Languedoc, Gascony, and Dauphiny, a century before these terrible crusades and also before the conversion of Peter Waldo of Lyons? They called them selves Good Men or Apostolicals, and were called by their enemies Paulicians, Cathari, Petrobrusians, Henricians, Manicheans, Bul garians, Paterines, Publicans, and in 1176 Albigenses, from the town of Albi, where they held a synod. They first were noticed in the south of France about the commence ment of the eleventh century ; but long before that a purer system of religion than that of Rome prevailed among the people there. "This whole district of Toulouse," says a monk who wrote the history of this heretical region, " has ever been notorious for the de testable prevalence of this heretical pravity. Generation after generation, from father to Who were the Albigenses? ai son, the venom of superstitious infidelity has been successively diffused. O Tou louse ! mother of heretics ! O tabernacle of robbers ! " Still the opposition to Rome took no com pact form, and showed itself chiefly in the preaching of eminent individuals against the worship of saints and images and relics, until, at the beginning of the eleventh century, appeared among this people, already prepared to resist papal authority, a well-disciplined handful of strangers from the East. , These Paulicians or Cathari were only four thou sand, but they formed a rallying point to resist the tyranny of Rome, and the number of their local proselytes, called Believers, was soon innumerable. The writings of the Albigenses have all been destroyed by the Inquisitor, but their confessions of faith, mixed with many falsities, are preserved in the records of their enemies. They were accused of Manicheism or worship ping two gods, one good and one evil; of adoring Lucifer in the form of a black cat; of sorcery and turbulence; of propagating their opinions by fire and sword; of abhorring ani mal food because it was produced by the evil one; of denying that Christ had a substantial 22 The Italian Waldenses body, and thus doing away with the benefits of his death. All these and many other hor rible accusations they denied, and suffered persecution and martyrdom rather than admit that they were true. That they held a Scrip tural faith similar to that of the Waldenses and of the Protestant churches to-day is clear. In the year 1017, at Orleans, three priests, converts of the Paulicians, were examined for eight hours. Queen Constance keeping guard at the door of the cathedral, and afterwards with a stick putting out the eye of one of them, — Stephen, who had been her confessor. and who probably had reproved her sins, Bu- "harder than any iron,'' they refused to repent, were degraded from holy orders, and with other converts, fourteen in all, were led with out the walls of the city, where a great fire was kindled, and were burned. These mar tyrs were said to be Manicheans, who main tained the existence of two gods : an evil god, the creator of the material world, and a good god, the creator of the spiritual world. But they themselves said that they believed in one God, whose law was written in their hearts by the Holy Ghost : " We can see our King reigning in heaven. By His own almighty hand He will raise us up to an immortal tri-