Online Encyclopedia

FRATICELLI (plural diminutive of Ital...

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V11, Page 42 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

FRATICELLI (plural diminutive of Ital. frate,
See also:
brother)
  , the name given during the 13th, 14th and 15th centuries to a number of religious groups in Italy, differing widely from each other, but all derived more or less directly from the Franciscan
See also:
movement . Fra
See also:
Salimbene says in his Chronicle (
See also:
Parma ed., p . 108) : " All who wished to found a new
See also:
rule borrowed something from the Franciscan order, the sandals or the habit." As early as 1238 Gregory IX., in his bull Quoniam abundavit iniquitas, condemned and denounced as forgers (tanquam falsarios) all who begged or preached in a habit resembling that of the mendicant orders, and this condemnation was repeated by him or his successors . The
See also:
term Fraticelli was used contemptuously to denote, not any particular
See also:
sect, but the members of orders formed on the fringeof the church . Thus Giovanni Villani, speaking of the heretic Dolcino, says in his Chronicle (bk. viii. ch . 84) : " He is not a
See also:
brother of an ordered rule, but a fraticello without an order." Similarly, John XXII., in his bull Sancta
See also:
Romana et Universalis Ecclesia (28th of December 1317), condemns vaguely those " profanae multitudinis viri commonly called Fraticelli, or Brethren of the Poor
See also:
Life, or Bizocchi, or Beguines, or by all manner of other names." Some historians, in their zeal for rigid classification, have regarded the Fraticelli as a distinct sect, and have attempted to discover its dogmas and its founder . Some of the
See also:
con-temporaries of these religious groups fell into the same error, and in this way the vague term Fraticelli has sometimes been applied to the disciples of Armanno Pongilupo of
See also:
Ferrara (d . 1269), who was undoubtedly a Cathar, and to the followers of Gerard Segarelli and Dolcino, who were always known among them-selves as Apostolic Brethren (Apostolici) . Furthermore, it seems absurd to classify both the Dolcinists and the Spiritual Franciscans as Fraticelli, since, as has been pointed out by Ehrle (Arch. f . Lit. u . Kirchengesch.
See also:
des Mittelalters, ii . 107, &e.), Angelo of Clarino, in his De septem tribulationibus, written to the glory of the Spirituals, does not
See also:
scruple to stigmatize the Dolcinists as " disciples of the devil." It is equally absurd to include in the same category the ignorant Bizocchi and Segarellists and such learned disciples of Michael of Cesena and Louis of Bavaria as William of .Occam and Bonagratia of Bergamo, who have often been placed under this comprehensive rubric .

The name Fraticelli may more justly be applied to the most exalted fraction of Franciscanism . In 1322 some prisoners declared to the inquisitor

Bernard Gui at Toulouse that the Franciscan order was divided into three sections—the Conventuals, who were allowed to retain their real and
See also:
personal
See also:
property; the Spirituals or Beguines, who were at that time the
See also:
objects of persecution; and the Fraticelli of Sicily, whose leader was Henry of
See also:
Ceva (see Gui's Practica Inquisilionis, v.) . It is this fraction of the order which John XXII. condemned in his bull Gloriosam Ecclesiam (23rd of
See also:
January 1318), but without calling them Fraticelli . Henry of Ceva had taken
See also:
refuge in Sicily at the time of Pope Boniface VIII.'s persecution of the Spirituals, and thanks to the good offices of Frederick of Sicily, a little colony of Franciscans who rejected all property had soon established itself in the island . Under Pope Clement V., and more especially under Pope John XXII., fresh Spirituals joined them; and this
See also:
group of exalted and isolated ascetics soon began to regard itself as the
See also:
sole legitimate order of the Minorites and then as the sole Catholic Church . After being excommunicated as " schismatics and rebels, founders of a superstitious sect, and propagators of false and pestiferous doctrines," they proceeded to elect a general (for Michael of Cesena had disavowed them) and then a pope called Celestine (L . Wadding, Annales, at date 1313) . The rebels continued to carry on an active propaganda . In Tuscany particularly the Inquisition made persistent efforts to suppress them; Florence afflicted them with severe
See also:
laws, but failed to rouse the populace against them . The papacy dreaded their social even more than their dogmatic influence . At first in Sicily and afterwards throughout Italy the Ghibellines gave them a warm welcome; the rigorists and the malcontents who had either
See also:
left the church or were on the point of leaving it, were attracted by these communities of needy rebels; and the tribune Rienzi was at one time disposed to join them . To overcome these ascetics it was necessary to have recourse to other ascetics, and from the outset the reformed Franciscans, or Franciscans of the Strict Observance, under the direction of their first leaders, Paoluccio da Trinci (d .

1390), Giovanni Stronconi (d . 1405), and St Bernardine of

See also:
Siena, had been at
See also:
great pains to restore the Fraticelli to orthodoxy . These early efforts, however, had little success . Alarmed by the number of the sectaries and the extent of their influence, Pope Martin V., who had encouraged the Observants, and particularly Bernardine of Siena, fulminated two bulls (1418 and 1421) against the heretics, and entrusted different legates with the task of hunting them down . These
See also:
measures failing, he decided, in 1426, to appoint two Observants as inquisitors without territorial limitation to make a
See also:
special crusade against the
See also:
heresy of the Fraticelli . These two inquisitors, who pursued their duties under three popes (Martin V.,
See also:
Eugenius IV. and Nicholas V.) were Giovanni da Capistrano and Giacomo della Marca . The latter's valuable Dialogus contra Fraticellos (Baluze and Mansi, Miscellanea, iv . 595-610) gives an account of the doctrines of these heretics and of the activity of the two inquisitors, and shows that the Fraticelli not only constituted a distinct church but a distinct society . They had a pope called Rinaldo, who was elected in 1429 and was succeeded by a brother named Gabriel . This supreme head of their church they styled " bishop of
See also:
Philadelphia," Philadelphia being the mystic name of their community; under him were bishops, e.g. the bishops of Florence, Venice, &c.; and, furthermore, a member of the community named Guglielmo Majoretto
See also:
bore the title of " Emperor of the Christians." This organization, at least in so far as concerns the heretical church, had already been observed among the Fraticelli in Sicily, and in 1423 the general council of Siena affirmed with horror that at Peniscola there was an heretical pope surrounded with a college of cardinals who made no attempt at concealment . From 1426 to 1449 the Fraticelli were unremittingly pursued, imprisoned and burners . The sect gradually died out after losing the
See also:
protection of the
See also:
common
See also:
people, whose sympathy was now transferred to the austere Observants and their miracle-worker Capistrano .

From 1466 to 1471 there were sporadic burnings of Fraticelli, and in 1471 Tommaso di Scarlino was sent to

See also:
Piombino and the littoral of Tuscany to track out some Fraticelli who had been discovered in those parts . After that date the name disappears from
See also:
history . See F . Ehrle, " Die Spiritualen, ihr Verhdltnis zum Franziskanerorden and zu den Fraticellen " and " Zur Vorgeschichte des Concils von Vienne," in Archiv fur Literatur- and Kirchengeschichte des Mittelalters, vols. i., ii., iii.; Wetzer and Welte, Kirchenlexikon, s.v . " Fraticellen "; H . C . Lea, History of the Inquisition of the
See also:
Middle Ages, iii . 129-18o (
See also:
London, 1888) . (P .

End of Article: FRATICELLI (plural diminutive of Ital. frate, brother)
[back]
COLLEGE FRATERNITIES
[next]
FRAUD (Lat. fraus, deceit)

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.