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  1. Ad extirpanda. Ad extirpanda (" To eradicate "; named for its Latin incipit) was a papal bull promulgated on Wednesday, May 15, 1252 by Pope Innocent IV which authorized in limited and defined circumstances the use of torture by the Inquisition as a tool for interrogation. [1]

  2. Pope Innocent IV authorized its use by the Inquisition in 1252 in the papal bull Ad extirpanda. ... The 21st century’s Ad extirpanda is the so-called Bybee memo, issued by the Justice Department ...

  3. 21. Whoever shall have the audacity to arrange the escape from custody of a male or female heretic, or shall try to prevent the arrest of such a person: or shall prevent the entry of an official into any house, or tower, or any

    • Pope Innocent IV Upbringing, Early Career, and Election to The Papacy
    • Papacy of Pope Innocent IV
    • Downfall of Pope Innocent IV
    • Pope Innocent IV Quick Facts
    • Interesting Facts About Pope Innocent IV

    Pope Innocent IV was born with the given name of Sinibaldo Fieschi to Count Hugo Fliscus of Lavagna. Their family had standing in financial as well as church circles. Sinibaldo went to Parma to study under the tutelage of three uncles, all of whom were bishops. From Parma he went to the most illustrious canonists’ school (at Bologna) and grew into ...

    Innocent IV found Emperor Frederick II eager to begin negotiations on the long-running conflict between the empire and the church. Pope Gregory IX had excommunicated Frederick, and Innocent IV did not have much trust for the emperor either. Even though the rivals struck an accord on the 31st of March in 1244 A.D. Pope Innocent IV chose to secretly ...

    This struggle in Southern Italy proved to be Pope Innocent IV’s undoing. After years of plotting and scheming to overthrow Conrad IV and Manfred (the illegitimate son of Frederick II) as the rulers of southern Italy, Innocent’s grand papal army suffered a crushing defeat at Manfred’s hands. Innocent IV died shortly after in Naples in the month of D...

    Born – 1195 in Genoa, Italy
    Birth Name – Sinibaldo Fieschi
    Died – December 7, 1254
    How he died At the head of his papal army, Pope Innocent entered Naples the capital of southern Italy. While he was lying in bed sick there, word reached Pope Innocent IV of the victory of his enem...
    Innocent IV was born as the sixth of 10 children.
    As the Cathedral of Parma’s canon, the church regarded him as among the finest canonists of his day.
    Pope Innocent IV engaged in a policy of deliberate nepotism far more than any popes who preceded him, starting a trend that only grew worse over following centuries.
    Innocent IV dispatched an envoy with papal bulls to the “Emperor of the Tatars” the Mongols asking their ruler to convert to Christianity and cease his assault on Christendom in Europe; the Mongol...
  4. Aquinas on Torture. Jordan Bishop. Thomas Aquinas was twenty-seven years old when Pope Innocent IV published the bull Ad extirpanda (May 15, 1252), a code for the conduct of the Inquisition in Lombardy, Romagna and the Marches. The document is most famous, today, for the ‘‘Law 25’’ (§ 26), which reads as follows:

    • Jordan Bishop
    • 2006
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  6. Pope Innocent IV ( Latin: Innocentius IV; c. 1195 – 7 December 1254), born Sinibaldo Fieschi, was head of the Catholic Church and ruler of the Papal States from 25 June 1243 to his death in 1254. [1] Fieschi was born in Genoa and studied at the universities of Parma and Bologna. He was considered in his own day and by posterity as a fine ...

  7. Dec 22, 2014 · Introduction: Thomas Aquinas was twenty-seven years old when Pope Innocent IV published the bull Ad extirpanda (May 15, 1252), a code for the conduct of the Inquisition in Lombardy, Romagna and the Marches. The document is most famous, today, for the “Law 25” (§ 26), which reads as follows: The Podestà or Rector has the authority to ...

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