- Peter Waldo
Infobox Person
name = Peter Waldo
caption = Statue of Peter Waldo at the Luther Memorial atWorms, Germany
birth_date = 1140
birth_place =
death_date = about 1218
death_place =Peter Waldo, Valdo, or Waldes ("c". 1140 – "c". 1218), also Pierre Vaudès or de Vaux, was the founder of the
Waldensians , aChristian spiritual movement of theMiddle Ages , descendants of which still exist in various regions.Life and work
Specific details of his life are largely unknown. The sources mention that he was a rich merchant from
Lyon making his money by "wicked usury", when around 1160 he began living a radical Christian life and gave his real estate to his wife, and the remainder of his belongings he distributed asalms to the poor.Waldo also began to preach and teach on the streets, based on his ideas of simplicity and poverty, notably that "No man can serve two masters, God and
mammon ." By 1170 he had gathered a number of followers and they started to be called "the Poor of Lyon", "the Poor ofLombardy ", or "the Poor of God". They were also referred to as theWaldensians (or Waldenses), after their leader. They were distinct from theAlbigensians orCathars .The Waldensian movement was characterised from the beginning by lay preaching,
voluntary poverty and sticking to the "Word of God", the Bible. Peter Waldo commissioned a cleric from Lyons around 1180 to translate the Bible, or parts of it, intovernacular , the provençal language.In 1179, Waldo and one of his
disciples went to Rome. They were welcomed byPope Alexander III , and by theRoman Curia . They had to explain their faith before a panel of three clergymen, including items which were then debated within the Church, as theuniversal priesthood , the gospel in the vulgar tongue, and the issue of self-imposed poverty. But Waldo and his friend were not taken seriously. The meeting therefore resolved nothing, and Waldo’s and his followers’ ideas, initially regarded with suspicion, were condemned at the Third Lateran Council in the same year, but the leaders of the movement had not been yet excommunicated.Driven away from
Lyon , Waldo and his followers settled in the high valleys ofPiedmont , and in France, in theLuberon . Finally, Waldo was excommunicated byPope Lucius III during the synod held atVerona in 1184, and the doctrine of the Poor of Lyon was againcondemned by the Fourth Lateran Council in 1215, and regarded asheresy . TheRoman church began to persecute the Waldensians, and many were tried and sentenced to death in various European countries during the 12th, 13th, and 14th centuries. Centuries after his death, the Waldensian denomination joined the Genevan or Reformed branch of theProtestant Reformation .Further reading
* Audisio, Gabriel, "The Waldensian Dissent: Persecution and Survival, c.1170 - c.1570", (1999) Cambridge Medieval Textbooks. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0521559847
External links
* [http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/source/waldo1.html Link to the "Medieval sourcebook" text about Peter Waldo]
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