Pataria

The murder of Arialdo da Carimate, part of the conflict of the pataria

The pataria was an eleventh-century Catholic movement focused on the city of Milan in northern Italy, which aimed to reform the clergy and ecclesiastic government within the city and its ecclesiastical province, in support of papal sanctions against simony and clerical marriage. Those involved in the movement were called patarini (singular patarino), patarines or patarenes, a word perhaps chosen by their opponents, the etymology of which is uncertain. The movement, associated with urban unrest in the city of Milan, is generally considered to have begun in 1057 and ended in 1075.

The name Patarenes has also been used for the unconnected earlier Bogomils and the later Albigensians or Cathars, who in contrast were anti-papal and non-Catholic. These were declared heretical sects.[1] They are considered by some as a precursor to the Protestant Reformation, however some sources fail to differentiate these different groups.[2]

  1. ^ "Patarine | medieval reform group | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2021-12-14.
  2. ^ Reddy, Mike Megrove (2017). "The forms of communication employed by the Protestant Reformers and especially Luther and Calvin" (PDF). Pharos Journal of Theology. 98. Mike Reddy quotes that "The Pataria, in Northern Italy, were in reaction to the corruption which was taking place in the church."

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