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Albigenses

Albigenses logo #10101) Cathari 2) Cathars 3) Religious order 4) Religious sect 5) Sect
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Albigenses

Albigenses logo #10101) Cathari 2) Cathars
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Albigenses

Albigenses logo #21002• (n. pl.) Alt. of Albigeois
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Albigenses

Albigenses logo #21003the heretics—especially the Catharist heretics—of 12th–13th-century southern France. (See Cathari.) The name, apparently given to them at the end of ... [9 related articles]
Found on http://www.britannica.com/eb/a-z/a/40

Albigenses

Albigenses logo #20688Heretical sect of Christians (also known as the Cathars) who flourished in southern France near Albi and Toulouse during the 11th-13th centuries. They adopted the Manichean belief in the duality...
Found on http://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/20688

Albigenses

Albigenses logo #20972Al`bi·gen'ses Al`bi`geois' noun plural [ From Albi and Albigeois , a town and its district in the south of France, in which the sect abounded.] (Eccl. Hist.) A sect of reformers opposed to the church of Rome in the 12th centuries. The Albigenses were a branch of the ...
Found on http://www.encyclo.co.uk/webster/A/50

Albigenses

Albigenses logo #21217The Albigenses were a sect which spread widely in the south of France and elsewhere about the twelfth century, and which differed in doctrine and practice from the Roman Catholic Church, by which they were subjected to severe persecution. They are said to have been so named from the district of Aibi, where, and about Toulouse, Narbonne, etc, they w...
Found on http://www.probertencyclopaedia.com/browse/CXA.HTM

Albigenses

Albigenses logo #20974Cathars noun a Christian religious sect in southern France in the 12th and 13th centuries; believers in Albigensianism
Found on https://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/20974

Albigenses

Albigenses logo #21221Heretical sect of Christians (also known as the Cathars) who flourished in southern France near Albi and Toulouse during the 11th–13th centuries. They adopted the Manichean belief in the duality of good and evil and pictured Jesus as being a rebel against the cruelty of an omnipotent God
Found on https://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/21221
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