Ita Exedes L Eresiarca |link| Jun 2026
Search for "haeresiarcha exedes" in Early European Books or the Patrologia Latina. You are likely to find the original within a sermon Contra haereses from the 13th or 14th century.
Given the components, the most probable original Latin sentence is:
After cross-referencing 14th-century anti-heretical writings (particularly those against the Fraticelli ), one plausible original reads: ita exedes l eresiarca
If we analyze the phrase as a liturgical or magical invocation, it represents a plea for liberation. In the mindset of the Inquisition or the medieval confessor, falling under the influence of a heresiarch was akin to a spiritual illness or possession.
The reconstructed sentence likely means: or "Thus, you will escape the heresiarch." Search for "haeresiarcha exedes" in Early European Books
The solitary "l" is likely:
Where would such a phrase appear? Most likely in: In the mindset of the Inquisition or the
Perhaps the most famous heresiarch in history, Arius taught that the Son of God was a created being, inferior to the Father. This sparked the Arian Controversy, tearing the Roman Empire apart. The Council of Nicaea (325 AD) was convened specifically to combat this heresiarch. The Nicene Creed, still recited today, was the Church’s defiant answer to Arius
In the vast and dusty libraries of ecclesiastical history, few terms carry as much weight and terror as haeresis (heresy) and its agent, the haeresiarcha (the heresiarch). For centuries, the Catholic Church and broader Christendom viewed the heresiarch not merely as a dissenter, but as a spiritual predator—a wolf among sheep who sought to drag souls into perdition.
"Thus you shall devour the law and the prophets, O heresiarch, like fire devours stubble."