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Menocchio The Heretic Apr 2026

: Accused of heresy, Menocchio was initially friendly but stubborn in his defense. He claimed his ideas were merely skepticism, not denial. He was imprisoned for nearly two years and eventually forced to abjure (renounce) his views.

The story of , born Domenico Scandella (1532–1599), is one of the most famous "microhistories" from the Italian Reformation. A self-educated miller from the small village of Montereale Valcellina, Menocchio was famously tried twice by the Roman Inquisition for his strikingly original and "heretical" views on the cosmos. Menocchio the Heretic

: He believed the universe began as a chaotic mass (like milk), and as it "curdled," the first beings—angels and even God—emerged from it like worms appearing in cheese. : Accused of heresy, Menocchio was initially friendly

: Carlo Ginzburg’s The Cheese and the Worms remains the definitive scholarly account of his life and trial. Menocchio: The Heretic Who Declared God a Worm The story of , born Domenico Scandella (1532–1599),

: He argued that God gave the Holy Spirit to everyone—Christians, Jews, Turks, and heretics alike—and that all could be saved regardless of their specific faith.