john wycliffe
john Wycliffe was an English scholastic philosopher and translator who was the first person that translated the bible Vulgate into vernacular English in the year 1382.his followers were known as Lollards and they aim was to reform the western Christianity (Western Christianity constitutes the Latin Church of the Catholic Church and those denominations historically derived from it)
peter waldo
peter waldo was an uneducated trader who choosed a poor life according to the holy book and he advised people in streets that caused him to find some followers named Waldensian.
and after a while their beliefs had division with the church so the church executed them in thew inquisition system in 1212 ad but there are still some people who believe in him he was a succesfulmerchant in Lyon in the late 1100's who underwent a religious conversion in about 1170. He renounced his wealth and began to preach a doctrine of voluntary poverty. Pope Alexander III affirmed his vow of poverty in 1179, but he was forbidden to continue preaching because he was a layperson. However, he and his followers ( the Poor Men of Lyon or Waldensians) were excommunicated for violating the ban on preaching and were banished from the city. Pope Lucius III included them among the heretics in his Bull of excommunication at Verona in 1184.
and after a while their beliefs had division with the church so the church executed them in thew inquisition system in 1212 ad but there are still some people who believe in him he was a succesfulmerchant in Lyon in the late 1100's who underwent a religious conversion in about 1170. He renounced his wealth and began to preach a doctrine of voluntary poverty. Pope Alexander III affirmed his vow of poverty in 1179, but he was forbidden to continue preaching because he was a layperson. However, he and his followers ( the Poor Men of Lyon or Waldensians) were excommunicated for violating the ban on preaching and were banished from the city. Pope Lucius III included them among the heretics in his Bull of excommunication at Verona in 1184.