Pope Alexander III (1159-1181) is the author of the oldest extant version of the bull. Excerpts from a translation of the bull follow:“[The Jews] ought to suffer no prejudice… We grant them the buckler of Our protection.…Too, no Christian ought to presume… to injure their persons, or with violence to take their property, or to change the good customs which they have had until now in whatever region they inhabit.
[All the “treaties” and expulsions endorsed by the “Gedolim” come to mind.]
Besides, in the celebration of their own festivities, no one ought disturb them in any way, with clubs or stones, nor ought any one try to require from them or to extort from them services they do not owe, except for those they have been accustomed from times past to perform.
[Taxes, laws, etc. endorsed by the “Gedolim”.]
…We decree… that no one ought to dare mutilate or diminish a Jewish cemetery, nor, in order to get money, to exhume bodies once they have been buried.
[Isn’t that close to what happened during Gush Katif? Exhume Jewish corpses so Yeshivas will get money?!]