INQUISITION

ĭnˌkwĭzĭshˈən, tribunal of the Roman Catholic Church established for the investigation of heresy.

The Medieval Inquisition

In the early Middle Ages investigation of heresy was a duty of the bishops. Alarmed especially by the spread of Albigensianism (see Albigenses), the popes issued increasingly stringent instructions as to the methods for dealing with heretics. Finally, in 1233, Pope Gregory IX established the papal Inquisition, dispatching Dominican friars to S France to conduct inquests.

When an inquisitor arrived, a month of grace was allowed to all who wished to confess to heresy and to recant; these were given a light penance, which was intended to confirm their faith. After the period of grace, persons accused of heresy who had not abjured were brought to trial. The defendants were not given the names of their accusers, but they could name their enemies and thus nullify any testimony by these persons. After 1254 the accused had no right to counsel, but those found guilty could appeal to the pope. The trials were conducted secretly in the presence of a representative of the bishop and of a stipulated number of local laymen. Torture of the accused and his witnesses soon became customary and notorious, despite the long-standing papal condemnation of torture (e.g., by Nicholas I); Innocent IV ultimately permitted torture in cases of heresy.

Most trials resulted in a guilty verdict, and the church handed the condemned over to the secular authorities for punishment. Burning at the stake was thought to be the fitting punishment for unrecanted heresy, probably through analogy with the Roman law on treason. However, the burning of heretics was not common in the Middle Ages; the usual punishments were penance, fine, and imprisonment. A verdict of guilty also meant the confiscation of property by the civil ruler, who might turn over part of it to the church. This practice led to graft, blackmail, and simony and also created suspicion of some of the inquests. Generally the inquisitors were eager to receive abjurations of heresy and to avoid trials. Secular rulers came to use the persecution of heresy as a weapon of state, as in the case of the suppression of the Knights Templars.

The Inquisition was an emergency device and was employed mainly in S France, N Italy, and Germany. In 1542, Paul III assigned the medieval Inquisition to the Congregation of the Inquisition, or Holy Office. This institution, which became known as the Roman Inquisition, was intended to combat Protestantism, but it is perhaps best known historically for its condemnation of Galileo. After the Second Vatican Conference, it was replaced (1965) by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, which governs vigilance in matters of faith.

The Spanish Inquisition

The Spanish Inquisition was independent of the medieval Inquisition. It was established (1478) by Ferdinand and Isabella with the reluctant approval of Sixtus IV. One of the first and most notorious heads was Tomas de Torquemada. It was entirely controlled by the Spanish kings, and the pope's only hold over it was in naming the inquisitor general. The popes were never reconciled to the institution, which they regarded as usurping a church prerogative.

The purpose of the Spanish Inquisition was to discover and punish converted Jews (and later Muslims) who were insincere. However, soon no Spaniard could feel safe from it; thus, St. Ignatius of Loyola and St. Theresa of Ávila were investigated for heresy. The censorship policy even condemned books approved by the Holy See. The Spanish Inquisition was much harsher, more highly organized, and far freer with the death penalty than the medieval Inquisition; its autos-da-fé became notorious. The Spanish government tried to establish the Inquisition in all its dominions; but in the Spanish Netherlands the local officials did not cooperate, and the inquisitors were chased (1510) out of Naples, apparently with the pope's connivance. The Spanish Inquisition was finally abolished in 1834.

Bibliography

See E. M. Peters, Torture (1985) and Inquisition (1988). For the Spanish Inquisition, see studies by A. S. Tuberville (1932, repr. 1968), C. Roth (1938, repr. 1964), R. E. Greenleaf (1969), P. J. Hauber (1969), H. A. F. Kamen (1965 and 1998), and E. Peters (1989).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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INQUISITION AND MEDIEVAL SOCIETY ALSO BY JAMES B. GIVEN Society...Medieval Europe: Gwynedd and Languedoc under Outside Rule INQUISITION AND MEDIEVAL SOCIETY Power, Discipline, and...Cataloging-in-Publication Data Given, James Buchanan. Inquisition and medieval society: power, discipline, and resistance...
The Roman Inquisition, the Index and the Jews studies in...lnivlTsity VOLUIVIE 9 The Roman Inquisition, the Index and the Jews Contexts...organization of the Roman and Universal Inquisition, constituted a new possibility of...
A HISTORY OF THE INQUISITION VOL. I. A HISTORY OF THE INQUISITION OF THE MIDDLE AGES. BY HENRY CHARLES LEA...rights reserved . PREFACE. THE history of the Inquisition naturally divides itself into two portions, each...
A HISTORY OF THE INQUISITION VOL. III. A HISTORY OF THE INQUISITION OF THE MIDDLE AGES. BY HENRY CHARLES LEA...94 Prosecuted by the Inquisition 98 Fate of the Sectaries 100...
Crypto-Judaism and the Spanish Inquisition Also by Michael Alpert EL EJERCITO...NOVELS Crypto-Judaism and the Spanish Inquisition Michael Alpert Professor of Modern...Michael. Cryptojudaism and the Spanish inquisition / Michael Alpert. p. cm. Includes...
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The Spanish Inquisition: Simon Lemieux Examines the Hard Facts about the Inquisition and Counters the Common Caricature. by Simon Lemieux The Spanish Inquisition is commonly associated with torture, cruelty and oppression; and it...
Helen Rawlings. the Spanish Inquisition. by Kimberlee D. Garza Helen Rawlings. The Spanish Inquisition. Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing...general interest reader, The Spanish Inquisition is written almost in textbook form...
...enzion amp;#93;. the Origins of the Inquisition in Fifteenth Century Spain. by...enzion amp;#93;. The Origins of the Inquisition in Fifteenth Century Spain. 2nd ed...a definitive history of the Spanish Inquisition. To read this work, it is helpful to...
The Spanish Inquisition. by Stacey Schlau The Spanish Inquisition. By Helen Rawlings. (Malden, Mass.: Blackwell...here, a survey of the institution known as the Inquisition, or the Holy Office, which operated in Spain and...
The Spanish Inquisition. by Henry Kamen Joseph Perez. The Spanish Inquisition. Trans. Janet Lloyd. New Haven and London...26. ISBN: 0-300-10790-0. The subject of the Inquisition has attracted a great number of writers and...
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Pombal Curbs the Inquisition in Portugal by Richard Cavendish...it was necessary to confront the Inquisition, the most powerful arch-conservative...made all sentences passed by the Inquisition subject to review by the crown...
"Herman Melville and the Spanish Inquisition". by John Cyril Barton A close reading...Melville reveals numerous allusions to the Spanish Inquisition. This paper argues that the Inquisition functions in Melvilles work as a multi-faceted...
A Modern Inquisition. by Jack Kevorkian This...dangerous tools of the Dark Ages. The Inquisition is still alive and well. The only...society. We certainly wouldnt have the Inquisition. So all Im doing is what a physician...
Pictures from an Inquisition: The Work of the Writer Victor Serge Faultlessly Captures the...turn. But by then he has helped to set in motion a machinery of inquisition, supported by a Borgesian labyrinth of bureaucratic incrimination...
Inquisition In The House: Quizzing A Priest On The Word Of God. by Garry Wills The chaplain of the House of Representatives has...
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...Documentary Reveals, the Cruelties of the Inquisition Lasted Even into the 20th Century...taken in a coach to the prisons of the Inquisition. There he was conducted to a square...BUT JUST across the water, the Spanish Inquisition was at work and Coustos, a naturalised...
...Inquisitive; No One Expects the Spanish Inquisition: Especially as Imagined, above, by 19th...atrocities committed by the Spanish Inquisition grossly exaggerated by Protestant propagandists...absconded to France with the archives of the Inquisition, where, having destroyed the originals...
An Inquisition. Byline: Greg Pierce, THE WASHINGTON TIMES An inquisition Whats happening to Sen. Joe Lieberman, Connecticut Democrat, "can only be described as an inquisition," New York Times columnist David Brooks writes...
The Race Inquisition; Veil Fight: Muslim Schoolgirl Shabina Begum John Hayes: Respect...warning at hispresbytery after a hate crime allegation was made. The inquisition in Hornchurch, East London, prompted a furious row aboutpolicing...
THE ENGLISH INQUISITION; Eighty -Minute Police Interrogation for Couple Who Dared to Suggest...spend their time. I have never been in trouble with the law. The inquisition in Fleetwood, Lancashire, is the latest in a series of incidents...
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INQUISITION in kwizish n, tribunal of the Roman Catholic Church...established for the investigation of heresy. The Medieval Inquisition In the early Middle Ages investigation of heresy...Finally, in 1233, Pope Gregory IX established the papal Inquisition, dispatching Dominican friars to S France to conduct...
VALDES, JUAN DE hwan tha valdas , c.1500 1540, Spanish reformer, b. Cuenca. Suspected by the Inquisition, he went soon after 1530 to Naples, where he became the center of a circle of men interested in religious reform. Valdes had already...
...Aragon, charged with the centralization of the Spanish Inquisition . He was largely instrumental in bringing about the expulsion...cruelty to the harsh rules of procedure that he devised for the Inquisition and to the rigor with which he had them enforced...
...philosopher, b. Amsterdam. Spinozas Life He belonged to the community of Jews from Spain and Portugal who had fled the Inquisition. Educated in the orthodox Jewish manner, he also studied Latin and the works of Rene Descartes, Thomas Hobbes, and other...
...II. First superior of the Theatines (see Cajetan, Saint ), he was sternly ascetic. A leading reformer, he organized the Inquisition set up by Paul III. As pope, he labored to purify the clergy and abolish corruption and worldliness from the papal curia...
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