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The Inquisition

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Title: The Inquisition


1
The Inquisition
  • Looking into the Human Soul

2
Definition
  1. A formal tribunal of the Roman Catholic Church
    created to discover and suppress heresy
  2. A severe interrogation (often violating the
    rights or privacy of individuals)

3
The Church in Medieval Europe
  • By 1200, Catholicism had been dominant religion
    in Europe for 800 years
  • In most of Europe, the pope was the undisputed
    religious leader
  • Heresy wasnt much of a problem
  • Church tolerated small groups with opposing views
  • Others were suppressed

4
Challenge to Church
  • In 1100s, thousands began following Catharism
  • They believed they were true Christians and the
    Catholic Church was false
  • Many dukes and local leaders in France protected
    the Cathars
  • This new religion attracted large s
  • Threatened pope and French government

5
Crusade Against Cathars
  • 1209, Pope Innocent III declared a Crusade
    against the Cathars
  • This led to a long war b/w Northern and Southern
    French nobles
  • North won, but many thousands of people remained
    secret Cathars
  • Chruch leaders felt something stronger needed to
    be done

6
The Coming of the Inquisition
  • 1232, Pope Gregory IX decided to end this heresy
    once and for all.
  • He set up a system of special courts called the
    Inquisition.
  • Gregory authorized the leaders of the Dominican
    religious order to send out friars to find and
    question heretics.

7
Purpose
  • Bernard Gui, a French inquisitioner described the
    purpose of the Inquisition thus
  • Heresy cannot be destroyed unless heretics are
    destroyed and . . . their defenders and
    supporters are destroyed, and this is effected
    in two ways . . . they are converted to the true
    Catholic faith, or . . . burned.

8
Procedure
  • When the Inquisition arrived in town, townspeople
    would gather in a public place
  • Failure to show suspicion
  • Anyone could denounce self for a light punishment
  • They would also have to inform on other heretics
  • Other people faced forced interrogation

9
Sample Inquisition Trial
The inquisition has come to town. Everyone
gather together to confess your crimes!
10
The Trial
  • Generally favored prosecution (Church)
  • Lawyers were allowed, but seldom used
  • Closed trials
  • Defendant allowed to confess (but seldom knew
    charges)
  • Defendant didnt have right to face accuser
  • Testimony was taken from all sorts

11
Defendants Rights
  • Defendants named those with mortal hatred
    against them.
  • If the accused was named, the defendant was
    released.
  • The accuser faced a life sentence.
  • This was meant to keep the Inquisition out of
    local grudges.

12
Torture
  • Used after 1252
  • A confession under torture was not admissable in
    court
  • The inquisitor could threaten torture
  • Torture was common in medieval judicial system
  • Torture used by Inquisition was mild in comparison

13
Torture
  • Forbidden to use methods that resulted in
    bloodshed, mutilation or death
  • One of the more common forms of medieval
    inquisition torture was known as strappado.
  • The hands were bound behind the back with a rope,
    and the accused was suspended this way,
    dislocating the joints painfully in both arms.
  • Weights could be added to the legs dislocating
    those joints as well.

14
Strappado
15
Another Torture Method the Rack
16
Punishment
  • Long pilgrimage for first offenders
  • Wearing a yellow cross for life
  • Confiscation of property
  • Banishment
  • Public recantation
  • Long-term imprisonment

17
Punishment
  • Burning at the stake was only for the most
    serious cases, including repeat offenders and
    unrepentant heretics.
  • Execution was done not by the Church, which was
    forbidden to kill, but by secular officials.

18
Punishment
  • The inquisitors generally preferred to persuade
    the heretic to repent.
  • They wanted to be perceived as merciful, and they
    generally preferred to keep defendants alive in
    hopes of obtaining confessions.
  • Bernard Gui executed 42 people out of over 900
    guilty verdicts in fifteen years of office.
  • Execution was to admit defeat, that the Church
    was unable to save a soul from heresy, which was
    the goal of the Inquisition.

19
No one expects the Spanish Inquisition!
20
Spanish Inquisition
  • Founded 1478 under Ferdinand Isabella
  • Thousands of Jews Muslims had settled in Spain
  • Theyd been forced to convert to Christianity to
    participate in business and government
  • These conversos made up a large portion of the
    wealthy and influential

21
Spanish Inquisition
  • Much anti-Semitism in Spain
  • Rumors spread that conversos continued to
    practice Judaism
  • Anti-conversos riots erupted
  • This upset the finally-united Spain
  • Ferdinand and Isabella took action

22
Spanish Inquisition
  • Didnt attack rioters
  • They attacked the conversos
  • Pope Sixtus IV gave permission for them to set up
    their own Inquisition
  • Tomas de Torquemada, Dominican friar, appointed
    Inquisitor General

23
Tomas de Torquemada
24
The Spanish Inquisitor-General
25
Spanish Inquisition
  • Ferocious in dealing with heretics
  • Within 10 years, 2,000 people had been burned at
    the stake
  • Another 15,000 suffered other penalties
  • Even the auto-da-fe was horrendous

26
Auto-da-fe
  • Act of faith
  • Final public ceremony of Spanish Inquisition
  • Crowds gathered in public square
  • A bishop called out names of condemned
  • Heretics led out, wearing black robes with red
    demons and flames
  • They were tied to the stakes

27
Auto-da-fe
  • A priest would ask if theyd given up their
    heresy to the church
  • Anyone who repented would be strangled to death
  • The others were burned
  • Their screams mingled with the crowds cheers

28
Spanish Inquisition Ends
  • In 1492, Ferdinand Isabella expelled all Jews
    who refused to convert
  • This paralyzed Spanish commerce
  • 100 years later, same resentment and fury turned
    toward Muslims
  • Spain never recovered as a commercial power

29
? The Inquisition ?
30
Protestant Reformation
  • In the 1500s, the Pope tried to use the
    Inquisition against the growing Protestant
    movement
  • Unsuccessful
  • Protestants had government allies
  • They were therefore protected
  • A single Europe had come apart

31
Inquisition Peters Out
  • The Inquisition began as an attack on a few sects
    of heretics
  • 300 years later, it could no longer hold Europe
    together
  • Religious and national wars were to last
    centuries and take hundreds of thousands of lives

32
Galileo
  • Galileo's belief in the Copernican System
    eventually got him into trouble with the Catholic
    Church.
  • A committee of consultants declared to the
    Inquisition that the Copernican proposition that
    the Sun is the center of the universe was a
    heresy.
  • Because Galileo supported the Copernican system,
    he was warned that he should not discuss or
    defend Copernican theories.

33
Galileo
  • In 1624, Galileo was assured by Pope Urban VIII
    that he could write about Copernican theory as
    long as he treated it as a mathematical
    proposition. However, with the printing of
    Galileo's book, Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief
    World Systems, Galileo was called to Rome in 1633
    to face the Inquisition again.
  • Galileo was ordered to stand trial on suspicion
    of heresy in 1633.

34
Galileos Sentence
  • Galileo was required to recant his heliocentric
    ideas, which were condemned as formally
    heretical.
  • He was ordered imprisoned the sentence was later
    commuted to house arrest.
  • His offending Dialogue was banned and in an
    action not announced at the trial, publication of
    any of his works was forbidden, including any he
    might write in the future.

35
The Inquisition
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