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The Inquisition: A Global History 1478-1834 (Past and Present Publications)

The Inquisition: A Global History 1478-1834 (Past and Present Publications)

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Francisco Bethencourt
Cambridge University Press, 10/15/2009
EAN 9780521748230, ISBN10: 0521748232

Paperback, 504 pages, 22.8 x 15 x 2.2 cm
Language: English

The Inquisition was the most powerful disciplinary institution in the early modern world, responsible for 300,000 trials and over 1.5 million denunciations. How did it root itself in different social and ethnic environments? Why did it last for three centuries? What cultural, social and political changes led to its abolition? In this first global comparative study, Francisco Bethencourt examines the Inquisition's activities in Spain, Italy, Portugal and overseas Iberian colonies. He demonstrates that the Inquisition played a crucial role in the Catholic Reformation, imposing its own members in papal elections, reshaping ecclesiastical hierarchy, defining orthodoxy, controlling information and knowledge, influencing politics and framing daily life. He challenges both traditionalist and revisionist perceptions of the tribunal. Bethencourt shows the Inquisition as an ever evolving body, eager to enlarge jurisdiction and obtain political support to implement its system of values, but also vulnerable to manipulation by rulers, cardinals, and local social elites.

Introduction
1. Foundation
2. Organisation
3. Presentation
4. Appointments
5. The edicts
6. The visits
7. The auto-da-fé
8. Status
9. Representations
10. Abolition
Conclusion.