Sunday, September 23, 2012

Week 3: The Spanish Inquisition

Today we learned about the Spanish Inquisition. It happened from around 1480 all the way until the 1840s. It started when many Jews fled Rome, to go to North Africa, and then to Spain. Of course, Spain didn't want them any more than Greece, Rome, or North Africa. They forced them to convert to Christianity. These new converts were called conversos. The Christians did not like the conversos because they felt they were 'fake' Christians. The felt as if the only reason they had become Christian is because they were told to by gunpoint (not literally, of course). They believed that all of the new Christians still practiced Judaism. Some Jews did still practice Judaism, but not all of them. The Spaniards went to the Pope and asked him for permission to an inquisition. An inquisition is a huge questioning, in this case, on the subject matter of Religion. They killed anyone who had the slightest trace of Judaism on them. They paid neighbors, household services, and even family to spy on these conversos to find evidence of them still being a secret Jew. If all your evidence was that your brother had heard from his friend's aunt, who heard from a baker, that someone ate meat during lent, they would be arrested.

1 comment:

  1. Great post, Auggie! You have so much information. The Spanish Inquisition is fascinating, especially for something that is so often overlooked. Your last sentence is especially interesting. Think about if that's how things worked here and now. People would probably lie to get someone they didn't like thrown in jail (even if they were innocent). Do you think that happened in the Spanish Inquisition?

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