Open main menu

Changes

Inquisition

614 bytes removed, 15:39, 9 September 2009
Category:Catholic Church
__NOTOC__{{Infobox_Contents | topic_name =Inquisition | subtopics =Synopsis=[[Medieval Inquisition]] * [[Spanish Inquisition]] * [[Roman Inquisition]] * [[Portuguese Inquisition]]* [[Roman Catholicism]] | opinion_pieces ={{short_opinions}} |}}
The Inquisition refers broadly to a number of historical movements orchestrated by the [[Pope]] and aimed at securing Papal religious and financial authority in Europe through the conversion, and sometimes persecution, of alleged heretics. In Spain and Portugal, the auto da fes and pre-decided trials of accused heretics, often ended with men and women being burned alive. Spanish missionaries would later import the Inquisition to the New World, convicting and killing Central and South Americans who refused to convert to Catholicism from the early sixteenth century onward. There were four major movements, starting with the Medieval Inquisition in 1184 and ending with the Spanish Inquisition in 1834.
==Contents==The Inquisition refers broadly to a number of historical movements orchestrated by the [[Pope]] and aimed at securing Papal religious and financial authority in Europe through the conversion, and sometimes persecution, of alleged heretics.
{{topics}}* [[Medieval Inquisition]] | [[In Spain and Portugal, the ''auto da fes'' and pre-decided trials of accused heretics often ended with men and women being burned alive. Spanish missionaries would later import the Inquisition]] | [[Roman Inquisition]] | [[Portuguese Inquisition]]* [[Roman to the New World, convicting and killing Central and South Americans who refused to convert to Catholicism]]from the early sixteenth century onward.
{{opinions}}There were four major movements, starting with the Medieval Inquisition in 1184 and ending with the Spanish Inquisition in 1834.
{{quotes}}==Background==
==Main pageViews on the Inquisition==
The Inquisition refers broadly to a number of historical movements orchestrated by the [[Pope]] and aimed at securing Papal religious and financial authority in Europe through the conversion, and sometimes persecution, of alleged heretics. In Spain and Portugal, the auto da fes and pre-decided trials of accused heretics, often ended with men and women being burned alive. Spanish missionaries would later import the Inquisition to the New World, convicting and killing Central and South Americans who refused to convert to Catholicism from the early sixteenth century onward. There were four major movements, starting with the Medieval Inquisition in 1184 and ending with the Spanish Inquisition in 1834. ===Background=== ===Views on the Inquisition=Quotes==
==Links==
{{returnto}} [[Church history]]
[[Category:Church history]]
[[Category:Catholic Church]]
administrator, Bureaucrats, bureaucrats, editor, emailconfirmed, Administrators
11,540
edits