Read God's Jury: The Inquisition and the Making of the Modern World Online
Authors: Cullen Murphy
Tags: #Non-Fiction, #History, #Research, #Society, #Religion
as heresy,
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and war on terror,
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Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems
(Galileo),
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Dick, Philip K.: “The Minority Report,”
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Disraeli, Benjamin: on Lea,
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Divine Milieu, The
(Teilhard de Chardin): Holy Office forbids publication of, 172–73
DNA research: crypto-Jews and,
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Dominican Order,
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mission of, 48–49
Dondaine, Antoine,
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Dostoyevsky, Feodor: “The Grand Inquisitor,” 13–14
doubt in theology,
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Duffy, Eamon,
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on Church’s anti-Modernist oath,
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on English religious wars, 190–92,
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Fires of Faith,
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Dulles, Avery (cardinal),
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,
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duress
torture and psychology of, 88–90
Echelon (surveillance system),
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Eco, Umberto:
The Name of the Rose,
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,
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Egypt: control of Internet in, 239–40
Eisenstein, Elizabeth: on printing revolution, 114–15
El Greco Paints the Grand Inquisitor
(Andres),
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Elizabeth I (queen): and Catholic Church,
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,
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, 193–94
censorship under,
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executions under,
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intelligence operations under,
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, 192–93, 194–95
torture under, 194–95
England.
See also
Great Britain
expels Jews, 73–74
identity cards in,
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Inquisition in,
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Pope Pius V wages campaign against, 193–94
Protestantism in, 191–92
religious warfare in, 190–95,
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witchcraft in,
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Erasmus, Desiderius: Roman Inquisition censors,
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“ethnic cleansing,”
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Everyman
(play),
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Ex corde Ecclesiae
(1990): and control of universities,
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executions: by Inquisition, 28–29, 45–47, 66–68,
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,
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, 129–32, 152–54,
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methods of, 46–47, 67–68
under Queen Elizabeth I,
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“extraordinary rendition”: and torture,
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,
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Eymerich, Nicholas: instruction manual for inquisitors, 48–49, 51–53,
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,
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,
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Fahrenheit 451
(Bradbury),
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Fallows, James: on Chinese censorship,
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Faulkner, William,
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Fichte, Johann Gottlieb: on secret police,
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Fires of Faith
(Duffy),
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Formation of a Persecuting Society, The
(Moore),
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Fouché, Joseph: as head of Napoleon’s secret police,
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Fournier, Jacques (bishop): interrogates population of Montaillou, 58–59, 61–63,
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,
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,
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as Pope Benedict XII,
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Fox, Matthew (father): silenced & expelled,
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France: censorship in, 197–98
expels Jews,
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secret police in, 197–98
Franciscan Order: as inquisitors, 22–23,
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,
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Friends of the Inquisition Archives program, 16–17,
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Frings, Josef (cardinal),
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condemns Holy Office,
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Frogs, The
(Aristophanes),
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Funeral in Berlin
(Deighton),
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Gaffney, Frank,
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Galileo Galilei,
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,
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,
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,
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Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems,
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Pope Urban VIII and,
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Geneva Conventions: U.S. abrogates,
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Germany: secret police in,
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,
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surveillance in,
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Gibbon, Edward, 71–72
on portability of power,
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Gibson, David:
The Rule of Benedict,
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Gingrich, Newt,
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Ginzburg, Carlo:
I Benandanti,
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, 135–36
The Cheese and the Worms,
136–37
presses for opening of Inquisition archives, 14–15,
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Gitlitz, David M.:
Secrecy and Deceit,
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,
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globalization: and Spanish empire, 149–50
Goa (India): Jewish community in,
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Portuguese Inquisition in,
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, 165–66
Godman, Peter: research in Inquisition archives, 110–11, 122–23,
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on self-censorship, 126–27
Goldman Sachs: censorship by,
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Google, 218–19,
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and censorship,
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government: bureaucracy in, 234–35
Catholic Church’s relationship with, 21–22
and control of Internet, 239–41
and control of Spanish Inquisition,
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, 79–81, 84–85
secular inquisition as tool of repression by, 23–24, 188–90, 233–34
Goya, Francisco: and Spanish Inquisition,
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Grafton, Anthony,
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Graham, Franklin,
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“Grand Inquisitor, The” (Dostoyevsky), 13–14
Grately, Edmund: as English spy,
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Gratian:
Concordia discordantium canonum,
38–39,
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Great Britain.
See also
England
complicity & collusion in torture, 223–24
surveillance in, 208–11
Greene, Graham,
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, 17–18
Holy Office criticizes, 173–76
Pope Paul VI and,
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The Power and the Glory,
174–76
Gregory IX (pope): establishes Inquisition (1231),
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,
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Griffin, Bernard (cardinal),
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Guantánamo Bay: U.S. acquires,
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Guantánamo detention facility, 215–23
censorship at, 218–19
interrogation & torture at, 215–17, 220–21
radicalization of detainees at,
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religion at, 219–20
Sands on, 220–23
Guevara, Niño de (cardinal): as Grand Inquisitor,
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Gui, Bernard, 44–45,
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,
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,
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,
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,
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Liber Sententiarum,
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, 249–50
habeus corpus: Guantánamo evades, 216–17
Hannity, Sean,
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Häring, Bernard (father),
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CDF interrogates, 179–80
Harry Potter books,
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inquisition depicted in, 18–19
Harvey, David: on modernity,
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hatred and intolerance: and inquisition,
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Hayden, Michael V.: on torture, 222–23
Henry VIII (king), 191–92
Hentoff, Nat: on censorship,
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heresy:
benandanti
and,
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canon law and, 38–39
Cathar thought as, 9–10, 28–29, 30–35,
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defenses against,
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deviance as,
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prevalent in medieval world, 33–34, 36–38
as treason,
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Hidalgo y Costilla, Miguel (father): Inquisition condemns,
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Hinduism: Portuguese Inquisition and,
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Histoire Critique de l’Inquisition d’Espagne
(Llorente),
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Historia Inquisitionis
(Limborch),
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History of the Inquisition of the Middle Ages
(Lea),
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,
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Hitchens, Christopher: on waterboarding,
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Hoess, Rudolf,
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Hojeda, Alonzo de, 66–67,
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Hoover, J. Edgar: and “Red Scare,” 213–14
Hordes, Stanley M.: and survival of crypto-Jews, 162–63
humility, 246–48,
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Humphrey (duke of Gloucester),
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identity cards: in England,
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Ignatieff, Michael: on torture,
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imprimatur: censorship and power of,
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,
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,
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,
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Index of Forbidden Books,
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,
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,
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.
See also
censorship, Congregation of the Index
abolished,
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Tedeschi on, 123–24
Index on Censorship,
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information revolution: in medieval world, 41–43
launches Albigensian crusade,
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Innocent IV (pope): authorizes torture, 55–56
Inquisition.
See also
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF), Sacred Congregation of the Holy Office
affected by “mission creep,” 150–54
in Africa,
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and auto-da-fé ritual, 65–66
Bethencourt on decline of, 140–41,
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“body count” of,
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and communications revolution, 148–49
conspiracy theorists and, 20–21
cultural legacy in Spain, 85–86, 232–33
in England,
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established in Spanish empire,
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executions by, 28–29, 45–47, 66–68,
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,
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,
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, 131–32, 152–54,
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Kamen on, 97–100
Lea as scholar of, 185–86,
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Medieval, 9–10, 22–23, 25–29, 30–31, 33–35, 37–39, 41–59, 61–64,
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,
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, 101–2,
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,
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as metaphor, 7–8, 12–13
methods & procedures, 22–23, 34–35, 82–84, 131–32
modern scholarship and, 19–21,
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, 185–88, 230–31
Netanyahu on, 96–97,
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operates in Spain under government control,
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, 79–81, 84–85
organization of, 3–4, 11–12
Peters on, 12–13
Pope John Paul II apologizes for,
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, 231–32
and portability of power,
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in Portugal & empire,
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, 150–51
in Portuguese India,
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, 165–66
psychological effects of,
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