Read God's Jury: The Inquisition and the Making of the Modern World Online
Authors: Cullen Murphy
Tags: #Non-Fiction, #History, #Research, #Society, #Religion
end of,
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, 141–42, 167–68
Pastor, Ludwig von,
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Patai, Raphael: and survival of crypto-Jews,
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,
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Paul approves censorship,
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Paul III
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establishes Roman Inquisition,
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Paul IV
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censors art,
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persecutes Jews,
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and Portuguese Inquisition,
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promotes Roman Inquisition, 105–6,
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Ranke on, 105–6
Paul V and Roman Inquisition, 106–7
Paul VI and Graham Greene,
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and Second Vatican Council,
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pedophilia scandals: Vatican’s archives and,
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Pentacostalism: crypto-Jews and, 161–62
Peters, Edward: on Inquisition, 12–13
on torture,
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Petrarch,
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Phenomenon of Man, The
(Teilhard de Chardin)
Holy Office forbids publication of,
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Philip IV suppresses Knights Templar, 63–64, 107–8
Picart, Bernard & Jean-Frédéric Bernard
Religious Ceremonies of the World,
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Piers Ploughman,
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Pius V
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promulgates
Regnans in Excelsis,
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wages campaign against England, 193–94
Pius IX loses Papal States, 141–42, 167–68
promulgates Syllabus of Errors (1864), 110–11,
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Pius X condemns Modernism,
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Pius XI
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Pius XII5
and World War II,
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Pizzardo, Giuseppe
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Poe, Edgar Allan,
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Poindexter, Adm. John: on desirability of surveillance, 211–12
heads Total Information Awareness Office,
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police systems: Kamen on, 100–101
Porter, Henry:
The Bell Ringers,
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Portugal: independence from Spain,
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Portuguese Inquisition,
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,
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,
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in Brazil,
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final suppression of, 166–67
and Hinduism,
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in India, 165–66
Pope Paul IV and,
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power: portability of,
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Power and the Glory, The
(Greene)
Holy Office displeasure with, 174–76
preemptive action: national security and, 212–13
printing revolution: and Catholic Church, 112–14
Eisenstein on, 114–15
Prisoner Without a Name, Cell Without a Number
(Timerman),
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privacy: surveillance and erosion of, 210–11
Protestantism: in England, 191–92
Prudentius Clemens, Aurelius:
Psychomachia,
246–47
Psychomachia
(Prudentius), 246–47
Pueblo Revolt: in New Mexico (1680), 144–45,
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“purity of blood”: Inquisition and,
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, 97–98,
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Putin, Vladimir: secret police under, 198–99
Quest for the Living God
(Johnson): Catholic Church criticizes,
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Question, La
(Alleg),
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Quintana, Miguel de,
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rack: as torture technique, 91–92
Ranke, Leopold von: on Pope Paul IV, 105–6
Ratzinger, Josef
See also
Benedict XVI
fires editor of
America,
180–81
and opening of Inquisition archives, 14–15, 109–10
Reese’s confrontation with, 180–81
at Second Vatican Council, 177–78
signs Nijmegen Declaration,
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and disciplining of Küng,
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Rauf, Feisal Abdul, 242–43
record-keeping: by Inquisition, 42–43,
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, 58–59,
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,
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,
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,
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,
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,
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, 151–52,
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,
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,
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,
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,
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, 228–29
official repression and,
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secular inquisition and, 199–201
“Red Scare” 39–40,
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, 213–14
Reese, Thomasconfrontation with Ratzinger, 181–82
Inside the Vatican,
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Reformation.
See
Protestantism
Regnans in Excelsis:
Pope Pius V promulgates,
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Rejali, Darius: on torture,
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religion, evangelical, 241–43
and book-burning,
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in Iraq War, 32–33, 244–45
and moral certainty, 244–45
Palin and,
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in U.S. Army,
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Religious Ceremonies of the World
(Picart & Bernard),
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religious warfare: in England, 190–95,
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and modernity, 31–33
Remnick, David,
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repression, official: and record-keeping,
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secular inquisition as tool of, 23–24, 188–90
Reprieve (prisoner-defense organization), 223–24
Rerum Novarum
168–69
Restitution of Christianity, The
(Servetus),
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Ricci, Francesco,
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Roman Curia,
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Roman Inquisition, 11–12,
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, 104–13, 117–26, 127–42
bureaucratic blindness in, 121–23,
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censors Erasmus,
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censors vernacular Bibles,
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and Jews,
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leads Counter-Reformation,
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Pope Paul III establishes,
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Pope Paul IV promotes, 105–6,
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Pope Paul V supports, 106–7
prosecutes & executes Bruno,
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,
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, 127–29,
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,
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,
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,
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,
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,
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prosecutes & executes Scandella,
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, 136–39
prosecutes Mocenigo, 111–12
records dispersed, 108–9, 132–33
records in Vatican’s archives, 107–8
Santa Maria sopra Minerva as outpost of, 103–4, 106–7,
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and witchcraft, 134–36
Rosas, Luis de murdered by Church supporters,
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Roth, Henry: “The Surveyor,”
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,
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Rule of Benedict, The
(Gibson),
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Rumsfeld, Donald: approves torture,
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Rushdie, Salman:
The Satanic Verses,
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Russia: censorship in, 115–16,
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secret police in, 198–99
Rynne, Xavier
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Sacred Congregation of the Holy Office, 2–3,
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,
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,
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,
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.
See also
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF), Inquisition
Cardinal Frings condemns,
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censorship of Teilhard de Chardin, 172–73,
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criticizes Graham Greene, 173–76
surveillance by,
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takes over functions of Inquisition (1908),
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Sacred Congregation of the Universal Inquisition.
See
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF), Inquisition, Sacred Congregation of the Holy Office
Salem witch trials,
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Samlesbury Witches,
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Sanchez, Ricardo 32–33
Sandel, Michael:
The Case for Imperfection,
247–48
Sands, Philippe: on Guantánamo detention facility, 220–23
Santa Fe (New Mexico): diversity in, 143–44
Spanish reconquest of (1693), 144–45,
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Santa Maria sopra Minerva as outpost of Roman Inquisition, 103–4, 106–7,
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Santori, Giulio Antonio as Inquisitor General, 110–11,
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Sarpi, Paolo: on Council of Trent,
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Sartre, Jean-Paul:
The Age of Reason,
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Satanic Verses, The
(Rushdie),
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Savonarola: promotes censorship,
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Scandella, Domenico (“Menocchio”): Roman Inquisition prosecutes & executes,
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, 136–39
Schillebeeckx, Edward
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CDF questions, 178–79
scholarship, modern: and Inquisition, 19–21,
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, 185–88, 230–31
Scholes, France V.: on Inquisition in New Mexico,
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,
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,
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science: Roman Inquisition censors,
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,
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,
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,
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Searle, John,
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secrecy: national security and, 234–35
Secrecy and Deceit
(Gitlitz),
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,
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secret police: Fichte on,
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in France, 197–98
under Napoleon,
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and national security, 197–99,
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Orthodox Church’s close ties to,
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in Russia, 198–99
surveillance by,
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, 205–7
Senor, Abraham,
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Servetus, Michael: execution of,
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,
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The Restitution of Christianity,
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Shakespeare, William, 69–70,
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sharia law, 243–44
Silvestrini, Achille
“slippery slope” argument, 47–48
Smith, Clive Stafford: challenges U.S. torture policies, 223–24
Sotilo, Ramon,
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Southworth, Christopher interrogated & detained, 196–97
Spain: anti-Semitism in,
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,
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Black Death in,
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and “Black Legend,”
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, 187–88
England’s ideological struggle against,
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,
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,
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,
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, 190–95
Inquisition operates under government control,
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, 79–81, 84–85
Inquisition’s cultural legacy in, 85–86, 232–33
medieval social divisions in,
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Portuguese independence from,
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Pueblo Revolt against (1680), 144–45
reconquers Santa Fe (1693), 144–45,
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settles New Mexico, 154–55
Spanish empire: censorship in,
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