Early modern Europe
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From the 15th to the 19th century, inquisitions were permanently established, bureaucratically organized, appointed, and supervised tribunals of clergy (and occasionally laymen). They were charged with the discovery and extirpation of heterodox religious opinion and practice in Christian Europe. The institutional inquisitions were similar to other institutions of government and discipline in early modern Europe. The earliest, largest, and best-known of these was the Spanish Inquisition, established by Pope Sixtus IV at the petition of Ferdinand and Isabella, the rulers of Aragon and Castile, in a papal bull of Nov. 1, 1478. It was eventually extended throughout the Spanish empire in Europe and the Americas through a system of subordinate regional tribunals. It was formally abolished by the Spanish government in 1834. Later institutional inquisitions were established in Portugal in 1540 (abolished in 1821) and in Rome (for the Papal States and some other parts of Italy) in 1542; the latter was erected into the Congregation of the Holy Roman and Universal Inquisition, or Holy Office, one of the 15 secretariats into which the administrative reforms of Sixtus V (1585–90) divided papal government. (In 1965 the Holy Office was reorganized by Pope Paul VI and renamed the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.) In 1547 the government of Venice established a tribunal of laymen, which was converted into a tribunal of clergy by 1551 but closely monitored by the Venetian government. The Venetian inquisition lasted until 1797. Another institutional inquisition, that of the city of Lucca, established in 1545, was also originally staffed by laymen but then clericalized after a few years.
The Spanish and Portuguese tribunals were departments of state intended initially to detect crypto-Judaism among Jewish converts to Christianity and their descendants and later to detect and eradicate Protestant Christianity. The Roman and other inquisitions were also departments of state, designed chiefly to combat Protestantism, which was conceived and defined as heresy in Catholic territories. All inquisitions had the power to supervise and discipline the moral failings of both clergy and laity.
These institutional inquisitions, some scholars have argued, differed from earlier inquisitorial tribunals established by papal delegation in various parts of western Europe in the 13th century and intermittently thereafter, because the earlier tribunals were either those of individual bishops acting in their ordinary judicial capacity or those of individuals commissioned by the pope to extirpate heresy in specific places or for specific periods. They used similar procedures, sometimes communicating with each other, and were instructed by the same handbooks of doctrine and procedure, but possessed no common organization or other institutional features. Although early inquisitorial practices in some instances moved toward institutionalization, only those of the 16th century displayed full institutional characteristics.
Procedures and organization
The institutional inquisitions bore a number of common features. Their officials were systematically recruited, appointed, and replaced, and they used well-defined and distinctive legal procedures. The inquisition possessed a vertical command-and-review structure, which required regular reports from subordinate branches, visitations and review of the activities of subordinate and regional branches, operational instructions, and preservation and regular consultation of archives. The inquisitions were also characterized by signs and insignia of membership and autonomous control of institutional finances and public activities (in Spain, the well-known autos-da-fé).
In some cases the institutional inquisitions themselves exerted considerable control over the prosecution of offenses that other courts treated with less consistency. In 1610 the Spanish inquisitor Alonso Salazar de Frias was sent by his superiors to review the evidence in a series of trials for witchcraft in northern Spain. When Salazar de Frias reported that he found insufficient evidence for conviction, and in spite of protests from two other fellow inquisitors, his program for the reform of witchcraft trials by the Spanish Inquisition was accepted and made official by the Supreme Council in 1614. In this case the institutional structure of the inquisition virtually eliminated accusations of and trials for witchcraft throughout the range of its jurisdiction.
All of the institutional inquisitions worked in secrecy, except for closely regulated public appearances. Their secrecy permitted those who opposed them to speculate about and often fictionalize dramatically their secret activities, producing many of the myths about inquisitions that are found in European literature from the 16th century to the present.
Edward Peters