000 02238cam a22003251 4500
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003 BJBSDDR
005 20241021094608.0
007 ta
008 750718s1965 enkab b 000 0 eng
010 _a66041184
015 _aGB65-18974
035 _a7067181
035 _a(OCoLC)1460157
040 _aDLC
_cVtMiM
_dOCoLC
_dUk
_dDLC
_beng
041 _aeng
050 1 4 _aBX 1735
_bK15s 1965
100 1 _aKamen, Henry A.,
_d1936-
_939005
245 1 4 _aThe Spanish Inquisition /
_cHenry Kamen.
260 _aLondon :
_bWeidenfeld and Nicolson,
_c[1965]
300 _ax, 339 pages :
_b illustrations, map ;
_c23 cm.
440 0 _aMack H. Singleton memorial collection
_939009
504 _aBibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 307-327)
505 0 _aIntroductory The great dispersion The coming of the Inquisition A minority opposition 'Silence has been imposed' The end of Morisco Spain Race purity and racialism The Spanish Inquisition: its organization The Spanish Inquisition: its procedure The Spanish Inquisition: trial and condemnation Special spheres of jurisdiction The last days of the conversos Political conflict In defence of the ancien regime The abolition of the Inquisition A final reassessment
520 _aDeals extensively with the persecution of Conversos after the expulsion. States that the expulsion created new problems, provoked social discord, and was criticized by Spaniards both then and thereafter. Discusses the activities of the Inquisition, anti-Converso polemics, and opposition to them. The early decades of the Inquisition effectively destroyed underground Judaism. From the mid-16th century, feeling against Jews showed itself more in prejudice than in persecution. Racial prejudice was commonplace in Spanish society long before the Inquisition became powerful; the Inquisition, therefore, was a product of the society it served, and was not to blame for Spain's political and cultural decline. (From the Bibliography of the Vidal Sassoon International Center for the Study of Antisemitism)
650 0 _aInquisition
_zSpain.
650 4 _aInquisición
_zEspaña
_917249
650 4 _aHistoria de la iglesia
_zEspaña
_9543
942 _2lcc
_cBK
999 _c94128
_d94128