History of Torture: Papal Inquisition
By
the 13th century, the dream of a lasting crusader kingdom in the Holy
Lands was starting to fade. Pope Innocent III then turned the zeal
of the
crusaders against fellow Christians. In 1202, the Fourth Crusade was
launched which later captured Constantinople. Next, in 1209, Innocent
III
launched a crusade against the Cathars in southern France (Languedoc
region). This bloody action, known to history as the Albigensian Crusade,
would directly lead to the establishment of the first Inquisition.
The Albigensian Crusade (so named, because the French city of Albi
was a Cathar
stronghold), lasted for 20 years, from 1209 to 1229. While authorized
by the pope, the actual fighting was carried out primarily by secular
forces,
especially under Simon de Montfort. The suppression of the Cathar
heresy established new standards for ferocity for the
Roman Church in dealing
with its own flock. Perhaps the most famous example was on July 22,
1209, when the city of Beziers was sacked, with over 20,000 men, women
and
children killed by crusaders. The event will forever be framed in
history by the words of papal legate Arnaud, whom, when asked if Catholics
should be
spared during the assault, answered Kill them all, for God knows
His own. Wholesale burnings of Cathars were carried out during
the Crusade,
including 400 burnt after the fall of Lavaur in 1211, and 94 burnt
after the fall of Casses in the same year. It was against this backdrop
that Pope
Gregory IX instituted the Papal Inquisition in 1227/31. While the
Albigensian Crusade had wiped out most of the Cathar strongholds,
there were still
heretics to be hunted down and burned many of whom had gone
into hiding during the years of the Crusade. Examples of post-Crusade
slaughter of
the Cathars include 183 burned in Montwimer (Marne) in 1239, and the
burning of 215 Cathar perfecti at the Castle of Montsegur in 1244
(sometimes
referred to as the Massacre at Montsegur.) And while the Cathars were
the initial targets of the Inquisition (so much so that, for many
years, the term
Cathar was used synonymously with heretic),
the scope of the Papal Inquisition would eventually range much wider
and further than the Cathars.
Ultimately, it would include victims such as the Waldensians, Fraticelli
(a splinter group of the Franciscans), the Knights Templar, and (much
later)
Protestants. By 1233, the Dominicans (the order founded by St. Dominic
in 1217) were given the primary charter to act as Inquisitors, joined
shortly
after by the Franciscans (founded by St. Francis of Assisi in 1209/10).
Curiously, the first 100 years of the Papal Inquisition could be said
to have
been a battle between ascetic groups. Many of the members of these
groups were referred to as mendicant friars, meaning they received
sustenance
by begging. By the 12th/13th centuries, many members of the Roman
Catholic clergy were known for their rather profligate living styles,
including
many monastics. A number of groups rose up during this period that
believed that the church should return to the example set by the apostles
in Acts
the church should own no possessions. Further, they believed
that clergy should earn the respect of the people by giving up worldly
goods, and going
out into the world to preach the gospel. (The argument between the
ascetics and the status-quo-Church is well laid out in the book (and
resulting
movie) The Name of the Rose, by Umberto Eco). Today, it can initially
be difficult to understand why some ascetic groups (such as the Dominicans
and
Franciscans) were openly welcomed by the church (and indeed, were
the first Inquisitors), while other ascetic groups (the Waldensians,
the Cathars,
the Fraticelli) were hunted down and burned at the stake. The answer,
though, is rather clear the former groups submitted to the
authority of the
Church, while the latter groups ultimately rejected the authority
of pope and clergy. It should be noted that prior to the institution
of the Papal
Inquisition in 1227/31, local bishops had the authority to investigate,
and try heretics in local ecclesiastical courts. What made the Inquisition
distinctive is that the Inquisitors theoretically answered only to
the pope not to the local bishop, nor even to the heads of
their Order. This autonomy
allowed the Inquisition to act as an independent tribunal, able to
go where it wanted, when it wanted, and try whom it wanted
with no interference
allowed from local secular or ecclesiastical authorities. (Those that
tried to interfere with the autonomy of the Inquisition were, of course,
branded as
heretics themselves). By end of the 15th century, the original Papal
Inquisition (created, remember, to eradicate the Cathars) had pretty
much run its
course (no one left to burn!). However, the flames of the Inquisition
would receive new life in the mid-16th century, as the Papal Inquisition
was
reconstituted to fight a new perceived enemy of the Roman Church
the Protestants. By the 1540s, the Roman Catholic Church was reeling
from the
affects of Protestantism all through Europe. While once the pope reigned
supreme over all of Western Christendom, by 1540, whole countries
had been
lost to Protestant usurpers, including England (Henry VIII), Germany
(Luther) and Switzerland (Calvin). France, too, was starting to look
shaky, as a
growing community of Calvinists were asserting their rights there.
And (unthinkably!) Protestantism was even making inroads into Italy
itself! The
Roman Church viewed that something must be done to stem the tide of
defections. The set of methodologies employed to do so is collectively
known
as the Counter-Reformation. The Counter Reformation used several methods
to attempt to save the church. One was to call a great church council
-
the Council of Trent met from 15451563, and enacted many church
reforms, and restated basic Catholic beliefs. Other methods included
the
creation of a new militant religious order (the Jesuits), and open
warfare against Protestant strongholds (The 30 Years War, in Germany).
And one
more tool was used with ruthless efficiency the Inquisition.
On June 21, 1542, Pope Paul III reconstituted the Papal Inquisition
(in the Licet ab
initio Bull) as the Congregation of the Inquisition, or
the Holy Office (Sanctum Officium). The Pope appointed
a commission to administer the
Inquisition, and made Cardinal Giovanni Caraffa the Grand Inquisitor.
Caraffa made his intentions clear with statements such as the following:
No man must debase himself by showing toleration toward heretics
of any kind, above all toward Calvinists Cardinal Caraffa
(later Paul IV), 1542
(Durant, The Reformation, p. 925) In 1555, the Grand Inquisitor
became Pope Paul IV. Paul IV increased the power of the Inquisition
in both Italy
and Spain. In 1559, he published the first Index of Forbidden Books
(Index auctoreum et librorum prohibitorum). Eventually, the works
of all of the
major Reformers would appear on the list Calvin, Zwingli, Luther,
etc. Paul IV was also noted for charming sentiments such as the following
Even if
my own father was a heretic, I would gather the wood to burn him.
After the death of Paul IV in 1559, Europe received a respite from
the Inquisition for several years. However, in 1566, Grand Inquisitor
Michele
Ghislieri (so appointed by Paul IV) became Pope Pius V (1566-1572)
the second time in little over a decade that a Grand Inquisitor
became Pope
(in 1585, a former inquisitor again became pope as Sixtus V). Under
Pius V, torture again became a common weapon in the Papal Inquisition.
On June
23, 1566, Pius V organized the first of what were to be many public
auto-da-fés (acts of faith) in Rome itself - beheadings
and burnings became
common occurrences. The reconstituted Papal Inquisition was especially
successful in Italy almost all vestiges of incipient Protestantism
were
wiped out by the end of the 16th century. The most famous victim of
the reconstituted Papal Inquisition, though, would come in the 17th
century.
Galileo Galilei was brought up on charges before the court of Inquisition
in February of 1633, for publishing The Great Systems of the Universe,
which
backed the Copernican/Kepler views of the movement of the planets
(i.e. that the Earth revolved around the Sun). Unfortunately, Galileo
had been
warned in 1616 by Cardinal Bellarmine to stay out of the debate regarding
whether the earth orbited the sun. Thus, when brought before the Inquisition
in 1633, he was determined to be a recidivist, and was sentenced to
life imprisonment. The sentence was later softened by the pope to
be house
arrest. Like Joan of Arc before him, the Inquisitorial charge and
sentence against Galileo was eventually overturned when it was too
late to help in
October 1992, by Pope John Paul II. So when did the Papal Inquisition
officially end? The Congregation of the Holy Office was officially
supplanted by
the Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith during Vatican II
in 1962/65!