The inside of a jail of the Spanish Inquisition, with a priest supervising his scribe while men and women are suspended from pulleys, tortured on the rack or burnt with torches. Etching.
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- 43230i
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Description
The Spanish Inquisition was a council to combat heresy, authorized by a papal bull in 1478 and established by King Ferdinand II and Queen Isabella in 1480 as responsible to the Crown, not the Church. It used secret procedures and judicial torture, and burning its victims in public ceremonials. With its independence from papal interference, the Inquisition soon became an instrument of the Spanish Crown's build-up of absolute power in the 16th and 17th century. It was finally abolished in 1834
Publication/Creation
[Place of publication not identified] : [publisher not identified]
Physical description
1 print : etching, with engraving ; image 10.5 x 14.8 cm
Lettering
Inside view of a goal in the Inquisition, showing several other methods of torture and cruelty, not hitherto delineated in this work
Reference
Wellcome Collection 43230i
Type/Technique
Languages
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Location Status Access Closed stores