📖 God's Jury

Established by the Catholic Church in 1231, the Inquisition continued in one form or another for almost seven hundred years. Though associated with the persecution of heretics and Jews and with burning at the stake it's targets were more numerous and it's techniques more ambitious. The Inquisition pioneered surveillance, censorship, and "scientific" interrogation. As time went on, it's methods and mindset spread far beyond the Church to become tools of secular persecution. Traveling from freshly opened Vatican archives to the detention camps of Guantánamo to the filing cabinets of the Third Reich, the acclaimed writer Cullen Murphy traces the Inquisition and it's legacy, showing that not only did it's offices survive into the twentieth century, but in the modern world it's spirit is more influential than ever. With the combination of vivid immediacy and learned analysis that characterized his acclaimed "Are We Rome?", Murphy puts a human face on a familiar but little-known piece of our past and argues that only by understanding the Inquisition can we hope to explain the making of the present.

О книге

автор, издательство, серия
Издательство
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Год
2013