M
MrZetterlund
Guest
Thoughts and comments on first few minutes on this video:
youtube.com/watch?v=HAz30mbxhWc&feature=related
youtube.com/watch?v=HAz30mbxhWc&feature=related
Quick fact check:Thoughts and comments on first few minutes on this video:
youtube.com/watch?v=HAz30mbxhWc&feature=related
:clapping:Quick fact check:
Inquisition
Crusades
- Only Catholics could be brought to trial by the Inquisition.
- A person had to be found guilty twice to be executed.
- The Inquisition was actually run by the civil government of Spain, not the Church.
- The Inquisition jail was far preferred over the civil jail. Men were known to have comitted
blasphemy in order to be transferred to the Inquisition jail.- The Inquisition was actually begun by King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella, although with Rome’s permission, in order to root out Muslims who had “converted” to Catholicism for monetary and social benefits. If they were found still practicing the Muslim faith, they were brought to trial by the Inquisition.
- Yes, some people were executed, in horrible ways. But to put it in historical context, everyone in those days who was executed was done so horribly. Humane treatment of prisoners was not the order of the day.
- In the first 100 years of Islam, the Muslims wiped out all of Catholic North Africa and most of the Middle East, especially around Jerusalem. They spread Islam by the sword! They also pushed their attack into the Middle of Europe and were finally defeated by Charles “The Hammer” Martel and his army.
- The Muslims continued attacking through the centuries before the Crusades, even attacking Rome. They sacked the Vatican and dug up and burned bodies of some of the Saints there. The Church’s response at that time? Build a big wall around the city.
- Finally, the Muslims closed off the Holy Land to Catholic pilgrims altogether. This was the straw that broke the camel’s back. The Pope requested a Crusade to free the Holy Land so that the faithful could once again be able to make pilgrimages. In the meantime, to substitute, the Way of the Cross was created. On the way to Jerusalem, they defeated the Muslims who had surrounded then Catholic Constantinople.
- The Crusades were a very delayed response to centuries of Muslim aggression.
- The Crusaders only held Jerusalem for about 100 years, before being defeated by the Muslims once again.
- Subsequent Crusades were less and less effective. The last requested Crusade never even got off the ground. Interest had withered to nothing by the kingdoms requested to send soldiers.
This is a small thing, but did you know that the Inquisition was the very first judicial body in which every accused person had a right to be represented by counsel before he was questioned? And if the accused didn’t have one, one was provided for him?Thanks to those who’ve responded thus far to the OP. This is one subject (of many) that I need to learn more about.
WAAAAY better said than meQuick fact check:
Inquisition
Crusades
- Only Catholics could be brought to trial by the Inquisition.
- A person had to be found guilty twice to be executed.
- The Inquisition was actually run by the civil government of Spain, not the Church.
- The Inquisition jail was far preferred over the civil jail. Men were known to have comitted
blasphemy in order to be transferred to the Inquisition jail.- The Inquisition was actually begun by King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella, although with Rome’s permission, in order to root out Muslims who had “converted” to Catholicism for monetary and social benefits. If they were found still practicing the Muslim faith, they were brought to trial by the Inquisition.
- Yes, some people were executed, in horrible ways. But to put it in historical context, everyone in those days who was executed was done so horribly. Humane treatment of prisoners was not the order of the day.
- In the first 100 years of Islam, the Muslims wiped out all of Catholic North Africa and most of the Middle East, especially around Jerusalem. They spread Islam by the sword! They also pushed their attack into the Middle of Europe and were finally defeated by Charles “The Hammer” Martel and his army.
- The Muslims continued attacking through the centuries before the Crusades, even attacking Rome. They sacked the Vatican and dug up and burned bodies of some of the Saints there. The Church’s response at that time? Build a big wall around the city.
- Finally, the Muslims closed off the Holy Land to Catholic pilgrims altogether. This was the straw that broke the camel’s back. The Pope requested a Crusade to free the Holy Land so that the faithful could once again be able to make pilgrimages. In the meantime, to substitute, the Way of the Cross was created. On the way to Jerusalem, they defeated the Muslims who had surrounded then Catholic Constantinople.
- The Crusades were a very delayed response to centuries of Muslim aggression.
- The Crusaders only held Jerusalem for about 100 years, before being defeated by the Muslims once again.
- Subsequent Crusades were less and less effective. The last requested Crusade never even got off the ground. Interest had withered to nothing by the kingdoms requested to send soldiers.
A quick clarification. The Inquisition itself was a Church organization. It was a fact-finding body. The Spanish state was the “cop” and the “prosecutor”, so to speak. A man might, for instance, be accused to the State of being a fake convert from Islam. The State would arrest him. Before the Inquisition, they would usually just imprison or execute him as an enemy. Sometimes people didn’t even bother to go to the State with it, and just grabbed the guy and hanged him.The Inquisition was run by Spaniards who were Catholic, but that doesn’t necessarily mean the Church encouraged it, or that it was in control of it.
I could go on a rant about the Crusades, but to shorten it up a bit:
Christians had been massacred for centuries before the Crusades by Muslims trying to spread Islam, so that by the time they happened, all of North Africa was Muslim, as was Arabia and Turkey, with parts of Italy and Spain. The Crusades happened (at first) to defend Constantinople from being massacred (as there were many Christians there), and to make the Holy Land and other places Christian territory. That’s in short.