Holy Office forbids publication of, [>]
Philip IV suppresses Knights Templar, 63–64, 107–8
Picart, Bernard & Jean-Frédéric Bernard
Religious Ceremonies of the World, [>]
Piers Ploughman, [>]
Pius V [>]
promulgates Regnans in Excelsis, [>]
wages campaign against England, 193–94
Pius IX loses Papal States, 141–42, 167–68
promulgates Syllabus of Errors (1864), 110–11, [>]
Pius X condemns Modernism, [>]
Pius XI [>]
Pius XII5
and World War II, [>]
Pizzardo, Giuseppe [>]
Poe, Edgar Allan, [>]
Poindexter, Adm. John: on desirability of surveillance, 211–12
heads Total Information Awareness Office, [>]
police systems: Kamen on, 100–101
Porter, Henry: The Bell Ringers, [>]
Portugal: independence from Spain, [>]
Inquisition in, [>], [>], [>]
Portuguese Inquisition, [>], [>], [>]
in Brazil, [>]
final suppression of, 166–67
and Hinduism, [>]
in India, 165–66
Pope Paul IV and, [>]
power: portability of, [>]
Power and the Glory, The (Greene)
Holy Office displeasure with, 174–76
preemptive action: national security and, 212–13
Prescott, William H., [>], [>]
printing revolution: and Catholic Church, 112–14
Eisenstein on, 114–15
Prisoner Without a Name, Cell Without a Number (Timerman), [>]
privacy: surveillance and erosion of, 210–11
Protestantism: in England, 191–92
Roman Inquisition combats, [>], [>], [>], [>], [>], 119–20
Prudentius Clemens, Aurelius: Psychomachia, 246–47
Psychomachia (Prudentius), 246–47
Pueblo Revolt: in New Mexico (1680), 144–45, [>]
“purity of blood”: Inquisition and, [>], 97–98, [>]
Putin, Vladimir: secret police under, 198–99
Quest for the Living God (Johnson): Catholic Church criticizes, [>]
Question, La (Alleg), [>]
Quintana, Miguel de, [>]
rack: as torture technique, 91–92
Ranke, Leopold von: on Pope Paul IV, 105–6
Ratzinger, Josef See also Benedict XVI
fires editor of America, 180–81
as head of CDF, 2–3, [>], [>], [>], 180–81, 225–26
and opening of Inquisition archives, 14–15, 109–10
Reese’s confrontation with, 180–81
at Second Vatican Council, 177–78
signs Nijmegen Declaration, [>]
and disciplining of Küng, [>]
Rauf, Feisal Abdul, 242–43
Raymond VI [>], [>]
record-keeping: by Inquisition, 42–43, [>], 58–59, [>], [>], [>], [>], [>], [>], 151–52, [>], [>], [>], [>], [>], 228–29
official repression and, [>]
secular inquisition and, 199–201
“Red Scare” 39–40, [>], 213–14
Reese, Thomasconfrontation with Ratzinger, 181–82
Inside the Vatican, [>]
Reformation. See Protestantism
Regnans in Excelsis: Pope Pius V promulgates, [>]
Rejali, Darius: on torture, [>]
religion, evangelical, 241–43
and book-burning, [>]
in Iraq War, 32–33, 244–45
and moral certainty, 244–45
Palin and, [>]
in U.S. Army, [>]
Religious Ceremonies of the World (Picart & Bernard), [>]
religious warfare: in England, 190–95, [>]
and modernity, 31–33
Remnick, David, [>]
repression, official: and record-keeping, [>]
secular inquisition as tool of, 23–24, 188–90
Reprieve (prisoner-defense organization), 223–24
Rerum Novarum 168–69
Restitution of Christianity, The (Servetus), [>]
Ricci, Francesco, [>]
Roman Curia, [>]
Roman Inquisition, 11–12, [>], 104–13, 117–26, 127–42
bureaucratic blindness in, 121–23, [>]
censors Descartes, [>], [>]
censors Erasmus, [>]
censors science, [>], [>], [>], [>]
censors vernacular Bibles, [>]
censorship by, 69–70, 118–26, [>], [>]
combats Protestantism, [>], [>], [>], [>], [>], 119–20
and Jews, [>]
leads Counter-Reformation, [>]
mob attacks, [>], [>]
Pope Paul III establishes, [>]
Pope Paul IV promotes, 105–6, [>]
Pope Paul V supports, 106–7
prosecutes & executes Bruno, [>], [>], 127–29, [>], [>], [>], [>], [>], [>]
prosecutes & executes Scandella, [>], 136–39
prosecutes Galileo, [>], [>], 127–28, 129–31
prosecutes Mocenigo, 111–12
records dispersed, 108–9, 132–33
records in Vatican’s archives, 107–8
Santa Maria sopra Minerva as outpost of, 103–4, 106–7, [>]
and witchcraft, 134–36
Rosas, Luis de murdered by Church supporters, [>]
Roth, Henry: “The Surveyor,” [>], [>]
Rule of Benedict, The (Gibson), [>]
Rumsfeld, Donald: approves torture, [>]
Rushdie, Salman: The Satanic Verses, [>]
Russia: censorship in, 115–16, [>]
secret police in, 198–99
Rynne, Xavier [>]
Sacred Congregation of the Holy Office, 2–3, [>], [>], [>], [>]. See also Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF), Inquisition
Cardinal Frings condemns, [>]
censorship of Teilhard de Chardin, 172–73, [>]
criticizes Graham Greene, 173–76
fights against Modernism, [>], [>]
surveillance by, [>]
takes over functions of Inquisition (1908), [>]
Sacred Congregation of the Universal Inquisition. See Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF), Inquisition, Sacred Congregation of the Holy Office
Salem witch trials, [>]
Samlesbury Witches, [>]
Sanchez, Ricardo 32–33
Sandel, Michael: The Case for Imperfection, 247–48
Sands, Philippe: on Guantánamo detention facility, 220–23
Santa Fe (New Mexico): diversity in, 143–44
Spanish reconquest of (1693), 144–45, [>]
Santa Maria sopra Minerva as outpost of Roman Inquisition, 103–4, 106–7, [>]
Santori, Giulio Antonio as Inquisitor General, 110–11, [>]
Sarpi, Paolo: on Council of Trent, [>]
Sartre, Jean-Paul: The Age of Reason, [>]
Satanic Verses, The (Rushdie), [>]
Savonarola: promotes censorship, [>]
Scandella, Domenico (“Menocchio”): Roman Inquisition prosecutes & executes, [>], 136–39
Schillebeeckx, Edward [>]
CDF questions, 178–79
scholarship, modern: and Inquisition, 19–21, [>], 185–88, 230–31
Scholes, France V.: on Inquisition in New Mexico, [>], [>], [>]
science: Roman Inquisition censors, [>], [>], [>], [>]
Searle, John, [>]
secrecy: national security and, 234–35
Secrecy and Deceit (Gitlitz), [>], [>]
secret police: Fichte on, [>]
in France, 197–98
in Germany, [>], [>]
under Napoleon, [>]
and national security, 197–99, [>]
Orthodox Church’s close ties to, [>]
in Russia, 198–99
surveillance by, [>], 205–7
Senor, Abraham, [>]
S
ervetus, Michael: execution of, [>], [>]
The Restitution of Christianity, [>]
Shakespeare, William, 69–70, [>]
sharia law, 243–44
Silvestrini, Achille
“slippery slope” argument, 47–48
Smith, Clive Stafford: challenges U.S. torture policies, 223–24
Sotilo, Ramon, [>]
Southworth, Christopher interrogated & detained, 196–97
Spain: anti-Semitism in, [>], [>]
Black Death in, [>]
and “Black Legend,” [>], 187–88
England’s ideological struggle against, [>], [>], [>], [>], 190–95
Inquisition operates under government control, [>], 79–81, 84–85
Inquisition’s cultural legacy in, 85–86, 232–33
Jews expelled from, 73–75, [>], [>], [>], [>], 232–33
medieval social divisions in, [>]
Muslims in, 70–72, [>], [>]
pogroms in, [>], [>]
Portuguese independence from, [>]
Pueblo Revolt against (1680), 144–45
reconquers Santa Fe (1693), 144–45, [>]
settles New Mexico, 154–55
Spanish empire: censorship in, [>]
conversos migrate to, 150–53, 160–61
globalization and, 149–50
Inquisition established in, [>]
Spanish Inquisition, 10–11, [>], 65–70, 75–76, 78–85, 88–92, 94–99, 101–2, [>], [>], [>]
attacks New Mexico government officials, [>]
in California, [>]
and church-state conflict in New Mexico, 156–57
condemns Father Hidalgo y Costilla, [>]
condemns Father Morelos, [>]
executes American Indians, [>]
executes Carvajal, 152–53
fears U.S. influence in Mexico, 159–60
final suppression of, 166–67
globalization of, [>], 147–48, [>]
Goya and, [>]
Lea researches, [>]
Llorente researches, [>]
in Mexico, 150–53, 159–60
and Mexico’s war of independence, [>]
motivated by anti-Semitism, 95–97, [>]
in New Mexico, 145–46, [>], 155–59
operates under government control, [>], 79–81, 84–85
prosecutes Jewish & Muslim conversos, 9–11, [>], 68–69, 95–96, 98–99, [>], [>], [>], 152–53
range of punishments available, 83–84
records in Mexican archives, 155–56
revisionist view of, 98–99
Spellman, Francis [>]
Starr, Kenneth: The Starr Report, [>], 60–63
Starr Report, The (Starr), [>], 60–63
Stasi (East German secret police): archives of, 204–8
attempts to destroy records, 205–6
museum of, 206–7
Stowe, Harriet Beecher: Uncle Tom’s Cabin, [>]
strappado: as torture technique, 90–91
surveillance: in Britain, 208–11
cell phones and, 237–38
and erosion of privacy, 210–12
by FBI, CIA, & NSA, 214–15, 236–37
in Germany, [>]
by Holy Office, [>]
institutionalization of, 236–38, [>]
of Internet, [>]
in Iran, [>]
and national security, 209–11
Poindexter on desirability of, 211–12
by secret police, [>], 205–7
under USA Patriot Act, [>], [>]
war on terror and, [>], 236–37
“Surveyor, The” (Roth), [>], [>]
Swift, Jonathan, [>]
Syllabus of Errors: Pope Pius IX promulgates (1864), 110–11, [>]
Sylvestrini, Achille [>]
Taft, William Howard: on waterboarding, 93–94
Tedeschi, John: on Church censorship, 123–24
Teilhard de Chardin, Pierre The Divine Milieu, 172–73
Holy Office censors, 172–73, [>]
The Phenomenon of Man, [>]
Pope Benedict XVI on, [>]
Texas State Board of Education: censorship by, 238–39
Theoharis, Athan G. & John Stuart Cox: The Boss: J. Edgar Hoover and the Great American Inquisition, [>]
Third Reich. See also Nazi archives
IBM assists, [>]
Timerman, Jacobo: Prisoner Without a Name, Cell Without a Number, [>]
tolerance: Locke on, [>], 249–50
moral certainty and, 246–51
Topcliffe, Richard: as interrogator, [>], [>]
Torquemada, Juan de [>]
Torquemada, Tomás de: background & personality, 81–82
as Inquisitor General, [>], [>], [>], [>], [>]
instruction manual for inquisitors, 82–84
Lea on, [>]
torture: in Argentina, [>]
in Brazil, 199–200
British complicity & collusion in, 223–24
Dershowitz on, [>]
“extraordinary rendition” and, [>], [>]
at Guantánamo detention facility, [>], 220–21
Hayden on, 222–23
Ignatieff on, [>]
Inquisition’s use of, [>], 55–56, [>], [>], 86–94, [>], [>], [>]
Lea on, [>]
modern arguments for legitimacy, 86–87
motivation for, 53–55, 88–89
Panetta and, 222–23
Peters on, [>]
Pope Innocent IV authorizes, 55–56
and psychology of duress, 88–90
under Queen Elizabeth I, 194–96
Rejali on, [>]
Smith challenges U.S. use of, 223–24
techniques of, 90–94, [>], [>], 221–22, [>]
U.S. uses, 90–94, 221–23
in war on terror, 90–94, 215–16, 221–23
treason: heresy as, [>]
truth. See moral certainty
Turner, Frederick Jackson, [>]
Tyrrell, George (father), [>]
condemned as Modernist, [>]
Uncle Tom’s Cabin (Stowe), [>]
United States: abrogates Geneva Conventions, [>]
acquires Guantánamo Bay, [>]
anti-Muslim attacks in, 242–43
“birthright citizenship” controversy in, 76–78
deviance and anti-communist campaign in, 39–40
Internet censorship in, 240–41
library censorship in, [>]
“Red Scare” in, 39–40, [>], 213–14
separation of church and state in, [>], 241–42
torture used by, 90–94, 221–23
tortures al-Qahtani, 222–23
United States. Army: evangelical relgion in, [>]
Human Intelligence Collector Operations, 50–53
and religious warfare, 32–33
United States. Census Bureau: and national security, [>]
United States. Central Intelligence Agency: and “extraordinary rendition,” [>], [>]
surveillance by, [>]
United States. Congress: and war on terror, [>]
United States. Constitution: and moral certainty, [>]
United States. Federal Bureau of Investigation: surveillance by, [>], [>]
United States. Internal Revenue Service: and national security, [>]
United States. National Archives, [>]
Nazi archives at, 201–3
United States. National Security Agency: surveillance by, [>], 236–37
United States. Total Information Awareness Office, 211–12
United States. Transportation Security Administration, 234–35
Urban VIII and Galileo, [>]
USA Patriot Act: surveillance under, [>], [>]
Van Pelt Library (University of Pennsylvania), 184–85
Vatican: underground construction in, 225–26
Vatican. Archivio della Congregazione per la Dottrina della Fede, 4–6, [>]
censorship in, 17–18
&nbs
p; Cifres administers, 15–17, 225–29, [>]
Ginzburg presses for opening of, 14–15, [>]
Godman’s research in, 110–11, 122–23, [>]
modernization & expansion of, 226–29
Napoleon confiscates, [>], [>]
organization & administration of, 15–17, 225–27
and pedophilia scandals, [>]
Pope Benedict XVI and opening of, [>]
Pope John Paul II opens, 14–15, [>], [>], [>]
Ratzinger and opening of, 14–15, 109–10
Roman Inquisition records in, 107–8
Vatican. Library: digitization of, [>]
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