Although at first sight the use of the lash, as a persuasive to correct religious belief, may appear somewhat incongruous, it must be borne in mind that, under the euphemy of the discipline, it has always formed a prominent feature of penance, especially among the monastic orders where, in the daily or weekly chapters, it was liberally administered for all infractions of the Rule or other sins, as a preliminary to absolution. In fact, the touching of the penitent's shoulder with a wand by the priest in absolution from excommunication, is a symbol of the discipline which was anciently indispensable. In the Old Inquisition it was in frequent use, although there it was rendered a matter of edification, through its infliction by priests during divine service or in religious processions. That it should form part of the penal resources of the Spanish Holy Office was therefore natural, although it lost its penitential aspect and became purely punitive and vindictive.
It was no longer the priest who wielded the discipline with an indeterminate number of strokes during an indeterminate series of feast-days. The tribunal prescribed the number of lashes and they were laid on by the vigorous arm of the public executioner. The penitents who had to suffer appeared in the auto de fe with halters around their necks; if there was one knot in the halter, it signified a hundred lashes, if two, two hundred and so on, one hundred being the unit and the minimum number. The next day the populace was treated to the spectacle. Mounted astride of asses, bared to the waist, with halter and mitre bearing inscription of their offences and a pié de amigo holding the head erect, they were paraded through the accustomed streets, with a guard of mounted familiars and a notary or secretary to make record, while the executioner plied the penca, or leather strap, on the naked flesh, until the tale was complete, and the town-crier proclaimed that it was by order of the Inquisition for the crimes [136] specified. A clause in the proclamation, after the great Madrid auto of 1680, forbidding, under pain of excommunication, any one to throw stones at the penitents, indicates that the populace had a playful habit of thus manifesting its detestation of heresy. (1)
In 1568 the Suprema rebuked the Barcelona tribunal for condemning to public scourging penitents reconciled for heresy. This, it said, was contrary to the estilo of the Inquisition, and in future the lash was not to be used unless there was some other crime than heresy. (2) This indicates how completely the scourge had become punitive and how it was dissociated from the ancient discipline, but if such regulation existed it met with scant recognition. All the offences subjected to the Inquisition were constructively heretical, and there never seems to have been any discrimination exercised between them. Indeed, we have seen that the lash was especially indicated for heretics who were tardy or variable in their confessions, and Judaizers are constantly seen to be subjected to it.
Scourging was a favorite penalty which was lavishly and often mercilessly employed. In the Saragossa auto of June 6, 1585, out of a total of seventy-nine penitents, twenty-two were scourged; in that of Valencia, in 1607, of forty-seven penitents, twenty-four received the lash. (3) This, however, exceeds the average. The Toledo reports, from 1575 to 1610, present a hundred and thirty-three cases of scourging which, allowing for a break in the record, give about four per annum. (4) On the other hand, a collection of autos de fe celebrated between 1721 and 1727, embracing in all nine hundred and sixty-two cases, affords two hundred and ninety-seven sentences of scourging, or about thirty per cent. (5) When [137] we recall that, in the list of officials reported by Murcia, in 1746, there figures Joseph García Bentura as notario de acotaciones-- a notary of scourgings--to keep record of the stripes, with a salary of about 2500 reales, we realize how prominent a feature it was in inquisitorial penology. (6) The brutalizing effect on the populace of these wholesale exhibitions of flogging, especially of women, can readily be estimated.
The usual number of lashes prescribed was two hundred, though in occasional cases a hundred sufficed. In the two hundred and ninety-seven just alluded to, two hundred and ninety were of two hundred lashes and only seven of one hundred. It was rare that two hundred were exceeded in any one infliction, though sometimes it was mercilessly duplicated, as in the Seville auto of September 24, 1559, Martin Fernando Saldrían, a shepherd, for blasphemy was scourged in Seville and again in his native town; Alonso Martin of Carmona, for Lutheranism, was scourged in both Seville and Carmona and Juan de Aragon of Málaga, who had pretended to be a familiar, was scourged in Málaga and again in the scene of his offence. (7)
Probably two hundred lashes were about the limit of safety, especially with those enfeebled by prolonged incarceration, for the infliction was excessively severe. We hear of Margarita Altamira reduced to such extremity after a scourging that the viaticum was administered to her. (8) There was no mercy for age or sex. In the Valencia auto of January 7, 1607, Isabel Madalina Conteri, a Morisca girl of 13, after overcoming torture, had a hundred lashes, Jayme Chulayla, a Morisco of 76, who had been tortured, had a hundred and the same was administered to Francisco Marquino, aged 86 for sorcery in treasure-seeking, while Magdalena Cahet, aged 60, who had escaped torture on account of heart-disease, was not spared a hundred. (9)
As the eighteenth century advanced there appears to be more readiness to remit the execution of sentences of scourging on account of age and infirmities and of "accidentes," which probably mean crippling by torture. Then there developes a tendency to spare women and finally men; the sentences continue to be pronounced, but they are remitted by the inquisitor-general. In [138] 1769, at Toledo, Gerónimo Clos, for bigamy, was pardoned the two hundred lashes of his sentence, which could not have been for infirmity, as he was not released from hard labor for five years in the royal works at Cartagena. (10) From this time scourging may be regarded as obsolescent and soon to become obsolete. Under the Restoration, from 1814 to 1820, in the votos secretos, there is not a case in which the lash was inflicted, for when included in the sentences, it was always remitted by the Suprema. (11)
The clergy, of course, were
not subjected to the disgrace of public scourging. In their cases it took
the form known as a circular discipline, administered in a convent by all
the inmates in turn.
Vergüenza, or shame, was the same as scourging, with the lashes omitted. The culprit, stripped to the waist and with the pié de amigo, was paraded through the streets, with the insignia of his offence, while the town-crier proclaimed his sentence. It was naturally regarded as less severe than scourging and was sometimes substituted for the latter, when the penitent was too aged or feeble to endure the lash. For the beldams and ruffians who were often its subjects it could have had but few terrors, but it was greatly dreaded by those of sensitive nature. The inquisitors took little count of this, when dealing with Judaizers and Moriscos, who had a keen sense of personal dignity, and Pedraza informs us that those exposed to it regarded death as a mercy, preferring to die rather than to endure a life of infamy. (12) To young women the exposure was especially humiliating, yet, on the whole, it may be regarded as more humane than the pillory of our forefathers, for the penitent was not exposed to the missiles of a brutal populace.
Vergüenza was a comparatively
infrequent punishment. In the Toledo reports of 1575-1610 it occurs in
but twenty-six sentences, which may be compared with the hundred and thirty-three
scourgings, and the records of the same tribunal from 1648 to 1794 present
but ten vergüenzas to ninety-two scourgings. In the very severe series
of autos de fe between 1721 and 1727, the comparison is thirteen to two
hundred and ninety-seven.
The mordaza or gag, as we have seen, was regarded as increasing
greatly the severity of the infliction of which it formed part. It was
sometimes used in scourging and vergüenza, when the so-called penitent
was a hardened blasphemer or likely in some way to create scandal. It was
likewise employed in the autos de fe, on pertinacious and impenitent heretics
of whom it was feared that they might on their way to the stake produce
an impression on those not firm in the faith. (13)
Its use was not frequent, although, in the dread inspired by Protestantism,
in 1559, at the great Seville auto of September 24th, twelve of the victims
wore the mordaza. There were also twelve thus gagged in the Madrid auto
of 1680, but these numbers were exceptional. (14)
Enslavement in the galleys, to labor at the oar, would appear to be even more incongruous than scourging as penance for spiritual offences. It was a Spanish device, unknown to the elder Inquisition, and had its origin in the thrifty mind of Ferdinand.. We shall presently see how exercised were the monarch and the Holy Office over the problem presented by the maintenance of those condemned to the canonical penalty of perpetual prison, and Ferdinand, whose Sicilian possessions required a powerful navy, bethought him of the expedient of utilizing his able-bodied prisoners to man his galleys--the galley propelled by oars being as yet the equivalent of the modern battle-ship. Galley-service was recognized as so severe that the old fueros of Aragon forbade it under heavy penalties, except with the free assent of the individual, and it was not until the curtailment of ancient privileges, in the Córtes of Tarazona in 1592, that judges were permitted to use it as a punishment for robbers. (15) In Castile, the pressure for slaves to man the galleys is indicated by a royal cédula of November 14, 1502, commuting the death-sentence of criminals in the secular [140] courts, and ordering them to be sent to the galleys. (16) It was probably about this time that Ferdinand turned to the Inquisition, which was bound by no laws, for relief from overcrowded prisons and undermanned galleys. Even the callous morality of the age seems to have been shocked at this and, as usual, the sanction of the Holy See was sought for the iniquity. It was of course granted, and Alexander VI, in a brief addressed to the inquisitors, May 26, 1503, recited that Ferdinand and Isabella had represented to him that those condemned to perpetual prison relapsed into heresy; that there was a lack of prisons in which they could be confined without perverting others, and that multiplication of prisons would lead to dissemination of heresy; that their power to commute imprisonment into other perpetual punishment had been called into question, and that they had asked him to provide a remedy. As the chief solicitude of the inquisitors should be the prevention of relapse, he therefore empowered them to change the perpetual prison of penitents into other penalties--deportation to the colonies, or imprisonment in the royal galleys, where, in perpetual confinement, they might render enforced service, or to any other perpetual punishment, according to their quality and offences. (17)
That full advantage was taken of this there can be no doubt, to the relief of the prison funds and the facilitation of the conquest of Naples. We chance to hear of the transfer at Barcelona, January 24, 1505, of nineteen prisoners from the gaol of the Inquisition to the galleys of Ramon de Cardona, which we may fairly accept as an example of what was on foot everywhere. (18) In fact, the eagerness of the tribunals to disembarrass themselves of their prisoners seems to have led to their discharging on the galleys those in every way unfit for the service, for the Suprema was obliged, in 1506, to declare that men over 60, clerics and women were exempt from the punishment of the galleys. (19) Even Ferdinand himself, towards the close of his career, seems to have shrunk from the responsibility of openly authorizing an extension of this heartless business for when, in 1513, the Inquisitor of Sicily asked permission to send to the galleys those condemned to perpetual [141] prison, Ferdinand threw the decision back on him; to build prisons will cost much money, he said, but the galleys may deter men from confessing their heresy; the inquisitor is therefore to think the matter over and do what he deems best. (20) The conclusion reached is unknown, but we may reasonably surmise that the Palermo tribunal did not waste its funds in constructing prisons.
Ferdinand's hesitation seems to have been shared by Charles V for, in 1527, the Suprema ordered that penitents should not be sent to the galleys but should have other penances. (21) The motive for this humane provision, however, did not long withstand the more pressing economical considerations. In 1529, Rodrigo Portuondo, captain-general of the galleys, was instructed that no one sent to them by the Inquisition should hold any office or administration, or have charge of the rations, showing that the prohibition had been rescinded. (22) Apparently the superior intelligence of the penitents had rendered them more useful as petty officers and accountants than as slaves of the oar, but this alleviation of their misery did not satisfy the spirit of persecution and it was probably to prevent it that the formula of the sentence was service at the oar without pay--unless, indeed, the penitent was of gentle blood, in which case he could he sent to serve as a gentleman or as a soldier. (23)
We have already seen to what profitable account the Inquisition turned the power which it had assumed to grant dispensations from this abhorrent servitude, and a case in 1558 indicates how it guarded against any invasion of its prerogative. Philip II was led to interest himself in the case of Andrés de Frías, condemned to the galleys, and asked to have him dispensed from the remainder of his term. To this the Suprema demurred, saying that the statement of Frías was untrue, for in Rome he had treacherously stabbed to death the procurator of the Inquisition, Doctor Puente, after dining with him and promising to sup with him; moreover the seventeen months which he claimed to have served had not been as a galley-slave, as required by his sentence. Still, if he would present himself and manifest repentance there might [142] be opportunity for the king to show him mercy, but otherwise it would greatly impair the authority of the Inquisition. (24)
Philip was not given to interceding for those sent to his galleys, for galley-slaves continued to be in great demand. In 1567 the Venitian envoy, Antonio Tiepolo, explains the weakness of the Spanish navy by the fact that its galleys were manned with slaves and forçats, who were not numerous enough to keep many galleys at sea. It would be, he says, impossible to man them with freemen, as in Venice, for no one would serve voluntarily, as the ill-treatment of the crews is notorious and their dying for lack of the necessaries of life. (25) It is true that there was a curious source of supply, besides the ordinary criminals and heretics, for the prelates of the religious Orders were accustomed to condemn their peccant brethren to the galleys, from the same economical motive that had actuated Ferdinand--to save the expense of maintaining them in prison. (26) Still, the needs of the armadas were pressing; Philip turned to the Inquisition for aid, and, in 1567, the Suprema issued two decrees intended to assist in manning the royal galleys. One bore that sentences must not be for less than three or four years, for otherwise the penitents cost the king more than the service he got from them, and this was enforced by a royal cédula of 1584. (27) The other suggested--suggestion being equivalent to an order--that sentences to the galleys could be substituted for those to prison and sanbenito. The practical deduction drawn from this is expressed by a writer of the period, who says that, if the accused confesses but does not satisfy the evidence, he is to be tortured and, if he still fails to satisfy the evidence, it is customary to send him to the galleys, but this must be for not less than three years. (28) To appreciate fully this atrocity, it must be borne in mind that torture could only be used in cases of doubt where the evidence was defective, so that, besides the torture the victim was sent to the galleys for suspicion of heresy.
Even this did not satisfy the royal exigency and a further inexcusable [143] step was taken. We have seen that tardy and imperfect confessions were visited with scourging and sometimes with the galleys, while the buen confitente, who confessed promptly and freely, was allured with promises of special consideration and mercy. Yet, in 1573, the Suprema issued a carta acordada ordering that Conversos, even when buen confitentes, should be sent to the galleys, and this it repeated in 1591, with injunctions for its enforcement. (29) The name of religion has not often been more brutally prostituted than in these provisions, and their success may be measured by a report of the inquisitors of Saragossa to Philip, of an auto celebrated June 6, 1585, in which they call his special attention to their zeal in furnishing him with twenty-nine galley-slaves for six years, besides three left over from a previous auto--and this in Aragon,which forbade galley-service as a punishment for the most heinous crimes. (30)
The galley-captains naturally were not punctilious in discharging the men when their terms had expired, giving rise to perpetual friction. The sentence ordinarily was to a term of prison or exile, of which the first three years or more were to be passed at the oar, and this was set forth in the certificates given to the penitents. The tribunals kept watch over them, and demanded their return to serve out the rest of their sentences, but this was not an easy task. The vigilance exercised is illustrated by a royal cédula addressed to the captain of a galley, ordering him to release two men whose terms had expired, and warning him that in future all such persons were to be returned to the tribunal that had sentenced them. (31) This was followed, in 1568, by general instructions to Don John of Austria, as Captain-general of the Sea, and to all captains of galleys, reciting the complaints of the Sicilian tribunal that its reclamations of its penitents were not complied with, and ordering their restoration to their tribunals without waiting for demands. (32) This was ineffectual and, in 1575, we find the Barcelona tribunal instructed to prosecute the captains who impede the discharge of those who had served out inquisitorial sentences. (33) The trouble was perennial and, in 1645, we have a formula of [144] requisition for the return of the party specified, under pain of excommunication and of five hundred ducats, and the tribunal of the port where the galleys lie is requested to see to its execution. A significant note however adds that this is scantly courteous to such great men as the generals of the galleys, and that it is better to ask the tribunal of the port to procure the release by friendly negotiation. (34)
The cases could not have been infrequent in which men, utterly unfit for the privations and ill-usage of the galley-slave, were condemned to this hard service, and no doubt many perished in consequence. Yet exemptions on this ground were reluctantly admitted, if we may judge from a rebuke administered, in 1665, by the Suprema to the Barcelona tribunal, in a case where this was asked; the opinions of the physician and surgeon were insufficient; other professionals must be called in and examination be made as to the penitent's condition when, if it appears that he is unfit for the service, the sentence can be commuted to eight years of exile as proposed. (35) It is a marked expression of the humanitarian development of the eighteenth century that, even in the fierce persecution of its first quarter, in 1721 it was ordered that, before imposing a sentence to the galleys, the delinquent should be examined by the physician and surgeon and, if incapacitating weakness appeared, it should be mentioned in the vote of the consulta de fe that, in consequence of it, the sentence was commuted to irremissible imprisonment. (36) The succeeding autos show that this bore fruit in sundry commutations, although the alternative of irremissible prison was not observed, and less severe penalties were sometimes substituted. (37)
In the sixty-four autos de fe between 1721 and 1727, of which we possess details, there were ninety-two sentences to the galleys and seven to service in the presidios. There was a certain relation between the two. In the seventeenth century legislation on offences connected with the coinage, the galleys were provided for commoners and presidio service for gentlemen and, as the century drew to a close, we find the Inquisition no longer sending gentlemen to serve as soldiers on the galleys but to Oran, Ceuta, [145] Gibraltar, Badajoz, Peñón and other royal works and garrisons. (38) In the eighteenth century Inquisition, the galleys for all classes were gradually supplanted by the presidio, if we include in the term enforced labor in the royal dock-yards and arsenals as well as in the African garrisons. Galleys were disappearing from the sea and, in the Inquisition, they were superseded by the bagne, in its various forms of hard work. In 1742, the Toledo tribunal condemned Rafael Nuñez Hernández, for certain errors, to eight years of exile of which the first five were to be passed serving the king in the unwholesome quicksilver mines of Almaden, and the last sentences to the galleys that I have met occur in 1745, when Nicholas Serrano was condemned at Toledo for bigamy to eight years of service in them, and Miguel Gutiérrez and Francisco García, at Valladolid, for relapse into Judaism, to ten years. After this the galleys may be said to be obsolete, even for bigamy, as is seen in a sentence of the Valencia tribunal in 1781. (39)
The presidio continued as a punishment under the Restoration, but cases were so rare that there was question as to the reception of the convicts in their places of destination. In 1818, the Seville tribunal sentenced three persons--two for propositions and one for bigamy--to two years' service in Ceuta or Melilla, and it asked the Suprema to get the minister of war to issue orders to the governors to receive them. The Suprema replied that this was the business of the tribunal; it must do as on former occasions, and if necessary could write to the governors. The formats were duly received and, it is pleasant to add that, in six months, the Suprema humanely remitted the punishment in order that they might return and support their families. For this an order from the secretary of the Council of War was required and procured. (40)
For women, the equivalent
of the galleys was service without pay in hospitals, houses of correction
and similar institutions. Apparently these female convicts were not always
regarded as desirable inmates and though, in the pre-revolutionary times,
no opposition was ventured, under the Restoration there was sometimes difficulty
in securing their admission. In 1819 the Seville tribunal appealed to the
Suprema, representing that it had been [146] unable thus to dispose
of Juana de Luna, for the same reasons which it had experienced in the
cases of Ana Barbero and Leonor Macias. The Inquisition inspired no such
terror as of old, for the Suprema could suggest no means of overcoming
the difficulty, and could only instruct the tribunal to devise some method
of executing its sentences. (41)
It is not to the credit of
the Roman Inquisition that it followed the example of the Spanish and included
the galleys in its list of punishments. Carena, indeed, tells us that it
was the most usual of all and was the customary penalty in a wide variety
of offences. (42)
That reconciliation to the Church, which was represented as a loving mother, eager to welcome back to her bosom her erring children, should be regarded as a punishment, seems a contradiction in terms, yet so it was, and the Suprema did not hesitate to speak of those "who had been condemned to reconciliation." (43) It would not be easy to invent a more emphatic illustration of the perversion of the spirit of religion by persecuting fanaticism.
The apostate or the heretic, who had abandoned the Church after admission through the waters of baptism, could only be reincorporated by abjuring his errors and applying for reconciliation. In the case of Conversos, who secretly adhered to the Mosaic or Mahometan law, there could be no question as to this, nor was there with such heretics as Protestants. To what extent other errors might constitute formal heresy requiring reconciliation, or might infer suspicion of heresy, light or vehement, was a problem for the calificadores, and sometimes was an intricate one, for the gradations of theological error are infinite and subtile.
In the tumultuous proceedings of the early period when, under Edicts of Grace, penitents came forward by the thousand, confessing their errors and begging for reconciliation, the ceremony was naturally simple. Under the Instructions of 1484, the form [147] described by Joan Andrea was to be used: the inquisitors declared that the penitent had been an apostate heretic, who had followed the rites and ceremonies of the Jews and had incurred the penalties of the law but, as he now says that he has been converted and desires to return to the faith, with a pure heart and faith unfeigned, and is ready to accept and perform the penances to be imposed, they must absolve him from the excommunication incurred through the said crime and must reconcile him to Holy Mother Church, if, as he says, he is converted to the holy faith truly and without fiction. (44)
No mention is made here of any subsequent ceremonies, although at least abjuration must probably have followed. When procedure was less hurried and there had been time for its elaboration, the process became impressive. The sentence recited that the penitent was admitted to reconciliation; that as penance he was to appear in an auto de fe, without girdle or cap, in a penitential habit of yellow cloth, with two red aspas or bands forming a St. Andrew's cross, and a candle in his hand when, after his sentence is read, he should publicly abjure the errors confessed and all other errors and apostasy, after which " we order him to be absolved and we absolve him from any excommunication which he has incurred and we unite and reincorpórate him in the bosom and union of the Holy Mother Catholic Church, and we restore him to participation in the holy sacraments and communion of the faithful"--to which was appended a recital of the various punishments to which he was condemned. After the auto de fe was ended, the abjuration was administered. This was similar to the abjuration de vehementi already given and in it he consented, in case of relapse, to submit to the penalties of the canons. On the conclusion of this, he was formally absolved and the next day his abjuration was read over to him, with a warning that in case of relapse he would be burnt. (45)
As described in an account of the Madrid auto de fe of 1632, this ceremony was imposing. The penitents to be reconciled were brought before the inquisitor-general who was presiding. While they kneeled before him he read a short catechism, comprising the creed with some additions, to each question of which they answered "Yes, I believe." Then the secretary recited the abjuration, in which they followed him. The inquisitor-general [148] then pronounced the exorcism and the customary prayers and the royal chapel chanted the Miserere, during which the chaplains of the Inquisition struck the penitents with rods on the shoulders. After this the inquisitor-general recited the customary verses and prayers and the royal chapel sang a hymn, while the black cloth was removed from the cross, which had been covered as a sign of mourning, and the inquisitor-general concluded the solemnities with a hymn. (46)
Superficially, there is nothing formidable in this reception of a wandering sheep back into the fold, but the serious aspect of reconciliation, justifying its characterization as a punishment, lay in the penalties which were virtually inseparable from it, and were customarily included in the sentence--imprisonment, sanbenito, confiscation and disabilities, with occasionally scourging and the galleys, some of which we have already considered while others will be treated hereafter. There was further the fact that the canons pardoned the heretic but once. If, after reconciliation, he was guilty of reincidence, there was no mercy for him on earth, although the Church in its kindness, would not close the portals of heaven on him and, if truly contrite, would admit him to the sacraments, although it would not spare him the stake. (47) The crucial question of relapse, however, will be considered in the next chapter and meanwhile it should be said that the Spanish Inquisition did not always enforce this cruel precept. In the later period second reconciliations were by no means infrequent, and, even in the earlier time, men sometimes shrank from the holocausts which the strict enforcement of the rule would have caused amid a population terrorized into suddenly forswearing their ancestral faith. In Majorca, under the Edict of Grace, there were three hundred and thirty-eight reconciliations, August 18, 1488, followed by ninety-six on March 26, 1490. Soon after this an Edict of Mercy was published, under which there were reconciled a second time no less than two hundred and eighty-eight of the previous penitents. One of these, Antonia, wife of Ferrer Pratz was even reconciled a third time, June 28, 1509. Scattering cases of second reconciliations can also be found elsewhere. (48)
[149] There was a rule that the reconciled were not to be subjected to scourging or the galleys, even though they might have deserved them by varying and revoking confessions, but I cannot find that this was observed for, in both the earlier and later periods, cases as we have seen were numerous in which reconciliation was accompanied with these corporal punishments. (49) On the other hand, although the principle was absolute that reconciliation carried with it confiscation and perpetual prison, cases sometimes occur in which these penalties were lightened. In the Toledo auto of November 30, 1651, there were nine reconciliations, in which the accompanying punishments were mostly trivial--in one case the sanbenito was removed immediately on return to the Inquisition. (50)
It seems almost a travesty on solemn religious observances that effigies of the dead should be admitted to reconciliation but, as the grave afforded no refuge from the Inquisition, this was a logical outcome of the system, when a defunct heretic had recanted and sought reincorporation with the Church. As he could not be reconciled in person he had to be reconciled in effigy, especially as the sentence was necessary to secure confiscation of his estate. The only occasion of this was the death, during trial, of a prisoner who had confessed, professed conversion and received sacramental absolution on his death-bed. His trial would necessarily be continued and result in reconciliation, and the Inquisition saw no incongruity in parading his image before the people, and performing with it the solemn farce of reconciliation. There was a somewhat inexplicable instance in Majorca of three Judaizers, who had died in prison during their trials, in 1678, after manifesting the necessary signs of repentance; they were not included among the two hundred and twelve reconciliations, in the autos de fe of 1679, but, thirteen years afterwards, their effigies were reconciled in the auto of July 2, 1691 and no theologian seems to have asked himself what was their spiritual condition during this prolonged interval. (51) This reconciliation in effigy, was not, as Llorente states, an innovation introduced under Philip III, but was practised from the beginning, for there was an instance [150] of it in Beatrix Sener, deceased, thus reconciled May 2, 1499, at Barcelona. (52)
Apparently the age of responsibility was the only minimum limit in reconciliation. In the Madrid Auto of 1632, Catalina Méndez, a child of 12, was reconciled with sanbenito and six months' imprisonment. At Toledo, in 1659, Beatriz Jorje and Ana Pereira, Portuguese Judaizers each ten years old, were reconciled; the former had her sanbenito removed at once; the latter was sentenced to confiscation and four months of prison. (53)
Reconciliation brought with
it one alleviation, for the reconciled, as penitents, were entitled to
the fuero of the Inquisition. This was derived from the penitential system
of the Middle Ages, which deprived the penitent of bearing arms during
the long series of years for which penance was imposed, and no one could
be expected to assume it unless protected by the Church against his enemies.
In this the Inquisition stood in the place of the Church, and cast its
jurisdiction over its penitents during their term of penance. In 1501,
we find a certain Pan Besante of Teruel, a reconciliado, to whom
Ferdinand had restored his confiscated property, complaining to the king
that he was persecuted and maltreated by his debtors and his neighbors,
and that the inquisitors, to whom he had appealed for protection, neglected
to aid him, whereupon Ferdinand promptly ordered them to come to his assistance,
to enforce, by their officials, the payment of his just claims and to punish
the aggressors. (54)
So far was this carried that at Granada, in 1654, the reconciled penitents
had an advantage in trade over the faithful, by claiming exemption from
the alcavala, or royal tax on sales. When the citizens complained
of this discrimination, the fiscal of the tribunal admitted that the question
was a difficult one; to subject the penitents to the royal jurisdiction
would give rise to great embarrassments, yet at the same time the inquisitorial
jurisdiction ought to be a punishment and not a reward.
(55) That it
was a reward we have seen from the eagerness with which it was claimed
by all who could put forward the slenderest pretext.
Imprisonment for life was the penance imposed by the canons on the heretic who, under the persuasive methods of persecution, sought reconciliation to the Church. It was so decreed, indeed, by pope and emperor before the Inquisition was organized, and that institution relentlessly enforced the laws. That the Spanish Holy Office should accept it was a matter of course. Its expense, however, had proved a source of tribulation in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, and it was none the less so in Spain for, large as were the confiscations and pecuniary penances, they were squandered as fast as they accrued. In Torquemada's supplementary Instructions of December, 1484, the receivers are ordered to provide for the maintenance of the prisons, which shows that the sovereigns admitted their responsibility, (56) but, in the chronic financial disorder of the time, no regular provision was made, either for their establishment or support. It is true that, in 1486, at the earnest request of the inquisitors of Saragossa, Ferdinand ordered the receiver to construct a perpetual prison, in accordance with their desires, but it is safe to assume that he prudently postponed replying to their inquiry as to the maintenance of the captives. (57) In 1492, when the tribunal sentenced Brianda de Bardaxí to five years' imprisonment, it was to the tower of Saliana and this, in a few days, was changed to the convent of Santo Sepolcro in Saragossa. (58) In fact, for want of prisons, the custom was general of consigning reconciled penitents to strongholds, hospitals, convents, or even to their own houses-- the latter presumably being such shelter as friends or kindred could afford to those who had been stripped by confiscation. The Instructions of 1488, indeed, authorize inquisitors, in view of the multitudes condemned to perpetual imprisonment and the lack of prisons, to designate to the penitents their houses, where they must confine themselves under the penalties provided by the laws. But this, it was added, was only meant to be temporary, and the sovereigns were supplicated to order that, at each tribunal, the receiver should provide a large enclosure with little huts and a chapel, where the prisoners could hear mass and could each work [152] at his trade and earn his living, and thus relieve the Inquisition from heavy burdens, due care being taken to keep the sexes apart. (59) The only answer to this prayer seems to have been the device of relieving the prisons for the benefit of the galleys.
The laxity of quartering penitents on public institutions or in private houses led to impracticable rules in the effort to counteract its evils. An instruction issued about this time by the Suprema orders that no one be admitted to reconciliation without condemning him to confiscation and perpetual prison, if he has been a heretic, and those thus condemned must perform their penance most rigidly, not speaking with any one except on the days when they go to mass and hear sermons; on other days, both in going out and in eating, they must show themselves true penitents, holding no intercourse with wives and children. (60) This seems to have received scant obedience and, in 1506, the Suprema ordered that sanbenitos be placed on all prisoners, and that they must not leave their houses and then, in 1509, it prescribed that perpetual prisons must be provided. Apparently this was partially successful, for it was followed by instructions that all who had been or should be condemned must be placed in them, where they can ply their trades, or their kindred can supply them with food, or they may beg alms for their support. Thus, in 1510, Llerena selected two pairs of houses for the purpose, which Ferdinand ordered the governor of Leon to have appraised. Cuenca also seems to have obtained a prison, but an inadequate one, for in 1511 the Suprema authorized the tribunal to permit all the sick, and all who had been confined for two years, to betake themselves to their homes. Where such prisons existed the discipline must have been exceedingly lax for, in 1512, the Suprema issued a general provision empowering the tribunals to allow the destitute occupants of the perpetual prisons to go out by turns to beg in the cities, but they must wear their sanbenitos and return by nightfall, under penalty of relapse, and this was repeated in 1513. Then the further effort to provide prisons seems to have been abandoned for, in 1514, Ximenes issued an order permitting the reconciled to fulfil their penances in their own homes. (61)
This fluctuating policy and the extraordinary laxity which it [153] reveals were not due to any humanitarian impulses. It was simply a continuous effort to shirk the responsibility of maintaining those whose property had been confiscated, and who were required by the canons to be incarcerated for life. The Inquisition obtained the plunder, it inflicted on its victims disabilities, which increased enormously the difficulty of self-support, it rendered them odious to the population by making them wear the sanbenito, it was in duty bound to provide prisons where they could be immured and prevented from infecting the community, but it neglected this duty and virtually told them that they might beg or starve. That death by starvation, indeed, was not uncommon is asserted in the project of reform drawn up, in 1518, by order of Charles V.
Still the tribunals seem
to have made some progress in providing themselves with penitential prisons
for, in 1524, the Suprema deemed it worth while to order that they should
be inspected monthly, and the results be recorded in a book to be kept
for that purpose. (62)
By no means all had done so however. Barcelona, which occupied the royal
palace, had found room there, in 1489, for its penitents, and in 1544 we
hear of Gerónimo de Quadras as alcaide, on a salary of fifty ducats,
out of which he was to pay for a person to conduct the prisoners to mass
and to bring them back. Valencia was less advanced, for it could have had
no prison in 1540, when it sentenced three women to keep as a prison such
place as should be designated to them, but in 1546 it secured the services
of Gerónimo de Quadras as alcaide, at a salary of thirty ducats.
In 1550, however, he complained that he had never received his pay and,
in 1554, we find the perpetual prison of Brianda de Garcete commuted to
confinement in her own house, or other designated place, which would indicate
that the attempt to establish a prison had been abandoned.
(63) In 1553, Logroño
apparently had none, for it assigned, to Juan Prebost, Bilbao and two leagues
around as a prison, with the sanbenito. (64)
This need not surprise us for, if in some tribunals there was an attempt
to provide a perpetual prison, it was exceptional. In 1537 the Suprema
had formally declared that it would be a novelty to support the penitents
at the cost of the fisc; this could not and ought not to be done; there
was no objection to their performing [154] their penance in their
own homes and the tribunals could arrange it accordingly. A few months
later this was repeated; the reconciled could be sent to their houses to
perform their penance, if they had no other means of support.
(65)
At length the Instructions
of 1561 endeavored to introduce some system in this scandalous state of
things. The sentence of reconciliation condemned the penitent to prison
and sanbenito for a specified term, during which he was to wear the abito
publicly over his other garments; he was to be confined in the perpetual
prison, going to mass and sermon on Sundays and feast days, and on Saturdays
performing certain devotions at a designated shrine.
(66) To enforce this
discipline the Instructions stated that, as many tribunals had no perpetual
prison, houses should be bought for the purpose as, without them there
were no means of knowing whether the reconciled performed their penance.
The alcaide should help them in their necessity by giving them materials
to work at their trades and help to support themselves, and the inquisitors
should visit the prison several times a year. (67)
This seems to have been followed by an effort to induce the tribunals to
provide prisons, for, in 1562, Toledo was taken to task for having none.
It not only did not supply the deficiency but demurred to the suggestion
that it should at least furnish a person to see that the penitents performed
their penance, and it was told that for three or four thousand maravedís
of extra pay the portero could attend to this. (68)
In 1570 the Suprema resumed
the attempt to bring about this much needed reform. It told the tribunals
that they could rent houses until they should be able to purchase, and
they must appoint proper persons as alcaides to keep watch over the penitents.
(69) The result of this pressure was gradual. In 1577 the Cistercian
convent of Santa Fe, in Saragossa, made formal complaint to the pope of
the number of penitents quartered upon it, and Cardinal Savelli, the head
of the Roman Inquisition, interposed with the Suprema to relieve it of
this oppression. (70) It was not until
1598 that the Mexican tribunal, nearly thirty years after its foundation,
[155] built a capacious prison adjoining its own structure.
(71) In 1600, for
the first time, there is an allusion in the Toledo record to a "cárcel
de la penitencia" and, in 1609, Valencia was busy in erecting one at a
cost of 5110 libras; it had been planned to have three floors, but was
economically reduced to two. (72)
Whether all the tribunals yielded to the pressure and established penitential
prisons it would be impossible to say, but they probably did so, if only
in some perfunctory fashion that justified the appointment of an alcaide.
Simultaneously with this there came a change in the name, and the. carcel
perpetua was known as the casa de la penitencia or de la
misericórdia.
It does not follow that the
establishment of prisons was attended with any increased strictness of
discipline. The Inquisition persistently refused to accept the burden of
supporting its prisoners and left them to shift for themselves. Where prisons
existed there were few penitents in them, although condemnations to imprisonment
were frequent and, in 1641, Philip IV conceived the idea of liberating
them all. The Suprema sent his decree to the tribunals with orders to report
whether they had any prisoners and what were their cases, to which Valencia
replied that it had one, imprisoned for persistent sorcery, whereupon the
Suprema ordered the sentence to be commuted and the prisoner to be discharged.
(73)
The royal project fell through.
All prisons were not as empty as that of Valencia and a discussion occurring,
in 1654, at Granada, to which allusion has already been made, illustrates
the character of the imprisonment rendered necessary by the refusal to
support the prisoners. They gained their living chiefly by hawking goods
around the city; this at length aroused the shopkeepers, and the corregidor
represented to the tribunal that scandals were occasioned by their entering
houses and committing indecencies; there was loss to the king for, as penitents,
they were not subject to the alcavala and other imposts; thus favored they
undersold the [156] shopkeepers, who had lost half of their trade,
while the penitents grew rich, for they came almost naked from the secret
prison and, in a short time, they were well clothed and enriched. The tribunal
admitted the force of this and, on December 24, 1654, issued an order that,
for two weeks, they might cry their wares through the streets, but not
enter houses, and subsequently be restricted to selling in shops. At this
the prisoners complained bitterly of the deprivation of a privilege of
long standing in all places where there was a tribunal, for without it
they could not earn a living or support their wives and families. Thereupon
the fiscal, Doctor Joseph Francisco Cresco de Escobar, seeing that both
sides would appeal to the Suprema, printed for its enlightenment a memorial
which reveals to us the character of penitential imprisonment. He states
that, in accordance with the Instructions of 1488, the tribunals had provided
penitential prisons, the one at Granada being of ample capacity for the
observance of the Instructions of 1561. He quotes the canons and conciliar
decrees to show that recanting heretics are to be immured for life, whence
he argues that the prison should be afflictive and penal. Now, however,
it is only nominal; the so-called prisoners go out at all hours of the
day, without restriction, without a companion, without labor save what
they voluntarily undertake, all of which is liberty and not captivity.
They wander at will through the city and suburbs, they amuse themselves
at the houses of their friends, they spend, if they choose, only part of
the night in the prison, which serves them as a comfortable lodging-house,
free of rent. The Instructions require that the alcaide shall see that
they perform their penance, but this has become impossible, and there are
no means of restricting their intercourse with the faithful. As for their
plea that they leave the secret prison broken in health and stripped of
their property, that they have no chance to learn trades and must support
their families by trading, the answer is that only through the mercy of
the Holy Office do they escape burning, and they should be thankful that
their lives are spared; their poverty is a trifling penalty for their crimes,
and their children only share the punishment of paternal heresy.
(74)
With all this laxity, there
was a pretence of maintaining the old rigor, which regarded prison-breaking
as relapse, but the real offence lay in the fugitive throwing off the sanbenito.
There seems [157] to have been little desire to recapture those
who absented themselves, for the formula of the mandate to search for and
arrest fugitives only concerns itself with those who escape from the secret
prison and who thus are still on trial, (75)
but when from any cause penitents were returned to the tribunal, their
treatment is exemplified in the case of Juan González, who escaped
from the casa de la penitencia of Valladolid, July 3, 1645. His
story was that, having gone out to collect some money due to him, he gambled
it away, got drunk, went to sleep under the walls of the Carmelite convent
in the suburbs and, on awaking next morning and fearing punishment, he
wandered away, throwing off the sanbenito and seeking work. Thus he reached
Irun and designed passing into France, but was recognized by a priest who
had seen him in Valladolid; he was handed over to the commissioner and
was passed from familiar to familiar till he was lodged in the secret prison
of Valladolid. The fiscal claimed that his flight and throwing off the
sanbenito proved him to be an impenitent and pertinacious relapsed into
Judaism who must be relaxed, but his sentence was only two hundred lashes
and irremissible prison. (76)
Sentences to imprisonment
continued as usual, but growing indifference as to providing for their
execution is indicated by a correspondence between Barcelona and the Suprema
in 1718. At that time the tribunal had but four cases under trial; it still
occupied the ancient royal palace but, after it had condemned for Judaism
Maria Meneses to irremissible, and her daughter Catalina de Solis, to perpetual
prison, it did not know what to do with them and applied for instructions.
There was, it said, no penitential prison nor could it find that there
ever had been one, neither was there an alcaide; it possessed no house
that could be used for the purpose, and no official could be spared from
his other duties. The Suprema replied by inquiring whether there was a
prison for familiars in which a room could be used for the women, or whether
some little house near the palace could be had and some official or familiar
could serve as alcaide. The tribunal rejoined negativing the proposed use
of the prison for familiars; it would see whether a house could be had,
but there was no money for the purpose; as for the officials, they were
all fully occupied and no one would take the position without salary. This
[158] the Suprema met with a peremptory order to rent a little house
and appoint an alcaide at the ordinary wages. Under this pressure some
kind of provision must have been made for, in an auto of January 31, 1723,
the tribunal condemned four Judaizers to irremissible prison.
(77)
During the recrudescence
of persecution at this period, the number of condemnations to imprisonment
was large; in the Granada auto of December 21, 1720, there were twenty-seven
and, in sixty-four autos between 1721 and 1727, there were seven hundred
and forty. (78)
How these numerous prisoners were accommodated it would be difficult to
guess, for the neglect of the penitential prisons was progressive and,
in the census of all the tribunals, about 1750, but three reported to have
alcaides--Córdova, Granada and Murcia. (79)
It does not follow that others had not prisons, but only that they had
no prisoners and cared to have none. For instance, in 1794, when the Suprema
inquired of Valencia whether its prison would suit for the priest Juan
Fernández Sotelo, whose health required a change from the convent
where he was recluded, the tribunal craftily replied that its prison was
constructed with cells and dungeons and that, in the eyes of the people,
confinement in it produced infamy, so that quarters for Sotelo had better
be found in some convent in the suburbs. Apparently it forgot all this
when, in 1802, it complained that the salaries of its secretaries had not
been raised in 1795, while that of the alcaide of the penitential prison
had been increased from a hundred and twenty to twenty-two hundred reales,
although he had nothing to do, and enjoyed the use of a house in the prison
as good as those of the inquisitors. (80)
In fact, by this time penitential
imprisonment was virtually obsolete. After the subsidence of the active
persecution of Judaism, the Toledo tribunal which, in 1738, pronounced
twelve sentences of prison, did not utter another until 1756. Then a long
interval occurs, of thirty-eight years, before the next one, which was
for heretical propositions. (81)
It would not, perhaps, be safe to say that, in the concluding years of
the Inquisition, this form [159] of punishment was wholly unknown,
but no cases of it have come under my observation.
There was the same reduction
in the duration of imprisonment as in its severity, owing presumably to
the same economical motive. As we have seen, the medieval Church recognized
only lifelong ifnprisonment as the fitting penalty for the heretic who
saved his forfeited life by recantation and, in recognition of this, the
penitential prison in Spain was officially known as the perpetual prison,
the sentences being always for perpetual imprisonment. At a very early
period, however, it was clearly recognized that the literal enforcement
of this was a physical impossibility. Bernaldez tells us that in Seville,
up to 1488, there had been five thousand reconciled and condemned to perpetual
imprisonment, but they were released after four or five years with sanbenitos
and these were subsequently removed to prevent the spread of infamy throughout
the land. (82) At Barcelona the tribunal
had scarce been established, when we find it drawing a distinction in its
sentences to perpetuial imprisonment, some being cum misericordia
and others absque misericordia--thus anticipating the so-called
"irremissible" perpetual prison--and from the sentences it would appear
that "without mercy" was exceptional. (83)
This inevitable laxity provoked
opposition on the part of the more rigid authorities and, in 1509, while
Ximenes was in Oran, there was a discussion on the subject in the Suprema,
when we are told that his temporary representative, Rojas Archbishop of
Granada, stood alone against the other members. (84)
What was the nature of the decision is not recorded, but it probably favored
the laxer view, for Ximenes and the Suprema, in 1516, deemed it necessary
to order that all sentences to prison and sanbenito must be perpetual,
in accordance with the canon law; if, in any case, the inquisitors thought
there should be a remission it must be left to the discretion of the inquisitor-general.
(85)
The tendency to shorten the
term was irresistible; the conservatives had to yield and, by the middle
of the sixteenth century, Simancas tells us that perpetual prison was customarily
defined to [160] be three years, if the penitent was repentant,
while those condemned to irremissible prison were usually released after
eight years. (86)
So purely technical did the term "perpetual prison" become that inquisitors
saw nothing incongruous in such sentences as "perpetual prison for one
year" or "for six months," which are constantly met with, as well as "perpetual
prison" followed by terms of exile. The real infliction was therefore much
less severe than it appears on the records, and when periods longer than
eight years were intended, they were specified, as when Salvador Razo,
for Molinism, was sentenced, in the Granada auto of July 4, 1745, to ten
years, of which the first five were to be spent in the galleys-- a hardship
remitted on account of his infirmities. (87)
The terms of imprisonment
were frequently shortened, moreover, sometimes, from humane motives, but
more often from financial considerations, for the dispensing power in this,
as in the other penalties, was a source of profit. Thus Mayor García,
a Morisca of Daimiel, condemned in the Toledo auto of September 21, 1550,
to perpetual prison for six months, on January 13, 1551, petitioned the
tribunal for release "as was customary with others," saying that her husband
would pay what the inquisitors should demand. The matter was promptly arranged
with Inquisitor Alonso Pérez for four ducats, to help to build the
staging for an auto de fe--a somewhat heavy payment for two months' relief.
(88) This dispensing
power was the subject of a prolonged struggle between the tribunals and
the Suprema. In the early period, at Barcelona, the former endeavored to
secure it by the device of discretional sentences, which inquisitors could
curtail or extend at will, and this was recognized in a letter of the Suprema,
October 4, 1499, authorizing them, under such sentences, to dispense with
the imprisonment but not with the sanbenito. (89)
In 1513, however, Ximenes forbade this without his consent and the repetition
of the order in 1514 and 1516 shows that it was difficult of enforcement.
(90) In spite of this when the Valencia tribunal, February 25,
1540, condemned five Moriscos to "habit and prison for as long a time as
we shall determine," the Suprema insisted that, when discretion [161]
was specified, it must alone be that of the inquisitor-general, a mandate
that had to be repeated more than once, even as late as 1592.
(91)
The question of this, as
of all other commutations, was inevitably settled, as we have seen, in
favor of the inquisitor-general. In many cases there was no concealment
that it was purely an affair of bargain and sale, but it is pleasant to
record that often it was prompted by humanity. Petitions for abridgement
of the penance were numerous and were usually sent in at the time of the
greater feasts, which are alleged as a reason for mercy, in addition to
the misery of the penitent. As an example of these petitions may be mentioned
the case of Violante Rodríguez who, with her husband Duarte Valentín,
was arrested for Judaism March 15, 1664. After a three years' trial, she
was sentenced at Granada, February 24, 1667, to two years' imprisonment,
while her husband was similarly sentenced at Cuenca. About August 10th
she petitioned for commutation, alleging that she had eight little children,
deprived of both parents. The Suprema promptly sent to Granada for the
details of the case, but the tribunal delayed until October 8th, when it
accompanied its report with the suggestion that she should be released
with spiritual penances after the expiration of the first year, as she
had manifested true repentance. Growing impatient, on December 24th, she
again petitioned the Suprema, alluding to her seven children, thus showing
that one had meanwhile died. That she was duly discharged in February there
can be no doubt, and there is no trace in the correspondence of any pecuniary
consideration. Some of the petitions for pelease, in truth, were well calculated
to inspire compassion, such as that of Simon Méndez Soto, in 1666,
wherein he describes himself as 84 years old, blind, deaf, crippled on
both sides with many infirmities and penniless, and he supplicates release
that he may seek for cure. (92)
There would appear to have
been no minimum age for imprisonment short of irresponsibility. The Toledo
tribunal condemned for Judaism García son of Pedro the potter of
Aguda, a boy eleven years of age, to perpetual prison. In the Cuenca auto
of June 29, 1654, for the same offence, Escolástica Gómez,
aged 12 and Isavel [162] Díaz Jorje, aged 14 had the same
penalty and, in the Toledo auto of October 30, 1701, José de Leon,
a boy of 16 was sentenced to irremissibie prison.
(93)
The sanbenito, or penitential
garment, was the invariable accompaniment of reconciliation and prison,
constituting together the "carcel y abito" of the sentences, although it
was not exclusively reserved for such cases. It was not invented by the
Spanish Inquisition, even though we can scarce agree with an enthusiastic
writer, who traces its origin to the Fall, when God made the delinquents
put on penitential habits of skins, corresponding with the sacos benditos
now used in the tribunals. (94)
The penitential habit of
sackcloth sprinkled with ashes, customary in the early Church, has passed
into a proverb. That the penitents of the Inquisition should be required
to wear such a garment was inevitable and, from the foundation of the institution,
in the thirteenth century, they were distinguished from other penitents
by two yellow crosses, one on the breast and the other on the back. From
Eymerich we learn that in Aragon this garment was like the scapular worn
by the religious Orders. (95)
This saco bendito became known as the sanbenito or, more commonly,
abito and was necessarily inherited by the new Inquisition. In 1486,
at the Toledo auto of December 11th, two hundred penitents, reconciled
under the Edict of Grace, were required to wear in public such a garment
for a year, under penalty of relapse. (96)
For those reconciled after trial, the infliction was more severe. In 1490,
Torquemada ordered that they should wear during life a sanbenitillo
of black or gray cloth, eighteen inches long and nine inches wide, like
a small tabard, hanging on breast and back, with a red cross before and
behind, occupying nearly the entire field. This was hung over the outer
garment, and was a conspicuous [163] indication to all beholders
of the shame of the wearer, rendering it a punishment regarded as exceedingly
severe. (97)
In 1514, Ximenes changed the cross to an aspa de San Andrés,
a St. Andrew's or oblique cross, of which the bars traversed diagonally
the breast and back. (98)
Finally the Instructions of 1561 describe the abito penitencial
as made of yellow linen or cloth, with two red aspas, although in
some parts of Aragon there are particular customs as to colors which must
be observed--referring probably to the use of green cloth in place of yellow,
which seems to have been the case in Valencia and Sicily.
(99) In some tribunals
there was also in use, for those who abjured de vehementi, a sanbenito
de media aspa, or half cross, consisting of a single diagonal band.
Those who were to be relaxed appeared in the auto de fe in a black sanbenito,
on which were painted flames and sometimes demons thrusting the heretic
into hell. (100)
Llorente tells us that abjuration de levi was performed in a zamarra,
or yellow sanbenito without aspas, but I have met with no allusion to its
use. (101)
The distinction between the sanbenito de dos aspas and the one de
media aspa was maintained, and the former was understood to indicate
that the wearer had been guilty of formal heresy, that he and his children
were subject to the consequent disabilities, and that he was liable to
the stake in case of relapse. The latter was worn only during the auto
de fe, after which it was laid aside. (102)
Although, in the early period,
the sanbenito was imposed perpetually, the expression is to be taken in
the same sense as imprisonment. As a rule, the two were coterminous and
the sentences are almost invariably "habit and prison for two years," or
perpetual or irremissible as the case may be. Where, indeed, the heresy
was trivial or technical rather than real, or the conversion seemed genuine
and spontaneous, the sanbenito was merely a symbol, to be worn only during
the auto, or even for a briefer period, although it none the less left
its ineffaceable stigma. There were gradatiolis suited to every case, as
is well illustrated in the Granada auto [164] of May 27,1593, where,
in three cases, it was removed after reading the sentence, in two, after
returning to the Inquisition, in two, after twenty-four hours (one of these
being the Licentiate Juan Fernández, who had Judaized for thirty-six
years), in one case it was imposed for two years and in another for three,
and Leonor Fernández had two years of sanbenito and four of prison.
It was even put on the effigy of Doña Inez de Torres, from which
it was removed after reading the sentence, because she had confessed and
died as a Catholic, with ample signs of contrition.
(103) Thus the tribunal
could vary the penalty at its discretion, and was not bound to the rule
of coterminous abito y carcel. In the Toledo auto of March 15, 1722,
two girls of 14, Manuela Díaz and María de Mendoza, were
sentenced to six months of prison and two months of sanbenito, while in
that of February 24, 1723, Manuel Ximenes had perpetual prison and one
year of sanbenito. (104)
From the fact that, in the
sentences, the penitents are told that they are not to go out of their
prisons or their houses without the sanbenito, it is inferable that it
was not worn within doors. Discarding it, as we have seen, was a grave
offence, punishable as non-fulfilment of penance and, in the Edicts of
Faith, the denunciation of this, as of other infractions, was required.
There was one occasion, however, in which this was done on a large scale
with impunity, for in the Palermo rising of 1516 against the Inquisition,
there was a universal throwing off of sanbenitos. When order was restored
and the tribunal was re-established, there was a fruitless effort made
to reimpose them. In 1522 the Suprema wrote to Inquisitors Calvete and
Cervera calling attention to this as a great disservice to God and a heavy
charge on the souls of the penitents, who must be compelled to resume them,
and all secular and ecclesiastical authorities were commanded to assist.
Then again, in 1525, Inquisitor-general Manrique insisted on the resumption
of the sanbenitos, but at the same time he cautioned the inquisitors not
to cause scandal or trouble, and we may assume that the attempt was practically
abandoned. (105)
Cruel as was the imposition
of the sanbenito, it was a punishment inherited from the elder Inquisition,
but Spanish ingenuity invented a still more cruel use of it to stimulate
the detestation of [165] heresy. This was the preservation of the
sanbenitos, with suitable inscriptions, conspicuously displayed in the
churches, thus perpetuating to future generations the memory of the crime
and punishment of the delinquent. The origin of this may perhaps be traceable
to the ceremonies observed in the early period, when penitents were relieved
of the abito. As described, in 1490, at Barcelona, they were assembled
in the Inquisition and preached to by the inquisitor. A fortnight later
they gathered in the parish church of Santa Maria del Pino and heard mass;
then they marched in procession to the chapel of Our Lady of Monserrat,
again heard mass, offered twelve dineros apiece to the Virgin, and passed
the night, after which their sanbenitos were taken off and hung in a prominent
place near the door. (106)
Of course, in the case of those who were burnt, the sanbenito was hung
up at once, and this remained the rule, as we learn from the Instructions
of 1561--the sanbenito of the reconciled was hung when it was removed,
whether during the auto or after years of prison; that of the relaxed,
immediately after the auto. (107)
The custom must have been
of gradual growth. There is no allusion to it in the Instrucciones antiguas,
nor have I found any indication as to the time when it became imperative
except that, in 1512, there is a decision of the Suprema expressing the
will of the king and the cardinal that the sanbenitos of the relaxed and
reconciled of the Campo de Calatrava shall be hung in the churches, except
those of the reconciled in the Time of Grace, and that, if any of the latter
have been hung, they are to be removed. (108)
This indicates a custom favored by the authorities, spreading, but as yet
subject to question. It had already passed to Sicily, where one of the
incidents of the rising of 1516 was the tearing down of the sanbenitos
in the churches, and so great was the popular detestation of it that, at
the end of the century, it had not been possible to restore the practice.
(109)
It mattered little to the
descendants that the sanbenitos of the victims in the early years had,
escaped this publicity. The perversity which inspired it developed into
such malignity that, in 1532, the Suprema ordered the tribunals to make
from their records lists of all burnt or reconciled, even under Edicts
of Grace, and [166] to suspend in the churches whatever sanbenitos
were found to be lacking. The inexcusable cruelty of including the voluntary
reconciliados under Edicts of Grace caused this portion of the order to
be revoked in 1538, but, in 1539, this was declared inapplicable to those
which had already been hung--if they had been removed, they must be replaced.
The question was revived, in 1552, and opinions were divided, but the decision
to retain them prevailed. Meanwhile, in 1548, the Suprema stimulated the
tribunals to fill all vacancies, whether arising from omissions or the
surreptitious removal of old ones, and it ordered the hanging of new ones
as soon as the autos were held, in order to anticipate the complaints and
importunities of the sufferers and their kindred. Then, as though the tribunals
were slack in their duty, in 1555 the order of 1532 was revived and repeated.
(110) The wilful viciousness
of this is indicated by the Instructions of 1561, which point out that,
as those reconciled in Time of Grace are exempt from wearing the sanbenito,
so their sanbenitos ought not to be suspended in the churches.
(111)
The object was the cruel
one of perpetuating the infamy of the victim and rendering it as galling
as possible to his kindred and descendants. As the sanbenitos wore out
or became illegible with time, they were replaced, and finally superseded
by yellow linen cloths, bearing full details of the name, lineage, crime
and punishment of the culprit. (112)
Originally they were hung in the cathedral of the city of the Inquisition,
but this did not bring the disgrace sufficiently close to the descendants
and, in some places at least, they were ordered to be transferred to the
parish churches of the delinquents, whose infamy was thus kept alive in
the memory of their neighbors. A single instance will illustrate the spirit
actuating this. In 1519 the Suprema ordered this transfer made by the tribunal
of Cuenca, but the command was slackly obeyed and was repeated in 1529.
Then the descendants of Lope de Leon and Alvar Hernández de Leon,
residents of Belmente, petitioned the Suprema, saying that the wives of
Lope and Alvar had been reconciled; they were natives of Quintanar, where
they had committed their heresy, and the descendants now begged that the
sanbenitos be hung in the church of Quintanar and not of Belmonte. To this
the Suprema replied, April 15, 1529, by [167] instructing the tribunal
to hang the sanbenitos in the residence of the descendants, in a place
so public that the reconciliation of the women should be notorious to all.
It is true that the descendants secured delay until the pressing orders
came of 1548, when, on November 9th the sanbenitos of the women were hung
in the church of Belmonte. (113)
This policy of distribution
cannot have been universal for, when the Toledo cathedral desired to be
relieved of the great accumulation of sanbenitos, the Suprema forbade it,
adding that if it was desired to have them in the parish churches it must
be done with new ones, leaving the originals in the cathedral. At length,
in 1538, the inquisitors Yáñez and Loaysa distributed them
among the parish churches, when Sebastian de Orozco tells us that it caused
infinite misery to the descendants, leading them all or nearly all to change
their family names, so that in Toledo the names actually borne by the Conversos
disappeared. (114)
Change of name was not the
only device resorted to by the descendants, for they were constantly at
work removing surreptitiously the evidence of their infamy. As early as
1518, the Saragossa tribunal was ordered to prosecute with rigor those
who had abstracted them from the Dominican church.
(115) Their zeal was
stimulated by the fact that the inquisitors, in making up the records,
included all who had been reconciled under Edicts of Grace, thus affording
legitimate ground of complaint, as shown by a long-continued struggle at
Frejenal. In 1556, Doctor Ramírez, Inquisitor of Llerena, protested
to the Suprema against the efforts of the people of Frejenal for the removal
of the names of those reconciled in Time of Grace; it would leave but few
for, in 1491, there had been three hundred and fifty-seven reconciliations
there, of which three hundred and fifty-four had been under the Edict.
To render ancestral infamy more accessible to the public, besides the sanbenitos,
the names-and details were inscribed on a tablet of parchment. This became
torn and nearly illegible and, on August 23, 1563, it was solemnly replaced
by another, written in large letters, with printer's ink, and varnished
to insure its preservation. The secret warfare waged against this perpetuation
of infamy is described, in 1572, in a deposition of the [168] familiar
Rodrigo Carvajo. The people of the town, he said, were mostly descendants
of Conversos, resorting to perjury and every other means to conceal their
origin. The sacristans were generally Conversos, who connived at the methods
employed to destroy the evidence, and the sanbenitos were stolen; there
used to be five hundred and ninety-nine, and now there were only ten or
a dozen, worn and torn and so placed that they could not be read, while
the tablet with the names was gradually being defaced and rendered illegible.
Thus it continued until 1576, when Inquisitor Montoyo brought to Frejenal
a new set of sanbenitos prepared from the records, which were duly suspended,
and a tablet containing names and details was placed where all could read
it. This list shows the obstinate persistence with which the names of the
spontaneously reconciled were retained. It contained a hundred and sixty-two
relaxed and four hundred and nine reconciled, all, with very few exceptions,
in the years from 1491 to 1495. There were none between 1499 and 1511,
and none later than 1511. (116)
Struggles similar to this were doubtless on foot in numerous other places.
The churches themselves do
not seem to have looked with favor on this desecration of their sacred
precincts. At Cuenca, there was apparently an attempt to hide the sanbenitos
of which the tribunal complained in 1571, when the Suprema ordered it to
see that nothing was put before them, even on feast-days.
(117) The parish church
of San Salvador, at Cifuentes, went further and, in 1561, appealed to Pius
IV, explaining to him the Spanish custom, and representing that not only
was the attractiveness of the church marred by the prominence assigned
to the sanbenitos, but that they led to many scandals, all of which would
be prevented if they were removed to some less prominent place or laid
away altogether, but that licence from the Holy See was requisite for this.
The pope gave the required licence, subject to the assent of the Inquisition
to the removal, which of course rendered it inoperative.
(118) The cathedral
of Granada was more fortunate for when, in 1610, Inquisitor-general Sandoval
consecrated as archbishop Pedro González de Mendoza, the latter
asked him, as a special favor to his bride, that she should be relieved
of the sanbenitos. Sandoval assented and the permission came soon after
[169] Mendoza had reached Granada. It was celebrated with great
rejoicings and ringing of bells; the sanbenitos of the Moriscos were transferred
to the church of San Salvador, in the Albaycin, while those of the Judaizers
were hung in the church of Santiago, which was the parish church of the
Inquisition. (119)
Even when there was not this open antagonism, there was apt to be neglect
which was practically more damaging. In 1642, the Valencia tribunal learned
that some of those in the cathedral had fallen and were allowed to lie.
It made an investigation and, from the report, it would seem as though
every available spot was thus decorated and that all required attention
for their preservation. The sacristans promised to do what was necessary,
but apparently they had been quite willing to see them disappear.
(120)
Conscious of this ecclesiastical
indifference and of the constant effort of those interested to make way
with the visible records of their infamy, the Suprema was incessantly active
to counteract the results. The Instructions of 1561 insist imperatively
on the duty of hanging the new sanbenitos and renewing the old, so that
the memory of the infamy of heretics shall be preserved forever, and inquisitors
on their visitations are commanded to see that the parish churches are
kept with unbroken lines of the mantetas y insinias of their culprit
parishioners. (121)
Philip II was no less urgent. In his instructions of 1595 to Manrique de
Lara, he calls special attention to the subject; there are sanbenitos now
to be hung and others which have never been hung, apparently through favoritism,
for which the inquisitors deserve rigorous punishment, for this is the
severest penalty which the Holy Office can inflict on heretics and their
descendants, and Manrique is to see that all deficiencies are made good.
(122)
In fact, the most pressing
business of the inquisitor in visiting his district was to attend to this.
In 1569 the Suprema ordered every one, before starting, to have full lists
made out of the relaxed and reconciled of the region to be traversed and,
in each place, these lists were to be compared with the existing sanbenitos
and all that had disappeared were to be replaced. In 1600 and 1607 these
instructions were repeated with still greater urgency, as a matter not
to be neglected for a single day, in view of the evils [170] that
would follow. (123)
That nothing was to be allowed to interfere with this pious duty is seen
when Valencia had no money wherewith to defray the expense of renewals
and was told to borrow it from the Depositario de los pretendientes--the
sacred deposits of those seeking to prove their limpieza, which were thus
used to preserve the muniments that might destroy their hopes.
(124)
How, in fact, the sanbenitos
were employed for this purpose is indicated in a perquisition conducted
at Tortosa, in 1577, by the inquisitor, Juan de Zúñiga. The
sanbenitos were carefully examined and lists were made out, classified
firstly into those of which the trials could be identified and those of
which no trace could be found in the records, and secondly into the penalties
inflicted. Then two of the oldest residents--a notary and a priest--were
summoned; the lists were gone over with them and their evidence was taken
as to the descendants of the culprits, especially whether any had changed
their names so as to elude disabilities. Thus a close watch was kept on
them and every care was taken that the infamy of their ancestors should
be lasting. (125)
As the seventeenth century
wore on, it would seem that the zeal of the tribunals in the matter of
sanbenitos was flagging. A general carta acordada of February 27, 1657,
assumes this, in calling their attention to the Instructions of 1561 and
to subsequent orders of similar import. As many autos de fe had recently
been held, and as it was understood that, in some places, the sanbenitos
had not been hung in the churches, the tribunals were commanded forthwith
to make out lists of the relaxed and the reconciled, and to have corresponding
sanbenitos suspended in the churches, as well as to renew the old ones
which were worn out. In view of the importance of this to the service of
God, a full report in detail was imperatively required to be furnished
within four months. This may have excited the tribunals to spasmodic activity
but, if so, its influence was but temporary for, in 1691, we find the Suprema
ordering reports as to the length of time that had elapsed since sanbenitos
had ceased to be hung in the churches; lists of deficiencies were called
for; the old sanbenitos were to be examined and statements were to be rendered
[171] as to what were lacking and what had become illegible, so
that the Suprema might take requisite action. (126)
This looks as if the custom
had been falling into desuetude, but it was by no means abandoned and,
as late as August 26, 1753, when a deceased delinquent named Horstmann
was burnt in effigy at Valencia, two sanbenitos were ordered to be suspended,
one in the cathedral and one in the parish church of San Lorenzo.
(127) Still the same tribunal furnishes, in 1783, a refreshing
evidence of the decline of intolerant zeal in the gradual diffusion of
enlightenment. The cathedral had been undergoing restoration, during which
the sanbenitos had been carefully stored in a room of the Inquisition.
On the completion of the work, the tribunal suggested to Inquisitor-general
Beltran that it would not redound to the service of God or of the public
to hang them up again, to which Beltran assented; if the chapter did not
ask for them, the tribunal was not to raise the question, or to do any
thing in the matter and, from an endorsement on the letter, it is to be
inferred that the sanbenitos were allowed to repose undisturbed.
(128)
It is not to be supposed
that, when the Cortes of Cadiz, February 22, 1813, abolished the Inquisition,
it was satisfied to permit the continued existence of the sanbenitos which
perpetuated so many dreadful memories. A decree of the same day recited
that Article 305 of the Constitution provided that no punishment should
extend beyond the criminal to his family; that the means by which, in public
places, the memory of penalties inflicted by the Inquisition was preserved,
brought infamy on families, and even exposed to evil repute persons of
the same name. Therefore all portraits, pictures, or inscriptions, recording
the punishments imposed by the Inquisition, existing in churches, cloisters,
convents and other places, were to be removed or blotted out within three
days after receipt of the decree. (129)
[172] The condition
of Spain was not such as to insure any wide obedience of this decree, although
it is scarce likely that the French armies had left many sanbenitos hanging
in towns occupied by them during the war. What occurred elsewhere may probably
be guessed by the example of Majorca, when the Constitution of Cadiz was
enthusiastically received and the sanbenitos were removed from the church
of San Domingo, but they were providently stored away and were again hung
up after the Restoration in 1814. In the Revolution of 1820, however, they
were torn down and burnt and the Inquisition was levelled to the ground.
(130)
The custom of suspending
in the churches the habitelli or sanbenitos of the reconciled and
relaxed seems to have been borrowed by Italy from Spain, at least in some
places. It is to the credit of the Roman Inquisition that it disapproved
this barbarous practice, as appears from a decree of 1627 ordering them
to be removed from the cathedral of Faenza and to be secretly burnt.
(131)
Disabilities have already
been considered in their relation to the finances of the Inquisition, arising
from the sale of dispensations, but they formed too important a portion
of the penal system not to require further treatment in this connection.
They differed however from other punishments in that, although specified
in the sentences, they were the inseparable consequences of condemnation
for heresy and thus, in some sense, self-operative, for the severity of
the laws for the suppression of misbelief was not content with confiscating
the property of those whose lives were spared. The reconciled heretic was
not only turned adrift penniless, but was subjected to restrictions incapacitating
him from earning a livelihood. As this refinement of cruelty could not
be applied to those who were burnt, it was visited on their descendants.
This latter provision was
derived from the imperial legislation against treason, which disabled children
of traitors from holding office and succeeding to collateral estates.
(132) Frederic II,
in his Ravenna decree of 1232, made this applicable to the children and
grandchildren of heretics, which was eagerly incorporated [173] into
the legislation of Alexander IV and Honorius IV, although Boniface VIII
mitigated it slightly by exempting grandchildren in the female line.
(133) As part of the
canon law this of course governed the Spanish Inquisition and, if there
were those who questioned the justice of punishing orthodox children for
their parents' heresy, they were triumphantly silenced by Alfonso de Castro,
who pointed to Original Sin as an irrefragable proof that this was in accordance
with the law of God. (134)
The application of these
restrictions to reconciled penitents apparently originated with the Council
of Béziers, in 1246, which ordered that penitents should not hold
public office, or serve as physicians or notaries, or wear silk garments
or gold and silver ornaments or other vanities--in short, that their apparel
should befit those whose lives constructively were to be passed in repentance.
(135) These provisions
were not carried into the canon law but apparently became traditional in
the Holy Office.
In the Instructions of 1484
there is nothing said as to the disabilities of descendants, but inquisitors
were instructed to order penitents, after completing their penance, never
to hold public office or benefices or to serve as procurators, tax-collectors,
farmers of the revenue, grocers, apothecaries, physicians, surgeons, bleeders
or brokers, thus prohibiting the professions which they had specially made
their own. Moreover, they were not to wear gold or silver, coral, pearls
or other precious stones or garments of silk or camlet or other finery
or to ride on horse-back or bear arms, and all this during life, under
penalty of relapse. (136)
There was evidently doubt
as to the application of these restrictions to the descendants of those
relaxed, but that there was an effort made in that direction is shown by
their procuring, in 1486, from Innocent VIII, a brief enabling them to
farm the revenues of churches. (137)
In the assembly of inquisitors, in 1488, the matter excited considerable
debate, resulting in instructions that each tribunal in its own district
should enforce, under heavy penalties, the disability of children and grandchildren
to hold any office or [174] dignity that could be considered public,
and the list of prohibited callings was enlarged by including those of
merchants, notaries, scriveners, advocates, farmers of revenues and some
others. The sumptuary restrictions were not extended to them, for they
were not penitents, but they were forbidden to wear the insignia of any
dignity, secular or ecclesiastic. (138)
The omission was made good in a decree issued by Torquemada, April 22,
1494, but it was so slackly obeyed that when, in 1502, the sovereigns ordered
its enforcement, they allowed a certain time for those affected to become
acquainted with its provisions. (139)
Ferdinand himself had had occasion to recognize the hardship of the rule
for, in 1500, the mother of Pero Rúiz, a member of his royal guard,
was condemned and consequently he was incapacitated from riding and bearing
arms. Unwilling to lose him, Ferdinand wrote to Torquemada for letters
of dispensation to be brought back by the messenger.
(140)
We have seen how, in the
struggle over the profits of dispensation, the sovereigns abandoned to
the Inquisition the cosas arbitrarias, or sumptuary restrictions,
and assumed to themselves, by the pragmáticas of 1501, control over
the disability to hold office and to follow certain professions and trades,
which limited so greatly the ability of the reconciled and of the children
and grandchildren of the condemned to support themselves.
(141) A humane exception
was made however, in 1502, under which children reconciled below the age
of 14 were exempted from the operation of the pragmáticas.
(142) As these were municipal laws they were subject to the secular
officials, who were ordered to enforce them under pain of confiscation
and loss of office for negligence.
It was easier to publish
edicts than to get them executed. The civil magistrates seem to have paid
little attention to the pragmáticas, while the Inquisition did what
it could within its allotted sphere. The Suprema issued orders to the tribunals
to punish with all rigor those who disregarded the sumptuary restrictions,
who were said to be numerous, in great contempt of the Holy Office. It
was probably to stimulate zeal that, in 1509, it modified [175]
the penalty of relapse to a pecuniary penance, which it authorized the
inquisitors to impose at discretion, bearing in mind the gravity of the
case and the wealth of the offender. (143)
The sums thus realized were considerable enough to tempt the cupidity of
the courtiers for, May 9, 1514, we find the king making over to four of
his ushers the penalties levied on the sons of Alonso Gallo of Toledo,
and on April 1st he ordered Vázquez de Busto, alguazil of Toledo,
to collect all the penances of this kind, to pay one-half to the receiver
for the tribunal, and divide the other half between the fiscal, Martin
Ximenes, and a servant of secretary Calcena. (144)
The punishments decreed in the pragmáticas were also modified to
fines, as we learn from a letter of June 20, 1515, dividing those incurred
in Seville between Calcena and Aguirre, after setting aside one-third for
the tribunal, and from another letter of January 8, 1516, bestowing on
Fernando de Hoyos, portero of the Cuenca tribunal, the penalties incurred
by the wives of Pedro de Vaguera and of Quiros and Jayme Boticario, for
exercising the profession of apothecary. (145)
At length it was recognized
that the Inquisition was the only instrumentality to be depended upon for
the enforcement of the pragmáticas and Charles V, in a cédula
of March 30, 1528, placed the whole business in its hands. He recited the
laws of Ferdinand and Isabella, with their severe penalties for negligent
officials, in spite of which he was informed that, in many places, they
were disregarded, wherefore he granted to the Inquisition all necessary
powers and ordered it to see to the execution of the law. Possibly there
may have been some opposition by the secular authorities to this invasion
of their jurisdiction, which called for a repetition of the cédula,
March 2, 1543. In pursuance of this the Suprema, in cartas acordadas of
1548, 1549 and 1566, called the attention of the tribunals to the number
of persons engaged in prohibited callings or wearing forbidden articles,
and it urged them to be active in detecting and punishing the offenders.
(146)
The construction of the laws
was rigorous. There was a nice question whether, when a parent was condemned
in absentia as contumacious, the children were subject to the disabilities,
for [176] the heresy was presumptive and not proven. Farinacci held
that they were not, for the absentee, even though burnt in effigy, could
always return and prove his innocence. Peña represents the stricter
Spanish view, that the fugitive was condemned as a heretic and his children
were incapacitated. The matter was threshed out in the case of the son
of Antonio Pérez, who was deprived of a pension on the church of
Cuenca. This was the final decision of the Rota after full argument; it
served as a precedent, and the sentence of the absent contained the same
enumeration of disabilities as that of one who was .burnt in person.
(147) Some doubts
arose as to whether the pragmáticas prohibited trade in general;
all such points were reserved to the king and when, in 1566, it was proposed
to prosecute some merchants, the Suprema ordered the cases to be suspended
until he should be consulted. It was less cautious when, in 1542, it forbade
all reconciled penitents to keep schools, or even to teach children their
letters. A question arose whether the prohibition to ride on horseback
comprehended mules, but Simancas decides it in the affirmative, and even
desires to include vehicles, as it is fitting that all such persons should
walk on foot. (148)
Even the limits of the canon law were disregarded in the panic occasioned
by the discovery of Protestantism in 1559, for in the Seville auto of September
24th, when Juan Ponce de Leon was burnt, the disabilities of his descendants
in the male line were extended to the fourth generation.
(149)
An ecclesiastical career
was closed to penitents and their descendants, who were forbidden to enter
holy orders. There was some question raised whether those who were in orders
could obtain or retain benefices, but it was decided in the negative. The
practice, as stated about 1640, was that on their visitation the inquisitors
dealt summarily with cases concerning the cosas arbitrarias while
those which involved the holding of benefices or public office were sent
to the tribunal for trial. (150)
In the Edicts of Faith which they published, denunciations were invited,
and all persons were required to give information as to any infractions
of the laws of which they were cognizant. (151)
[177] As everyone
who had the misfortune to fall into the hands of the Inquisition was a
marked man thereafter, and was liable to the suspicion that he had incurred
disabilities--a suspicion apt to grow stronger with time and to affect
his descendants--it became important for those who were not thus affected
to have some evidence of the fact. In the earlier time the Inquisition
was chary about affording this relief, but did not absolutely refuse it
when the sufferer applied to the Suprema. It was not everyone however who
could obtain the intervention of the Suprema; popular prejudice was strong,
and no one knew what took place within the precincts of the tribunals.
Blighted careers were thus numerous. Escobar, in his work on Limpieza,
tells us that, at the origin of the Inquisition it punished the lightest
offences with extreme severity and this, after the lapse of a century and
a half, was still disastrously affecting the descendants; it was inhuman
that a word inadvertently spoken through levity, or anger, or in jest should
bring infamy on the delinquent and his posterity without limitation of
time. (152)
The memorial of 1623, by a member of the Suprema, discusses the same evil.
The writer says that the Inquisition is surrounded by enemies who are daily
multiplied through those afflicted by the tribunals. It is not merely those
who are relaxed or reconciled or compelled to abjure de vehementi,
but there are many well-affected Old Christians, punished with lighter
penalties who, if they remain defamed and their posterity disabled from
honors, must necessarily add to the number of enemies and it is pitiable
thus to afflict them for trivial causes. (153)
The tribunals did not cease
to afflict the people, but some relief was afforded by a practice, which
gradually came into use, of including, in a sentence for light offences
or of acquittal, a clause declaring that the party and his descendants
were not subject to disabilities and that he could have a certificate to
that effect. Two examples of this, occurring in Valladolid in 1638 will
suffice. In the case of Agustín López, tried for blasphemy,
the consulta de fe could not agree and the Suprema sentenced him to reprimand
and exile, adding that the sentence should be no bar to offices of honor
or in the Inquisition. So a sentence, acquitting Miguel Rúiz of
a charge of sorcery, says that his imprisonment shall not be an obstacle
to him and his children, and that he shall [178] have a certificate
to that effect. That Rúiz had not even been confined in the secret
prison but in the public gaol shows how sensitive was the popular mind.
(154) These certificates
de no obstancia, as they were called, would appear, as a rule, not
to be issued unless specially applied for, and yet how important they were
to the individual and his posterity is manifested by a petition presented,
January 17, 1818, by the Licencíate Mariano de Santander y Alvárez
setting forth that, twenty years before, in 1798, his father had been arrested
and prosecuted by the Valladolid tribunal because, in his trade as a bookseller,
he had sold prohibited books. In the final sentence it was declared that
his imprisonment and prosecution did not prejudice him or his descendants
in the enjoyment of their civil rights, but the secrecy of the Inquisition,
and the loss of the certificate given to the father, prevented the petitioner
from furnishing the proofs necessary to his admission as an advocate in
the royal chancellery, wherefore he begged for a proper testimonial. The
Suprema had the statement verified and ordered a certificate to be duly
issued. (155)
From this, as well as from
the memorial of 1623, it appears that not merely reconciliation but even
abjuration or lesser penalties inflicted disabilities, if not as to the
cosas arbitrarias at least as to the attainment of an honorable
career. In the closing years of the Inquisition this sometimes led to a
merciful moderation of the sentence, as in that pronounced, August 27,
1817, on Francisco Mosquera Villamarino, of Santiago, "Bachiller clasico
y Profesor del 6° Cuerpo de Canones en su Real Universidad," for certain
propositions. He escaped with a reprimand in the audience-chamber and without
abjuration, it being expressly stated that he was treated with this benignity
in order not to prejudice him in his career, though he was warned that
the Inquisition would keep a watch on him. (156)
Popular prejudice, as we
have seen, intensified the cruelty of the cruel laws. How inveterate was
this is manifested in the case of Josef Calot who, in 1791, sought in marriage
the daughter of Pablo Bordo, a merchant of Valencia. The parents refused
assent and the lovers eloped. Bordo brought the matter before the royal
Audiencia, showing that Calot was the great-grandson of Clara Muñoz
who, at the age of 19, was reconciled for Judaism in the [179] Barcelona
auto de fe of April 2, 1724, and was sentenced to irremissible "cárcel
y abito," though after two years her husband, Antonio Antonelli, obtained
her release. In view of this descent the Audiencia decided that Bordo's
opposition to the marriage was reasonable and just, thus inflicting an
indelible stigma on Calot and his posterity. In some way the affair reached
the Suprema, which wrote to Valencia for details and, in transmitting them,
the inquisitors added an expression of sympathy for Calot in the dishonor
cast upon him; the punishment of his great-grandmother did not disable
him from the professions, but it would be difficult to restore him to his
good fame without calling in question the justice of the sentence of the
Audiencia. (157)
Even the Inquisition did not venture to repair an injustice caused by its
assiduous training of the population in an unreasoning abhorrence of heresy.
In a land where theocratic
influence was so strong, it was inevitable that there should be especial
favor shown to erring ecclesiastics. The Church has ever sought to conceal
from the public the knowledge of weaknesses that might diminish veneration
for its ministers, and scandal has been more dreaded than sin. The Inquisition
established its jurisdiction over both the secular and the regular clergy,
but it exercised that jurisdiction in accordance with the general policy
of the Church. Every care was taken to keep clerical offences from public
knowledge, except in cases of formal heresy or of administering the sacraments
by those who held only the lower orders. As a rule, in place of being confined
in the secret prison during trial, they were housed in some convenient
convent, where their presence need excite no surprise. When convicted,
they were not exposed in the public autos de fe, but their sentences were
read in the audience-chamber with closed doors, though in certain cases
a prescribed number of other clerics were summoned to be present as witnesses;
even then they did not wear the penitential habit as did laymen.
(162)
When, however, the offence
was formal heresy, entailing reconciliation or relaxation, the cleric was
obliged to appear in an auto de fe, like any other culprit. Cases of the
kind were common enough in the early period, when many Conversos had entered
the Church but, after the thorough weeding out by the Inquisition, they
became rare. An essential preliminary was degradation from the priesthood,
which was of two kinds, verbal and formal--the former sufficing for cases
of reconciliation, while relaxation required the latter. Verbal degradation
effaced the orders, but not the priestly character and, in the later
period, publicity was often avoided by executing the sentence in the audience-chamber,
as in the Toledo cases of Jacinto Vásquez Aranso, a priest convicted
of Judaism and condemned to the galleys, December 4, 1688, and [182]
of Buenaventura Frutos, cura of Mocejon, sentenced February 19, 1722.
(165) Originally the
ministration of a single bishop sufficed for verbal degradation, while
two were required for formal, until Gregory IX, to facilitate the operations
of the Inquisition, decreed that, in cases of heresy, the bishop of the
culprit could perform the ceremony, in the presence of some abbots and
other learned men, and finally, in 1551, the Council of Trent permitted
a single bishop to officiate in all cases of formal degradation, and his
vicar-general in verbal degradation. (166)
The ceremony of public formal
degradation was impressive. The culprit marched in the procession bearing
the mitre and sanbenito of relaxation, which were removed on the staging
in order that he might be seen in his priestly vestments and tonsure. In
the case of Fray Joseph Díaz Pimiento, a relapsed Judaizer, burnt
at the Seville auto de fe of July 25, 1720, we are told that an immense
crowd was assembled, for no degradation had been witnessed there since
1623. The auto was celebrated in the church of San Pablo but, as soon as
Fray Joseph's sentence was read, he was taken by a number of officials
to a scaffold in the Plaza de San Francisco, where the Bishop of Lycopolis,
the assistant of the archbishop, performed the ceremony. His tongue, the
palms of his hands and finger tips were scraped and rubbed with tow, the
tonsure was erased by cutting his hair and he was deprived of his orders
one by one in the reverse order of their bestowal. He was then handed over
to his superiors of the Mercenarian Order, who stripped him of the habit,
after which the mitre and sanbenito with painted flames were replaced on
him and he was taken to the juzgado, or secular court, and delivered
to the deputy Assistente of the city to be formally sentenced and conducted
to the brasero. (167)
1. Pablo
García, Orden de Processar, fol. 41.--Archivo hist. nacional, Inquisicion
de Valencia, Leg. 31, fol. 2.--Bibl. nationale de France, fonds espagnol,
354, fol. 242.--Bodleian Library, Arch. Seld. I. 1.--Olmo, Relación
del Auto, pp. 294-5.
The Roman Inquisition was
more merciful. Not only was scourging much lighter than in Spain and less
frequently prescribed but, by a decree of Feb. 23, 1641, it was commuted
when the offender had sisters, daughters or grandchildren of respectable
position. It was also spared to women who had husbands or marriageable
daughters.--Collectio Decretar. S. Congr. Sti Officii, p. 358;
Ristretto cerca li Delitti piú frequenti nel S. Offizio, p. 53 (MSS.
penes me).
Archivo
de Simancas, Inquisicion, Visitas de Barcelona, Leg. 15, fol. 20.
Danvila
y Collado, Expulsion de los Moriscos, pp. 208-16.--Archivo hist. nacional,
Inquisicion de Valencia, Leg. 2, n. 10.
MSS.
of Library of Univ. of Halle, Yc, 20. T. I.
Royal
Library of Berlin, Qt. 9548.
See
Appendix to Vol. II.
Archivo
de Simancas, Hacienda, Leg. 25, fol. 2.
Proceso
contra Margarita Altamira, fol. 40 (MSS. of Am. Philos. Society).
Archivo
hist. nacional, Inquisicion de Valencia, Leg. 2, n. 10, fol. 37, 54,55,74.
Archivo
hist. nacional, Inquisicion de Toledo, Leg. 1.
Archivo
de Simancas, Inquisicion, Lib. 890.
Pedraza,
Hist. eccles. de Granada, P. iv, Cap. 129 (Granada, 1638).
13. Simancas
de Cath. Instt. Tit. XLVIII, n. 6.--Pablo García, Orden de Processar,
fol. 31.
Archivo
de Simancas, Hacienda, Leg. 25.--Olmo, Relacion del Auto, p. 104.
Fueros
de Aragon, fol. 164, 204, 220, 238 (Zaragoza, 1624).
Archivo
de Sevilla, Seccion primera, Carpeta v, n. 41 (Sevilla, 1860).
Bularlo
de la Orden de Santiago, Lib. II, fol. 130.--Archivo hist. nacional, Inquisicion
de Valencia, Leg. 2, n. 16, fol. 292.
Carbonell
de Gest. Haeeret. (Co
The penalty for disregarding
the disabilities settled down to the thrifty one of a fine. As regards
those imposed by the pragmáticas, the Suprema, in 1531, replied
to an inquiry from the tribunal of Avila and Segovia that, although the
laws prescribed confiscation for infractions, yet the practice was to penance
culprits in accordance with their wealth and station and the degree of
the offence. So, in respect to the cosas arbitrarias, it decreed
in 1536, that although the Instructions of 1484 provided the pain of relapse,
they did not require the inquisitors to condemn the infraction as such,
and the practice was to impose pecuniary and spiritual penances.
(158) Cases of prosecution
for infraction are not very numerous in the records, chiefly owing, we
may presume, to the customary sale of rehabilitations; in the tribunal
of Toledo they amount only to ninety-one and of these it is noteworthy
that there are only three posterior to 1586--two in 1600 and one in 1616.
(159) When they occurred,
the penalty was at the discretion of the tribunal, and Toledo exercised
this with great moderation, in 1579, when Bernardino de Aldana, a ribbon-weaver,
spontaneously denounced himself. His mother, Isabel Alvarez, had been burnt
by the Cuenca tribunal, yet he had worn a velvet cap, had carried a sword
and had ridden on a mule with a saddle; [180] he was married and
had done this to satisfy his wife and her kindred, and besides his brother
had told him that they had been rehabilitated. His artless story seems
to have moved his judges, for he escaped with a reprimand and a fine of
two ducats. (160)
In 1703 the tribunal of Madrid was more severe with Simon de Andrade, a
reconciled penitent, who had worn the prohibited articles. He was harshly
reprimanded, was fined in fifty ducats, was banished for a year and was
required to surrender the cosas arbitrarias, but we are told that
he was permitted to keep the garments which he had on to cover his nakedness,
especially as they were of ordinary cloth. (161)
For aggravated offences,
the ordinary punishment was reclusion in a designated convent for a specified
term, a penalty which might be infinitely varied. Perhaps six months or
a year was to be passed in a cell; the culprit was to be last in choir
and refectory; he might be suspended for a term or perpetually from some
or [181] all of his functions and of the right to vote or to be
voted for; spiritual penances might be superadded or, at his entrance,
he might be subjected to a zurra de rueda, or circular discipline,
in which all the members of the house, including the lay-brethren, took
a hand. All these greater or less aggravations could be varied or accumulated
to meet the exact shades of guilt. This conventual reclusión was
adopted, perhaps, partly for concealment and partly as a milder form of
incarceration, but the mercy was doubtful if we may trust the story told
by Llorente of a Capuchin guilty of aggravated abuse of the confessional
who, when condemned to five years' reclusión in a convent of his
Order, begged to have it changed to incarceration in the secret prison;
he had been, he said, provincial and guardian, he knew how the brethren
treated those thrust upon them as criminals, and it would cost him his
life. His prayer was refused and his prevision was correct, for he died
within three years. (163)
I have met, however, with cases in which the recluded fraile survived longer
terms; as a rule, no doubt, life was not rendered pleasant, but it depended
on circumstances. The Franciscan, Francisco Ortiz, sentenced to confinement
for two years in a cell in the convent of Torrelaguna, without intercourse
with his brethren, refused to leave his retirement on the expiration of
the term and remained there till his death, twelve years later, the object
of veneration to all around him. (164)
There might or might not be sympathy for the penitent and his treatment
naturally corresponded.