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Informationen zum Autor E. William Monter (PhD Princeton, 1963) is Professor of Early-Modern Europe at Northwestern University. He is an internationally renowned early-modern social historian who has worked on a wide variety of subjects, including witchcraft, the Inquisition, women's history, and perceived deviance, with special reference to France, Switzerland, and Spain. He is the recipient of numerous awards, including Guggenheim and NEH fellowships, and membership in the Institute for Advanced Study. Klappentext Frontiers of Heresy is among the first major English-language contributions to the history of the Spanish Inquisition since Henry Charles Lea completed his classic curvey eighty years ago. Focusing on the lands beyond Castile! Professor Monter analyzes the activities of the Holy Office during an 'Aragonese Century' (1530 1630) when these frontier tribunals were its most active elements. This 'other' Spanish Inquisition virtually ignored converted Jews and their descendants! but brutally harassed Moriscos and immigrant workers from France; it executed nearly as many people for sodomy as for heresy. Despite opposition from local elites! the Inquisition performed many services for the king! sending thousands of heretics to the galleys and even capturing horse-smugglers along the Pyrenees. Frontiers of Heresy is based upon an immense variety of archival sources! and represents a significant reappraisal of one of the most important yet misunderstood institutions of early modern Europe. Zusammenfassung Frontiers of Heresy is a history of the 'other' Spanish Inquisition, in the lands beyond Castile, during an 'Aragonese Century' (1530–1630) when the frontier tribunals were theInquisition's most active agents. This is a significant reappraisal of one of the most important yet misunderstood institutions of early modern Europe. Inhaltsverzeichnis List of maps and figures; List of tables; Preface; Part I. The Holy Office outside Castile: 1. The Castilian Inquisition in the Crown of Aragon, 1484-1530; 2. The Aragonese century of the Spanish Inquisition, 1530-1630; 3. The Aragonese Secretariat: public and private faces; Part II. Aragonese Tribunals: 4. Saragossa: a royal fortress; 5. Barcelona: inquisitors with short arms; 6. Valencia: taming the magnates; 7. Navarre: the four conspiracies; 8. Sicily: Italian wine in Spanish bottles; Part III. Aragonese Heresies: 9. Patterns of Morisco persecution in northern Spain; 10. The survival of Morisco culture in Aragon; 11. Protestants, Frenchmen, and toleration; Part IV. 'Mixed Crimes' in Aragon: 12. Witchcraft: the forgotten offense; 13. Sodomy: the fateful accident; Part V. Recessional: 14. The eclipse of Aragon, 1630-1730; Conclusion; Appendices; Glossary; Index....