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The Inquisition
 
 
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The Inquisition [Paperback]

Michael Baigent , Richard Leigh
1.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 352 pages
  • Publisher: Penguin; New Ed edition (2 Nov 2000)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0140274669
  • ISBN-13: 978-0140274660
  • Product Dimensions: 19.2 x 12.8 x 3.2 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 1.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 252,579 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

More About the Author

Michael Baigent
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Product Description

Product Description

After the Albigensian Crusade against the Cathars of south-west France in 1208, a Spanish monk - later canonized as St Dominic - took up the cudgels by establishing a kind of secret police to ferret out heresy - thus began the infamous Inquisition. Baigent and Leigh tell the whole extraordinary story, taking it on into the nineteenth century and showing how after the Doctrine of Papal Infallibility in 1870 the Vatican attempted to establish new authorities that were an intellectual equivalent of the Inquisition. The Inquisition offers a fascinating narrative account of one of the most influential and horrifying movements in the history of western Europe.

About the Author

Michael Baigent is a New Zealander who has lived in the UK since 1976, and Richard Leigh an American who has also been here for many years. Together they collaborated on the international bestseller THE HOLY BLOOD and THE HOLY GRAIL. Baigent lives in Winchester, Hampshire, Leigh in London NW3.

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15 of 17 people found the following review helpful
Unscholarly 28 April 2007
By S. Bailey VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback
Baigent and Leigh are perhaps most famous for being two-thirds of the authors of the infamous The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail, a work not noted for its adherence to strict historical method, or indeed strict history. So I was intrigued to see how they would handle this more factual area. Depressingly, the answer turned out to be less with science than with tabloid sensationalism.

This book alleges to be a wide-ranging study of the activities of the Papal and Spanish Inquisitions from the time of their creation in the thirteenth century to their modern day incarnation. However, my doubts were raised before we'd even left the introduction, as I read:

"Dostoyevsky's Grand Inquisitor has seared itself into our collective consciousness as the definite image and embodiment of the Inquisition." [p. xiv]

Frankly, the only Inquisitor burned into my mind is Michael Palin's soft cushion-brandishing one, and in any case, what has this to do with the historical issues they are supposed to be examining? This was not the last example of this, sadly: works of Umberto Eco, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Arthur Miller and André Gide being waved around in a quite inexplicable manner, as though they were primary sources!

When, finally, we do come to some history, this is sadly lacking. There might be nothing wrong with the facts cited by Baigent and Leigh, or with the conclusions they draw from them - but they've given no proof of that. Almost without exception, no sources are cited: when the odd direct quote does appear and has a footnote, this turns out to be a secondary source. One entire chapter ('Enemies of the Black Friars') appears to be not much more than a straight precis of Norman Cohn's excellent The Pursuit of the Millennium: one is left wondering if there is any original research here at all.

My other complaint about the first half of this book can be amply illustrated by one prudish sentence:

"And there were numberous additional refinements [to methods of torture], to obscene to be transcribed." [p. 73]

Play fair, guys. Half the reason we're reading the book is for the graphic descriptions of torture, so don't titillate.

So far, so mediocre. If they'd stopped halfway through, this would have been an acceptable, if short and unoriginal, introduction to the subject. Then suddenly it all goes horribly wrong.

The second half of the book is a confused mess of ecclesiastical and political history of the last three centuries, coupled with utterly pointless rants relating to the authors' previous work (the Dead Sea Scrolls and Freemasonary). They seem to take very personal objection to certain individuals within the Vatican hierarchy, and abandon any pretence of scholarship in favour of piling up every bit of negative speculation they can: they claim, for example, that the Church's attempts to control the interpretation of the Dead Sea Scrolls to coincide with its own doctrines - what monotheist would do differently? - is a "conspiracy", not the feeble defensiveness it so plainly was.

I am no fan of the Roman Church myself, but surely it deserves better enemies than these.
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14 of 20 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Paperback
Begins as a highly readable and light study of the reasons for the formation of the various European inquistions as well as a survey of the religious orders which propelled it, but then loses steam completely by the third quarter once the the late 18th century spells the inquisitions' doom.Also the authors are exceedingly squeamish about the actual tortures used, for lets be honest, part of the enormous fascination of this subject is its grisly blood spattered chambers of horror. The last part is made up of some tedious rants against the evils of this pope or that cardinal and bits and bobs of the authors' own previous books used obviously to both pad out and push the sales. Love the engraving though, of the witchfinder and the names of the imps he has cast out:Pyewackett,Jarmara,Pecke in the Crowne,Vinegar Tom.
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11 of 16 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Paperback
This single volume history of the inquisition starts well, with racey portraits of the perscution of the Cathars, the roles of the Dominicans and Jesuits and the political background to the founding of the Spanish inquisition. However, it is frequently marred by the use of irrelevent modern parallels (especially the Nazi Holocaust and the term 'ethnic cleansing') and an apparently unquestioning use of contemporary accounts.

The second half of the book tails off, though, as the rather non-eventful activities of the inquisition in the New World and England are chronicled and ends with absurdly long descriptions of the frankly comical Vatican forbidden books list and the tired old story of the Dead Sea Scrolls conspiracy (cut and pasted from the authors' previous work, I imagine). The authors justify the inclusion of these latter episodes on the basis that they were carried out by the beaurocratic descendents of the Holy office but they really have no place here. One can only assume this book was finished before the film 'Stigmata' dredged up the Dead Sea Scrolls Vatican conspiracy stuff again or the authors would have cited Gabriel Byrne as a source!

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