While the Spanish Inquisition has laid the greatest claim to
both scholarly attention and the popular imagination, the Roman
Inquisition, established in 1542 and a key instrument of papal
authority, was more powerful, important, and long-lived. Founded by
Paul III and originally aimed to eradicate Protestant heresy, it
followed medieval antecedents but went beyond them by becoming a
highly articulated centralized organ directly dependent on the
pope. By the late sixteenth century the Roman Inquisition had
developed its own distinctive procedures, legal process, and
personnel, the congregation of cardinals and a professional staff.
Its legal process grew out of the technique of "inquisitio"
formulated by Innocent III in the early thirteenth century, it
became the most precocious papal bureaucracy on the road to the
first "absolutist" state.As Thomas F. Mayer demonstrates, the
Inquisition underwent constant modification as it expanded. The new
institution modeled its case management and other procedures on
those of another medieval ancestor, the Roman supreme court, the
Rota. With unparalleled attention to archival sources and detail,
Mayer portrays a highly articulated corporate bureaucracy with the
pope at its head. He profiles the Cardinal Inquisitors, including
those who would play a major role in Galileo's trials, and details
their social and geographical origins, their education, economic
status, earlier careers in the Church, and networks of patronage.
At the point this study ends, circa 1640, Pope Urban VIII had made
the Roman Inquisition his personal instrument and dominated it to a
degree none of his predecessors had approached.
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