Sentences with word «converso»

A novel of generations of conversos» Jews who converted to Christianity» during the years leading up to the Spanish Inquisition.
The Spanish Inquisition was responsible for the deaths of between 3,000 and 5,000 people during its 350 - year history, about 2 \ % of all cases, with executions peaking in the tribunal's first fifty years (mostly converso) and at the end of the sixteenth century (mostly morisco).
It was reported, for example, that many Jews denounced conversos because of their betrayal of Judaism, while genuine converts to Christianity were keen to inform on those who were bringing the New Christians into disrepute.
Unsurprisingly the «conversos problem» irreparably damaged the coexistence of the Christian and Jewish communities.
To take one example, out of the 400 or so conversos interrogated at Ciudad Real between 1483 and 1485, only two were definitely tortured.
The grandfather of St Teresa of Avila, Juan Sánchez, was a wealthy conversos who took advantage of one such Edict and accused himself of crimes that undermined the Church.
Raised in dead denominational Catholic conversos (Jews whose families had escaped the inqusition 1500's) in the SW USA I never heard the gospel of grace or scripture.
The first decades of the Inquisition was its most brutal period and perhaps as many as 2,000 victims, mostly conversos, were burnt at the stake between 1480 and 1530.
These became known as the «New Christians» or conversos.
Conversos were investigated not so much for explicitly denying their new creed, but for continuing Jewish practices, such as reading Hebrew texts, marking the Sabbath and eating unleavened bread.
The Inquisitor of Córdoba sent 134 conversos to their deaths over a six - month period between 1504 and 1505, although he was later dismissed for his zeal.
Although many of these rose to high positions, tensions still remained, especially during times of crisis, and many suspected the conversos of secretly maintaining Jewish customs and beliefs and thus threatening the order of society.
Since about half the Jews chose baptism the edict of expulsion increased the converso population and the workload of the Inquisition.
There are Lutheran counties in the Carolinas and Virginia, for instance, and communities of «converso» Jews in New Mexico.
The authors, led by geneticists Andrés Ruiz - Linares of Fudan University in Shanghai, China, and Garrett Hellenthal of University College London, trace a significant portion of this ancestry to conversos, or Jews who converted to Christianity in 1492, when Spain expelled those who refused to do so.
Conversos were prohibited from migrating to the Spanish colonies, though a few are known to have made the trip anyway.
Genetic tests indicate that Laron syndrome patients in Ecuador (as well as in Israel, Brazil, Chile, and Mexico) are descended from a common ancestor — perhaps a member of the conversos, Jews who converted to Christianity during the Spanish Inquisition.
They theorized that the founder was a member of the conversos, a group of Spanish Jews in the 15th century who converted to Christianity under pressure and later fled during the Inquisition.
Morris» enthralling saga of the Sephardic diaspora focuses on the crypto - Jews of the American Southwest and their European ancestors, reaching back to Luis de Torres, a converso interpreter on Columbus» first voyage, and featuring several courageous women.
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