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11 - The Reception of the Protestant Reformation in the Iberian Peninsula

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 March 2024

Henry A. Jefferies
Affiliation:
Ulster University
Richard Rex
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
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Summary

The discovery of a consignment of books of Protestant propaganda in Seville in the autumn of 1557 convinced the Spanish inquisitors of the existence of clandestine circles that promoted doctrines that contradicted Catholic orthodoxy as redefined between 1547 and 1552 during the first sessions of the Council of Trent. The discovery of a second community of religious dissidents in Valladolid a few weeks later, followed by the arrest on suspicion of Lutheranism of Bartolomé de Carranza y Miranda, archbishop of Toledo, on 22 August 1559 created the impression in the royal court of Philip II that Spain had escaped an odious heretical conspiracy hatched by foreigners and supported by members of its own nobility and senior clergy. Some of the outstanding figures among the Seville and Valladolid dissidents cannot, contrary to what historiography has long maintained, be characterised simply as Erasmists; many of them subscribed to the doctrinal core of Protestantism. There were several networks of Lutherans in Spain, as well as among the communities of exiled Spaniards throughout Europe. The Reformation made a greater impression in Iberia than has long been assumed.

Type
Chapter
Information
Reformations Compared
Religious Transformations across Early Modern Europe
, pp. 242 - 265
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024

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References

Further Reading

Bataillon, Marcel, Érasme et l’Espagne (1937); new edn., Geneva: Droz, 1991, 3 vols.Google Scholar
Boeglin, Michel, Terricabras, Ignacio Fernández and Kahn, David (eds.), Reforma y disidencia religiosa. La recepción de las doctrinas reformadas en la Península ibérica en el siglo XVI, Madrid: Casa de Velázquez, 2018.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boeglin, Michel, Réforme et dissidence religieuse en Castille au temps de l’Empereur. L’affaire Constantino de la Fuente (1505?–1559), Paris: Honoré Champion, 2016.Google Scholar
Boehmer, Eduard, Bibliotheca Wiffeniana. Spanish Reformers of Two Centuries from 1520: Their Lives and Writings, Strasbourg-London: Trübner, 1872–74, 3 vols.Google Scholar
Griffin, Clive, Journeymen-Printers and the Inquisition in Sixteenth-Century Spain, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pareja, Herráiz, Marcos, J., Pinilla, García, Ignacio, J., and Nelson, Jonathan (eds.), Reginaldus Gonsalvius Montanus. A Critical Edition of the Sanctae Inquisitionis Hispanicae Artes aliquot (1567) with a Modern English Translation, London: Brill, 2018.Google Scholar
Kinder, A. Gordon, ‘A Hitherto Unknown Group of Protestants in Sixteenth-Century Aragon’, Cuadernos de Historia Jerónimo Zurita 51–2 (1985), 131–60.Google Scholar
Montanus, Reginaldus Gonsalvius, Sanctae Inquisitionis hispanicae artes aliquot detectae, ac palam traductæ, Heidelberg 1567.Google Scholar
Redondo, Augustin, ‘Luther et l’Espagne de 1520 à 1536’, Mélanges de la Casa de Velázquez 1 (1965), 109–65.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tellechea Idígoras, Jose I., Tiempos recios. Inquisición y heterodoxias, Salamanca: Sígueme, 1977.Google Scholar
Thomas, Werner, La represión del protestantismo en España, 1517–1648, Leuven: Leuven University Press, 2001.Google Scholar

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