Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-8bhkd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-04T16:18:42.829Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 April 2017

Charles H. Parker
Affiliation:
St Louis University, Missouri
Gretchen Starr-LeBeau
Affiliation:
Principia College, Illinois
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Judging Faith, Punishing Sin
Inquisitions and Consistories in the Early Modern World
, pp. 341 - 376
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2017

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Primary Sources

Abbott, William M., “Ruling Eldership in Civil War England, the Scottish Kirk, and Early New England: A Comparative Study of Secular and Spiritual Aspects,” Church History 75 1 (2006): 3868.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alberro, Solange, Inquisición y sociedad en México, 1571–1700 (México, 1988).Google Scholar
Alcalá, Angel ed., The Spanish Inquisition and the Inquisitorial Mind (Highland Lakes, NJ, 1987).Google Scholar
Ames, Christine Caldwell, Righteous Persecution: Inquisition, Dominicans, and Christianity in the Middle Ages (Philadelphia, PA, 2009).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baião, António, A Inquisição de Goa: Tentativa de história de sua origem, estabelecimento, evolução, e extinção, 2 vols. (Lisbon, 1949).Google Scholar
Barker, S. K. ed., Revisiting Geneva: Robert Kingdon and the Coming of the French Wars of Religion, (St Andrews, 2012).Google Scholar
Benedict, Philip, Christ’s Churches Purely Reformed: A Social History of Calvinism (New Haven, CT, 2002).Google Scholar
Bennassar, Bartolomé, “La Inquisición o la pedagogía del miedo,” in Inquisición española, poder político y control social, Bennassar, Bartolomé et al. eds. (Barcelona, 1984), 94125.Google Scholar
Bethencourt, Francisco, The Inquisition. A Global History, 1478–1834, Birrell, Jean trans. (Cambridge, 2009).Google Scholar
Black, Christopher F., The Italian Inquisition (New Haven, CT, 2009).Google Scholar
Brambilla, Elena, La Giustizia Intollerante. Inquisizione e tribunali confessionali in Europa (secolo iv-xviii) (Rome, 2006).Google Scholar
Calvin, John, Institutes of the Christian Religion, 2 vols., McNeill, John T. ed., Battles, Ford Lewis trans. (Philadelphia, PA, 1960).Google Scholar
Calvini, Ioannis, Opera quae supersunt omnia, 59 vols., Baum, G., Cunitz, E. and Reuss, E. eds. (Brunswick, 1863–1900).Google Scholar
Cavarzere, Marco, La Prassi della Censura nell’Italia del Seicento. Tra Repressione e Mediazione (Rome, 2011).Google Scholar
Chuchiak, John F., The Inquisition in New Spain, 1536–1820. A Documentary History (Baltimore, MD, 2012).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Contreras, Jaime, Sotos contra Riquelmes: regidores, inquisidores, y criptojudíos (Madrid, 1992).Google Scholar
Croq, Laurence and Garrioch, David eds., La religion vécue. Les laïcs dans l’Europe moderne (Rennes, 2013).Google Scholar
Davidson, Nicholas D., “The Inquisition,” in The Ashgate Companion to the Counter-Reformation, Bamji, Alexandra, Janssen, Geert H., and Laven, Mary eds. (Farnham and Burlington, VT, 2013), 91108.Google Scholar
Dedieu, Jean-Pierre, L’administration de la foi: l’inquisition de Tolède, XVIe – XVIIIe siècle (Madrid, 1989).Google Scholar
Del Col, Andrea, L’Inquisizione in Italia. Dal XII al XXI secolo (Milan, 2006).Google Scholar
van Deursen, A. Th., Bavianen en Slijkgeuzen: Kerk en kerkvolk ten tijde and Maurits en Oldenbarnvelt (Franeker, 1997).Google Scholar
Errera, Andrea, Processus in causa fide: l’evoluzione dei manuali inquisitoriali nei secoli XVI-XVIII e il manuale inedito di un inquisitore perugino (Bologna, 2000).Google Scholar
Estèbe, Janine and Vogler, Bernard, “La genèse d’une société protestante: étude comparée de quelques registres consistoriaux languedociens et palatins vers 1600,” Annales: économies, sociétés, civilisations 32 (1976): 362–88.Google Scholar
Fehler, Timothy, Poor Relief and Protestantism (Brookfield, VT, 1999).Google Scholar
Feitler, Bruno, Inquisition, juifs et nouveaux-chrétiens au Brésil. Le Nordeste, XVIIe-XVIIIe (Louvain, 2003).Google Scholar
Flynn, Maureen, “Mimesis of the Last Judgement: The Spanish Auto de Fe,” Sixteenth Century Journal 22/2 (1991): 281–97.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Giles, Mary E. ed., Women in the Inquisition. Spain and the New World (Baltimore, MD, 1999).Google Scholar
Ginzburg, Carlo, “The Inquisitor as Anthropologist,” in Clues, Myths, and the Historical Method, John, and Tedeschi, Anne trans. (Baltimore, MD, 1989), 156–64.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ginzburg, Carlo, The Night Battles. Witchcraft and Agrarian Cults in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Century, John, and Tedeschi, Anne trans. (Baltimore, MD, 1983).Google Scholar
Givens, Bryan, Judging Maria de Macedo: A Female Visionary and the Inquisition in Early Modern Portugal (Baton Rouge, LA, 2010).Google Scholar
Gowing, Laura, Domestic Dangers: Women, Words, and Sex in Early Modern London (Oxford, 1996).Google Scholar
Graham, Michael F., The Uses of Reform: “Godly Discipline” and Popular Behavior in Scotland and Beyond, 1560–1610 (Leiden, 1996).Google Scholar
Grosse, Christian, Les rituels de la Cène: le culte eucharistique réformé à Genève (XVIe-XVIIe siècles) (Geneva, 2008).Google Scholar
Grosse, Christian, Tosato-Rigo, Danièle, and Staremberg Goy, Nicole eds., Sous l’oeil du Consistoire: sources consistoriales et histoire du contrôle social sous l’ancien régime (Lausanne, 2004).Google Scholar
Henningsen, Gustav, The Witches’ Advocate: Basque Witchcraft and the Spanish Inquisition, 1609–1614 (Reno, NV, 1980).Google Scholar
Henningsen, Gustav and Tedeschi, John eds., The Inquisition in Early Modern Europe: Studies on Sources and Methods, ed. (Dekalb, IL, 1986).Google Scholar
Holt, Mack P. ed., Adaptations of Calvinism in Reformation Europe: Essays in Honor of Brian G. Armstrong (Aldershot, 2007).Google Scholar
Homza, Lu Ann, Religious Authority in the Spanish Renaissance (Baltimore, MD, 2000).Google Scholar
Homza, Lu Ann, The Spanish Inquisition, 1478–1614: An Anthology of Sources (Indianapolis, IN, 2006).Google Scholar
Hsia, Ronnie Po-Chia, Social Discipline in the Reformation: Central Europe 1550–1750 (New York, 1989).Google Scholar
Hughes, Philip Edgcumbe ed. and trans., The Register of the Company of Pastors of Geneva in the Time of Calvin (Grand Rapids, MI, 1966).Google Scholar
Huisseau, Isaac d’, La Discipline des Eglises réformées de France ou l’ordre par lequel elles sont conduites et gouvernées (Geneva, 1666).Google Scholar
Ingram, Martin, Church Courts, Sex and Marriage in England, 1570–1640 (Cambridge, 1987).Google Scholar
Ingram, Martin, “History of Sin or History of Crime? The Regulation of Personal Morality in England, 1450–1750,” in Institutionen, Instrumente und Akteure Sozialer Kontrolle und Disziplinierung im frühneuzeitlichen Europa, Schilling, Heinz and Behrisch, Lars eds. (Frankfurt, 1999), 87103.Google Scholar
Janin-Thivos Tailland, Michèle, Inquisition et Société au Portugal. Le cas du tribunal d’Évora 1660–1821 (Paris, 2001).Google Scholar
Kagan, Richard, Lucrecia’s Dreams: Politics and Prophecy in Sixteenth-Century Spain (Berkeley, CA, 1990).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kagan, Richard, and Dyer, Abigail eds. and trans., Inquisitorial Inquiries. Brief Lives of Secret Jews and Other Heretics (Baltimore, MD, 2004).Google Scholar
Kamen, Henry, The Phoenix and the Flame: Catalonia and the Counter Reformation (New Haven, CT, 1993).Google Scholar
Kamen, Henry, The Spanish Inquisition. An Historical Revision (London, 1997).Google Scholar
Kaplan, Benjamin J., Calvinists and Libertines: Confession and Community in Utrecht, 1578–1620 (Oxford, 1995).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kingdon, Robert M., Adultery and Divorce in Calvin’s Geneva (Cambridge, MA, 1995).Google Scholar
Kingdon, Robert M., “The Control of Morals in Calvin’s Geneva,” in The Social History of the Reformation, Buck, Lawrence. P., Zophy, Jonathan. W. eds. (Columbus, 1972), 316.Google Scholar
Kingdon, Robert M., “Social Welfare in Calvin’s Geneva,” American Historical Review 76 (1971): 5069.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kingdon, Robert M. and Bergier, Jean-François eds., Registres de la Compagnie des Pasteurs de Genève, vol. 1, 1546–1553 (Geneva, 1964).Google Scholar
Kooi, Christine, Liberty and Religion: Church and State in Leiden’s Reformation, 1572–1620 (Leiden, 2000).Google Scholar
Lambert, Thomas A. and Watt, , Isabella, M., eds., Registers of the Consistory of Geneva in the Time of Calvin, vol. 1, (Grand Rapids, MI, 2000).Google Scholar
Lambert, Thomas A., Watt, Isabella M., Kingdon, Robert M. and Watt, Jeffrey R. eds., Registres du Consistoire de Genève au temps de Calvin, 6 vols. (Geneva, 1996–2012).Google Scholar
Lea, Henry Charles, A History of the Inquisition of Spain, 4 vols. (New York, 1906).Google Scholar
Lenman, Bruce, “The Limits of Godly Discipline in the Early Modern Period,” in Religion and Society in Early Modern Europe, von Greyerz, Kaspar ed. (London, 1984), 124–45.Google Scholar
Lipscomb, Suzannah, “Crossing Boundaries: Women’s Gossip, Insults and Violence in Sixteenth-Century France,” French History 25 (2011): 408–26.Google Scholar
Llorente, Juan Antonio, Histoire critique de l’Inquisitio d’Espagne (Paris, 1817–18).Google Scholar
Lualdi, Katherine Jackson and Thayer, Anne T. eds., Penitence in the Age of Reformations (Aldershot, 2000).Google Scholar
Lynn, Kimberly, Between Court and Confessional: The Politics of Spanish Inquisitors (Cambridge, 2013).Google Scholar
Manetsch, Scott M., Calvin’s Company of Pastors: Pastoral Care and the Emerging Reformed Church, 1536–1609 (Oxford, 2013).Google Scholar
Manetsch, Scott M., “Pastoral Care East of Eden: The Consistory of Geneva, 1568–82,” Church History 75 (2006): 274313.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marcocci, Giuseppe, I Custodi dell’Ortodossia. Inquisizion e Chiesa nel Portugallo del Cinquecento (Rome, 2004).Google Scholar
Marcocci, Giuseppe, “Toward a History of the Portuguese Inquisition: Trends in Modern Historiography (1974–2009),” Revue de l’histoire des religions 227 3(2010): 355–93.Google Scholar
Mayer, Thomas F., The Roman Inquisition, A Papal Bureaucracy and its Laws in the Age of Galileo (Philadelphia, PA, 2013).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McCallum, John, Reforming the Scottish Parish: The Reformation in Fife, 1560–1640 (Farnham, 2010).Google Scholar
Méjan, François ed., Discipline de l’Église réformée de France annotée et précédée d’une introduction historique (Paris, 1947).Google Scholar
Mentzer, Raymond A., “Le consistoire et la pacification du monde rural,” Bulletin de la Société de l’Histoire du Protestantisme Français 135 (1989): 373–89.Google Scholar
Mentzer, Raymond A., “Disciplina nervus ecclesiae: The Calvinist Reform of Morals at Nîmes,” Sixteenth Century Journal 18 (1987): 89115.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mentzer, Raymond A., “Morals and Moral Regulation in Protestant France,” Journal of Interdisciplinary History 31 (2000): 120.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mentzer, Raymond, “The Reformed Churches of France and Medieval Canon Law,” in Canon Law in Protestant Lands, Helmholz, R.H. ed. (Berlin, 1992), 165–85.Google Scholar
Mentzer, Raymond, “Sociability and Culpability: Conventions of Mediation and Reconciliation within the Sixteenth-Century Huguenot Community,” in Memory and Identity: The Huguenots in France and the Altalntic Diaspora, Van Ruymbeke, B. and Sparks, Randy J. eds. (Columbia, SC, 2003), 4557.Google Scholar
Mentzer, Raymond ed., Sin and the Calvinists: Morals Control and the Consistory in the Reformed Tradition (Kirksville, MO, 1994).Google Scholar
Mentzer, Raymond A., Chareyre, Philippe, and Moreil, Françoise eds., Dire l’interdit: The Vocabulary of Censure and Exclusion in the Early Modern Reformed Tradition (Leiden, 2010).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mills, Kenneth R., Idolatry and its Enemies: Colonial Andean Religion and Extirpation, 1640–1750 (Princeton, NJ, 1997).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Monter, William E., “The Consistory of Geneva, 1559–1569,” Bibliothèque d’Humanisme et Renaissance 38 3 (1976): 467–84.Google Scholar
Monter, E. William, Frontiers of Heresy: The Spanish Inquisition from the Basque Lands to Sicily (Cambridge, 1990).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moreno Martínez, Doris, La Invención de la Inquisición (Madrid, 2004).Google Scholar
Münch, Paul, Zucht und Ordnung. Reformierte Kirchenverfassungen im 16. und 17. Jahrhundert (Nassau-Dillenburg, Kurpfalz, Hessen-Kassel) (Stuttgart, 1978).Google Scholar
Murdock, Graeme, Calvinism on the Frontier, 1600–1660: International Calvinism and the Reformed Church in Hungary and Transylvania (Oxford, 2000).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nalle, Sara, God in La Mancha: Religious Reform and the People of Cuenca, 1500–1650 (Baltimore, MD, 1992).Google Scholar
Nalle, Sara, Mad for God: Bartolomé Sánchez, the Secret Messiah of Cardenete (Charlottesville, VA, 2001).Google Scholar
Naphy, William G., Calvin and the Consolidation of the Genevan Reformation (Manchester, 1994).Google Scholar
Nesvig, Martin Austin, Ideology and Inquisition: The World of the Censors in Early Mexico (New Haven, CT, 2009).Google Scholar
Paiva, José Pedro, Baluartes da fé e da disciplina. O enlace entre a Inquisiçâo e os bispos em Portugal (1536–1750) (Coimbra, 2011).Google Scholar
Parker, Charles H., “Enregistrer les péchés pour favoriser la réconciliation. Les archives des consistoires des Eglises réformées de Hollande,” Philippe Chareyre trans. Bulletin de la Société de l’Histoire du Protestantisme Français 153 (2007): 613–34.Google Scholar
Parker, Charles H., “The Moral Agency and Moral Autonomy of Church Folk in the Dutch Reformed Church of Delft, 1580–1620,” Journal of Ecclesiastical History 48 (1997): 4470.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Parker, Charles H., The Reformation of Community: Social Welfare and Calvinist Charity in Holland, 1572–1620 (Cambridge, 1998).Google Scholar
Parker, Geoffrey, “The ‘Kirk by Law Established’ and the Origins of the ‘Taming of Scotland’: St. Andrews 1559–1600,” in Perspectives in Scottish Social History: Essays in Honour of Rosalind Mitchison, Leneman, Leah ed. (Aberdeen, 1988), 132.Google Scholar
Pastore, Stefania, Il vangelo e la spada. L’inquisizione di Castiglia e i suoi critici (1460–1598) (Rome, 2003).Google Scholar
Pérez Villanueva, Joaquín, and Bonet, Bartolomé Escandell eds., Historia de la Inquisición en España y América 3 vols. (Madrid, 1984–2000).Google Scholar
Perry, Mary Elizabeth, and Cruz, Anne J. eds., Cultural Encounters: the Impact of the Inquisition in Spain and the New World (Berkeley, CA, 1991).Google Scholar
Peters, Edward, Inquisition (Berkeley, CA, 1989).Google Scholar
Pettegree, Andrew, Foreign Protestant Communities in Sixteenth-Century London (Oxford, 1986).Google Scholar
Pollmann, Judith, “Off the Record: Problems in the Quantification of Calvinist Church Discipline,” Sixteenth Century Journal 33 (2002): 423–38.Google Scholar
Pollmann, Judith, Religious Choice in the Dutch Republic (Manchester, 1999).Google Scholar
Prestwich, Menna ed., International Calvinism, 1541–1715 (Oxford, 1985).Google Scholar
Prosperi, Adriano, Tribunali della coscienza. Inquisitori, confessori, missionari (Turin, 2009).Google Scholar
Prosperi, Adriano ed., with Lavenia, Vincenzo and Tedeschi, John, Dizionario storico dell’Inquisizione, 4 vols. (Pisa, 2010).Google Scholar
Pullan, Brian, The Jews of Europe and the Inquisition of Venice, 1550–1670 (London, 1997).Google Scholar
Romeo, Giovanni, Inquisitori, esorcisti e streghe nell’Italia della Controriforma (Florence, 1990).Google Scholar
Roodenburg, Herman, Onder Censuur. De kerkelijke tucht in de gereformeerde gemeente van Amsterdam, 1578–1700 (Hilversum, 1990).Google Scholar
Roth, Cecil, The Spanish Inquisition, 2nd ed. (New York, 1996).Google Scholar
Saraiva, António José, The Marrano Factory: The Portuguese and its New Christians, 1536–1765, Salomon, H. P. and Sassoon, I.S.D. trans. (Leiden, 2001).Google Scholar
Scaramella, Pierroberto ed., Le lettere della Congregazione del Sant’Ufficio ai tribunali di fede di Napoli 1563–1625, introduction by Tedeschi, John (Trieste, 2002).Google Scholar
Schilling, Heinz, Civic Calvinism in Northwestern Germany and the Netherlands: Sixteenth to Nineteenth Centuries (Kirksville, MO, 1991).Google Scholar
Schilling, Heinz, “‘History of Crime’ or ‘History of Sin?’” in Politics and Society in Reformation Europe, Kouri, E. I. and Scott, Tom eds. (Basingstoke, 1987), 289310.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schilling, Heinz, and Schreiber, Klaus-Dieter eds. Die Kirchenratsprotokolle der reformierten Gemeinde Emden 1557–1620, 2 vols. (Cologne, 1989–1992).Google Scholar
Schutte, Anne Jacobson, Aspiring Saints: Pretence of Holiness, Inquisition and Gender in the Republic of Venice, 1618–1750 (Baltimore, MD, 2001).Google Scholar
Schwartz, Stuart B., All Can Be Saved: Religious Tolerance and Salvation in the Iberian Atlantic World (New Haven, CT, 2008).Google Scholar
Seitz, Jonathan, Witchcraft and Inquisition in Early Modern Venice (Cambridge, 2011).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Silverblatt, Irene, Modern Inquisitions: Peru and the Colonial Origins of the Civilized World (Durham, NC, 2004).Google Scholar
Soyer, François, “Nowhere to Run: The Extradition of Conversos between the Spanish and Portuguese Inquisition during the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries,” in The Conversos and Moriscos in Late Medieval Spain and Beyond, Ingram, Kevin ed. (Leiden, 2012), 247–74.Google Scholar
Spierling, Karen E., Infant Baptism in Reformation Geneva (Aldershot, 2005).Google Scholar
Starr-LeBeau, Gretchen, In the Shadow of the Virgin: Inquisitors, Friars, and Conversos in Guadalupe, Spain (Princeton, NJ, 2003).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tausiet, Maria, Abracadabra omnipotens: magia urbana en Zaragoza en la Edad Moderna (Madrid, 2007).Google Scholar
Tausiet, María, Ponzoña en los ojos: brujería y superstición en Aragón en el siglo XVI (Madrid, 2004).Google Scholar
Tedeschi, John, The Prosecution of Heresy. Collected Studies on the Inquisition in Early Modern Italy (Binghamton, NY, 1991).Google Scholar
Todd, Margo, “Consistoire, guilde et conseil: les archives des consistoires écossais et l’urbanisation de la culture paroissiale,” Bulletin de la Société de l’Histoire du Protestantisme Français 153 (2007): 635–48.Google Scholar
Todd, Margo, The Culture of Protestantism in Early Modern Scotland (New Haven, CT, 2002).Google Scholar
Villa-Flores, Javier, Dangerous Speech: A Social History of Blasphemy in Colonial Mexico (Tucson, AZ, 2006).Google Scholar
Wachtel, Nathan, The Faith of Remembrance: Marrano Labyrinths, Halpern, Nikki trans. (Philadelphia, PA, 2013).Google Scholar
Wadsworth, James E., Agents of Orthodoxy: Honor, Status and the Inquisition in Colonial Pernambuco Brazil (New York, 2008).Google Scholar
Watt, Jeffrey R., The Making of Modern Marriage: Matrimonial Control and the Rise of Sentiment in Neuchâtel, 1550–1800 (Ithaca, NY, 1992).Google Scholar
Watt, Jeffrey R., The Scourge of Demons: Possession, Lust, and Witchcraft in a Seventeenth-Century Italian Convent (Rochester, NY, 2009).Google Scholar
Watt, Jeffrey, “Women and the Consistory in Calvin’s Geneva,” Sixteenth Century Journal 24 (1993): 429–39.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Witte, John Jr. and Kingdon, Robert M., Sex, Marriage and Family in John Calvin’s Geneva, vol. 1, Courtship, Engagement and Marriage (Grand Rapids, MI, 2005).Google Scholar
Wouters, A. Ph. F. and Abels, P.H.A.M., Nieuw en ongezien: kerk en samenleving in de classis Delft en Delfland 1572–1621, 2 vols. (Delft, 1994).Google Scholar

Secondary Sources

Bayle, Pierre, Dictionnaire Historique et Critique, 4 vols., 6th ed. (Basel, 1741).Google Scholar
Bennassar, Bartolomé, “Modelos de la mentalidad inquisitorial: métodos de su ‘pedagogia de miedo,’” in Inquisición española y mentalidad inquisitorial, Alcalá, Angel ed. (Barecelona, 1984), 174–82.Google Scholar
Contreras, Jaime and Henningsen, Gustav, “Forty-Four Thousand Cases of the Spanish Inquisition (1540–1700): Analysis of a Historical Data Bank,” in The Inquisition in Early Modern Europe: Studies on Sources and Methods, Hennigsen, Gustav and Tedeschi, John eds., in association with Charles Amiel (DeKalb, IL, 1986), 100–29.Google Scholar
Elias, Norbert, The Civilizing Process, Jephcott, Edmund trans. (Cambridge, MA, 1994).Google Scholar
Gordon, Bruce, Calvin (New Haven, CT, 2009).Google Scholar
Mentzer, Raymond A., Heresy Proceedings in Languedoc, 1500–1560 (Philadelphia, PA, 1984).Google Scholar
Monter, E. William, “Women and the Italian Inquisitions,” in Women in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance: Literary and Historical Perspectives, Rose, Mary Beth ed. (Syracuse, NY, 1986).Google Scholar
Monter, E. William and Tedeschi, John, “Toward a Statistical Profile of the Italian Inquisitions, Sixteenth to Eighteenth Centuries,” in The Inquisition in Early Modern Europe: Studies on Sources and Methods, Hennigsen, Gustav and Tedeschi, John eds., in association with Charles Amiel (DeKalb, IL, 1986), 130–57.Google Scholar
Mout, M.E.H.N., “Limits and Debates: A Comparative View of Dutch Toleration in the Sixteenth and Early Seventeenth Centuries,” in The Emergence of Tolerance in the Dutch Republic, Berkvens-Stevelinck, C., Israel, J., and Posthumus Meyjes, G.H.M. eds. (Leiden, 1997), 3747.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pomeau, René, La Religion de Voltaire (Paris, 1956).Google Scholar
Pullan, Brian, The Jews of Europe and the Inquisition in Venice, 1550–1670 (Totowa, NJ, 1983).Google Scholar
Tailland, Michèle Janin-Thivos, Inquisition et société: le cas du tribunal d’Evora, 1660–1821 (Paris, 2001).Google Scholar
Voltaire, , Philosophical Dictionary, 2 vols., Gay, Peter trans. and ed. (New York, 1962).Google Scholar
Black, Christopher F., “Censorship and Indexes,” in Oxford Bibliographies: Renaissance and Reformation (online resource).Google Scholar
Black, Christopher F., Church, Religion and Society in Early Modern Italy (New York, 2004).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Black, Christopher F., “Confraternities and the Italian Inquisitions,” in Brotherhood and Boundaries: Fraternità e barriere, Pastore, Stefania, Prosperi, Adriano, and Terpstra, Nicholas eds. (Pisa, 2011), 293305.Google Scholar
Black, Christopher F., Italian Confraternities in the Sixteenth Century (Cambridge, 1989).Google Scholar
Black, Christopher F., “The Roman Inquisition,” in Oxford Bibliographies: Renaissance and Reformation (online resource).Google Scholar
Black, Christopher F., “The Trials and Tribulations of a Local Roman Inquisitor: Giacomo Tinti in Modena, 1626–1647,” online, Giornale di Storia 12 (2012): www.giornaledistoria.net.Google Scholar
Bruening, Michael, Calvinism’s First Battleground: Conflict and Reform in the Pays de Vaud, 1528–1559 (Dordrecht, 2005).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burnett, Amy Nelson, The Yoke of Christ: Martin Bucer and Christian Discipline (Kirksville, MO, 1994).Google Scholar
Cameron, James K. ed., The First Book of Discipline (Edinburgh, 1972).Google Scholar
Cerrillo Cruz, Gonzalo, Los Familiares de la Inquisición Española (Valladolid, 2000).Google Scholar
Del Col, Andrea, Domenico Scandella Known as Menocchio: His Trials before the Inquisition (1583–1599), John and Anne Tedeschi trans. (Binghamton, NY, 1996).Google Scholar
Denis, Philippe and Rott, Jean, Jean Morély (ca. 1524 – ca. 1594) et l’utopie d’une démocratie dans l’Église (Geneva, 1993).Google Scholar
Garrisson, Janine, Protestants du Midi, 1559–1598 (Toulouse, 1980).Google Scholar
Ginzburg, Carlo, The Cheese and the Worms. The Cosmos of a Sixteenth-Century Miller, John and Anne Tedeschi trans. (Baltimore, MD, 1992).Google Scholar
Gorski, Philip S., The Disciplinary Revolution. Calvinism and the Rise of the State in Early Modern Europe (Chicago, 2003).Google Scholar
Greenleaf, Richard E., “Persistence of Native Values: The Inquisition and the Indians of Colonial Mexico,” The Americas 50 3(1994): 351–76.Google Scholar
Greschat, Martin, Martin Bucer: A Reformer and his Times (Louisville, KY, 2004).Google Scholar
Havik, Philip J., “Walking the Tightrope: Female Agency, Religious Practice, and the Portuguese Inquisition on the Upper Guinea Coast (Seventeenth Century),” in Bridging the Early Modern Atlantic World: People, Products, and Practices on the Move, Williams, Caroline A. ed. (Farnham and Burlington, VT, 2009), 173–81.Google Scholar
Kingdon, Robert M., “La discipline ecclésiastique vue de Zurich et Genève au temps de la Réformation: l’usage de Matthieu 18, 15–17 par les réformateurs,” Revue de théologie et de philosophie 133 (2001): 343–55.Google Scholar
Kingdon, Robert M., “The Geneva Consistory in the Time of Calvin,” in Calvinism in Europe, 1540–1620, Pettegree, Andrew et al. eds. (Cambridge, 1994).Google Scholar
Kingdon, Robert M., “Nostalgia for Catholic Rituals in Calvin’s Geneva,” in Grenzgänge der Theologie Professor Alexandre Ganoczy zum 75. Geburtstag, Meuffels, O. ed. (Munster, 2004), 209–20.Google Scholar
Kingdon, Robert M. and Lambert, Thomas A., Reforming Geneva: Discipline, Faith and Anger on Calvin’s Geneva (Geneva, 2012).Google Scholar
Kingdon, Robert M., Mentzer, Raymond A., and Reulos, Michel, “‘Disciplines’ réformées du XVIe siècle français: une découverte faite aux Etats-Unis,” Bulletin de la Société de l’Histoire du Protestantisme Français 130 (1984): 6986.Google Scholar
Kirk, James ed., The Second Book of Discipline (Edinburgh, 1980).Google Scholar
MacCulloch, Diarmaid, “Evil Just Is,” review of The Italian Inquisition, by Christopher Black, London Review of Books 32 9(May 2010), 23–4.Google Scholar
Mayer, Thomas F., “The Roman Inquisition’s Precept to Galileo (1616),” The British Journal for the History of Science 43 3(2010): 327–51.Google Scholar
Minchella, Giuseppina, “Alterità e Vicinanza: Cristiani, Turchi, Rinnegati, Ebrei a Venezia e nella Frontiera Orientale,” Giornale di Storia 4 (2010): www.giornaledistoria.net.Google Scholar
Minchella, Giuseppina, Porre un soldato all’Inquisizione: L’intervento del Sant’Uffizio nella fortezza veneziana di Palmanova, 1595–1669 (Trieste, 2009).Google Scholar
Monter, E. William, Calvin’s Geneva (New York, 1967).Google Scholar
Plakotos, Georgios, “Christian and Muslim Converts from the Balkans in Early Modern Venice: Patterns of Social and Cultural Mobility and Identities,” in Developing Cultural Identity in the Balkans: Convergence vs. Divergence, Raymond, Detrez and Pieter, Plas eds. (Brussels, 2005), 125–45.Google Scholar
Reulos, Michel, “Police et discipline de l’Église de Saint-Lô (1563),” appended to “Les débuts des Communautés réformées dans l’actuel département de la Manche (Cotetin et Avranchin),” in Réforme et Contre-réforme en Normandie, special issue of Revue du Département de la Manche 24 (1982, fascicules 93-94-95), 3157.Google Scholar
Rowland, Ingrid D., Giordano Bruno: Philosopher/Heretic (New York, 2008).Google Scholar
Valente, Michaela, Contro L’Inquisizione. Il dibattito europeo secc. XVI-XVIII (Turin, 2009).Google Scholar
Wagner, Christine, “Los luteranos ante la Inquisición de Toledo en el siglo XVI,” Hispania Sacra 46 (1994): 473510.Google Scholar
Wickersham, Jane K., Rituals of Prosecution: The Roman Inquisition and the Prosecution of Philo-Protestants in Sixteenth-Century Italy (Toronto, 2012).Google Scholar
Adorno, Rolena, Guaman Poma: Writing and Resistance in Colonial Peru (Austin, TX, 2000).Google Scholar
Ambrona, Antonio Gil, Historia de la violencia contra las mujeres: misoginía y conflicto matrimonial en España (Madrid, 2008).Google Scholar
Barbierato, Francesco, The Inquisitor in the Hat Shop: Inquisition, Forbidden Books, and Unbelief in Early Modern Venice (Farnham and Burlington, VT, 2012).Google Scholar
Bray, Gerald ed., The Anglican Canons, 1529–1947 (Woodbridge, 1998).Google Scholar
Bray, Gerald ed., Tudor Church Reform: the Henrician Canons of 1535 and the Reformation Legum Ecclesiasticarum (Woodbridge, 2000).Google Scholar
Brodman, James William, Charity and Welfare: Hospitals and the Poor in Medieval Catalonia (Philadelphia, PA, 1998).Google Scholar
Brooks, Christopher W., Law, Politics and Society in Early Modern England (Cambridge, 2008).Google Scholar
Brucker, Gene A., “Ecclesiastical Courts in Fifteenth-Century Florence and Fiesole,” Mediaeval Studies 53 1(1991): 229–57.Google Scholar
Brundage, James A., Medieval Canon Law (London, 1995).Google Scholar
Burns, Kathryn, “Nuns, Kurakas, and Credit: The Spiritual Economy of Seventeenth-Century Cuzco,” Colonial Latin American Review 6 2 (1997): 185204.Google Scholar
Calderwood, Alma ed., Buik of the Kirk of the Canagait (Edinburgh, 1961).Google Scholar
Chacón, Candau, Luisa, Maria, Iglesia y sociedad en la campiña sevillana, la Vicaría de Ecija (1697–1723) (Seville, 1986).Google Scholar
Carroll, Stuart, Blood and Violence in Early Modern France (Oxford, 2006).Google Scholar
Conner, Philip, Huguenot Heartland: Montaubon and Southern French Calvinism During the Wars of Religion (Aldershot, 2002), 3187.Google Scholar
Coutts, W. and Forte, A.D.M., “Some Aspects of the Law of Marriage in Scotland: 1500–1700,” in Marriage and Property, Craik, Elizabeth M. ed. (Aberdeen, 1984), 104–18.Google Scholar
Crawford, David, “The Rule of Law? The Laity, English Archdeacons’ Courts and the Reformation to 1558,” Parergon, new series 4 (1986): 155–73.Google Scholar
Davies, Stephen J., “The Courts and the Scottish Legal System, 1600–1747: The Case of Stirlingshire,” in Crime and the Law: The Social History of Crime in Western Europe since 1500, Gatrell, V.A.C., Lenman, Bruce, and Parker, Geoffrey eds. (London, 1980), 120–54.Google Scholar
De Klerk, Peter, Renaissance, Reformation, Resurgence (Grand Rapids, 1976).Google Scholar
Dougall, Alistair, The Devil’s Book: Charles I, the Book of Sports and Puritanism in Tudor and Early Stuart England (Exeter, 2011).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Duffy, Eamon, Fires of Faith: Catholic England under Mary Tudor (New Haven, CT, 2009).Google Scholar
Edwards, John, Christian Córdoba: The City and its Region in the Late Middle Ages (Cambridge, 1982).Google Scholar
Elton, G. R., Reform and Renewal: Thomas Cromwell and the Common Weal (Cambridge, 1977).Google Scholar
Elton, G. R., Encyclopedia of the Laws of Scotland (Edinburgh, 1927).Google Scholar
Fasolt, Constantin, “Visions of Order in the Canonists and Civilians,” in Handbook of European History, 1400–1600: Late Middle Ages, Renaissance and Reformation, 2 vols., Brady, Thomas A., Oberman, Heiko, and Tracy, James eds. (Leiden, 1995), 2:31–59.Google Scholar
Fenster, Thelma and Smail, Daniel Lord eds., Fama: The Politics of Talk and Reputation in Medieval Europe (Ithaca, NY, 2003).Google Scholar
Ferreira dos Santos Silveira, Patricia, “A justiça eclesiástica e os mecanismos de busca de infratores: as queixas, as querelas e as denúncias no século XVIII,” Boletim do Arquivo da Universidade de Coimbra 26 (2013): 137–60.Google Scholar
Fitzgerald, Monica D., “Drunkards, Fornicators, and a Great Hen Squabble: Censure Practices and the Gendering of Puritanism,” Church History 80 (2011): 4075.Google Scholar
Fragnito, Gigliola, “Introduction” and “The Central and Peripheral Organization of Censorship,” in Church, Censorship and Culture in Early Modern Italy, Fragnito, Gigliola ed., Adrian Belton trans. (Cambridge, 2001), 149.Google Scholar
Frere, Walter Howard and Douglas, C. E. eds., Puritan Manifestoes: A Study of the Origin of the Puritan Revolt, 2nd ed. (London, 1954).Google Scholar
García y García, Antonio, “La Canonísta Iberica (1150–1250),” Bulletin of Medieval Canon Law 11 (1981): 4175.Google Scholar
García y García, Antonio, Synodicon Hispanum, I–X vols. (Madrid, 1981).Google Scholar
Garnot, Benoît, “Justice, infrajustice, parajustice et extra justice dans la France d’Ancien Régime,” Crime, Histoire & Sociétés 4 (2000): 103–20.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gloag, W.M. and Henderson, R.C. eds., Introduction to the Law of Scotland, 7th ed. (Edinburgh, 1968).Google Scholar
González Rapariegos, de Cándido María Ajo ed., Inventario general de los archivos de la Diócesis de Avila (Madrid, 1969).Google Scholar
Grosse, Christian, “Les consistoires réformés et le pluralisme des instances de régulation des conflits (Genève, XVIe siècle),” in Entre justice et justiciables: les auxiliaires de la justice du Moyen Âge au XXe siècle, Dolan, Claire ed. (Québec, 2005), 627–44.Google Scholar
Grosse, Christian, L’excommunication de Philibert Berthelier: histoire d’un conflit d’identité aux premiers temps de la Réforme Genevoise, 1547–1555 (Geneva, 1995).Google Scholar
Grosse, Christian, “‘Il y avoit eu trop grande rigueur par cy-devant.’ La discipline ecclésiastique à Genève à l’époque de Théodore de Bèze,” in Théodore de Bèze, 1519–1605: actes du colloque de Genève, septembre 2005, Backus, Irena ed. (Geneva, 2007), 5568.Google Scholar
Grosse, Christian, “‘Obstinés et incorrigibles’ L’impénitence devant le consistoire de l’église de Genève,” in Le criminel endurci: récidive et récidivistes du Moyen Age au XXe siècle, Porret, Michel and Briegel, Françoise eds. (Geneva, 2006), 8191.Google Scholar
Haigh, Christopher, English Reformations: Religion, Politics and Society under the Tudors (Oxford, 1993).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hardwick, Julie, Family Business: Litigation and the Political Economies of Daily Life in Early Modern France (Oxford, 2009).Google Scholar
van der Heijden, Manon, “Punishment Versus Reconciliation: Marriage Control in Sixteenth- and Seventeenth-Century Holland,” in Social Control in Europe, Roodenburg, Herman and Spierenburg, Pieter eds. (Columbus, 2004), 5677.Google Scholar
Helmholz, R. H., Marriage Litigation in Medieval England (Cambridge, 2007).Google Scholar
Helmholz, R. H., The Oxford History of the Laws of England. Volume I: The Canon Law and Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction from 597 to the 1640s (Oxford, 2004).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Helmholz, R. H., Roman Canon Law in Reformation England (Cambridge, 1990).Google Scholar
Herlihy, David and Klapisch-Zuber, Christiane, Les Toscans et leurs familles: Un etude du Castasto florentin de 1427 (Paris, 1978).Google Scholar
Hossain, Kimberly Lynn, “Was Adam the First Heretic? Luis de Páramo, Diego de Simancas, and the Origins of Inquisitorial Practice,” Archive for Reformation History 97 (2006): 184210.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Houlbrooke, Ralph, Church Courts and the People during the English Reformation, 1520–1570 (Oxford, 1979).Google Scholar
Houlbrooke, Ralph, “The Decline of Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction under the Tudors,” in Continuity and Change: Personnel and Administration of the Church in England, 1500–1642, O’Day, Rosemary and Heal, Felicity eds. (Leicester, 1976), 239–57.Google Scholar
Ingram, Martin, “From Reformation to Toleration: Popular Religious Cultures in England, 1540–1690,” in Popular Culture in England, c. 1500–1850, Harris, Tim ed. (Basingstoke, 1995), 101–18.Google Scholar
Ingram, Martin, “Puritans and the Church Courts,” in The Culture of English Puritanism, 1560–1700, Durston, Christopher and Eales, Jacqueline eds. (Basingstoke, 1996).Google Scholar
Ingram, Martin, “Shame Punishments, Penance and Charivari in Early Modern England,” in Shame between Punishment and Penance: The Social Usages of Shame in the Middle Ages and Early Modern Times, Sère, Bénédicte and Wettlaufer, Jörg eds. (Florence, 2013).Google Scholar
Kaden, Erich Hans, Le juriconsulte Germain Colladon, ami de Jean Calvin et de Théodore de Bèze (Geneva, 1974).Google Scholar
Kagan, Richard, Lawsuits and Litigants in Castile, 1500–1700 (Chapel Hill, NC, 1981).Google Scholar
Kelly, Henry Ansgar, “Inquisition and the Prosecution of Heresy: Misconceptions and Abuses,” Church History, 58 4 (Dec. 1989): 439–51.Google Scholar
Kelly, Henry Ansgar, “Inquisition, Public Fame and Confession: General Rules and English Practice,” in The Culture of Inquisition in Medieval England, Flanner, Mary C. and Walter, Katie L. eds. (Woodbridge, 2013).Google Scholar
Kelly, Henry Ansgar, “The Right to Remain Silent: Before and After Joan of Arc,” Speculum 68 4 (1993): 9921026.Google Scholar
Kennedy, Chloë, “Criminal Law and Religion in Post-Reformation Scotland,” Edinburgh Law Review 16 (2012): 178–97.Google Scholar
Kent, Joan, “Attitudes of Members of the House of Commons to the Regulation of ‘Personal Life’ in Late Elizabethan and Early Stuart England,” Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research 46 (1973): 4171.Google Scholar
King, Walter J., “Punishment for Bastardy in Early Seventeenth-Century England,” Albion 10 (1978): 130–51.Google Scholar
Kingdon, Robert M., “Calvin and the Establishment of Consistory Discipline in Geneva: The Institution and the Men Who Directed It,” Nederlands Archief voor Kerkgeschiedenis 70 (1990): 158–72.Google Scholar
Kollmann, Nancy Shields, “Torture in Early Modern Russia,” in The New Muscovite Cultural History: A Collection in Honor of Daniel B. Rowland, Kivelson, Valerie, Petrone, Karen, Kollmann, Nancy Shields, and Flier, Michael S. eds. (Bloomington, IN, 2009), 159–70.Google Scholar
Kuttner, Stephen, “Raymond of Peñafort as Editor: The ‘Decretales’ and ‘Constituciones’ of Gregory IX,” Bulletin of Medieval Canon Law 12 (1982): 6580.Google Scholar
Lambert, Thomas A., “Cette loi durera guère: inertie religieuse et espoirs catholiques à Genève au temps de la Réforme,” Bulletin de la Société d’Histoire et d’Archéologie de Genève 23 (1993): 524.Google Scholar
Lehfeldt, Elizabeth A., “Convents as Litigants: Dowry and Inheritance Disputes in Early-Modern Spain,” Journal of Social History 33 3(2000): 645–64.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lescaze, Bernard, “La confession de Nicolas Antoine (1632),” Bulletin de la Société d’Histoire et d’Archéologie de Genève 14 (1970): 277323.Google Scholar
Lescaze, Bernard, “Crime et criminels à Genève en 1572,” in Pour une histoire qualitative. Etudes offerts à Sven Stelling-Michaud, Binz, Louis ed. (Geneva, 1975), 4571.Google Scholar
Levack, Brian P., “The Prosecution of Sexual Crimes in Early Eighteenth-Century Scotland,” Scottish Historical Review 89 (2010): 172–93.Google Scholar
Loetz, Francisca, Dealings with God from Blasphemers in Early Modern Zurich to a Cultural History of Religiousness (Farnham, 2009).Google Scholar
Magdelaine, Michelle, “Le registre du consistoire de Francfort-sur-le-Main,” Bulletin de la Société de l’Histoire du Protestantisme Français 153 (2007): 695706.Google Scholar
Mantecón Movellan, Tomás A., “The Patterns of Violence in Early Modern Spain,” Journal of The Historical Society 7 2 (2007): 229–64.Google Scholar
Marchant, Ronald A., The Church under the Law: Justice, Administration and Discipline in the Diocese of York, 1560–1640 (Cambridge, 1969).Google Scholar
Mentzer, Raymond A., “Ecclesiastical Discipline and Communal Reorganization among the Protestants of Southern France,” European History Quarterly 21 (1991): 163–83.Google Scholar
Monter, E. William, “Crime and Punishment in Calvin’s Geneva, 1562,” Archiv für Reformationsgeschichte 64 (1973): 281–7.Google Scholar
Murdock, Graeme, Beyond Calvin: The Intellectual, Political and Cultural World of Europe’s Reformed Churches, 1540–1620 (New York, 2004).Google Scholar
Naphy, William G., “Sodomy in Early Modern Geneva: Various Definitions, Diverse Verdicts,” in Sodomy in Early Modern Europe, Betteridge, Tom ed. (New York, 2002), 94111.Google Scholar
Outhwaite, R. B., The Rise and Fall of the English Ecclesiastical Courts, 1500–1860 (Cambridge, 2006).Google Scholar
Parker, Charles H., “Two Generations of Discipline: Moral Reform in Delft Before and After the Synod of Dort,” Archiv für Reformationsgeschichte 92 (2001): 268–84.Google Scholar
Perry, Mary Elizabeth, Crime and Society in Early Modern Seville (Hannover, NH, 1980).Google Scholar
Peters, Edward, Torture (Philadelphia, PA, 1996).Google Scholar
Poncet, André-Luc, Les châtelains et l’administration de la justice dans les mandements genevois sous l’Ancien Régime (1536–1792) (Geneva, 1973).Google Scholar
Postles, Dave, “Penance and the Market Place: a Reformation Dialogue with the Medieval Church (c.1250–c.1600),” Journal of Ecclesiastical History 54 (2003): 441–68.Google Scholar
Price, F. Douglas, “Gloucester Diocese under Bishop Hooper, 1551–3,” Transactions of the Bristol and Gloucestershire Archaeological Society 60 (1939 for 1938): 51151.Google Scholar
Rappaz, Sonia Vernhes, “Criminalité réprimée, criminalité archivée au XVIe siècle à Genève (1555–72),” Bulletin de la Société d’Histoire et d’Archéologie de Genève 38 (2008): 3344.Google Scholar
Rivera, Mariano Galván and Arrillaga, Basilio Manuel, Concilio III Provincial mexicano: Celebrando en México el año de 1585, confirmado en Roma por el Papa Sixto V, y mandado observar por el Gobierno Español, en diversos reales ordenes (Mexico City, 1859).Google Scholar
Robbins, Kevin C., City on the Ocean Sea: La Rochelle, 1530–1650: Urban Society, Religion and Politics on the French Atlantic Frontier (New York, 1997).Google Scholar
Ross, Richard J., “Puritan Godly Discipline in Comparative Perspective: Legal Pluralism and the Sources of Intensity,” American Historical Review 113 (2008): 9751002.Google Scholar
Safley, Thomas Max, Let No Man Put Asunder: The Control of Marriage in the German Southwest: a Comparative Study, 1550–1600 (Kirksville, MO, 1984).Google Scholar
Sales Tirapu, José Luís, and Iigoyen, Isidro Ursúa, eds., Catálogo del Archivo Diocesano de Pamplona, 12 vols. (Pamplona, 1990).Google Scholar
Schwerhoff, Gerd, “Horror Crime or Bad Habit? Blasphemy in Premodern Europe, 1200–1650,” The Journal of Religious History 32 (2008): 398408.Google Scholar
Shagan, Ethan H., “The English Inquisition: Constitutional Conflict and Ecclesiastical Law in the 1590s,” Historical Journal 47 (2004): 541–65.Google Scholar
Sharpe, James A., Instruments of Darkness: Witchcraft in England, 1550–1750 (New York, 1996).Google Scholar
de Simancas, Diego, Enchiridion Iudicum Violatae Religionis (Venice, 1569).Google Scholar
Smail, Daniel Lord, The Consumption of Justice: Emotions, Publicity, and Legal Culture in Marseille, 1264–1423 (Ithaca, NY, 2003).Google Scholar
Smith, Michael G., The Church Courts, 1680–1840: From Canon to Ecclesiastical Law (Lampeter, 2006).Google Scholar
Springer, Michael, Restoring Christ’s Church: John à Lasco and the Forma ac ratio (Aldershot, 2007).Google Scholar
Testón Núñez, Isabel, Amor, sexo y matrimonio en Extremadura (Badajoz, 1985).Google Scholar
Thomas, Keith, “Puritans and Adultery: The Act of 1650 Reconsidered,” in Puritans and Revolutionaries: Essays in Seventeenth-Century History Presented to Christopher Hill, Pennington, Donald and Thomas, Keith eds. (Oxford, 1978), 257–82.Google Scholar
Thompson, Roger, Sex in Middlesex: Popular Mores in a Massachusetts County, 1649–1699 (Amherst, MA, 1986).Google Scholar
Todd, Margo, “Fairies, Egyptians and Elders: Multiple Cosmologies in Post-Reformation Scotland,” in The Impact of the European Reformation, Heal, Bridget and Grell, Ole eds. (Aldershot, 2008), 189208.Google Scholar
Todd, Margo, “Practicing the Books of Discipline: The Problem of Equality before the Law in Scottish Parish Consistories,” in Calvin and the Book: The Evolution of the Printed Word in Reformed Protestantism, Spierling, Karen E. ed. (Göttingen, 2014).Google Scholar
Todd, Margo, “Profane Pastimes and the Reformed Community: The Persistence of Popular Festivities in Early Modern Scotland,” Journal of British Studies 39 (2000): 123–56.Google Scholar
Todd, Margo ed., The Perth Kirk Session Books, 1577–90 (Cambridge, 2012).Google Scholar
Trexler, Richard C., “Infanticide in Florence: New Sources and First Results,” History of Childhood Quarterly 1 1 (1973): 98116.Google Scholar
Trexler, Richard C., Synodal Law in Florence and Fiesole, 1306–1518 (Vatican City, 1971).Google Scholar
Usher, Roland G., The Rise and Fall of the High Commission, 2nd ed., introduction by Philip Tyler (Oxford, 1968).Google Scholar
Vázquez de Prada, Valentín, Historia económica y social de España: Los siglos XVI y XVII (Madrid, 1978).Google Scholar
Wachtel, Nathan, La logique des bûchers (Paris, 2009).Google Scholar
Walker, David M., A Legal History of Scotland, vol. 3 (Edinburgh, 1995).Google Scholar
Weisser, Mary, “Crime and Punishment in Early Modern Spain,” in Crime and the Law: The Social History of Crime in Western Europe since 1500, Gatrell, V.A.C., Lenman, Bruce, and Parker, Geoffrey eds. (London, 1980), 7696.Google Scholar
Wickham, Chris, Courts and Conflict in Twelfth-century Tuscany (Oxford, 2003).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Woodcock, Brian L., Medieval Ecclesiastical Courts in the Diocese of Canterbury (London, 1952).Google Scholar
Wunderli, Richard M., London Church Courts and Society on the Eve of the Reformation (Cambridge, MA, 1981).Google Scholar
Barrio Conde, Maximiliano, “Burocracia inquisitorial y movilidad social. El Santo Oficio plantel de obispos (1556–1820),” in Inquisición y Sociedad, Moura, Ángel Prado ed. (Valladolid, 1999), 107–38.Google Scholar
Caro Baroja, Julio, El señor Inquisidor y otras vidas por oficio (Madrid, 1968).Google Scholar
Davis, Natalie Z., Protestantism and the Printing Workers of Lyons: A Study in the Problem of Religion and Social Class during the Reformation (Ph.D. dissertation, University of Michigan, 1959).Google Scholar
Ditchfield, Simon, “Umberto Locati, O. P. (1503–1587): Inquisitore, Vescovo e Storico – un profilo bio-bibliografico,” Bollettino Storico Piacentino 84 (1989): 205–21.Google Scholar
Dorward, Reinhold A., “Church Organization in Brandenburg-Prussia from the Reformation to 1740,” The Harvard Theological Review 31 4 (1938): 275–90.Google Scholar
Edwards, John, “Trial of an Inquisitor: The Dismissal of Diego Rodríguez Lucero Inquisitor of Córdoba, in 1508,” Journal of Ecclesiastical History 37 2 (1986): 240–57.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Feitler, Bruno, “A delegação de poderes inquisitoriais: o exemplo de Goa através da documentação da Biblioteca Nacional do Rio de Janeiro,” Tempo 12 24 (2008): 127–48.Google Scholar
Feitler, Bruno, “Hierarquias e mobilidade na carreira inquisitorial portuguesa: a centralidade do tribunal de Lisboa,” in Raizes do privilegio: mobilidade social no mundo ibérico do Antigo Regime, Monteiro, Rodrigo Bentes, Feitler, Bruno, Calainho, Daniela Buono, and Flores, Jorge eds. (Rio de Janeiro, 2011), 235–58.Google Scholar
Feitler, Bruno, “Teoria e Prática na Definição da Jurisdição e da Práxis Inquisitorial Portuguesa: da ‘Prova’ como Objeto de Análise,” in O Império por escrito. Formas de transmissão da cultura letrada no mundo ibérico. Séculos XVI-XIX, Algranti, Leila Mezan and Megiani, Ana Paula Torres eds. (São Paulo, 2009), 7393.Google Scholar
Feitler, Bruno, “Usos Políticos del Santo Oficio Portugués en el Atlántico (Brasil y África Occidental). El Período Filipino,” Hispania Sacra 59 119 (2007): 269–91.Google Scholar
Galiffe, Jacques-Augustin, et al. eds., Notices généalogiques sur les familles genevoises, depuis les premiers temps, jusqu’à nos jours, 7 vols. (Geneva, 1829–95).Google Scholar
Kamen, Henry, “A Crisis of Conscience in Golden Age Spain: The Inquisition against Limpieza de Sangre,” in Crisis and Change in Early Modern Spain (Aldershot, 1993), Article VII, 127.Google Scholar
Kevorkian, Tanya, Baroque Piety: Religion, Society and Music in Leipzig, 1650–1750 (Aldershot, 2007).Google Scholar
Kingdon, Robert M., “The Deacons of the Reformed Church in Calvin’s Geneva,” in Mélanges d’histoire du seizième siècle offerts à Henri Meylan (Geneva, 1979), 8190.Google Scholar
López-Salazar Codes, Ana Isabel, “‘Che Si Riduca al Modo di Procedere di Castiglia.’ El Debate Sobre el Procedimiento Inquisitorial Portugués en Tiempos de los Austrias,” Hispania Sacra 59 119 (2007): 243–68.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marcocci, Giuseppe, “Toward a History of the Portuguese Inquisition: Trends in Modern Historiography (1974–2009),” Revue de l’histoire des religions 227 3 (2010): 355–93.Google Scholar
Menchi, Silvana Seidel, “The Inquisitor as Mediator,” in Heresy, Culture, and Religion in Early Modern Italy: Contexts and Contestations, Delph, Ronald K., Fontaine, Michelle M., and Martin, John Jeffries eds. (Kirksville, MO, 2006), 173–92.Google Scholar
Mentzer, Raymond A., “Fasting, Piety, and Political Anxiety among French Reformed Protestants,” Church History 76 2 (2007): 330–62.Google Scholar
Monter, William E., Judging the French Reformation: Heresy Trials by Sixteenth-Century Parlements (Cambridge, MA, 1999).Google Scholar
Moody, Michael E., “Trials and Travels of a Nonconformist Layman: The Spiritual Odyssey of Stephen Offwood,” Church History 51 2 (1982): 157–71.Google Scholar
Nalle, Sara, “Inquisitors, Priests, and the People during the Catholic Reformation in Spain,” Sixteenth Century Journal 18 (1987): 557–87.Google Scholar
Naphy, William G., Plagues, Poison and Potions: Plague-Spreading Conspiracies in the Western Alps, c. 1530–1640 (Manchester, 2002).Google Scholar
Ogier, Darryl, “Night Revels and Werewolvery in Calvinist Guernsey,” Folklore 109 (1998), 5362.Google Scholar
Olival, Fernanda, “Quando o Santo Ofício Processava os seus Comissários (Portugal, 1600–1773),” in Estudos em Homagem a Joaquim Romero Magalhães. Economia, Instituições e Império, Garrido, Álvaro, Costa, Leonor Freire, and Duarte, Luís Miguel eds. (Coimbra, 2012), 179–95.Google Scholar
de Paz, Amelia, Góngora y el Señor Inquisidor. Un autógrafo inédito de Don Luis en edición facsímil (Madrid, 2012).Google Scholar
van der Pol, Frank, “Religious Diversity and Everyday Ethics in the Seventeenth-Century Dutch City Kampen,” Church History 71 1 (2002): 1662.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
de Prado Moura, Ángel, Inquisición e Inquisidores en Castilla: El Tribunal de Valladolid Durante el Crisis de Antiguo Régimen (Valladolid, 1995).Google Scholar
Prosperi, Adriano, L’Inquisizione Romana: Letture e Richerche (Rome, 2003).Google Scholar
Raath, Andries, “Covenant and the Christian Community: Bullinger and the Relationship between Church and Magistracy in Early Cape Settlement,” The Sixteenth Century Journal 33 4 (2002): 9991019.Google Scholar
Ramos, Gabriela, “La fortuna del inquisidor. Inquisición y poder en el Perú (1594–1611),” Cuadernos para la historia de la evangelización en América Latina 4 (1989): 89122.Google Scholar
Renwick, John, “Voltaire and the Politics of Toleration,” in The Cambridge Companion to Voltaire, Cronk, Nicholas ed. (Cambridge, 2009).Google Scholar
Rieder, Philip, “Miracles and Heretics: Protestants and Catholic Healing Practices in and around Geneva 1530–1750,” Social History of Medicine 23 2 (2010): 227–43.Google Scholar
Roget, Amédée, Histoire du Peuple de Genève depuis la Réforme jusqu’à l’Escalade (Geneva, 1870–7).Google Scholar
Santosuosso, Antonio, “The Moderate Inquisitor: Giovanni Della Casa’s Venetian Nunciature, 1544–1549,” Studi veneziani n.s. 2 (1978): 119210.Google Scholar
Schutte, Anne Jacobson, “Un inquisitore al lavoro: Fra Marino da Venezia e l’Inquisizione veneziana,” in I Francescani in Europa tra riforma e controriforma (Naples, 1987), 165–96.Google Scholar
Sprunger, Keith L., “Other Pilgrims in Leiden: Hugh Goodyear and the English Reformed Church,” Church History 41 1 (1972): 4660.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sunshine, Glenn S., Reforming French Protestantism: The Development of Huguenot Ecclesiastical Institutions, 1557–1572 (Kirksville, MO, 2003).Google Scholar
Tavárez, David, The Invisible War: Indigenous Devotions, Discipline, and Dissent in Colonial Mexico (Stanford, CA, 2011).Google Scholar
Tavuzzi, Michael M., Renaissance Inquisitors: Dominican inquisitors and inquisitorial districts in Northern Italy, 1474–1527 (Leiden, 2007).Google Scholar
Tulchin, Allan, That Men Would Praise the Lord: The Reformation in Nîmes, 1530–1570 (Oxford, 2010).Google Scholar
Tulchin, Allan, “The Michelade in Nîmes, 1567,” French Historical Studies, 29 1 (2006): 135.Google Scholar
Wadsworth, James E., “Historiography of the Structure and Functioning of the Portuguese Inquisition in Colonial Brazil,” History Compass 8 7 (2010): 636–52.Google Scholar
Watt, Jeffrey R., “Marriage Contract Disputes in Early Modern Neuchatel, 1547–1806,” Journal of Social History 22 1 (1988): 129–47.Google Scholar
Watt, Jeffrey R., “The Reception of the Reformation in Valangin, Switzerland, 1547–1588,” The Sixteenth Century Journal 20 1 (1989): 89104.Google Scholar
Williams, Patrick, “A Jewish Councillor of Inquisition? Luis de Mercado, the Statutes of limpieza de sangre and the Politics of Vendetta (1598–1601),” Bulletin of Hispanic Studies 67 (1990): 253–64.Google Scholar
Alpert, Michael, Secret Judaism and the Spanish Inquisition (Nottingham, 2008).Google Scholar
Arnaud, Eugène, Documents protestants inédits du XVIe siècle (Paris, 1872).Google Scholar
Baer, Fritz, Die Juden im christlichen Spanien, 2 vols. (Berlin, 1929–1936).Google Scholar
Baroni, Raphaël, La tension narrative: suspense, curiosité et surprise (Paris, 2007).Google Scholar
Barthes, Roland, “L’effet de réel,” Communications 11 (1968): 84–9.Google Scholar
Bazeille, M., “Etude sur les registres paroissiaux antérieurs à l’établissement des registres d’état civil,” Bulletin Historique et Philologique (1909): 327–59.Google Scholar
Beinart, Haim, Conversos on Trial: The Inquisition in Ciudad Real (Jerusalem, 1981).Google Scholar
Bennassar, Bartolomé, Bennassar, Lucile, Les chrétiens d’ Allah: l’histoire extraordinaire des renégats, XVIe et XVIIe siècles (Paris, 1989).Google Scholar
Beretta, F., Galilée devant le Tribunal de l’Inquisition: une relecture des sources (Fribourg, 1998).Google Scholar
Bériou, Nicole et al. eds., Prier au Moyen Age: pratiques et expériences (Ve-XVe siècles) (Turnhout, 1991).Google Scholar
de Bèze, Théodore, Histoire ecclésiastique des Eglises reformées au royaume de France, 3 vols., Baum, G. and Cunitz, Ed. eds. (Paris, 1883–9).Google Scholar
Biondi, Grazia, Le lettere della Sacra Congregazione romana del Santo Ufficio all’Inquisizione di Modena: note in margine a un regesto,” Schifanoia 4 (1987): 93108.Google Scholar
Boisson, Didier ed., Actes des synodes provinciaux. Anjou-Touraine-Maine (1594–1683) (Geneva, 2012).Google Scholar
Brambilla, E., Alle origini del Sant’Uffizio: Penitenza, confessione e giustizia spiritual dal medioevo al XVI secolo (Bologna, 2000).Google Scholar
Burn, John Southerden, Registrum ecclesiae parochialis. The History of Parish Registers in England (London, 1862).Google Scholar
Carbonnier-Burkard, Marianne, “‘L’Histoire ecclésiastique des Eglises réformées...’: la construction bézienne d’un ‘corps d’histoire,’” in Théodore de Bèze (1519–1605) (Geneva, 2007), 145–61.Google Scholar
Chareyre, Philippe, “Le consistoire et l’advertisseur : étude croisée de deux séries de registres nîmois, XVIe-XVIIe siècles,” Bulletin de la Société de l’Histoire du Protestantisme 153 (2007): 525–42.Google Scholar
Chevalier, F. ed., Actes des synodes nationaux. Charenton (1644) – Loudun (1659) (Geneva, 2012).Google Scholar
Courouau, Jean-François, “La Réforme et les langues de France,” Bulletin de la Société de l’Histoire du Protestantisme Français 154 (2008): 509–29.Google Scholar
Crespin, Jean, Histoire des martyrs, 3 vols., Benoit, Daniel ed. (Toulouse, 1885–9).Google Scholar
Daireaux, Luc, “Réflexions autour des registres consistoriaux des Eglises réformées normandes (XVIIe siècle),” Bulletin de la Société de l’Histoire du Protestantisme Français 153 (2007), 477–90.Google Scholar
Dall’Olio, Guido, “I rapporti tra la Congregazione del Sant’Officio e gli inquisitori locali nei categgi Bolognesi (1573 – 1594),” Rivista storica italiana 105 (1993): 246–86.Google Scholar
Davis, Natalie Z., Fiction in the Archives: Pardon Tales and Their Tellers in Sixteenth-Century France (Stanford, CA, 1987).Google Scholar
Del Col, Andrea, “I processi dell’Inquisizione come fonte: considerazioni diplomatiche e storiche,” Annuario dell’Istituto storico italiano per l’Età moderna e contemporanea 35–36 (1983–4): 29–49.Google Scholar
Del Col, Andrea, “Problemi e metodi attuali di storia istituzionale dell’Inquisizione romana,” Annali di storia moderna e contemporanea 6 (2000): 549–60.Google Scholar
Del Col, Andrea and Paolin, Giovanna eds., L’inquisizione romana: metodologia delle fonti e storia istituzionale. Atti del seminario internazionale, Montereale Valcellina 23 e 24 settembre 1999 (Trieste, 2000).Google Scholar
Donati, Barbara, Tra inquisizione e Granducato. Storie di Inglesi nella Livorno del primo Seicento (Rome, 2010).Google Scholar
Dumur, Benjamin, “Notes extraites des registres de l’état civil de la paroisse de Pully,” Revue historique vaudoise 15 (1907): 329–42.Google Scholar
Edwards, John, “Was the Spanish Inquisition Truthful?,” review essay, The Jewish Quarterly Review 87 (1997): 351–66.Google Scholar
Faucher, Benjamin, “Les registres d’état civil protestant en France depuis le XVIe siècle jusqu’à nos jours,” Bibliothèque de l’Ecole des Chartes 84 (1923): 306–46.Google Scholar
Francillon, François ed., Livre des délibérations de l’Eglise réformée de l’Albenc (1606–1682) (Paris, 1998).Google Scholar
Furet, François, “L’histoire quantitative et la construction du fait historique,” in Faire de l’histoire, Nora, Jacques Le Goff et Pierre eds. (Paris, 1974), 6791.Google Scholar
Garnot, Benoît ed., Histoire et criminalité de l’Antiquité au XXe siècle : nouvelles approches (Dijon, 1992).Google Scholar
Garnot, Benoît ed., L’infrajudiciaire du Moyen Âge à l’époque contemporaine (Dijon, 1996).Google Scholar
Garnot, Benoît ed., “Justice, Infrajustice, Parajustice et Extra Justice dans la France d’Ancien Régime,” Crime, Histoire & Sociétés, 4 1(2000): 103–20.Google Scholar
Graizbord, David L., Souls in Dispute: Converso Identities in Iberia and the Jewish Diaspora, 1580–1700 (Philadelphia, PA, 2003).Google Scholar
Greyerz, Kaspar von, “Portuguese Conversos on the Upper Rhine and the Converso Community of Sixteenth-Century Europe,” Social History 14 (1989): 5982.Google Scholar
Grosclaude, Michel, “Registre du Consistoire de Montestrucq (1642–1663),” Bulletin du Centre d’Etude du Protestantisme Béarnais 20 (1996): 69.Google Scholar
Grosse, Christian, “Des querelles ‘dispendieuses et ruineuses’. Les limites de la régulation consistoriale des conflits comme instrument de lutte contre l’appauvrissement des familles,” in Richesse et pauvreté dans les républiques suisses au XVIIIe siècle, Holenstein, André et al. eds. (Genève, 2010), 5163.Google Scholar
Grosse, Christian, “Rationalité graphique et discipline ecclésiastique. Les registres du Consistoire de Genève à l’épreuve (XVIe – XVIIIe siècles),” Bulletin de la Société de l’Histoire du Protestantisme Français 153 (2007): 543–60.Google Scholar
Grosse, Christian, “Techniques de l’écrit et contrôle social à l’époque moderne. Les pratiques d’enregistrement des institutions genevoises (XVIe siècle),” in Penser l’archive. Histoires d’archives – archives d’histoire, Cerutti, Mauro et al. eds. (Lausanne, 2006), 2134.Google Scholar
Hsia, Ronnie Po-Chia, Trent 1475: Stories of A Ritual Murder Trial (New Haven, CT, 1992).Google Scholar
d’Huisseau, Isaac ed., La Discipline ecclésiastique des Eglises réformées de France (Amsterdam, 1710).Google Scholar
Klaniczay, Gábor and Kristóf, Ildikó, “Ecritures saintes et pactes diaboliques. Les usages religieux de l’écrit (Moyen Âge et Temps modernes),” Annales HSS 56 (2001): 947–80.Google Scholar
Marshall, Peter, Belief and the Dead in Reformation England (Oxford, 2002).Google Scholar
Matzinger-Pfister, Regula, Les sources du droit du canton de Vaud, C. Epoque bernoise 1 (Basel, 2003).Google Scholar
Mentzer, Raymond A., “La mémoire d’une ‘fausse religion’: les registres de consistoires des Eglises réformées de France (XVIe –XVIIe siècle),” Bulletin de la Société de l’Histoire du Protestantisme Français 153 (2007): 461–75.Google Scholar
Messana, M. S., Inquisitori, negromanti e streghe nella Sicilia moderna (1500–1782) (Palermo, 2007).Google Scholar
Millioud, A. ed., Le consistoire de Bex: 1659–1691 (Bex, 1914).Google Scholar
Mirto, Alfonso ed., “Un inedito del Seicento sull’Inquisizione,” Prattica per procedere nelle cause del S. Offizio, Nouvelles de la République des Lettres 1 (1986): 99138.Google Scholar
Moreil, Françoise, “Le consistoire de Courthézon au XVIIèmee siècle,” Actes de colloque d’Avignon protestants du Vaucluse, Mémoires de l’académie de Vaucluse, 8 (1998): 6986.Google Scholar
Moreil, Françoise, “Les Consistoires de la principauté d’Orange (XVIe-XVIIe siècles),” Bulletin de la société de l’histoire du protestantisme Français 153 (2007): 505–24.Google Scholar
Netanyahu, Benzion, The Marranos of Spain: From the Late 14th to the Early 16th Century, According to Contemporary Hebrew Sources, 3rd ed. (Ithaca, NY, 1999).Google Scholar
Netanyahu, Benzion, The Origins of the Inquisition in Fifteenth Century Spain (New York, 1995).Google Scholar
Prosperi, Adriano, “Vicari dell’Inquisizione fiorentina alla metà del Seicento. Note d’archivio,” Annali dell’Istituto storico italo-germanico in Trento 8 (1982): 275304.Google Scholar
Raemond, Florimond de, L’histoire de la naissance, progrez et decadence de l’heresie de ce siecle (Rouen, 1618).Google Scholar
Revaz, Françoise, Introduction à la narratologie: action et narration (Brussels, 2009).Google Scholar
Ricœur, Paul, Temps et récit, vol. 1 (Paris, 1983).Google Scholar
Romeo, Giovanni, Esorcisti, confessori e sessualità femminile nell’Italia della controriforma (Florence, 1998).Google Scholar
Romeo, Giovanni, L’inquisizione nell’Italia moderna (Rome, 2002).Google Scholar
Roth, Cecil, A History of the Marranos (Philadelphia, PA, 1932).Google Scholar
Roth, Norman, Conversos, Inquisition and the Expulsion of the Jews from Spain (Madison, WI, 1995).Google Scholar
Roth, Norman, “Jewish Conversos in Medieval Spain: Some Misconceptions and New Information,” in Marginated Groups in Spanish and Portuguese History. Proceedings of the Seventeenth Annual Meeting of the Society for Spanish and Portuguese Historical Studies, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, April 1986, Phillips, W. D. and Phillips, C. Rahn eds. (Minneapolis, MN, 1989), 2352.Google Scholar
Roth-Lochner, Barbara, De la branche à l’étude: une histoire institutionnelle, professionnelle et sociale du notariat genevois sous l’Ancien Régime (Geneva, 1997).Google Scholar
Sabean, David W., “Peasant Voices and Bureaucratic Texts: Narrative Structure in Early Modern German Protocols,” in Little Tools of Knowledge: Historical Essays on Academic and Bureaucratic Practices, Becker, Peter and Clark, William eds. (Ann Arbor, MI, 2001).Google Scholar
Scaramella, Pierroberto, Inquisizioni, eresie, etnie. Dissenso religioso e giustizia ecclesiastica in Italia (secc. XVI-XVIII) (Bari, 2005).Google Scholar
Schwerhoff, G., Aktenkundig und gerichtsnotorisch. Einführung in die Historische Kriminalitätsforschung (Tübingen, 1999).Google Scholar
Siebenhüner, Kim, Bigamie und Inquisition in Italien 1600 – 1750 (Paderborn, 2006).Google Scholar
Siebenhüner, Kim, “Conversion, Mobility and the Roman Inquisition in Italy around 1600,” Past & Present 200 (2008): 535.Google Scholar
Soman, Alfred, “Deviance and Criminal Justice in Western Europe, 1300–1800,” Criminal Justice History 1 (1980): 328.Google Scholar
Staremberg Goy, Nicole, Du buveur à l’ivrogne: le Consistoire de Lausanne face à l’abus d’alcool, 1754 à 1791 (Lausanne, 2006).Google Scholar
Tosato-Rigo, Danièle, “Registres consistoriaux et images de l’exil; un exemple lausannais,” Bulletin de la Société de l’Histoire du Protestantisme Français 153 (2007): 649–70.Google Scholar
Viallet, Ludovic, “Le salaire de la plume: prières de notaires et de copistes à la fin du Moyen Âge (XIVe-XVIe siècles),” in La prière en latin de l’Antiquité au XVIe siècle, Cottier, Jean-François ed. (Turnhout, 2007), 291307.Google Scholar
Benedict, Philip and Fornerod, Nicolas eds., L’organisation et l’action des Eglises réformées de France (1557–1563) (Geneva, 2012).Google Scholar
Blanco White, J. M., El Español, 10 (1811).Google Scholar
Boeglin, M., “Disciplina religiosa y asentamiento de la doctrina: el delito de proposiciones ante la Inquisición sevillana (1560–1700),” Historia, Instituciones, Documentos 30 (2003): 121–44.Google Scholar
Boisson, Didier and Krumenacker, Yves eds., La coexistence confessionnelle à l’épreuve. Etudes sur les relations entre protestants et catholiques dans la France Moderne (Lyon, 2009).Google Scholar
Bossy, John, “The Counter-Reformation and the People of Catholic Europe,” Past and Present 47 (1970), 5170.Google Scholar
Burke, Peter, “How to Be a Counter Reformation Saint,” in Religion and Society in Early Modern Europe, von Greyerz, K. ed. (London, 1984), 4556.Google Scholar
Chareyre, Philippe, “Le consistoire de Nîmes et l’Édit de Nantes,” in L’édit de Nantes, sa genèse, son application en Languedoc, Bulletin Historique de la Ville de Montpellier 23 (1999): 117–28.Google Scholar
Chareyre, Philippe, “‘La fleur de tous les anciens’ ou le ministère des diacres à Nîmes XVIe-XVIIe siècles,” in Agir pour l’Eglise. Ministères et charges ecclésiastiques dans les Eglises réformées (XVIe-XVIIe), Poton, Didier ed. (Paris, 2013), 91110.Google Scholar
Chareyre, Philippe, “Protestantisme et structuration de l’espace urbain: Nîmes 1561–1685,” in Le protestantisme et la cité, Astoul, Guy and Chareyre, Philippe eds. (Montauban, 2013), 111–30.Google Scholar
Christian, William A., Local Religion in Sixteenth Century Spain (Princeton, NJ, 1981).Google Scholar
Cruz de Carlos Varona, María, “The Authority of Sacred Paintbrushes: Representing Medieval Sainthood in the Early Modern Period,” in Sacred Spain: Art and Belief in the Spanish World, Kasl, Ronda ed. (New Haven, CT, 2009), 101–20.Google Scholar
De Certeau, Michel, El lugar del otro: Historia religiosa y mística (Buenos Aires, 2007).Google Scholar
Ditchfield, Simon, “Il mondo della Riforma e della Controriforma,” in Storia della Santità nel cristianesimo occidentale, Benvenuti, Anna et al. eds. (Rome, 2005), 261323.Google Scholar
De la Flor, Fernando R., Emblemas: Lecturas de la imagen simbólica (Madrid, 1995), 2177.Google Scholar
Fragnito, Gigliola, “Aspetti e problemi della censura espurgatoria,” in L’Inquisizione e gli storici: un cantiere aperto: tavola rotonda nell’ambito della Conferenza annuale della ricerca, Roma, 24–25 giugno 1999 (Rome, 2000), 161–78.Google Scholar
Fragnito, Gigliola, “La censura eclesiástica en la Italia del Quinientos: órganos centrales y periféricos,” Cultura escrita & Sociedad 7 (2008): 3759.Google Scholar
Díaz, Galende, Carlos, Juan, “Una aproximación a la hermandad inquisitorial de San Pedro Mártir,” Cuadernos de investigación histórica 14 (1991): 4586.Google Scholar
García Cárcel, Ricardo and Moreno, Doris, Inquisición. Historia crítica (Madrid, 2000).Google Scholar
García Cárcel, Ricardo and Orta, J. Palau, “Reforma y Contrarreforma Católicas,” in Historia del Cristianismo, vol. 3, El mundo moderno, Peña, Antonio Luis Cortés ed. (Granada, 2006), 187226.Google Scholar
Gotor, Miguel, I beati del papa: Santità, Inquisizione e obbedienza in età moderna (Florence, 2002).Google Scholar
Greenleaf, Richard E., “The Inquisition Brotherhood, Cofradía de San Pedro,” The Americas 40 (1983): 171207.Google Scholar
Hsia, Ronnie Po-Chia, The World of Catholic Renewal, 1540–1770 (Cambridge, 2005).Google Scholar
Labrousse, Elisabeth, “Les mariages bigarrés,” in Le couple interdit. Entretiens sur le racisme (Paris, 1980), 159–76.Google Scholar
Lavenia, Vincenzo, L’infamia e il perdono: Tributi, pene e confessione nella teología morale della prima età moderna (Bologna, 2004).Google Scholar
Lavrin, Asunción, “La Congregación de San Pedro: Una cofradía urbana del México Colonial, 1604–1730,” Historia Mexicana 39 4 (1980): 562601.Google Scholar
Le Goff, Jacques, ed. Herejías y sociedades en la Europa preindustrial, ss. XI-XVIII (Madrid, 1987).Google Scholar
Maravall, Juan Antonio, “Teatro, fiesta e ideología en el Barroco,” in Teatro y fiesta en el Barroco: España e Iberoamérica, Borque, J. Mª Díez ed. (Seville, 1986).Google Scholar
Marcocci, Giuseppe and Paiva, J. P., História da Inquisiciçâo portuguesa, 1536–1821 (Lisbon, 2013).Google Scholar
M’Crie, Thomas, La Reforma en España en el siglo XVI (Seville, 2008).Google Scholar
Mentzer, Raymond A. ed., Les Registres des consistoires des Églises réformées de France — XVIe–XVIIe siècles: Un inventaire (Geneva, 2014).Google Scholar
Monter, William E., “The Mediterranean Inquisitions of Early Modern Europe,” in Christianity. Reform and Expansion, 1500–1660, Hsia, Ronnie Po-Chia ed. (Cambridge, 2007), 283301.Google Scholar
Nieto, J.C., “Two Spanish Mystics as Submissive Rebels,” Bibliotheque d’Humanisme et Renaissance 33 (1971): 6377.Google Scholar
Palomo, F., A Contra-Reforma em Portugal 1540–1700 (Lisbon, 2006).Google Scholar
Pastore, Stefania, Una herejía española. Conversos, alumbrados e Inquisición (1449–1559) (Madrid, 2010).Google Scholar
Peña, M., “Leer con cautela: estrategias y nuevos modos de censurer en el siglo XVII,” in Historia y perspectivas de investigación: estudios en memoria del professor Angel Rodríguez Sánchez, Cancho, Miguel Rodríguez ed. (Mérida, 2002), 365–70.Google Scholar
Peña, M., “Normas y transgresiones. La cultura escrita en el Siglo de Oro,” in Grafías del imaginario: Representaciones culturales en España y América (siglos XVI-XVIII), González, Carlos Alberto and Vila, Enriqueta eds. (Mexico City, 2003), 120–39.Google Scholar
Peña, M., “Sobre expurgos y calificadores. Debates en torno a la censura inquisitorial (siglos XVI-XVII),” in Edición y literatura en España (Siglos XVI y XVII), Cayuela, A. and Chartier, R. eds. (Zaragoza, 2012), 187203.Google Scholar
Peyre, D., “La Inquisición o la política de la presencia,” in Inquisición española, poder político y control social, Bennassar, Bartolomé et al. eds. (Barcelona, 1984), 4067.Google Scholar
Prudlo, Donald S., The Martyred Inquisitor: The Life and Cult of Peter of Verona (†1252) (Aldershot, 2008).Google Scholar
Serrano, Pulido, Ignacio, Juan, Injurias a Cristo: Religión, político y antijudaísmo en el siglo XVII (Alcalá de Henares, 2002).Google Scholar
Sarrión Mora, A., Beatas y endemoniadas: mujeres heterodoxas ante la Inquisición, siglos XVI a XIX (Madrid, 2003).Google Scholar
Tausiet, María, “Conciencias insumisas: la resistencia a la confesión en el arzobispado de Zaragoza a finales del siglo XVI,” in Felipe II y su tiempo, Iglesias, J. L. Pereira and Beltrán, J. M. González eds. (Cádiz, 1999), 589–96.Google Scholar
Tausiet, María, “Gritos del más allá. La defensa del Purgatorio en la España de la Contrarreforma,” Hispania sacra 57 (2005): 81108.Google Scholar
Ahlgren, Gillian T.W., The Inquisition of Francisca: A Sixteenth-Century Visionary on Trial, The Other Voice in Early Modern Europe (Chicago, 2005).Google Scholar
Beinart, Haim ed., Records of the Trials of the Spanish Inquisition in Ciudad Real, 1483–1527, 4 vols. (Jerusalem, 1974–85).Google Scholar
Bell, Rudolph, “Renaissance Sexuality and the Florentine Archives: An Exchange,” Renaissance Quarterly 40 (1987): 485511.Google Scholar
Fernández Majolero, Jesús, Proceso inquisitorial a Rodrigo de Bivar, ‘el mozo’, clérigo de Santa María, 1553–1554 (Alcalá de Henares, 1989).Google Scholar
Firpo, Massimo, Inquisizione romana e Controriforma: studi sul Giovanni Morone (1509–1580) e il suo processo d’eresia (Bologna, 1992).Google Scholar
Firpo, Massimo and Marcatto, Dario, Il proceso inquisitoriale del Cardinal Giovanni Morone, vol. III: I documenti difensivi (Rome, 1985).Google Scholar
Homza, Lu Ann, “How to Harass an Inquisitor-General: The Polyphonic Law of Friar Francisco Ortiz,” in A Renaissance of Conflicts: Visions and Revisions of the Law and Society in Early Modern Italy and Spain, Marino, John A. and Kuehn, Thomas eds. (Toronto, 2004), 299336.Google Scholar
Homza, Lu Ann, “The Merits of Disruption and Tumult: New Scholarship on Spain in the Reformation,” Archiv für Reformationsgeschichte 100 (2009): 212–28.Google Scholar
Idígoras, Tellechea, El Arzobispo Carranza y su tiempo (Madrid, 1968).Google Scholar
Idígoras, Tellechea, Fray Bartolomé Carranza: documentos históricos, vol. 1 (Madrid, 1962).Google Scholar
Kuehn, Thomas, “Reading Microhistory: The Example of Giovanni and Lusanna,” Journal of Modern History 61 (1989): 512–34.Google Scholar
Longhurst, John E., Erasmus and the Spanish Inquisition: The Case of Juan de Valdés (Albuquerque, NM, 1950).Google Scholar
Longhurst, John E., Luther and the Spanish Inquisition: The Case of Diego de Uceda, 1528–1529 (Albuquerque, NM, 1953).Google Scholar
Ortega-Costa, Milagros, Proceso de la inquisición contra María de Cazalla (Madrid, 1978).Google Scholar
Perez Escohotado, Javier, Proceso inquisitorial contra el Bachiller Antonio de Medrano (Logroño, 1526-Calahorra, 1527) (Logroño, 1988).Google Scholar
de la Pinta Llorente, Miguel, Procesos inquisitoriales contra los catedráticos hebraísticas de Salamanca, Gaspar de Grajal, Martínez de Cantalapiedra y Fray Luis de León (Madrid, 1935).Google Scholar
Pullan, Brian, “A Ship with Two Rudders: `Righetto Marrano’ and the Inquisition in Venice,” The Historical Journal 20 (1977): 2558.Google Scholar
Schutte, Anne Jacobson ed., Cecilia Ferrazzi: Autobiography of an Aspiring Saint, The Other Voice in Early Modern Europe (Chicago, 2001).Google Scholar
Selke, Angela, El Santo Oficio de la Inquisición: Proceso de Dr. Francisco Ortiz (1529–32) (Madrid, 1968).Google Scholar
Selke, Angela, Los chuetas y la inquisicion: vida y muerte en el ghetto de Mallorca (Madrid, 1972).Google Scholar
Selke, Angela A., “Vida y muerte de Juan López Celain, alumbrado vizcaíno,” Bulletin Hispanique 62 (1960): 36162.Google Scholar
Spohnholz, Jesse, The Tactics of Toleration: A Refugee Community in the Age of Religious Wars (Newark, DE, 2011).Google Scholar
Zagorin, Perez, Ways of Lying: Dissimulation, Persecution and Conformity in Early Modern Europe (Cambridge, MA, 1990).Google Scholar
Zito, Paola, Giulia e l’inquisitore: simulazione di santita e misticismo nella Napoli di primo Seicento (Naples, 2000).Google Scholar
Bertheau, Solange, “Le Consistoire dans les Eglises Réformées du Moyen-Poitou au XVIIe siècle,” Bulletin de la Société de l’Histoire du Protestantisme Français 116 (1970): 513–49.Google Scholar
Bethencourt, Francisco, “The Auto da Fé Ritual and Imagery,” Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 55 (1992): 155–68.Google Scholar
Borges Coelho, Antonio, Inquisiçao de Evora (Lisbon, 1987).Google Scholar
Burnett, Amy Nelson, “Church Discipline and Moral Reformation in the Thought of Martin Bucer,” The Sixteenth Century Journal 22 (1991): 438–56.Google Scholar
Cañeque, Alejandro, “Theater of Power: Writing and Representing the Auto de Fe in Colonial Mexico,” The Americas 52 3 (1996): 321–43.Google Scholar
Cavallero, Ricardo Juan, Justicia inquisitorial: el Sistema de Justicia Criminal de la Inquisición española (Buenos Aires, 2003).Google Scholar
Chareyre, Philippe, “Jeux interdits, jeux toléré. L’application de la discipline réformée dans la France méridionale,” in Le plaisir et la transgression en France et en Espagne aux XVIe et XVIIe siècles, Daumas, Maurice, Blázquez, Adrián, Caporossi, Olivier, and Chareyre, Philippe eds. (Orthez, 2005), 385414.Google Scholar
García Molina Riquelme, Antonio, El Régimen de penas y penitencias en el tribunal de la inquisición de México (Mexico City, 1999).Google Scholar
Greenleaf, Richard E., “The Great Visitas of the Mexican Holy Office 1645–1669,” The Americas 44 4 (1988): 399420.Google Scholar
Grosse, Christian, “Les Consistoires réformé et le pluralisme des instance de regulation des conflits (Genève, XVIe siècle),” in Entre justice et justiciables: Les auxiliaries de la justice du Moyen Âge au XXe siècle, Dolan, Claire ed. (Québec, 2005), 627–44.Google Scholar
Grosse, Christian, “‘Pour bien de paix’: La regulation des conflits par les consistoires en Suisse romand (XVIe – XVIIe siècles),” in Figures de la mediation et lien social, Chabot, Jean-Luc, Gal, Stépahe and Tournu, Christophe eds. (Paris, 2006), 85107.Google Scholar
Kingdon, Robert M., “Calvin and the Family: The Work of the Consistory in Geneva,” Pacific Theological Review 17 (1984): 518.Google Scholar
Lewin, Boleslao, “‘Las Confidencias’ of Two Crypto-Jews in the Holy Office Prison of Mexico (1654–1655),” Jewish Social Studies, 30 1(1968): 322.Google Scholar
Maag, Karin ed., The Reformation in Eastern and Central Europe (Aldershot, 1997).Google Scholar
Parker, Charles H., “Pilgrims’ Progress: Narratives of Penitence and Reconciliation in the Dutch Reformed Church,” Journal of Early Modern History 5 (2001): 222–40.Google Scholar
Rawlings, Helen, “Representational Strategies of Inclusion and Exclusion in José Del Olmo’s Narrative and Francisco Rizi’s Visual Record of the Madrid Auto de Fe of 1680,” Romance Studies 29 4 (2011): 223–41.Google Scholar
Saban, Mario J. ed., Judíos Conversos, 3 vols. (Buenos Aires, 1990–3).Google Scholar
Schmidt, Heinrich Richard, “Emden est partout; vers un modèle interactif de la confessionnalisation,” Francia: Revolution, Empire 1500–1815 26 (1999): 2345.Google Scholar
Spierling, Karen, “The Complexity of Community in Reformation Geneva,” in Defining Community in Early Modern Europe, Halvorson, Michael J. and Spierling, Karen E. eds. (Aldershot, 2008), 81101.Google Scholar
Spierling, Karen E., “Making Use of God’s Remedies: Negotiating the Material Care of Children in Reformation Geneva,” The Sixteenth Century Journal 36 (2005): 785807.Google Scholar
Spinks, Bryan, “A Seventeenth-Century Reformed Liturgy of Penance and Reconciliation,” Scottish Journal of Theology 42 (1989): 183–97.Google Scholar
de la Peña, Uchamany, Alexandra, Eva, “Simón Vaéz Sevilla,” in Estudios de Historia Novohispana, vol. 4 (Mexico City, 1987), 6793.Google Scholar
Accati, Luisa, “The Spirit of Fornication: Virtue of the Soul and Virtue of the Body in Friuli, 1600–1800,” in Sex and Gender in Historical Perspective: Selections from Quaderni Storici, Margaret A. Gallucci trans., Muir, Edward and Ruggiero, Guido eds. (Baltimore, MD, 1990).Google Scholar
Berco, Christian, Sexual Hierarchies, Public Status: Men, Sodomy and Society in Spain´s Golden Age (Toronto, 2007).Google Scholar
Bethencourt, Francisco, O imaginário da magia: feiticeiras, saludadores e nigromantes no seculo XVI (Lisbon, 1987).Google Scholar
Blackmore, Josiah and Hutcheson, Gregory S. eds., Queer Iberia: Sexualities, Cultures, and Crossings from the Middle Ages to the Renaissance (Durham, NC, 1999).Google Scholar
Boeglin, Michel, Inquisición y Contrarreforma: El Tribunal del Santo Oficio de Sevilla (1560 –1700) (Seville, 2007).Google Scholar
Del Col, Andrea, “Alcune osservazioni sui processi inquisitoriali come fonti storiche,” Metodi e ricerche 13 (1994): 85105.Google Scholar
Col, Andrea Del, “I processi dell’Inquisizione come fonte: Considerazioni diplomatiche e storiche,” Annuario dell’Istituto storico italiano per l’età moderna e contemporanea 35–6 (1983–4): 3349.Google Scholar
Contreras, Jaime, El Santo Oficio de la Inquisición en Galicia, 1560–1700: poder, sociedad y cultura (Madrid, 1982).Google Scholar
Emerson, Mark Cooper, “Maria de Jesus: A Seventeenth-Century Trans-Atlantic Visionary,” in “The Evolution of the Portuguese Altantic,” Timothy Coates ed., special issue, Portuguese Studies Review 15 1–2 (2007): 307–19.Google Scholar
Esmein, A., Le mariage en droit canonique, 2 vols., 2nd ed. (Paris, 1929).Google Scholar
Gautier, Léon, La médecine à Genève jusqu’à la fin du XVIIIe siècle (Geneva, 1906).Google Scholar
Gowing, Laura, “Language, Power, and the Law: Women’s Slander Litigation in Early Modern London,” in Women, Crime and the Courts in Early Modern England, Kermode, Jennifer and Walker, Garthine eds. (Chapel Hill, NC, 1994), 2647.Google Scholar
Guilhem, Claire, “L’inquisition et la dévaluation des discours féminins,” in L’inquisition espagnole: XVe-XIXe siècle, Bennassar, Bartolomé ed. (Paris, 1979).Google Scholar
Haliczer, Stephen, Sexuality in the Confessional: a Sacrament Profaned (New York, 1996).Google Scholar
Haliczer, Stephen ed. and trans., Inquisition and Society in Early Modern Europe (Totowa, 1987).Google Scholar
Higgs, David, “Tales of Two Carmelites: Inquisitorial Narratives in Portugal and Brazil,” in Infamous Desire: Male Homosexuality in Colonial Latin America, Sigal, Pete ed. (Chicago, 2003).Google Scholar
Hossain, Kimberly Lynn, “Unraveling the Spanish Inquisition: Inquisitorial Studies in the Twenty-First Century,” History Compass 5 4 (2007): 1280–93.Google Scholar
Johnson, Harold and Dutra, Francis A. eds., Pelo vaso traseiro: Sodomy and Sodomites in Luso-Brazilian History (Tucson, AZ, 2007).Google Scholar
Kallendorf, Hilaire ed., A New Companion to Hispanic Mysticism (Leiden, 2010).Google Scholar
Kamensky, Jane, “Words, Witches, and Woman Trouble: Witchcraft, Disorderly Speech, and Gender Boundaries in Puritan New England,” in New Perspectives on Witchcraft, Magic, and Demonology, Levack, Brian P. ed., vol. 4, Gender and Witchcraft (New York, 2001), 196217.Google Scholar
Keitt, Andrew, Inventing the Sacred: Imposture, Inquisition, and the Boundaries of the Supernatural in Golden Age Spain (Leiden, 2005).Google Scholar
Kingdon, Robert M., with Lambert, Thomas A., Reforming Geneva: Discipline, Faith, and Anger in Calvin’s Geneva (Geneva, 2012).Google Scholar
Köhler, Walther, Zürcher Ehegericht und Genfer Konsistorium, 2 vols. (Leipzig, 1932–42).Google Scholar
Lehfeldt, Elizabeth A., “Ideal Men: Masculinity and Decline in Seventeenth-Century Spain,” Renaissance Quarterly 61 2 (2008): 463–94.Google Scholar
Martin, Ruth, Witchcraft and the inquisition in Venice, 1550–1650 (Oxford, 1989).Google Scholar
Melammed, Renée Levine, Heretics or Daughters of Israel?: The Crypto-Jewish Women of Castile (Oxford, 1999).Google Scholar
Mentzer, Raymond A., “La Réforme calviniste des moeurs à Nîmes,” in La construction de l’identité réformée aux XVIe et XVIIe siècles: Le role des consistoires, idem ed., (Paris, 2006), 1948.Google Scholar
Mirrer, Louise, Women, Jews, and Muslims in the Texts of Reconquest Castile (Ann Arbor, MI, 1996).Google Scholar
Monter, William E., “Women in Calvinist Geneva (1550–1800),” Signs 6 (1980): 189209.Google Scholar
Mott, Luiz, “Filhos de Abrãao e de Sodoma. Cristãos-novos homosexuais nos tempos da Inquisição,” in Ensaios sobra a intolerância. Inquisição, marranismo e anti-semitismo (homenagem a Anita Novinsky), da Silva, Lina Gorenstein Ferreira and Carneiro, Maria Luiza Tucci eds. (São Paulo, 2002), 2363.Google Scholar
Mott, Luiz, “Justitia et Misericordia: a Inquisição Portuguesa e a Repressão ao Nefando Pecado de Sodomia,” in Inquisição: Ensaios sobre a mentalidade, heresias e arte, Novinsky, Anita and Carneiro, Maria Luiza Tucci eds. (São Paulo, 1992), 703–38.Google Scholar
Murdock, Graeme, “The Elders’ Gaze: Women and Consistorial Discipline in Late Sixteenth-Century France,” in John Calvin, Myth and Reality: Images and Impact of Geneva’s Reformer, Burnett, Amy Nelson ed. (Eugene, OR, 2011), 6990.Google Scholar
Paiva, José Pedro, Bruxaria e superstição num país sem “caça às bruxas”: 1600–1774 (Lisbon, 1997).Google Scholar
Perry, Mary Elizabeth, Gender and Disorder in Early Modern Seville (Princeton, NJ, 1990).Google Scholar
Perry, Mary Elizabeth, The Handless Maiden: Moriscos and the Politics of Religion in Early Modern Spain (Princeton, NJ, 2005).Google Scholar
Pittard, Therèse, Femmes de Genève aux jours d’autrefois (Geneva, 1946).Google Scholar
Poska, Allyson M., Women and Authority in Early Modern Spain: The Peasants of Galicia (Oxford, 2005).Google Scholar
Rieder, Philip, “Miracles and Heretics: Protestants and Catholic Healing Practices in and around Geneva 1530–1750,” Social History of Medicine 23 (2010): 227–43.Google Scholar
Ruggiero, Guido, Binding Passions: Tales of Magic, Marriage, and Power at the End of the Renaissance (New York, 1993).Google Scholar
Safley, Thomas Max, Let No Man Put Asunder: The Control of Marriage in the German Southwest: A Comparative Study, 1550–1600 (Kirksville, MO, 1984).Google Scholar
Ortega, Sánchez, Helena, María, “Sorcery and Eroticism in Love Magic,” in Cultural Encounters: the Impact of the Inquisition in Spain and the New World, Perry, Mary Elizabeth and Cruz, Anne eds. (Berkeley, CA, 1991), 5892.Google Scholar
Ortega, Sánchez, Helena, María, “Woman as Source of ‘Evil’ in Counter-Reformation Spain,” in Culture and Control in Counter-Reformation Spain, Cruz, Anne J. and Perry, Mary Elizabeth eds. (Minneapolis, MN, 1992), 196215.Google Scholar
Sarrión Mora, Adelina, Sexualidad y confesión. La solicitación ante el tribunal del Santo Oficio, siglos XVI-XIX (Madrid, 1994).Google Scholar
Schlau, Stacey, Gendered Crime and Punishment: Women and/in the Hispanic inquisitions (Leiden, 2013).Google Scholar
Schmidt, Heinrich Richard, “Morals Courts in Rural Berne during the Early Modern Period,” in The Reformation in Eastern and Central Europe, Maag, Karin ed. (Aldershot, 1997), 155–81.Google Scholar
Schutte, Anne Jacobson, “Recent Research on the Roman inquisition: The Emergence of a New Paradigm,” in Politics and Reformations: History and Reformations, Essays in Honour of Brady, Thomas A. Jr. Ocker, Christopher, Printy, Michael, Starenko, Peter, and Wallace, Peter eds. (Leiden, 2007), 9111.Google Scholar
Seeger, Cornelia, Nullité de mariage, divorce et séparation de corps à Genève au temps de Calvin: Fondements doctrinaux, loi et jurisprudence (Lausanne, 1989).Google Scholar
Seitz, Jonathan, “‘The Root is Hidden and the Material Uncertain’: The Challenges of Prosecuting Witchcraft in Early Modern Venice,” Renaissance Quarterly 62 (2009): 102–33.Google Scholar
Sluhovsky, Moshe, Believe Not Every Spirit: Possession, Mysticism, and Discernment in Early Modern Catholicism (Chicago, 2007).Google Scholar
Soyer, François, Ambiguous Gender in Early Modern Spain and Portugal: Inquisitors, Doctors, and the Transgression of Gender Norms (Leiden, 2012).Google Scholar
Twinam, Ann, “The Negotiation of Honor: Elites, Sexuality, and Illegitimacy in Eighteenth-Century Spanish America,” in The Faces of Honor: Sex, Shame and Violence in Colonial Latin America, Lipsett-Rivera, Sonya and Johnson, Lyman eds. (Albuquerque, NM, 1998).Google Scholar
Velasco, Sherry, Lesbians in Early Modern Spain (Nashville, TN, 2011).Google Scholar
Vollendorf, Lisa, The Lives of Women: A New History of inquisitional Spain (Nashville, TN, 2005).Google Scholar
Vose, Robin, “Beyond Spain: Inquisition History in Global Context,” History Compass 11 4(2013): 316–29.Google Scholar
Walker, Timothy D., Doctors, Folk Medicine and the Inquisition: The Repression of Magical Healing in Portugal during the Enlightenment (Leiden, 2005).Google Scholar
Watt, Jeffrey R., “Calvinism, Childhood, and Education: The Evidence from the Genevan Consistory,” Sixteenth Century Journal 33 (2002): 439–56.Google Scholar
Watt, Jeffrey R., “Childhood and Youth in the Genevan Consistory Minutes,” in Calvinus Praeceptor Ecclesiae: Papers of the International Congress on Calvin Research, Selderhuis, Herman ed. (Geneva, 2004), 4162.Google Scholar
Watt, Jeffrey R., “The Impact of the Reformation and Counter-Reformation,” in The History of the European Family, vol. 1: Family Life in Early Modern Times, Barbagli, Marzio and Kertzer, David I. eds. (New Haven, CT, 2001), 123–51.Google Scholar
Watt, Jeffrey R., “Reconciliation and the Confession of Sins: The Evidence from the Consistory in Calvin’s Geneva,” in Calvin and Luther: The Continuing Relationship, Holder, Ward ed. (Göttingen, 2013), 105–20.Google Scholar
Weber, Alison, Teresa of Avila and the Rhetoric of Femininity (Princeton, NJ, 1990).Google Scholar
Antonio Gonsalves de Mello, José, Nederlanders in Brazilië (1624–1654). De invloed van de Hollandse bezetting op het leven en de cultuur in Noord-Brazilië, Visser, G. trans., Teensma, Ben eds. (Zutphen, 2001).Google Scholar
Behar, Ruth, “Sexual Witchcraft, Colonialism, and Women’s Powers: Views from the Mexican Inquisition,” in Sexuality and Marriage in Colonial Latin America, Lavrin, Asunción ed. (Lincoln, NE, 1989), 178206.Google Scholar
Bellini, Ligia, A coisa obscura: mulher, sodomia e inquisição no Brasil colonial (São Paulo, 1989).Google Scholar
Bennett, Herman L., Africans in Colonial Mexico: Absolutism, Christianity, and Afro-Creole Consciousness, 1570–1640 (Bloomington, IN, 2003).Google Scholar
Bloch, Kristen, Ordinary Lives in the Early Caribbean: Religion, Colonial Competition, and the Politics of Profit (Athens, GA, 2012).Google Scholar
Bernardini, Paolo and Fiering, Norman eds., The Jews and the Expansion of Europe to the West, 1450–1800 (New York, 2001).Google Scholar
van den Boogaart, Ernst, “De Nederlandse expansie in het Atlantische gebied, 1590–1674,” in Overzee. Nederlandse koloniale geschiedenis, 1590–1975, idem et al. eds. (Haarlem, 1982), 113–44.Google Scholar
Boyer, Richard, Lives of the Bigamists: Marriage, Family, and Community in Colonial Mexico (Albuquerque, NM, 1995).Google Scholar
Bristol, Joan Cameron, Christians, Blasphemers, and Witches: Afro-Mexican Ritual Practice in the Seventeenth Century (Albuquerque, NM, 2007).Google Scholar
Buddingh, Hans, Geschiedenis van Suriname (Utrecht, 1999).Google Scholar
Cañeque, Alejandro, The King’s Living Image: The Culture and Politics of Viceregal Power in Colonial Mexico (New York, 2004).Google Scholar
Clendinnen, Inga, Ambivalent Conquests: Maya and Spaniard in Yucatan, 1517–1570 (Cambridge, 1987).Google Scholar
Cohen, Julie-Marthe ed., Joden in de Cariben (Zutphen, 2015).Google Scholar
Don, Patricia Lopes, Bonfires of Culture: Franciscans, Indigenous Leaders and the Inquisition in Early Mexico, 1524–1540 (Norman, OK, 2010).Google Scholar
Don, Patricia Lopes, “The 1539 Inquisition and Trial of Don Carlos of Texcoco in Early Mexico,” Hispanic American Historical Review 88 4(November 2008): 573606.Google Scholar
Duviols, Pierre, La lutte contre les religions autochtones dans le Péru colonial: “L’extirpationde l’idolâtrie,” entre 1532 et 1660 (Toulouse, 2008).Google Scholar
Enthoven, Victor, “Suriname and Zeeland: Fifteen Years of Dutch Misery on the Wild Coast, 1667–1682,” in Proceedings of the International Conference on Shipping, Factories and Colonization, Everaert, J. and Parmentier, J. eds. (Brussels, 1996), 249–60.Google Scholar
Escobar Quevedo, Ricardo, Inquisición y judaizantes en América española, siglos XVI-XVII (Bogotá, 2008).Google Scholar
Feitler, Bruno, Nas malhas da consciência: Igreja e inquisiçião no Brasil (São Paulo, 2007).Google Scholar
Few, Martha, Women Who Live Evil Lives: Gender, Religion, and the Politics of Power in Colonial Guatemala (Austin, TX, 2002).Google Scholar
Frijhoff, Willem, Wegen van Evert Willemsz. Een Hollands weeskind op zoek naar zichzelf, 1607–1647 (Nijmegen, 1995).Google Scholar
Frijhoff, Willem, “The West India Company and the Reformed Church: Neglect or Concern?De Halve Maen 70 (1997): 5968.Google Scholar
van Goor, J., “Predikanten in Brazilië,” Spiegel Historiael 4 (1969): 651–8.Google Scholar
Greenleaf, Richard E., The Mexican Inquisition of the Sixteenth Century (Albuquerque, NM, 1969).Google Scholar
Greenleaf, Richard E., Zumárraga and the Mexican Inquisition, 1536–1543 (Washington, DC, 1961).Google Scholar
Haefeli, Evan, New Netherland and the Dutch Origins of American Religious Liberty (Philadelphia, PA, 2012).Google Scholar
Israel, Jonathan and Schwartz, Stuart B. eds., The Expansion of Tolerance: Religion in Dutch Brazil (1624–1654) (Amsterdam, 2007).Google Scholar
Jacobs, Jaap, New Netherland: A Dutch Colony in Seventeenth-Century America (Ithaca, NY, 2009).Google Scholar
Jacobs, Jaap, Een zegenrijk gewest. Nieuw-Nederland in de zeventiende eeuw (Amsterdam, 1999).Google Scholar
Jaffary, Nora E., False Mystics: Deviant Orthodoxy in Colonial Mexico (Lincoln, NE, 2004).Google Scholar
Joosse, Leendert Jan, Geloof in de Nieuwe Wereld. Ontmoeting met Afrikanen en Indianen (1600–1700) (Kampen, 2008).Google Scholar
Klooster, Wim, “Jews in Suriname and Curacao,” in Jews and the Expansion of Europe to the West, 1450–1800, Bernardini, Paolo and Fiering, Norman eds. (New York, 2001), 350–68.Google Scholar
Krabbendam, Hans, van Minnen, Cornelis A., and Scott-Smith, Giles eds., Four Centuries of Dutch-American Relations, 1609–2009 (Albany, NY, 2009).Google Scholar
Lenders, Maria, Strijders voor het Lam: Leven en werk van Herrnhutter broeders en –zusters in Suriname, 1735–1900 (Leiden, 1996).Google Scholar
Lewis, Laura, Hall of Mirrors: Power, Witchcraft, and Caste in Colonial Mexico (Durham, NC, 2003).Google Scholar
Lichtveld, U.M. and Voorhoeve, J. eds., Suriname: Spiegel der vaderlandse kooplieden (The Hague, 1980).Google Scholar
Liebman, Seymour B., The Jews in New Spain. Faith, Flame, and the Inquisition (Coral Gables FL, 1970).Google Scholar
van Lier, Rudolf, Samenleving in een grensgebied: Een sociaal-historische studie van Suriname, 3rd ed. (Amsterdam, 1977).Google Scholar
van der Linde, J.M., Surinaamse Suikerheren en hun kerk. Plantagekolonie en handelskerk ten tijde van Johannes Basseliers, predikant en planter in Suriname, 1667–1689 (Wageningen, 1966).Google Scholar
McKnight, Kathryn Joy and Garofalo, Leo J. eds., Afro-Latino Voices: Narratives from the Early Modern Ibero-Atlantic World, 1550–1812 (Indianapolis, IN, 2009).Google Scholar
Mello e Souza, Laura, O diabo e a terra de Santa Cruz: Feitiçaria e religiosidade popular no Brasil colonial (São Paulo, 1986).Google Scholar
Meuwese, Mark, “Dutch Calvinism and Native Americans: A Comparative Study of the Motivations for Protestant Conversion among the Tupis in Northeastern Brazil (1630–1654) and the Mohawks in Central New York (1690–1713),” in The Spiritual Conversion of the Americas, Muldoon, James ed. (Gainesville, FL, 2004), 118–41.Google Scholar
Mott, Luiz, Bahia: Inquisição e sociedade (Salvador, 2010).Google Scholar
Mott, Luiz, O sexo proibido: Virgens, gays e escravos nas garras da Inquisição (Campinus, 1988).Google Scholar
Novinsky, Anita, “Ser marrano em Minas colonial,” Revista Brasileira de História 21 40(2001), http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/S0102-01882001000100008Google Scholar
Oort, J.W.C., Surinaams verhaal: Vestiging van de Hervormde Kerk in Suriname, 1667–1800 (Zutphen, 2000).Google Scholar
O’Toole, Rachel Sarah, “Danger in the Convent: Colonial Demons, Idolatrous Indias, and Bewitching Negras in Santa Clara (Trujillo del Peru),” Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History 7 1 (Spring 2006).Google Scholar
Poole, Stafford, Pedro Moya de Contreras: Catholic Reform and Royal Power in New Spain, 1571–1591 (Berkeley, CA, 1987).Google Scholar
Postma, Johannes, “Suriname and Its Atlantic Connections, 1667–1795,” in Riches from Atlantic Commerce: Dutch Transatlantic Trade and Shipping, 1585–1817, Postma, Johannes and Enthoven, Victor eds. (Leiden, 2003), 287322.Google Scholar
Schalkwijk, F.L., The Reformed Church in Dutch Brazil, 1624–1654 (Zoetermeer, 1998).Google Scholar
Schwaller, Robert C, “Mulatos as Bilingual Intermediaries in Sixteenth-Century New Spain,” Ethnohistory 59 4 (Fall 2012): 713–38.Google Scholar
Silverblatt, Irene, Moon, Sun, and Witches: Gender Ideologies and Class in Inca and Colonial Peru (Princeton, NJ, 1987).Google Scholar
Sweet, James H., Domingos Álvares, African Healing, and the Intellectual History of the Atlantic World (Chapel Hill, NC, 2011).Google Scholar
Tavárez, David, The Invisible War: Indigenous Devotions, Discipline, and Dissent in Colonial Mexico (Stanford, CA, 2011).Google Scholar
Tavárez, David, “Legally Indian: Inquisitorial Readings of Indigenous Identity in New Spain” in Imperial Subjects: Race and Identity in Colonial Latin America, Fisher, Andrew B. and O’Hara, Matthew D. eds. (Durham, NC, 2009), 81100.Google Scholar
Teensma, B. N., “De Braziliaanse brieven van ds Vincent Joachim Soler,” Documentatieblad voor de Geschiedenis van de Nederlandse Zending en Overzeese Kerken 4 (1997): 123.Google Scholar
Tortorici, Zeb, “Against Nature: Sodomy and Homosexuality in Colonial Latin America,” History Compass 10 2 (2012): 161–78.Google Scholar
Vainfas, Ronaldo, Trópico dos pecados: moral, sexualidade e Inquisição no Brasil (Rio de Janeiro, 1989).Google Scholar
Venema, Janny, Beverwijck: A Dutch Village on the American Frontier, 1652–1664 (Albany, NY, 2003).Google Scholar
Von Germeten, Nicole, Violent Delights, Violent Ends: Sex, Race, and Honor in Colonial Cartagena de Indias (Albuquerque, NM, 2013).Google Scholar
Wolbers, J., Geschiedenis van Suriname (Amsterdam, 1861).Google Scholar
Amiel, Charles and Lima, Anne eds., L’Inquisition de Goa; la relation de Charles Dellon (1687) (Paris, 1997).Google Scholar
Aron-Beller, Katherine, Jews on Trial. The Papal Inquisition in Modena, 1598–1638 (Manchester, 2011).Google Scholar
Biewenga, A., De Kaap de Goede Hoop: Een Nederlandse vestigingskolonie, 1680–1730 (Amsterdam, 1999).Google Scholar
Blussé, L., Strange Company: Chinese Settlers, Mestizo Women and the Dutch in VOC Batavia (Leiden, 1988).Google Scholar
Cannas da Cunha, Ana, A Inquisição no Estado da Índia. Origens (1539–1560) (Lisbon, 1995).Google Scholar
Feitler, Bruno, “A delegação de poderes inquisitoriais: o exemplo de Goa através da documentação da Biblioteca Nacional do Rio de Janeiro,” Tempo 12 24 (2008): 127–48.Google Scholar
Feitler, Bruno, “A Sinagoga desenganada: um tratado antijudaico no Brasil do começo do século XVIII,” Revista de História 148 (2003): 103–24.Google Scholar
Fernando, M. Radin, “The Lost Archives of Melaka: Are They Really Lost?Journal of the Malaysian Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society 78 (2005): 136.Google Scholar
van Goor, J., Jan Kompenie as Schoolmaster: Dutch Education in Ceylon 1690–1795 (Groningen, 1978).Google Scholar
Hsin-Hui, Chiu, The Colonial “Civilizing Process” in Dutch Formosa: 1624–1662 (Leiden, 2008).Google Scholar
Kanumoyoso, B., Beyond the City Wall: Society and Economic Development in the Ommelanden of Batavia, 1684–1740 (Ph.D. dissertation, Leiden University, 2011).Google Scholar
Marcocci, Giuseppe, A Consciência de um império. Portugal e o seu mundo (sécs. XV-XVII) (Coimbra, 2012).Google Scholar
Marcocci, Giuseppe, “A fé de um império: A Inquisição no mundo português de Quinhentos,” Revista de História 164 (2011): 65100.Google Scholar
Mooij, J. ed., Bouwstoffen voor de Geschiedenis der Protestantsche Kerken in Nederlandsch-Indië, 3 vols. (Batavia, 1931).Google Scholar
Niemeijer, Hendrik E., Batavia. Een koloniale samenleving in de 17de eeuw (Amsterdam, 2005).Google Scholar
Niemeijer, Hendrik E., Calvinisme en koloniale stadscultuur. Batavia 1619–1725 (Ph.D. dissertation, Vrije Universiteit van Amsterdam, 1996).Google Scholar
Niemeijer, Hendrik E., “Slavery, Ethnicity and the Economic Independence of Women in Seventeenth-Century Batavia,” in Other Pasts: Women, Gender and History in Early Modern Southeast Asia, Watson-Andaya, Barbara ed. (Honolulu, 2000), 174–95.Google Scholar
Niemeijer, Hendrik E. and van den End, Th., eds., Bronnen betreffende de geschiedenis van Kerk en School in de gouvernementen Ambon, Ternate en Banda ten tijde van de Verenigde Oost-Indische Compagnie (VOC), 1605–1791 (The Hague, 2014).Google Scholar
Pagden, Anthony, The Fall of Natural Man: The American Indian and the Origins of Comparative Ethnology (Cambridge, 1982).Google Scholar
Plomp, J., De kerkelijke tucht bij Calvijn (Kampen, 1969).Google Scholar
Priolkar, Anant Kakba, The Goa Inquisition. Being a Quatercentenary Commemoration Study of the Inquisition in India (Bombay, 1961).Google Scholar
Priolkar, Anant Kakba Reportorio geral de tres mil oito centos processos, que sam todos os despachados neste sancto Officio de Goa … [1623]. Analyzed as www.i-m.co/reportorio/reportorio/home/htmlGoogle Scholar
Schutte, G. J. ed.,. Het Indisch Sion. De Gereformeerde kerk onder de Verenigde Oost-Indische Compagnie (Hilversum, 2002).Google Scholar
Singh, Anjana, Fort Cochin in Kerala, 1750–1830: The Social Condition of a Dutch Community in an Indian Milieu (Leiden, 2010).Google Scholar
Soleiman, Y., The Dutch Reformed Church in Late Eighteenth-Century Java: An Eastern Adventure (Zoetermeer, 2012).Google Scholar
Subrahmanyam, Sanjay, Improvising Empire: Portuguese Trade and Settlement in the Bay of Bengal, 1500–1700 (Delhi, 1990).Google Scholar
Subrahmanyam, Sanjay, The Portuguese Empire in Asia 1500–1700. A Political and Economic History, 2nd ed. (New York, 2012).Google Scholar
Thomaz, Luís Filipe F. R., De Ceuta a Timor (Lisbon, 1994).Google Scholar
Ward, Kerry, Networks of Empire. Forced migration in the Dutch East India Company (Cambridge, 2009).Google Scholar
Xavier, Ângela Barreto, A Invenção de Goa. Poder imperial e conversões culturais nos séculos XVI e XVII (Lisbon, 2008).Google Scholar
Zupanov, Ines, Disputed Mission: Jesuit Experiment and Brahmanical Knowledge in Seventeenth-Century India (Oxford, 1999).Google Scholar
de Almeida, Fortunato, História da Igreja em Portugal (Porto, 1971).Google Scholar
de Azevedo, J. Lúcio, História dos Cristãos-Novos Portugueses, 3rd ed. (Lisbon, 1989).Google Scholar
Bachmann, Karl, Geschichte der Kirchenzucht in Kurhessen von der Reformation bis zur Gegenwart. Ein Beitrag zur Kirchen- und Kulturgeschichte des Hessenlandes (Marburg, 1912).Google Scholar
Barnard, T.C., “Reforming Irish Manners: The Religious Societies in Dublin during the 1690s,” The Historical Journal 35 (1992): 805–38.Google Scholar
Bethencourt, Francisco, “Declínio e estinção do Santo Ofício,” Revista de História Económica e Social (1987): 77–85.Google Scholar
Bethencourt, Francisco, “Inquisição e controle social,” História e critica 14 (1987): 518.Google Scholar
Brecht, Martin, Kirchenordnumg und Kirchenzucht in Württemberg vom 16. bis zum 18. Jahrhundert [Quellen und Forschungen zur württembergischen Kirchengeschichte] (Stuttgart, 1967).Google Scholar
Burns, E. Bradford. “The Intellectuals as Agents of Change and the Independence of Brazil, 1724–1822,” in From Colony to Nation: Essays on the Independence of Brazil, Russell-Wood, A.J.R. ed. (Baltimore, MD, 1975).Google Scholar
Callahan, William J., Church, Politics, and Society in Spain, 1750–1874 (Cambridge, 1984)Google Scholar
Dabhoiwala, Faramerz, The Origins of Sex. A History of the First Sexual Revolution (London, 2012).Google Scholar
van Deursen, A. Th., Een dorp in de polder. Graft in de zeventiende eeuw (Amsterdam, 1994).Google Scholar
van Eijnatten, Joris, Liberty and Concord in the United Provinces. Religious Toleration and the Public in the Eighteenth-Century Netherlands (Leiden, 2003).Google Scholar
de Freitas, Jordão, O Marquez de Pombal e o Santo Officio da Inquisição: Memoria enriquecida com documentos inéditos e facsimiles de assignaturas do benemerito da cidade de Lisboa (Lisbon, 1916).Google Scholar
Geudeke, Liesbeth, De classis Edam, 1572–1650. Opbouw van een nieuwe kerk in een verdeelde samenleving (Gouda, 2010).Google Scholar
Gorenstein Ferreira da Silva, Lina, Herético e impuros: A Inquisição e os cristãosnovos no Rio de Janeiro século XVIII (Rio de Janeiro, 1995).Google Scholar
Grünenfelder, Lukas, Das Zürcher Ehegerecht. Eheschliessung, Ehescheidung und Ehetrennung nach der erneuerten Satzung von 1698 [Zürcher Studien zur Rechtsgeschichte 57] (Zürich, 2007).Google Scholar
Haliczer, Stephen, “Inquisition Myth and Inquisition History: The Abolition of the Holy Office and the Development of Spanish Political Ideology,” in The Spanish Inquisition and the Inquisitorial Mind, Alcalá, Angel ed. (Boulder, CO, 1987), 146–56.Google Scholar
Haliczer, Stephen, Inquisition and Society in the Kingdom of Valencia, 1478–1834 (Berkeley, CA, 1990).Google Scholar
Hargreaves-Mawdsley, W. N. ed., Spain under the Bourbons, 1700–1833. A Collection of Documents (Columbia, 1973).Google Scholar
Hofer, Roland E., “Üppiges, unzüchtiges Lebwesen.” Schaffhauser Ehegerichtsbarkeit van der Reformation bis zum Ende des Ancien Régime (1529–1798) (Bern, 1993).Google Scholar
Hurl-Eamon, Jennine, “Policing Male Heterosexuality: The Reformation of Manners Societies’ Campaign against the Brothels in Westminster, 1690–1720,” Journal of Social History 37 (2004), 1017–35.Google Scholar
Isaacs, Tina, “The Anglican Hierarchy and the Reformation of Manners 1688–1738,” Journal of Ecclesiastical History 33 (1982): 391411.Google Scholar
Israel, Jonathan I., The Dutch Republic. Its Rise, Greatness and Fall 1477–1806 (Oxford, 2005).Google Scholar
Konersmann, Frank, Kirchenregiment und Kirchenzucht im frühneuzeitlichen Kleinstaat. Studien zu den herrschaftlichen und gesellschaftlichen Grundlagen des Kirchenregiments der Herzöge von Pfalz-Zweibrücken 1410–1793 [Schriftenreihe des Vereins für Rheinische Kirchengeschichte] (Cologne, 1996).Google Scholar
Lea, Henry Charles, The Inquisition in the Spanish Dependencies (New York, 1908).Google Scholar
van Lieburg, Fred, De Nadere Reformatie in Utrecht ten tijde van Voetius. Sporen in de gereformeerde kerkenraadsacta (Rotterdam, 1989).Google Scholar
Lieburg, Fred van, “Gerardus van Schuylenburg (1681–1770). Een piëtistisch predikantenleven,” Documentatieblad Nadere Reformatie 16 (1992): 103–26.Google Scholar
Lipiner, Elias, Terror e Linguagem: Um dicionário da Santa Inquisição (1999).Google Scholar
Lüdicke, Martina, Kirchenzucht und Alltagsleben. Untersuchungen in der reformierten hessischen Gemeninde Deisel 1781–1914 (Kassel, 2003).Google Scholar
Lustosa, Fernanda Mayer, Raízes judaicas na Paraíba colonial: Séculos VXI-XVIII (Master’s Thesis, University of São Paulo, 2000).Google Scholar
Lynch, John, Bourbon Spain, 1700–1808 (Cambridge, 1989).Google Scholar
Maxwell, Kenneth, Pombal: Paradox of the Enlightenment (Cambridge, 1995).Google Scholar
Mendes de Almeida, Candido ed., Ordenações Filipinas, Livro 5 (1870; reprint ed., Lisbon, 1985).Google Scholar
Mitchison, Rosalind and Leneman, Leah, “Acquiescence in and Defiance of Church Discipline in Early-Modern Scotland,” Records of the Scottish Church History Society 25 (1993): 1939.Google Scholar
Mitchison, Rosalind and Leneman, Leah, Sexuality and Social Control. Scotland 1660–1780 (Oxford, 1989).Google Scholar
de Mooij, Charles, Geloof kan Bergen verzetten. Reformatie en katholieke herleving te Bergen op Zoom 1577–1795 (Hilversum, 1998).Google Scholar
Muster, Michael, Das Ende der Kirchenbuße. Dargestellt an der Verordnung über die Aufhebung der Kirchenbuße in den Braunschweig-Wolfenbüttelschen Landen vom 6. März 1775 (Hanover, 1983).Google Scholar
Nizza da Silva, Maria Beatriz, Cultura no Brasil Colônia (Petrópolis, 1981).Google Scholar
Quenet, Grégory, Les tremblements de terre aux XIIe et XVIIIe siècles. La naissance d’un risque (Seyssel, 2005).Google Scholar
Rawlings, Helen, The Spanish Inquisition (Malden, MA, 2006).Google Scholar
van Rooden, Peter, Religieuze regimes. Over godsdienst en maatschappij in Nederland, 1570–1990 (Amsterdam, 1996).Google Scholar
Santos, Maria Helena Carvalho dos, “A abolição da Inquisição em Portugal: Um acto de poder,” in Inquisição, 3 vols., idem ed. (Lisbon, 1989), 3: 1379–86.Google Scholar
Scharfe, Martin, “Subversive Frömmigkeit. Über die Distanz unterer Volksklassen zur offiziellen Religion. Beispiele aus dem württembergischen Protestantismus des 18. Jahrhunderts,” in Kultur zwischen Bürgertum und Volk [Argument-Sonderband, AS 103], Held, Jutta ed. (Berlin, 1983), 1735.Google Scholar
Schilling, Heinz ed., Kirchenzucht und Sozialdisziplinierung im frühneuzeitlichen Europa [Zeitschrift für historische Forschung, Beiheft 16] (Berlin, 1994).Google Scholar
Schnabel-Schüle, Helga, “Der grosse Unterschied und seine kleinen Folgen. Zum Problem der Kirchenzucht als Unterscheidungskriterium zwischen lutherischer und reformierter Konfession,” in Krisenbewußtsein und Krisenbewältigung in der frühen Neuzeit – Crisis in Early Modern Europe. Festschrift für Hans-Christoph Rublack, Hagenmaier, Monika and Holtz, Sabine eds. (Frankfurt am Main, 1992), 197214.Google Scholar
Shore, Heather, “‘The Reckoning’: disorderly women, informing constables and the Westminster justices, 1727–33,” Social History 34 (2009): 409–27.Google Scholar
Siqueira, Sonia A., “Os Regimentos da Inquisição,” Revista do Instituto Histórico e Geográfico Brasileiro 157 392(July–Sept. 1996): 4951020.Google Scholar
Spaans, Joke, Armenzorg in Friesland. Publieke zorg en particuliere liefdadigheid in zes Friese steden: Leeuwarden, Bolsward, Franeker, Sneek, Dokkum en Harlingen (Hilversum, 1997),Google Scholar
Taylor, Stephen, “Whigs, Tories and Anticlericalism: Ecclesiastical Courts Legislation in 1733,” Parliamentary History 19 (2000): 329–55.Google Scholar
Thomson, Andrew, “Church Discipline: The Operation of the Winchester Consistory Court in the Seventeenth Century,” History 91 (2006): 337–59.Google Scholar
Torres, José Veiga, “Uma longa guerra social: Os rítmos da repressão inquisitorial em Portugal,” RHES 1 (Jan-June, 1978): 5568.Google Scholar
Torres, José Veiga, “Da repressão religiosa para a promoção social: A Inquisição como instância legitimadora da promoção social da burguesia mercantile,” Revista Crítica de Ciências Sociais 4 (October 1994): 109–35.Google Scholar
Villalta, Luiz Carlos, “As licenças para posse e leitura de livros proibidos,” in De Cabral a Pedro I: Aspectos da colonização portuguesa no Brasil, da Silva, Maria Beatriz Nizza ed. (Porto, 2001), 235–46.Google Scholar
Wadsworth, James E., “Celebrating St. Peter Martyr: The Inquisitional Brotherhood in Colonial Brazil,” Colonial Latin American Historical Review 12 2 (2003): 173227.Google Scholar
Wadsworth, James E., In Defence of the Faith: Joaquim Marques de Araújo, a Comissário in the Age of Inquisitional Decline (Montreal & Kingston, 2013).Google Scholar
Borromeo, Agostino ed., L’Inquisizione. Atti del Simposio internazionale, Città del Vaticano, 29–31 ottobre 1998 (Vatican City, 2005).Google Scholar
Clasen, Claus-Peter, Anabaptism: A Social History (Ithaca, NY, 1972).Google Scholar
Kamen, Henry, Inquisition and Society in Spain in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries (Bloomington, IN, 1985).Google Scholar
Kamen, Henry, The Spanish Inquisition: An Historical Revision (London, 1997).Google Scholar
Monter, William E., “The Inquisition,” in A Companion to the Reformation World, Hsia, Ronnie Po-Chia ed. (Oxford, 2004), 255–71.Google Scholar
Monter, E. William, “The Mediterranean Inquisitions of Early Modern Europe,” in The Cambridge History of Christianity, vol. 6, Reform and Expansion, 1500–1660, Hsia, Ronnie Po-Chia ed. (Cambridge, 2007), 283301.Google Scholar
O’Malley, John, Trent: What Really Happened at the Council (Cambridge, 2012).Google Scholar
Robinson, Marilynne, The Death of Adam (New York, 2005).Google Scholar
Rupp, E.G. and Drewery, Benjamin eds., Martin Luther (New York, 1970).Google Scholar
Tolley, Bruce, Pastors and Parishioners in Wurttemberg during the Late Reformation, 1581–1621 (Stanford, CA, 1995).Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×