inquisition

listen to the pronunciation of inquisition
Englisch - Türkisch
sorgu
sorgulama
Soruşturma, hukuksal açıdan yapılan araştırma
inquisitionalEngizisyon veya soruşturma ile ilgili
{i} inceleme
Engizisyon

Yahudiler, İspanyol Engizisyonundan kaçtılar ve onbeşinci asırda Osmanlı İmparatorluğu'na sığındılar. - Jews fled the Spanish Inquisition and took shelter in Ottoman Empire in the fifteenth century.

Hiç kimse İspanyol Engizisyonu beklemiyor! - Nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition!

engizisyon mahkemesi
soruşturma
the inquisition
engizisyon mahkemesi
spanish inquisition
İspanyol Engizisyonu
Englisch - Englisch
a questioning
an investigation or inquiry into the truth of some matter
an inquest
a court or tribunal for examination and punishment of heretics
The organized suppression of heresy instituted by Pope Gregory IX in 1231 to bring about the apprehension and trial of those accused of heresy At this time, there was a sense of Christian unity, and most of them agreed with the Church that heretics seemed to threaten society itself See Heresy
A tribunal once set up by the Roman Catholic Church, intended to weed out heresy from the realms of Christendom Many Jews lost their homes and livelihoods in this age of intolerance, as did many gentiles who did not confess to the official doctrines of the established Church
Judicial inquiry; official examination; inquest
The act of inquiring; inquiry; search; examination; inspection; investigation
To make inquisition concerning; to inquire into
A permanant institution of the Church charged with the eradication of heresies
The finding of a jury, especially such a finding under a writ of inquiry
A religious tribunal of the Catholic church for the suppression of heresy, first administered by the Dominican Order in the 3rd century In the 16th century the Spanish Inquisition was particularly active, and was controlled independently by the Spanish kings
An assembly of the Roman Catholic Church clergy established for the investigation of any opinions or doctrines differing from the official church position
{i} formal investigation; brutal questioning, prolonged interrogation; judicial investigation, inquiry (Law)
Its operations were chiefly confined to Spain, Portugal, and their dependencies, and a part of Italy
A court or tribunal for the examination and punishment of heretics, fully established by Pope Gregory IX
An inquisition is an official investigation, especially one which is very thorough and uses harsh methods of questioning. In the Middle Ages, a judicial procedure that was used to combat heresy; in early modern times, a formal Roman Catholic judicial institution. Inquisito, a Latin term meaning investigation or inquest, was a legal procedure that involved the assemblage of evidence and the prosecution of a criminal trial. Use of the procedure against the heresies of the Cathari and Waldenses was approved by Pope Gregory IX in 1231. Suspected heretics were arrested, interrogated, and tried; the use of torture was approved by Innocent IV in 1252. Penalties ranged from prayer and fasting to imprisonment; convicted heretics who refused to recant could be executed by lay authorities. Medieval inquisitors functioned widely in northern Italy and southern France. The Spanish Inquisition was authorized by Sixtus IV in 1478; the pope later tried to limit its powers but was opposed by the Spanish crown. The auto-da-fé, the public ceremony at which sentences were pronounced, was an elaborate celebration, and the grand inquisitor Tomás de Torquemada was responsible for burning about 2,000 heretics at the stake. The Spanish Inquisition was also introduced into Mexico, Peru, Sicily (1517), and the Netherlands (1522), and it was not entirely suppressed in Spain until the early 19th century
a former tribunal of the Roman Catholic Church (1232-1820) created to discover and suppress heresy
a severe interrogation (often violating the rights or privacy of individuals)
a severe interrogation (often violating the rights or privacy of individuals) a former tribunal of the Roman Catholic Church (1232-1820) created to discover and suppress heresy
A tribunal established by the Catholic Church to identify and correct those committing heresy
the official persecution of heresy by special ecclesiastical courts; formally constituted by the papacy in the 13th century
a tribunal of the Roman Catholic Church set up to investigate and suppress heresy
a harsh or rigorous interrogation that violates the rights of an individual
inquisition post mortem
an local investigation, in medieval England, into the lands of a deceased person in order to discover what income and legal rights were due to the crown
ınquisition
{n} a judicial enquiry, a cruel court
spanish inquisition
the Inquisition that guarded the orthodoxy of Catholicism in Spain (especially from the 15th to the 17th centuries)
inquisition
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