Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 288
Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-0-7425-5445-0 • Hardback • December 2006 • $146.00 • (£112.00)
978-0-7425-5446-7 • Paperback • December 2016 • $38.00 • (£30.00)
978-0-7425-6965-2 • eBook • December 2006 • $36.00 • (£30.00)
James E. Wadsworth is professor of history at Stonehill College. He is the author of In Defence of the Faith: Joaquim Marques de Araújo, a Comissário in the Age of Inquisitional Decline, Columbus’s First Voyage: A History in Documents, and The World of Credit in Colonial Massachusetts: James Richards and His Day Book, 1692–1711.
Introduction
Chapter 1: In the Name of the Holy Office
Chapter 2: The Inquisition at Work in Pernambuco
Chapter 3: Qualifying for Office: Procedures and Costs
Chapter 4: Qualifying for Office: The Problems of Honor
Chapter 5: Genealogical Fraud and Political Reform
Chapter 6: Nobility of Blood
Chapter 7: Corporate Privilege: The familiars do número
Chapter 8: Corporate Institutions: Brotherhoods and Militias
Chapter 9: Impostors, Abusers, and Obstructers
Chapter 10: Decay and Decline
Conclusion
This is a valuable book based on a significant research effort. . . . [that] expands our knowledge of the Iberian Inquisition and its workings in Brazil. It is an important guide to the internal structure of the Inquisition and its bureaucrats. Wadsworth's analysis of those Pernambucan agents of orthodoxy is an important contribution to the literature.
— Hispanic American Historical Review
James Wadsworth has undertaken wide-ranging archival research in order to produce this new perspective on the Portuguese Inquisition by focusing on the lay and clerical officials of the Inquisition in wealthy and well-populated Pernambuco.
— British Bulletin of Publications on Latin America, the Caribbean, Portugal and Spain
James E. Wadsworth's Agents of Orthodoxy is an engaging and well-documented book, one that makes a truly important contribution to the history of the Inquisition in Brazil, and more broadly, throughout the entire Iberian world. It also offers new insights into the complex array of social and political factors that contributed to the abolition of the Portuguese Inquisition in 1821. Original in approach and revisionist in its findings, this book is one of the best studies on New World inquisitions currently in print.
— Richard L. Kagan, Johns Hopkins University
Agents of Orthodoxy is an innovative contribution to the still imperfectly known history of the Portuguese Inquisition. It argues that the Holy Office was an active institution in colonial society whose role wasn't confined to the persecution of religious and moral deviants. In fact, Wadsworth's extensive research and sharp analysis shows how deeply the Inquisition, by its system of appointment and local structure, could pervade society, even in distant Pernambuco. It worked as a strong instrument of social exclusion and promotion until the final decades of the eighteenth century.
— Bruno Feitler, Universidade Federal de São Paulo
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Lecture Notes. The Lecture Notes provide the tables and figures from the text.