Document Type: |
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Author/editor: |
Jessie Sherwood Standard: Sherwood, Jessie [Jessie Sherwood] |
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Title:
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The Inquisitor as Archivist: Surprise, Fear, and Ruthless Efficiency in the Archives
Standard: |
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Periodical: |
The American Archivist | ||
Volume: |
75 | ||
Date of Publication: |
Spring/Summer 2012) | ||
Pages: |
56-80 | ||
URL: |
https://www.academia.edu/3500095 | ||
Subjects: |
Heretics - Persecutions by the Inquisition - Middle Ages - Sources Inquisition - Handbooks - Middle Ages Inquisition - Middle Ages - History Inquisition - Middle Ages - Origins Inquisition and notaries - Middle Ages Inquisitors - Archives - Middle Ages |
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Summary/Notes: |
Abstract:
Medieval inquisitors did not belong to the torturous institution of popular imagination. They were, however, efficient, perhaps even ruthlessly so, in their use of their archives and indexes. Inquisitors used these new technologies for creating, keeping, and searching records to uncover heresy, lies, and evasions. Using their records as an institutional memory, they searched out old crimes, uncovered false or mendacious confessions, compiled evidence, and provoked new confessions. As the written records of oral confessions, inquisitorial records are peculiarly difficult documents to negotiate, but they are also unusually rich sources for studying the unstable nexus of medieval orality and textuality. |