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JOAQUÍN FURNÓ I ABAD (1832-1918). SPANISH ENGRAVER.. Paul IV (Giovanni Pietro Caraffa) (1476-1559). Pope of the Catholic Church (23 May 1555-18 August 1559). His pontificate focused on combating heresy and preventing its spread in the territories of the Italian peninsula. To achieve this, he made use of the Roman Inquisition and book censorship. On the day of his death, the Roman people flocked to the Palace of the Holy Office, breaking down the doors, releasing the prisoners from the dungeons and burning the building. One of the victims of the Inquisition in Rome, freed by the people, was the famous Greek heresiarch John Palaeologus. He studied theology in Italy, having had frequent dealings with the leading Protestants of the time, adopting Luther's ideas and preaching them publicly. Revolution broke out in Rome. The people destroyed the statues of Paul IV, dragging them through the streets for days and then throwing them into the Tiber. Destruction of the Inquisition in Rome. Engraving by J. Furnó. Historia de las persecuciones políticas y religiosas en Europa (History of political and religious persecutions in Europe). Volume III. Published in Barcelona, 1864.

JOAQUÍN FURNÓ I ABAD (1832-1918). SPANISH ENGRAVER.. Paul IV (Giovanni Pietro Caraffa) (1476-1559). Pope of the Catholic Church (23 May 1555-18 August 1559). His pontificate focused on combating heresy and preventing its spread in the territories of the Italian peninsula. To achieve this, he made use of the Roman Inquisition and book censorship. On the day of his death, the Roman people flocked to the Palace of the Holy Office, breaking down the doors, releasing the prisoners from the dungeons and burning the building. One of the victims of the Inquisition in Rome, freed by the people, was the famous Greek heresiarch John Palaeologus. He studied theology in Italy, having had frequent dealings with the leading Protestants of the time, adopting Luther's ideas and preaching them publicly. Revolution broke out in Rome. The people destroyed the statues of Paul IV, dragging them through the streets for days and then throwing them into the Tiber. Destruction of the Inquisition in Rome. Engraving by J. Furnó. Historia de las persecuciones políticas y religiosas en Europa (History of political and religious persecutions in Europe). Volume III. Published in Barcelona, 1864.
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Paul IV (Giovanni Pietro Caraffa) (1476-1559). Pope of the Catholic Church (23 May 1555-18 August 1559). His pontificate focused on combating heresy and preventing its spread in the territories of the Italian peninsula. To achieve this, he made use of the Roman Inquisition and book censorship. On the day of his death, the Roman people flocked to the Palace of the Holy Office, breaking down the doors, releasing the prisoners from the dungeons and burning the building. One of the victims of the Inquisition in Rome, freed by the people, was the famous Greek heresiarch John Palaeologus. He studied theology in Italy, having had frequent dealings with the leading Protestants of the time, adopting Luther's ideas and preaching them publicly. Revolution broke out in Rome. The people destroyed the statues of Paul IV, dragging them through the streets for days and then throwing them into the Tiber. Destruction of the Inquisition in Rome. Engraving by J. Furnó. Historia de las persecuciones políticas y religiosas en Europa (History of political and religious persecutions in Europe). Volume III. Published in Barcelona, 1864.
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40.0 x 29.6 cm | 15.7 x 11.6 in (300 dpi)