All residents of Spain are officially Christian…
1516 CE to 1527 CE
Purity of blood (limpieza de sangre) regulations are imposed on candidates for positions in the government and the church, to prevent Moriscos from becoming a force again in Spain and to eliminate participation by conversos whose families might have been Christian for generations.
Many of Spain's oldest and finest families scramble to reconstruct family trees.
The Inquisition, a state-controlled Castilian tribunal, authorized by papal bull in 1478, that soon extended throughout Spain, has the task of enforcing uniformity of religious practice.
It was originally intended to investigate the sincerity of conversos, especially those in the clergy, who had been accused of being crypto-Jews.
Tomás de Torquemada, a descendant of conversos, is the most effective and notorious of the Inquisition's prosecutors.
For years religious laws are laxly enforced, particularly in Aragon, and converted Jews and Moriscos continue to observe their previous religions in private.
In 1568, however, a serious rebellion will break out among the Moriscos of Andalusia, who seal their fate by appealing to the Ottoman Empire for aid.
The incident will lead to mass expulsions throughout Spain and to the eventual exodus of hundreds of thousands of conversos and Moriscos, even those who had apparently become devout Christians.
Groups
Arab people
View →
Berber people (also called Amazigh people or Imazighen, "free men", singular Amazigh)
View →
Jews
View →
Islam
View →
Castillian people
View →
Christians, Roman Catholic
View →
Aragón, Kingdom of
View →
Aragon, Crown of
View →
Valencia, Kingdom of
View →
Naples, Angevin Kingdom of
View →
Sicily, Aragonese Kingdom of
View →
Catalonia, Principality of
View →
Portugal, Avizan (Joannine) Kingdom of
View →
Inquisition, Spanish
View →
Moriscos
View →
Christians, New
View →