How Bad was the Spanish Inquisition? (Short Animated Documentary)

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  • Опубликовано: 27 сен 2024

Комментарии • 3,3 тыс.

  • @hopefulhyena3400
    @hopefulhyena3400 Год назад +1121

    "only 2% resulted in execution, and they were one of the first institutions to dismiss confessions obtained via torture"
    Wow, Spanish Inquisition, I gotta admit I didn't expect that.

    • @Henning_Rech
      @Henning_Rech Год назад +79

      NOBODY expects that!

    • @FighteroftheNightman
      @FighteroftheNightman Год назад

      Bc modern society is run by enemies of Christ. They've mislead the world

    • @thorvaldrvargeblod4603
      @thorvaldrvargeblod4603 Год назад +55

      Well, it's one of their main weapons: surprise.

    • @DoctorX101
      @DoctorX101 10 месяцев назад +10

      @@thorvaldrvargeblod4603 I thought it was "surprise" and "fear?"

    • @thorvaldrvargeblod4603
      @thorvaldrvargeblod4603 9 месяцев назад +16

      @@DoctorX101 well, it's surprise and fear....and an almost FANATICAL devotion to the pope..!

  • @CommanderStupid
    @CommanderStupid 4 года назад +5612

    "Most People expected the Spanish Inquisition"
    The Internet: Unfortunately for you, History will not see it that way.

    • @Stoic_Revanchist
      @Stoic_Revanchist 4 года назад +87

      Execute them!!!

    • @StrokeMahEgo
      @StrokeMahEgo 4 года назад +58

      CARDINAL!!
      BRING IN... THE RACK!

    • @hydrogendiamond5830
      @hydrogendiamond5830 4 года назад +82

      Star Wars and Monty Python referenced in one sentence. That's why I love the internet.

    • @Delgen1951
      @Delgen1951 4 года назад +1

      and Trolls certainly not!

    • @alexandrosnaoum1318
      @alexandrosnaoum1318 4 года назад +4

      Nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition

  • @Josep_Hernandez_Lujan
    @Josep_Hernandez_Lujan 3 года назад +4037

    Spanish Inquisition: 2% of our trials result in the death penalty
    Joe Stalin: You Gotta Pump Those Numbers Up, Those Are Rookie Numbers

    • @katerinakatykat
      @katerinakatykat 3 года назад +54

      reference caught

    • @SuspiciousBread
      @SuspiciousBread 3 года назад +93

      Don’t talk to me if it’s not at least 50%

    • @TeamTwiistz
      @TeamTwiistz 3 года назад +55

      Kulaks shouldnt have horded grain

    • @pocketlightt
      @pocketlightt 3 года назад +52

      I'm sorry did you just call Joseph *Vissarionovich* Stalin a Joe Stalin?
      lmao both from georgia

    • @loremipsum3394
      @loremipsum3394 3 года назад +27

      @@TeamTwiistz they shouldn't have children either but you have to eat something

  • @yibithehispanic
    @yibithehispanic 4 года назад +4212

    "The Spanish Inquisition gives a month of notice"
    Ahh the spanish bureaucracy, being a pain in the ass to the spanish people since ancient times until these days.

    • @POCLEE
      @POCLEE 4 года назад +438

      "Hope Death is from Madrid, so he'll take forever to reach us!"
      --a common Spanish joke in 17th (or so I heard)

    • @marinusvonzilio9628
      @marinusvonzilio9628 4 года назад +233

      @@POCLEE 16th century, actually, and it was not so much a take at the Spanish bureaucracy but rather at Philip II, who was notorious for making lengthy preparations for anything and everything, plus, had a habit of seeming indecisive on many issues and would let his courtiers bounce proposals while he kept his views to himself, thus creating the impression he needed an eternity to reach a decision. Many of this was deliberate on his part, he prided himself on never showing emotions and posing as a completely impenetrable person, one which those around him could never truly guess what he was thinking of. The actual saying went more along the lines of "if Death was Spanish, we would all live to see a 100".

    • @Alusnovalotus
      @Alusnovalotus 4 года назад +18

      Kyrie Matamoro actually they were a pain wherever they set foot in the world.

    • @yibithehispanic
      @yibithehispanic 4 года назад +7

      @@Alusnovalotus Yes, but actually no.

    • @yibithehispanic
      @yibithehispanic 4 года назад +6

      @Miguel Cervantes Yo duermo abajo...

  • @pauortolacobos6636
    @pauortolacobos6636 4 года назад +3204

    "My time in Spain
    - Was tortured
    - They took my stuff
    - Lovely food
    3/10"
    LOL

    • @大塒昭
      @大塒昭 4 года назад +21

      Same, but we called as Asian Latinos

    • @pedrob.573
      @pedrob.573 3 года назад +4

      @Great Side Bro tranquilo no ha dicho nada malo y su apellido a mi tampoco me suena muy guiri

    • @alittlebitofhistory7712
      @alittlebitofhistory7712 3 года назад +3

      @Great Side Debeerias viajar un poco...

    • @Yomesto
      @Yomesto 3 года назад +3

      s is silent

    • @internetexplorer7143
      @internetexplorer7143 3 года назад +3

      Worst of all, I didn't expect it

  • @GundemaroSagrajas
    @GundemaroSagrajas 2 года назад +118

    Plus, persecution of witchcraft was banned in 1604 after the only major witchcraft trial held in Spain in Zugarramundi (near the French border, not a coincidence), torture was practised only through three methods that could never draw blood, mutilate or permanently damage the individual, the accused could not be tortured for periods of more than 1 hour and 15 minutes, and confessions uttered via torture had to be confirmed. In the Americas, only Spanish people were held accountable to the inquisition, leading to people bribing authorities to change their status from Spanish or mestizo to Indigenous to avoid being tried and there were numerous cases of prisoners in civil jails blaspheming to be transported to Inquisitorial jails, which were notably more lenient.

    • @Reiner547
      @Reiner547 6 месяцев назад +14

      Intersting fact Athagualpa (last incan emperor)'s death was completely ilegal by inquisition standards since he repented and converted
      Maybe life in prision but never death wich is why pizarro lost its governorship

    • @yibithehispanic
      @yibithehispanic 20 дней назад

      ​@@Reiner547Yeah the Spanish Crown was seriously pissed when they found out Pizarro put Atahualpa in a kangaroo court and executed him, the standard in Europe was that citizens were not allowed to kill a monarch regardless of his origin.

  • @theconqueringram5295
    @theconqueringram5295 4 года назад +5319

    Good to know that the Spanish Inquisition had standards.

    • @MarcoFire820g
      @MarcoFire820g 4 года назад +222

      TheConqueringRam professionals have standards

    • @hectoristoomuch
      @hectoristoomuch 3 года назад +61

      @@scintillam_dei there is a lot of bad part about spain you left out,also you can't count water as your empire,no one can really settle on the water and make an empire out of it,thats just straight up stupid,honestly your comment is biassed too

    • @scintillam_dei
      @scintillam_dei 3 года назад +22

      @@hectoristoomuch So you're a hypocrite who counts deserts but not oceans with more resources and trade routes. And you called the British stupid because they say "Hail Britannia! Britannia ruled the waves!" LOL! You are not as smart as you wish you were.
      You haven't proven Spain did anything wrong. Get to it. Of course... it did do some things wrong like push Roman Catholicism which is a counterfeit "Christianity" misrepresenting Jesus' way.

    • @scintillam_dei
      @scintillam_dei 3 года назад +11

      @@hectoristoomuch PS Yes, I'm biased. No one isn't. My admitting to my bias means I'm honest, unlike you.

    • @gurkhajake
      @gurkhajake 3 года назад +18

      No one expects the Spanish Inquisition to have standards!

  • @fridericusrex7042
    @fridericusrex7042 4 года назад +11477

    Everybody expects the “nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition” jokes

    • @BatTaz19
      @BatTaz19 4 года назад +250

      I expected that!

    • @Shadowkiller-dq2ju
      @Shadowkiller-dq2ju 4 года назад +194

      I didn’t expect that

    • @karansjet3823
      @karansjet3823 4 года назад +167

      Well nobody expected the Spanish Inquisition guys to actually be quite chill for their time..

    • @Zombie1Boy
      @Zombie1Boy 4 года назад +118

      Nobody expected the "Everybody expects the 'nobody expects the Spanish Inqusition' jokes" joke

    • @slappy8941
      @slappy8941 4 года назад +25

      @@Zombie1Boy This is a comment about your comment about a comment about comments about "nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition" comments

  • @ravenwilder4099
    @ravenwilder4099 Год назад +54

    Thing about witch hunting was that, while the Church generally didn't believe witchcraft was real, they still saw it as a sin/crime to attempt to perform witchcraft. Their reasoning was, chanting a spell won't actually curse someone, but if you chant a spell BELIEVING that it will curse someone, you're still guilty of ATTEMPTING to do wrong. Like how, if you fire a gun at someone intending to kill them, it's attempted murder, even if it turns out that (unbeknownst to you) the gun was unloaded, so your victim was never in actual danger.

    • @arcturus4762
      @arcturus4762 3 месяца назад +1

      It feels so weird that a religion that believes in angels, demons, essentially magic, and high alchemy, would suddenly not believe in witchcraft. Like, bro, they literally exorcised demons from people, couldn’t they just believe that one of those evil bois just lent its power to someone?

    • @RiotsareRandom
      @RiotsareRandom 3 месяца назад

      Although you're right about the attempted murder analogy, you're still wrong about them not believing in witchcraft. You've never heard of possessed people being possessed, because they were doing some stuff they weren't suppose to? (Aka witchcraft and other demonic practices) In cases throughout history you could actually see the effects of witch-practicing cults, like possession, and also, although rarely, the witch/wizard would have "powers" of some sort. These things still go on today. Ever heard of Satan and people selling their souls? It's a somewhat rare thing now, but if you ever listened to any documentaries about Rockstars don't be surprised if they mentioned any satanic stuff. One example of this would be the band who performed the popular "Hotel California". They followed an Irish druid. Anyway don't do ouiji board kids. And drugs.

    • @yibithehispanic
      @yibithehispanic 20 дней назад

      ​@@arcturus4762No but it's easy to consider why, let's take the animal kingdom as an example; We have horses, we have donkeys, we have mules, we have zebras, why don't we have unicorns? It should exist since we heard about them right? Like, their existence should be right at the corner of discovery right? We have reason to affirm unicorns do not exist in the same way the Church does not believe that a demon can give powers to a human, the Church has reasons to believe that is not possible and believe me they would know since they're the ones who compiled all of the Sacred Scriptures into the Bible.

    • @arcturus4762
      @arcturus4762 20 дней назад

      ​@@yibithehispanic Honestly, you have a point. Though I would take their words with a pinch of salt. The Catholic Church's texts and beliefs are filled with add-ons that they wrote hundreds of years after the Bible.
      I appreciate that you know that while they compiled the books, the Bible is not a Catholic book and actually predates the Catholic Church by over 200 years. Also, they blatantly ignored the explicit warning to not add any more text to the sacred scriptures, so I wouldn't trust them to come up with a 100% faithful analysis tbh

  • @georgeprchal3924
    @georgeprchal3924 4 года назад +1781

    "How do you know that she is a witch?"
    "WHY SHE TURNED ME INTO A NEWT!"
    "A newt?"
    "I got better."

    • @a2falcone
      @a2falcone 4 года назад +36

      Sir Bedevere would've qualified for the job of inquisitor.

    • @Jino-yl3uk
      @Jino-yl3uk 4 года назад +2

      9 I) l

    • @robertlehnert4148
      @robertlehnert4148 4 года назад +40

      Uh, the Spanish Inquisition SURPRESSED the only witchcraft hysteria in Spain, in the Basque territories. The SI thought the idea of witchcraft a ridiculous superstition, and the vile mysognistic _Mallus Mallefactorum_ a ridiculous judicial manual.

    • @Delgen1951
      @Delgen1951 4 года назад +19

      You mean she made you a US Congressman?
      Newt Gingrich?
      yes.

    • @lewatoaofair2522
      @lewatoaofair2522 4 года назад +14

      All these Monty Python quotes, here!

  • @pridelander06
    @pridelander06 4 года назад +348

    2:38 "And their torture was less severe."
    Get... The Comfy Chair!

    • @mushedups
      @mushedups 3 года назад +1

      Gender changer

    • @kellydalstok8900
      @kellydalstok8900 3 года назад +27

      Oh no! Not the comfy chair!

    • @orangedalmatian
      @orangedalmatian 3 года назад +26

      @@kellydalstok8900 *screaming in terrror as he's forced into the comfy chair as the screams slowly turn to relaxed sighs*

    • @molybdaen11
      @molybdaen11 3 года назад +16

      "Now we will tell him bad jokes until he spit out the names of his leaders."

    • @doemis8573
      @doemis8573 3 года назад +7

      Let him eat cake...with gluten!

  • @alexnavarro6941
    @alexnavarro6941 2 года назад +52

    It's an interesting note that the spanish inquisition became famous mainly because protestant kingdoms didn't have an institution with that name. Although they did the same things, they made sure quite successfully that the spaniards were acknowledged as the worst of all. Truth is other kingdoms committed the very same tortures and kills, and in some cases in greater numbers than the spanish institution. Good examples are the baltic crusades carried by Denmark, Sweden and Germany, the cathars massacres in France, the executions of catholics in protestant countries, or the witchhunts Europe-wide based on the german book Malleus Maleficarium.

    • @jeanbethencourt1506
      @jeanbethencourt1506 2 года назад +4

      Facts.

    • @johnisaacfelipe6357
      @johnisaacfelipe6357 Год назад

      Lets be charitable and honest, the albigensian crusade to crush the cathars was necessary, they were a gnostic perverse suicide cult that was using scripture to push their beliefs, they had to be put down

    • @Admiral45-10
      @Admiral45-10 10 месяцев назад +10

      And to be honest Spain might be the one gathering the most crap for whitchhunting, but it didn't hold the most of them - the Holy Roman Empire did, with marginal diffrence between Protestant and Catholic countries. It was mainly because in Holy Roman Empire the ruler would take all of the property of the trialed individual, so it was in their interest to accuse them of such.

  • @pandaman2234
    @pandaman2234 4 года назад +3017

    People tend to forget that torture was considered an expected and normal part of the legal process for thousands of years at this point, some cultures wouldn't even accept admissions of guilt unless they were obtained through torture.

    • @nonnayerbusiness7704
      @nonnayerbusiness7704 4 года назад +280

      Yeah, and a lot of people don't realize that torture increased in the justice system the more Roman law was revived. In early Republic/Empire being a citizen exempted you from torture but non citizens and slaves were tortured as a matter of procedure.
      In late antiquity when most people were citizens this was changed so the lower classes (humiliores) were tortured as a matter of procedure while those of higher classes (nobilis) were exempt. That is why nobles were generally exempt from torture in later centuries.

    • @santiagomendozaariza2790
      @santiagomendozaariza2790 4 года назад +81

      thanks Vlad.

    • @NoahgotLEGO
      @NoahgotLEGO 4 года назад +1

      Damn

    • @nonnayerbusiness7704
      @nonnayerbusiness7704 4 года назад +181

      It should also be noted that the primary method of torture by the Spanish Inquisition was putting a cloth over someone's face and using a pitcher of water. In other words waterboarding.
      It was considered less cruel than other forms of torture.

    • @BeastinlosersHD
      @BeastinlosersHD 4 года назад +155

      @@nonnayerbusiness7704 TBH rather be water boarded than get a knife under my nails or pulling teeth.

  • @AbrahamSamma
    @AbrahamSamma 4 года назад +1559

    Fining people for making false accusations seems pretty sensible!

    • @chrisjackson1215
      @chrisjackson1215 4 года назад +190

      You are both idiots. BOTH parties lie through thier teeth on a regular basis.

    • @barccy
      @barccy 4 года назад +2

      It's something Curt Doolittle is fond of.

    • @YAH2121
      @YAH2121 4 года назад +80

      @Gary Allen TDS spotted

    • @chrisjackson1215
      @chrisjackson1215 4 года назад +38

      @S-Tizayl Zirereza Of course he did. Just like Biden was fully aware of and encouraged his sons nepotisim. And just as Democrats tanked the impeachment on purpose in the hopes of winning in 2020 in the name of justice.
      They all do wrong, and they all want to be Dictators.

    • @RDMracer
      @RDMracer 4 года назад +2

      @@bv5998 you can't fine politicians for doing their job. Even though the process was hopeless from the beginning.

  • @rodrin1262
    @rodrin1262 4 года назад +1173

    - Was tortured
    - They took my stuff
    + Lovely food
    3/10
    God I love your channel

    • @anttibjorklund1869
      @anttibjorklund1869 4 года назад +15

      My fave joke was the "well" one.

    • @AlexToussiehChannel
      @AlexToussiehChannel 4 года назад +4

      But my family was expelled from Spain others were tortured and killed and you guys think it's a trivial matter?!?!?!?!

    • @cepelinov
      @cepelinov 4 года назад +1

      Food is indeed quite tasty here

    • @rambard5599
      @rambard5599 4 года назад +13

      @@AlexToussiehChannel Your family how many generations back? Around what year are we talking about here?

    • @museisbliss1174
      @museisbliss1174 4 года назад

      5/7 nice with rice

  • @martinicodiez9468
    @martinicodiez9468 2 года назад +144

    The Spanish inquisition has also been thought to be that bad because of the dark legend ( leyenda negra ) a series of misconceptions about Spain in general made by, at the time, enemies of Spain. Very few people now about this.

    • @seronymus
      @seronymus 2 года назад

      In general, the Middle Ages' bad reputation were started by embittered Protestants and then philosophers who exaggerated their already exaggerated claims.

    • @neochris2
      @neochris2 6 месяцев назад

      It's honestly incredible that the truth has taken centuries to reach the Anglo world. The Black Legend was written when Spain was the biggest world power and its rivals wrote all the fake stuff they could come up with. Since Spain was not doing any propaganda campaign back then because it didn't care about Europe's opinion, they themselves started believing the fake info was real 😂

  • @EverythingDeadly
    @EverythingDeadly 4 года назад +252

    I love how everyone getting burned alive in your videos just looks mildly annoyed. Like “oh, this again” 🙄

  • @dolfy7591
    @dolfy7591 4 года назад +509

    History matters: the Spanish inquisition was expected
    Me: *visible confusion*

  • @Fishmanglitz
    @Fishmanglitz 4 года назад +22

    I still love the fact that any extreme torture depicted on this channel will only have a reaction of mild annoyance from its victim

  • @galenusv7831
    @galenusv7831 4 года назад +479

    When you had a trial by the inquisition, it was more likely that you would get a fair trial, considering the times. But if you had a trail by secular authorities, whatever the country, things would be always manipulated against you (manipulated in favour of the one in power). They would torture till the accused confessed although he didn't commit the thing he was accused of. On the contrary, the inquisition, most of the times, tried to search for the truth of the matter.
    And no. Joan of Arc wasn't judged by the inquisition. There were some pro-England corrupt and bought clergy-men involved (but not from the inquisition), and also secular authorities. It was a sham. They needed an excuse for her to be put to death. A political move.
    No much time later, the inquisition made a revision of the case, and they found out all the brutal irregularities, and they officially declared it was a false trial. And she was canonized (made saint). This was like a few decades later, IIRC.
    Witch trials were more of a Modern Era thing. And they happened a bit more in northern protestant countries. The problem was printing press. The book Malleus Malleficarum got viral, even when the church officially considered it a bad book (prohibited), but it was too late, printing press made it viral (that was a new phenomenon). So witch trials were condenmed by church authorities, but they happened (not so frequently as people now believe they did) in towns with mass hysteria and small secular authorities who had read the book.

    • @paireon3419
      @paireon3419 4 года назад +62

      Not to mention witch hunts and trials tended to happen relatively more often in Protestant areas (North Germany, England) than in Catholic areas (Iberia, Italy, France). No to say those places didn't have their problems...

    • @alejandroojeda1572
      @alejandroojeda1572 4 года назад +5

      I've Heard lichtenstein GOT a nickname out of having the most brutal Witch hunts

    • @ChristnThms
      @ChristnThms 3 года назад +52

      So, you're saying that there is a historical precedent for media being used, with intent, to fire up mobs to commit atrocities?
      Interesting...
      I wonder if that sort of thing is possible in this day and age? Surely, we're immune to that sort of low information group-think by now.

    • @kabalofthebloodyspoon
      @kabalofthebloodyspoon 3 года назад +2

      James 1st and 6th’s witch hunting manual did not help either (Daemonologie 1597)

    • @hrotha
      @hrotha 3 года назад +7

      The condemnation trial of Joan of Arc was super irregular, granted, but let's not pretend her rehabilitation trial wasn't political too. While the original jury was certainly pressured by the English (and the list of irregularities is super long), it was still conducted by the Church, just by pro-bourguignon clergy, with theological support from the University of Paris. And it was very much an inquisitorial trial

  • @taylewis8235
    @taylewis8235 4 года назад +825

    "They definitely expected it"
    You just gotta ruin the best monty python skit, didnt you?

    • @barney6888
      @barney6888 4 года назад +13

      It really is their best episode, the way it all comes together with the other skits. Truly brilliant.

    • @lucinae8512
      @lucinae8512 4 года назад +4

      If they didn't make a reference at the beginning, they clearly weren't gonna respect it at all.

    • @anttibjorklund1869
      @anttibjorklund1869 4 года назад +22

      Any properly done history lesson would do that.

    • @liamjm9278
      @liamjm9278 4 года назад

      No he didn't.

    • @taylewis8235
      @taylewis8235 4 года назад +2

      @@barney6888 I like the episode where the keep showing you a diagram of a particular tree between skits and then as the credits roll the point out that tree in the background. Killed me with laughter.

  • @vvmax4375
    @vvmax4375 4 года назад +78

    Alternate title: How Unexpected was the Spanish Inquisition

  • @martonk
    @martonk 4 года назад +228

    I'M very very glad about this episode, since I think that fairly recent research (especially ones done by Heny Kramer into the Inquisition's archives) revealed many of these misconceptions, but so far it has failed to materialise in public intellectual thought.

    • @OutnBacker
      @OutnBacker 4 года назад +8

      "public intellectual thought" That's funny.

    • @martonk
      @martonk 4 года назад +27

      @@OutnBacker i mean by that people who are not academics but give a damn about how the world works, and/or can influence public opinion.

    • @maligjokica
      @maligjokica 4 года назад +10

      @@martonk i've herad about a jewins author(i forget his name) who actualy aslo resecered this topic and he also saed that the bad reputation was from outside spain.

    • @OutnBacker
      @OutnBacker 4 года назад +1

      @@martonk I know. I was merely being facetious.

    • @pelayopar
      @pelayopar 2 года назад +9

      Indeed, I agree with you. I also consider worth noting that the Spanish Inquisition did keep records and documents unlike most other inquisitions throughout history. Additionally, and while in no way defending its brutality and concept, the scope of the historical period must be considered.

  • @SuperSmith
    @SuperSmith 4 года назад +138

    I like how people burning at the stake only ever have a slight look of disappointment on their face.

  • @mrheroprimes
    @mrheroprimes 2 года назад +15

    I can see why the Spanish Inquisition would disregard any confessions from someone who was being tortured realizing that people will say anything to get the pain to stop. Which is exactly what happened to the Templars Knights.

  • @Astraben
    @Astraben 4 года назад +624

    As a Spaniard, thanks for this.

    • @radopon
      @radopon 4 года назад +18

      Astra Ben did your ancestor break the laws of time and space for expecting the Spanish Inqusition

    • @DarkwearGT
      @DarkwearGT 4 года назад +4

      There is 1 imposter among us

    • @KaiserHanstedt
      @KaiserHanstedt 4 года назад +15

      I would be proud of the Spanish inquisition, you got your lands back from those who took them and unified christians across europe.

    • @thegoodllama3788
      @thegoodllama3788 4 года назад +2

      La verdad es que yo tampoco sabía que era aunque también soy español

    • @axios4702
      @axios4702 3 года назад +17

      Fun fact: Most of the inquisition's black legend came from exagerated tales of a traitor advisor that fled to france after the failure of his plot to set the king against his half brother.

  • @cartercrum1490
    @cartercrum1490 4 года назад +395

    “Most people expected the Spanish Inquisition”
    Internet: Actually, quantum mechanics forbids this.

    • @Delgen1951
      @Delgen1951 4 года назад

      No Quantum Mechanics does not, only you cant observe it and be unchanged.

    • @lorisbrussato7131
      @lorisbrussato7131 4 года назад +3

      Delgen1951 ok boomer

    • @flynntom8057
      @flynntom8057 4 года назад +2

      @@Delgen1951 OK boomer

    • @bagelinpond2433
      @bagelinpond2433 4 года назад +1

      @@Delgen1951 imagine not knowning what a joke is

    • @scintillam_dei
      @scintillam_dei 3 года назад

      See my video proving Quandumb is dumb.

  • @kryle3887
    @kryle3887 3 года назад +12

    1:28 the "well" joke got me good NGL

    • @ichessegerneviel3566
      @ichessegerneviel3566 3 года назад +1

      i didn't even get it until you mentioned it 🤦🏼‍♂️😂

  • @cdagyekybcrpaa
    @cdagyekybcrpaa 4 года назад +250

    People are making Monty Python jokes, while I’m here humming Mel Brooks’ “The Inquisition” song

    • @fury-2-neon843
      @fury-2-neon843 4 года назад +28

      That is a great song. I am still waiting on History of the World Part 2 with Hitler on Ice.

    • @ginnrollins211
      @ginnrollins211 4 года назад +13

      FUCK THE POOR!!!!!

    • @overvieweffect9034
      @overvieweffect9034 4 года назад +4

      I'm doing both! I gotta watch that movie (and episode) again!

    • @iwazhear77
      @iwazhear77 4 года назад +16

      You cant Torquemada anything!

    • @stevenstinson3291
      @stevenstinson3291 4 года назад +13

      The Inquisiiiition! What a show!

  • @GaryWagers
    @GaryWagers 2 года назад +37

    I remember watching a television program on the Spanish Inquisition once that made a point about how it wasn't as bad as everyone seems to think it was. But since the program was aired on a Catholic-specific television station, I wasn't sure if the channel was just trying to whitewash it or not. Thanks for confirming.

    • @jeanbethencourt1506
      @jeanbethencourt1506 2 года назад +7

      I saw it too. The historical researcher they had on for that wasn't a Catholic, either. Besides, unlike Protestants, Catholics aren't about whitewashing. We're always about guilt tripping ourselves and self accountability.

    • @kedarunzi9139
      @kedarunzi9139 2 года назад

      how th would this be "whitewashing"

    • @GaryWagers
      @GaryWagers 2 года назад +5

      @@kedarunzi9139 It was a generic term for a cover up long before it took on racial connotations.

    • @kedarunzi9139
      @kedarunzi9139 2 года назад

      @@GaryWagers oh, right. thank you

    • @FighteroftheNightman
      @FighteroftheNightman Год назад

      Catholics as a rule don't do the whitewashing thing. You forget we've put a corpse on trial before. We believe a public sin requires public repentance.
      This is why Joan of Arc is a Saint for instance. Members of the Church did wrong, the Church set it right. It's why the Church seriously listened to objections of the Protestant rebels originally and made changes to the law surrounding things like how much a priest is permitted to take for something like offering a mass for someone's intentions.
      The entire world operates in opposition to the Catholic Church. Whether it be a Pagan, an Atheist, a Gnostic, a Jew, or a Protestant. It isn't the Church that hides history from the masses.
      Is every member if the Church perfect? No, no one is. We've had legitimately evil clergy throughout history. No one knows that better than a Catholic.

  • @obscureoccultist9158
    @obscureoccultist9158 4 года назад +128

    Finally someone sheds some truth! I did a history paper on the Spanish inquisition during High school. It was mainly a focus on the social impact of the inquisition but I did mention how they weren't as bad as people like to think. Big problem is that every time I mention that they aren't as bad as commonly depicted. I get labeled as a religious extremist.

    • @alfrredd
      @alfrredd 2 года назад +38

      It was mostly the english protestants who spread the news about the "terrors" of the Spanish Inquisition through the Anglosphere.

    • @SylviaRustyFae
      @SylviaRustyFae 2 года назад +1

      Templar foot bones tho; look up the inquisition and those three words and youll see that some of the horribleness claimed about the Spanish Inquisition was based on actual facts and what was rly happening... If only to a small few (eg. Templars)

    • @davidwuhrer6704
      @davidwuhrer6704 2 года назад +30

      @@SylviaRustyFae That wasn't the Spanish inquisition though. That was in France.

    • @Delgen1951
      @Delgen1951 Год назад +5

      @@SylviaRustyFae The Templars were destroyed by the king of France who wanter there money. The Templars Gand Master at he moment he was excuted said that the King of France would join him before the year was out, almost a year to the day the king of France died, of what I do not remember.

  • @MightyElo
    @MightyElo 4 года назад +59

    History Matters, Thank you very much for putting the Spanish Inquisition into context of it’s time period. Many documentaries that talk about the Spanish Inquisition seem to leave that out, instead comparing the Spanish Inquisition to modern times.
    Also, little bonus history fact. In the vast majority of cases an inquisitor was not a full time job. In most cases when there was an accusation of heresy, a local priest would be temporarily given the title of inquisitor. After the inquisitor finished the investigation, he would then go back to being a priest.

  • @l.u.i.s._.8452
    @l.u.i.s._.8452 3 года назад +16

    Spain: hey babe time for your every week inquisition
    Spaniards: yes honey

    • @molybdaen11
      @molybdaen11 3 года назад

      "I will strip you, bind you on this comfy chair and then make you scream."

  • @Zeldaytal
    @Zeldaytal 4 года назад +320

    Anglo propaganda, as almost everything during those times towards France and Spain

    • @brandonlyon730
      @brandonlyon730 4 года назад +29

      @William Winter I doubt France and Britain would’ve been as merciful if they had large populations of Muslims at that time period.

    • @ArkadiBolschek
      @ArkadiBolschek 4 года назад +5

      @@brandonlyon730 French and Britain each spent over half a century in a state of permanent civil war between Catholics and Protestants, _plus_ the thousands of innocent victims of the witch hunts. So yeah, one could argue that the Inquisition was the lesser evil in comparison. But the Inquisition also had a chokehold on free speech, critical thought and the exchange of ideas, and this left Spain lagging behind the rest of Europe in intellectual and scientific development for several centuries, so there's that too.

    • @johnisaacfelipe6357
      @johnisaacfelipe6357 4 года назад +19

      @@ArkadiBolschek the inquisition wasn't this huge barrier to science, people attribute the comfortable house arrest of Galileo as a prime example of inquisitorial zealotry blocking science but he was placed there because of 2 reasons, 1 the majority of rome at that point believed Tycho brahe's model and were abrasive to the Copernican model, and 2) Galileo was just an asshole who did a big no no in rome, insult the pope.

    • @ryhanzfx1641
      @ryhanzfx1641 4 года назад +1

      WHAT ABOUT MOMENT
      WHAT ABOUT MOMENT

    • @scottydu81
      @scottydu81 4 года назад +1

      You’re a propaganda

  • @SuperLusername
    @SuperLusername 4 года назад +184

    Catholic church: *Dismisses confession made under torture in 16th century*
    21st century USA: "WATERBOARDIIIIIING!!!"

    • @SuperLusername
      @SuperLusername 4 года назад +26

      @Mike signs usa still uses torture to get information while Catholic church denounced the practice centuries ago

    • @adriancampos8640
      @adriancampos8640 4 года назад

      Well, as long as you have different sources of information to contrast from, torture isn't that bad of a method.

    • @theoveranalyzingcinephile983
      @theoveranalyzingcinephile983 4 года назад +8

      @@adriancampos8640 Well, as long as you have different sources interrogation works almost every time as lying becomes very hard and eventually you can get them to confess the truth. The problem with torture is (besides how inhumane it is) that the victim will spew out whatever you think you want to hear in order to make you stop, so it's been proven to be way less effective then plain interrogation. Remember when KSM confessed under torture that Al Queda had a massive network in North Dakota I think (or Minnesota?) leading to the NSA looking for the mysterious network for moths till they realized it was just KSM telling them what they wanted to hear?

    • @evanhall06
      @evanhall06 4 года назад

      They don’t torture normal prisoners it’s only either people who threaten national security or military individuals

    •  3 года назад +4

      @@evanhall06 and if they expect to be tortured they already have a story about something that LOOKS real but it isn't so they can lead the ones torturing that person into a dead end or even a trap.

  • @jorgeaguirre7260
    @jorgeaguirre7260 4 года назад +5

    Short, Objective, and put things into perspective. Becoming a huge fan of yours! keep posting!

  • @maje5842
    @maje5842 3 года назад +31

    Thank you for this. I just came back from Ted-Ed's video about the Spanish Inquisition and saw them just repeat the usual myths associated with the Spanish Inquisition.

  • @michaellancia45
    @michaellancia45 4 года назад +34

    1:30
    “Well” a actual well lol

    • @dixie_rekd9601
      @dixie_rekd9601 4 года назад +1

      i spat my drink out

    • @garreswe
      @garreswe 4 года назад +1

      an*

    • @HitTheMat
      @HitTheMat 4 года назад

      That got a hearty laugh from me.

    • @demonetizationball8430
      @demonetizationball8430 4 года назад +1

      He used things like this several times already.for example,when he say "see" the video would show a sea with a letter c floating

  • @KimKhan
    @KimKhan 3 года назад +19

    Reminds me of "The Great Noise" in Sweden, were rampant accusations of witchcraft lasted for a few years, but some towns lost 30% of their entire population to execution.

    • @r.ladaria135
      @r.ladaria135 2 года назад

      300 executions are not so much killing in the XVII century

    • @KimKhan
      @KimKhan 2 года назад +5

      @@r.ladaria135 In a town of a thousand.

    • @tuff9486
      @tuff9486 2 года назад +1

      Protestants did love the witch hunts

    • @louisduarte8763
      @louisduarte8763 2 года назад +1

      This is the 1st time I heard of this, ever. Wow, Sweden. It's always the ones you least expect.

    • @KimKhan
      @KimKhan 2 года назад

      @@louisduarte8763 Sweden used to be extremely religious and fundamentalist for a long time. That part of our history is often forgotten.
      In The Great Noise, the topic came up of what to do with "witches" that were pregnant. The prosecutions were performed by the local government, usually village elders and councils, and in one instance they asked the people of the town how to proceed. The overwhelming majority argued that it was better to kill the child in the womb so it might go to heaven, then have it be born and risk it's eternal soul to be in the clutches of Satan.
      Higher instances of government, provincial in this case, stepped in and put a stop to it.

  • @edgelord8337
    @edgelord8337 4 года назад +49

    90% of early comments.
    Nobody expects the Spanish inquisition!

  • @MatijaCG
    @MatijaCG 4 года назад +102

    Well, looks like History Matters expected Spanish Inquisition.

  • @manuelr.lavado-libros9545
    @manuelr.lavado-libros9545 3 года назад +16

    Great video that shed some light about the real Inquisition. I would have added some cultural aspects that impacted on today's Spanish thought and culture. One of the Inquisition's main responsibilities was the cultural alignment of literature to the Catholic dogma. For instance, those books containing too much fantasy were no favoured by the censorship. During the Middle Ages, it was common finding fantasy books about the Arthuric legends, but from the establishment of the Inquistion onwards, they gradually vanished. The story of Don Quixote reflects the above mentioned fact. Who is the main character interested in bringing don Quixote back to reality? Right, the priest. Was it a metaphor written by Cervantes? Probably he did it unconsciously. What it is uncontestable is that no Spanish author could have ever produced such a fantasy book as Harry Potter. Magical realism surged in the only area where the intervention of the Inquisition on society was testimonial: the West Indies.

  • @-et37-
    @-et37- 4 года назад +22

    Next video: How Scary was the Red Scare?

  • @officerbeenadd
    @officerbeenadd 4 года назад +131

    Spanish Inquisition: I'm the most *feared thing*...
    KGB: *Hold my vodka*...

    • @Delgen1951
      @Delgen1951 4 года назад +8

      "No Comrade! hold mine" NKVD

    • @JBTriple8
      @JBTriple8 4 года назад

      Trump: *Vodka*

    • @crusaderiii477
      @crusaderiii477 4 года назад +3

      Gestapo: *Hole my beer and bangers*

    • @johnchandler1687
      @johnchandler1687 4 года назад +4

      You neglected FBI: If you don't plead guilty , Gen. Flynn, we'll get something on your son, etc.

    • @TheSkyGuy77
      @TheSkyGuy77 3 года назад +4

      IRS has entered the chat

  • @garygol1000
    @garygol1000 4 года назад +4

    I thought I liked this channel but after they actually bother to research for this topic, in which everyone just exposes popular folklore without attempting to investigate the truth behind what they say. Now this channel is between the few ones that has my attention and in which I expect not to be fooled. So basically thank you for your integrity

  • @LoneWolf343
    @LoneWolf343 4 года назад +41

    So the Comfy Chair was more historically accurate then one would expect?

    • @nonnayerbusiness7704
      @nonnayerbusiness7704 4 года назад +13

      Actually, the primary method of torture was a cloth over the face and a pitcher of water. In other words, waterboarding. Hence the "no blood" sign in the video.
      They called it the "water cure" because confession is good for the soul.

    • @BangFarang1
      @BangFarang1 4 года назад +1

      @@nonnayerbusiness7704 Any source? They rather tied the person bent over a sawhorse and forced them to drink litres of water. When the stomach and the bladder were outstretched it was very painful.

  • @pierre-andrelecomte9384
    @pierre-andrelecomte9384 4 года назад +10

    "how long will it go before the reference?" - I think, clicking on the video
    answer: the very first frame.

  • @timetraveltvniles7650
    @timetraveltvniles7650 4 года назад +6

    Let’s just get this out the way, “Nobody ever expects the Spanish Inquisition!” Right now no more Monty Python references.

  • @deluxehipster8714
    @deluxehipster8714 4 года назад +10

    "The spanish inquisition has a certain reputation."
    *NOBODY EXPECTS IT*

  • @dr_outcast9385
    @dr_outcast9385 4 года назад +8

    You were not expecting *The Spanish Inquisiton* but *IT WAS I, DIO*

    • @paireon3419
      @paireon3419 4 года назад

      IS THAT A MOTHERFUCKING JOJO REFERENCE!?

  • @Merennulli
    @Merennulli Год назад +7

    No one expects a fair overview of the Spanish Inquisition!

  • @pepegomezmerchan7685
    @pepegomezmerchan7685 4 года назад +32

    Someone has been reading "Imperiofobia y Leyenda Negra" de María Elvira Roca Barea

    • @f.j.carpio454
      @f.j.carpio454 4 года назад +6

      basura de libraco, pura leyenda rosa, por suerte ya salió el libro Imperiofilia de Villacañas

    • @alcambio8923
      @alcambio8923 3 года назад +1

      @@f.j.carpio454 Pero si la basura de libelo es el de Villacañas, que con suerte sirve de papel higiénico.

  • @ethanrepublic
    @ethanrepublic 4 года назад +92

    it wasn't that bad because no one expected it

  • @John_Fugazzi
    @John_Fugazzi 2 года назад +2

    Thank you for pointing out that historical events need to be understood within the context of their times.

  • @williammullen7504
    @williammullen7504 2 года назад +2

    "Give her the comfy chair"

  • @Kagemusha08
    @Kagemusha08 4 года назад +4

    Imagine how excited and clever I felt as I scrolled down, expecting to be the first person to make that Monty Python reference...

  • @ell3655
    @ell3655 9 месяцев назад +2

    I didn’t expect the Spanish Inquisition to be so lenient

  • @captainez4387
    @captainez4387 4 года назад +17

    I didn’t expect this video

  • @SnowghostFilms
    @SnowghostFilms Год назад +1

    History Maters: Actually, most people expected the Spanish Inquisition
    Monty Python: Unfortunately for you, history will no see it that way

  • @tarasbulba4029
    @tarasbulba4029 4 года назад +5

    "lovely food" killed me xD
    Thanks for the nice laugh after work💚

  • @yezdanus
    @yezdanus 4 года назад +11

    me: i am so tired i am going to sleep now
    *history matters posted a new video*
    also me: i think i have another 5 minutes

  • @mikiroony
    @mikiroony 2 года назад +3

    Thank you for bursting the bubble of the Black Legend. Yes, it was brutal by modern standards but nowhere as bad as by its time's, which is how History should be considered altogether.
    The propaganda labor led by the English, French, Dutch and even Italians, as historian Elvira Roca Varea has published in several books, has exaggerated a reputation out of any proportion and I'm glad people are taking matters into their own hands to educate others better. Thank you!

  • @project22-ab88
    @project22-ab88 4 года назад +12

    So I'm a protest-
    Spain: *no*

  • @micahbush5397
    @micahbush5397 2 года назад +3

    I imagine, though, that the Spanish Inquisition didn't mind a reputation for ruthlessness, seeing that it probably made people more willing to confess up front.

  • @ibtaba
    @ibtaba 4 года назад +10

    The most interesting inquisition was in Mexico. They had no power over the Indians and mostly were the C and D graduates in college.

    • @xander9564
      @xander9564 4 года назад +2

      The Spanish also set up Inquisitions in Lima and Cartagena de Indias.

    • @josiahmartin329
      @josiahmartin329 4 года назад

      There where Indians in mexico? I thought asian immigration to the americas did not start until later?

    • @adriancampos8640
      @adriancampos8640 4 года назад +2

      @@josiahmartin329 Amerindians, as the cool kids call them now.

  • @woodrobin
    @woodrobin 2 года назад +1

    To quote Mel Brooks' History of the World Part I: "Auto da fe? What's an auto da fe? It's what you oughtn't to do, but you do anyway."

  • @mistershadier8577
    @mistershadier8577 4 года назад +14

    I mean at this point we all expected the Spanish Inquisition

  • @DepZHEDU
    @DepZHEDU 2 года назад +4

    You should give some numbers (more than % or % to apply to a total numbers) ! We had around 100 to 500 executions.
    For comparaison for this time : In England, each year, they executed twice what the inquisition did in 100 years ....

  • @MarvelousSeven
    @MarvelousSeven 4 года назад +9

    "Put her in...the comfy chair!"

  • @nobby5555
    @nobby5555 4 года назад +6

    Love your work! Also please make more videos on Spain under Philip II as that is module for my History A-Levels, and your videos are the only thing that help me to remember specific detail ;)

  • @MominEnjoyer
    @MominEnjoyer 2 года назад +4

    "Many people did expect the spanish Inquisition"
    No, it cant be... NOOOO

  • @wilddoggo1719
    @wilddoggo1719 4 года назад +5

    I didn’t expect the Spanish Inquisition in my recommendation.

  • @sebastiaodecamposalves
    @sebastiaodecamposalves 4 года назад +11

    I sure didn't expect this video ;)

  • @sebastianboeddinghaus3505
    @sebastianboeddinghaus3505 3 года назад +5

    "Or were, god forbid, a protestant" lmao

  • @DamnYouDamnMe
    @DamnYouDamnMe 4 года назад +119

    Thank you for bringing the unfair reputation of the spanish inequisition to the forefront. It's true that their practices should be compared to existing practices at the time, not today's practices.

    • @dindin8753
      @dindin8753 9 месяцев назад +2

      Spanish inquisition? Sure. But Spanish kingdom as a whole? No. The confiscation of Jewish and Muslims lands, homes and wealth and the persecution is a horrible thing that the monarch did and literally broke the treaty between the last sultan of iberia.

    • @Reiner547
      @Reiner547 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@dindin8753you are right but the expelled jews were able to keep their economic assets and the spanish were the last kingdom to expelled them.

  • @robert506007
    @robert506007 4 года назад +9

    "Blimmy I expected the Spannish Inquisition!" "And now they will put me in the unconnfy chair with spikes" hmmm interesting so our world is the real opposite world.

  • @hermes5456
    @hermes5456 Год назад +2

    the inquisitions was also not allowed to judge the indigenous people in the Americas, so many Spaniards there claimed to be descendants of Indians to avoid punishments or possible trials.

  • @legionofmetal9968
    @legionofmetal9968 4 года назад +5

    me: so what is the spanish inquisition anyway?
    **THIS VIDEO**
    Me: Well shit, didnt expect that...

  • @karlosdaniel6537
    @karlosdaniel6537 2 года назад +2

    I was browsing through History Matters' videos but I didn't expect a kind of Spanish Inquisition.

  • @milan5690
    @milan5690 4 года назад +4

    I didn’t expect a video on the Spanish Inquisition

    • @spartangoku7610
      @spartangoku7610 Год назад

      Nobody expects a video on the Spanish Inquisition!

  • @Mirokuofnite
    @Mirokuofnite 4 года назад +9

    The Inquisition, what a show
    The Inquisition, here we go
    We know you're wishin'
    That we'd go away
    But the Inquisition's here and it's here to stay!

    • @AlexGeee
      @AlexGeee 4 года назад +2

      Mirokuofnite hey Torquemada what do you say?

    • @Mirokuofnite
      @Mirokuofnite 4 года назад +3

      @@AlexGeee I just got back from the auto-da-fé!

  • @looinrims
    @looinrims 4 года назад +2

    “Well”
    *inserts well transition*

  • @Flight_of_Icarus
    @Flight_of_Icarus 4 года назад +4

    The man, the mystery, spinning three plates

  • @jorgeh.r9879
    @jorgeh.r9879 3 года назад +8

    Finally someone tells the truth about the Spanish inquisition.

  • @The_Hagseed
    @The_Hagseed Год назад +2

    "Let's face it. You can't Torquemada anything!!"

  • @OptimusWombat
    @OptimusWombat 4 года назад +11

    This is weird, only ten comments in the ten days since it was posted? Was there a massive comment purge?

  • @SmoothOperator739
    @SmoothOperator739 3 года назад +1

    Wasn’t expecting you to make this video.

  • @sauluxville
    @sauluxville 4 года назад +23

    So, ~2% of cases execution, and the rest were more like soft cushions and comfy chairs... Pythons got it right, after all

  • @escopeteroce
    @escopeteroce 2 года назад +2

    a 2% execution rate is markedly lenient by the period standards, especially considering that this was described as the inquisition as its worst.

  • @francinelieto8899
    @francinelieto8899 2 года назад +1

    There was also a debate during this time whether to support Philippine colonisation or not as it was too costly to manage a very far away land hence why Viceroyalty of Mexico manage the Spanish East Indies instead of directly from the crown of the Kingdom.

  • @averageperson8274
    @averageperson8274 4 года назад +17

    Me: We did it! We time travelled!
    Person: But to what year?
    Me: Let me ask that guy over there.
    Me: Hey! Is this Granada?
    Person who I just asked the question: You mean Castile?
    Me: We're too late...

  • @Wolf-f9
    @Wolf-f9 2 года назад +1

    The worse thing is that no one expected them, well in truth they usually notified within 30 days before their escapades.

  • @RIFADOR001
    @RIFADOR001 Год назад +1

    I remember a museum in Mexico about torture devices… After knowing those things I cannot accept what’s said here…

    • @hugohernandez9080
      @hugohernandez9080 11 месяцев назад

      The inquisition wasn't allowed to judge the indigenous people of the Americas. If you were on a museum of torture devices in Mexico then the guide probably told you that these devices were basically never used.

  • @idanzamir7540
    @idanzamir7540 4 года назад +73

    Brace yourselves for all the lame "nobody expects the Spanish inquisition!" jokes...

  • @mafiousbj
    @mafiousbj 4 года назад +2

    English speaking media blowing foreign matters out of proportion (while barely mentioning theirs)...they did it back then and keep doing it now ^^
    Thanks for this video!

  • @ReinoldFZ
    @ReinoldFZ 2 года назад +2

    Surely it is mentioned in the comments but in my South American country, at the time ruled by Spaniards, the Spanish Inquisition had no authority over indigenous people. At least that said the guide at the museum.

  • @charliehillstrom6356
    @charliehillstrom6356 4 года назад +5

    I didn't expect that

  • @Shaw4123
    @Shaw4123 3 года назад +3

    How bad was the Muslim conquest of Spain?

  • @nurventilatoren
    @nurventilatoren 9 месяцев назад +1

    Another lesson of:
    "Good by medieval standards means nothing"

    • @addisonwelsh
      @addisonwelsh 8 месяцев назад +4

      Another example of:
      “You cannot judge history by modern standards.”

  • @SiberianScytheYT
    @SiberianScytheYT 4 года назад +6

    Huh, so everyone expected the Spanish Inquisition.