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er, ii. 365; his masterpieces, 367. 'IL PADRE di Famiglio,' Tasso's Dialogue, ii. 63. 'IL Pentito,' Tasso's name as one of Gli Eterei, ii. 26. INGEGNERI, Antonio, a friend of Tasso, ii. 64; publishes the _Gerusalemme_, 71. INDEX Expurgatorius: its first publication at Venice, i. 192; effects on the printing trade there, 193; the Index in concert with the Inquisition, 194; origin of the Index, 195; local lists of prohibited books, _ib._; establishment of the Congregation of the Index, 197; Index of Clement VIII., 198; its preambles, _ib._; regulations, 199 _sq._; details of the censorship and correction of books, 201; rules as to printers, publishers, and booksellers, 203; responsibility of the Holy Office, 204; annoyances arising from delays and ignorance on the part of censors, 205; spiteful delators of charges of heresy, 207; extirpation of books, 208; proscribed literature, 209; garbled works by Vatican students, 210; effect of the Tridentine decree about the Vulgate, 212; influence of the Index on schools and lecture-rooms, 213; decline of humanism, 218; the statutes on the _Ratio Status_, 220; their object and effect, 221; the treatment of lewd and obscene publications, 223; expurgation of secular books, 224. INQUISITION, the, i. 159 _sqq._; the first germ of the Holy Office, 161; developed during the crusade against the Albigenses, _ib._; S. Dominic its founder, 162; introduced into Lombardy, etc., 164; the stigma of heresy, 165; three types of Inquisition, 166; the number of victims, 166 _n._; the crimes of which it took cognizance, 167; the methods of the Apostolical Holy Office, 168; treatment of the New Christians in Castile, 169, 171; origin of the Spanish Holy Office, 170; opposition of Queen Isabella, 171; exodus of New Christians, 172; the punishments inflicted, _ib._; futile appeals to Rome, 173; constitution of the Inquisition, 174; its two most formidable features, 175; method of its judicial proceedings, 176; the sentence and its execution, 177; the holocausts and their pageant, _ib._; Torquemada's insolence, 179; the body-guard of the Grand Inquisitor, 180; number of Torquemada's victims, 181; exodus of Moors from Castile, 182; victims under Torquemada's successors, _ib._; an Aceldama at Madrid, 184; the Roman Holy Office, _ib._; remodelled by Giov. Paolo Caraffa,
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