English Encounters with the Spanish Inquisition

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16th century
A01=Teresa Tinsley
accounts
alliance
Author_Teresa Tinsley
British history
case studies
Category=NHD
Category=NHDN
Catholicism
converts
Council of Trent
cross cultural contact
early modern history
Elizabethan England
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
European history
exiles
expatriate
faith
forthcoming
history of religion
international history
merchants
persecution
political history
privateers
Reformation
seamen
smugglers
Spanish history
suspicion
testimonies
trade
transnational history
Tudor England
war

Product details

  • ISBN 9781350468634
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Aug 2026
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Between 1524 and 1604, several hundred Englishmen found themselves in contact with the Spanish Inquisition. This book draws on the records of their experiences and testimonies to provide a fresh perspective on a crucial period of religious divergence. In the context of increasing animosity between England and Spain, Teresa Tinsley looks at how those individuals managed the international encounters they were exposed to and what they had to say about their lives in England – particularly their experiences of religion. Cross cultural contact – whether through trade or war – brought individuals face to face with differences in religious faith and practice; interrogation by the Inquisition forced them to articulate these. This has resulted in a unique corpus of historical evidence, mostly relating to the time of Queen Elizabeth I, examined here in detail for the very first time.

English Encounters with the Spanish Inquisition comprehensively examines the diverse range of circumstances which brought the English into contact with the Spanish Inquisition, highlighting cooperation and alliance as well as suspicion and persecution. There were well-integrated expatriates, Catholic exiles and converts to Catholicism who had to prove their sincerity as well as merchants and seamen, privateers and smugglers who employed a range of survival strategies in the international politics and religious struggles of the day. While Inquisitors sought to reinforce clear distinctions between the ‘new religion of England’ and traditional Catholicism as redefined by the Council of Trent, this book insightfully reveals how men who found themselves straddling both worlds often tried to ignore or minimise the difference.

Teresa Tinsley obtained her PhD in History from the University of Exeter, UK in 2019. She is the author of Reconciliation and Resistance in Early Modern Spain (Bloomsbury Academic, 2022) and numerous articles exploring 15th and 16th Spanish history, published in English and Spanish respectively.

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