Tomás de Torquemada was a
Spanish Dominican whose name, as part of the
Black Legend of the
Spanish Inquisition, has become a byword for cruelty and fanaticism in the service of religion. He was born in
1420 in the village of Torquemada (
Latin turris cremata, "burnt tower") near the northern Spanish city of
Valladolid and may have had Jewish ancestry: the contemporary historian
Hernando del Pulgar[?], writing of Torquemada's uncle
Juan de Torquemada[?], said that his ancestor
Alvar Fernández de Torquemada[?] had married a first-generation Jewish convert. After distinguished service as a monk and scholar, Torquemada became close to the rulers of the newly created kingdom of
Spain,
Ferdinand and
Isabella of Castile, and was appointed
Inquisitor General in
1482. The extension of his power over the whole of Spain was assisted by the
murder of the
Inquisitor Pedro de Arbués in
Saragossa in
1485, which was attributed to
heretics and
Jews, and by the alleged
ritual murder of the so-called
Santo Niño de La Guardia or
Holy Child of La Guardia in 1491, which was again attributed to Jews. In
1492 he was one of the chief movers of the mass expulsion of Jews from Spain. Torquemada is probably more important as a figure of anti-Catholic myth and
propaganda than as a figure of sober history, but there is no doubt that he and the Spanish Inquisition were responsible for gross injustice and enormous suffering in their use of
torture, anonymous denunciation, and
execution by fire[?] in the so-called
auto de fe, or "act of faith".
Using the connotation of "torturer", "Torquemada" was the pseudonym of a long-running author of crossword puzzles for The Times. Following authors took pseudonyms from other inquisitors.
References
- Thomas Hope, Torquemada: Scourge of the Jews, (George Allen and Unwin, 1939).
- Simon Whitechapel, Flesh Inferno: Atrocities of Torquemada and the Spanish Inquisition (Creation Books, 2003). ISBN 1840681055
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