References
There is much confusion and misunderstanding about the Spanish Inquisition, not all of it the fault of Monty Python’s Flying Circus. While traditionally the Inquisition has been seen as a ruthless and cruel operation in the main it was in fact a force for order. However, when my book is set it is shortly after new individuals came to the fore, among them Tomas de Torquemada, appointed chief Inquisitor by Queen Isabel herself. For a period of around ten years the Inquisition did become a force of evil, but primarily caused by greed rather than religious zeal. The period 1482-92 was a turmoil in Spain. Al-Andalus was slowly being eroded, and Spain was stretching the muscles it would use to conquer swathes of South America as well as large areas to the West of North America too. One only has to look at the names of many towns and cities in California to realise this. Los Angeles, San Fransisco, San Louis Obispo - open up Google maps of the western United States and you will see who originally conquered these lands.
The Spanish Inquisition, a Historical Revision, Henry Kamen. Yale University Press, 4th Edition, 2014. ISBN: 9780300180510.
Dogs of God, Columbus, the Inquisition and the Defeat of the Moors, James Reston Jr. Doubleday, 2005. ISBN: 0385505484.
Also by David Penny
Breaker of Bones
The Sin Eater
The Incubus
About the Author
Find out more about David Penny
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