, whose works inquisitor Nicolas Eymerich accused of heresy In 1301, the Spanish Dominican province split into Spain (Castile-León and Portugal) and Aragon (Aragon, Navarre, and Majorca). The 1262 bull of
Pope Urban IV remained unchanged, leaving inquisitor appointments in Aragon to the Spanish provincial, causing a prolonged conflict. In 1351,
Pope Clement VI granted the Aragonese provincial the right to appoint inquisitors. In 1308, Aragonese inquisitor Juan de Lotgerio participated in interrogations of
Templars. In 1317, he condemned the works of Arnold de Vilanova. His successors, Bernard Puigcercos (c. 1320–1346), Arnold Burguete (1325), and Guillem Costa (1328–1346), primarily prosecuted Franciscan spirituals In 1302, Juan de Lotgerio acquitted Jews in
Jaca accused of blasphemy and church desecration in Alexandria. In 1325, Bernard Puigcercos fined the
Jewish community in
Calatayud for encouraging a Christian convert to revert to Judaism. In 1352 and 1371, Jews faced inquisitorial trials for alleged magic. Nicolas Rossell, inquisitor and Aragonese provincial (1351–1356), secured the Inquisition's independence from the Spanish provincial in 1351. On 23 December 1356,
Pope Innocent VI appointed him a cardinal. His successor,
Nicholas Eymerich (d. 1399), the most prominent Aragonese inquisitor, authored
Directorium Inquisitorum (c. 1376, printed 1503 in Barcelona, 1578 in Rome, 1595 in Venice). Eymerich opposed the royal court's support for
Ramon Llull's teachings, accusing them of heresy, leading to conflicts with Kings
Peter IV and
John I. Internal Dominican rivalries with Bernard Ermengaudi over provincial and inquisitorial roles further complicated matters. Eymerich was briefly removed as inquisitor in 1360 and 1385 and exiled to the papal court in Avignon (1376–1383, 1393–1397). The number of inquisitors in Aragon gradually increased, leading to smaller inquisitorial districts. In 1313,
Pope Clement V established a separate tribunal for the
Kingdom of Majorca, covering the
Balearic Islands,
Roussillon, and Cerdanya, based in
Perpignan. Its reintegration into Aragon in the mid-14th century did not dissolve this tribunal. In 1413,
Antipope Benedict XIII created a separate tribunal for the Balearics in
Palma de Mallorca. Majorcan inquisitor nominations were reserved for the Dominican general, bypassing the provincial, though a 1420 bull by
Pope Martin V indicated Aragonese provincial involvement. After the
Western Schism, Martin V's 1420 bull confirmed the division of Majorca into Balearics and Pyrenean counties and separated Valencia from Aragon. In 1447, a Catalan tribunal was established, and in 1459, Barcelona was further separated. By 1475, Aragon had six inquisitorial districts: • Aragon (general inquisitor) • Valencia • Catalonia • Barcelona • Majorca • Roussillon In 1475, the Dominican general appointed Juan Franco as Navarre's inquisitor, though no prior active inquisitors are recorded there beyond 1238. The increase in inquisitors reflected the office becoming an honorary distinction rather than heightened activity. In 1481, King
Ferdinand II of Aragon sought to control Aragonese papal inquisitors during a campaign against judaizers in Castile. He appointed his candidates, but their actions sparked protests. On 17 October 1483,
Pope Sixtus IV appointed Dominican
Tomás de Torquemada as Aragon's General Inquisitor, already Castile's inquisitorial head. Papal inquisitors were gradually replaced by royal nominees, integrating the Aragonese Inquisition into the new, monarchy-controlled
Spanish Inquisition. The Majorcan papal tribunal persisted until 1488. == Castile ==