Early inquisitions In the
Republic of Venice, the
doge, as the supreme judicial authority, was ultimately responsible for repressing
heresy, which was seen as a threat to the good ordering of the society. Yet heresy, even though considered among the most heinous of crimes, is not listed as an offence in the of 1232, the document revised by Doge
Jacopo Tiepolo that articulated punishable crimes. Specific magistrates
super inquirendis hereticis to assist the doge in cases of heresy are first mentioned in the coronation oath,
promissione ducale, of Doge
Marino Morosini, dated 13 June 1249. These magistrates were laymen personally chosen by the doge for their religious devotion and integrity. Although they were given authority to prosecute cases of heresy, the actual interrogation of suspected individuals was carried out by the
patriarch of Grado, the
bishop of Olivolo, and other Venetian bishops who as
ordinaries had jurisdiction in virtue of their offices. The doge, in concert with the
Great Council and the
Minor Council, retained judicial authority with regard to sentencing, which included
burning at the stake. On 12 August 1289, under pressure exerted by
Pope Nicholas IV, the Great Council voted to admit the
papal inquisition into Venice's territories. Inquisitorial activity was only sporadic in Venice after 1423 when the government suspended the stipend of the inquisitor, but it intensified beginning in the 1530s, largely in response to the
Protestant Reformation. The renewal of inquisitorial activity was also consistent with broader efforts to moralize the society and gain the favour of God following the Venetian defeat at the
Battle of Agnadello in 1509, a defeat that was interpreted as divine punishment for the moral dissolution of the Venetians.
Roman Inquisition ,
Portrait of Giovanni della Casa (). As papal nuncio to Venice (1544–1550), della Casa pressed the Venetian government on behalf of Pope Paul III for the establishment of the Roman Inquisition. In 1542,
Pope Paul III established the
Roman Inquisition as part of the Catholic Church's efforts to repress
Protestantism in the period of the
Counter Reformation. Unlike earlier inquisitions which tasked secular authorities with the punishment of heretics, the new institution depended directly upon the
Holy See and had full authority throughout the Italian peninsula to identify and interrogate heretics and emit sentences, including the death penalty. The objective was to eliminate religious dissent and ensure uniformity of doctrine. To secular rulers, the pope warned of the risks that came with heresy: social disorder, subversion of authority, and even the wrath of God for those governments that tolerated sin. The creation of the Roman Inquisition was strongly advocated by Cardinal Gian Pietro Carafa, later
Pope Paul IV, largely on the basis of his personal experiences in Venice. He had taken refuge in the city in 1527, following the
Sack of Rome, and remained until 1536. In a missive to
Pope Clement VII in 1532, Caraffa lamented the diffusion of heresy in Venice and its territories, noting specifically the presence of itinerant
apostates, particularly
conventual Franciscans. The inquisition, he proposed, was the best remedy to restore the honour of the Holy See and to punish those heretics who misled the faithful. On its part, the Venetian government was resistant to the establishment of an inquisitorial tribunal with direct allegiance to Rome. Although it shared the Church's objective of maintaining an orderly society with a hierarchical structure and shared values, its trading interests required a degree of tolerance that made it possible for merchants of faiths other than Catholicism to conduct affairs in the city, unhindered. The government further sought to defend its autonomy in the administration of justice. Resistance also stemmed from the longstanding Venetian conception of the state as a sacred entity empowered by God and the resulting assertion of the government to administer local ecclesiastical matters. The task of reaching a compromise between the Church and the republic fell to
Giovanni della Casa,
archbishop of Benevento, who was nominated
papal nuncio to Venice in 1544. He was to institute the new tribunal and organize the first trials of the Protestant reformers. Negotiations between della Casa and the Venetian government for the establishment of the Roman Inquisition in Venice continued. To the Venetian proposal that jurisdiction reside with the Venetian bishops as ordinaries, Paul III countered that the ordinaries were not sufficient and that time was of the essence. It was also suggested that the Church could try cases for heresy alone, but that all other related offences would be deferred to the state. The solution to the impasse was the creation by the Minor Council of the three (sages over heresy) on 22 April 1547. They were to block any proceedings of the Holy Office that might have violated Venetian laws and customs or had ramifications for the economic, social, and diplomatic interests of the state. Without their participation, the proceedings of the inquisition would be invalid, . Although the Holy Office in Rome had sought greater clerical control, della Casa reassured his superiors that the three nobles chosen as the first were intent on repressing heresy. Doge
Francesco Donà himself had declared that there was "nothing more fitting a Christian prince than zeal in religion and the defence of the Catholic faith". ==Composition==