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  1. The greatest of these clerical orders by far was the Society of Jesus, founded in 1540 by the Spaniard Ignatius Loyola (1491-1556). Loyola, who had been a soldier, turned to religion after receiving a painful wound in battle. From the first the Jesuits were the soldiery of the Catholic church; their leader bore the title of general, and a military discipline was laid down in Loyola's Spiritual ...

  2. The attempt at extirpation was successful. By the year 1570, Protestantism in Spain was destroyed. Thereafter the advocates and upholders of infallible authority were obliged to look mainly to other sources for the victims with which, from time to time, they celebrated the terrible festival of fanatical intolerance.

  3. tih. -. zihm. ) noun. 1. (religion) a. el protestantismo. (M) Protestantism arose out of a difference of opinion between Martin Luther and Catholicism.El protestantismo nació de una diferencia de opinión entre Martín Lutero y el catolicismo.

  4. May 19, 2019 · The Spanish reformation did come to an end in the early 1560s, if we are referring specifically to the movement within Spanish borders, however, if we are referring to the reformation of God’s Spanish-speaking church, which had been exiled from her motherland, this has in fact never come to an end. Instead, faithful to the reformational ...

  5. In all the hopeful talk of a peaceful coming together of Protestantism and Roman Catholicism, the conversation sooner or later gets down to Spain. The real Catholicism, say its most wary Protestant...

  6. When Protestantism appeared in the sixteenth century, it was ruthlessly suppressed. About two hundred Spanish Protestants, including some of high station in church or state, were condemned by the Inquisition.2 The official policy of Catholic unity prevented a religious division. The ideal of Catholic unity in Spain was threatened and partially

  7. Protestantism in Portugal has long been a minority religion. After the Reformation, the Inquisition and the Portuguese government's religious intolerance outlawed the practice of non- Catholic faiths in the country, and those who followed them could not practice it openly. However, when the British began settling in Portugal in the 19th century ...

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