Mercurial justice: a Jesuit chaplain’s view of life in the prisons of sixteenth-century Seville

Historian article

By Clare Burgess, published 25th July 2025

Justice in the early modern period was discretionary, which meant it could be both violent and deeply unfair. Elites often escaped the most severe punishments inflicted on the poor and minoritised groups. Clare Burgess shows how a Jesuit chaplain in sixteenth- century Seville used his spiritual discretion and zealous belief to save not only souls but on occasion the lives of the condemned, sometimes in ways that overcame rigid class distinctions...

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