Religious Colonialism in Early Modern Malta: Inquisitorial Imprisonment and Inmate Graffiti

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Abstract

Early modern Malta was governed by three competing Roman Catholic institutions—Order of St. John, Bishopric, and Roman Inquisition—all of which ultimately answered to the Pope. By focusing on the inquisition, the institution most directly controlled by the Vatican, this paper explores the role of imprisonment in furthering the Vatican’s cultural and political control on the island. In doing so, this paper offers an archaeological perspective on an early modern prison context. Through analyses of the prison cells and the inmates’ graffiti, I argue that the inquisition’s ability to imprison was crucial to the Vatican’s colonial position in Malta.

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Palmer, R. (2016). Religious Colonialism in Early Modern Malta: Inquisitorial Imprisonment and Inmate Graffiti. International Journal of Historical Archaeology, 20(3), 548–561. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10761-016-0359-0

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