|
“Heresy and Error”: The Ecclesiastical Censorship of Books, 1400–1800 An Exhibition at Bridwell Library, September 20 – December 17, 2010 | |||||
|
|
King Ferdinand V (1452–1516)
invited the Bishop of Coria to write the Luzero
de la vida cristiana
(“Morning Star of the Christian Life”) in order to
“expel the darkness of ignorance” from Spain,
particularly among Jews and Muslims who had endured
forced conversion to Christianity. Published in six
Spanish editions beginning in 1493, the Luzero
derived its theological lessons from meditations on
the life and ministry of Christ. However, because it
paraphrased the New Testament in the vernacular and
embroidered Christ’s life with non-Biblical
episodes, the
Luzero was placed on the Spanish Index
librorum prohibitorum published at
Valladolid in 1559. Bridwell Library’s Luzero
is the only recorded copy of the 1499 edition.
|
||||