What is the difference between saint and inquisitor
Thank you mate. The Saint is has a Support role in game, prioritizing in Healing while the Inquisitor is considered as a DPS class, with his role revolving in dealing damage. In which, your probable clientele will be reduce significantly especially, in lower levelled nests -You do not have the same damage-dealing ability in comparison to DPS-classes. Support classes have one drawback: a disadvantage at dealing damage. As far as Saints go, in your Skill Tree, you mainly focus on the Relic Tree of the Priest Skill Page, and you do not have that many options in damage dealing, especially as how Saints have marginal SP-management to get all necessary 'supporting skills'.
Of course one can 'over-gear' their Saint to deal damage on par with DPS-classes with lower 'gear-quality' than you, but that depends on your tenacity and passion. Frankly, Inquis have good DPS capability but due to this 'the DPS ranking is a law that must be followed', public parties might not want to pick you but hey, if you have OP-gears that dun matter!
A proper mastery of this 'setting-up' is a must for Inquisitors, and proper knowledge can make you way better than novice Inquisitors. Last edited by Skyros ; , AM. Skyros commented. Apologies for making you feel uncomfortable with the term. Already edited it to prevent further mishaps on the matter. In my defense though, I mentioned 'uncultured players who follow [the DPS ranking] as gospel'. Thank you very much. Now i know the difference of the 2 class. Chelly commented.
Ahh i understand what you mean. Pubs have a extremely wrong concept with this tiering of DPS which has mostly backfired. Inquisitors would arrive in a town and announce their presence, giving citizens a chance to admit to heresy. Those who confessed received a punishment ranging from a pilgrimage to a whipping. Those accused of heresy were forced to testify. If the heretic did not confess, torture and execution were inescapable.
There were countless abuses of power. Count Raymond VII of Toulouse was known for burning heretics at the stake even though they had confessed. His successor, Count Alphonese, confiscated the lands of the accused to increase his riches. In , Inquisitors were involved in the mass arrest and tortures of 15, Knights Templar in France, resulting in dozens of executions.
Joan of Arc , burned at the stake in , is the most famous victim of this wing of the Inquisition. Known as Conversos, they were viewed with suspicion by old powerful Christian families. Ferdinand and Isabella feared that even trusted Conversos were secretly practicing their old religion; the royal couple was also afraid of angering Christian subjects who demanded a harder line against Conversos—Christian support was crucial in an upcoming crusade against Muslims planned in Granada.
Ferdinand felt an Inquisition was the best way to fund that crusade, by seizing the wealth of heretic Conversos. In , under the influence of clergyman Tomas de Torquemada, the monarchs created the Tribunal of Castile to investigate heresy among Conversos. The effort focused on stronger Catholic education for Conversos, but by , the Inquisition was formed. That same year, Jews in Castile were forced into ghettos separated from Christians, and the Inquisition expanded to Seville.
A mass exodus of Conversos followed. In , 20, Conversos confessed to heresy, hoping to avoid execution. Inquisitors decreed that their penitence required them to name other heretics. Hearing the complaints of Conversos who had fled to Rome, Pope Sextus proclaimed the Spanish Inquisition was too harsh and was wrongly accusing Conversos. In Sextus appointed a council to take command of the Inquisition. Torquemada was named Inquisitor General and established courts across Spain.
Torture became systemized and routinely used to elicit confessions. Sentencing of confessed heretics was done in a public event called the Auto-da-Fe. All heretics wore a sackcloth with a single eyehole over their heads. Heretics who refused to confess were burned at the stake. Sometimes people fought back against the Inquisition. In , an Inquisitor died after being poisoned, and another Inquisitor was stabbed to death in a church.
Torquemada managed to round up the assassins, burning at the stake 42 people in retaliation. Torquemada was forced to share leadership with four other clergymen until he died in Diego de Deza took over as Inquisitor General, escalating the hunt for heresy within cities and rounding up scores of accused heretics, including members of the nobility and local governments.
Some were able to bribe their way out of imprisonment and death, reflecting the level of corruption under de Deza. Ximenes had previously made a mark in Granada persecuting the Islamic Moors. Upon seizing African towns, the Inquisition became established there. Ximenes was dismissed in after pleas from prominent Conversos, but the Inquisition was allowed to continue. This Inquisition is best known for putting Galileo on trial in In , Philip II ascended the Spanish throne.
He had previously brought the Roman Inquisition to the Netherlands, where Lutherans were hunted down and burned at the stake. As Spain expanded into the Americas, so did the Inquisition, established in Mexico in In , Lutherans were burned at the stake there, and the Inquisition came to Peru, where Protestants were likewise tortured and burned alive. In Spain and Portugal ruled jointly by the Spanish crown and began rounding up and slaughtering Jews that had fled Spain.
Philip II also renewed hostilities against the Moors, who revolted and found themselves either killed or sold into slavery. From to , , Muslims who had converted to Catholicism were forced out of Spain. By the mids the Inquisition and Catholic dominance had become such an oppressive fact of daily life in Spanish territories that Protestants avoided those places altogether.
In , Napoleon conquered Spain and ordered the Inquisition there to be abolished. Part of the agreement with France was to dismantle the Inquisition, which was defunct by The last person to be executed by the Inquisition was Cayetano Ripoll, a Spanish schoolmaster hanged for heresy in The Supreme Sacred Congregation of the Roman and Universal Inquisition still exists, though changed its name a couple of times.
It is currently called the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.
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