The sanbenito (; sambenito at the Diccionario de la Real Academia Española. Swimming the Christian Atlantic: Judeoconversos, Afroiberians and Amerindians in the Seventeenth Century, Jonathan Schorsch, Brill Publishers, 2009, pag 99 Catalan language: gramalleta, sambenet, Portuguese: sambenito) was a penitential garment that was used especially during the Portuguese and Spanish Inquisitions. It was similar to a scapular, either yellow with red for penitent Heresy or black and decorated with devils and flames for impenitent heretics to wear at an auto-da-fé (meaning 'act of faith').
File:Cornelis Martinus Vermeulen - Man to be burned on the stake as an heretic.jpg|The samarra
File:Cornelis Martinus Vermeulen - Man condemned to be burned on the stake saved because of his confession.jpg|The fuego revolto
File:Cornelis Martinus Vermeulen - Man condemned for heresy who accused himself before he was judged.jpg|The sambenito
The heretics, found guilty by the Grand Inquisitor, had to walk in the procession wearing the sambenito, the capirote, the rope around the neck, the rosary, and in their hands a yellow or green wax candle.
Originally the penitential garments were hung up in the churches as mementos of disgrace to their wearers, and as the trophies of the Inquisition. The lists of the punished were also called sambenitos. The bearers of the surnames of those listed in the church of Santo Domingo in Palma de Mallorca were discriminated against as (the local name for Converso Jews), even when those surnames were also borne by and the surnames of other Majorcan Judaizers were not preserved at the cathedral.
The sambenito should not be confused with the yellow robes worn by some , which are also garments related to penitence and which is one reason that caused the Inquisition to prefer common wool dyed yellow with red crosses for the sambenito. Such were the penitential robes in 1514, when Cardinal Francisco Ximénez de Cisneros replaced the common crosses with those of saltire. The inquisitors afterwards designated a different tunic for each class of penitents.
In the 1945 edition of México Viejo, Luis González Obregón shows images from Felipe A. Limborch's Historia Inquisitionis, dated 1692, which were images of sambenitos used in the Inquisition.
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