MICHAEL SERVETUS, SPANISH VICTIM OF RELIGIOUS INTOLERANCE

 


Religiosity universally could not tolerate a difference, even in the same belief. Michael Servetus, a Spanish theologian and physician, for differing Trinity, was arrested on 13 August 1553 as a heretic in Geneva and was burnt alive with his books. 

Michael Servetus was a Spanish theologian, physician, polymath, and radical. Born in Aragon in 1511, he was known for medicine and humanism. He rejected religious orthodoxy, infant baptism, and the Trinity. He believed that God was a singular entity, and Jesus was not coequal to God. Catholics and Protestants got angry. He contributed to anatomy, astronomy, law, and maths. Practised medicine, moved with intellectuals in Europe. His views made enemies. In 1553, he was arrested in Geneva and tried for heresy and blasphemy. He stood by his beliefs. On 27.10.1553, he was burnt with his books, a brutal act that sparked debates on religious tolerance and Unitarian movements. His medical insights were recognized later. He is remembered as a martyr for free thought, a pioneer in theology and science.

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