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  • March 1, 1798
  • Page 37
  • THE LIFE OF DON BALTHASAR OROBIO,
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The Freemasons' Magazine, March 1, 1798: Page 37

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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Life Of Don Balthasar Orobio,

peared twice or thrice before the Inquisitors , he was used as follows ; At the bottom of a subterraneous vault , lighted by two or three small torches , he appeared before two persons , one of whom was the judge of the Inquisition , and the other secretary ; who asking him whether he would confess the truth ? protested , that in case of denial , the holy office would not be deemed the cause of his death if he should expire under the torments , but that it must be imputed solely to his

own obstinacy . Then the executioner stripped off his clothes , tied his feet and hands with a strong cord , and set him upon a little stool , while he passed the cord through some iron buckles which were fixed in the wall ; then drawing away the stool , he remained hanging by the cord , which the executioner drew harder and harder , to make him confess , till a surgeon assured the court that he could not possibly bear more without expiring . These cords put him to exquisite tortures , by cutting into the flesh , and making the blood burstfrom under

Ins nails . As there certainly was danger that the cords would tear off his flesh , to prevent the worst , care was taken to gird him with some bands about the breast , which , however , w ere drawn so very tight , that he would not have been able to breathe , had he not held in his breath while the executioner put the bands found him , by which means his lungs had room enough to perform their functions . In the severest extremity of his sufferingshe was told that this was

, but the beginning of his torments , and that he had better confess , before they went to greater lengths : and the executioner being on a small ladder , frequently let it fall against his shins , so that the staves being sharp , put him to exquisite pain . At last , after three years confinement , finding themselves baffled by his perseverance , they ordered his wounds to be cured , and discharged him . As soon as he

gained his liberty , he left Spain , and went to France , where he was made professor of physic atThoulouse . The theses which he made as candidate for this place were upon putrefaction ; and he maintained them with so much subtlety as embarrassed all his competitors . He . continued in this city for some time , still outwardly professing popery : but at last , weary of dissembling , he went to Amsterdam , where he was circumcised , took the name of Isaac , and professed Judaism : still continuing , however , to practise physic , in which he was much " ssteemed . On the publication of Spinoza ' s book , he despised a system ,

the falseness of which he quickly discovered ; and when Bredenbourg ' s answer to it came to his hands , Orobio , being persuaded that he had also admitted atheistical principles , took up his pen against both , and published a piece , entitled Certamen Philosophicum adversus J . B . Principia . But the dispute which he held with the celebrated Philip Limborch against the Christian Religion made the greatest noise . Here he exerted the utmost force of his metaphysical

genius , and conducted himself with great temper . The three papers which he wrote on that occasion were afterwards printed by his antagonist , in an account which he published of the controversy under the title of Arnica Collatio cum Judceo . This extraordinary man , who suffered with so much fortitude the cruelties of the Inquisition , ' ended his days in the year 1687 ;

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1798-03-01, Page 37” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01031798/page/37/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
TO CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 3
PRICES OF BINDING PER VOLUME. Article 3
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH OF HER ROYAL HIGHNESS THE DUTCHESS OF CUMBERLAND. Article 4
THE LIFE OF XIMENES, ARCHBISHOP OF TOLEDO. Article 5
BRIEF HISTORY OF NONSENSE. Article 11
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH OF GENERAL MUSKIEN. Article 13
ACCOUNT OF THE CABALISTICAL PHILOSOPHY OF THE JEWS. Article 14
WISDOM AND FOLLY. A VISION. Article 18
COMPARISON BETWEEN THE ANCIENTS AND MODERNS IN SCIENCE AND LITERATURE. Article 22
AN HISTORICAL ESSAY ON LONGEVITY. Article 29
AN ESSAY ON THE CHINESE POETRY. Article 31
CHARACTER OF SIR WILLIAM JONES. Article 34
THE LIFE OF DON BALTHASAR OROBIO, Article 36
THE COLLECTOR. Article 38
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 42
GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND. Article 43
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 44
POETRY. Article 52
REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 56
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 56
IRISH PARLIAMENT. Article 60
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 62
OBITUARY. Article 68
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Page 37

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Life Of Don Balthasar Orobio,

peared twice or thrice before the Inquisitors , he was used as follows ; At the bottom of a subterraneous vault , lighted by two or three small torches , he appeared before two persons , one of whom was the judge of the Inquisition , and the other secretary ; who asking him whether he would confess the truth ? protested , that in case of denial , the holy office would not be deemed the cause of his death if he should expire under the torments , but that it must be imputed solely to his

own obstinacy . Then the executioner stripped off his clothes , tied his feet and hands with a strong cord , and set him upon a little stool , while he passed the cord through some iron buckles which were fixed in the wall ; then drawing away the stool , he remained hanging by the cord , which the executioner drew harder and harder , to make him confess , till a surgeon assured the court that he could not possibly bear more without expiring . These cords put him to exquisite tortures , by cutting into the flesh , and making the blood burstfrom under

Ins nails . As there certainly was danger that the cords would tear off his flesh , to prevent the worst , care was taken to gird him with some bands about the breast , which , however , w ere drawn so very tight , that he would not have been able to breathe , had he not held in his breath while the executioner put the bands found him , by which means his lungs had room enough to perform their functions . In the severest extremity of his sufferingshe was told that this was

, but the beginning of his torments , and that he had better confess , before they went to greater lengths : and the executioner being on a small ladder , frequently let it fall against his shins , so that the staves being sharp , put him to exquisite pain . At last , after three years confinement , finding themselves baffled by his perseverance , they ordered his wounds to be cured , and discharged him . As soon as he

gained his liberty , he left Spain , and went to France , where he was made professor of physic atThoulouse . The theses which he made as candidate for this place were upon putrefaction ; and he maintained them with so much subtlety as embarrassed all his competitors . He . continued in this city for some time , still outwardly professing popery : but at last , weary of dissembling , he went to Amsterdam , where he was circumcised , took the name of Isaac , and professed Judaism : still continuing , however , to practise physic , in which he was much " ssteemed . On the publication of Spinoza ' s book , he despised a system ,

the falseness of which he quickly discovered ; and when Bredenbourg ' s answer to it came to his hands , Orobio , being persuaded that he had also admitted atheistical principles , took up his pen against both , and published a piece , entitled Certamen Philosophicum adversus J . B . Principia . But the dispute which he held with the celebrated Philip Limborch against the Christian Religion made the greatest noise . Here he exerted the utmost force of his metaphysical

genius , and conducted himself with great temper . The three papers which he wrote on that occasion were afterwards printed by his antagonist , in an account which he published of the controversy under the title of Arnica Collatio cum Judceo . This extraordinary man , who suffered with so much fortitude the cruelties of the Inquisition , ' ended his days in the year 1687 ;

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