Persecution and Repression timeline
In the Qin dictatorship, all Confucian books are burnt (except those of any practical use) and 460 Confucian scholars are executed
The complete destruction of the Jewish Temple follows the fall of Jerusalem to the Romans
On the order of Marcus Aurelius, Christians in Lyons are tortured to death - an instance of persecution unusual at this time
Cyprian, bishop of Carthage, is one of many Christians martyred for refusing to sacrifice to the Roman gods
The emperor Diocletian initiates a sustained persecution of Christians in the Roman empire
Justinian closes down the schools of Athens, famous for their tradition of pagan philosophy
On the orders of the T'ang emperor, 4000 Buddhist monasteries are destroyed in China and 250,000 monks and nuns are forced into secular life
The German crusade begins with a massacre of Jews in many of the region's cities
Resentment of western merchants results in a massacre of Roman Catholics by fellow Christians in Constantinople
The murder of the pope's legate to Toulouse provokes the Albigensian crusade, which aims to wipe out the Catharist heresy
Gregory IX sends Dominican friars to root out the remains of the Catharist heresy in France, thus launching the Inquisition
The siege of the Catharist stronghold of Montségur ends when 200 heretics are herded into a wooden stockade and are burnt
The Jews in England are driven out of the country, soon to be followed by those in France
Dante, a member of the White faction in Florence, is sentenced to death by the Blacks - and never returns to his native city
Fifty-four Knights Templars are burned at the stake, during the campaign of the French king to destroy the order
Massacres of Jews, rumoured to have caused the Black Death by poisoning wells, begin in southern France and spread through much of Europe
John Huss, invited to Constance under a promise of safe conduct, is arrested, tried and burnt at the stake as a heretic
Torquemada persuades Ferdinand and Isabella to expel from Spain all Jews (about 160,000) who will not convert to Christianity
The original ghetto is established as a district to which the Jews of Venice are confined
Luther's writings are burnt in Rome by order of the pope
Eighty distinguished Swedish citizens are executed together on the main square, in what becomes known as the Stockholm Bloodbath
Pope Leo X excommunicates Martin Luther after he has refused to recant
Outlawed by the Edict of Worms, Luther lives secretly in the Wartburg as Junker Georg
Muslims throughout Spain are ordered to convert to Christianity or to leave the kingdom
3000 Waldenses are massacred as heretics in the villages of Provence