Well, that's a tough subject, friend. Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand established the Spanish Inquisition to investigate and punish those who didn't practice Christianity. It's important to remember that we've come a long way since then, and it's all about spreading love and understanding now.
They exiled (kicked out) the Jews and Muslims
to get money
Queen Isabella Nd King Ferdinand Of Spain!.... KP
Isabella was Queen of Castile and Leon. With her husband Ferdinand II of Aragon she presided over the final defeat of the Moors in Spain, the eventual eviction of the Moors and the Jews, and the beginning of the Spanish Inquisition.
After the Reconquista, Spanish Queen Isabella I, alongside her husband Ferdinand II, focused on consolidating their power and expanding Spanish influence. One of their significant military campaigns was against the Kingdom of Navarre in 1512, which they annexed into the Crown of Castile. Additionally, they supported the exploration and conquest of the Americas, leading to conflicts with Indigenous peoples. Their reign also marked the persecution of Muslims and Jews within Spain, culminating in the Alhambra Decree of 1492.
They exiled (kicked out) the Jews and Muslims
to get money
Jews and Muslims
Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand required all Jews and Muslims in Spain in 1492 to convert to Catholicism on pain of death or else flee the country. Many stayed and converted. Many others fled to the Ottoman Empire and Merinid Morocco.
The court of the Inquisition. And it generally persecuted Conversos, not Jews who remained Jewish.
Inquisition
The Inquisition was established in 1478 at the behest of Queen Isabella I and focused heavily on Jews.
She made The Jews became catholic or made them leave the country
In 1492, Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand issued a decree to expell all of the Jews from Spain.
She made The Jews became catholic or made them leave the country
Queen Isabella Nd King Ferdinand Of Spain!.... KP
The answer you are looking for is "the Spanish Inquisition", but technically this is not correct. Jews and Muslims who refused to convert to Catholicism in 1492 in Spain and 1497 in Portugal and equally refused to leave those countries were executed by the government and were not brought before the Inquisition Court. Therefore, it is improper to say that the Inquisition Court killed them since it never "reviewed" their cases. The jurisdiction of the court was "only" over those people who, at least outwardly, claimed to be Catholics and was looking primarily at former Jews and Muslims to see whether or not they had actually had a change of heart. Most suspects were tortured and later executed in thoroughly barbaric procedures, but since these individuals were nominally Christian, it is incorrect to claim that the court killed Jews and Muslims.