[2] The council convened between 19 September and 5 November, passing various decrees concerning the divine service, the ornaments of the church, instruction of youth, the qualifications of the holders of benefices, etc.
The king's letters confirming the liberties and immunities of the church were read, and at the end of the fourth session twenty canons were approved and published.
[2] Antipope Clement VIII, who was only recognised by the Aragonese, renounced the insignia of the papacy on 26 July 1429.
[6] The Inquisition had hardly touched the Crown of Aragon and the Crown of Castile in 1429,[7] and the council entreated that "for divine mercy's sake, the king of Aragon, the barons, knights, prelates, and universities, should protect the Jews from violence, from which they would otherwise have suffered"[8] (under the Inquisition).
[9] It was not until 1498 that the Spanish Inquisition effectively swept away the protection that Spain's Jews enjoyed following the Council.