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History of European Jews in the Middle Ages

History of European Jews in the Middle Ages covers Jewish history in the period from the 5th to the 15th century. During the course of this period, the Jewish population gradually started shifting from the Levant to Europe, primarily Central Europe dominated by the Holy Roman Empire or Southern Europe dominated by the Iberian kingdoms. As with Christianity, the Middle Ages were the period when Judaism became mostly insignificant in the Middle East, and a front-of-mind part of Europe.

Jewish tradition traces the origins of the Jews to the 12 Israelite tribes, however most Jewish traditions state that modern Jews descend from Judah, Benjamin and Levi. As early as the Babylonian exile Jews, through exile under military constraint or otherwise, came to live in many other Middle Eastern countries, and later formed communities throughout the eastern Mediterranean lands, constituting collectively a Jewish diaspora. Their presence is attested in Greece from the fourth century BCE onwards in places as varied as Chios, Aegina, Attica and Rhodes[1] and in Italy as early as the 2nd century BCE.[2]

After the Siege of Jerusalem (70 CE), hundreds of thousands of Jews were taken as slaves to Rome, where they later immigrated to other European lands. The Jews who immigrated to Iberia, and their descendants comprise the Sephardic Jews, while those who immigrated to the German Rhineland and France comprise the Ashkenazi Jews.[3] A significant depletion in their numbers in Western Europe began to take place with the rise of the Crusades, which brought about many pogroms and successive expulsion orders, in England (1290), France (14th century) and Spain (1492). With the end of the medieval age, a similar phenomenon was to repeat itself in the Italian peninsula and throughout most German towns and principalities in German-speaking lands in the sixteenth century. As a result, many Jews migrated to Eastern Europe, with large Yiddish speaking populations rising there over these same centuries. By the 17th century a trickle back process began, with reverse migration back to central and western Europe, following pogroms in Ukraine (1648–1649).[4]

From the fall of Rome to the Late Middle Ages (500–1500) edit

Fall of Rome edit

The majority of archaeological and epigraphical evidence of the Jews in Late Ancient Rome lies in funerary sites, making it difficult to uncover a historical picture of their daily lives or their interactions with outsiders.[5] After the decline of the Roman Empire, the Visigoths controlled large portions of former Roman territory, including southwestern Gaul until 507, and much of the Iberian peninsula until 711. At the start, Jewish communities generally flourished under Visigothic rule in both Gaul and Spain.[6]

Visigoth Spain edit

In 506, Alaric II decreed that Jews were to be considered Roman citizens and were to live under Roman law. They were given freedom to practice their religion, although efforts to convert pagans and Christians to Judaism were to be curtailed. Alaric also decreed that the judicial autonomy of the Jewish communities was to be respected. After Sisebut took the Visigothic throne in 612, these privileges were revoked, and suppression of the Jewish religion became policy, resulting in attempted forced conversion. There was a brief respite in 640, when Chindasuinth usurped the throne and pursued a pro-Jewish policy. His son Recceswinth, to the contrary, denounced Jews as "polluting the soil of Spain" in 653, and enacted a new code meant to make it impossible for Jews to remain in Spain. These laws proved to be unpopular, and were resisted by both Jews and Christians alike.[7] Despite these persecutions, Jews were able to help Muslim invaders capture Spain, ending Visigothic rule.[8]

Activities edit

The first historical testimonies on the activities of the Jews show that most were engaged in agriculture, and a minority were engaged in trade, as well as in handicrafts.[9] In the South, "particularly in south Italy and Greece - the Jewish communities had almost a monopoly of dyeing and silk-weaving".[10] Some were involved in qualified services such as interpreters, translators, and medical practitioners.[11]

In the high middle ages, many European Jews were specialized as merchants, money-lenders or artisans, as they were largely excluded from crafts guilds and barred from owning land.[12] In contrast, Julie L. Mell insists on the fact that much of the Jewish population was left at the lower end of the urban economic scale.[13]

European Jews were involved in the intellectual and cultural spheres of Medieval society : "Jews contributed to medicine, astrology, mathematics as well as to the arts, literature and music."[14]

Germany edit

Jewish migration from Roman Italy is considered the most likely source of the first Jews within German territory. While the date of the first settlement of Jews in the regions which the Romans called Germania Superior, Germania Inferior, and Magna Germania is not known, the first authentic documents relating to a large and well-organized Jewish community in these regions date from 321[15][16][17][18] and refers to Cologne on the Rhine.[19][20][21] These documents stated that Jews could be called to the Curia and owed taxes to Rome, and that Jewish religious leaders were exempt from curial service, signalling that a uniquely Jewish community, prosperous enough to be taxed, had existed in Cologne for some time. During the Carolingian period, Jews had a vital function as importers of goods from the East, and their laws and customs were generally tolerated, although they were not allowed to proselytize to Christians. It was during this peaceful time, that Jews from other communities emigrated to Francia in hopes of better treatment, notably members of the Persian House of Exilarchs, such as Isaac the Jew and Makhir of Narbonne came to Francia and with them, brought a large community of Persian Jews, who later assimilated to European customs. However, these peaceful relations would end with the beginning of the First Crusade and thousands of Jews in communities all along the Rhine were attacked and killed under the presumption that if they were going to attack enemies of the Christ in Jerusalem, they should attack "Christ's enemies" around them in Germany,[22] ushering in a lasting antisemitism that included pogroms, blood libel, and being blamed as the cause of catastrophes like the Black Death and the Mongol invasion of Europe. Despite those difficulties, German Jews continued to practice, refine, and evolve their religious and social customs, including the development of the Yiddish language and an identity as Ashkenazi Jews. They eventually established a uniquely Jewish occupation, working as Court Jews within the Holy Roman Empire.[23]

Church laws in the Early Middle Ages edit

Conversions of Jews to Christianity, whether forced or voluntary, during the medieval period were an integral part of the life of Jewish communities in the medieval period. The pressures to convert, other than compulsory baptism to save one's life, could be theological, economic and intellectual. Voluntary conversion by such renegades (meshummadim) was motivated by a number of facts: a change of belief could account for the conversion, as could the desire to marry a Christian or to escape from the restrictions on life as a Jew, or to resecure a livelihood or home. Such conversions proved particularly devastating for the English and Spanish Jewish communities.[24]

By the 10th century, most of Europe was under the rule of Christian monarchs who made Christianity the official religion of their realms. In the seriously diminished Roman or Byzantine Empire, Christianity had been the state church since the 380 Edict of Thessalonica. A privileged niche for Jews in the new order nonetheless remained. The Church forbade Christians from charging interest to fellow Christians; therefore the only source of loans were non-Christians such as Jews. While this status did not always lead to peaceful conditions for the Jewish people, they were the most compatible[citation needed] non-Christians for the position due to their shared devotion to the same Abrahamic God that the Christians worshiped. While many Jews rose to prominence in these times, Judaism was mostly practiced in private to avoid persecution. The descendants of the survivors of this period, the Ashkenazi Jews, still commemorate some of the more memorable tragedies of this period[which?] in their liturgy.

Their fate in each particular country depended on the changing political conditions. In Italy (see History of the Jews in Italy) they experienced difficult days during the wars waged by the Heruli, Rugii, Ostrogoths, and Lombards.[citation needed] The severe laws of the Roman emperors were, in general, more mildly administered than elsewhere[citation needed]; the Arian confession, of which the Germanic conquerors of Italy were adherents, was characterized by its tolerance.

In other parts of western Europe, Jews who wished to remain true to the faith of their fathers were protected by the Church itself from compulsory conversion. There was no change in this policy even later, when the Pope called for the support of the Carolingians in protecting his ideal kingdom with their temporal power. Charlemagne, moreover, was glad to use the Church for the purpose of welding together the loosely connected elements of his kingdom when he transformed part of the old Roman empire into a new Christian one, and united under the imperial crown all the German races at that time. Years after his death, in 843, his empire fell apart, and the rulers of Italy, France, and Germany were more attentive to the Church's desires in the making of laws dealing with the Jews.

In the wake of a narrow military defeat over Muslim forces, Leo III of Constantinople decided his nation's weakness lay in its heterogeneous population and began the forcible conversion of the Jews, as well as the New Christians. However, some were able to secretly continue their Jewish practices. In 1040, Rashi was born, and in the wake of the Norman conquest of England, Jews left Normandy to settle in London and other cities such as York, Norwich, Oxford, Bristol and Lincoln, where Pope Gregory VII prohibited Jews from holding offices in Christendom. Iban Iashufin, the King of the Almoravides, captured Granada[25] and destroyed the Jewish community, as the survivors fled to Toledo.[26] In 1095, Henry IV of Germany granted the Jews favorable conditions and issued a charter to the Jews and a decree against forced baptism. In 1171, after the birth of Rambam, Jews were accused of committing ritual murder and blood libel in the town of Blois. The adult Jews of the city were arrested and most were executed after refusing to convert. In 1210, a group of 300 French and English rabbis made aliyah and settled in Israel. During the Black Death, the clerics accused Jews of poisoning the wells of Europe to kill all the Christians.[27]

Sicut Judaeis edit

Sicut Judaeis (the "Constitution for the Jews") was the official position of the papacy regarding Jews throughout the Middle Ages and later. The first bull was issued in about 1120 by Calixtus II, intended to protect Jews who were suffering during the First Crusade, and was reaffirmed by many popes, even until the 15th century. The bill forbade, besides other things, Christians from forcing Jews to convert, or to harm them, or to take their property, or to disturb the celebration of their festivals, or to interfere with their cemeteries, on pain of excommunication.[28] Although the Jews and Christians of Rome were organized into distinct communities, the boundaries of which were not only reinforced on a daily basis but were regularly performed on ceremonial occasions such as the papal adventus, Jews and Christians experienced unusually robust cultural and social interactions, especially as the Jews increasingly aligned themselves with the protective power of the papacy.[29]

However, despite the Church official position expressed in the Sicut Judaeis, the Church felt free to impose other restrictions and disabilities on Jews not inconsistent with the bull. For example, the Fourth Lateran Council in 1215 decreed that Jews be differentiated from others by their type of clothing or marking to avoid intercourse between Jews and Christians. Jews were sometimes required to wear a yellow badge or a pointed hat. Christian theologians began calling for the slavery of all Jews.

In 1229, King Henry III of England forced Jews to pay half the value of their property in taxes, following burning of the Talmud in Paris and the Tartars' capture of Jerusalem.[30] During the Fatimid period, many Jewish officials served in the regime.[30] King Henry III of England ordered Jewish worship in synagogue to be held quietly so that Christians passing by would not have to hear it, giving an order that Jews may not employ Christian nurses or maids, nor may any Jew prevent another from converting to Christianity. A few years later, French King Louis IX expelled the Jews from France, ending the Tosaphists period. Most Jews went to Germany and further east.[31]

Later immigration to Germany edit

In 1267, the Vienna city council forced Jews to wear the Jewish hat, in addition to the yellow badge. Later in the century, a blood libel in Munich resulted in the deaths of 68 Jews, and an additional 180 Jews were burned alive at the synagogue, following another mob in Oberwesel, Germany. In 1290, owing to political pressure, English King Edward I expelled all Jews from England. They were only allowed to take what they could carry and most went to France, paying for their passage only to be robbed and cast overboard by the ship captains.[citation needed] Philip IV of France ordered all Jews expelled from France, with their property to be sold at public auction, and some 125,000 Jews were forced to leave. Similar to accusations made during the Black Plague, Jews were accused of encouraging lepers to poison Christian wells in France. An estimated five thousand Jews were killed before the king, Philip the Tall, admitted the Jews were innocent. Then, Charles IV expelled all French Jews without the one-year period he had promised them, as much of Europe blamed the Black Plague on the Jews and tortured them so they would confess that they poisoned the wells. Despite the pleas of innocence of Pope Clement VI, the accusations resulted in the destruction of over 60 large and 150 small Jewish communities.[31]

In 1348, hundreds of Jews were burned and many were baptized in Basel.[32][33] The city's Christian residents converted the synagogue into a church and destroyed the Jewish cemetery there. Pope Clement VI issued an edict repudiating the libel against Jews, saying that they too were suffering from the Plague. In 1385, German Emperor Wenceslaus arrested Jews living in the Swabian League, a group of free cities in Germany, and confiscated their books. Later, he expelled the Jews of Strassburg after a community debate. In 1391, Ferrand Martinez, archdeacon of Ecija, began a campaign against Spanish Jewry, killing over 10,000 and destroying the Jewish quarter in Barcelona.[34] The campaign quickly spread throughout Spain, except for Granada, and destroyed Jewish communities in Valencia and Palma De Majorca. King Pedro I ordered Spain not to harm the remaining Jews and that synagogues not be converted into churches. He then announced his compliance with the Bull of Pope Boniface IX, protecting Jews from baptism. He extended this edict to Spanish Jewish refugees. Benedict XIII banned the study of the Talmud in any form, as institutions forced Christian sermons and tried to restrict Jewish life completely, and a few years later Pope Martin V favorably reinstated old privileges of the Jews.[35] After more Jews were expelled from France, some remained in Provence until 1500. In 1422, Pope Martin V issued a bull reminding Christians that Christianity was derived from Judaism and warned the Friars not to incite against the Jews, but the Bull was withdrawn the following year. By the end of the 15th century, the Inquisition was established in Spain. Around 1500 Jews found relative security and a renewal of prosperity in present-day Poland.[36]

The Crusades edit

The trials the Jews periodically endured in the various Christian West kingdoms echoed the catastrophes that occurred during Crusades. In the First Crusade (1096) flourishing communities on the Rhine and the Danube were utterly destroyed. Furthermore, there were also attacks on the Jews that lived in cities along the Rhine. Prior to these attacks, many Jews were seen as integral members of society despite religious differences. Many Jews worked in the money lending trade. Their services allowed for societies to function financially. In one case Jewish moneylenders were responsible for financially maintaining a monastery.[37] Without these loans the monastery would have been unable to survive. However, this fiscal responsibility that the Jews carried might have caused tensions amongst the middle and upper class. These sects of society would not have approved of the power that the Jewish communities held. At this point there were no strictly Jewish communities. Jews were not concentrated in one area, rather their presence was spread over a larger geographical region. Oftentimes a few families lived immersed in a predominantly Christian settlement. The Jewish families were comfortable in this setting and functioned successfully.[neutrality is disputed] In some circumstances, Christians both accepted and welcomed the Jews. When violence against the Jewish people began to occur some Christians attempted to protect their fellow neighbors. In the town of Cologne, Jews fled to the homes of their Christian neighbors where they were given shelter.[37] Christians discussed the topic of conversion with the Jews. There existed a theory that if the Jews were to convert to Christianity then they would no longer be the target of such violence. There were discussions regarding conversion to Christianity. Religious leaders including Bishops and Archbishops alike tried to spare the Jews from violence. One Archbishop from Mainz went so far as to offer monetary bribes to protect Jewish families.[37] These Jews did not want relief from the exile that occurred hundreds of years prior, moreover they saw the towns in which they had immigrated to as their homes. They were well received members of the community. In the Second Crusade (1147) the Jews in France suffered especially under Louis VII. Philip Augustus treated them with exceptional severity. In his days the Third Crusade took place (1188); and the preparations for it proved to be momentous for the English Jews. After being the victims of increasing oppression Jews were banished from England in 1290; and 365 years passed before they were allowed to settle again in the British Isles. The Jews were also subjected to attacks by the Shepherds' Crusades of 1251 and 1320.

Protection attempts by Christians during the First Crusade edit

During the First Crusade of 1096, there are documented accounts of Christian attempts to protect Jews from their violent attackers. The first of such attempts was carried out by the archbishop of Mainz, located in the Rhineland of Germany, in response to local Jews who had organized a bribe in return for the archbishop's protection.[38] Although the archbishop at first accepted the bribe, community leaders persuaded him to protect the Jews' money instead of taking it, while still offering them refuge in his quarters.[38] Ultimately, the archbishop's rescue attempt was unsuccessful. Crusaders, aided by some townspeople, eventually stormed the archbishop's chamber and slaughtered the Jews hiding there.[39]

In another instance, the bishop of Trier offered to keep Jews safe from Crusaders in his palace; however, local intimidation eventually forced him to abandon those whom he had previously aided. Because the bishop had no ancestry or allies in Trier, he felt that he could not muster the political power needed to carry out a successful resistance without the support of the townspeople. Instead, he offered the Jews an ultimatum: convert to Christianity or leave the palace. When doing so, he remarked, “You cannot be saved—Your God does not wish to save you now as he did in earlier days.”[40]

In Cologne, Jews were protected by local gentiles after violence had broken out at the beginning of Shavuot, a Jewish holiday. During the two days of Shavuot, one Jewish woman was killed by Crusaders while venturing to the safety of a Christian neighbor's home, where her husband was waiting for her. However, the vast majority of Jews in Cologne survived Shavuot because local Christians had reached out and offered their homes as a means of asylum from the Crusaders.[41]

Jewish-Christian relations edit

The relations of Jews and Christians were fraught with tensions about the death of Jesus and the Christian perception of Jewish obstinacy in refusing to accept the only faith the Christians knew in the world. The pressure on Jews to accept Christianity was intense.[42] Recent years have seen a debate among historians on the nature of Jewish-Christian relations in medieval Europe. Traditionally, historians focused on the trials Jews had to endure in this period. Christian violence towards Jews was rife, as were ritual murder accusations, expulsions, and extortion. However, recently historians have begun to show evidence of other relationships between Jews and Christians, suggesting Jews were more embedded into Christian society than was previously thought.

Jonathan Elukin is one historian who thinks in this vein, as elucidated in his book Living Together, Living Apart. He shows that during the Crusades, some Jews were hidden and protected from being attacked by Christians. Some Jews worked in Christian villages. There were also several cases of conversion to Judaism as well as interfaith marriages.[43]

One such case was Jacob ben Sullam, a Christian looking to become a part of Jewish society. He chose to "slaughter [himself]" of his Christian identity in the hope of being accepted as a Jew in the Jewish community.[44]

As Christians sought conversion to Judaism, a number of Jews similarly wanted to convert to Christianity. For example, Herman, a Jew who adopted Christianity to the degree that his family worried that he would reject his Jewish heritage completely. Herman's conversion startled the rabbis and made them fear losing other Jews to Christianity.[45]

The close bonds between Jewish and Christian neighbors led to Jewish communities thriving in some Christian cities.[45] Jews experienced economic security and prosperity in their communities, even while enduring constant threats of violence.[46] Though strict constraints were placed on Jews in the thirteenth century by the French monarchy, Jews continued to experience a stable living situation.[47] Although the French monarchy prohibited the creation of Jewish religious centers, friendly relations with Christians enabled them to build a synagogue in Béziers in 1278.[46] After being expelled from certain areas in Europe, Jews regularly returned to their old places of residence, if they had previously experienced a prosperous life there.[47]

Another such historian is Ivan Marcus. The section of his book Cultures of the Jews, "Jewish-Christian Symbiosis" deals with the relationship between Christians and Ashkenazi Jews. Marcus claims that the time is written off as a time of intolerance against Jews living in Europe.[48]: 450  For Marcus times of persecution were rarities and few and far between.[48] The two communities lived amongst each other and interacted socially on an everyday basis.[48] They interacted at such a personal level both Christian and Jewish leaders thought that the other group would heavily influence their respective faiths.[48]: 450–451  When persecution did occur however it was only the more drastic measures that stopped the close interactions between the two groups.[48]: 451  Had the intense violence described in other sources been the standard for living condition of the Askkenazi Jews then they would not have survived the era let alone their culture which is the roots for many Jews today.[48]: 452  During times of persecution against the Jews, chronicles show that Christian friends provided some of them aid and shelter. A chronicler tells a story of a Jewish woman who is given food and shelter for two days from a gentile acquaintance during a time of violence against the Jews during Shavuot.[41] This gentile acquaintance is believed to be Christian. Also, the chronicles show that some Christians converted to Judaism during these times. Some converts even sacrificed themselves in order to show their loyalty to the Jewish community.[45]

In England, many Jews worked and lived in small, mostly Christian towns.[49] Historians interpret this as Jews feeling comfortable living and working in places surrounded by Christians. Another example some historians use to show Jewish attachment to their place in Western Christendom is the Jewish expulsion in France. After they were expelled in 1182, they returned in 1198.[47]

Through some of the Christian world, Jews enjoyed privileges at the hands of nobles and even kings that were almost equal to the local Christians. For example, in the Crown of Aragon, in 1241, King James of Aragon issued a decree that the Jewish community of Barcelona would be given the right to elect members of the Jewish community to police itself and investigate Jewish criminals and crimes within the Jewish community. Once the elected police force caught a criminal, they were given the right to impose fines (paid to the crown, not the Jewish community), banish them from the Jewish quarter, or even banish them entirely from the city of Barcelona. Further, these elected members were given the authority to judge cases between Jews in a court of law. In 1271, King James issued a similar decree with a sense of increased urgency which suggests that things had become volatile among the Jewish community, or that the perception of the Jewish community was overwhelmingly one of a state of chaos. This second decree also increased the rights of the council to whatever punishments they deem to be "convenient to the community," including any punishments that they deemed fit.[50]

Even after multiple expulsions and persecutions, some Jews still returned to their hometowns.[47] Once they returned, many prospered. In spite of royal restrictions attempting to limit their success. They built new synagogues.[46]

These examples are used by some historians to shine a light on a more positive relationship between the two religious groups. These historians believe that these stories of aid, neighborliness, and prosperity are more notable and significant than previously recognized.

However, some historians do not agree with this view of history. Historian Daniel J. Lasker does not see the relationship of Christians and Jews in the same light. He contends that the expulsions Jews in Spain faced in 1492 were the product of the revolts seen a century earlier in 1391.[51] Even though the relationship might have been positive, it ended on a negative note.[52] The expulsions of the Jews in various regions is that ending, with a wide range of reasons behind them not just religion.[53] The reason for the Jews returning to regions they were expelled from was not acceptance as to what happened, but a sense of comfort and familiarity.[52] While Lasker acknowledges that Jews and Christians as having some positive relationships he does not want to write off the tension of the area.[54]

Accusations of ritual murder, blood libel and host desecration edit

Although the first known mention of blood libel is found in the writings of Apion (30–20 BCE to 45 or 48 CE), who claimed that the Jews sacrificed Greeks in the Temple of Jerusalem, no other mention is recorded until the 12th century, when blood libels began to proliferate.

Jews were frequently accused of ritual murder and of using human blood (especially, the blood of Christian children) to make matzah. In many cases, these "blood libels" led to the Catholic Church regarding the victims as martyrs. The Catholic Church canonized children in over 20 such cases. England seems to have counted for the first and most important examples of these. The most influential and widely-known of these is Little Saint Hugh of Lincoln (d. 1255 and written about in Chaucer's "Canterbury Tales") and Simon of Trent (d. 1475). It gained particular currency because of the intervention of Henry III of England, who ordered the death of the Coping, the first to 'confess', and a further 91 Jews to be arrested, leading to 18 being executed. Nevertheless, the rest were released despite their conviction, after monks and his brother Richard interceded.[55]

One example of Christian hostility towards Jews is the Accusation of Ritual Murder at Blois.[56] The story follows a Jewish man and a Christian servant watering their horses at the same bend in a river. The Jewish man accidentally scared the Christian's horse with the white corner of his undershirt and the servant rode away, upset about the frightened beast, and told his master he saw the Jew throw a child in the river. The Christian master, who hated Jews, took this opportunity and had the Jew unlawfully accused of murder. The Christians took the man, along with the Jews who had tried to free him, beating and torturing them in the effort that they would abandon their religion. To no avail, the Jews were burned alive.

In some cases, the authorities spoke against the accusations, for example Pope Innocent III wrote in 1199:

No Christian shall do the Jews any personal injury, except in executing the judgments of a judge, or deprive them of their possessions, or change the rights and privileges which they have been accustomed to have. During the celebration of their festivals, no one shall disturb them by beating them with clubs or by throwing stones at them. No one shall compel them to render any services except those which they have been accustomed to render. And to prevent the baseness and avarice of wicked men we forbid anyone to deface or damage their cemeteries or to extort money from them by threatening to exhume the bodies of their dead.[57]

The charge was circulated that they wished to dishonor the Host, which Roman Catholics believe is the body of Jesus Christ.

Black Death edit

When the Black Death raged through Europe (1346–53), the charge was given that the Jews had poisoned the wells.[58] The only court of appeal that regarded itself as their appointed protector, according to historical conceptions, was the "Holy Roman Emperor." The emperor, as legal successor to Titus, who had acquired the Jews for his special property through the destruction of the Temple in the year 70, claimed the rights of possession and protection over all the Jews in the former Roman empire.

Expulsions edit

In 1275, Edward I of England issued a decree forbidding Jews from lending money with interests, while allowing Jews to engage in craft, commerce and farming.[59] The Jews, who were driven out of England in 1290,[60] out of France in 1394, out of numerous districts of Germany, Italy, and the Balkan peninsula[citation needed] between 1200 and 1600, were scattered in all directions, and fled preferably to the new Slavic kingdoms, where for the time being other confessions were still tolerated. Most fled to Poland, as it had a reputation for religious tolerance unparalleled during this era. This religious tolerance may have also been a byproduct of the fact that Lithuania was the last country in Europe to become Christianized. Here they found a sure refuge under benevolent rulers and acquired a certain prosperity, in the enjoyment of which the study of the Talmud was followed with renewed vigor. Together with their faith, they took with them the German language and customs, which they then cultivated in a Slavic environment with unexampled faithfulness for centuries.

Spain edit

As in Slavic countries, so also under Muslim rule, the persecuted Jews often found a humane reception, especially from the 8th century onward on the Iberian peninsula. But even as early as the 13th century the Arabs could no longer offer a real resistance to the advancing force of Christian kings; and with the fall of political power Arabic culture declined, after having been transmitted to the Occident at about the same period, chiefly through the Jews in the north of Spain and in the south of France. At that time there was no field of learning the Spanish Jews did not cultivate. They studied the secular sciences with the same zeal as the Bible and Talmud.

But the growing influence of the Church gradually crowded them out of this advantageous position. At first, the attempt was made to win them to Christianity through writings and religious disputations; and when these attempts failed they were ever more and more restricted in the exercise of their civil rights. Soon they were obliged to live in separate quarters of the cities and to wear humiliating badges on their clothing. Thereby they were made a prey to the scorn and hatred of their fellow citizens. In 1391, when a fanatical mob killed four thousand Jews in Seville alone, many in their fright sought refuge in baptism. And although they often continued to observe in secret the laws of their fathers the Inquisition soon rooted out these pretended Christians or Marranos. Thousands were thrown into prison, tortured, and burned, until a project was formed to sweep all Spain clean of unbelievers. The plan matured when in 1492 the last Moorish fortress fell into the hands of the Christians. Queen Isabella of Spain issued an edict banishing all Jews from Spain for acts of, ‘a serious a detestable crime,’ a reference to the purported ritual murder of the infant Christopher of La Guardia, which was tried in court in 1491, and who was later made into a Saint. Many of the Jews fled to the Balkan peninsula, where a few decades before Ottoman Turks had won a victory over the Cross. Sultan Bayazid II of the Ottoman Empire, learning about the expulsion of Jews from Spain, dispatched the Ottoman Navy to bring the Jews safely to Ottoman lands, mainly to the cities of Salonica (currently in Greece) and Smyrna (currently in Turkey). Judeo-Spanish also known as Ladino (a form of medieval Spanish influenced by Hebrew) was widely spoken amongst some of the Jewish communities in Europe since the 15th century.[61]

Renaissance edit

Italy edit

Italian dukes in the Renaissance era accorded protections to resident Jewish communities for a range of political or economic reasons. However, the local authorities rigorously attempted to impose Jewish badges. Franciscan friars exerted pressure on the dukes to enforce the wearing of yellow badges by Jews which the dukes resisted.[62] Taxation records reveal a great quantity of Jewish contribution to the duchy's finances. The Jewish tax contribution in the state budget was 0.2% in 1460. By 1480 this had increased to 1%. In 1482, 6% of the extraordinary tax came from Jewish communities. This evidence indicates the wealth of the Jewish population and also indicates a possible population boom.[63] However, Jews lost support from Ludovico Sforza on the eve of the Italian wars.[64]

Spain edit

There was no progress towards inter faith harmony in 15th century Spain.[65] Mark Meyerson notes the silence of 15th century records on the Jewish-Christian relations in Morvedre.[66] In that town Jews constituted a quarter of the urban population and had a significant contribution to the area's economy.[67] The Jewish situation varied across Spain. The Jewish quarter of Cervera was sacked by Catalan troops and they warned Jews in Tarrega of the same fate. These events set off the emigration of affluent converso households from Barcelona. The situation was less severe for Jews and conversos in Aragon. In the kingdom of Aragon the strong Jewish ties to the monarchy, in the form of political support, revenue supplies and assistance, ensured their relatively safer position.[68] The introduction of credit mechanisms by the Jews in Morvedre facilitated the Jewish revival in the region and granted the Jews dominance in the kingdom's credit markets.[69] The Jewish community as a whole generally functioned with economic success.[70] The Jewish economic activity was diversified not only in the kingdom of Valencia but also in the kingdom of Aragon. Jews continued lending sums to non-Jews and Jewish usury was no longer contested in public, and religious relations remained stable and unmarred by violent activity.[71]

France edit

Jews enjoyed a time of prosperity until the end of the 15th century in Provence. There were no significant legal distinctions between the citizenship rights of Jews and Christians under the statutes of Marseilles. Jews were officially given the same citizenship rights in Saint-Remy-de-Provence in 1345 and by 1467 in Tarascon.[72] Comtat Venaissin and Avignon, both being papal principalities, witnessed an era of peace for Jewish communities who were established there without expulsions being a part of their lives.[73] The Jews of Provence received official protection but this was because of Jewish usefulness for the royalty. This did not, however, preclude anti-Jewish incidences which precipitated voluntary Jewish departures.[74] Once Provence was annexed by the Kingdom of France in 1481, the flourishing Jewish residents found themselves expelled by 1498.[75]

Enlightenment edit

According to most scholars, the Middle Ages ended around 1500–1550, giving way to the Early Modern Era, c. 1550–1789. The Enlightenment appeared at the end of the Early Modern Era, and was characterized by a set of values and ideas that completely opposed the previous Medieval age. The Enlightened Monarch was an important product of the era; he or she strove to create a cultured, modern state populated by effective subjects, and often began the journey to this state by improving the living conditions of the poor and minorities, which included Jews in most countries. The monarchs tried to include their Jewish subjects in mainstream society, reducing restrictions and passing more general laws that applied to all, regardless of religion.[76]

A Jewish Enlightenment occurred alongside the broader European one, originally appearing at the end of the eighteenth century. Known as Haskalah, it would re-emerge in the 1820s and lasted for the better part of the century. A form of "critical rationalism"[76] inspired by the European Enlightenment, Haskalah focused on reform in two specific areas: stimulating an internal rebirth of culture, and better preparing and training Jews to exist in a christocentric world. It did not force its adherents to sacrifice one identity for the other, allowing them to simultaneously be Jewish and emulate their Gentile contemporaries. One of the most important effects of the Enlightenment was emancipation for Jews. Beginning in Napoleonic France after the Revolution-which was directly inspired by the Enlightenment-Jews received full rights and became equal citizens. This trend spread eastward across the continent, lasting until 1917, when Russian Jews were finally emancipated during the first Russian Revolution.[76]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Alexander Panayotou, 'Jews and Jewish Communities in the Balkans and the Aegean until the twelfth century,' in James K. Aitken, James Carleton Paget (eds.), The Jewish-Greek Tradition in Antiquity and the Byzantine Empire, Cambridge University Press, 2014 pp. 54–75, [64ff]
  2. ^ Peter Schäfer, Judeophobia: Attitudes Toward the Jews in the Ancient World, Harvard University Press 2009
  3. ^ Ben-Sasson, Haim Hillel; Ettinger, Samuel, editor. (1972) [1969]. Jewish society through the ages. Schocken Books. OCLC 581911264. {{cite book}}: |last= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ Yohanan Aharoni, The Jewish People: An Illustrated History, A&C Black 2006 p. 305.
  5. ^ Rutgers, Leonard (2000). The Jews in Late Ancient Rome: Evidence of Cultural Interaction in the Roman Diaspora. ISBN 9004119280. Retrieved 1 August 2018.
  6. ^ Bachrach, Bernard (1977). Early Medieval Jewish Policy in Western Europe. U of Minnesota Press. p. 11. ISBN 9780816608140. sisebut jew.
  7. ^ Bachrach, Bernard. Early Medieval Jewish Policy in Western Europe. pp. 9–16. ISBN 9781452909776.
  8. ^ Bachrach, Bernard. Early Medieval Jewish Policy in Western Europe. p. 26. ISBN 9781452909776.
  9. ^ Maristella Botticini , The chosen few: how education shaped Jewish history, 70–1492 , Princeton University Press, 2012, ISBN 978-0-691-14487-0, OCLC 761850778
  10. ^ "HHF Factpaper: Silkmaking and the Jews".
  11. ^ Werner J. Cahnman (2017). Jews and Gentiles: A Historical Sociology of Their Relations. Routledge.
  12. ^ Botticini and Eckstein, Maristella and Zvi (2012). The Chosen Few : How Education Shaped Jewish History, 70–1492. Princeton NJ: Princeton University Press. p. 49. ISBN 9780691144870.
  13. ^ Julie L. Mell (2017). The Myth of the Medieval Jewish Moneylender: Volume I. Springer.
  14. ^ Norman Roth (2014). Medieval Jewish Civilization: An Encyclopedia. Routledge.
  15. ^ Davies, William D.; Frankenstein, Louis (1984). The Cambridge History of Judaism. Cambridge University Press. p. 1042. ISBN 978-1-397-80521-8.
  16. ^ Lieu, Judith; North, John; Rajak, Tessa (2013). The Jews Among Pagans and Christians in the Roman Empire. Routledge. p. 117. ISBN 978-1-135-08188-1.
  17. ^ "Already during Roman times, Jews resided in Cologne". Archäologische Zone – Jüdisches Museum. Retrieved November 1, 2013.
  18. ^ Adrian, Johanna. . Frankfurt/Oder: Institut für angewandte Geschichte. Archived from the original on November 9, 2013. Retrieved November 10, 2013.
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on January 19, 2009.
  20. ^ "Medieval Source book Legislation Affecting the Jews from 300 to 800 CE". Retrieved February 1, 2008.
  21. ^ . Archived from the original on March 6, 2008.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  22. ^ Marcus, Ivan (2014). "Review of Anti-Judaism: The Western Tradition by David Nirenberg". Jewish History. 28 (2): 194. JSTOR 24709717.
  23. ^ Gay, Ruth (1994). The Jews of Germany: A Historical Portrait. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0300060522.
  24. ^ Ruth Langer, Cursing the Christians?: A History of the Birkat HaMinim, Oxford University Press, 2011 p. 73
  25. ^ "Granada". Jewish Encyclopedia. 1906. Retrieved August 12, 2012.
  26. ^ Sephardim by Rebecca Weiner.
  27. ^ Marcus, Ivan (2014). "Reviewed work: Anti-Judaism: The Western Tradition, David Nirenberg". Jewish History. 28 (2): 194. JSTOR 24709717.
  28. ^ Thurston, Herbert (1912). "History of Toleration" in The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 14. New York: Robert Appleton Company. Accessed 12 July 2013.
  29. ^ Champagnea and Boustan, Marie Thérèse and Ra‘anan S. (November 2011). "Walking in the Shadows of the Past: The Jewish Experience of Rome in the Twelfth Century". Medieval Encounters. 11: 464.
  30. ^ a b Joseph E. Katz (2001). "Continuous Jewish Presence in the Holy Land". EretzYisroel.Org. Retrieved August 12, 2012.
  31. ^ a b "Timeline for the History of Judaism - Medieval Period in the West". Jewish Virtual Library. Retrieved 9 November 2013.
  32. ^ "This Week in History: The Jews of Basel are burnt". Jpost. Retrieved 21 December 2013.
  33. ^ "The Black Death and the Jews 1348–1349 CE" (PDF). www.ffst.hr. Retrieved 21 December 2013.
  34. ^ "Martinez, Ferrand". Jewish Encyclopedia. Retrieved 21 December 2013.
  35. ^ . Archived from the original on 5 January 2012. Retrieved 21 December 2013.
  36. ^ Norman F. Cantor, The Last Knight: The Twilight of the Middle Ages and the Birth of the Modern Era, Free Press, 2004. ISBN 978-0-7432-2688-2, pp. 28–29
  37. ^ a b c Elukin, Jonathan (2007). Living Together Living Apart: Rethinking Jewish-Christian Relations in the Middle Ages. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
  38. ^ a b Jonathan M. Elukin, Living Together, Living Apart: Rethinking Jewish-Christian Relations in the Middle Ages (Princeton, NJ: Princeton UP, 2007), 76–77.
  39. ^ Elukin, Living Together, Living Apart, p. 78.
  40. ^ Elukin, Living Together, Living Apart, p. 80.
  41. ^ a b Elukin, Jonathan (2007). Living Together, Living Apart: Rethinking Jewish-Christian Relations in the Middle Ages. Princeton: Princeton University Press. p. 81. ISBN 9780691114873.
  42. ^ Abraham Malamat (1976). A History of the Jewish People. Harvard University Press. pp. 412–. ISBN 978-0-674-39731-6.
  43. ^ Elukin, Jonathan (2007). Living Together, Living Apart: Rethinking Jewish-Christian Relations in the Middle Ages. Princeton: Princeton University Press. p. 82. ISBN 9780691114873.
  44. ^ Elukin. Living Together, Living Apart. p. 82.
  45. ^ a b c Elukin. Living Together, Living Apart. p. 84.
  46. ^ a b c Elukin. Living Together, Living Apart. p. 87.
  47. ^ a b c d Elukin. Living Together, Living Apart. p. 86.
  48. ^ a b c d e f Biale, David; Ivan G. Marcus (2006). "A Jewish-Christian Symbiosis: The Culture of Early Ashkenaz". Cultures of the Jews (1st ed.). New York: Schocken Books. ISBN 9780805212013.
  49. ^ Elukin. Living Together, Living Apart. p. 85.
  50. ^ "Medieval Sourcebook: Royal Grants to the Jewish Community of Barcelona, 1241–1271". Internet History Sourcebook Project. fordham.edu. November 1998. Retrieved 2 May 2016.
  51. ^ Lasker, Daniel J. (2007). Eyffinger, Shalem (ed.). "Living Together, Living Apart: Rethinking Jewish-Christian Relations in the Middle Ages". Hebraic Politics Studies. Shalem Press. 2 (4): 474.
  52. ^ a b Lasker, Daniel J. (2007). Eyffinger, Shalem (ed.). "Living Together, Living Apart: Rethinking Jewish-Christian Relations in the Middle Ages". Hebraic Politics Studies. Shalem Press. 2 (4): 477.
  53. ^ Lasker, Daniel J. (2007). Eyffinger, Shalem (ed.). "Living Together, Living Apart: Rethinking Jewish-Christian Relations in the Middle Ages". Hebraic Politics Studies. Shalem Press. 2 (4): 475.
  54. ^ Lasker, Daniel J. (2007). Eyffinger, Shalem (ed.). "Living Together, Living Apart: Rethinking Jewish-Christian Relations in the Middle Ages". Hebraic Politics Studies. Shalem Press. 2 (4): 478.
  55. ^ Hillaby, Joe; Hillaby (2013). The Palgrave Dictionary of Medieval Anglo-Jewish History. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 468. ISBN 978-0230278165.; "The Knight's Tale of Young Hugh of Lincoln", Gavin I. Langmuir, Speculum, Vol. 47, No. 3 (July 1972), pp. 459–482.
  56. ^ Hallo, William. Heritage: Civilization and the Jews. New York: Praeger. pp. 134–37.
  57. ^ Thatcher, Oliver J.; Edgar Holmes McNeal (1905). A Source Book for Medieval History. New York: Scribner's. pp. 212–213.
  58. ^ Jean de Venette, prior of a Carmelite convent in Paris in the 14th century, wrote:

    As a result of this theory of infected water and air as the source of the plague the Jews were suddenly and violently charged with infecting wells and water and corrupting the air. The whole world rose up against them cruelly on this account. In Germany and other parts of the world where Jews lived, they were massacred and slaughtered by Christians, and many thousands were burned everywhere, indiscriminately.

    Newhall, Richard A.; Jean Birdsall (1953). The Chronicle of Jean de Venette. New York: Columbia University Press. pp. 48–51.
  59. ^ Botticini and Eckstein, Maristella and Zvi (2012). The Chosen Few : How Education Shaped Jewish History, 70–1492. Princeton NJ: Princeton University Press. p. 56. ISBN 9781400842483.
  60. ^ Robin R. Mundill (2002). England's Jewish Solution: Experiment and Expulsion, 1262-1290. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-52026-3.
  61. ^ Rozovsky, Lorne. "Will Ladino Rise Again?". Chabad.org. Retrieved 7 December 2013.
  62. ^ Flora Cassen (2017). Marking the Jews in Renaissance Italy: Politics, Religion, and the Power of Symbols. Cambridge University Press. p. 50. ISBN 978-1-316-81302-7. For a variety of reasons (usually financial and political) Italian dukes often protected the Jews, while local authorities, often resistant to ducal power, regularly tried to impose the Jewish badge. Franciscan friars, who enjoyed great popularity at the time, especially with impoverished populations, pressured the dukes and local authorities to make the Jews wear a yellow badge. Throughout the 15th century, however, Jews, by means of frequent and increasing payments, could usually rely on the Visconti and Sforzas to safeguard them against increasingly frequent and loud calls for them to be forced to wear a yellow badge.
  63. ^ Flora Cassen (2017). Marking the Jews in Renaissance Italy: Politics, Religion, and the Power of Symbols. Cambridge University Press. p. 50. ISBN 978-1-316-81302-7. Taxation records, evidencing Jewish contribution to the duchy's finances, suggest that Jewish population was growing or becoming wealthier, or both. In 1460 the Jews' tax contribution accounted for 0.2% of the state's budget; by 1480 it was 1%. In addition, in 1482 the Jews paid 6% of the state's extraordinary revenue.
  64. ^ Flora Cassen (2017). Marking the Jews in Renaissance Italy: Politics, Religion, and the Power of Symbols. Cambridge University Press. p. 50. ISBN 978-1-316-81302-7. But Ludovico Sforza (Il Moro), duke from 1481 to 1499, on the eve of the Italian Wars, withdrew his support for the Jews.
  65. ^ Mark D. Meyerson (2010). A Jewish Renaissance in Fifteenth-Century Spain. Princeton University Press. p. 240. ISBN 978-0-691-14659-1. Indeed, it was not. Neither Jew nor Christian ventured any enlightened opinions about the religion of the other; neither made any astonishing gestures of goodwill toward the other.
  66. ^ Mark D. Meyerson (2010). A Jewish Renaissance in Fifteenth-Century Spain. Princeton University Press. p. 240. ISBN 978-0-691-14659-1. The silence of the records concerning fifteenth century Morvedre is just as, if not more, striking than anything that was said or done. These records tell us nothing about vicious anti-Judaism, nothing about frequent or systematic persecution of the Jewish community, nothing about Christian mob violence against Jews or even common interpersonal; violence between individual Christians and Jews. The records, in other words, tell us nothing about the kinds of behavior we might expect to find during the decades preceding the expulsion.
  67. ^ Mark D. Meyerson (2010). A Jewish Renaissance in Fifteenth-Century Spain. Princeton University Press. p. 240. ISBN 978-0-691-14659-1. In regard to the history of Morvodre – or Sagunto – the demographic and economic facts speak eloquently: the Jews comprised more than one-quarter of the town's population, municipality and aljama were fiscally interdependent; the Jews had an integral role in the local and regional economy.
  68. ^ Mark D. Meyerson (2010). A Jewish Renaissance in Fifteenth-Century Spain. Princeton University Press. p. 244. ISBN 978-0-691-14659-1. Catalan troops sacked the Jewish quarter of Cervera and threatened to do the same in Tarrega. Fearing rebel aggression, affluent converso families fled from Barcelona. In the kingdom of Aragon Jews and conversos encountered fewer difficulties of this sort, in part because Aragonese opposition to the Trastamaras was less fierce...In fact, Zaragoza, the capital and home of the largest Jewish community, offered Juan II much assistance during the Catalan civil war. Valencians, as has been noted, cooperated for the most part with Alfonso IV and Juan II, and provided both kings with substantial revenue. The Jews and conversos of the kingdom were therefore not put in a dangerous situation by virtue of their ties to the monarchy.
  69. ^ Mark D. Meyerson (2010). A Jewish Renaissance in Fifteenth-Century Spain. Princeton University Press. p. 244. ISBN 978-0-691-14659-1. ...the Jews' revival in Morvedre was facilitated and their relations with Christians ameliorated by a third key factor. This was the introduction of new credit mechanisms – the censal and violari – and the rise of the purchasers of these annuities, the censalistas, to a position of dominance in the kingdom's credit markets, a position the Jews had occupied until the later fourteenth century.
  70. ^ Mark D. Meyerson (2010). A Jewish Renaissance in Fifteenth-Century Spain. Princeton University Press. p. 244. ISBN 978-0-691-14659-1. Well-to-do Jews diversified their investments and the Jewish community as a whole engaged in a wider range of economic activities, often, as has been seen, with considerable success. Even though Jews still loaned small amounts to farmers and artisans, Jewish usury-now illegal but in fact disguised-ceased to be a subject about which bishops and friars fulminated and Christian debtors protested.
  71. ^ Mark D. Meyerson (2010). A Jewish Renaissance in Fifteenth-Century Spain. Princeton University Press. pp. 244–245. ISBN 978-0-691-14659-1. Jewish usury, a perennial source of tension between Christian and Jew in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, was no longer one in the kingdom of Valencia in the fifteenth century. The kingdom of Aragon saw similar developments. There too municipalities and Jewish aljamas, such as those of Zaragoza and Huesca, were in debt to censalistas. There too Jewish economic activity was highly diversified. There too relations between Christians and Jews were stable, unmarked by outbreaks of violence. There too, although Jews still loaned small sums to Christians and Muslims, "Jewish usury" ceased to be a major topic of public discussion.
  72. ^ Esther Benbassa (2001). The Jews of France: A History from Antiquity to the Present. Princeton University Press. pp. 25–. ISBN 1-4008-2314-5. In Provence, too, until the end of the fifteenth century, the Jews enjoyed relatively favorable conditions. Whereas, in the kingdom, a policy of Jewish exclusion was pursued under Saint Louis, the statutes of Marseilles enacted in 1257 made no juridical distinction between them and Christians, both coming under the category of 'citizen' (Civis Massilie). And by the end of the fifteenth century, the legal condition of the Jews, despite a whole series of arrangements signaling their inferiority, was still not fundamentally different there than that of their fellow Christian citizens. They were recognised to have the same status in Saint-Remy-de-Provence in 1345, and in Tarascon in 1467.
  73. ^ Esther Benbassa (2001). The Jews of France: A History from Antiquity to the Present. Princeton University Press. pp. 25–. ISBN 1-4008-2314-5. A relative peace reigned also in the Comtat Venaissin and in Avignon for the Jewish communities that had reestablished themselves there. These regions being papal possessions (from 1274 and 1348, respectively), expulsion was not the order of the day.
  74. ^ Esther Benbassa (2001). The Jews of France: A History from Antiquity to the Present. Princeton University Press. pp. 25–. ISBN 1-4008-2314-5. During the reign of the 'good king Rene' d'Ajou, between 1434 and 1480, the Jews of Provence benefited from protection, dictated by royal decisions in domestic and foreign policy. In this context, once again, the Jews' usefulness served the sovereign's purposes. Nonetheless, anti-Jewish disturbances were common throughout the fifteenth century, followed by movements of voluntary exodus.
  75. ^ Esther Benbassa (2001). The Jews of France: A History from Antiquity to the Present. Princeton University Press. pp. 25–. ISBN 1-4008-2314-5. Provence, which had formerly brought together flourishing Jewish communities, was annexed to the kingdom of France in 1481. The expulsion of the Jews was finally announced in 1498.
  76. ^ a b c Dubin, Lois C. (2005). Modern Judaism: An Oxford Guide. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 30, 31, 33, 37.

  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainRichard Gottheil, M. Brann and Joseph Jacobs (1901–1906). "Europe". In Singer, Isidore; et al. (eds.). The Jewish Encyclopedia. New York: Funk & Wagnalls.

External links edit

  • Church And The Jews In The Middle Ages
  • Medieval Jewish History - Jews living under Islamic and Christian rule

history, european, jews, middle, ages, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, provide, balanced, geographical, coverage, region, question, pleas. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article may not provide balanced geographical coverage on the region in question Please improve this article or discuss the issue on the talk page July 2016 This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is Citations needed to remove tag spam Please help improve this article if you can July 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message The neutrality of this article is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met July 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message History of European Jews in the Middle Ages covers Jewish history in the period from the 5th to the 15th century During the course of this period the Jewish population gradually started shifting from the Levant to Europe primarily Central Europe dominated by the Holy Roman Empire or Southern Europe dominated by the Iberian kingdoms As with Christianity the Middle Ages were the period when Judaism became mostly insignificant in the Middle East and a front of mind part of Europe Jewish tradition traces the origins of the Jews to the 12 Israelite tribes however most Jewish traditions state that modern Jews descend from Judah Benjamin and Levi As early as the Babylonian exile Jews through exile under military constraint or otherwise came to live in many other Middle Eastern countries and later formed communities throughout the eastern Mediterranean lands constituting collectively a Jewish diaspora Their presence is attested in Greece from the fourth century BCE onwards in places as varied as Chios Aegina Attica and Rhodes 1 and in Italy as early as the 2nd century BCE 2 After the Siege of Jerusalem 70 CE hundreds of thousands of Jews were taken as slaves to Rome where they later immigrated to other European lands The Jews who immigrated to Iberia and their descendants comprise the Sephardic Jews while those who immigrated to the German Rhineland and France comprise the Ashkenazi Jews 3 A significant depletion in their numbers in Western Europe began to take place with the rise of the Crusades which brought about many pogroms and successive expulsion orders in England 1290 France 14th century and Spain 1492 With the end of the medieval age a similar phenomenon was to repeat itself in the Italian peninsula and throughout most German towns and principalities in German speaking lands in the sixteenth century As a result many Jews migrated to Eastern Europe with large Yiddish speaking populations rising there over these same centuries By the 17th century a trickle back process began with reverse migration back to central and western Europe following pogroms in Ukraine 1648 1649 4 Contents 1 From the fall of Rome to the Late Middle Ages 500 1500 1 1 Fall of Rome 1 2 Visigoth Spain 1 3 Activities 1 4 Germany 1 5 Church laws in the Early Middle Ages 1 6 Sicut Judaeis 1 7 Later immigration to Germany 1 8 The Crusades 1 8 1 Protection attempts by Christians during the First Crusade 1 9 Jewish Christian relations 1 10 Accusations of ritual murder blood libel and host desecration 1 11 Black Death 1 12 Expulsions 1 12 1 Spain 2 Renaissance 2 1 Italy 2 2 Spain 2 3 France 3 Enlightenment 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksFrom the fall of Rome to the Late Middle Ages 500 1500 editFall of Rome edit The majority of archaeological and epigraphical evidence of the Jews in Late Ancient Rome lies in funerary sites making it difficult to uncover a historical picture of their daily lives or their interactions with outsiders 5 After the decline of the Roman Empire the Visigoths controlled large portions of former Roman territory including southwestern Gaul until 507 and much of the Iberian peninsula until 711 At the start Jewish communities generally flourished under Visigothic rule in both Gaul and Spain 6 Visigoth Spain edit Main article History of the Jews in Spain In 506 Alaric II decreed that Jews were to be considered Roman citizens and were to live under Roman law They were given freedom to practice their religion although efforts to convert pagans and Christians to Judaism were to be curtailed Alaric also decreed that the judicial autonomy of the Jewish communities was to be respected After Sisebut took the Visigothic throne in 612 these privileges were revoked and suppression of the Jewish religion became policy resulting in attempted forced conversion There was a brief respite in 640 when Chindasuinth usurped the throne and pursued a pro Jewish policy His son Recceswinth to the contrary denounced Jews as polluting the soil of Spain in 653 and enacted a new code meant to make it impossible for Jews to remain in Spain These laws proved to be unpopular and were resisted by both Jews and Christians alike 7 Despite these persecutions Jews were able to help Muslim invaders capture Spain ending Visigothic rule 8 Activities edit The first historical testimonies on the activities of the Jews show that most were engaged in agriculture and a minority were engaged in trade as well as in handicrafts 9 In the South particularly in south Italy and Greece the Jewish communities had almost a monopoly of dyeing and silk weaving 10 Some were involved in qualified services such as interpreters translators and medical practitioners 11 In the high middle ages many European Jews were specialized as merchants money lenders or artisans as they were largely excluded from crafts guilds and barred from owning land 12 In contrast Julie L Mell insists on the fact that much of the Jewish population was left at the lower end of the urban economic scale 13 European Jews were involved in the intellectual and cultural spheres of Medieval society Jews contributed to medicine astrology mathematics as well as to the arts literature and music 14 Germany edit Main article History of the Jews in Germany Jewish migration from Roman Italy is considered the most likely source of the first Jews within German territory While the date of the first settlement of Jews in the regions which the Romans called Germania Superior Germania Inferior and Magna Germania is not known the first authentic documents relating to a large and well organized Jewish community in these regions date from 321 15 16 17 18 and refers to Cologne on the Rhine 19 20 21 These documents stated that Jews could be called to the Curia and owed taxes to Rome and that Jewish religious leaders were exempt from curial service signalling that a uniquely Jewish community prosperous enough to be taxed had existed in Cologne for some time During the Carolingian period Jews had a vital function as importers of goods from the East and their laws and customs were generally tolerated although they were not allowed to proselytize to Christians It was during this peaceful time that Jews from other communities emigrated to Francia in hopes of better treatment notably members of the Persian House of Exilarchs such as Isaac the Jew and Makhir of Narbonne came to Francia and with them brought a large community of Persian Jews who later assimilated to European customs However these peaceful relations would end with the beginning of the First Crusade and thousands of Jews in communities all along the Rhine were attacked and killed under the presumption that if they were going to attack enemies of the Christ in Jerusalem they should attack Christ s enemies around them in Germany 22 ushering in a lasting antisemitism that included pogroms blood libel and being blamed as the cause of catastrophes like the Black Death and the Mongol invasion of Europe Despite those difficulties German Jews continued to practice refine and evolve their religious and social customs including the development of the Yiddish language and an identity as Ashkenazi Jews They eventually established a uniquely Jewish occupation working as Court Jews within the Holy Roman Empire 23 Church laws in the Early Middle Ages edit Conversions of Jews to Christianity whether forced or voluntary during the medieval period were an integral part of the life of Jewish communities in the medieval period The pressures to convert other than compulsory baptism to save one s life could be theological economic and intellectual Voluntary conversion by such renegades meshummadim was motivated by a number of facts a change of belief could account for the conversion as could the desire to marry a Christian or to escape from the restrictions on life as a Jew or to resecure a livelihood or home Such conversions proved particularly devastating for the English and Spanish Jewish communities 24 By the 10th century most of Europe was under the rule of Christian monarchs who made Christianity the official religion of their realms In the seriously diminished Roman or Byzantine Empire Christianity had been the state church since the 380 Edict of Thessalonica A privileged niche for Jews in the new order nonetheless remained The Church forbade Christians from charging interest to fellow Christians therefore the only source of loans were non Christians such as Jews While this status did not always lead to peaceful conditions for the Jewish people they were the most compatible citation needed non Christians for the position due to their shared devotion to the same Abrahamic God that the Christians worshiped While many Jews rose to prominence in these times Judaism was mostly practiced in private to avoid persecution The descendants of the survivors of this period the Ashkenazi Jews still commemorate some of the more memorable tragedies of this period which in their liturgy Their fate in each particular country depended on the changing political conditions In Italy see History of the Jews in Italy they experienced difficult days during the wars waged by the Heruli Rugii Ostrogoths and Lombards citation needed The severe laws of the Roman emperors were in general more mildly administered than elsewhere citation needed the Arian confession of which the Germanic conquerors of Italy were adherents was characterized by its tolerance In other parts of western Europe Jews who wished to remain true to the faith of their fathers were protected by the Church itself from compulsory conversion There was no change in this policy even later when the Pope called for the support of the Carolingians in protecting his ideal kingdom with their temporal power Charlemagne moreover was glad to use the Church for the purpose of welding together the loosely connected elements of his kingdom when he transformed part of the old Roman empire into a new Christian one and united under the imperial crown all the German races at that time Years after his death in 843 his empire fell apart and the rulers of Italy France and Germany were more attentive to the Church s desires in the making of laws dealing with the Jews In the wake of a narrow military defeat over Muslim forces Leo III of Constantinople decided his nation s weakness lay in its heterogeneous population and began the forcible conversion of the Jews as well as the New Christians However some were able to secretly continue their Jewish practices In 1040 Rashi was born and in the wake of the Norman conquest of England Jews left Normandy to settle in London and other cities such as York Norwich Oxford Bristol and Lincoln where Pope Gregory VII prohibited Jews from holding offices in Christendom Iban Iashufin the King of the Almoravides captured Granada 25 and destroyed the Jewish community as the survivors fled to Toledo 26 In 1095 Henry IV of Germany granted the Jews favorable conditions and issued a charter to the Jews and a decree against forced baptism In 1171 after the birth of Rambam Jews were accused of committing ritual murder and blood libel in the town of Blois The adult Jews of the city were arrested and most were executed after refusing to convert In 1210 a group of 300 French and English rabbis made aliyah and settled in Israel During the Black Death the clerics accused Jews of poisoning the wells of Europe to kill all the Christians 27 Sicut Judaeis edit Main article Sicut Judaeis Sicut Judaeis the Constitution for the Jews was the official position of the papacy regarding Jews throughout the Middle Ages and later The first bull was issued in about 1120 by Calixtus II intended to protect Jews who were suffering during the First Crusade and was reaffirmed by many popes even until the 15th century The bill forbade besides other things Christians from forcing Jews to convert or to harm them or to take their property or to disturb the celebration of their festivals or to interfere with their cemeteries on pain of excommunication 28 Although the Jews and Christians of Rome were organized into distinct communities the boundaries of which were not only reinforced on a daily basis but were regularly performed on ceremonial occasions such as the papal adventus Jews and Christians experienced unusually robust cultural and social interactions especially as the Jews increasingly aligned themselves with the protective power of the papacy 29 However despite the Church official position expressed in the Sicut Judaeis the Church felt free to impose other restrictions and disabilities on Jews not inconsistent with the bull For example the Fourth Lateran Council in 1215 decreed that Jews be differentiated from others by their type of clothing or marking to avoid intercourse between Jews and Christians Jews were sometimes required to wear a yellow badge or a pointed hat Christian theologians began calling for the slavery of all Jews In 1229 King Henry III of England forced Jews to pay half the value of their property in taxes following burning of the Talmud in Paris and the Tartars capture of Jerusalem 30 During the Fatimid period many Jewish officials served in the regime 30 King Henry III of England ordered Jewish worship in synagogue to be held quietly so that Christians passing by would not have to hear it giving an order that Jews may not employ Christian nurses or maids nor may any Jew prevent another from converting to Christianity A few years later French King Louis IX expelled the Jews from France ending the Tosaphists period Most Jews went to Germany and further east 31 Later immigration to Germany edit In 1267 the Vienna city council forced Jews to wear the Jewish hat in addition to the yellow badge Later in the century a blood libel in Munich resulted in the deaths of 68 Jews and an additional 180 Jews were burned alive at the synagogue following another mob in Oberwesel Germany In 1290 owing to political pressure English King Edward I expelled all Jews from England They were only allowed to take what they could carry and most went to France paying for their passage only to be robbed and cast overboard by the ship captains citation needed Philip IV of France ordered all Jews expelled from France with their property to be sold at public auction and some 125 000 Jews were forced to leave Similar to accusations made during the Black Plague Jews were accused of encouraging lepers to poison Christian wells in France An estimated five thousand Jews were killed before the king Philip the Tall admitted the Jews were innocent Then Charles IV expelled all French Jews without the one year period he had promised them as much of Europe blamed the Black Plague on the Jews and tortured them so they would confess that they poisoned the wells Despite the pleas of innocence of Pope Clement VI the accusations resulted in the destruction of over 60 large and 150 small Jewish communities 31 In 1348 hundreds of Jews were burned and many were baptized in Basel 32 33 The city s Christian residents converted the synagogue into a church and destroyed the Jewish cemetery there Pope Clement VI issued an edict repudiating the libel against Jews saying that they too were suffering from the Plague In 1385 German Emperor Wenceslaus arrested Jews living in the Swabian League a group of free cities in Germany and confiscated their books Later he expelled the Jews of Strassburg after a community debate In 1391 Ferrand Martinez archdeacon of Ecija began a campaign against Spanish Jewry killing over 10 000 and destroying the Jewish quarter in Barcelona 34 The campaign quickly spread throughout Spain except for Granada and destroyed Jewish communities in Valencia and Palma De Majorca King Pedro I ordered Spain not to harm the remaining Jews and that synagogues not be converted into churches He then announced his compliance with the Bull of Pope Boniface IX protecting Jews from baptism He extended this edict to Spanish Jewish refugees Benedict XIII banned the study of the Talmud in any form as institutions forced Christian sermons and tried to restrict Jewish life completely and a few years later Pope Martin V favorably reinstated old privileges of the Jews 35 After more Jews were expelled from France some remained in Provence until 1500 In 1422 Pope Martin V issued a bull reminding Christians that Christianity was derived from Judaism and warned the Friars not to incite against the Jews but the Bull was withdrawn the following year By the end of the 15th century the Inquisition was established in Spain Around 1500 Jews found relative security and a renewal of prosperity in present day Poland 36 The Crusades edit Main article History of the Jews and the Crusades The trials the Jews periodically endured in the various Christian West kingdoms echoed the catastrophes that occurred during Crusades In the First Crusade 1096 flourishing communities on the Rhine and the Danube were utterly destroyed Furthermore there were also attacks on the Jews that lived in cities along the Rhine Prior to these attacks many Jews were seen as integral members of society despite religious differences Many Jews worked in the money lending trade Their services allowed for societies to function financially In one case Jewish moneylenders were responsible for financially maintaining a monastery 37 Without these loans the monastery would have been unable to survive However this fiscal responsibility that the Jews carried might have caused tensions amongst the middle and upper class These sects of society would not have approved of the power that the Jewish communities held At this point there were no strictly Jewish communities Jews were not concentrated in one area rather their presence was spread over a larger geographical region Oftentimes a few families lived immersed in a predominantly Christian settlement The Jewish families were comfortable in this setting and functioned successfully neutrality is disputed In some circumstances Christians both accepted and welcomed the Jews When violence against the Jewish people began to occur some Christians attempted to protect their fellow neighbors In the town of Cologne Jews fled to the homes of their Christian neighbors where they were given shelter 37 Christians discussed the topic of conversion with the Jews There existed a theory that if the Jews were to convert to Christianity then they would no longer be the target of such violence There were discussions regarding conversion to Christianity Religious leaders including Bishops and Archbishops alike tried to spare the Jews from violence One Archbishop from Mainz went so far as to offer monetary bribes to protect Jewish families 37 These Jews did not want relief from the exile that occurred hundreds of years prior moreover they saw the towns in which they had immigrated to as their homes They were well received members of the community In the Second Crusade 1147 the Jews in France suffered especially under Louis VII Philip Augustus treated them with exceptional severity In his days the Third Crusade took place 1188 and the preparations for it proved to be momentous for the English Jews After being the victims of increasing oppression Jews were banished from England in 1290 and 365 years passed before they were allowed to settle again in the British Isles The Jews were also subjected to attacks by the Shepherds Crusades of 1251 and 1320 Protection attempts by Christians during the First Crusade edit During the First Crusade of 1096 there are documented accounts of Christian attempts to protect Jews from their violent attackers The first of such attempts was carried out by the archbishop of Mainz located in the Rhineland of Germany in response to local Jews who had organized a bribe in return for the archbishop s protection 38 Although the archbishop at first accepted the bribe community leaders persuaded him to protect the Jews money instead of taking it while still offering them refuge in his quarters 38 Ultimately the archbishop s rescue attempt was unsuccessful Crusaders aided by some townspeople eventually stormed the archbishop s chamber and slaughtered the Jews hiding there 39 In another instance the bishop of Trier offered to keep Jews safe from Crusaders in his palace however local intimidation eventually forced him to abandon those whom he had previously aided Because the bishop had no ancestry or allies in Trier he felt that he could not muster the political power needed to carry out a successful resistance without the support of the townspeople Instead he offered the Jews an ultimatum convert to Christianity or leave the palace When doing so he remarked You cannot be saved Your God does not wish to save you now as he did in earlier days 40 In Cologne Jews were protected by local gentiles after violence had broken out at the beginning of Shavuot a Jewish holiday During the two days of Shavuot one Jewish woman was killed by Crusaders while venturing to the safety of a Christian neighbor s home where her husband was waiting for her However the vast majority of Jews in Cologne survived Shavuot because local Christians had reached out and offered their homes as a means of asylum from the Crusaders 41 Jewish Christian relations edit The relations of Jews and Christians were fraught with tensions about the death of Jesus and the Christian perception of Jewish obstinacy in refusing to accept the only faith the Christians knew in the world The pressure on Jews to accept Christianity was intense 42 Recent years have seen a debate among historians on the nature of Jewish Christian relations in medieval Europe Traditionally historians focused on the trials Jews had to endure in this period Christian violence towards Jews was rife as were ritual murder accusations expulsions and extortion However recently historians have begun to show evidence of other relationships between Jews and Christians suggesting Jews were more embedded into Christian society than was previously thought Jonathan Elukin is one historian who thinks in this vein as elucidated in his book Living Together Living Apart He shows that during the Crusades some Jews were hidden and protected from being attacked by Christians Some Jews worked in Christian villages There were also several cases of conversion to Judaism as well as interfaith marriages 43 One such case was Jacob ben Sullam a Christian looking to become a part of Jewish society He chose to slaughter himself of his Christian identity in the hope of being accepted as a Jew in the Jewish community 44 As Christians sought conversion to Judaism a number of Jews similarly wanted to convert to Christianity For example Herman a Jew who adopted Christianity to the degree that his family worried that he would reject his Jewish heritage completely Herman s conversion startled the rabbis and made them fear losing other Jews to Christianity 45 The close bonds between Jewish and Christian neighbors led to Jewish communities thriving in some Christian cities 45 Jews experienced economic security and prosperity in their communities even while enduring constant threats of violence 46 Though strict constraints were placed on Jews in the thirteenth century by the French monarchy Jews continued to experience a stable living situation 47 Although the French monarchy prohibited the creation of Jewish religious centers friendly relations with Christians enabled them to build a synagogue in Beziers in 1278 46 After being expelled from certain areas in Europe Jews regularly returned to their old places of residence if they had previously experienced a prosperous life there 47 Another such historian is Ivan Marcus The section of his book Cultures of the Jews Jewish Christian Symbiosis deals with the relationship between Christians and Ashkenazi Jews Marcus claims that the time is written off as a time of intolerance against Jews living in Europe 48 450 For Marcus times of persecution were rarities and few and far between 48 The two communities lived amongst each other and interacted socially on an everyday basis 48 They interacted at such a personal level both Christian and Jewish leaders thought that the other group would heavily influence their respective faiths 48 450 451 When persecution did occur however it was only the more drastic measures that stopped the close interactions between the two groups 48 451 Had the intense violence described in other sources been the standard for living condition of the Askkenazi Jews then they would not have survived the era let alone their culture which is the roots for many Jews today 48 452 During times of persecution against the Jews chronicles show that Christian friends provided some of them aid and shelter A chronicler tells a story of a Jewish woman who is given food and shelter for two days from a gentile acquaintance during a time of violence against the Jews during Shavuot 41 This gentile acquaintance is believed to be Christian Also the chronicles show that some Christians converted to Judaism during these times Some converts even sacrificed themselves in order to show their loyalty to the Jewish community 45 In England many Jews worked and lived in small mostly Christian towns 49 Historians interpret this as Jews feeling comfortable living and working in places surrounded by Christians Another example some historians use to show Jewish attachment to their place in Western Christendom is the Jewish expulsion in France After they were expelled in 1182 they returned in 1198 47 Through some of the Christian world Jews enjoyed privileges at the hands of nobles and even kings that were almost equal to the local Christians For example in the Crown of Aragon in 1241 King James of Aragon issued a decree that the Jewish community of Barcelona would be given the right to elect members of the Jewish community to police itself and investigate Jewish criminals and crimes within the Jewish community Once the elected police force caught a criminal they were given the right to impose fines paid to the crown not the Jewish community banish them from the Jewish quarter or even banish them entirely from the city of Barcelona Further these elected members were given the authority to judge cases between Jews in a court of law In 1271 King James issued a similar decree with a sense of increased urgency which suggests that things had become volatile among the Jewish community or that the perception of the Jewish community was overwhelmingly one of a state of chaos This second decree also increased the rights of the council to whatever punishments they deem to be convenient to the community including any punishments that they deemed fit 50 Even after multiple expulsions and persecutions some Jews still returned to their hometowns 47 Once they returned many prospered In spite of royal restrictions attempting to limit their success They built new synagogues 46 These examples are used by some historians to shine a light on a more positive relationship between the two religious groups These historians believe that these stories of aid neighborliness and prosperity are more notable and significant than previously recognized However some historians do not agree with this view of history Historian Daniel J Lasker does not see the relationship of Christians and Jews in the same light He contends that the expulsions Jews in Spain faced in 1492 were the product of the revolts seen a century earlier in 1391 51 Even though the relationship might have been positive it ended on a negative note 52 The expulsions of the Jews in various regions is that ending with a wide range of reasons behind them not just religion 53 The reason for the Jews returning to regions they were expelled from was not acceptance as to what happened but a sense of comfort and familiarity 52 While Lasker acknowledges that Jews and Christians as having some positive relationships he does not want to write off the tension of the area 54 Accusations of ritual murder blood libel and host desecration edit Main articles Blood libel against Jews and Host desecration Although the first known mention of blood libel is found in the writings of Apion 30 20 BCE to 45 or 48 CE who claimed that the Jews sacrificed Greeks in the Temple of Jerusalem no other mention is recorded until the 12th century when blood libels began to proliferate Jews were frequently accused of ritual murder and of using human blood especially the blood of Christian children to make matzah In many cases these blood libels led to the Catholic Church regarding the victims as martyrs The Catholic Church canonized children in over 20 such cases England seems to have counted for the first and most important examples of these The most influential and widely known of these is Little Saint Hugh of Lincoln d 1255 and written about in Chaucer s Canterbury Tales and Simon of Trent d 1475 It gained particular currency because of the intervention of Henry III of England who ordered the death of the Coping the first to confess and a further 91 Jews to be arrested leading to 18 being executed Nevertheless the rest were released despite their conviction after monks and his brother Richard interceded 55 One example of Christian hostility towards Jews is the Accusation of Ritual Murder at Blois 56 The story follows a Jewish man and a Christian servant watering their horses at the same bend in a river The Jewish man accidentally scared the Christian s horse with the white corner of his undershirt and the servant rode away upset about the frightened beast and told his master he saw the Jew throw a child in the river The Christian master who hated Jews took this opportunity and had the Jew unlawfully accused of murder The Christians took the man along with the Jews who had tried to free him beating and torturing them in the effort that they would abandon their religion To no avail the Jews were burned alive In some cases the authorities spoke against the accusations for example Pope Innocent III wrote in 1199 No Christian shall do the Jews any personal injury except in executing the judgments of a judge or deprive them of their possessions or change the rights and privileges which they have been accustomed to have During the celebration of their festivals no one shall disturb them by beating them with clubs or by throwing stones at them No one shall compel them to render any services except those which they have been accustomed to render And to prevent the baseness and avarice of wicked men we forbid anyone to deface or damage their cemeteries or to extort money from them by threatening to exhume the bodies of their dead 57 The charge was circulated that they wished to dishonor the Host which Roman Catholics believe is the body of Jesus Christ Black Death edit Main article Black Death Persecutions When the Black Death raged through Europe 1346 53 the charge was given that the Jews had poisoned the wells 58 The only court of appeal that regarded itself as their appointed protector according to historical conceptions was the Holy Roman Emperor The emperor as legal successor to Titus who had acquired the Jews for his special property through the destruction of the Temple in the year 70 claimed the rights of possession and protection over all the Jews in the former Roman empire Expulsions edit In 1275 Edward I of England issued a decree forbidding Jews from lending money with interests while allowing Jews to engage in craft commerce and farming 59 The Jews who were driven out of England in 1290 60 out of France in 1394 out of numerous districts of Germany Italy and the Balkan peninsula citation needed between 1200 and 1600 were scattered in all directions and fled preferably to the new Slavic kingdoms where for the time being other confessions were still tolerated Most fled to Poland as it had a reputation for religious tolerance unparalleled during this era This religious tolerance may have also been a byproduct of the fact that Lithuania was the last country in Europe to become Christianized Here they found a sure refuge under benevolent rulers and acquired a certain prosperity in the enjoyment of which the study of the Talmud was followed with renewed vigor Together with their faith they took with them the German language and customs which they then cultivated in a Slavic environment with unexampled faithfulness for centuries Spain edit Main article Alhambra Decree As in Slavic countries so also under Muslim rule the persecuted Jews often found a humane reception especially from the 8th century onward on the Iberian peninsula But even as early as the 13th century the Arabs could no longer offer a real resistance to the advancing force of Christian kings and with the fall of political power Arabic culture declined after having been transmitted to the Occident at about the same period chiefly through the Jews in the north of Spain and in the south of France At that time there was no field of learning the Spanish Jews did not cultivate They studied the secular sciences with the same zeal as the Bible and Talmud But the growing influence of the Church gradually crowded them out of this advantageous position At first the attempt was made to win them to Christianity through writings and religious disputations and when these attempts failed they were ever more and more restricted in the exercise of their civil rights Soon they were obliged to live in separate quarters of the cities and to wear humiliating badges on their clothing Thereby they were made a prey to the scorn and hatred of their fellow citizens In 1391 when a fanatical mob killed four thousand Jews in Seville alone many in their fright sought refuge in baptism And although they often continued to observe in secret the laws of their fathers the Inquisition soon rooted out these pretended Christians or Marranos Thousands were thrown into prison tortured and burned until a project was formed to sweep all Spain clean of unbelievers The plan matured when in 1492 the last Moorish fortress fell into the hands of the Christians Queen Isabella of Spain issued an edict banishing all Jews from Spain for acts of a serious a detestable crime a reference to the purported ritual murder of the infant Christopher of La Guardia which was tried in court in 1491 and who was later made into a Saint Many of the Jews fled to the Balkan peninsula where a few decades before Ottoman Turks had won a victory over the Cross Sultan Bayazid II of the Ottoman Empire learning about the expulsion of Jews from Spain dispatched the Ottoman Navy to bring the Jews safely to Ottoman lands mainly to the cities of Salonica currently in Greece and Smyrna currently in Turkey Judeo Spanish also known as Ladino a form of medieval Spanish influenced by Hebrew was widely spoken amongst some of the Jewish communities in Europe since the 15th century 61 Renaissance editItaly edit Italian dukes in the Renaissance era accorded protections to resident Jewish communities for a range of political or economic reasons However the local authorities rigorously attempted to impose Jewish badges Franciscan friars exerted pressure on the dukes to enforce the wearing of yellow badges by Jews which the dukes resisted 62 Taxation records reveal a great quantity of Jewish contribution to the duchy s finances The Jewish tax contribution in the state budget was 0 2 in 1460 By 1480 this had increased to 1 In 1482 6 of the extraordinary tax came from Jewish communities This evidence indicates the wealth of the Jewish population and also indicates a possible population boom 63 However Jews lost support from Ludovico Sforza on the eve of the Italian wars 64 Spain edit There was no progress towards inter faith harmony in 15th century Spain 65 Mark Meyerson notes the silence of 15th century records on the Jewish Christian relations in Morvedre 66 In that town Jews constituted a quarter of the urban population and had a significant contribution to the area s economy 67 The Jewish situation varied across Spain The Jewish quarter of Cervera was sacked by Catalan troops and they warned Jews in Tarrega of the same fate These events set off the emigration of affluent converso households from Barcelona The situation was less severe for Jews and conversos in Aragon In the kingdom of Aragon the strong Jewish ties to the monarchy in the form of political support revenue supplies and assistance ensured their relatively safer position 68 The introduction of credit mechanisms by the Jews in Morvedre facilitated the Jewish revival in the region and granted the Jews dominance in the kingdom s credit markets 69 The Jewish community as a whole generally functioned with economic success 70 The Jewish economic activity was diversified not only in the kingdom of Valencia but also in the kingdom of Aragon Jews continued lending sums to non Jews and Jewish usury was no longer contested in public and religious relations remained stable and unmarred by violent activity 71 France edit Jews enjoyed a time of prosperity until the end of the 15th century in Provence There were no significant legal distinctions between the citizenship rights of Jews and Christians under the statutes of Marseilles Jews were officially given the same citizenship rights in Saint Remy de Provence in 1345 and by 1467 in Tarascon 72 Comtat Venaissin and Avignon both being papal principalities witnessed an era of peace for Jewish communities who were established there without expulsions being a part of their lives 73 The Jews of Provence received official protection but this was because of Jewish usefulness for the royalty This did not however preclude anti Jewish incidences which precipitated voluntary Jewish departures 74 Once Provence was annexed by the Kingdom of France in 1481 the flourishing Jewish residents found themselves expelled by 1498 75 Enlightenment editAccording to most scholars the Middle Ages ended around 1500 1550 giving way to the Early Modern Era c 1550 1789 The Enlightenment appeared at the end of the Early Modern Era and was characterized by a set of values and ideas that completely opposed the previous Medieval age The Enlightened Monarch was an important product of the era he or she strove to create a cultured modern state populated by effective subjects and often began the journey to this state by improving the living conditions of the poor and minorities which included Jews in most countries The monarchs tried to include their Jewish subjects in mainstream society reducing restrictions and passing more general laws that applied to all regardless of religion 76 A Jewish Enlightenment occurred alongside the broader European one originally appearing at the end of the eighteenth century Known as Haskalah it would re emerge in the 1820s and lasted for the better part of the century A form of critical rationalism 76 inspired by the European Enlightenment Haskalah focused on reform in two specific areas stimulating an internal rebirth of culture and better preparing and training Jews to exist in a christocentric world It did not force its adherents to sacrifice one identity for the other allowing them to simultaneously be Jewish and emulate their Gentile contemporaries One of the most important effects of the Enlightenment was emancipation for Jews Beginning in Napoleonic France after the Revolution which was directly inspired by the Enlightenment Jews received full rights and became equal citizens This trend spread eastward across the continent lasting until 1917 when Russian Jews were finally emancipated during the first Russian Revolution 76 See also editMedieval antisemitism Golden age of Jewish culture in the Iberian Peninsula History of the Jews in England 1066 1200 History of the Jews under Muslim Rule History of the Jews in the Ottoman Empire History of the Jews in Poland before the 18th centuryReferences edit Alexander Panayotou Jews and Jewish Communities in the Balkans and the Aegean until the twelfth century in James K Aitken James Carleton Paget eds The Jewish Greek Tradition in Antiquity and the Byzantine Empire Cambridge University Press 2014 pp 54 75 64ff Peter Schafer Judeophobia Attitudes Toward the Jews in the Ancient World Harvard University Press 2009 Ben Sasson Haim Hillel Ettinger Samuel editor 1972 1969 Jewish society through the ages Schocken Books OCLC 581911264 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a last has generic name help CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Yohanan Aharoni The Jewish People An Illustrated History A amp C Black 2006 p 305 Rutgers Leonard 2000 The Jews in Late Ancient Rome Evidence of Cultural Interaction in the Roman Diaspora ISBN 9004119280 Retrieved 1 August 2018 Bachrach Bernard 1977 Early Medieval Jewish Policy in Western Europe U of Minnesota Press p 11 ISBN 9780816608140 sisebut jew Bachrach Bernard Early Medieval Jewish Policy in Western Europe pp 9 16 ISBN 9781452909776 Bachrach Bernard Early Medieval Jewish Policy in Western Europe p 26 ISBN 9781452909776 Maristella Botticini The chosen few how education shaped Jewish history 70 1492 Princeton University Press 2012 ISBN 978 0 691 14487 0 OCLC 761850778 HHF Factpaper Silkmaking and the Jews Werner J Cahnman 2017 Jews and Gentiles A Historical Sociology of Their Relations Routledge Botticini and Eckstein Maristella and Zvi 2012 The Chosen Few How Education Shaped Jewish History 70 1492 Princeton NJ Princeton University Press p 49 ISBN 9780691144870 Julie L Mell 2017 The Myth of the Medieval Jewish Moneylender Volume I Springer Norman Roth 2014 Medieval Jewish Civilization An Encyclopedia Routledge Davies William D Frankenstein Louis 1984 The Cambridge History of Judaism Cambridge University Press p 1042 ISBN 978 1 397 80521 8 Lieu Judith North John Rajak Tessa 2013 The Jews Among Pagans and Christians in the Roman Empire Routledge p 117 ISBN 978 1 135 08188 1 Already during Roman times Jews resided in Cologne Archaologische Zone Judisches Museum Retrieved November 1 2013 Adrian Johanna A Jewish beginnings Frankfurt Oder Institut fur angewandte Geschichte Archived from the original on November 9 2013 Retrieved November 10 2013 Cologne City of the Arts 07 Archived from the original on January 19 2009 Medieval Source book Legislation Affecting the Jews from 300 to 800 CE Retrieved February 1 2008 Jewish Cemeteries in Germany Cologne Cockleshell Archived from the original on March 6 2008 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Marcus Ivan 2014 Review of Anti Judaism The Western Tradition by David Nirenberg Jewish History 28 2 194 JSTOR 24709717 Gay Ruth 1994 The Jews of Germany A Historical Portrait Yale University Press ISBN 978 0300060522 Ruth Langer Cursing the Christians A History of the Birkat HaMinim Oxford University Press 2011 p 73 Granada Jewish Encyclopedia 1906 Retrieved August 12 2012 Sephardim by Rebecca Weiner Marcus Ivan 2014 Reviewed work Anti Judaism The Western Tradition David Nirenberg Jewish History 28 2 194 JSTOR 24709717 Thurston Herbert 1912 History of Toleration in The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 14 New York Robert Appleton Company Accessed 12 July 2013 Champagnea and Boustan Marie Therese and Ra anan S November 2011 Walking in the Shadows of the Past The Jewish Experience of Rome in the Twelfth Century Medieval Encounters 11 464 a b Joseph E Katz 2001 Continuous Jewish Presence in the Holy Land EretzYisroel Org Retrieved August 12 2012 a b Timeline for the History of Judaism Medieval Period in the West Jewish Virtual Library Retrieved 9 November 2013 This Week in History The Jews of Basel are burnt Jpost Retrieved 21 December 2013 The Black Death and the Jews 1348 1349 CE PDF www ffst hr Retrieved 21 December 2013 Martinez Ferrand Jewish Encyclopedia Retrieved 21 December 2013 Middle East Information Center Archived from the original on 5 January 2012 Retrieved 21 December 2013 Norman F Cantor The Last Knight The Twilight of the Middle Ages and the Birth of the Modern Era Free Press 2004 ISBN 978 0 7432 2688 2 pp 28 29 a b c Elukin Jonathan 2007 Living Together Living Apart Rethinking Jewish Christian Relations in the Middle Ages Princeton Princeton University Press a b Jonathan M Elukin Living Together Living Apart Rethinking Jewish Christian Relations in the Middle Ages Princeton NJ Princeton UP 2007 76 77 Elukin Living Together Living Apart p 78 Elukin Living Together Living Apart p 80 a b Elukin Jonathan 2007 Living Together Living Apart Rethinking Jewish Christian Relations in the Middle Ages Princeton Princeton University Press p 81 ISBN 9780691114873 Abraham Malamat 1976 A History of the Jewish People Harvard University Press pp 412 ISBN 978 0 674 39731 6 Elukin Jonathan 2007 Living Together Living Apart Rethinking Jewish Christian Relations in the Middle Ages Princeton Princeton University Press p 82 ISBN 9780691114873 Elukin Living Together Living Apart p 82 a b c Elukin Living Together Living Apart p 84 a b c Elukin Living Together Living Apart p 87 a b c d Elukin Living Together Living Apart p 86 a b c d e f Biale David Ivan G Marcus 2006 A Jewish Christian Symbiosis The Culture of Early Ashkenaz Cultures of the Jews 1st ed New York Schocken Books ISBN 9780805212013 Elukin Living Together Living Apart p 85 Medieval Sourcebook Royal Grants to the Jewish Community of Barcelona 1241 1271 Internet History Sourcebook Project fordham edu November 1998 Retrieved 2 May 2016 Lasker Daniel J 2007 Eyffinger Shalem ed Living Together Living Apart Rethinking Jewish Christian Relations in the Middle Ages Hebraic Politics Studies Shalem Press 2 4 474 a b Lasker Daniel J 2007 Eyffinger Shalem ed Living Together Living Apart Rethinking Jewish Christian Relations in the Middle Ages Hebraic Politics Studies Shalem Press 2 4 477 Lasker Daniel J 2007 Eyffinger Shalem ed Living Together Living Apart Rethinking Jewish Christian Relations in the Middle Ages Hebraic Politics Studies Shalem Press 2 4 475 Lasker Daniel J 2007 Eyffinger Shalem ed Living Together Living Apart Rethinking Jewish Christian Relations in the Middle Ages Hebraic Politics Studies Shalem Press 2 4 478 Hillaby Joe Hillaby 2013 The Palgrave Dictionary of Medieval Anglo Jewish History Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan p 468 ISBN 978 0230278165 The Knight s Tale of Young Hugh of Lincoln Gavin I Langmuir Speculum Vol 47 No 3 July 1972 pp 459 482 Hallo William Heritage Civilization and the Jews New York Praeger pp 134 37 Thatcher Oliver J Edgar Holmes McNeal 1905 A Source Book for Medieval History New York Scribner s pp 212 213 Jean de Venette prior of a Carmelite convent in Paris in the 14th century wrote As a result of this theory of infected water and air as the source of the plague the Jews were suddenly and violently charged with infecting wells and water and corrupting the air The whole world rose up against them cruelly on this account In Germany and other parts of the world where Jews lived they were massacred and slaughtered by Christians and many thousands were burned everywhere indiscriminately Newhall Richard A Jean Birdsall 1953 The Chronicle of Jean de Venette New York Columbia University Press pp 48 51 Botticini and Eckstein Maristella and Zvi 2012 The Chosen Few How Education Shaped Jewish History 70 1492 Princeton NJ Princeton University Press p 56 ISBN 9781400842483 Robin R Mundill 2002 England s Jewish Solution Experiment and Expulsion 1262 1290 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 52026 3 Rozovsky Lorne Will Ladino Rise Again Chabad org Retrieved 7 December 2013 Flora Cassen 2017 Marking the Jews in Renaissance Italy Politics Religion and the Power of Symbols Cambridge University Press p 50 ISBN 978 1 316 81302 7 For a variety of reasons usually financial and political Italian dukes often protected the Jews while local authorities often resistant to ducal power regularly tried to impose the Jewish badge Franciscan friars who enjoyed great popularity at the time especially with impoverished populations pressured the dukes and local authorities to make the Jews wear a yellow badge Throughout the 15th century however Jews by means of frequent and increasing payments could usually rely on the Visconti and Sforzas to safeguard them against increasingly frequent and loud calls for them to be forced to wear a yellow badge Flora Cassen 2017 Marking the Jews in Renaissance Italy Politics Religion and the Power of Symbols Cambridge University Press p 50 ISBN 978 1 316 81302 7 Taxation records evidencing Jewish contribution to the duchy s finances suggest that Jewish population was growing or becoming wealthier or both In 1460 the Jews tax contribution accounted for 0 2 of the state s budget by 1480 it was 1 In addition in 1482 the Jews paid 6 of the state s extraordinary revenue Flora Cassen 2017 Marking the Jews in Renaissance Italy Politics Religion and the Power of Symbols Cambridge University Press p 50 ISBN 978 1 316 81302 7 But Ludovico Sforza Il Moro duke from 1481 to 1499 on the eve of the Italian Wars withdrew his support for the Jews Mark D Meyerson 2010 A Jewish Renaissance in Fifteenth Century Spain Princeton University Press p 240 ISBN 978 0 691 14659 1 Indeed it was not Neither Jew nor Christian ventured any enlightened opinions about the religion of the other neither made any astonishing gestures of goodwill toward the other Mark D Meyerson 2010 A Jewish Renaissance in Fifteenth Century Spain Princeton University Press p 240 ISBN 978 0 691 14659 1 The silence of the records concerning fifteenth century Morvedre is just as if not more striking than anything that was said or done These records tell us nothing about vicious anti Judaism nothing about frequent or systematic persecution of the Jewish community nothing about Christian mob violence against Jews or even common interpersonal violence between individual Christians and Jews The records in other words tell us nothing about the kinds of behavior we might expect to find during the decades preceding the expulsion Mark D Meyerson 2010 A Jewish Renaissance in Fifteenth Century Spain Princeton University Press p 240 ISBN 978 0 691 14659 1 In regard to the history of Morvodre or Sagunto the demographic and economic facts speak eloquently the Jews comprised more than one quarter of the town s population municipality and aljama were fiscally interdependent the Jews had an integral role in the local and regional economy Mark D Meyerson 2010 A Jewish Renaissance in Fifteenth Century Spain Princeton University Press p 244 ISBN 978 0 691 14659 1 Catalan troops sacked the Jewish quarter of Cervera and threatened to do the same in Tarrega Fearing rebel aggression affluent converso families fled from Barcelona In the kingdom of Aragon Jews and conversos encountered fewer difficulties of this sort in part because Aragonese opposition to the Trastamaras was less fierce In fact Zaragoza the capital and home of the largest Jewish community offered Juan II much assistance during the Catalan civil war Valencians as has been noted cooperated for the most part with Alfonso IV and Juan II and provided both kings with substantial revenue The Jews and conversos of the kingdom were therefore not put in a dangerous situation by virtue of their ties to the monarchy Mark D Meyerson 2010 A Jewish Renaissance in Fifteenth Century Spain Princeton University Press p 244 ISBN 978 0 691 14659 1 the Jews revival in Morvedre was facilitated and their relations with Christians ameliorated by a third key factor This was the introduction of new credit mechanisms the censal and violari and the rise of the purchasers of these annuities the censalistas to a position of dominance in the kingdom s credit markets a position the Jews had occupied until the later fourteenth century Mark D Meyerson 2010 A Jewish Renaissance in Fifteenth Century Spain Princeton University Press p 244 ISBN 978 0 691 14659 1 Well to do Jews diversified their investments and the Jewish community as a whole engaged in a wider range of economic activities often as has been seen with considerable success Even though Jews still loaned small amounts to farmers and artisans Jewish usury now illegal but in fact disguised ceased to be a subject about which bishops and friars fulminated and Christian debtors protested Mark D Meyerson 2010 A Jewish Renaissance in Fifteenth Century Spain Princeton University Press pp 244 245 ISBN 978 0 691 14659 1 Jewish usury a perennial source of tension between Christian and Jew in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries was no longer one in the kingdom of Valencia in the fifteenth century The kingdom of Aragon saw similar developments There too municipalities and Jewish aljamas such as those of Zaragoza and Huesca were in debt to censalistas There too Jewish economic activity was highly diversified There too relations between Christians and Jews were stable unmarked by outbreaks of violence There too although Jews still loaned small sums to Christians and Muslims Jewish usury ceased to be a major topic of public discussion Esther Benbassa 2001 The Jews of France A History from Antiquity to the Present Princeton University Press pp 25 ISBN 1 4008 2314 5 In Provence too until the end of the fifteenth century the Jews enjoyed relatively favorable conditions Whereas in the kingdom a policy of Jewish exclusion was pursued under Saint Louis the statutes of Marseilles enacted in 1257 made no juridical distinction between them and Christians both coming under the category of citizen Civis Massilie And by the end of the fifteenth century the legal condition of the Jews despite a whole series of arrangements signaling their inferiority was still not fundamentally different there than that of their fellow Christian citizens They were recognised to have the same status in Saint Remy de Provence in 1345 and in Tarascon in 1467 Esther Benbassa 2001 The Jews of France A History from Antiquity to the Present Princeton University Press pp 25 ISBN 1 4008 2314 5 A relative peace reigned also in the Comtat Venaissin and in Avignon for the Jewish communities that had reestablished themselves there These regions being papal possessions from 1274 and 1348 respectively expulsion was not the order of the day Esther Benbassa 2001 The Jews of France A History from Antiquity to the Present Princeton University Press pp 25 ISBN 1 4008 2314 5 During the reign of the good king Rene d Ajou between 1434 and 1480 the Jews of Provence benefited from protection dictated by royal decisions in domestic and foreign policy In this context once again the Jews usefulness served the sovereign s purposes Nonetheless anti Jewish disturbances were common throughout the fifteenth century followed by movements of voluntary exodus Esther Benbassa 2001 The Jews of France A History from Antiquity to the Present Princeton University Press pp 25 ISBN 1 4008 2314 5 Provence which had formerly brought together flourishing Jewish communities was annexed to the kingdom of France in 1481 The expulsion of the Jews was finally announced in 1498 a b c Dubin Lois C 2005 Modern Judaism An Oxford Guide Oxford Oxford University Press pp 30 31 33 37 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Richard Gottheil M Brann and Joseph Jacobs 1901 1906 Europe In Singer Isidore et al eds The Jewish Encyclopedia New York Funk amp Wagnalls External links editChurch And The Jews In The Middle Ages Medieval Jewish History Jews living under Islamic and Christian rule Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of European Jews in the Middle Ages amp oldid 1167812591, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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