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History of the Jews in Spain

The history of the Jews in the current-day Spanish territory stretches back to Biblical times according to Jewish tradition, but the settlement of organised Jewish communities in the Iberian Peninsula possibly traces back to the times after the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE.[1] The earliest archaeological evidence of Hebrew presence in Iberia consists of a 2nd-century gravestone found in Mérida.[2] From the late 6th century onward, following the Visigothic monarchs' conversion from Arianism to the Nicene Creed, conditions for Jews in Iberia considerably worsened.[3]

13th-century illustration from the Libro de los juegos depicting Jews playing chess.

After the Umayyad conquest of Hispania in the early 8th century, Jews lived under the Dhimmi system and progressively Arabised.[4] Jews of Al-Andalus stood out particularly during the 10th and the 11th centuries, in the caliphal and first taifa periods.[5] Scientific and philological study of the Hebrew Bible began, and secular poetry was written in Hebrew for the first time.[citation needed] After the Almoravid and Almohad invasions, many Jews fled to Northern Africa and the Christian Iberian kingdoms.[5] Targets of antisemitic mob violence, Jews living in the Christian kingdoms faced persecution throughout the 14th century, leading to the 1391 pogroms.[6] As a result of the Alhambra Decree of 1492, the remaining practising Jews in Castile and Aragon were forced to convert to Catholicism (thus becoming 'New Christians' who faced discrimination under the limpieza de sangre system) whereas those who continued to practise Judaism (c. 100,000–200,000) were expelled,[7] creating diaspora communities. Tracing back to a 1924 decree, there have been initiatives to favour the return of Sephardi Jews to Spain by facilitating Spanish citizenship on the basis of demonstrated ancestry.[2]

An estimated 13,000 to 50,000 Jews live in Spain today.[8][9][10][11][12]

Early history (before 300) edit

Some associate the country of Tarshish, as mentioned in the books of Jeremiah, Ezekiel, I Kings, Jonah and Romans, with a locale in southern Spain.[13] In generally describing Tyre's empire from west to east, Tarshish is listed first (Ezekiel 27.12–14), and in Jonah 1.3 it is the place to which Jonah sought to flee from the LORD; evidently it represents the westernmost place to which one could sail.[14]

 
Map of Phoenician (red) and Greek colonies (blue) at about 550 BCE
 
Roman provinces of Hispania

The link between Jews and Tarshish is clear. One might speculate that commerce conducted by Jewish emissaries, merchants, craftsmen, or other tradesmen among the Canaanitic-speaking Tyrean Phoenicians might have brought them to Tarshish. Although the notion of Tarshish as Spain is merely based on suggestive material, it leaves open the possibility of a very early Jewish presence in the Iberian peninsula.[15]

More substantial evidence of Jews in Spain comes from the Roman era. Although the spread of the Jews into Europe is most commonly associated with the diaspora that ensued from the Roman conquest of Judea, emigration from the land of Israel into the greater Roman Mediterranean area predated the destruction of Jerusalem by the Romans under Titus. In his Facta et dicta memorabilia, Valerius Maximus makes reference to Jews and Chaldaeans being expelled from Rome in 139 BCE for their "corrupting" influences.[16] According to Josephus, King Herod Agrippa attempted to discourage the Jews of Jerusalem from rebelling against Roman authority by reference to Jews throughout the Roman Empire and elsewhere; Agrippa warned that

"the danger concerns not those Jews that dwell here only, but those of them which dwell in other cities also; for there is no people upon the habitable earth which do not have some portion of you among them, whom your enemies might slay, in case you go to war[.]"[17]

The Spanish rabbi and scholar Abraham ibn Daud wrote in 1161: "A tradition exists with the [Jewish] community of Granada that they are from the inhabitants of Jerusalem, of the descendants of Judah and Benjamin, rather than from the villages, the towns in the outlying districts [of Judaea]."[18] Elsewhere, he writes about his maternal grandfather's family and how they came to Spain: "When Titus prevailed over Jerusalem, his officer who was appointed over Hispania appeased him, requesting that he send to him captives made-up of the nobles of Jerusalem, and so he sent a few of them to him, and there were amongst them those who made curtains and who were knowledgeable in the work of silk, and [one] whose name was Baruch, and they remained in Mérida."[19] Here, Rabbi Abraham ben David refers to the second influx of Jews into Spain, shortly after the destruction of Israel's Second Temple.

The earliest mention of Spain is, allegedly, found in Obadiah 1:20:[20]

“And the exiles of this host of the sons of Israel who are among the Canaanites as far as Ṣarfat (Heb. צרפת), and the exiles of Jerusalem who are in Sepharad, will possess the cities of the south.”

While the medieval lexicographer, David ben Abraham al-Fasi, identifies Ṣarfat with the city of Ṣarfend (Ladino: צרפנדה),[21] the word Sepharad (Hebrew: ספרד) in the same verse has been translated by the 1st century rabbinic scholar, Jonathan ben Uzziel, as Aspamia.[22] Based on a later teaching in the compendium of Jewish oral laws compiled by Judah ha-Nasi in 189 CE, known as the Mishnah, Aspamia is associated with a very faraway place, generally thought of as Hispania, or Spain.[23] Circa 960, Hisdai ibn Shaprut, minister of trade in the court of the caliph in Córdoba, wrote to Joseph the king of Khazaria, saying: “The name of our land in which we dwell is called in the sacred tongue, Sepharad, but in the language of the Arabs, the indwellers of the lands, Alandalus [Andalusia], the name of the capital of the kingdom, Córdoba.”[24]

According to David Kimhi (1160–1235), in his commentary on Obadiah 1:20, Ṣarfat and Sepharad, both, refer to the Jewish captivity (Heb. galut) expelled during the war with Titus and who went as far as the countries Alemania (Germany), Escalona,[25] France and Spain. The names Ṣarfat and Sepharad are explicitly mentioned by him as being France and Spain, respectively. Some scholars think that, in the case of the place-name, Ṣarfat (lit. Ṣarfend) – which, as noted, was applied to the Jewish diaspora in France, the association with France was made only exegetically because of its similarity in spelling with the name פרנצא (France), by a reversal of its letters.

The Spanish Jew Moses de León (ca. 1250 – 1305), mentioned a tradition concerning the first Jewish exiles, saying that the vast majority of the first exiles driven away from the land of Israel during the Babylonian captivity refused to return, for they had seen that the Second Temple would be destroyed like the first.[26] Yet another teaching, passed down later, by Moshe ben Machir in the 16th century, explicitly stated that Jews had lived in Spain since the destruction of the First Temple:[27]

“Now, I have heard that this praise, emet weyaṣiv [which is now used by us in the prayer rite] was sent by the exiles who were driven away from Jerusalem and who were not with Ezra in Babylon, and that Ezra had sent inquiring after them, but they did not wish to go up [there], replying that since they were destined to go off again into exile a second time, and that the Temple would once again be destroyed, why should we then double our anguish? It is best for us that we remain here in our place and to serve God. Now, I have heard that they are the people of Ṭulayṭulah (Toledo) and those who are near to them. However, that they might not be thought of as wicked men and those who are lacking in fidelity, may God forbid, they wrote down for them this magnanimous praise, etc.”

Similarly, Gedaliah ibn Jechia the Spaniard has written:[28]

“In [5],252 anno mundi (= 1492 CE), the king Ferdinand and his wife, Isabella, made war with the Ishmaelites who were in Granada and took it, and while they returned they commanded the Jews in all of his kingdoms that in but a short time they were to take leave from the countries [they had heretofore possessed], they being Castile, Navarre, Catalonia, Aragón, Granada and Sicily. Then the [Jewish] inhabitants of Ṭulayṭulah (Toledo) answered that they were not present [in the land of Judea] at the time when their Christ was put to death. Apparently, it was written upon a large stone in the city's street which some very ancient sovereign inscribed and testified that the Jews of Ṭulayṭulah (Toledo) did not depart from there during the building of the Second Temple, and were not involved in putting to death [the man whom they called] Christ. Yet, no apology was of any avail to them, neither unto the rest of the Jews, till at length six hundred-thousand souls had evacuated from there.”

Don Isaac Abrabanel, a prominent Jewish figure in Spain in the 15th century and one of the king's trusted courtiers who witnessed the expulsion of Jews from Spain in 1492, informs his readers[29] that the first Jews to reach Spain were brought by ship to Spain by a certain Phiros, a confederate of the king of Babylon in laying siege to Jerusalem. This man was a Greek by birth, but had been given a kingdom in Spain. He became related by marriage to a certain Espan, the nephew of King Heracles, who also ruled over a kingdom in Spain. This Heracles later renounced his throne because of his preference for his native country in Greece, leaving his kingdom to his nephew, Espan, from whom the country's name España (Spain) derives. The Jewish exiles transported there by the said Phiros were descended by lineage from Judah, Benjamin, Shimon and Levi, and were, according to Abrabanel, settled in two districts in southern Spain: one, Andalusia, in the city of Lucena – a city so-called by the Jewish exiles that had come there; the second, in the country around Ṭulayṭulah (Toledo).

Abrabanel says that the name Ṭulayṭulah was given to the city by its first Jewish inhabitants, and surmises that the name may have meant טלטול (= wandering), on account of their wandering from Jerusalem. He says, furthermore, that the original name of the city was Pirisvalle, so named by its early pagan[clarification needed] inhabitants. He also wrote[30] that he found written in the ancient annals of Spanish history collected by the kings of Spain that the 50,000 Jewish households then residing in the cities throughout Spain were the descendants of men and women who were sent to Spain by the Roman Emperor and who had formerly been subjected to him, and whom Titus had originally exiled from places in or around Jerusalem. The two Jewish exiles joined together and became one.[clarification needed]

Hispania came under Roman control with the fall of Carthage after the Second Punic War (218–202 BCE). Exactly how soon after this time Jews made their way onto the scene is a matter of speculation. It is within the realm of possibility that they went there under the Romans as free men to take advantage of its rich resources and build enterprises there. These early arrivals would have been joined by those who had been enslaved by the Romans under Vespasian and Titus, and dispersed to the extreme west during the period of the Jewish-Roman War, and especially after the defeat of Judea in 70. The Jewish historian, Josephus, confirms that as early as 90 CE there was already a Jewish diaspora in Europe, made-up of the two tribes, Judah and Benjamin. Thus, he writes in his Antiquities, "there are but two tribes in Asia (Turkey) and Europe subject to the Romans, while the ten tribes are beyond Euphrates till now and are an immense multitude."[31]

One questionable estimate places the number carried off to Spain at 80,000.[32] Subsequent immigrations came into the area along both the northern African and southern European sides of the Mediterranean.[33]

Among the earliest records which may refer specifically to Jews in Spain during the Roman period is Paul the Apostle's Epistle to the Romans. Many have taken Paul's intention to go to Spain to minister the gospel[34] to indicate the presence of Jewish communities there,[35] as well as Herod's banishment to Spain by Caesar in 39 (Flavius Josephus, The Wars of the Jews, 2.9.6).[36] So too, the Mishna[37] implied that there was a Jewish community in Spain, and that there was communication with the Jewish community in Israel.

From a slightly later period, Midrash Rabbah (Leviticus Rabba § 29.2), and Pesikta de-Rav Kahana (Rosh Hashanna), both, make mention of the Jewish diaspora in Spain (Hispania) and their eventual return. Among these early references are several decrees of the Council of Elvira, convened in the early fourth century, which address proper Christian behaviour with regard to the Jews of Spain, notably forbidding marriage between Jews and Christians.[38]

Of material evidence of early Iberian Jewry, representing a particularly early presence is a signet ring found at Cadiz, dating from the 8th–7th century BCE The inscription on the ring, generally accepted as Phoenician, has been interpreted by a few scholars to be "paleo-Hebraic"[39] Among the early Spanish items of more reliably Jewish origins is an amphora which is at least as old as the 1st century. Although this vessel is not from the Spanish mainland (it was recovered from Ibiza, in the Balearic Islands), the imprint upon it of two Hebrew characters attests to Jewish contact, either direct or indirect, with the area at this time. Two trilingual Jewish inscriptions from Tarragona and Tortosa have been variously dated from the 2nd century BCE to the 6th century. (Bowers, p. 396.) There is also the tombstone inscription from Adra (formerly Abdera) of a Jewish girl named Salomonula, which dates to the early 3rd century.[40]

Thus, while there are limited material and literary indications for Jewish contact with Spain from a very early period, more definitive and substantial data begins with the third century. Data from this period suggest a well-established community, whose foundations must have been laid sometime earlier. It is likely that these communities originated several generations earlier in the aftermath of the conquest of Judea, and possible that they originated much earlier. There may have been[41] close contact between the Jewish community of Babylon and Spain, as the Talmud[42] documents that Yitzhak the Exilarch, son of the sister of Rav Beivai[43] travelled from "Cordoba to Hispania".

As citizens of the Roman Empire, the Jews of Spain engaged in a variety of occupations, including agriculture. Until the adoption of Christianity, Jews had close relations with non-Jewish populations, and played an active role in the social and economic life of the province.[44] The edicts of the Synod of Elvira, although early examples of priesthood-inspired anti-Semitism, provide evidence of Jews who were integrated enough into the greater community to cause alarm among some: of the council's 80 canonic decisions, all those that pertained to Jews served to maintain a separation between the two communities.[45] It seems that by this time the presence of Jews was of greater concern to Catholic authorities than the presence of pagans; Canon 16, which prohibited marriage with Jews, was worded more strongly than canon 15, which prohibited marriage with pagans. Canon 78 threatens those who commit adultery with Jews with ostracism. Canon 48 forbade Jews from blessing Christian crops, and Canon 50 forbade sharing meals with Jews; repeating the command to Hebrew the Bible indicated respect to Gentile.[further explanation needed]

Visigoth rule – Repression and forced conversions (5th century to 711) edit

Barbarian invasions brought most of the Iberian Peninsula under Visigothic rule by the early 5th century. Other than in their contempt for Catholics, who reminded them of the Romans,[46] the Visigoths did not generally take much of an interest in the religious creeds within their kingdom. It was only in 506, when Alaric II (484–507) published his Breviarium Alaricianum in which he adopted the laws of the ousted Romans that a Visigothic king concerned himself with the Jews.[47]

 
Visigothic coinage: King Recared

The tides turned even more dramatically following the conversion of the Visigothic royal family under Recared from Arianism to Catholicism in 587. In their desire to consolidate the realm under the new religion, the Visigoths adopted an aggressive policy concerning the Jews. As the king and the church acted in a single interest, the situation for the Jews deteriorated. Recared approved the Third Council of Toledo's move in 589 to forcibly baptize the children of mixed marriages between Jews and Christians. Toledo III also forbade Jews from holding public office, having intercourse with Christian women and performing circumcisions on slaves or Christians. Still, Recared was not entirely successful in his campaigns since not all Visigoth Arians had converted to Catholicism; the unconverted were true allies of the Jews, both of whom were oppressed, and Jews received some protection from Arian bishops and the independent Visigothic nobility.

 
Visigothic coinage: Sisebut

While the policies of the subsequent Kings Liuva II (601–604), Witteric (603–610), and Gundemar (610–612) are unknown, Sisebut (612–620) embarked on Recared's course with renewed vigour. Soon after upholding the edict of compulsory baptism for children of mixed marriages, Sisebut instituted what was to become a recurring phenomenon in Spanish official policy, the first edicts expelling Jews from Spain. After his 613 decree that Jews must either convert or be expelled, some fled to Gaul or North Africa, while as many as 90,000 converted. Many of the conversos, like those of later periods, maintained their Jewish identities in secret.[48] During the more tolerant reign of Suintila (621–631), most of the conversos returned to Judaism, and a number of the exiles returned to Spain.[49]

In 633, the Fourth Council of Toledo, while taking a stance in opposition to compulsory baptism, convened to address the problem of crypto-Judaism. It was decided that if professed Christian were determined to be a practising Jew, their children were to be taken away to be raised in monasteries or trusted Christian households.[48] The council further directed that all who had reverted to Judaism during the reign of Swintila had to return to Christianity.[50] The trend toward intolerance continued with the ascent of Chintila (636–639). He directed the Sixth Council of Toledo to order that only Catholics could remain in the kingdom, and taking an unusual step further, he excommunicated "in advance" any of his successors who did not act in accordance with his anti-Jewish edicts. Again, many converted, but others chose exile.[51]

However, the "problem" continued. The Eighth Council of Toledo in 653 again tackled the issue of Jews within the realm. Further measures at the time included the forbidding of all Jewish rites (including circumcision and the observation of the Shabbat), and all converted Jews had to promise to put to death, either by burning or by stoning, any of their brethren known to have relapsed to Judaism. The council was aware that prior efforts had been frustrated by lack of compliance among authorities on the local level; therefore, anyone, including nobles and clergy, found to have aided Jews in their practice of Judaism was to be punished by seizure of one quarter of their property and excommunication.[52]

The efforts again proved unsuccessful. The Jewish population remained sufficiently sizable as to prompt Wamba (672–680) to issue limited expulsion orders against them, and the reign of Erwig (680–687) also seemed vexed by the issue. The Twelfth Council of Toledo again called for forced baptism and, for those who disobeyed, seizure of property, corporal punishment, exile, ll and slavery. Jewish children over seven years of age were taken from their parents and similarly dealt with in 694. Erwig also took measures to ensure that Catholic sympathisers would not be inclined to aid Jews in their efforts to subvert the council's rulings. Heavy fines awaited any nobles who acted in favour of the Jews, and members of the clergy who were remiss in enforcement were subject to a number of punishments.[51]

Egica (687–702), recognising the wrongness of forced baptism, relaxed the pressure on the conversos but kept it up on practising Jews. Economic hardships included increased taxes and the forced sale, at a fixed price, of all property ever acquired from Christians. That effectively ended all agricultural activity for the Jews of Spain. Furthermore, Jews were not to engage in commerce with the Christians of the kingdom or to conduct business with Christians overseas.[53] Egica's measures were upheld by the Sixteenth Council of Toledo in 693.

In 694, at the Council of Toledo, Jews were condemned to slavery by the Visigoths because of a plot to revolt against them encouraged by the Eastern Roman Empire and Romans still residing in Spain.[54]

Under the Catholic Visigoths persecutions increased. The degree of complicity that the Jews had in the Islamic invasion in 711 is uncertain, but since they were openly treated as enemies in the country in which they had resided for generations, it would be no surprise for them to have appealed to the Moors to the south, who were quite tolerant in comparison to the Visigoths, for aid. In any case, the Jews in 694 were accused of conspiring with Muslims across the Mediterranean. Jews were declared traitors, including baptised Jews, found their property confiscated and themselves enslaved. The decree exempted only the converts who dwelt in the mountain passes of Septimania, who were necessary for the kingdom's protection.[53]

The Eastern Roman Empire sent its navy on numerous occasions in the late 7th century and the early 8th century to try to instill uprisings in the Jewish and Christian Roman populations in Spain and Gaul against their Visigoth and Frankish rulers that was also aimed at halting the expansion of Muslim Arabs in the Roman world.[54]

The Jews of Spain were utterly embittered and alienated by Catholic rule at the time of the Muslim invasion. The Moors were perceived as a liberating force[55] and welcomed by Jews eager to help them to administer the country. In many conquered towns, the Muslims left the garrison in the hands of the Jews before they proceeded further north, which initiated the Golden Age of Spanish Jews.

Moorish Spain (711 to 1492) edit

Moorish conquest edit

With the victory of Tariq ibn Ziyad in 711, the lives of the Sephardim changed dramatically. For the most part, the invasion of the Moors was welcomed by the Jews of Iberia.

Both Muslim and Catholic sources tell that Jews provided valuable aid to the invaders.[56] Once the city was captured, the defence of Córdoba was left in the hands of Jews, and Granada, Málaga, Seville, and Toledo were left to a mixed army of Jews and Moors. The Chronicle of Lucas de Tuy records that when the Catholics left Toledo on Sunday before Easter to go to the Church of Saint Leocadia to listen to the divine sermon, the Jews acted treacherously, informed the Saracens, closed the gates of the city before the Catholics and opened them for the Moors. However, unlike de Tuy's account, Rodrigo Jiménez de Rada's De rebus Hispaniae maintains that Toledo was "almost completely empty of its inhabitants" not because of Jewish treachery but because "many had fled to Amiara, others to Asturias and some to the mountains" and the city was then fortified by a militia of Arabs and Jews (3.24). Although in the cases of some towns, the behaviour of the Jews may have been conducive to Muslim success, it was of limited impact overall.[57]

In spite of the restrictions placed upon the Jews as dhimmis, life under Muslim rule was one of great opportunity in comparison to that under prior Catholic Visigoths, as was testified by the influx of Jews from abroad. To Jews throughout the Catholic and Muslim worlds, Iberia was seen as a land of relative tolerance and opportunity. After initial Arab-Berber victories, especially with the establishment of Umayyad dynasty rule by Abd al-Rahman I in 755, the native Jewish community was joined by Jews from the rest of Europe, as well as from Arab territories from Morocco to Mesopotamia (the latter region was known as Babylonia in Jewish sources).[58][59] Thus, the Sephardim found themselves enriched culturally, intellectually, and religiously by the commingling of diverse Jewish traditions. Contacts with Middle Eastern communities were strengthened, and the influence of the Babylonian academies of Sura and Pumbedita was at its greatest. As a result, until the mid-10th century, much Sephardic scholarship focused on Halakha.

Although not as influential, traditions of the Levant, known as Palestine, were also introduced, in an increased interest in Hebrew and biblical studies.[60]

Arabic culture, of course, also made a lasting impact on Sephardic cultural development. General re-evaluation of scripture was prompted by Muslim anti-Jewish polemics and the spread of rationalism, as well as the anti-Rabbanite polemics of Karaite Judaism.

In adopting Arabic, as had the Babylonian geonim (the heads of the Talmudic Academies in Babylonia), the cultural and intellectual achievements of Arabic culture were opened up to the educated Jew, as was much of the scientific and philosophical speculation of Greek culture, which had been best preserved by Arab scholars. The meticulous regard which the Arabs had for grammar and style also had the effect of stimulating an interest among Jews in philological matters in general.[61] Arabic came to be the main language of Sephardic science, philosophy and everyday business. From the second half of the 9th century, most Jewish prose, including many non-halakhic religious works, was in Arabic. The thorough adoption of Arabic greatly facilitated the assimilation of Jews into Arabic culture.[62][63][64]

Although initially, the often-bloody disputes among Muslim factions generally kept Jews out of the political sphere, the first approximately two centuries that preceded the Golden Age were marked by increased activity by Jews in a variety of professions, including medicine, commerce, finance and agriculture.[65]

By the ninth century, some members of the Sephardic community felt confident enough to take part in proselytizing amongst previously-Jewish "Catholics". Most famous were the heated correspondences sent between Bodo the Frank, a former deacon who had converted to Judaism in 838, and the converso Bishop of Córdoba, Álvaro of Córdoba. Both men, by using such epithets as "wretched compiler", tried to convince the other to return to their former religion but to no avail.[66][67]

Caliphate of Córdoba edit

The first period of exceptional prosperity took place under the reign of Abd ar-Rahman III (882–955), the first Caliph of Córdoba (from 929 onward). The inauguration of the Golden Age is closely identified with the career of his Jewish councillor, Hasdai ibn Shaprut (882–942). Originally a court physician, Shaprut's official duties went on to include the supervision of customs and foreign trade. It was in his capacity as dignitary that he corresponded with the Khazars, a kingdom that had converted to Judaism in the 8th century.[68]

Abd al-Rahman III's support for Arabic scholasticism had made Iberia the centre of Arabic philological research. It was within that context of cultural patronage that interest in Hebrew studies developed and flourished. With Hasdai as its leading patron, Córdoba became the "Mecca of Jewish scholars who could be assured of a hospitable welcome from Jewish courtiers and men of means".[69]

In addition to being a poet himself, Hasdai encouraged and supported the work of other Sephardic writers. Subjects covered the spectrum, encompassing religion, nature, music, politics and pleasure. Hasdai brought a number of men of letters to Córdoba, including Dunash ben Labrat, the innovator of Hebrew metrical poetry, and Menahem ben Saruq, the compiler of the first Hebrew dictionary, which came into wide use among the Jews of Germany and France. Celebrated poets of the era include Solomon ibn Gabirol, Yehuda Halevi, Samuel Ha-Nagid ibn Nagrela, and Abraham and Moses ibn Ezra.[70][71]

For the only time between Biblical times and the origins of the modern state of Israel, a Jew (Samuel ha-Nagid) commanded a Jewish army.[72]

Hasdai benefited world Jewry by creating a favourable environment for scholarly pursuits within Iberia but also by using his influence to intervene on behalf of foreign Jews, as is reflected in his letter to the Byzantine Princess Helena. In it, he requested protection for the Jews under Byzantine rule, attested to the fair treatment of the Christians of al-Andalus and indicated that such was contingent on the treatment of Jews abroad.[73][74]

The intellectual achievements of the Sephardim of al-Andalus influenced the lives of non-Jews as well. Most notable of the literary contributions is Ibn Gabirol's neo-Platonic Fons Vitae ("The Source of Life"). Thought by many to have been written by a Christian, the work was admired by Christians and studied in monasteries throughout the Middle Ages.[75] Some Arabic philosophers followed Jewish ones in their ideas although that phenomenon was somewhat hindered in that, although in Arabic, Jewish philosophical works were usually written with Hebrew characters.[76] Jews were also active in such fields as astronomy, medicine, logic and mathematics. In addition to training the mind in logical yet abstract and subtle modes of thought, the study of the natural world, as the direct study of the work of the Creator, was ideally a way to better understand and become closer to God.[77] Al-Andalus also became a major centre of Jewish philosophy during Hasdai's time. Following the tradition of the Talmud and the Midrash, many of the most notable Jewish philosophers were dedicated to the field of ethics, although the ethical Jewish rationalism rested on the notion that traditional approaches had not been successful in their treatments of the subject in that they were lacking in rational, scientific arguments.[78]

In addition to contributions of original work, the Sephardim were active as translators. Greek texts were rendered into Arabic, Arabic into Hebrew, Hebrew and Arabic into Latin and all combinations of vice versa occurred. In translating the great works of Arabic, Hebrew, and Greek into Latin, Iberian Jews were instrumental in bringing the fields of science and philosophy, which formed much of the basis of Renaissance learning, into the rest of Europe.

Taifas, Almoravids and Almohads edit

 
A Jew and a Muslim playing chess in 13th-century al-Andalus. Libro de los juegos, commissioned by Alphonse X of Castile, 13th century. Madrid.

In the early 11th century, centralised authority based at Córdoba broke down after the Berber invasion and the ousting of the Umayyads. In its stead arose the independent taifa principalities under the rule of local Arab, Berber, Slavic or Muwallad leaders. Rather than having a stifling effect, the disintegration of the caliphate expanded the opportunities to Jewish and other professionals. The services of Jewish scientists, doctors, traders, poets and scholars were generally valued by the Christian as well as Muslim rulers of regional centres, especially as recently-conquered towns were put back into order.[79][80]

Among the most prominent Jews to serve as viziers in the Muslim taifas were the ibn Nagrelas (or Naghrela). Samuel Ha-Nagid ibn Nagrela (993–1056) served Granada's King Habbus al-Muzaffar and his son Badis for thirty years. In addition to his roles as policy director and military leader (as one of only two Jews to command Muslim armies, the other being his son Joseph), Samuel ibn Nagrela was an accomplished poet, and his introduction to the Talmud is standard today. His son Joseph ibn Naghrela also acted as vizier but was murdered in the 1066 Granada massacre. There were other Jewish viziers serving in Seville, Lucena, and Saragossa.[81][82]

The Granada massacre of 1066 was an anti-Jewish pogrom that took place in Granada when a Muslim mob stormed the royal palace, where Joseph had sought refuge, and crucified him. The instigators then attacked 1500 Jewish families and killed approximately 4,000 Granada Jews.[83]

The Golden Age ended before the completion of the Christian Reconquista. The Granada massacre was one of the earliest signs of a decline in the status of Jews, which resulted largely from the penetration and influence of increasingly-zealous Islamic sects from North Africa.

After the fall of Toledo to Christians in 1085, the ruler of Seville sought relief from the Almoravides. The ascetic sect abhorred the liberality of the Islamic culture of al-Andalus, including the position of authority that some dhimmis held over Muslims. In addition to battling the Christians, who were gaining ground, the Almoravides implemented numerous reforms to bring al-Andalus more in line with their notions of proper Islam. In spite of large-scale forcible conversions, Sephardic culture was not entirely decimated. Members of Lucena's Jewish community, for example, managed to bribe their way out of conversion. As the spirit of Andalusian Islam was absorbed by the Almoravides, policies concerning Jews were relaxed. The poet Moses ibn Ezra continued to write during this time, and several Jews served as diplomats and physicians to the Almoravides.[81][84]

Wars in North Africa with Muslim tribes eventually forced the Almoravides to withdraw their forces from Iberia. As the Christians advanced, Iberian Muslims again appealed to their brethren to the south, this time to those who had displaced the Almoravides in north Africa. The Almohads, who had taken control of much of Islamic Iberia by 1172, far surpassed the Almoravides in fundamentalist outlook and treated the dhimmis harshly. Jews and Christians were expelled from Morocco and Islamic Spain. Faced with the choice of either death or conversion, many Jews emigrated.[85] Some, such as the family of Maimonides, fled south and east to the more tolerant Moslem lands, and others went northward to settle in the growing Christian kingdoms.[86][87][88][89]

Meanwhile, the Reconquista continued in the north. By the early 12th century, conditions for some Jews in the emerging Christian kingdoms were becoming increasingly favourable. As had happened during the reconstruction of towns after the breakdown of authority under the Umayyads, the services of Jews were employed by the Christian leaders, who were increasingly emerging victorious during the later Reconquista. The Jews' knowledge of the language and the culture of the enemy, their skills as diplomats and professionals and their desire for relief from intolerable conditions rendered their services of great value to the Christians during the Reconquista, the very same reasons that they had proved useful to the Arabs in the early stages of the Moslem invasion. The necessity of having conquerors settle in reclaimed territories also outweighed the prejudices of anti-Semitism, at least while the Islamic threat was imminent. Thus, as conditions in Islamic Iberia worsened, immigration to Christian principalities increased.[90]

The Jews from the Muslim south were not entirely secure in their northward migrations, however. Old prejudices were compounded by newer ones. Suspicions of complicity with Islam were alive, and Jews who immigrated from Muslim territories spoke Arabic. However, many of the newly-arrived Jews of the north prospered during the late eleventh and early twelfth centuries. The majority of Latin documentation regarding Jews during the period refers to their landed property, fields and vineyards.[91]

In many ways, life had come full circle for the Sephardim of al-Andalus. As conditions became more oppressive in the areas under Muslim rule during the 12th and the 13th centuries, Jews again looked to an outside culture for relief. Christian leaders of reconquered cities granted them extensive autonomy, and Jewish scholarship recovered and developed as communities grew in size and importance (Assis, p. 18). However, the Reconquista Jews never reached the same heights as had those of the Golden Age.

Christian kingdoms (974–1300) edit

 
The Spanish kingdoms in 1030

Early rule (974–1085) edit

Catholic princes,[who?] the counts of Castile and the first kings of León, treated the Jews harshly. In their operations against the Moors they did not spare the Jews, destroying their synagogues and killing their teachers and scholars.[citation needed] Only gradually did the rulers come to realize that, surrounded as they were by powerful enemies, they could not afford to turn the Jews against them.[citation needed] Garcia Fernandez, Count of Castile, in the fuero of Castrojeriz (974), placed the Jews in many respects on an equality with Catholics; and similar measures were adopted by the Council of Leon (1020), presided over by Alfonso V. In Leon many Jews owned real estate, and engaged in agriculture and viticulture as well as in the handicrafts; and here, as in other towns, they lived on friendly terms with the Christian population.[citation needed] The Council of Coyanza [es] (1050) therefore found it necessary to revive the old Visigothic law forbidding, under pain of punishment by the Church, Jews and Christians to live together in the same house, or to eat together.[citation needed]

Toleration and Jewish immigration (1085–1212) edit

Ferdinand I of Castile set aside a part of the Jewish taxes for the use of the Church, and even the not very religious-minded Alfonso VI gave to the church of León the taxes paid by the Jews of Castro. Alfonso VI, the conqueror of Toledo (1085), was tolerant and benevolent in his attitude toward the Jews, for which he won the praise of Pope Alexander II. To estrange the wealthy and industrious Jews from the Moors he offered the former various privileges. In the fuero of Najara Sepulveda, issued and confirmed by him in 1076, he not only granted the Jews full equality with Catholics, but he even accorded them the rights enjoyed by the nobility. To show their gratitude to the king for the rights granted them, the Jews willingly placed themselves at his and the country's service. Alfonso's army contained 40,000 Jews, who were distinguished from the other combatants by their black-and-yellow turbans; for the sake of this Jewish contingent the Battle of Sagrajas was not begun until after the Sabbath had passed.[92] The king's favoritism toward the Jews, which became so pronounced that Pope Gregory VII warned him not to permit Jews to rule over Catholics, roused the hatred and envy of the latter. After the Battle of Uclés, at which the Infante Sancho, together with 30,000 men were killed, an anti-Jewish riot broke out in Toledo; many Jews were slain, and their houses and synagogues were burned (1108). Alfonso intended to punish the murderers and incendiaries, but died in June, 1109 before he could carry out his intention. After his death the inhabitants of Carrión de los Condes fell upon the Jews; many were slain, others were imprisoned, and their houses were pillaged.

 
Image of a cantor reading the Passover story, from the 14th-century Barcelona Haggadah

Alfonso VII, who assumed the title of Emperor of Leon, Toledo, and Santiago, curtailed in the beginning of his reign the rights and liberties which his father had granted the Jews. He ordered that neither a Jew nor a convert might exercise legal authority over Catholics, and he held the Jews responsible for the collection of the royal taxes. Soon, however, he became more friendly, confirming the Jews in all their former privileges and even granting them additional ones, by which they were placed on equality with Catholics. Considerable influence with the king was enjoyed by Judah ben Joseph ibn Ezra (Nasi). After the conquest of Calatrava (1147) the king placed Judah in command of the fortress, later making him his court chamberlain. Judah ben Joseph stood in such favor with the king that the latter, at his request, not only admitted into Toledo the Jews who had fled from the persecutions of the Almohades, but even assigned many fugitives dwellings in Flascala (near Toledo), Fromista, Carrion, Palencia, and other places, where new congregations were soon established.

After the brief reign of King Sancho III, a war broke out between Fernando II of León, (who granted the Jews special privileges), and the united kings of Aragon and Navarre. Jews fought in both armies, and after the declaration of peace they were placed in charge of the fortresses. Alfonso VIII of Castile (1166–1214), who had succeeded to the throne, entrusted the Jews with guarding Or, Celorigo, and, later, Mayorga, while Sancho the Wise of Navarre placed them in charge of Estella, Funes, and Murañon. During the reign of Alfonso VIII the Jews gained still greater influence, aided, doubtless, by the king's love of the beautiful Rachel (Fermosa) of Toledo, who was Jewish. When the king was defeated at the Battle of Alarcos by the Almohades under Yusuf Abu Ya'kub al-Mansur, the defeat was attributed to the king's love-affair with Fermosa, and she and her relatives were murdered in Toledo by the nobility. After the victory at Alarcos the emir Muhammad al-Nasir ravaged Castile with a powerful army and threatened to overrun the whole of Catholic Spain. The Archbishop of Toledo called to crusade to aid Alfonso. In this war against the Moors the king was greatly aided by the wealthy Jews of Toledo, especially by his "almoxarife mayor", the learned and generous Nasi Joseph ben Solomon ibn Shoshan (Al-Hajib ibn Amar).

Turning point (1212–1300) edit

 
The Spanish kingdoms in 1210

The Crusaders were hailed with joy in Toledo, but this joy was soon changed to sorrow, as far as the Jews were concerned. The Crusaders began the "holy war" in Toledo (1212) by robbing and killing the Jews, and if the knights had not checked them with armed forces all the Jews in Toledo would have been slain. When, after the battle of Las Navas de Tolosa (1212), Alfonso victoriously entered Toledo, the Jews went to meet him in triumphal procession. Shortly before his death (Oct., 1214) the king issued the fuero de Cuenca, settling the legal position of the Jews in a manner favorable to them.

A turning-point in the history of the Jews of Spain was reached under Ferdinand III, (who permanently united the kingdoms of León and Castile), and under James I, the contemporary ruler of Aragon. The clergy's endeavors against the Jews became more and more pronounced. Spanish Jews of both sexes, like the Jews of France, were compelled to distinguish themselves from Catholics by wearing a yellow badge on their clothing; this order was issued to keep them from associating with Catholics, although the reason given was that it was ordered for their own safety. Some Jews such as Vidal Taroç, were also allowed to own land.

The papal bull issued by Pope Innocent IV in April 1250, to the effect that Jews might not build a new synagogue without special permission, also made it illegal for Jews to proselytize, under pain of death and confiscation of property. They might not associate with the Catholics, live under the same roof with them, eat and drink with them, or use the same bath; neither might a Catholic partake of wine which had been prepared by a Jew. The Jews might not employ Catholic nurses or servants, and Catholics might use only medicinal remedies which had been prepared by competent Catholic apothecaries. Every Jew should wear the badge, though the king reserved to himself the right to exempt anyone from this obligation; any Jew apprehended without the badge was liable to a fine of ten gold maravedís or to the infliction of ten stripes. Jews were also forbidden to appear in public on Good Friday.

The Jewish community in 1300 edit

 
An illustration from the Sarajevo Haggadah, written in fourteenth-century Spain

The Jews in Spain were citizens of the kingdoms in which they resided (Castile, Aragón, and Valencia were the most important), both as regards their customs and their language. They owned real estate, and they cultivated their land with their own hands; they filled public offices, and on account of their industry they became wealthy while their knowledge and ability won them respect and influence. But this prosperity roused the jealousy of the people and provoked the hatred of the clergy; the Jews had to suffer much through these causes. The kings, especially those of Aragon, regarded the Jews as their property; they spoke of "their" Jews, "their" juderías (Jewish neighborhoods), and in their own interest they protected the Jews against violence, making good use of them in every way possible. The Jews were vassals of the king, the same as Christian commoners.[citation needed]

There were about 120 Jewish communities in Catholic Spain around 1300, with somewhere around half a million or more Jews,[citation needed] mostly in Castille. Catalonia, Aragón, and Valencia were more sparsely inhabited by Jews.

Even though the Spanish Jews engaged in many branches of human endeavor—agriculture, viticulture, industry, commerce, and the various handicrafts—it was the money business that procured to some of them their wealth and influence. Kings and prelates, noblemen and farmers, all needed money and could obtain it only from the Jews, to whom they paid from 20 to 25 percent interest. This business, which, in a manner, the Jews were forced to pursue[citation needed] in order to pay the many taxes imposed upon them as well as to raise the compulsory loans demanded of them by the kings,[citation needed] led to their being employed in special positions, as "almonries", bailiffs, tax collectors.

The Jews of Spain formed in themselves a separate political body. They lived almost solely in the Juderias, various enactments being issued from time to time preventing them from living elsewhere. From the time of the Moors they had had their own administration. At the head of the aljamas in Castile stood the "rab de la corte", or "rab mayor" (court, or chief, rabbi), also called "juez mayor" (chief justice), who was the principal mediator between the state and the aljamas. These court rabbis were men who had rendered services to the state, as, for example, David ibn Yah.ya and Abraham Benveniste, or who had been royal physicians, as Meïr Alguadez and Jacob ibn Nuñez, or chief-tax-farmers, as the last incumbent of the court rabbi's office, Abraham Senior. They were appointed by the kings, no regard being paid to the rabbinical qualifications or religious inclination of those chosen

1300–1391 edit

 
At the Feet of the Savior, massacre of Jews in Toledo, oil on canvas by Vicente Cutanda (1887)
 
The Spanish kingdoms in 1360

In the beginning of the fourteenth century the position of Jews became precarious throughout Spain as antisemitism increased. Many Jews emigrated from the crowns of Castile and Aragon. It was not until the reigns of Alfonso IV and Peter IV of Aragon, and of the young and active Alfonso XI of Castile (1325), that an improvement set in. In 1328, 5,000 Jews were killed in Navarre following the preaching of a mendicant friar.[93]

Peter of Castile, the son and successor of Alfonso XI, was relatively favorably disposed toward the Jews, who under him reached the zenith of their influence – often exemplified by the success of his treasurer, Samuel ha-Levi. For this reason, the king was called "the heretic" and often "the cruel". Peter, whose education had been neglected, was not quite sixteen years of age when he ascended the throne in 1350. From the commencement of his reign he so surrounded himself with Jews that his enemies in derision spoke of his court as "a Jewish court".[who?]

Soon, however a civil war erupted, as Henry II of Castile and his brother, at the head of a mob, invaded on 7 May 1355 that part of the Judería of Toledo called the Alcaná; they plundered the warehouses and murdered about 1200 Jews, without distinction of age or sex.[94] The mob did not, however, succeed in overrunning the Judería of Toledo proper, which was defended by the Jews and by knights loyal to the King. Following the succession of John I of Castile, conditions for Jews seem to have improved somewhat, with John I even making legal exemptions for some Jews, such as Abraham David Taroç.

The more friendly Peter showed himself toward the Jews, and the more he protected them, the more antagonistic became the attitude of his illegitimate half-brother, who, when he invaded Castile in 1360, murdered all the Jews living in Nájera and exposed those of Miranda de Ebro to robbery and death.

Massacres of 1366 edit

Everywhere the Jews remained loyal to King Peter, in whose army they fought bravely; the king showed his good-will toward them on all occasions, and when he called the King of Granada to his assistance he especially requested the latter to protect the Jews. Nevertheless they suffered greatly. Villadiego, whose Jewish community numbered many scholars, Aguilar, and many other towns were totally destroyed. The inhabitants of Valladolid, who paid homage to his half-brother Henry, robbed the Jews, destroyed their houses and synagogues, and tore their Torah scrolls to pieces. Paredes, Palencia, and several other communities met with a like fate, and 300 Jewish families from Jaén were taken prisoners to Granada. The suffering, according to a contemporary writer, Samuel Zarza of Palencia, had reached its culminating point, especially in Toledo, which was being besieged by Henry, and in which no less than 8,000 persons died through famine and the hardships of war. This civil conflict did not end until the death of Peter, of whom the victorious brother said, derisively, "Dó esta el fi de puta Judio, que se llama rey de Castilla?" ("Where is the Jewish son of a bitch, who calls himself king of Castile?") Peter was beheaded by Henry and Bertrand Du Guesclin on March 14, 1369. A few weeks before his death he reproached his physician and astrologer Abraham ibn Zarzal for not having told the truth in prophesying good fortune for him.[95]

When Henry de Trastámara ascended the throne as Henry II an era of suffering and intolerance began for the Castilian Jews, culminating in their expulsion. Prolonged warfare had devastated the land; the people had become accustomed to lawlessness, and the Jews had been reduced to poverty.[95]

But in spite of his aversion for the Jews, Henry did not dispense with their services. He employed wealthy Jews—Samuel Abravanel and others—as financial councilors and tax-collectors. His contador mayor, or chief tax-collector, was Joseph Pichon of Seville. The clergy, whose power became greater and greater under the reign of the fratricide, stirred the anti-Jewish prejudices of the masses into clamorous assertion at the Cortes of Toro in 1371. It was demanded that the Jews should be kept far from the palaces of the grandees, should not be allowed to hold public office, should live apart from the Catholics, should not wear costly garments nor ride on mules, should wear the badge, and should not be allowed to bear Catholic names. The king granted the two last-named demands, as well as a request made by the Cortes of Burgos in 1379 that Jews should neither carry arms nor sell weapons; but he did not prevent them from holding religious disputations, nor did he deny them the exercise of criminal jurisprudence. The latter prerogative was not taken from them until the reign of John I, Henry's son and successor; he withdrew it because certain Jews, on the king's coronation-day, by withholding the name of the accused, had obtained his permission to inflict the death-penalty on Joseph Pichon, who stood high in the royal favor; the accusation brought against Pichon included "harboring evil designs, informing, and treason.[95]

Anti-Jewish enactments edit

In the Cortes of Soria of 1380, it was enacted that rabbis, or heads of aljamas, should be forbidden, under penalty of a fine of 6,000 maravedís, to inflict upon Jews the penalties of death, mutilation, expulsion, or excommunication; but in civil proceedings they were still permitted to choose their own judges. In consequence of an accusation that the Jewish prayers contained clauses cursing the Catholics, the king ordered that within two months, on pain of a fine of 3,000 maravedís, they should remove from their prayer-books the objectionable passages. Whoever caused the conversion to Judaism of a Moor or of any one confessing another faith, or performed the rite of circumcision upon him, became a slave and the property of the treasury. The Jews no longer dared show themselves in public without the badge, and in consequence of the ever-growing hatred toward them they were no longer sure of life or limb; they were attacked and robbed and murdered in the public streets, and at length the king found it necessary to impose a fine of 6,000 maravedís on any town in which a Jew was found murdered. Against his desire, John was obliged in 1385 to issue an order prohibiting the employment of Jews as financial agents or tax-farmers to the king, queen, infantes, or grandees. To this was added the resolution adopted by the Council of Palencia ordering the complete separation of Jews and Catholics and the prevention of any association between them.

Massacres and mass conversions of 1391 edit

 
Slaughter of Jews in Barcelona in 1391 (Josep Segrelles, c. 1910)

"The execution of Joseph Pichon and the inflammatory speeches and sermons delivered in Seville by Archdeacon Ferrand Martínez, the pious Queen Leonora's confessor, soon raised the hatred of the populace to the highest pitch. The feeble King John I, in spite of the endeavors of his physician Moses ibn Ẓarẓal to prolong his life, died at Alcalá de Henares on October 9, 1390, and was succeeded by his eleven-year-old son. The council-regent appointed by the king in his testament, consisting of prelates, grandees, and six citizens from Burgos, Toledo, León, Seville, Córdoba, and Murcia, was powerless; every vestige of respect for law and justice had disappeared. Ferrand Martínez, although deprived of his office, continued, in spite of numerous warnings, to incite the public against the Jews, and encourage it to acts of violence. As early as January, 1391, the prominent Jews who were assembled in Madrid received information that riots were threatening in Seville and Córdoba.

A revolt broke out in Seville in 1391. Juan Alfonso de Guzmán, Count of Niebla and governor of the city, and his relative, the "alguazil mayor" Alvar Pérez de Guzmán, had ordered, on Ash Wednesday, March 15, according to the source[96] the arrest and public whipping of two of the mob-leaders. If that date had been Ash Wednesday, Easter would have fallen on 30 April, which is impossible in western Christianity. The fanatical mob, still further exasperated thereby, murdered and robbed several Jews and threatened the Guzmáns with death. In vain did the regency issue prompt orders; Ferrand Martínez continued unhindered his inflammatory appeals to the rabble to kill the Jews or baptize them. On June 6 the mob attacked the Judería of Seville from all sides and killed 4000 Jews; the rest submitted to baptism as the only means of escaping death."[95]

"At this time Seville is said to have contained 7000 Jewish families. Of the three large synagogues existing in the city two were transformed into churches. In all the towns throughout the archbishopric, as in Alcalá de Guadeira, Écija, Cazalla, and in Fregenal de la Sierra, the Jews were robbed and slain. In Córdoba this butchery was repeated in a horrible manner; the entire Judería de Córdoba was burned down; factories and warehouses were destroyed by the flames. Before the authorities could come to the aid of the defenseless people, every one of them—children, young women, old men—had been ruthlessly slain; 2000 corpses lay in heaps in the streets, in the houses, and in the wrecked synagogues."[95]

From Córdova the spirit of murder spread to Jaén. A horrible butchery took place in Toledo on June 20. Among the many martyrs were the descendants of the famous Toledan rabbi Asher ben Jehiel. Most of the Castilian communities suffered from the persecution; nor were the Jews of Aragon, Catalonia, or Majorca spared. On July 9, an outbreak occurred in Valencia. More than 200 persons were killed, and most of the Jews of that city were baptized by the friar Vicente Ferrer, whose presence in the city was probably not accidental. The only community remaining in the former kingdom of Valencia was that of Murviedro. On Aug. 2 the wave of murder visited Palma, in Majorca; 300 Jews were killed, and 800 found refuge in the fort, from which, with the permission of the governor of the island, and under cover of night, they sailed to North Africa; many submitted to baptism. Three days later, on Saturday, August 5, a riot began in Barcelona. On the first day, 100 Jews were killed, while several hundred found refuge in the new fort; on the following day the mob invaded the Juderia and began pillaging. The authorities did all in their power to protect the Jews, but the mob attacked them and freed those of its leaders who had been imprisoned. On Aug. 8 the citadel was stormed, and more than 300 Jews were murdered, among the slain being the only son of Ḥasdai Crescas. The riot raged in Barcelona until Aug. 10, and many Jews (though not 11,000 as claimed by some authorities) were baptized. On the last-named day began the attack upon the Juderia in Girona; several Jews were robbed and killed; many sought safety in flight and a few in baptism.[95]

"The last town visited was Lérida (August 13). The Jews of this city vainly sought protection in the Alcázar; 75 were slain, and the rest were baptized; the latter transformed their synagogue into a church, in which they worshiped as Marranos."[95]

Several responses bearing on the widespread persecution of Iberian Jewry between the years 1390 and 1391 can be found in contemporary Jewish sources, such as in the Responsa of Isaac ben Sheshet (1326–1408),[97] and in the seminal writing of Gedaliah ibn Yahya ben Joseph, Shalshelet haQabbalah (written ca. 1586),[98] as also in Abraham Zacuto's Sefer Yuḥasin,[99] in Solomon ibn Verga's Shevaṭ Yehudah,[100] as well as in a Letter written to the Jews of Avignon by Don Hasdai Crescas in the winter of 1391 concerning the events in Spain in the year 1391. The letter is dated 19 October 1391.[101][102]

According to Don Hasdai Crescas, persecution against Jews began in earnest in Seville in 1391, on the 1st day of the lunar month Tammuz (June).[103] From there the violence spread to Córdoba, and by the 17th day of the same lunar month, it had reached Toledo (then called by Jews after its Arabic name, Ṭulayṭulah).[104] From there, the violence spread to Mallorca and by the 1st day of the lunar month Elul it had also reached the Jews of Barcelona in Catalonia, where the slain were estimated at two-hundred and fifty. So, too, many Jews who resided in the neighboring provinces of Lérida and Gironda and in the kingdom of València had been affected,[105] as were also the Jews of al-Andalus,[106] whereas many died a martyr's death, while others converted in order to save themselves.

1391–1492 edit

The year 1391 forms a turning-point in the history of the Spanish Jews. The persecution was the immediate forerunner of the Inquisition, which, ninety years later, was introduced as a means of watching heresy and converted Jews. The number of those who had embraced Catholicism, in order to escape death, was very large – over half of Spain's Jews according to Joseph Pérez, 200,000 converts with only 100,000 openly practicing Jews remaining by 1410.; Jews of Baena, Montoro, Baeza, Úbeda, Andújar, Talavera, Maqueda, Huete, and Molina, and especially of Zaragoza, Barbastro, Calatayud, Huesca, and Manresa, had submitted to baptism. Among those baptized were several wealthy men and scholars who scoffed at their former coreligionists; some even, as Solomon ha-Levi, or Paul de Burgos (called also Paul de Santa Maria), and Joshua Lorqui, or Gerónimo de Santa Fe, became the bitterest enemies and persecutors of their former brethren.[95]

After the bloody excesses of 1391 the popular hatred of the Jews continued unabated. The Cortes of Madrid and that of Valladolid (1405) mainly busied themselves with complaints against the Jews, so that Henry III found it necessary to prohibit the latter from practising usury and to limit the commercial intercourse between Jews and Catholics; he also reduced by one-half the claims held by Jewish creditors against Catholics. Indeed, the feeble and suffering king, the son of Leonora, who hated the Jews so deeply that she even refused to accept their money, showed no feelings of friendship toward them. Though on account of the taxes of which he was thereby deprived he regretted that many Jews had left the country and settled in Málaga, Almería, and Granada, where they were well treated by the Moors, and though shortly before his death he inflicted a fine of 24,000 doubloons on the city of Córdoba because of a riot that had taken place there (1406), during which the Jews had been plundered and many of them murdered, he prohibited the Jews from attiring themselves in the same manner as other Spaniards, and he insisted strictly on the wearing of the badge by those who had not been baptized.[95]

Many of the Jews from Valencia, Catalonia and Aragon thronged to North Africa, particularly Algiers.[107]

Anti-Jewish laws edit

At the Catholic preacher Ferrer's request a law consisting of twenty-four clauses, which had been drawn up by Paul of Burgos, né Solomon haLevi, was issued in January 1412 in the name of the child-king John II of Castile.[citation needed]

The object of this law was to reduce the Jews to poverty and to further humiliate them. They were ordered to live by themselves, in enclosed Juderías, and they were to repair, within eight days after the publication of the order, to the quarters assigned them under penalty of loss of property. They were prohibited from practising medicine, surgery, or chemistry (pharmacy) and from dealing in bread, wine, flour, meat, etc. They might not engage in handicrafts or trades of any kind, nor might they fill public offices, or act as money-brokers or agents. They were not allowed to hire Catholic servants, farmhands, lamplighters, or gravediggers; nor might they eat, drink, or bathe with Catholics, or hold intimate conversation (have sexual relations) with them, or visit them, or give them presents. Catholic women, married or unmarried, were forbidden to enter the Judería either by day or by night. The Jews were allowed no self-jurisdiction whatever, nor might they, without royal permission, levy taxes for communal purposes; they might not assume the title of "Don", carry arms, or trim beard or hair. Jewish women were required to wear plain, long mantles of coarse material reaching to the feet; and it was strictly forbidden for Jews to wear garments made of better material. On pain of loss of property and even of slavery, they were forbidden to leave the country, and any grandee or knight who protected or sheltered a fugitive Jew was punished with a fine of 150,000 maravedís for the first offense. These laws, which were rigidly enforced, any violation of them being punished with a fine of 300–2,000 maravedís and flagellation, were calculated to compel the Jews to embrace Catholicism.[citation needed]

 
A lane in the old Jewish Quarter, called "El Call", of Girona, which includes the Girona Synagogue. Girona's Jewish community was lost as a result of the Expulsion.

The persecution of the Jews was now pursued systematically. In the hope of mass conversions, Benedict on May 11, 1415, issued a Papal bull consisting of twelve articles, which, in the main, corresponded with the decree ("Pragmática") issued by Catalina, and which had been placed on the statutes of Aragon by Fernando. By this bull Jews and neophytes were forbidden to study the Talmud, to read anti-Catholic writing, in particular the work "Macellum" ("Mar Jesu"), to pronounce the names of Jesus, Maria, or the saints, to manufacture communion-cups or other church vessels or accept such as pledges, or to build new synagogues or ornament old ones. Each community might have only one synagogue. Jews were denied all rights of self-jurisdiction, nor might they proceed against malsines (accusers). They might hold no public offices, nor might they follow any handicrafts, or act as brokers, matrimonial agents, physicians, apothecaries, or druggists. They were forbidden to bake or sell matzot, or to give them away; neither might they dispose of meat which they were prohibited from eating. They might have no intercourse (sex) with Catholics, nor might they disinherit their baptized children. They should wear the badge at all times, and thrice a year all Jews over twelve, of both sexes, were required to listen to a Catholic sermon. (the bull is reprinted, from a manuscript in the archives of the cathedral in Toledo, by Rios ["Hist." ii. 627–653]).[citation needed]

As soon as the Catholic monarchs Ferdinand and Isabella ascended their respective thrones, steps were taken to segregate the Jews both from the conversos and from their fellow countrymen. At the Cortes of Toledo, in 1480, all Jews were ordered to be separated in special barrios, and at the Cortes of Fraga, two years later, the same law was enforced in Navarre, where they were ordered to be confined to the Juderías at night. The same year saw the establishment of the Spanish Inquisition, the main object of which was to deal with the conversos. Though both monarchs were surrounded by Neo-Catholics, such as Pedro de Caballería and Luis de Santángel, and though Ferdinand was the grandson of a Jew, he showed the greatest intolerance to Jews, whether converted or otherwise, commanding all "conversos" to reconcile themselves with the Inquisition by the end of 1484, and obtaining a bull from Pope Innocent VIII ordering all Catholic princes to return all fugitive conversos to the Inquisition of Spain. One of the reasons for the increased rigor of the Catholic monarchs was the disappearance of the fear of any united action by Jews and Moors, the kingdom of Granada being at its last gasp. The rulers did, however, promise the Jews of the Moorish kingdom that they could continue to enjoy their existing rights in exchange for aiding the Spaniards to overthrow the Moors. This promise dated February 11, 1490, was repudiated, however, by the decree of expulsion. See the Catholic Monarchs of Spain.[citation needed]

The prohibitions, persecution and eventual Jewish mass emigration from Spain and Portugal probably had adverse effects on the development of the Spanish economy. Jews and Non-Catholic Christians reportedly had substantially better numerical skills than the Catholic majority, which might be due to the Jewish religious doctrine, which focused strongly on education, for example because Torah-Reading was compulsory. Even when Jews were forced to quit their highly skilled urban occupations, their numeracy advantage persisted. However, during the inquisition, spillover-effects of these skills were rare because of forced separation and Jewish emigration, which was detrimental for economic development.[108]

Architecture edit

A small number of pre-expulsion synagogues survive, including the Synagogue of Santa María la Blanca and the Synagogue of El Tránsito in Toledo, the Córdoba Synagogue, the Híjar Synagogue, the Old main synagogue, Segovia and the Synagogue of Tomar.

Edict of Expulsion edit

 
A signed copy of the Alhambra Decree
 
The Expulsion of the Jews from Spain (in the year 1492) by Emilio Sala Francés

Several months after the fall of Granada, an edict of expulsion called the Alhambra Decree was issued against the Jews of Spain by Ferdinand and Isabella on 31 March 1492. It ordered all Jews of whatever age to leave the kingdom by the last day of July: one day before Tisha B'Av.[109] They were permitted to take their property provided it was not in gold, silver, or money.

The reason given for this action in the preamble of the edict was the relapse of so many conversos owing to the proximity of unconverted Jews, who seduced them from Christianity and kept alive in them the knowledge and practices of Judaism.

It is claimed that Isaac Abarbanel, who had previously ransomed 480 Jews of Málaga from the Catholic Monarchs by a payment of 20,000 doubloons, now offered them 600,000 crowns for the revocation of the edict. It is said also that Ferdinand hesitated, but was prevented from accepting the offer by Tomás de Torquemada, the grand inquisitor, who dashed into the royal presence and, throwing a crucifix down before the king and queen, asked whether, like Judas, they would betray their Lord for money. Torquemada was reputedly of converso ancestry, and the confessor of Isabella, Espina, was previously a Rabin. Whatever the truth of this story, there were no signs of relaxation shown by the court, and the Jews of Spain made preparations for exile. In some cases, as at Vitoria, they took steps to prevent the desecration of the graves of their kindred by presenting the cemetery, called the Judumendi, to the municipality — a precaution not unjustified, as the Jewish cemetery of Seville was later ravaged by the people. The members of the Jewish community of Segovia passed the last three days of their stay in the city in the Jewish cemetery, fasting and wailing over being parted from their dead beloved.

Number of exiles edit

The number of Jews exiled from Spain is subject to controversy, with highly exaggerated figures provided by early observers and historians offering figures which numbered the hundreds of thousands. By the time of the expulsion, little more than 100,000 practicing Jews remained in Spain, since the majority had already converted to Catholicism. This in addition to the indeterminate number who managed to return has led recent academic investigations such as those of Joseph Pérez and Julio Valdeón to offer figures of somewhere between 50,000 and 80,000 practicing Jews expelled from Spanish territory.[110]

European context of expulsions edit

Jewish expulsion is a well established trend in European history. From the 13th to the 16th century, at least 15 European countries expelled their Jewish populations. The expulsion of the Jews from Spain was preceded by expulsions from England, France and Germany, among many others, and succeeded by at least five more expulsions.[111][112]

Conversos edit

 
Marranos: Secret Seder in Spain during the times of inquisition, an 1892 painting by Moshe Maimon

Henceforth the history of the Jews in Spain is that of the conversos, whose numbers, as has been shown, had been increased by no less than 50,000 during the period of the expulsion to a possible total of 300,000.[113] For three centuries after the expulsion, Spanish Conversos were subject to suspicion by the Spanish Inquisition, which executed over 3000 people in the 1570–1700 period on charges of heresy (including Judaism). They were also subject to more general discriminatory laws known as "limpieza de sangre" which required Spaniards to prove their "old Christian" background in order to access certain positions of authority. During this period hundreds of conversos escaped to nearby countries such as England, France and the Netherlands, or converted back to Judaism, thus becoming part of the communities of Western Sephardim or Spanish and Portuguese Jews.

Conversos played an important leadership role[which?] in the Revolt of the Comuneros (1520–1522), a popular revolt and civil war in the Crown of Castile against the imperial pretensions of Holy Roman Emperor Charles V.[114]

1858 to the present edit

Small numbers of Jews started to arrive in Spain in the 19th century, and synagogues were opened in Madrid.

 
Jewish woman in the Jewish quarter of Melilla (1909).

By 1900, not taking Ceuta and Melilla into account, about 1,000 Jews lived in Spain.[115]

Jews began to interact with Melilla as early as 1862, with a increasing Jewish community in the city throughout the early 20th century that grew upon the arrival of Moroccan Jews spurred on after the events of Taza under Bou Hmara, the 1909 Melillan Campaign, World War I, and the Rif War.[116]

Spanish historians started to take an interest in the Sephardim and Judaeo-Spanish, their language. There was a Spanish rediscovery of the Jews of Northern Morocco who still conserved this language and practiced old Spanish customs.

The dictatorship of Miguel Primo de Rivera (1923–1930) decreed the right to Spanish citizenship to a certain number of Sephardim on December 20, 1924. The condition was that they had enjoyed Spanish protection before while living in the Ottoman Empire and that they applied before December 31, 1930. A similar measure was undertaken by the French government regarding non-Muslims in the Levant who had previously been protected by France. The decree especially addressed Jews from Thessaloniki who had refused to take either Greek or Turkish citizenship. The decree was later used by some Spanish diplomats to save Sephardi Jews from persecution and death during the Holocaust.[117]

Prior to the Spanish Civil War and not taking Ceuta and Melilla into account, about 6,000–7,000 Jews lived in Spain, mostly in Barcelona and Madrid.[118] Likewise, by 1936, the Jewish community in Melilla amounted to 6,000, later notably decreasing because of emigration to Venezuela, Israel, mainland Spain and France.[119]

Spanish Civil War & World War II edit

During the Spanish Civil War (1936–1939), synagogues were closed and post-war worship was kept in private homes. Jewish public life resumed in 1947 with the arrival of Jews from Europe and North Africa.

In the first years of World War II, "Laws regulating their admittance were written and mostly ignored."[120] They were mainly from Western Europe, fleeing deportation to concentration camps from occupied France, but also Jews from Eastern Europe, especially Hungary. Trudi Alexy refers to the "absurdity" and "paradox of refugees fleeing the Nazis' Final Solution to seek asylum in a country where no Jews had been allowed to live openly as Jews for over four centuries."[121]

Throughout World War II, Spanish diplomats of the Franco government extended their protection to Eastern European Jews, especially Hungary. Jews claiming Spanish ancestry were provided with Spanish documentation without being required to prove their case and either left for Spain or survived the war with the help of their new legal status in occupied countries.

Once the tide of war began to turn, and Count Francisco Gómez-Jordana Sousa succeeded Franco's brother-in-law Ramón Serrano Suñer as Spain's foreign minister, Spanish diplomacy became "more sympathetic to Jews", although Franco himself "never said anything" about this.[120] Around that same time, a contingent of Spanish doctors travelling in Occupied Poland were fully informed of the Nazi extermination plans by Governor-General Hans Frank, who was under the impression that they would share his views about the matter; when they came home, they passed the story to Admiral Luís Carrero Blanco, who told Franco.[122]

Diplomats discussed the possibility of Spain as a route to a containment camp for Jewish refugees near Casablanca but it came to naught due to lack of Free French and British support.[123] Nonetheless, control of the Spanish border with France relaxed somewhat at this time,[124] and thousands of Jews managed to cross into Spain (many by smugglers' routes). Almost all of them survived the war.[125] The American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee operated openly in Barcelona.[126]

Shortly afterward, Spain began giving citizenship to Sephardi Jews in Greece, Hungary, Bulgaria, and Romania; many Ashkenazi Jews also managed to be included, as did some non-Jews. The Spanish head of mission in Budapest, Ángel Sanz Briz, saved thousands of Ashkenazim in Hungary by granting them Spanish citizenship, placing them in safe houses and teaching them minimal Spanish so they could pretend to be Sephardim, at least to someone who did not know Spanish. The Spanish diplomatic corps was performing a balancing act: Alexy conjectures that the number of Jews they took in was limited by how much German hostility they were willing to engender.[127]

Toward the war's end, Sanz Briz had to flee Budapest, leaving these Jews open to arrest and deportation. An Italian diplomat, Giorgio Perlasca, who was himself living under Spanish protection, used forged documents to persuade the Hungarian authorities that he was the new Spanish Ambassador. As such, he continued Spanish protection of Hungarian Jews until the Red Army arrived.[128]

Although Spain effectively undertook more to help Jews escape deportation to the concentration camps than most neutral countries did,[128][129] there has been debate about Spain's wartime attitude towards refugees. Franco's regime, despite its aversion to Zionism and "Judeo-Marxist"-Freemasonry conspiracy, does not appear to have shared the rabid anti-Semitic ideology promoted by the Nazis. About 25,000 to 35,000 refugees, mainly Jews, were allowed to transit through Spain to Portugal and beyond.

Some historians argue that these facts demonstrate a humane attitude by Franco's regime, while others point out that the regime only permitted Jewish transit through Spain.[citation needed] After the war, Franco's regime was quite hospitable to those who had been responsible for the deportation of the Jews, notably Louis Darquier de Pellepoix, Commissioner for Jewish Affairs (May 1942 – February 1944) in Vichy France, and to many other former Nazis, such as Otto Skorzeny and Léon Degrelle, and other former Fascists.[130]

José María Finat y Escrivá de Romaní, Franco's chief of security, issued an official order dated May 13, 1941 to all provincial governors requesting a list of all Jews, both local and foreign, present in their districts. After the list of six thousand names was compiled, Romani was appointed Spain's ambassador to Germany, enabling him to deliver it personally to Heinrich Himmler. Following the defeat of Germany in 1945, the Spanish government attempted to destroy all evidence of cooperation with the Nazis, but this official order survived. A Jewish newspaper cited a report published 22 June 2010 in the Spanish daily El País.[131]

At around the same time, synagogues were opened and the communities could hold a discreet degree of activity.[132]

On December 29, 1948, the official state bulletin (BOE) published a list of Sefardím family surnames from Greece and Egypt to which a special protection should be granted.

The Alhambra Decree that had expelled the Jews were formally rescinded on December 16, 1968.[133]

Between 1948, the year Israel was founded, and 2010, 1,747 Spanish Jews made aliyah to Israel.

Modern Jewish community edit

There are currently around 50,000 Spanish Jews,[134] with the largest communities in Barcelona and Madrid each with around 3,500 members.[135] There are smaller communities in Alicante, Málaga, Tenerife, Granada, Valencia, Benidorm, Cadiz, Murcia and many more.

Barcelona, with a Jewish community of 3,500, has the largest concentration of Jews in Spain. Melilla maintains an old community of Sephardic Jews. The city of Murcia in the southeast of the country has a growing Jewish community and a local synagogue. Kosher olives are produced in this region and exported to Jews around the world. Also there is a new Jewish school in Murcia as a result of the growth in Jewish population immigrating to the Murcia community PolarisWorld.[136][137]

The modern Jewish community in Spain consists mainly of Sephardim from Northern Africa, especially the former Spanish colonies.[citation needed] In the 1970s, there was also an influx of Argentine Jews, mainly Ashkenazim, escaping from the military junta. With the birth of the European community, Jews from other countries in Europe moved to Spain because of its weather, lifestyle as well as for its cost of living relative to the north of Europe. Some Jews see Spain as an easier life for retirees and for young people. Mazarron has seen its Jewish community grow as well as La Manga, Cartagena and Alicante.

Moreover, Reform and liberal communities have arisen in cities like Barcelona or Oviedo during the last decade.[138][139]

Some famous Spaniards of Jewish descent are the businesswomen Alicia and Esther Koplowitz, the politician Enrique Múgica Herzog, and Isak Andic, founder of the clothing design and manufacturing company Mango, though only the latter is of Sephardic origin.

There are rare cases of Jewish converts, like the writer Jon Juaristi. Today there is an interest by some Jewish groups working in Spain to encourage the descendants of the Marranos to return to Judaism. This has resulted in a limited number of conversions to the Jewish faith.[140]

Like other religious communities in Spain, the Federation of Jewish Communities in Spain (FCJE) has established agreements with the Spanish government,[141] regulating the status of Jewish clergy, places of worship, teaching, marriages, holidays, tax benefits, and heritage conservation.

In 2014, residents of a village in Spain called Castrillo Matajudios voted to change the name of their town due to risk of confusion resulting from the etymology of the name. "Mata" is a common suffix of placenames in Spain, meaning "forested patch". In this case, it is likely to be a corruption of "mota" meaning "hill". Confusion arises from the word "mata" also meaning "kill", thus rendering a name that could be interpreted as "kill the jews". The name was changed back to its earlier name which would be less subject to surprise by newcomers Castrillo Mota de Judíos (Castrillo Hill of the Jews).[142] Although a mere anecdote in Spain, where it barely made the national press, this story was widely covered in the English speaking press of the United States, United Kingdom and Israel, often misrepresenting the name of the village as "Camp Kill the Jews".[143]

2014–2019 Citizenship law edit

In 2014 it was announced that the descendants of Sephardic Jews who were expelled from Spain by the Alhambra Decree of 1492 would be offered Spanish citizenship, without being required to move to Spain and/or renounce any other citizenship they may have.[144][145] The law lapsed on October 1, 2019 and by that point the justice ministry claimed to have received 132,226 applications and approved 1,500 applicants.[146] In order to be approved applicants needed to take "tests in Spanish language and culture... prove their Sephardic heritage, establish or prove a special connection with Spain, and then pay a designated notary to certify their documents."[146] Most applications came from nationals of countries with high levels of insecurity and violence in Latin America (mainly Mexico, Colombia and Venezuela).[146]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Hinojosa Montalvo 2000, p. 25.
  2. ^ a b Prados García 2011, p. 2119.
  3. ^ Hinojosa Montalvo 2000, pp. 25–26.
  4. ^ Hinojosa Montalvo, José (2000). "Los judíos en la España medieval: de la tolerancia a la expulsión". Los marginados en el mundo medieval y moderno (PDF). p. 26. ISBN 84-8108-206-6.
  5. ^ a b Hinojosa Montalvo 2000, p. 26.
  6. ^ Hinojosa Montalvo 2000, p. 28.
  7. ^ Prados García, Celia (2011). "La expulsión de los judíos y el retorno de los sefardíes como nacionales españoles. Un análisis histórico-jurídico" (PDF). Actas del I Congreso Internacional sobre Migraciones en Andalucía. pp. 2119–2126. ISBN 978-84-921390-3-3.
  8. ^ Europa Press (27 November 2013). "Los 50.000 judíos de España celebran desde hoy la fiesta de Janucá que culminará el día 4 con el encendido de luces". Retrieved 12 February 2022.
  9. ^ "Unos 50000 judíos residentes en España reciben el nuevo año". 28 September 2011.
  10. ^ Calvo, Vera Gutiérrez (6 June 2014). "El Gobierno aprueba la ley que otorga la doble nacionalidad a los sefardíes". El País.
  11. ^ Sergio DellaPergola, World Jewish Population (2007) American Jewish Committee, accessed 12 October 2009
  12. ^ The Jewish Virtual Library (as well as the president of the Spanish Jewish community) speak of 40,000-50,000 Jews (see "Spain". Jewish Virtual Library. Retrieved 12 October 2009.) of whom half are affiliated with the Federación de Comunidades Judías de España (FCJE).
  13. ^ "Tarshish" in the Jewish Encyclopedia, Isidore Singer and M. Seligsohn
  14. ^ from 'Tyre' in Easton's Bible Dictionary
  15. ^ William Parkin – 1837 "Festus Avinus says expressly that Cadiz was Tarshish. This agrees perfectly with the statement of Ibn Hankal, who no doubt reports the opinion of the Arabian geographers, that Phoenicia maintained a direct intercourse with Britain in later ..."
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  17. ^ Flavius Josephus, Wars of the Jews 2.16.4.
  18. ^ Seder Hakabbalah Laharavad, p. 51, Jerusalem 1971 (printed in the edition which includes the books, Seder Olam Rabbah and Seder Olam Zuta) (Hebrew)
  19. ^ Seder Olam Rabba/ Seder Olam Zuta/ Seder HaKabbalah le'Ravad, Jerusalem 1971, pp. 43–44 (Hebrew).
  20. ^ Pesiqata Derav Kahana (ed. Salomon Buber), New York 1949, p. 151b, in Comments, note 26 (Hebrew)
  21. ^ The Hebrew-Arabic Dictionary known as Kitāb Jāmi' Al-Alfāẓ (Agron), p. xxxviii, pub. by Solomon L. Skoss, 1936 Yale University
  22. ^ Targum Yonathan ben Uzziel on the Minor Prophets
  23. ^ Mishnayoth, with a commentary by Pinchas Kahati, Baba Bathra 3:2 s.v., אספמיא, Jerusalem 1998 (Hebrew)
  24. ^ Elkan Nathan Adler, Jewish Travellers, Routledge:London 1931, pp. 22–36. Cf. Cambridge University Library, Taylor-Schecter Collection (T-S Misc.35.38)
  25. ^ According to Don Isaac Abrabanel, in his Commentary at the end of II Kings, this was a city built near Toledo, in Spain. Abrabanel surmises that the name may have been given to it by the Jewish exiles who arrived in Spain, in remembrance of the city Ashqelon in the Land of Israel. The spelling rendered by Abrabanel is אישקלונה. See: Abrabanel, Commentary on the First Prophets, p. 680, Jerusalem 1955 (Hebrew).
  26. ^ Moses de León, in Ha-Nefesh Ha-Ḥakhamah (also known as Sefer Ha-Mishḳal), end of Part VI which treats on the Resurrection of the Dead, pub. in Basel 1608 (Hebrew)
  27. ^ Moses ben Machir, in Seder Ha-Yom, p. 15a, Venice 1605 (Hebrew)
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  29. ^ Abrabanel's Commentary on the First Prophets (Pirush Al Nevi'im Rishonim), end of II Kings, pp. 680–681, Jerusalem 1955 (Hebrew).
  30. ^ Abrabanel's Commentary on the First Prophets (Pirush Al Nevi'im Rishonim), end of II Kings, pp. 680–681, Jerusalem 1955 (Hebrew).
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  36. ^ The place of banishment is identified in Josephus's Antiquities of the Jews as Gaul — specifically Lyon (18.7.2) — this discrepancy has been resolved by postulating Lugdunum Convenarium, a town in Gaul on the Spanish frontier as the actual site.
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  88. ^ Gampel; pp. 20–21
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  91. ^ Ashtor, pp. 250–251
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  98. ^ Gedaliah ibn Yahya ben Joseph, Shalshelet haQabbalah Jerusalem 1962, pp. רסז – רסח, in PDF pp. 276–278 (Hebrew)
  99. ^ Abraham Zacuto, Sefer Yuḥasin, Cracow 1580 (q.v. Sefer Yuḥasin, pp. 265–266 in PDF)
  100. ^ Ibn Verga, Salomón (1992). Sheveṭ Yehudah [The Sceptre of Judah] (in Hebrew). B’nei Issachar Institute: Jerusalem.; Solomon ibn Verga, Shevaṭ Yehudah (The Sceptre of Judah), Lvov 1846, p. 76 in PDF)
  101. ^ American-Israeli Cooperative Enterprise (2022). "Hasdai Ben Judah Crescas". Jewish Virtual Library. Retrieved 1 March 2022.
  102. ^ Printed in the book Shevaṭ Yehudah by Solomon ibn Verga (ed. Dr. M. Wiener), Hannover 1855, pp. 128 – 130, or pp. 138 – 140 in PDF, and which history concerns only the year 1391, although the Christian date mentioned here is represented in his account by two dates in the Anno Mundi counting, i.e. 5,152 and 5,151, owing to the change of the Hebrew year in the Fall of that same year. For English translation, see: Fritz Kobler, Letters of the Jews through the Ages, London 1952, pp. 272–75.
  103. ^ Letter of Hasdai Crescas, Shevaṭ Yehudah by Solomon ibn Verga (ed. Dr. M. Wiener), Hannover 1855, pp. 128 – 130, or pp. 138 – 140 in PDF; Fritz Kobler, Letters of the Jews through the Ages, London 1952, pp. 272–75; Mitre Fernández, Emilio (1994). Secretariado de Publicaciones e Intercambio Editorial (ed.). Los judíos de Castilla en tiempo de Enrique III : el pogrom de 1391 [The Castilian Jews at the time of Henry III: the 1391 pogrom] (in Spanish). Valladolid University. ISBN 84-7762-449-6.; Solomon ibn Verga, Shevaṭ Yehudah (The Sceptre of Judah), Lvov 1846, p. 76 in PDF.
  104. ^ Letter from Hasdai Crescas to the congregations of Avignon, published as an appendix to Wiener's edition of Shevaṭ Yehudah of Solomon ibn Verga, in which he names the Jewish communities affected by the persecution of 1391. See pages 138 – 140 in PDF (Hebrew); Fritz Kobler, Letters of the Jews through the Ages, London 1952, pp. 272–75.
  105. ^ Solomon ibn Verga, Shevaṭ Yehudah (The Sceptre of Judah), Lvov 1846, pp. 41 (end) – 42 in PDF); Kamen (1998), p. 17. Kamen cites approximate numbers for Valencia (250) and Barcelona (400), but no solid data about Córdoba.
  106. ^ According to Gedaliah Ibn Yechia, these disturbances were caused by a malicious report spread about the Jews. See: Gedaliah Ibn Yechia, Shalshelet Ha-Kabbalah Jerusalem 1962, p. רסח, in PDF p. 277 (top) (Hebrew); Solomon ibn Verga, Shevat Yehudah, Lvov 1846 (p. 76 in PDF) (Hebrew).
  107. ^ "ALGERIA - JewishEncyclopedia.com". www.jewishencyclopedia.com.
  108. ^ Juif, Dácil; Baten, Joerg; Pérez-Artés, Mari Carmen (2020). "Numeracy of Religious Minorities in Spain and Portugal During the Inquisition Era". The Revista de Historia Económica - Journal of Iberian and Latin American Economic History. 38: 147–184. doi:10.1017/S021261091900034X. hdl:10016/36127. S2CID 214199340.
  109. ^ Hebrew calendar dates start at sunset. 31 July 1492 until sunset was the 7th of Av; from sunset it was the 8th. Presumably the edict took effect at midnight, which was already the 8th, the day before the 9th.
  110. ^ Valdeón Baruque, Julio (2007). El reinado de los reyes Católicos in: Antisemitismo en España (in Spanish). Cuenca. p. 102. ISBN 978-84-8427-471-1.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  111. ^ Expulsion at USF.edu
  112. ^ . 26 October 2009. Archived from the original on 26 October 2009.
  113. ^ Pérez, Joseph (2012). History of a Tragedy. p. 17.
  114. ^ Hernando, Máximo Diago (24 May 2017). Líderes de origen judeoconverso en las ciudades castellanas durante la revuelta comunera: su papel al frente de Común de pecheros. Centro de Estudios del Camino de Santiago. pp. 71–102. ISBN 9788460846406 – via dialnet.unirioja.es.
  115. ^ Álvarez Chillida 2011, p. 131.
  116. ^ Levy, León (1985). "La colectividad judía en Melilla". Aldaba. Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia (5): 199–200. doi:10.5944/aldaba.5.1985.19609.
  117. ^ Celia Prados García: La expulsión de los judíos y el retorno de los sefardíes como nacionales españoles. Un análisis histórico-jurídico (in Spanish)
  118. ^ Álvarez Chillida 2011, pp. 132–133.
  119. ^ Levy 1985, p. 200.
  120. ^ a b Alexy, p. 77.
  121. ^ Trudi Alexy, The Mezuzah in the Madonna's Foot, Simon and Schuster, 1993. ISBN 0-671-77816-1. p. 74.
  122. ^ Alexy, p. 164–165.
  123. ^ Alexy, p. 77–78.
  124. ^ Alexy, p. 165.
  125. ^ Alexy, p. 79, passim.
  126. ^ Alexy, p. 154–155, passim.
  127. ^ Alexy, p. 165 et. seq.
  128. ^ a b "Giorgio Perlasca". The International Raoul Wallenberg foundation. Retrieved 2006-07-21.
  129. ^ . Hitler: Stopped by Franco. Archived from the original on 2011-07-11. Retrieved 2006-07-21.
  130. ^ Nicholas Fraser, "Toujours Vichy: a reckoning with disgrace", Harper's, October 2006, p. 86–94. The relevant statement about Spain sheltering him is on page 91.
  131. ^ Ofer Aderet (22 June 2010). "WWII Document Reveals: General Franco Handed Nazis List of Spanish Jews". Haaretz. Tel Aviv. Retrieved 2 March 2022.
  132. ^ Spain at the Virtual Jewish History Tour
  133. ^ 1492 Ban on Jews Is Voided by Spain– The New York Times, 17 Dec 1968
  134. ^ Jewish Spain : Living, Eating and Praying as a Jew in Spain at Spain Expat.com
  135. ^ . Archived from the original on 2006-03-01. Retrieved 2009-10-04.
  136. ^ HebreoCollege Murcia empezamos en 2003 como escuela privada en polaris world para 214 familias jud 2008-07-09 at the Wayback Machine at ayunt.murcia
  137. ^ "Barcelona, Spain Jewish History Tour". www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org.
  138. ^ "Comunidad Judía del Principado de Asturias". www.sefarad-asturias.org.
  139. ^ "Europe – World Union for Progressive Judaism". wupj.org.
  140. ^ Anusim project at bechollashon.org
  141. ^ Ley 25/1992, de 10 de noviembre, por la que se aprueba el acuerdo de cooperación del Estado con la Federación de Comunidades Israelistas de España.
  142. ^ "Jewish group asks French minister to rename Death to Jews hamlet". The Guardian. Agence France-Presse. 12 August 2014.
  143. ^ "It's Official: Spanish Town 'Camp Kill the Jews' to Change Its Name". Haaretz. January 10, 2018 [May 25, 2014].
  144. ^ Stavans, Ilan (1 April 2014). "Repatriating Spain's Jews". The New York Times.
  145. ^ "522 años después, los sefardíes podrán tener nacionalidad española (522 years later, the Sephardi Jews will be able to have Spanish nationality)" (in Spanish). El Mundo. 9 February 2014. Retrieved 27 July 2018.
  146. ^ a b c Jones, Sam (2 October 2019). "132,000 descendants of expelled Jews apply for Spanish citizenship". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 2 March 2022.

Further reading edit

  • Alexy, Trudi. The Mezuzah in the Madonna's Foot: Oral Histories Exploring Five Hundred Years in the Paradoxical Relationship of Spain and the Jews, New York: Simon & Schuster, 1993. ISBN 978-0-671-77816-3, hardcover; ISBN 978-0-06-060340-3, paperback reprint.
  • Álvarez Chillida, Gonzalo (2011). "Presencia e imagen judía en la España contemporánea. Herencia castiza y modernidad". In Schammah Gesser, Silvina; Rein, Raanan (eds.). El otro en la España contemporánea / Prácticas, discursos y representaciones (PDF). Seville: Fundación Tres Culturas del Mediterráneo. pp. 123–160. ISBN 978-84-937041-8-6.
  • Ashtor, Eliyahu. The Jews of Moslem Spain, Vol. 2, Philadelphia: The Jewish Publication Society of America, 1979.
  • Assis, Yom Tov. The Jews of Spain: From Settlement to Expulsion, Jerusalem: The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, 1988.
  • Bartlett, John R. Jews in the Hellenistic World: Josephus, Aristeas, The Sibylline Oracles, Eupolemus, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1985.
  • Bowers, W. P. "Jewish Communities in Spain in the Time of Paul the Apostle" Journal of Theological Studies Vol. 26 Part 2, October 1975, pp. 395–402.
  • Dan, Joseph. "The Epic of a Millennium: Judeo-Spanish Culture's Confrontation" in Judaism Vol. 41, No. 2, Spring 1992.
  • Encyclopaedia Judaica, Jerusalem: Keter Publishing House, Ltd., 1971.
  • Gampel, Benjamin R. "Jews, Christians, and Muslims in Medieval Iberia: Convivencia through the Eyes of Sephardic Jews", in Convivencia: Jews, Muslims, and Christians in Medieval Spain, ed. Vivian B. Mann, Thomas F. Glick, and Jerrilynn D. Dodds, New York: George Braziller, Inc., 1992.
  • Graetz, Professor H. History of the Jews, Vol. III Philadelphia: The Jewish Publication Society of America, 1894.
  • Halkin, Abraham. "The Medieval Jewish Attitude toward Hebrew", in Biblical and Other Studies, ed. Alexander Altman, Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. 1963.
  • Kamen, Henry (1998). The Spanish Inquisition: a Historical Revision. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-07522-9.
  • Katz, Solomon. Monographs of the Mediaeval Academy of America No. 12: The Jews in the Visigothic and Frankish Kingdoms of Spain and Gaul, Cambridge, Massachusetts: The Mediaeval Society of America, 1937.
  • Lacy, W. K. and Wilson, B. W. J. G., trans. Res Publica: Roman Politics and Society according to Cicero, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1970.
  • Laeuchli, Samuel Power and Sexuality: The Emergence of Canon Law at the Synod of Elvira, Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1972.
  • Leon, Harry J., The Jews of Ancient Rome Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society of America, 1960.
  • Lewis, Bernard, Cultures in Conflict: Christians, Muslims, and Jews in the Age of Discovery, US: Oxford University Press, 1995.
  • Mann, Jacob, Texts and Studies in Jewish History and Literature I Cincinnati: Hebrew Union College Press, 1931.
  • Markman, Sidney David, Jewish Remnants in Spain: Wanderings in a Lost World, Mesa, Arizona, Scribe Publishers, 2003.
  • (in Spanish) Arias, Leopoldo Meruéndano. Los Judíos de Ribadavia y orígen de las cuatro parroquias.
  • Raphael, Chaim. The Sephardi Story: A Celebration of Jewish History London: Valentine Mitchell & Co. Ltd., 1991.
  • Ray, Jonathan. The Jew in Medieval Iberia (Boston Academic Studies Press, 2012) 441 pp.
  • Sarna, Nahum M., "Hebrew and Bible Studies in Medieval Spain" in Sephardi Heritage, Vol. 1 ed. R. D. Barnett, New York: Ktav Publishing House, Inc., 1971.
  • Sassoon, Solomon David, "The Spiritual Heritage of the Sephardim", in The Sephardi Heritage, Vol. 1 ed. R. D. Barnett, New York: Ktav Publishing House Inc., 1971.
  • Scherman, Rabbi Nosson and Zlotowitz, Rabbi Meir eds., History of the Jewish People: The Second Temple Era, Brooklyn: Mesorah Publications, Ltd., 1982.
  • Stillman, Norman, "Aspects of Jewish Life in Islamic Spain" in Aspects of Jewish Culture in the Middle Ages, ed. Paul E. Szarmach, Albany: State University of New York Press, 1979.
  • Whiston, A. M., trans., The Life and Works of Flavius Josephus Philadelphia: The John C. Winston Company, 19??.
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainSinger, Isidore; et al., eds. (1901–1906). "Spain". The Jewish Encyclopedia. New York: Funk & Wagnalls.

External links edit

  • Expulsion from Spain and The Anusim[permanent dead link], The Jewish History Resource Center, Project of the Dinur Center for Research in Jewish History, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
  • Jewish Spain today
  • (in Spanish) La Inquisición Española: origen, desarrollo, organización, administración, métodos y proceso inquisitorial
  • The Jews in Spain 2013-10-25 at the Wayback Machine (from Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971)
  • Vikipedya, the Judaeo-Spanish Wikipedia
  • The Tragic History of the Jews of Spain Rabbi Menachem Levine, Aish.com
  • In Plain Language: The song of the Marrano

history, jews, spain, history, jews, current, spanish, territory, stretches, back, biblical, times, according, jewish, tradition, settlement, organised, jewish, communities, iberian, peninsula, possibly, traces, back, times, after, destruction, second, temple,. The history of the Jews in the current day Spanish territory stretches back to Biblical times according to Jewish tradition but the settlement of organised Jewish communities in the Iberian Peninsula possibly traces back to the times after the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE 1 The earliest archaeological evidence of Hebrew presence in Iberia consists of a 2nd century gravestone found in Merida 2 From the late 6th century onward following the Visigothic monarchs conversion from Arianism to the Nicene Creed conditions for Jews in Iberia considerably worsened 3 13th century illustration from the Libro de los juegos depicting Jews playing chess After the Umayyad conquest of Hispania in the early 8th century Jews lived under the Dhimmi system and progressively Arabised 4 Jews of Al Andalus stood out particularly during the 10th and the 11th centuries in the caliphal and first taifa periods 5 Scientific and philological study of the Hebrew Bible began and secular poetry was written in Hebrew for the first time citation needed After the Almoravid and Almohad invasions many Jews fled to Northern Africa and the Christian Iberian kingdoms 5 Targets of antisemitic mob violence Jews living in the Christian kingdoms faced persecution throughout the 14th century leading to the 1391 pogroms 6 As a result of the Alhambra Decree of 1492 the remaining practising Jews in Castile and Aragon were forced to convert to Catholicism thus becoming New Christians who faced discrimination under the limpieza de sangre system whereas those who continued to practise Judaism c 100 000 200 000 were expelled 7 creating diaspora communities Tracing back to a 1924 decree there have been initiatives to favour the return of Sephardi Jews to Spain by facilitating Spanish citizenship on the basis of demonstrated ancestry 2 An estimated 13 000 to 50 000 Jews live in Spain today 8 9 10 11 12 Contents 1 Early history before 300 2 Visigoth rule Repression and forced conversions 5th century to 711 3 Moorish Spain 711 to 1492 3 1 Moorish conquest 3 2 Caliphate of Cordoba 3 3 Taifas Almoravids and Almohads 4 Christian kingdoms 974 1300 4 1 Early rule 974 1085 4 2 Toleration and Jewish immigration 1085 1212 4 3 Turning point 1212 1300 4 4 The Jewish community in 1300 5 1300 1391 5 1 Massacres of 1366 5 2 Anti Jewish enactments 5 3 Massacres and mass conversions of 1391 6 1391 1492 6 1 Anti Jewish laws 6 2 Architecture 7 Edict of Expulsion 7 1 Number of exiles 7 2 European context of expulsions 8 Conversos 9 1858 to the present 9 1 Spanish Civil War amp World War II 9 2 Modern Jewish community 9 3 2014 2019 Citizenship law 10 See also 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksEarly history before 300 editSome associate the country of Tarshish as mentioned in the books of Jeremiah Ezekiel I Kings Jonah and Romans with a locale in southern Spain 13 In generally describing Tyre s empire from west to east Tarshish is listed first Ezekiel 27 12 14 and in Jonah 1 3 it is the place to which Jonah sought to flee from the LORD evidently it represents the westernmost place to which one could sail 14 nbsp Map of Phoenician red and Greek colonies blue at about 550 BCE nbsp Roman provinces of HispaniaThe link between Jews and Tarshish is clear One might speculate that commerce conducted by Jewish emissaries merchants craftsmen or other tradesmen among the Canaanitic speaking Tyrean Phoenicians might have brought them to Tarshish Although the notion of Tarshish as Spain is merely based on suggestive material it leaves open the possibility of a very early Jewish presence in the Iberian peninsula 15 More substantial evidence of Jews in Spain comes from the Roman era Although the spread of the Jews into Europe is most commonly associated with the diaspora that ensued from the Roman conquest of Judea emigration from the land of Israel into the greater Roman Mediterranean area predated the destruction of Jerusalem by the Romans under Titus In his Facta et dicta memorabilia Valerius Maximus makes reference to Jews and Chaldaeans being expelled from Rome in 139 BCE for their corrupting influences 16 According to Josephus King Herod Agrippa attempted to discourage the Jews of Jerusalem from rebelling against Roman authority by reference to Jews throughout the Roman Empire and elsewhere Agrippa warned that the danger concerns not those Jews that dwell here only but those of them which dwell in other cities also for there is no people upon the habitable earth which do not have some portion of you among them whom your enemies might slay in case you go to war 17 The Spanish rabbi and scholar Abraham ibn Daud wrote in 1161 A tradition exists with the Jewish community of Granada that they are from the inhabitants of Jerusalem of the descendants of Judah and Benjamin rather than from the villages the towns in the outlying districts of Judaea 18 Elsewhere he writes about his maternal grandfather s family and how they came to Spain When Titus prevailed over Jerusalem his officer who was appointed over Hispania appeased him requesting that he send to him captives made up of the nobles of Jerusalem and so he sent a few of them to him and there were amongst them those who made curtains and who were knowledgeable in the work of silk and one whose name was Baruch and they remained in Merida 19 Here Rabbi Abraham ben David refers to the second influx of Jews into Spain shortly after the destruction of Israel s Second Temple The earliest mention of Spain is allegedly found in Obadiah 1 20 20 And the exiles of this host of the sons of Israel who are among the Canaanites as far as Ṣarfat Heb צרפת and the exiles of Jerusalem who are in Sepharad will possess the cities of the south While the medieval lexicographer David ben Abraham al Fasi identifies Ṣarfat with the city of Ṣarfend Ladino צרפנדה 21 the word Sepharad Hebrew ספרד in the same verse has been translated by the 1st century rabbinic scholar Jonathan ben Uzziel as Aspamia 22 Based on a later teaching in the compendium of Jewish oral laws compiled by Judah ha Nasi in 189 CE known as the Mishnah Aspamia is associated with a very faraway place generally thought of as Hispania or Spain 23 Circa 960 Hisdai ibn Shaprut minister of trade in the court of the caliph in Cordoba wrote to Joseph the king of Khazaria saying The name of our land in which we dwell is called in the sacred tongue Sepharad but in the language of the Arabs the indwellers of the lands Alandalus Andalusia the name of the capital of the kingdom Cordoba 24 According to David Kimhi 1160 1235 in his commentary on Obadiah 1 20 Ṣarfat and Sepharad both refer to the Jewish captivity Heb galut expelled during the war with Titus and who went as far as the countries Alemania Germany Escalona 25 France and Spain The names Ṣarfat and Sepharad are explicitly mentioned by him as being France and Spain respectively Some scholars think that in the case of the place name Ṣarfat lit Ṣarfend which as noted was applied to the Jewish diaspora in France the association with France was made only exegetically because of its similarity in spelling with the name פרנצא France by a reversal of its letters The Spanish Jew Moses de Leon ca 1250 1305 mentioned a tradition concerning the first Jewish exiles saying that the vast majority of the first exiles driven away from the land of Israel during the Babylonian captivity refused to return for they had seen that the Second Temple would be destroyed like the first 26 Yet another teaching passed down later by Moshe ben Machir in the 16th century explicitly stated that Jews had lived in Spain since the destruction of the First Temple 27 Now I have heard that this praise emet weyaṣiv which is now used by us in the prayer rite was sent by the exiles who were driven away from Jerusalem and who were not with Ezra in Babylon and that Ezra had sent inquiring after them but they did not wish to go up there replying that since they were destined to go off again into exile a second time and that the Temple would once again be destroyed why should we then double our anguish It is best for us that we remain here in our place and to serve God Now I have heard that they are the people of Ṭulayṭulah Toledo and those who are near to them However that they might not be thought of as wicked men and those who are lacking in fidelity may God forbid they wrote down for them this magnanimous praise etc Similarly Gedaliah ibn Jechia the Spaniard has written 28 In 5 252 anno mundi 1492 CE the king Ferdinand and his wife Isabella made war with the Ishmaelites who were in Granada and took it and while they returned they commanded the Jews in all of his kingdoms that in but a short time they were to take leave from the countries they had heretofore possessed they being Castile Navarre Catalonia Aragon Granada and Sicily Then the Jewish inhabitants of Ṭulayṭulah Toledo answered that they were not present in the land of Judea at the time when their Christ was put to death Apparently it was written upon a large stone in the city s street which some very ancient sovereign inscribed and testified that the Jews of Ṭulayṭulah Toledo did not depart from there during the building of the Second Temple and were not involved in putting to death the man whom they called Christ Yet no apology was of any avail to them neither unto the rest of the Jews till at length six hundred thousand souls had evacuated from there Don Isaac Abrabanel a prominent Jewish figure in Spain in the 15th century and one of the king s trusted courtiers who witnessed the expulsion of Jews from Spain in 1492 informs his readers 29 that the first Jews to reach Spain were brought by ship to Spain by a certain Phiros a confederate of the king of Babylon in laying siege to Jerusalem This man was a Greek by birth but had been given a kingdom in Spain He became related by marriage to a certain Espan the nephew of King Heracles who also ruled over a kingdom in Spain This Heracles later renounced his throne because of his preference for his native country in Greece leaving his kingdom to his nephew Espan from whom the country s name Espana Spain derives The Jewish exiles transported there by the said Phiros were descended by lineage from Judah Benjamin Shimon and Levi and were according to Abrabanel settled in two districts in southern Spain one Andalusia in the city of Lucena a city so called by the Jewish exiles that had come there the second in the country around Ṭulayṭulah Toledo Abrabanel says that the name Ṭulayṭulah was given to the city by its first Jewish inhabitants and surmises that the name may have meant טלטול wandering on account of their wandering from Jerusalem He says furthermore that the original name of the city was Pirisvalle so named by its early pagan clarification needed inhabitants He also wrote 30 that he found written in the ancient annals of Spanish history collected by the kings of Spain that the 50 000 Jewish households then residing in the cities throughout Spain were the descendants of men and women who were sent to Spain by the Roman Emperor and who had formerly been subjected to him and whom Titus had originally exiled from places in or around Jerusalem The two Jewish exiles joined together and became one clarification needed Hispania came under Roman control with the fall of Carthage after the Second Punic War 218 202 BCE Exactly how soon after this time Jews made their way onto the scene is a matter of speculation It is within the realm of possibility that they went there under the Romans as free men to take advantage of its rich resources and build enterprises there These early arrivals would have been joined by those who had been enslaved by the Romans under Vespasian and Titus and dispersed to the extreme west during the period of the Jewish Roman War and especially after the defeat of Judea in 70 The Jewish historian Josephus confirms that as early as 90 CE there was already a Jewish diaspora in Europe made up of the two tribes Judah and Benjamin Thus he writes in his Antiquities there are but two tribes in Asia Turkey and Europe subject to the Romans while the ten tribes are beyond Euphrates till now and are an immense multitude 31 One questionable estimate places the number carried off to Spain at 80 000 32 Subsequent immigrations came into the area along both the northern African and southern European sides of the Mediterranean 33 Among the earliest records which may refer specifically to Jews in Spain during the Roman period is Paul the Apostle s Epistle to the Romans Many have taken Paul s intention to go to Spain to minister the gospel 34 to indicate the presence of Jewish communities there 35 as well as Herod s banishment to Spain by Caesar in 39 Flavius Josephus The Wars of the Jews 2 9 6 36 So too the Mishna 37 implied that there was a Jewish community in Spain and that there was communication with the Jewish community in Israel From a slightly later period Midrash Rabbah Leviticus Rabba 29 2 and Pesikta de Rav Kahana Rosh Hashanna both make mention of the Jewish diaspora in Spain Hispania and their eventual return Among these early references are several decrees of the Council of Elvira convened in the early fourth century which address proper Christian behaviour with regard to the Jews of Spain notably forbidding marriage between Jews and Christians 38 Of material evidence of early Iberian Jewry representing a particularly early presence is a signet ring found at Cadiz dating from the 8th 7th century BCE The inscription on the ring generally accepted as Phoenician has been interpreted by a few scholars to be paleo Hebraic 39 Among the early Spanish items of more reliably Jewish origins is an amphora which is at least as old as the 1st century Although this vessel is not from the Spanish mainland it was recovered from Ibiza in the Balearic Islands the imprint upon it of two Hebrew characters attests to Jewish contact either direct or indirect with the area at this time Two trilingual Jewish inscriptions from Tarragona and Tortosa have been variously dated from the 2nd century BCE to the 6th century Bowers p 396 There is also the tombstone inscription from Adra formerly Abdera of a Jewish girl named Salomonula which dates to the early 3rd century 40 Thus while there are limited material and literary indications for Jewish contact with Spain from a very early period more definitive and substantial data begins with the third century Data from this period suggest a well established community whose foundations must have been laid sometime earlier It is likely that these communities originated several generations earlier in the aftermath of the conquest of Judea and possible that they originated much earlier There may have been 41 close contact between the Jewish community of Babylon and Spain as the Talmud 42 documents that Yitzhak the Exilarch son of the sister of Rav Beivai 43 travelled from Cordoba to Hispania As citizens of the Roman Empire the Jews of Spain engaged in a variety of occupations including agriculture Until the adoption of Christianity Jews had close relations with non Jewish populations and played an active role in the social and economic life of the province 44 The edicts of the Synod of Elvira although early examples of priesthood inspired anti Semitism provide evidence of Jews who were integrated enough into the greater community to cause alarm among some of the council s 80 canonic decisions all those that pertained to Jews served to maintain a separation between the two communities 45 It seems that by this time the presence of Jews was of greater concern to Catholic authorities than the presence of pagans Canon 16 which prohibited marriage with Jews was worded more strongly than canon 15 which prohibited marriage with pagans Canon 78 threatens those who commit adultery with Jews with ostracism Canon 48 forbade Jews from blessing Christian crops and Canon 50 forbade sharing meals with Jews repeating the command to Hebrew the Bible indicated respect to Gentile further explanation needed Visigoth rule Repression and forced conversions 5th century to 711 editBarbarian invasions brought most of the Iberian Peninsula under Visigothic rule by the early 5th century Other than in their contempt for Catholics who reminded them of the Romans 46 the Visigoths did not generally take much of an interest in the religious creeds within their kingdom It was only in 506 when Alaric II 484 507 published his Breviarium Alaricianum in which he adopted the laws of the ousted Romans that a Visigothic king concerned himself with the Jews 47 nbsp Visigothic coinage King RecaredThe tides turned even more dramatically following the conversion of the Visigothic royal family under Recared from Arianism to Catholicism in 587 In their desire to consolidate the realm under the new religion the Visigoths adopted an aggressive policy concerning the Jews As the king and the church acted in a single interest the situation for the Jews deteriorated Recared approved the Third Council of Toledo s move in 589 to forcibly baptize the children of mixed marriages between Jews and Christians Toledo III also forbade Jews from holding public office having intercourse with Christian women and performing circumcisions on slaves or Christians Still Recared was not entirely successful in his campaigns since not all Visigoth Arians had converted to Catholicism the unconverted were true allies of the Jews both of whom were oppressed and Jews received some protection from Arian bishops and the independent Visigothic nobility nbsp Visigothic coinage SisebutWhile the policies of the subsequent Kings Liuva II 601 604 Witteric 603 610 and Gundemar 610 612 are unknown Sisebut 612 620 embarked on Recared s course with renewed vigour Soon after upholding the edict of compulsory baptism for children of mixed marriages Sisebut instituted what was to become a recurring phenomenon in Spanish official policy the first edicts expelling Jews from Spain After his 613 decree that Jews must either convert or be expelled some fled to Gaul or North Africa while as many as 90 000 converted Many of the conversos like those of later periods maintained their Jewish identities in secret 48 During the more tolerant reign of Suintila 621 631 most of the conversos returned to Judaism and a number of the exiles returned to Spain 49 In 633 the Fourth Council of Toledo while taking a stance in opposition to compulsory baptism convened to address the problem of crypto Judaism It was decided that if professed Christian were determined to be a practising Jew their children were to be taken away to be raised in monasteries or trusted Christian households 48 The council further directed that all who had reverted to Judaism during the reign of Swintila had to return to Christianity 50 The trend toward intolerance continued with the ascent of Chintila 636 639 He directed the Sixth Council of Toledo to order that only Catholics could remain in the kingdom and taking an unusual step further he excommunicated in advance any of his successors who did not act in accordance with his anti Jewish edicts Again many converted but others chose exile 51 However the problem continued The Eighth Council of Toledo in 653 again tackled the issue of Jews within the realm Further measures at the time included the forbidding of all Jewish rites including circumcision and the observation of the Shabbat and all converted Jews had to promise to put to death either by burning or by stoning any of their brethren known to have relapsed to Judaism The council was aware that prior efforts had been frustrated by lack of compliance among authorities on the local level therefore anyone including nobles and clergy found to have aided Jews in their practice of Judaism was to be punished by seizure of one quarter of their property and excommunication 52 The efforts again proved unsuccessful The Jewish population remained sufficiently sizable as to prompt Wamba 672 680 to issue limited expulsion orders against them and the reign of Erwig 680 687 also seemed vexed by the issue The Twelfth Council of Toledo again called for forced baptism and for those who disobeyed seizure of property corporal punishment exile ll and slavery Jewish children over seven years of age were taken from their parents and similarly dealt with in 694 Erwig also took measures to ensure that Catholic sympathisers would not be inclined to aid Jews in their efforts to subvert the council s rulings Heavy fines awaited any nobles who acted in favour of the Jews and members of the clergy who were remiss in enforcement were subject to a number of punishments 51 Egica 687 702 recognising the wrongness of forced baptism relaxed the pressure on the conversos but kept it up on practising Jews Economic hardships included increased taxes and the forced sale at a fixed price of all property ever acquired from Christians That effectively ended all agricultural activity for the Jews of Spain Furthermore Jews were not to engage in commerce with the Christians of the kingdom or to conduct business with Christians overseas 53 Egica s measures were upheld by the Sixteenth Council of Toledo in 693 In 694 at the Council of Toledo Jews were condemned to slavery by the Visigoths because of a plot to revolt against them encouraged by the Eastern Roman Empire and Romans still residing in Spain 54 Under the Catholic Visigoths persecutions increased The degree of complicity that the Jews had in the Islamic invasion in 711 is uncertain but since they were openly treated as enemies in the country in which they had resided for generations it would be no surprise for them to have appealed to the Moors to the south who were quite tolerant in comparison to the Visigoths for aid In any case the Jews in 694 were accused of conspiring with Muslims across the Mediterranean Jews were declared traitors including baptised Jews found their property confiscated and themselves enslaved The decree exempted only the converts who dwelt in the mountain passes of Septimania who were necessary for the kingdom s protection 53 The Eastern Roman Empire sent its navy on numerous occasions in the late 7th century and the early 8th century to try to instill uprisings in the Jewish and Christian Roman populations in Spain and Gaul against their Visigoth and Frankish rulers that was also aimed at halting the expansion of Muslim Arabs in the Roman world 54 The Jews of Spain were utterly embittered and alienated by Catholic rule at the time of the Muslim invasion The Moors were perceived as a liberating force 55 and welcomed by Jews eager to help them to administer the country In many conquered towns the Muslims left the garrison in the hands of the Jews before they proceeded further north which initiated the Golden Age of Spanish Jews Moorish Spain 711 to 1492 editMain articles Golden age of Jewish culture in Spain and Al Andalus Moorish conquest edit With the victory of Tariq ibn Ziyad in 711 the lives of the Sephardim changed dramatically For the most part the invasion of the Moors was welcomed by the Jews of Iberia Both Muslim and Catholic sources tell that Jews provided valuable aid to the invaders 56 Once the city was captured the defence of Cordoba was left in the hands of Jews and Granada Malaga Seville and Toledo were left to a mixed army of Jews and Moors The Chronicle of Lucas de Tuy records that when the Catholics left Toledo on Sunday before Easter to go to the Church of Saint Leocadia to listen to the divine sermon the Jews acted treacherously informed the Saracens closed the gates of the city before the Catholics and opened them for the Moors However unlike de Tuy s account Rodrigo Jimenez de Rada s De rebus Hispaniae maintains that Toledo was almost completely empty of its inhabitants not because of Jewish treachery but because many had fled to Amiara others to Asturias and some to the mountains and the city was then fortified by a militia of Arabs and Jews 3 24 Although in the cases of some towns the behaviour of the Jews may have been conducive to Muslim success it was of limited impact overall 57 In spite of the restrictions placed upon the Jews as dhimmis life under Muslim rule was one of great opportunity in comparison to that under prior Catholic Visigoths as was testified by the influx of Jews from abroad To Jews throughout the Catholic and Muslim worlds Iberia was seen as a land of relative tolerance and opportunity After initial Arab Berber victories especially with the establishment of Umayyad dynasty rule by Abd al Rahman I in 755 the native Jewish community was joined by Jews from the rest of Europe as well as from Arab territories from Morocco to Mesopotamia the latter region was known as Babylonia in Jewish sources 58 59 Thus the Sephardim found themselves enriched culturally intellectually and religiously by the commingling of diverse Jewish traditions Contacts with Middle Eastern communities were strengthened and the influence of the Babylonian academies of Sura and Pumbedita was at its greatest As a result until the mid 10th century much Sephardic scholarship focused on Halakha Although not as influential traditions of the Levant known as Palestine were also introduced in an increased interest in Hebrew and biblical studies 60 Arabic culture of course also made a lasting impact on Sephardic cultural development General re evaluation of scripture was prompted by Muslim anti Jewish polemics and the spread of rationalism as well as the anti Rabbanite polemics of Karaite Judaism In adopting Arabic as had the Babylonian geonim the heads of the Talmudic Academies in Babylonia the cultural and intellectual achievements of Arabic culture were opened up to the educated Jew as was much of the scientific and philosophical speculation of Greek culture which had been best preserved by Arab scholars The meticulous regard which the Arabs had for grammar and style also had the effect of stimulating an interest among Jews in philological matters in general 61 Arabic came to be the main language of Sephardic science philosophy and everyday business From the second half of the 9th century most Jewish prose including many non halakhic religious works was in Arabic The thorough adoption of Arabic greatly facilitated the assimilation of Jews into Arabic culture 62 63 64 Although initially the often bloody disputes among Muslim factions generally kept Jews out of the political sphere the first approximately two centuries that preceded the Golden Age were marked by increased activity by Jews in a variety of professions including medicine commerce finance and agriculture 65 By the ninth century some members of the Sephardic community felt confident enough to take part in proselytizing amongst previously Jewish Catholics Most famous were the heated correspondences sent between Bodo the Frank a former deacon who had converted to Judaism in 838 and the conversoBishop of Cordoba Alvaro of Cordoba Both men by using such epithets as wretched compiler tried to convince the other to return to their former religion but to no avail 66 67 Caliphate of Cordoba edit The first period of exceptional prosperity took place under the reign of Abd ar Rahman III 882 955 the first Caliph of Cordoba from 929 onward The inauguration of the Golden Age is closely identified with the career of his Jewish councillor Hasdai ibn Shaprut 882 942 Originally a court physician Shaprut s official duties went on to include the supervision of customs and foreign trade It was in his capacity as dignitary that he corresponded with the Khazars a kingdom that had converted to Judaism in the 8th century 68 Abd al Rahman III s support for Arabic scholasticism had made Iberia the centre of Arabic philological research It was within that context of cultural patronage that interest in Hebrew studies developed and flourished With Hasdai as its leading patron Cordoba became the Mecca of Jewish scholars who could be assured of a hospitable welcome from Jewish courtiers and men of means 69 In addition to being a poet himself Hasdai encouraged and supported the work of other Sephardic writers Subjects covered the spectrum encompassing religion nature music politics and pleasure Hasdai brought a number of men of letters to Cordoba including Dunash ben Labrat the innovator of Hebrew metrical poetry and Menahem ben Saruq the compiler of the first Hebrew dictionary which came into wide use among the Jews of Germany and France Celebrated poets of the era include Solomon ibn Gabirol Yehuda Halevi Samuel Ha Nagid ibn Nagrela and Abraham and Moses ibn Ezra 70 71 For the only time between Biblical times and the origins of the modern state of Israel a Jew Samuel ha Nagid commanded a Jewish army 72 Hasdai benefited world Jewry by creating a favourable environment for scholarly pursuits within Iberia but also by using his influence to intervene on behalf of foreign Jews as is reflected in his letter to the Byzantine Princess Helena In it he requested protection for the Jews under Byzantine rule attested to the fair treatment of the Christians of al Andalus and indicated that such was contingent on the treatment of Jews abroad 73 74 The intellectual achievements of the Sephardim of al Andalus influenced the lives of non Jews as well Most notable of the literary contributions is Ibn Gabirol s neo Platonic Fons Vitae The Source of Life Thought by many to have been written by a Christian the work was admired by Christians and studied in monasteries throughout the Middle Ages 75 Some Arabic philosophers followed Jewish ones in their ideas although that phenomenon was somewhat hindered in that although in Arabic Jewish philosophical works were usually written with Hebrew characters 76 Jews were also active in such fields as astronomy medicine logic and mathematics In addition to training the mind in logical yet abstract and subtle modes of thought the study of the natural world as the direct study of the work of the Creator was ideally a way to better understand and become closer to God 77 Al Andalus also became a major centre of Jewish philosophy during Hasdai s time Following the tradition of the Talmud and the Midrash many of the most notable Jewish philosophers were dedicated to the field of ethics although the ethical Jewish rationalism rested on the notion that traditional approaches had not been successful in their treatments of the subject in that they were lacking in rational scientific arguments 78 In addition to contributions of original work the Sephardim were active as translators Greek texts were rendered into Arabic Arabic into Hebrew Hebrew and Arabic into Latin and all combinations of vice versa occurred In translating the great works of Arabic Hebrew and Greek into Latin Iberian Jews were instrumental in bringing the fields of science and philosophy which formed much of the basis of Renaissance learning into the rest of Europe Taifas Almoravids and Almohads edit nbsp A Jew and a Muslim playing chess in 13th century al Andalus Libro de los juegos commissioned by Alphonse X of Castile 13th century Madrid In the early 11th century centralised authority based at Cordoba broke down after the Berber invasion and the ousting of the Umayyads In its stead arose the independent taifa principalities under the rule of local Arab Berber Slavic or Muwallad leaders Rather than having a stifling effect the disintegration of the caliphate expanded the opportunities to Jewish and other professionals The services of Jewish scientists doctors traders poets and scholars were generally valued by the Christian as well as Muslim rulers of regional centres especially as recently conquered towns were put back into order 79 80 Among the most prominent Jews to serve as viziers in the Muslim taifas were the ibn Nagrelas or Naghrela Samuel Ha Nagid ibn Nagrela 993 1056 served Granada s King Habbus al Muzaffar and his son Badis for thirty years In addition to his roles as policy director and military leader as one of only two Jews to command Muslim armies the other being his son Joseph Samuel ibn Nagrela was an accomplished poet and his introduction to the Talmud is standard today His son Joseph ibn Naghrela also acted as vizier but was murdered in the 1066 Granada massacre There were other Jewish viziers serving in Seville Lucena and Saragossa 81 82 The Granada massacre of 1066 was an anti Jewish pogrom that took place in Granada when a Muslim mob stormed the royal palace where Joseph had sought refuge and crucified him The instigators then attacked 1500 Jewish families and killed approximately 4 000 Granada Jews 83 The Golden Age ended before the completion of the Christian Reconquista The Granada massacre was one of the earliest signs of a decline in the status of Jews which resulted largely from the penetration and influence of increasingly zealous Islamic sects from North Africa After the fall of Toledo to Christians in 1085 the ruler of Seville sought relief from the Almoravides The ascetic sect abhorred the liberality of the Islamic culture of al Andalus including the position of authority that some dhimmis held over Muslims In addition to battling the Christians who were gaining ground the Almoravides implemented numerous reforms to bring al Andalus more in line with their notions of proper Islam In spite of large scale forcible conversions Sephardic culture was not entirely decimated Members of Lucena s Jewish community for example managed to bribe their way out of conversion As the spirit of Andalusian Islam was absorbed by the Almoravides policies concerning Jews were relaxed The poet Moses ibn Ezra continued to write during this time and several Jews served as diplomats and physicians to the Almoravides 81 84 Wars in North Africa with Muslim tribes eventually forced the Almoravides to withdraw their forces from Iberia As the Christians advanced Iberian Muslims again appealed to their brethren to the south this time to those who had displaced the Almoravides in north Africa The Almohads who had taken control of much of Islamic Iberia by 1172 far surpassed the Almoravides in fundamentalist outlook and treated the dhimmis harshly Jews and Christians were expelled from Morocco and Islamic Spain Faced with the choice of either death or conversion many Jews emigrated 85 Some such as the family of Maimonides fled south and east to the more tolerant Moslem lands and others went northward to settle in the growing Christian kingdoms 86 87 88 89 Meanwhile the Reconquista continued in the north By the early 12th century conditions for some Jews in the emerging Christian kingdoms were becoming increasingly favourable As had happened during the reconstruction of towns after the breakdown of authority under the Umayyads the services of Jews were employed by the Christian leaders who were increasingly emerging victorious during the later Reconquista The Jews knowledge of the language and the culture of the enemy their skills as diplomats and professionals and their desire for relief from intolerable conditions rendered their services of great value to the Christians during the Reconquista the very same reasons that they had proved useful to the Arabs in the early stages of the Moslem invasion The necessity of having conquerors settle in reclaimed territories also outweighed the prejudices of anti Semitism at least while the Islamic threat was imminent Thus as conditions in Islamic Iberia worsened immigration to Christian principalities increased 90 The Jews from the Muslim south were not entirely secure in their northward migrations however Old prejudices were compounded by newer ones Suspicions of complicity with Islam were alive and Jews who immigrated from Muslim territories spoke Arabic However many of the newly arrived Jews of the north prospered during the late eleventh and early twelfth centuries The majority of Latin documentation regarding Jews during the period refers to their landed property fields and vineyards 91 In many ways life had come full circle for the Sephardim of al Andalus As conditions became more oppressive in the areas under Muslim rule during the 12th and the 13th centuries Jews again looked to an outside culture for relief Christian leaders of reconquered cities granted them extensive autonomy and Jewish scholarship recovered and developed as communities grew in size and importance Assis p 18 However the Reconquista Jews never reached the same heights as had those of the Golden Age Christian kingdoms 974 1300 editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2008 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp The Spanish kingdoms in 1030Early rule 974 1085 edit Catholic princes who the counts of Castile and the first kings of Leon treated the Jews harshly In their operations against the Moors they did not spare the Jews destroying their synagogues and killing their teachers and scholars citation needed Only gradually did the rulers come to realize that surrounded as they were by powerful enemies they could not afford to turn the Jews against them citation needed Garcia Fernandez Count of Castile in the fuero of Castrojeriz 974 placed the Jews in many respects on an equality with Catholics and similar measures were adopted by the Council of Leon 1020 presided over by Alfonso V In Leon many Jews owned real estate and engaged in agriculture and viticulture as well as in the handicrafts and here as in other towns they lived on friendly terms with the Christian population citation needed The Council of Coyanza es 1050 therefore found it necessary to revive the old Visigothic law forbidding under pain of punishment by the Church Jews and Christians to live together in the same house or to eat together citation needed Toleration and Jewish immigration 1085 1212 edit Ferdinand I of Castile set aside a part of the Jewish taxes for the use of the Church and even the not very religious minded Alfonso VI gave to the church of Leon the taxes paid by the Jews of Castro Alfonso VI the conqueror of Toledo 1085 was tolerant and benevolent in his attitude toward the Jews for which he won the praise of Pope Alexander II To estrange the wealthy and industrious Jews from the Moors he offered the former various privileges In the fuero of Najara Sepulveda issued and confirmed by him in 1076 he not only granted the Jews full equality with Catholics but he even accorded them the rights enjoyed by the nobility To show their gratitude to the king for the rights granted them the Jews willingly placed themselves at his and the country s service Alfonso s army contained 40 000 Jews who were distinguished from the other combatants by their black and yellow turbans for the sake of this Jewish contingent the Battle of Sagrajas was not begun until after the Sabbath had passed 92 The king s favoritism toward the Jews which became so pronounced that Pope Gregory VII warned him not to permit Jews to rule over Catholics roused the hatred and envy of the latter After the Battle of Ucles at which the Infante Sancho together with 30 000 men were killed an anti Jewish riot broke out in Toledo many Jews were slain and their houses and synagogues were burned 1108 Alfonso intended to punish the murderers and incendiaries but died in June 1109 before he could carry out his intention After his death the inhabitants of Carrion de los Condes fell upon the Jews many were slain others were imprisoned and their houses were pillaged nbsp Image of a cantor reading the Passover story from the 14th century Barcelona HaggadahAlfonso VII who assumed the title of Emperor of Leon Toledo and Santiago curtailed in the beginning of his reign the rights and liberties which his father had granted the Jews He ordered that neither a Jew nor a convert might exercise legal authority over Catholics and he held the Jews responsible for the collection of the royal taxes Soon however he became more friendly confirming the Jews in all their former privileges and even granting them additional ones by which they were placed on equality with Catholics Considerable influence with the king was enjoyed by Judah ben Joseph ibn Ezra Nasi After the conquest of Calatrava 1147 the king placed Judah in command of the fortress later making him his court chamberlain Judah ben Joseph stood in such favor with the king that the latter at his request not only admitted into Toledo the Jews who had fled from the persecutions of the Almohades but even assigned many fugitives dwellings in Flascala near Toledo Fromista Carrion Palencia and other places where new congregations were soon established After the brief reign of King Sancho III a war broke out between Fernando II of Leon who granted the Jews special privileges and the united kings of Aragon and Navarre Jews fought in both armies and after the declaration of peace they were placed in charge of the fortresses Alfonso VIII of Castile 1166 1214 who had succeeded to the throne entrusted the Jews with guarding Or Celorigo and later Mayorga while Sancho the Wise of Navarre placed them in charge of Estella Funes and Muranon During the reign of Alfonso VIII the Jews gained still greater influence aided doubtless by the king s love of the beautiful Rachel Fermosa of Toledo who was Jewish When the king was defeated at the Battle of Alarcos by the Almohades under Yusuf Abu Ya kub al Mansur the defeat was attributed to the king s love affair with Fermosa and she and her relatives were murdered in Toledo by the nobility After the victory at Alarcos the emir Muhammad al Nasir ravaged Castile with a powerful army and threatened to overrun the whole of Catholic Spain The Archbishop of Toledo called to crusade to aid Alfonso In this war against the Moors the king was greatly aided by the wealthy Jews of Toledo especially by his almoxarife mayor the learned and generous Nasi Joseph ben Solomon ibn Shoshan Al Hajib ibn Amar Turning point 1212 1300 edit See also Nahmanides and Disputation of Barcelona nbsp The Spanish kingdoms in 1210The Crusaders were hailed with joy in Toledo but this joy was soon changed to sorrow as far as the Jews were concerned The Crusaders began the holy war in Toledo 1212 by robbing and killing the Jews and if the knights had not checked them with armed forces all the Jews in Toledo would have been slain When after the battle of Las Navas de Tolosa 1212 Alfonso victoriously entered Toledo the Jews went to meet him in triumphal procession Shortly before his death Oct 1214 the king issued the fuero de Cuenca settling the legal position of the Jews in a manner favorable to them A turning point in the history of the Jews of Spain was reached under Ferdinand III who permanently united the kingdoms of Leon and Castile and under James I the contemporary ruler of Aragon The clergy s endeavors against the Jews became more and more pronounced Spanish Jews of both sexes like the Jews of France were compelled to distinguish themselves from Catholics by wearing a yellow badge on their clothing this order was issued to keep them from associating with Catholics although the reason given was that it was ordered for their own safety Some Jews such as Vidal Taroc were also allowed to own land The papal bull issued by Pope Innocent IV in April 1250 to the effect that Jews might not build a new synagogue without special permission also made it illegal for Jews to proselytize under pain of death and confiscation of property They might not associate with the Catholics live under the same roof with them eat and drink with them or use the same bath neither might a Catholic partake of wine which had been prepared by a Jew The Jews might not employ Catholic nurses or servants and Catholics might use only medicinal remedies which had been prepared by competent Catholic apothecaries Every Jew should wear the badge though the king reserved to himself the right to exempt anyone from this obligation any Jew apprehended without the badge was liable to a fine of ten gold maravedis or to the infliction of ten stripes Jews were also forbidden to appear in public on Good Friday The Jewish community in 1300 edit nbsp An illustration from the Sarajevo Haggadah written in fourteenth century SpainThe Jews in Spain were citizens of the kingdoms in which they resided Castile Aragon and Valencia were the most important both as regards their customs and their language They owned real estate and they cultivated their land with their own hands they filled public offices and on account of their industry they became wealthy while their knowledge and ability won them respect and influence But this prosperity roused the jealousy of the people and provoked the hatred of the clergy the Jews had to suffer much through these causes The kings especially those of Aragon regarded the Jews as their property they spoke of their Jews their juderias Jewish neighborhoods and in their own interest they protected the Jews against violence making good use of them in every way possible The Jews were vassals of the king the same as Christian commoners citation needed There were about 120 Jewish communities in Catholic Spain around 1300 with somewhere around half a million or more Jews citation needed mostly in Castille Catalonia Aragon and Valencia were more sparsely inhabited by Jews Even though the Spanish Jews engaged in many branches of human endeavor agriculture viticulture industry commerce and the various handicrafts it was the money business that procured to some of them their wealth and influence Kings and prelates noblemen and farmers all needed money and could obtain it only from the Jews to whom they paid from 20 to 25 percent interest This business which in a manner the Jews were forced to pursue citation needed in order to pay the many taxes imposed upon them as well as to raise the compulsory loans demanded of them by the kings citation needed led to their being employed in special positions as almonries bailiffs tax collectors The Jews of Spain formed in themselves a separate political body They lived almost solely in the Juderias various enactments being issued from time to time preventing them from living elsewhere From the time of the Moors they had had their own administration At the head of the aljamas in Castile stood the rab de la corte or rab mayor court or chief rabbi also called juez mayor chief justice who was the principal mediator between the state and the aljamas These court rabbis were men who had rendered services to the state as for example David ibn Yah ya and Abraham Benveniste or who had been royal physicians as Meir Alguadez and Jacob ibn Nunez or chief tax farmers as the last incumbent of the court rabbi s office Abraham Senior They were appointed by the kings no regard being paid to the rabbinical qualifications or religious inclination of those chosen1300 1391 editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp At the Feet of the Savior massacre of Jews in Toledo oil on canvas by Vicente Cutanda 1887 nbsp The Spanish kingdoms in 1360In the beginning of the fourteenth century the position of Jews became precarious throughout Spain as antisemitism increased Many Jews emigrated from the crowns of Castile and Aragon It was not until the reigns of Alfonso IV and Peter IV of Aragon and of the young and active Alfonso XI of Castile 1325 that an improvement set in In 1328 5 000 Jews were killed in Navarre following the preaching of a mendicant friar 93 Peter of Castile the son and successor of Alfonso XI was relatively favorably disposed toward the Jews who under him reached the zenith of their influence often exemplified by the success of his treasurer Samuel ha Levi For this reason the king was called the heretic and often the cruel Peter whose education had been neglected was not quite sixteen years of age when he ascended the throne in 1350 From the commencement of his reign he so surrounded himself with Jews that his enemies in derision spoke of his court as a Jewish court who Soon however a civil war erupted as Henry II of Castile and his brother at the head of a mob invaded on 7 May 1355 that part of the Juderia of Toledo called the Alcana they plundered the warehouses and murdered about 1200 Jews without distinction of age or sex 94 The mob did not however succeed in overrunning the Juderia of Toledo proper which was defended by the Jews and by knights loyal to the King Following the succession of John I of Castile conditions for Jews seem to have improved somewhat with John I even making legal exemptions for some Jews such as Abraham David Taroc The more friendly Peter showed himself toward the Jews and the more he protected them the more antagonistic became the attitude of his illegitimate half brother who when he invaded Castile in 1360 murdered all the Jews living in Najera and exposed those of Miranda de Ebro to robbery and death Massacres of 1366 edit Everywhere the Jews remained loyal to King Peter in whose army they fought bravely the king showed his good will toward them on all occasions and when he called the King of Granada to his assistance he especially requested the latter to protect the Jews Nevertheless they suffered greatly Villadiego whose Jewish community numbered many scholars Aguilar and many other towns were totally destroyed The inhabitants of Valladolid who paid homage to his half brother Henry robbed the Jews destroyed their houses and synagogues and tore their Torah scrolls to pieces Paredes Palencia and several other communities met with a like fate and 300 Jewish families from Jaen were taken prisoners to Granada The suffering according to a contemporary writer Samuel Zarza of Palencia had reached its culminating point especially in Toledo which was being besieged by Henry and in which no less than 8 000 persons died through famine and the hardships of war This civil conflict did not end until the death of Peter of whom the victorious brother said derisively Do esta el fi de puta Judio que se llama rey de Castilla Where is the Jewish son of a bitch who calls himself king of Castile Peter was beheaded by Henry and Bertrand Du Guesclin on March 14 1369 A few weeks before his death he reproached his physician and astrologer Abraham ibn Zarzal for not having told the truth in prophesying good fortune for him 95 When Henry de Trastamara ascended the throne as Henry II an era of suffering and intolerance began for the Castilian Jews culminating in their expulsion Prolonged warfare had devastated the land the people had become accustomed to lawlessness and the Jews had been reduced to poverty 95 But in spite of his aversion for the Jews Henry did not dispense with their services He employed wealthy Jews Samuel Abravanel and others as financial councilors and tax collectors His contador mayor or chief tax collector was Joseph Pichon of Seville The clergy whose power became greater and greater under the reign of the fratricide stirred the anti Jewish prejudices of the masses into clamorous assertion at the Cortes of Toro in 1371 It was demanded that the Jews should be kept far from the palaces of the grandees should not be allowed to hold public office should live apart from the Catholics should not wear costly garments nor ride on mules should wear the badge and should not be allowed to bear Catholic names The king granted the two last named demands as well as a request made by the Cortes of Burgos in 1379 that Jews should neither carry arms nor sell weapons but he did not prevent them from holding religious disputations nor did he deny them the exercise of criminal jurisprudence The latter prerogative was not taken from them until the reign of John I Henry s son and successor he withdrew it because certain Jews on the king s coronation day by withholding the name of the accused had obtained his permission to inflict the death penalty on Joseph Pichon who stood high in the royal favor the accusation brought against Pichon included harboring evil designs informing and treason 95 Anti Jewish enactments edit In the Cortes of Soria of 1380 it was enacted that rabbis or heads of aljamas should be forbidden under penalty of a fine of 6 000 maravedis to inflict upon Jews the penalties of death mutilation expulsion or excommunication but in civil proceedings they were still permitted to choose their own judges In consequence of an accusation that the Jewish prayers contained clauses cursing the Catholics the king ordered that within two months on pain of a fine of 3 000 maravedis they should remove from their prayer books the objectionable passages Whoever caused the conversion to Judaism of a Moor or of any one confessing another faith or performed the rite of circumcision upon him became a slave and the property of the treasury The Jews no longer dared show themselves in public without the badge and in consequence of the ever growing hatred toward them they were no longer sure of life or limb they were attacked and robbed and murdered in the public streets and at length the king found it necessary to impose a fine of 6 000 maravedis on any town in which a Jew was found murdered Against his desire John was obliged in 1385 to issue an order prohibiting the employment of Jews as financial agents or tax farmers to the king queen infantes or grandees To this was added the resolution adopted by the Council of Palencia ordering the complete separation of Jews and Catholics and the prevention of any association between them Massacres and mass conversions of 1391 edit Main article Massacre of 1391 nbsp Slaughter of Jews in Barcelona in 1391 Josep Segrelles c 1910 The execution of Joseph Pichon and the inflammatory speeches and sermons delivered in Seville by Archdeacon Ferrand Martinez the pious Queen Leonora s confessor soon raised the hatred of the populace to the highest pitch The feeble King John I in spite of the endeavors of his physician Moses ibn Ẓarẓal to prolong his life died at Alcala de Henares on October 9 1390 and was succeeded by his eleven year old son The council regent appointed by the king in his testament consisting of prelates grandees and six citizens from Burgos Toledo Leon Seville Cordoba and Murcia was powerless every vestige of respect for law and justice had disappeared Ferrand Martinez although deprived of his office continued in spite of numerous warnings to incite the public against the Jews and encourage it to acts of violence As early as January 1391 the prominent Jews who were assembled in Madrid received information that riots were threatening in Seville and Cordoba A revolt broke out in Seville in 1391 Juan Alfonso de Guzman Count of Niebla and governor of the city and his relative the alguazil mayor Alvar Perez de Guzman had ordered on Ash Wednesday March 15 according to the source 96 the arrest and public whipping of two of the mob leaders If that date had been Ash Wednesday Easter would have fallen on 30 April which is impossible in western Christianity The fanatical mob still further exasperated thereby murdered and robbed several Jews and threatened the Guzmans with death In vain did the regency issue prompt orders Ferrand Martinez continued unhindered his inflammatory appeals to the rabble to kill the Jews or baptize them On June 6 the mob attacked the Juderia of Seville from all sides and killed 4000 Jews the rest submitted to baptism as the only means of escaping death 95 At this time Seville is said to have contained 7000 Jewish families Of the three large synagogues existing in the city two were transformed into churches In all the towns throughout the archbishopric as in Alcala de Guadeira Ecija Cazalla and in Fregenal de la Sierra the Jews were robbed and slain In Cordoba this butchery was repeated in a horrible manner the entire Juderia de Cordoba was burned down factories and warehouses were destroyed by the flames Before the authorities could come to the aid of the defenseless people every one of them children young women old men had been ruthlessly slain 2000 corpses lay in heaps in the streets in the houses and in the wrecked synagogues 95 From Cordova the spirit of murder spread to Jaen A horrible butchery took place in Toledo on June 20 Among the many martyrs were the descendants of the famous Toledan rabbi Asher ben Jehiel Most of the Castilian communities suffered from the persecution nor were the Jews of Aragon Catalonia or Majorca spared On July 9 an outbreak occurred in Valencia More than 200 persons were killed and most of the Jews of that city were baptized by the friar Vicente Ferrer whose presence in the city was probably not accidental The only community remaining in the former kingdom of Valencia was that of Murviedro On Aug 2 the wave of murder visited Palma in Majorca 300 Jews were killed and 800 found refuge in the fort from which with the permission of the governor of the island and under cover of night they sailed to North Africa many submitted to baptism Three days later on Saturday August 5 a riot began in Barcelona On the first day 100 Jews were killed while several hundred found refuge in the new fort on the following day the mob invaded the Juderia and began pillaging The authorities did all in their power to protect the Jews but the mob attacked them and freed those of its leaders who had been imprisoned On Aug 8 the citadel was stormed and more than 300 Jews were murdered among the slain being the only son of Ḥasdai Crescas The riot raged in Barcelona until Aug 10 and many Jews though not 11 000 as claimed by some authorities were baptized On the last named day began the attack upon the Juderia in Girona several Jews were robbed and killed many sought safety in flight and a few in baptism 95 The last town visited was Lerida August 13 The Jews of this city vainly sought protection in the Alcazar 75 were slain and the rest were baptized the latter transformed their synagogue into a church in which they worshiped as Marranos 95 Several responses bearing on the widespread persecution of Iberian Jewry between the years 1390 and 1391 can be found in contemporary Jewish sources such as in the Responsa of Isaac ben Sheshet 1326 1408 97 and in the seminal writing of Gedaliah ibn Yahya ben Joseph Shalshelet haQabbalah written ca 1586 98 as also in Abraham Zacuto s Sefer Yuḥasin 99 in Solomon ibn Verga s Shevaṭ Yehudah 100 as well as in a Letter written to the Jews of Avignon by Don Hasdai Crescas in the winter of 1391 concerning the events in Spain in the year 1391 The letter is dated 19 October 1391 101 102 According to Don Hasdai Crescas persecution against Jews began in earnest in Seville in 1391 on the 1st day of the lunar month Tammuz June 103 From there the violence spread to Cordoba and by the 17th day of the same lunar month it had reached Toledo then called by Jews after its Arabic name Ṭulayṭulah 104 From there the violence spread to Mallorca and by the 1st day of the lunar month Elul it had also reached the Jews of Barcelona in Catalonia where the slain were estimated at two hundred and fifty So too many Jews who resided in the neighboring provinces of Lerida and Gironda and in the kingdom of Valencia had been affected 105 as were also the Jews of al Andalus 106 whereas many died a martyr s death while others converted in order to save themselves 1391 1492 editMain article Spanish Inquisition The year 1391 forms a turning point in the history of the Spanish Jews The persecution was the immediate forerunner of the Inquisition which ninety years later was introduced as a means of watching heresy and converted Jews The number of those who had embraced Catholicism in order to escape death was very large over half of Spain s Jews according to Joseph Perez 200 000 converts with only 100 000 openly practicing Jews remaining by 1410 Jews of Baena Montoro Baeza Ubeda Andujar Talavera Maqueda Huete and Molina and especially of Zaragoza Barbastro Calatayud Huesca and Manresa had submitted to baptism Among those baptized were several wealthy men and scholars who scoffed at their former coreligionists some even as Solomon ha Levi or Paul de Burgos called also Paul de Santa Maria and Joshua Lorqui or Geronimo de Santa Fe became the bitterest enemies and persecutors of their former brethren 95 After the bloody excesses of 1391 the popular hatred of the Jews continued unabated The Cortes of Madrid and that of Valladolid 1405 mainly busied themselves with complaints against the Jews so that Henry III found it necessary to prohibit the latter from practising usury and to limit the commercial intercourse between Jews and Catholics he also reduced by one half the claims held by Jewish creditors against Catholics Indeed the feeble and suffering king the son of Leonora who hated the Jews so deeply that she even refused to accept their money showed no feelings of friendship toward them Though on account of the taxes of which he was thereby deprived he regretted that many Jews had left the country and settled in Malaga Almeria and Granada where they were well treated by the Moors and though shortly before his death he inflicted a fine of 24 000 doubloons on the city of Cordoba because of a riot that had taken place there 1406 during which the Jews had been plundered and many of them murdered he prohibited the Jews from attiring themselves in the same manner as other Spaniards and he insisted strictly on the wearing of the badge by those who had not been baptized 95 Many of the Jews from Valencia Catalonia and Aragon thronged to North Africa particularly Algiers 107 Anti Jewish laws edit At the Catholic preacher Ferrer s request a law consisting of twenty four clauses which had been drawn up by Paul of Burgos ne Solomon haLevi was issued in January 1412 in the name of the child king John II of Castile citation needed The object of this law was to reduce the Jews to poverty and to further humiliate them They were ordered to live by themselves in enclosed Juderias and they were to repair within eight days after the publication of the order to the quarters assigned them under penalty of loss of property They were prohibited from practising medicine surgery or chemistry pharmacy and from dealing in bread wine flour meat etc They might not engage in handicrafts or trades of any kind nor might they fill public offices or act as money brokers or agents They were not allowed to hire Catholic servants farmhands lamplighters or gravediggers nor might they eat drink or bathe with Catholics or hold intimate conversation have sexual relations with them or visit them or give them presents Catholic women married or unmarried were forbidden to enter the Juderia either by day or by night The Jews were allowed no self jurisdiction whatever nor might they without royal permission levy taxes for communal purposes they might not assume the title of Don carry arms or trim beard or hair Jewish women were required to wear plain long mantles of coarse material reaching to the feet and it was strictly forbidden for Jews to wear garments made of better material On pain of loss of property and even of slavery they were forbidden to leave the country and any grandee or knight who protected or sheltered a fugitive Jew was punished with a fine of 150 000 maravedis for the first offense These laws which were rigidly enforced any violation of them being punished with a fine of 300 2 000 maravedis and flagellation were calculated to compel the Jews to embrace Catholicism citation needed nbsp A lane in the old Jewish Quarter called El Call of Girona which includes the Girona Synagogue Girona s Jewish community was lost as a result of the Expulsion The persecution of the Jews was now pursued systematically In the hope of mass conversions Benedict on May 11 1415 issued a Papal bull consisting of twelve articles which in the main corresponded with the decree Pragmatica issued by Catalina and which had been placed on the statutes of Aragon by Fernando By this bull Jews and neophytes were forbidden to study the Talmud to read anti Catholic writing in particular the work Macellum Mar Jesu to pronounce the names of Jesus Maria or the saints to manufacture communion cups or other church vessels or accept such as pledges or to build new synagogues or ornament old ones Each community might have only one synagogue Jews were denied all rights of self jurisdiction nor might they proceed against malsines accusers They might hold no public offices nor might they follow any handicrafts or act as brokers matrimonial agents physicians apothecaries or druggists They were forbidden to bake or sell matzot or to give them away neither might they dispose of meat which they were prohibited from eating They might have no intercourse sex with Catholics nor might they disinherit their baptized children They should wear the badge at all times and thrice a year all Jews over twelve of both sexes were required to listen to a Catholic sermon the bull is reprinted from a manuscript in the archives of the cathedral in Toledo by Rios Hist ii 627 653 citation needed As soon as the Catholic monarchs Ferdinand and Isabella ascended their respective thrones steps were taken to segregate the Jews both from the conversos and from their fellow countrymen At the Cortes of Toledo in 1480 all Jews were ordered to be separated in special barrios and at the Cortes of Fraga two years later the same law was enforced in Navarre where they were ordered to be confined to the Juderias at night The same year saw the establishment of the Spanish Inquisition the main object of which was to deal with the conversos Though both monarchs were surrounded by Neo Catholics such as Pedro de Caballeria and Luis de Santangel and though Ferdinand was the grandson of a Jew he showed the greatest intolerance to Jews whether converted or otherwise commanding all conversos to reconcile themselves with the Inquisition by the end of 1484 and obtaining a bull from Pope Innocent VIII ordering all Catholic princes to return all fugitive conversos to the Inquisition of Spain One of the reasons for the increased rigor of the Catholic monarchs was the disappearance of the fear of any united action by Jews and Moors the kingdom of Granada being at its last gasp The rulers did however promise the Jews of the Moorish kingdom that they could continue to enjoy their existing rights in exchange for aiding the Spaniards to overthrow the Moors This promise dated February 11 1490 was repudiated however by the decree of expulsion See the Catholic Monarchs of Spain citation needed The prohibitions persecution and eventual Jewish mass emigration from Spain and Portugal probably had adverse effects on the development of the Spanish economy Jews and Non Catholic Christians reportedly had substantially better numerical skills than the Catholic majority which might be due to the Jewish religious doctrine which focused strongly on education for example because Torah Reading was compulsory Even when Jews were forced to quit their highly skilled urban occupations their numeracy advantage persisted However during the inquisition spillover effects of these skills were rare because of forced separation and Jewish emigration which was detrimental for economic development 108 Architecture edit A small number of pre expulsion synagogues survive including the Synagogue of Santa Maria la Blanca and the Synagogue of El Transito in Toledo the Cordoba Synagogue the Hijar Synagogue the Old main synagogue Segovia and the Synagogue of Tomar nbsp Cordoba Synagogue nbsp Synagogue of El Transito Toledo nbsp Synagogue of Santa Maria la Blanca Toledo nbsp Old main synagogue SegoviaEdict of Expulsion editMain article Alhambra Decree nbsp A signed copy of the Alhambra Decree nbsp The Expulsion of the Jews from Spain in the year 1492 by Emilio Sala FrancesSeveral months after the fall of Granada an edict of expulsion called the Alhambra Decree was issued against the Jews of Spain by Ferdinand and Isabella on 31 March 1492 It ordered all Jews of whatever age to leave the kingdom by the last day of July one day before Tisha B Av 109 They were permitted to take their property provided it was not in gold silver or money The reason given for this action in the preamble of the edict was the relapse of so many conversos owing to the proximity of unconverted Jews who seduced them from Christianity and kept alive in them the knowledge and practices of Judaism It is claimed that Isaac Abarbanel who had previously ransomed 480 Jews of Malaga from the Catholic Monarchs by a payment of 20 000 doubloons now offered them 600 000 crowns for the revocation of the edict It is said also that Ferdinand hesitated but was prevented from accepting the offer by Tomas de Torquemada the grand inquisitor who dashed into the royal presence and throwing a crucifix down before the king and queen asked whether like Judas they would betray their Lord for money Torquemada was reputedly of converso ancestry and the confessor of Isabella Espina was previously a Rabin Whatever the truth of this story there were no signs of relaxation shown by the court and the Jews of Spain made preparations for exile In some cases as at Vitoria they took steps to prevent the desecration of the graves of their kindred by presenting the cemetery called the Judumendi to the municipality a precaution not unjustified as the Jewish cemetery of Seville was later ravaged by the people The members of the Jewish community of Segovia passed the last three days of their stay in the city in the Jewish cemetery fasting and wailing over being parted from their dead beloved Number of exiles edit The number of Jews exiled from Spain is subject to controversy with highly exaggerated figures provided by early observers and historians offering figures which numbered the hundreds of thousands By the time of the expulsion little more than 100 000 practicing Jews remained in Spain since the majority had already converted to Catholicism This in addition to the indeterminate number who managed to return has led recent academic investigations such as those of Joseph Perez and Julio Valdeon to offer figures of somewhere between 50 000 and 80 000 practicing Jews expelled from Spanish territory 110 European context of expulsions edit Jewish expulsion is a well established trend in European history From the 13th to the 16th century at least 15 European countries expelled their Jewish populations The expulsion of the Jews from Spain was preceded by expulsions from England France and Germany among many others and succeeded by at least five more expulsions 111 112 Conversos editMain articles Converso Marrano Anusim and Spanish and Portuguese Jews nbsp Marranos Secret Seder in Spain during the times of inquisition an 1892 painting by Moshe MaimonHenceforth the history of the Jews in Spain is that of the conversos whose numbers as has been shown had been increased by no less than 50 000 during the period of the expulsion to a possible total of 300 000 113 For three centuries after the expulsion Spanish Conversos were subject to suspicion by the Spanish Inquisition which executed over 3000 people in the 1570 1700 period on charges of heresy including Judaism They were also subject to more general discriminatory laws known as limpieza de sangre which required Spaniards to prove their old Christian background in order to access certain positions of authority During this period hundreds of conversos escaped to nearby countries such as England France and the Netherlands or converted back to Judaism thus becoming part of the communities of Western Sephardim or Spanish and Portuguese Jews Conversos played an important leadership role which in the Revolt of the Comuneros 1520 1522 a popular revolt and civil war in the Crown of Castile against the imperial pretensions of Holy Roman Emperor Charles V 114 1858 to the present editSmall numbers of Jews started to arrive in Spain in the 19th century and synagogues were opened in Madrid nbsp Jewish woman in the Jewish quarter of Melilla 1909 By 1900 not taking Ceuta and Melilla into account about 1 000 Jews lived in Spain 115 Jews began to interact with Melilla as early as 1862 with a increasing Jewish community in the city throughout the early 20th century that grew upon the arrival of Moroccan Jews spurred on after the events of Taza under Bou Hmara the 1909 Melillan Campaign World War I and the Rif War 116 Spanish historians started to take an interest in the Sephardim and Judaeo Spanish their language There was a Spanish rediscovery of the Jews of Northern Morocco who still conserved this language and practiced old Spanish customs The dictatorship of Miguel Primo de Rivera 1923 1930 decreed the right to Spanish citizenship to a certain number of Sephardim on December 20 1924 The condition was that they had enjoyed Spanish protection before while living in the Ottoman Empire and that they applied before December 31 1930 A similar measure was undertaken by the French government regarding non Muslims in the Levant who had previously been protected by France The decree especially addressed Jews from Thessaloniki who had refused to take either Greek or Turkish citizenship The decree was later used by some Spanish diplomats to save Sephardi Jews from persecution and death during the Holocaust 117 Prior to the Spanish Civil War and not taking Ceuta and Melilla into account about 6 000 7 000 Jews lived in Spain mostly in Barcelona and Madrid 118 Likewise by 1936 the Jewish community in Melilla amounted to 6 000 later notably decreasing because of emigration to Venezuela Israel mainland Spain and France 119 Spanish Civil War amp World War II edit Further information Francoist Spain and the Holocaust During the Spanish Civil War 1936 1939 synagogues were closed and post war worship was kept in private homes Jewish public life resumed in 1947 with the arrival of Jews from Europe and North Africa In the first years of World War II Laws regulating their admittance were written and mostly ignored 120 They were mainly from Western Europe fleeing deportation to concentration camps from occupied France but also Jews from Eastern Europe especially Hungary Trudi Alexy refers to the absurdity and paradox of refugees fleeing the Nazis Final Solution to seek asylum in a country where no Jews had been allowed to live openly as Jews for over four centuries 121 Throughout World War II Spanish diplomats of the Franco government extended their protection to Eastern European Jews especially Hungary Jews claiming Spanish ancestry were provided with Spanish documentation without being required to prove their case and either left for Spain or survived the war with the help of their new legal status in occupied countries Once the tide of war began to turn and Count Francisco Gomez Jordana Sousa succeeded Franco s brother in law Ramon Serrano Suner as Spain s foreign minister Spanish diplomacy became more sympathetic to Jews although Franco himself never said anything about this 120 Around that same time a contingent of Spanish doctors travelling in Occupied Poland were fully informed of the Nazi extermination plans by Governor General Hans Frank who was under the impression that they would share his views about the matter when they came home they passed the story to Admiral Luis Carrero Blanco who told Franco 122 Diplomats discussed the possibility of Spain as a route to a containment camp for Jewish refugees near Casablanca but it came to naught due to lack of Free French and British support 123 Nonetheless control of the Spanish border with France relaxed somewhat at this time 124 and thousands of Jews managed to cross into Spain many by smugglers routes Almost all of them survived the war 125 The American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee operated openly in Barcelona 126 Shortly afterward Spain began giving citizenship to Sephardi Jews in Greece Hungary Bulgaria and Romania many Ashkenazi Jews also managed to be included as did some non Jews The Spanish head of mission in Budapest Angel Sanz Briz saved thousands of Ashkenazim in Hungary by granting them Spanish citizenship placing them in safe houses and teaching them minimal Spanish so they could pretend to be Sephardim at least to someone who did not know Spanish The Spanish diplomatic corps was performing a balancing act Alexy conjectures that the number of Jews they took in was limited by how much German hostility they were willing to engender 127 Toward the war s end Sanz Briz had to flee Budapest leaving these Jews open to arrest and deportation An Italian diplomat Giorgio Perlasca who was himself living under Spanish protection used forged documents to persuade the Hungarian authorities that he was the new Spanish Ambassador As such he continued Spanish protection of Hungarian Jews until the Red Army arrived 128 Although Spain effectively undertook more to help Jews escape deportation to the concentration camps than most neutral countries did 128 129 there has been debate about Spain s wartime attitude towards refugees Franco s regime despite its aversion to Zionism and Judeo Marxist Freemasonry conspiracy does not appear to have shared the rabid anti Semitic ideology promoted by the Nazis About 25 000 to 35 000 refugees mainly Jews were allowed to transit through Spain to Portugal and beyond Some historians argue that these facts demonstrate a humane attitude by Franco s regime while others point out that the regime only permitted Jewish transit through Spain citation needed After the war Franco s regime was quite hospitable to those who had been responsible for the deportation of the Jews notably Louis Darquier de Pellepoix Commissioner for Jewish Affairs May 1942 February 1944 in Vichy France and to many other former Nazis such as Otto Skorzeny and Leon Degrelle and other former Fascists 130 Jose Maria Finat y Escriva de Romani Franco s chief of security issued an official order dated May 13 1941 to all provincial governors requesting a list of all Jews both local and foreign present in their districts After the list of six thousand names was compiled Romani was appointed Spain s ambassador to Germany enabling him to deliver it personally to Heinrich Himmler Following the defeat of Germany in 1945 the Spanish government attempted to destroy all evidence of cooperation with the Nazis but this official order survived A Jewish newspaper cited a report published 22 June 2010 in the Spanish daily El Pais 131 At around the same time synagogues were opened and the communities could hold a discreet degree of activity 132 On December 29 1948 the official state bulletin BOE published a list of Sefardim family surnames from Greece and Egypt to which a special protection should be granted The Alhambra Decree that had expelled the Jews were formally rescinded on December 16 1968 133 Between 1948 the year Israel was founded and 2010 1 747 Spanish Jews made aliyah to Israel Modern Jewish community edit There are currently around 50 000 Spanish Jews 134 with the largest communities in Barcelona and Madrid each with around 3 500 members 135 There are smaller communities in Alicante Malaga Tenerife Granada Valencia Benidorm Cadiz Murcia and many more Barcelona with a Jewish community of 3 500 has the largest concentration of Jews in Spain Melilla maintains an old community of Sephardic Jews The city of Murcia in the southeast of the country has a growing Jewish community and a local synagogue Kosher olives are produced in this region and exported to Jews around the world Also there is a new Jewish school in Murcia as a result of the growth in Jewish population immigrating to the Murcia community PolarisWorld 136 137 The modern Jewish community in Spain consists mainly of Sephardim from Northern Africa especially the former Spanish colonies citation needed In the 1970s there was also an influx of Argentine Jews mainly Ashkenazim escaping from the military junta With the birth of the European community Jews from other countries in Europe moved to Spain because of its weather lifestyle as well as for its cost of living relative to the north of Europe Some Jews see Spain as an easier life for retirees and for young people Mazarron has seen its Jewish community grow as well as La Manga Cartagena and Alicante Moreover Reform and liberal communities have arisen in cities like Barcelona or Oviedo during the last decade 138 139 Some famous Spaniards of Jewish descent are the businesswomen Alicia and Esther Koplowitz the politician Enrique Mugica Herzog and Isak Andic founder of the clothing design and manufacturing company Mango though only the latter is of Sephardic origin There are rare cases of Jewish converts like the writer Jon Juaristi Today there is an interest by some Jewish groups working in Spain to encourage the descendants of the Marranos to return to Judaism This has resulted in a limited number of conversions to the Jewish faith 140 Like other religious communities in Spain the Federation of Jewish Communities in Spain FCJE has established agreements with the Spanish government 141 regulating the status of Jewish clergy places of worship teaching marriages holidays tax benefits and heritage conservation In 2014 residents of a village in Spain called Castrillo Matajudios voted to change the name of their town due to risk of confusion resulting from the etymology of the name Mata is a common suffix of placenames in Spain meaning forested patch In this case it is likely to be a corruption of mota meaning hill Confusion arises from the word mata also meaning kill thus rendering a name that could be interpreted as kill the jews The name was changed back to its earlier name which would be less subject to surprise by newcomers Castrillo Mota de Judios Castrillo Hill of the Jews 142 Although a mere anecdote in Spain where it barely made the national press this story was widely covered in the English speaking press of the United States United Kingdom and Israel often misrepresenting the name of the village as Camp Kill the Jews 143 2014 2019 Citizenship law edit In 2014 it was announced that the descendants of Sephardic Jews who were expelled from Spain by the Alhambra Decree of 1492 would be offered Spanish citizenship without being required to move to Spain and or renounce any other citizenship they may have 144 145 The law lapsed on October 1 2019 and by that point the justice ministry claimed to have received 132 226 applications and approved 1 500 applicants 146 In order to be approved applicants needed to take tests in Spanish language and culture prove their Sephardic heritage establish or prove a special connection with Spain and then pay a designated notary to certify their documents 146 Most applications came from nationals of countries with high levels of insecurity and violence in Latin America mainly Mexico Colombia and Venezuela 146 See also edit nbsp Judaism portal nbsp Spain portalIsrael Spain relations History of the Jews in Portugal History of the Jews under Muslim rule Jacob ibn Jau Jewish community of Calatayud Marrano Persecution of Jews Samuel Toledano Sephardic law and customs Jews of Catalonia Portuguese Inquisition Pallache familyReferences edit Hinojosa Montalvo 2000 p 25 a b Prados Garcia 2011 p 2119 Hinojosa Montalvo 2000 pp 25 26 Hinojosa Montalvo Jose 2000 Los judios en la Espana medieval de la tolerancia a la expulsion Los marginados en el mundo medieval y moderno PDF p 26 ISBN 84 8108 206 6 a b Hinojosa Montalvo 2000 p 26 Hinojosa Montalvo 2000 p 28 Prados Garcia Celia 2011 La expulsion de los judios y el retorno de los sefardies como nacionales espanoles Un analisis historico juridico PDF Actas del I Congreso Internacional sobre Migraciones en Andalucia pp 2119 2126 ISBN 978 84 921390 3 3 Europa Press 27 November 2013 Los 50 000 judios de Espana celebran desde hoy la fiesta de Januca que culminara el dia 4 con el encendido de luces Retrieved 12 February 2022 Unos 50000 judios residentes en Espana reciben el nuevo ano 28 September 2011 Calvo Vera Gutierrez 6 June 2014 El Gobierno aprueba la ley que otorga la doble nacionalidad a los sefardies El Pais Sergio DellaPergola World Jewish Population 2007 American Jewish Committee accessed 12 October 2009 The Jewish Virtual Library as well as the president of the Spanish Jewish community speak of 40 000 50 000 Jews see Spain Jewish Virtual Library Retrieved 12 October 2009 of whom half are affiliated with the Federacion de Comunidades Judias de Espana FCJE Tarshish in the Jewish Encyclopedia Isidore Singer and M Seligsohn from Tyre in Easton s Bible Dictionary William Parkin 1837 Festus Avinus says expressly that Cadiz was Tarshish This agrees perfectly with the statement of Ibn Hankal who no doubt reports the opinion of the Arabian geographers that Phoenicia maintained a direct intercourse with Britain in later Valerius Maximus I www thelatinlibrary com Flavius Josephus Wars of the Jews 2 16 4 Seder Hakabbalah Laharavad p 51 Jerusalem 1971 printed in the edition which includes the books Seder Olam Rabbah and Seder Olam Zuta Hebrew Seder Olam Rabba Seder Olam Zuta Seder HaKabbalah le Ravad Jerusalem 1971 pp 43 44 Hebrew Pesiqata Derav Kahana ed Salomon Buber New York 1949 p 151b in Comments note 26 Hebrew The Hebrew Arabic Dictionary known as Kitab Jami Al Alfaẓ Agron p xxxviii pub by Solomon L Skoss 1936 Yale University Targum Yonathan ben Uzziel on the Minor Prophets Mishnayoth with a commentary by Pinchas Kahati Baba Bathra 3 2 s v אספמיא Jerusalem 1998 Hebrew Elkan Nathan Adler Jewish Travellers Routledge London 1931 pp 22 36 Cf Cambridge University Library Taylor Schecter Collection T S Misc 35 38 According to Don Isaac Abrabanel in his Commentary at the end of II Kings this was a city built near Toledo in Spain Abrabanel surmises that the name may have been given to it by the Jewish exiles who arrived in Spain in remembrance of the city Ashqelon in the Land of Israel The spelling rendered by Abrabanel is אישקלונה See Abrabanel Commentary on the First Prophets p 680 Jerusalem 1955 Hebrew Moses de Leon in Ha Nefesh Ha Ḥakhamah also known as Sefer Ha Mishḳal end of Part VI which treats on the Resurrection of the Dead pub in Basel 1608 Hebrew Moses ben Machir in Seder Ha Yom p 15a Venice 1605 Hebrew Gedaliah ibn Jechia in Shalshelet Ha Kabbalah p 271 Venice 1585 Hebrew Abrabanel s Commentary on the First Prophets Pirush Al Nevi im Rishonim end of II Kings pp 680 681 Jerusalem 1955 Hebrew Abrabanel s Commentary on the First Prophets Pirush Al Nevi im Rishonim end of II Kings pp 680 681 Jerusalem 1955 Hebrew Josephus Flavius Antiquities xi v 2 Graetz p 42 Assis p 9 15 24 28 See e g Yitzhak Baer A History of the Jews in Christian Spain Philadelphia The Jewish Publication Society of America 1961 p 16 Salo Wittmayer Baron A Social and Religious History of the Jews Christian Spain New York Columbia University press 1952 p 170 Safrai S and Stern M eds The Jewish People in the First Century Assen Netherlands Van Gorcum amp Comp 1974 p 169 Bowers W P Jewish Communities in Spain in the Time of Paul the Apostle Journal of Theological Studies Vol 26 Part 2 October 1975 p 395 The place of banishment is identified in Josephus s Antiquities of the Jews as Gaul specifically Lyon 18 7 2 this discrepancy has been resolved by postulating Lugdunum Convenarium a town in Gaul on the Spanish frontier as the actual site Bava Basra pp 38a History of the Christian Church Volume II Ante Nicene Christianity A D 100 325 Christian Classics Ethereal Library www ccel org Bowers p 396 Encyclopaedia Judaica p 221 But see this article that some Rishonim explained that the Exilarch was just a local community leader Steinsaltz Adin August 23 2007 Masechet Yevamot 113a 119 www ou org Yevamot 115b 8 www sefaria org who lived in the fourth century Jewish Encyclopedia Assis at p 9 Laeuchli pp 75 76 Graetz p 45 Katz p 10 a b Assis p 10 Encyclopaedica Judaica p 221 Katz p 13 a b Encyclopaedia Judaica p 222 Katz p 16 a b Katz p 21 a b Roman Revolutions and the Rise of Frankish Feudalism and Doctrine www romanity org Retrieved 14 April 2016 Stillman p 53 Roth Norman 1994 Jews Visigoths and Muslims in medieval Spain cooperation and conflict pp 79 90 Leiden Brill ISBN 978 90 04 09971 5 Assis pp 44 45 Assis p 12 Sarna p 324 Sarna pp 325 326 Sarna pp 327 328 Dan p 115 Halkin pp 324 325 Jebara Mohamed Nov 16 2015 Hope amid discord in the Middle East blogs timesofisrael com Raphael p 71 Katz pp 40 41 Stillman pp 54 55 Assis pp 13 47 Sarna p 327 Sassoon p 15 Stillman p 58 Eisenberg Daniel 2008 La actitud de Cervantes ante sus antepasados judaicos 2005 PDF Cervantes y las religiones Universidad de Navarra Iberoamericana Vervuert pp 55 78 ISBN 978 84 8489 314 1 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 13 Assis p 13 Mann pp 21 22 Raphael p 78 Dan p 116 Dan pp 7 8 Dan p 117 Assis pp 13 14 Raphael p 75 a b Assis p 14 Ahmed M I Muslim Jewish Harmony A Politically Contingent Reality Religions 2022 13 535 https doi org 10 3390 rel13060535 The Treatment of Jews in Arab Islamic Countries www jewishvirtuallibrary org Gampel p 20 The Forgotten Refugees Archived 2011 09 13 at the Wayback Machine Sephardim www jewishvirtuallibrary org Assis p 16 Gampel pp 20 21 Stillman pp 51 73 Assis p 17 Ashtor pp 250 251 Army article in the Jewish Encyclopedia 1906 by Morris Jastrow Jr J Frederic McCurdy Richard Gottheil Kaufmann Kohler Francis L Cohen Herman Rosenthal Michael Robert 2006 Holy Hatred Christianity Antisemitism and the Holocaust Palgrave Macmillan US p 99 ISBN 978 0 230 60198 7 Lopez de Ayala Pedro Cronicas de los reyes de Castilla Don Pedro Don Enrique II Don Juan I Don Enrique III 1 Que comprende la cronica del rey Don Pedro Madrid 1779 Chap VII a b c d e f g h i SPAIN JewishEncyclopedia com www jewishencyclopedia com Retrieved 2017 04 15 Don Adolfo de Castro trans E D G M Kirwan 1851 The history of the Jews in Spain London p 90 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Rabbi Isaac ben Sheshet Perfet in his Responsa treats mainly on the status of Jews Anusim who were compelled to hide their religion in face of persecution in responsa no s 6 11 12 and 14 of Questions and Responsa of Ben Sheshet Vilnius 1879 pages 13 15 and 16 in PDF Hebrew On Rabbi Isaac ben Sheshet s own forced conversion see Isaac ben Sheshet Perfet Encyclopaedia Judaica ed Michael Berenbaum and Fred Skolnik vol 10 2nd ed Detroit Macmillan Reference USA 2007 p 49 Gedaliah ibn Yahya ben Joseph Shalshelet haQabbalah Jerusalem 1962 pp רסז רסח in PDF pp 276 278 Hebrew Abraham Zacuto Sefer Yuḥasin Cracow 1580 q v Sefer Yuḥasin pp 265 266 in PDF Ibn Verga Salomon 1992 Sheveṭ Yehudah The Sceptre of Judah in Hebrew B nei Issachar Institute Jerusalem Solomon ibn Verga Shevaṭ Yehudah The Sceptre of Judah Lvov 1846 p 76 in PDF American Israeli Cooperative Enterprise 2022 Hasdai Ben Judah Crescas Jewish Virtual Library Retrieved 1 March 2022 Printed in the book Shevaṭ Yehudah by Solomon ibn Verga ed Dr M Wiener Hannover 1855 pp 128 130 or pp 138 140 in PDF and which history concerns only the year 1391 although the Christian date mentioned here is represented in his account by two dates in the Anno Mundi counting i e 5 152 and 5 151 owing to the change of the Hebrew year in the Fall of that same year For English translation see Fritz Kobler Letters of the Jews through the Ages London 1952 pp 272 75 Letter of Hasdai Crescas Shevaṭ Yehudah by Solomon ibn Verga ed Dr M Wiener Hannover 1855 pp 128 130 or pp 138 140 in PDF Fritz Kobler Letters of the Jews through the Ages London 1952 pp 272 75 Mitre Fernandez Emilio 1994 Secretariado de Publicaciones e Intercambio Editorial ed Los judios de Castilla en tiempo de Enrique III el pogrom de 1391 The Castilian Jews at the time of Henry III the 1391 pogrom in Spanish Valladolid University ISBN 84 7762 449 6 Solomon ibn Verga Shevaṭ Yehudah The Sceptre of Judah Lvov 1846 p 76 in PDF Letter from Hasdai Crescas to the congregations of Avignon published as an appendix to Wiener s edition of Shevaṭ Yehudah of Solomon ibn Verga in which he names the Jewish communities affected by the persecution of 1391 See pages 138 140 in PDF Hebrew Fritz Kobler Letters of the Jews through the Ages London 1952 pp 272 75 Solomon ibn Verga Shevaṭ Yehudah The Sceptre of Judah Lvov 1846 pp 41 end 42 in PDF Kamen 1998 p 17 Kamen cites approximate numbers for Valencia 250 and Barcelona 400 but no solid data about Cordoba According to Gedaliah Ibn Yechia these disturbances were caused by a malicious report spread about the Jews See Gedaliah Ibn Yechia Shalshelet Ha Kabbalah Jerusalem 1962 p רסח in PDF p 277 top Hebrew Solomon ibn Verga Shevat Yehudah Lvov 1846 p 76 in PDF Hebrew ALGERIA JewishEncyclopedia com www jewishencyclopedia com Juif Dacil Baten Joerg Perez Artes Mari Carmen 2020 Numeracy of Religious Minorities in Spain and Portugal During the Inquisition Era The Revista de Historia Economica Journal of Iberian and Latin American Economic History 38 147 184 doi 10 1017 S021261091900034X hdl 10016 36127 S2CID 214199340 Hebrew calendar dates start at sunset 31 July 1492 until sunset was the 7th of Av from sunset it was the 8th Presumably the edict took effect at midnight which was already the 8th the day before the 9th Valdeon Baruque Julio 2007 El reinado de los reyes Catolicos in Antisemitismo en Espana in Spanish Cuenca p 102 ISBN 978 84 8427 471 1 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Expulsion at USF edu A Brief Chronology of anti Semitism 26 October 2009 Archived from the original on 26 October 2009 Perez Joseph 2012 History of a Tragedy p 17 Hernando Maximo Diago 24 May 2017 Lideres de origen judeoconverso en las ciudades castellanas durante la revuelta comunera su papel al frente de Comun de pecheros Centro de Estudios del Camino de Santiago pp 71 102 ISBN 9788460846406 via dialnet unirioja es Alvarez Chillida 2011 p 131 Levy Leon 1985 La colectividad judia en Melilla Aldaba Universidad Nacional de Educacion a Distancia 5 199 200 doi 10 5944 aldaba 5 1985 19609 Celia Prados Garcia La expulsion de los judios y el retorno de los sefardies como nacionales espanoles Un analisis historico juridico in Spanish Alvarez Chillida 2011 pp 132 133 Levy 1985 p 200 a b Alexy p 77 Trudi Alexy The Mezuzah in the Madonna s Foot Simon and Schuster 1993 ISBN 0 671 77816 1 p 74 Alexy p 164 165 Alexy p 77 78 Alexy p 165 Alexy p 79 passim Alexy p 154 155 passim Alexy p 165 et seq a b Giorgio Perlasca The International Raoul Wallenberg foundation Retrieved 2006 07 21 Franco amp the Jews Hitler Stopped by Franco Archived from the original on 2011 07 11 Retrieved 2006 07 21 Nicholas Fraser Toujours Vichy a reckoning with disgrace Harper s October 2006 p 86 94 The relevant statement about Spain sheltering him is on page 91 Ofer Aderet 22 June 2010 WWII Document Reveals General Franco Handed Nazis List of Spanish Jews Haaretz Tel Aviv Retrieved 2 March 2022 Spain at the Virtual Jewish History Tour 1492 Ban on Jews Is Voided by Spain The New York Times 17 Dec 1968 Jewish Spain Living Eating and Praying as a Jew in Spain at Spain Expat com European Jewish Congress Spain Archived from the original on 2006 03 01 Retrieved 2009 10 04 HebreoCollege Murcia empezamos en 2003 como escuela privada en polaris world para 214 familias jud Archived 2008 07 09 at the Wayback Machine at ayunt murcia Barcelona Spain Jewish History Tour www jewishvirtuallibrary org Comunidad Judia del Principado de Asturias www sefarad asturias org Europe World Union for Progressive Judaism wupj org Anusim project at bechollashon org Ley 25 1992 de 10 de noviembre por la que se aprueba el acuerdo de cooperacion del Estado con la Federacion de Comunidades Israelistas de Espana Jewish group asks French minister to rename Death to Jews hamlet The Guardian Agence France Presse 12 August 2014 It s Official Spanish Town Camp Kill the Jews to Change Its Name Haaretz January 10 2018 May 25 2014 Stavans Ilan 1 April 2014 Repatriating Spain s Jews The New York Times 522 anos despues los sefardies podran tener nacionalidad espanola 522 years later the Sephardi Jews will be able to have Spanish nationality in Spanish El Mundo 9 February 2014 Retrieved 27 July 2018 a b c Jones Sam 2 October 2019 132 000 descendants of expelled Jews apply for Spanish citizenship The Guardian London Retrieved 2 March 2022 Further reading editAlexy Trudi The Mezuzah in the Madonna s Foot Oral Histories Exploring Five Hundred Years in the Paradoxical Relationship of Spain and the Jews New York Simon amp Schuster 1993 ISBN 978 0 671 77816 3 hardcover ISBN 978 0 06 060340 3 paperback reprint Alvarez Chillida Gonzalo 2011 Presencia e imagen judia en la Espana contemporanea Herencia castiza y modernidad In Schammah Gesser Silvina Rein Raanan eds El otro en la Espana contemporanea Practicas discursos y representaciones PDF Seville Fundacion Tres Culturas del Mediterraneo pp 123 160 ISBN 978 84 937041 8 6 Ashtor Eliyahu The Jews of Moslem Spain Vol 2 Philadelphia The Jewish Publication Society of America 1979 Assis Yom Tov The Jews of Spain From Settlement to Expulsion Jerusalem The Hebrew University of Jerusalem 1988 Bartlett John R Jews in the Hellenistic World Josephus Aristeas The Sibylline Oracles Eupolemus Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1985 Bowers W P Jewish Communities in Spain in the Time of Paul the Apostle Journal of Theological Studies Vol 26 Part 2 October 1975 pp 395 402 Dan Joseph The Epic of a Millennium Judeo Spanish Culture s Confrontation in Judaism Vol 41 No 2 Spring 1992 Encyclopaedia Judaica Jerusalem Keter Publishing House Ltd 1971 Gampel Benjamin R Jews Christians and Muslims in Medieval Iberia Convivencia through the Eyes of Sephardic Jews in Convivencia Jews Muslims and Christians in Medieval Spain ed Vivian B Mann Thomas F Glick and Jerrilynn D Dodds New York George Braziller Inc 1992 Graetz Professor H History of the Jews Vol III Philadelphia The Jewish Publication Society of America 1894 Halkin Abraham The Medieval Jewish Attitude toward Hebrew in Biblical and Other Studies ed Alexander Altman Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1963 Kamen Henry 1998 The Spanish Inquisition a Historical Revision Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 07522 9 Katz Solomon Monographs of the Mediaeval Academy of America No 12 The Jews in the Visigothic and Frankish Kingdoms of Spain and Gaul Cambridge Massachusetts The Mediaeval Society of America 1937 Lacy W K and Wilson B W J G trans Res Publica Roman Politics and Society according to Cicero Oxford Oxford University Press 1970 Laeuchli Samuel Power and Sexuality The Emergence of Canon Law at the Synod of Elvira Philadelphia Temple University Press 1972 Leon Harry J The Jews of Ancient Rome Philadelphia Jewish Publication Society of America 1960 Lewis Bernard Cultures in Conflict Christians Muslims and Jews in the Age of Discovery US Oxford University Press 1995 Mann Jacob Texts and Studies in Jewish History and Literature I Cincinnati Hebrew Union College Press 1931 Markman Sidney David Jewish Remnants in Spain Wanderings in a Lost World Mesa Arizona Scribe Publishers 2003 in Spanish Arias Leopoldo Meruendano Los Judios de Ribadavia y origen de las cuatro parroquias Raphael Chaim The Sephardi Story A Celebration of Jewish History London Valentine Mitchell amp Co Ltd 1991 Ray Jonathan The Jew in Medieval Iberia Boston Academic Studies Press 2012 441 pp Sarna Nahum M Hebrew and Bible Studies in Medieval Spain in Sephardi Heritage Vol 1 ed R D Barnett New York Ktav Publishing House Inc 1971 Sassoon Solomon David The Spiritual Heritage of the Sephardim in The Sephardi Heritage Vol 1 ed R D Barnett New York Ktav Publishing House Inc 1971 Scherman Rabbi Nosson and Zlotowitz Rabbi Meir eds History of the Jewish People The Second Temple Era Brooklyn Mesorah Publications Ltd 1982 Stillman Norman Aspects of Jewish Life in Islamic Spain in Aspects of Jewish Culture in the Middle Ages ed Paul E Szarmach Albany State University of New York Press 1979 Whiston A M trans The Life and Works of Flavius Josephus Philadelphia The John C Winston Company 19 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Singer Isidore et al eds 1901 1906 Spain The Jewish Encyclopedia New York Funk amp Wagnalls External links editExpulsion from Spain and The Anusim permanent dead link The Jewish History Resource Center Project of the Dinur Center for Research in Jewish History The Hebrew University of Jerusalem Jewish Spain today in Spanish La Inquisicion Espanola origen desarrollo organizacion administracion metodos y proceso inquisitorial The Jews in Spain Archived 2013 10 25 at the Wayback Machine from Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971 Vikipedya the Judaeo Spanish Wikipedia The Tragic History of the Jews of Spain Rabbi Menachem Levine Aish com In Plain Language The song of the Marrano Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of the Jews in Spain amp oldid 1182786984, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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