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-Project Gutenberg's History of the Jews, Vol. IV (of VI), by Heinrich Graetz
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: History of the Jews, Vol. IV (of VI)
-
-Author: Heinrich Graetz
-
-Release Date: October 6, 2013 [EBook #43900]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTORY OF THE JEWS, VOL. IV ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Edwards, Charlie Howard, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-HISTORY OF THE JEWS
-
-
-
-
- HISTORY OF THE
- JEWS
-
- BY
- HEINRICH GRAETZ
-
- VOL. IV
-
- FROM THE RISE OF THE KABBALA (1270 C. E.) TO THE
- PERMANENT SETTLEMENT OF THE MARRANOS
- IN HOLLAND (1618 C. E.)
-
- [Illustration]
-
- PHILADELPHIA
-
- THE JEWISH PUBLICATION SOCIETY OF AMERICA
-
- 5717-1956
-
-
-
-
- Copyright, 1894, by
-
- THE JEWISH PUBLICATION SOCIETY OF AMERICA
-
- _All rights reserved. No part of this book may be
- reproduced in any form without permission in
- writing from the publisher: except by a reviewer
- who may quote brief passages in a review to be
- printed in a magazine or newspaper._
-
-
- PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- CULTIVATION OF THE KABBALA, AND PROSCRIPTION OF SCIENCE.
-
- Progress of the Kabbala--Todros Halevi and his Sons--Isaac
- Allatif and his Kabbalistic Doctrines--Adventurous Career
- of Abraham Abulafia--He assumes the Character of Messiah
- --Opposition of Ben Adret--The Prophet of Avila--Joseph
- Jikatilla and his Kabbalistic Mazes--The Impostor Moses de
- Leon--Forgeries of the Kabbalists--Origin of the Zohar--
- Its Doctrines and Influence--Shem-Tob Falaquera--Isaac
- Albalag--Levi of Villefranche--Samuel Sulami and Meiri--
- Abba-Mari's Exaggerated Zeal--Jacob ben Machir Profatius and
- the Controversy regarding the Study of Science--Asheri--The
- Poet Yedaya Bedaresi _page 1._
-
- 1270-1328 C.E.
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- THE FIRST EXPULSION OF THE JEWS FROM FRANCE, AND ITS
- CONSEQUENCES.
-
- Philip le Bel--The Jews of France plundered and banished--
- Estori Parchi; Aaron Cohen; Laments of Bedaresi--Eleazar
- of Chinon, the Martyr--Return of the Jews to France; their
- Precarious Position--Progress of the Controversy regarding
- the Study of Philosophy--Abba-Mari and Asheri--Death of Ben
- Adret--Rabbinical Revival in Spain--Isaac Israeli II--
- Samuel and the Queen Maria Molina--Don Juan Emanuel and Judah
- Ibn-Wakar--The Jews of Rome--Robert of Naples and the Jews
- --Peril of the Jews in Rome--Kalonymos ben Kalonymos, his
- Satires--Immanuel and Dante--The Poet Judah Siciliano--
- Leone Romano and King Robert--Shemarya Ikriti--Position of
- Karaism--Aaron the Elder and the Prayer-Book of the Karaites
- _page 46._
-
- 1306-1328 C.E.
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- THE AGE OF THE ASHERIDES AND OF GERSONIDES.
-
- Condition of Palestine--Pilgrims and Immigrants--Shem
- Tob Ibn-Gaon--Favorable Position of the Jews in Castile
- under Alfonso XI--Persecution in Navarre--Joseph de Ecija
- and Samuel Ibn-Wakar--Increase of Anti-Jewish Feelings
- --Abner-Alfonso of Burgos, Convert to Christianity, and
- Persecutor of the Jews--Gonzalo Martinez--Fall of Martinez
- and Deliverance of the Jews--Decline of the Study of Science
- --The Study of the Talmud prosecuted with Renewed Vigor--
- Jacob and Judah Asheri--Isaac Pulgar, David Ibn-Albilla--
- The Provencal Philosophers Ibn-Kaspi, Leon de Bagnols, and
- Vidal Narboni--Decline of the Study of the Talmud in Germany
- --Emperor Louis of Bavaria and the Jews--Persecution by the
- "Leather-Arms" _page 73._
-
- 1328-1350 C.E.
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
- THE BLACK DEATH.
-
- Rise of the False Accusation against Jews of Poisoning the
- Wells--Massacres in Southern France and Catalonia--The
- Friendly Bull of Pope Clement VI--Terrible Massacres in all
- Parts of Germany--Confessions wrung from the Jews on the Rack
- --The Flagellants as a Scourge for the Jews--King Casimir of
- Poland--Persecution in Brussels--The Black Death in Spain
- --Don Pedro the Cruel and the Jews--Santob de Carrion and
- Samuel Abulafia--Fall of Don Pedro and its Consequences for
- the Jews--Return of the Jews to France and Germany--The
- "Golden Bull"--Manessier de Vesoul--Matathiah Meir Halevi
- --Synod at Mayence _page 100._
-
- 1348-1380 C.E.
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
- THE AGE OF CHASDAI CRESCAS AND ISAAC BEN SHESHET.
-
- The Jews of Spain after the Civil War--Joseph Pichon and
- Samuel Abrabanel--The Apostates: John of Valladolid--
- Menachem ben Zerach, Chasdai Crescas, and Isaac ben Sheshet
- --Chayim Gallipapa and his Innovations--Prevot Aubriot
- and the Jews of Paris--The French Rabbinate--Revival
- of Jewish Influence in Spain--The Jews of Portugal--The
- Jewish Statesmen, David and Judah Negro--Rabbis and Clergy
- --Persecutions in Germany and Spain--The First Germs of the
- Inquisition--Second Expulsion of the Jews from France--The
- Convert Pessach-Peter--Lipmann of Muehlhausen _page 136._
-
- 1369-1380 C.E.
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
-
- JEWISH APOSTATES AND THE DISPUTATION AT TORTOSA.
-
- The Marranos--The Satirists--Pero Ferrus of Alcala, Diego
- de Valencia, and Villasandino--Astruc Raimuch and Solomon
- Bonfed--Paul de Santa Maria and his Zealous Campaign against
- the Jews--Joshua Ibn-Vives--Profiat Duran (Efodi)--Meir
- Alguades--The Philosophy of Crescas--Death of Henry III of
- Castile and Unfavorable Change in the Position of the Jews--
- Messianic Dreams of the Kabbalists--Jews seek an Asylum in
- Northern Africa--Simon Duran--Geronimo de Santa Fe, Vincent
- Ferrer and Benedict XIII--Anti-Jewish Edict of Juan II--
- Special Jewish Costume--Conversion of Jews owing to Ferrer's
- Violent Efforts--Disputation at Tortosa--The Jewish
- Spokesmen at the Conference--Incidents of the Meeting--
- Geronimo instigates the Publication of a Bull for the Burning
- of the Talmud--Pope Martin V befriends the Jews _page 179._
-
- 1391-1420 C.E.
-
-
- CHAPTER VII.
-
- THE HUSSITES. PROGRESS OF JEWISH LITERATURE.
-
- The Hussite Heresy--Consequences for the Jews involved in
- the Struggle--Jacob Moelin--Abraham Benveniste and Joseph
- Ibn-Shem Tob in the Service of the Castilian Court--Isaac
- Campanton, the Poet Solomon Dafiera--Moses da Rieti--
- Anti-Christian Polemical Literature--Chayim Ibn-Musa--
- Simon Duran and his Son Solomon--Joseph Albo as a Religious
- Philosopher--Jewish Philosophical Systems--Edict of the
- Council of Basle against the Jews--Fanatical Outbreaks in
- Majorca--Astruc Sibili and his Conversion to Christianity
- _page 221._
-
- 1420-1442 C.E.
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
-
- CAPISTRANO AND HIS PERSECUTION OF THE JEWS.
-
- Pope Eugenius IV, under the Influence of Alfonso de Cartagena,
- changes his Attitude towards the Jews--His Bull against the
- Spanish and Italian Jews in 1442--Don Juan II defends the
- Jews--Pope Nicholas V's Hostility--Louis of Bavaria--The
- Philosopher Nicholas of Cusa and his Relation to Judaism--
- John of Capistrano--His Influence with the People is turned
- against the Jews--Capistrano in Bavaria and Wuerzburg--
- Expulsion of the Breslau Community--Expulsion of the Jews
- from Bruenn and Olmuetz--The Jews of Poland under Casimir IV
- --Capture of Constantinople by Mahomet II--The Jews find
- an Asylum in Turkey--The Karaites--Moses Kapsali--Isaac
- Zarfati--Position of the Jews of Spain--Persecutions
- directed by Alfonso de Spina--The Condition of the Marranos
- _page 248._
-
- 1442-1474 C.E.
-
-
- CHAPTER IX.
-
- THE JEWS IN ITALY AND GERMANY BEFORE THE EXPULSION FROM SPAIN.
-
- Position of the Jews of Italy--The Jewish Bankers--Yechiel
- of Pisa--His Relations with Don Isaac Abrabanel--Jewish
- Physicians, Guglielmo di Portaleone--Revival of Learning
- among Italian Jews--Messer Leon and Elias del Medigo--
- Pico di Mirandola, the Disciple of Medigo--Predilection of
- Christians for the Kabbala--Jochanan Aleman--Religious
- Views of Del Medigo--German Rabbis immigrate into Italy--
- Joseph Kolon, his Character and his Feud with Messer Leon
- --Judah Menz, an Antagonist of Del Medigo--Bernardinus
- of Feltre--Jews banished from Trent on a False Charge of
- Child-Murder--The Doge of Venice and Pope Sixtus IV befriend
- the Jews--Sufferings of the Jews of Ratisbon--Israel Bruna
- --Synod at Nuremberg--Emperor Frederick III _page 285._
-
- 1474-1492 C.E.
-
-
- CHAPTER X.
-
- THE INQUISITION IN SPAIN.
-
- Jewish Blood in the Veins of the Spanish Nobility--The
- Marranos cling to Judaism and manifest Unconquerable Antipathy
- to Christianity--Ferdinand and Isabella--The Dominicans,
- Alfonso de Ojeda, Diego de Merlo, and Pedro de Solis--The
- Catechism of the Marranos--A Polemical Work against the
- Catholic Church and Despotism gives a Powerful Impulse to the
- Inquisition--The Tribunal is established in 1480--Miguel
- Morillo and Juan de San Martin are the first Inquisitors--
- The Inquisition in Seville--The "Edict of Grace"--The
- Procession and the Auto-da-fe--The Numbers of the Accused and
- Condemned--Pope Sixtus IV and his Vacillating Policy with
- Regard to the Inquisition--The Inquisition under the first
- Inquisitor General, Thomas de Torquemada; its Constitutions
- --The Marranos of Aragon--They are charged with the Death
- of the Inquisitor Arbues--Persecutions and Victims--
- Proceedings against two Bishops Favorable to the Jews,
- De Avila and De Aranda _page 308._
-
- 1474-1483 C.E.
-
-
- CHAPTER XI.
-
- EXPULSION OF THE JEWS FROM SPAIN.
-
- Friendship of Marranos and Jews--Torquemada demands of
- the Rabbis of Toledo the Denunciation of Marranos--Judah
- Ibn-Verga--Jewish Courtiers under Ferdinand and Isabella
- --Isaac Abrabanel: his History and Writings--The Jews
- of Portugal under Alfonso V--The Ibn-Yachya Brothers--
- Abrabanel's Flight from Portugal to Spain--The Jews of
- Granada: Isaac Hamon--Edict of Banishment promulgated by
- Ferdinand and Isabella--Its Consequences--Departure from
- Spain--Number of the Exiles--Decline in the Prosperity
- of Spain after the Banishment of the Jews--Transformation
- of Synagogues and Schools into Churches and Monasteries--
- The Inquisition and the Marranos--Deza, the Successor of
- Torquemada _page 334._
-
- 1483-1492 C.E.
-
-
- CHAPTER XII.
-
- EXPULSION OF THE JEWS FROM NAVARRE AND PORTUGAL.
-
- The Exiles from Navarre--Migration to Naples--King
- Ferdinand I of Naples and Abrabanel--Leon Abrabanel--
- Misfortunes of the Jews in Fez, Genoa, Rome, and the Islands
- of Greece--The Sultan Bajazet--Moses Kapsali--Spanish
- Jews in Portugal--The Jewish Astronomers, Abraham Zacuto
- and Jose Vecinho--The Jewish Travelers, Abraham de Beya and
- Joseph Zapateiro--Outbreak of the Plague among the Spanish
- Jews in Portugal--Sufferings of the Portuguese Exiles--
- Judah Chayyat and his Fellow-Sufferers--Cruelty of Joao II--
- Kindly Treatment by Manoel changed into Cruelty on his Marriage
- --Forcible Baptism of Jewish Children--Levi ben Chabib and
- Isaac Caro--Pope Alexander VI--Manoel's Efforts on Behalf
- of the Portuguese Marranos--Death of Simon Maimi and Abraham
- Saba _page 357._
-
- 1492-1498 C.E.
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII.
-
- RESULTS OF THE EXPULSION OF THE JEWS FROM SPAIN AND PORTUGAL.
- GENERAL VIEW.
-
- Widespread Consequences of the Expulsion--The Exiles--Fate
- of the Abrabanel Family--Leon Medigo--Isaac Akrish--The
- Pre-eminence of Jews of Spanish Origin--The North-African
- States: Samuel Alvalensi, Jacob Berab, Simon Duran II--The
- Jews of Algiers, Tripoli and Tunis--Abraham Zacuto and Moses
- Alashkar--Egypt: Isaac Shalal, David Ibn-Abi Zimra--The
- Jews of Cairo--Selim I--Cessation of the Office of Nagid--
- Jerusalem--Obadyah di Bertinoro--Safet and Joseph Saragossi
- --The Jews of Turkey--Constantinople--Elias Mizrachi:
- the Karaites--The Communities of Salonica and Adrianople--
- The Jews of Greece--Elias Kapsali--The Jews of Italy and
- the Popes: Bonet de Lates--The Ghetto in Venice--Samuel
- Abrabanel and Benvenida Abrabanela--Abraham Farissol--The
- Jews of Germany and their Sorrows--Expulsion of the Jews from
- Various Towns--The Jews of Bohemia--Jacob Polak and his
- School--The Jews of Poland _page 382._
-
- 1496-1525 C.E.
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV.
-
- REUCHLIN AND THE TALMUD.
-
- Antecedents of the Convert John Pfefferkorn--Pfefferkorn and
- the Dominicans of Cologne--Hoogstraten, Ortuinus Gratius
- and Arnold of Tongern--Victor von Karben--Attacks on the
- Talmud and Confiscation of Copies in Frankfort--Reuchlin's
- Hebrew and Kabbalistic Studies--The Controversy concerning
- the Talmud--Activity on both Sides--Public Excitement--
- Complete Victory of Reuchlin's Efforts in Defense of Jewish
- Literature--Ulrich von Hutten--Luther--Revival of Hebrew
- Studies _page 422._
-
- 1500-1520 C.E.
-
-
- CHAPTER XV.
-
- THE KABBALA AND MESSIANIC FANATICISM. THE MARRANOS AND THE
- INQUISITION.
-
- Internal Condition of Judaism--Division in the Communities--
- The Lack of Interest in Poetry--Historical Studies---Leon
- Medigo's "Dialogues of Love"--Supremacy of the Kabbala--
- Messianic Hopes--The Marranos and the Inquisition--Henrique
- Nunes--The Traveler David Reubeni in Rome--Solomon Molcho
- --His Relations with David Reubeni--Joseph Karo and his
- "Maggid"--Clement VII--Molcho in Ancona and Rome--His
- Favor with the Cardinals--Death of Molcho--The Enthusiastic
- Regard in which he was held--Duarte de Paz--Paul III--
- Charles V and the Jews--Emanuel da Costa _page 477._
-
- 1500-1538 C.E.
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI.
-
- STRIVINGS OF EASTERN JEWS FOR UNITY. SUFFERING IN THE WEST.
-
- Efforts towards Unity--Jacob Berab proposes the
- Re-introduction of Rabbinical Ordination into Palestine--
- Successful Opposition of Levi ben Chabib--Joseph Karo--His
- Connection with Solomon Molcho and his Messianic Visions--
- Karo's Religious Code--Converts to Judaism at the Era of the
- Reformation--Expulsion of the Jews from Naples and Prague--
- Their Return to the latter Town--Dr. Eck--Martin Luther and
- the Jews--Moses Hamon--Jewish Histories by Joseph Cohen,
- the Ibn-Vergas, and Samuel Usque--Elegy of Samuel Usque--
- Reaction in the Catholic Church; Loyola establishes the Order
- of Jesuits--The Censorship of Books--Eliano Romano and
- Vittorio Eliano--Fresh Attacks on the Talmud--Paul IV and
- his anti-Jewish Bulls--Persecution of the Marranos by the
- Inquisition in Ancona--Joseph Nassi--The Levantine Jews--
- Expulsion of the Jews from Austria and Bohemia--Relations
- of Pope Pius IV and V to the Jews _page 529._
-
- 1538-1566 C.E.
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII.
-
- THE JEWS IN TURKEY. DON JOSEPH NASSI.
-
- Joseph Nassi's Favor with Sultan Solyman--His Friendship for
- Prince Selim--Hostility of Venice and France to Nassi--
- Joseph Nassi restores Tiberias, and is created Duke of Naxos
- --The Vizir Mahomet Sokolli--The Turks, at the Instigation
- of Nassi, conquer Cyprus--Rebellion against Philip II in
- the Netherlands--Solomon Ashkenazi--Election of Henry
- of Anjou as King of Poland--Ashkenazi negotiates a Peace
- between Venice and Turkey--Gedalya Ibn-Yachya and Jewish
- Literature in Turkey--Joseph Karo compiles the "Shulchan
- Aruch"--Azarya dei Rossi--Isaac Lurya--The Jewish "Dark
- Age"--Spread of the Kabbala--Lurya's Disciple, Chayim Vital
- Calabrese--Death of Joseph Nassi--Esther Kiera and the
- Influence of Jewish Women in Turkey _page 593._
-
- 1566-1600 C.E.
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII.
-
- THE JEWS IN POLAND.
-
- Condition of Poland--Favorable Situation of the Jews in
- that Country--Anti-Jewish Party in Poland--The Jewish
- Communities--Judaizing Poles--Studies of the Jews--
- The Talmud in Poland--Solomon Lurya--Moses Isserles--
- The Historian, David Gans--"Zemach David"--Supremacy of
- the Polish Authorities in Rabbinical Matters--The Jewish
- Seminaries in Poland--The Disputations at the Fairs--
- Chiddushim and Chillukim--Stephen Bathori--His Kindness
- towards his Jewish Subjects--Sigismund III--Restriction
- on the Erection of Synagogues--Jewish Synods--Vaad Arba
- Arazoth--Mordecai Jafa--Christian Sects in Poland--The
- Socinians or Unitarians--Simon Budny--The Reformers and the
- Jews--Isaac Troki--"The Strengthening of Faith" _page 631._
-
- 1566-1600 C.E.
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX.
-
- SETTLEMENT OF JEWS IN HOLLAND. FEEBLE ATTEMPTS AT
- ENFRANCHISEMENT.
-
- Revival of Catholicism--Decay in European Culture--
- Ill-treatment of Jews in Berlin--Emperor Rudolph II of
- Austria--Diminution in the Numbers of Italian Jews--Pope
- Gregory XIII--Confiscation of Copies of the Talmud--
- Vigorous Attempts at the Conversion of Jews--Pope Sixtus V--
- The Jewish Physician David de Pomis--Renewal of Persecution
- by Clement VIII--Expulsion from Various Italian States--The
- Censors and the Talmud--The Jews at Ferrara--Settlement
- of Jews in Holland--Samuel Pallache--Jacob Tirado and the
- Marranos in Amsterdam--Tolerant Treatment--The Poet, David
- Jesurun--Moses Uri--Hebrew Printing in Amsterdam _page 650._
-
- 1593-1618 C.E.
-
-
- CHAPTER XX.
-
- THE DUTCH JERUSALEM AND THE THIRTY YEARS' WAR.
-
- The Amsterdam Jewish Community--Its Wealth, Culture, and
- Honored Position--Zacuto Lusitano--Internal Dissensions
- --The Talmud Torah School--Saul Morteira, Isaac Aboab, and
- Manasseh ben Israel--The Portuguese Congregation in Hamburg
- --The First Synagogue--Lutheran Intolerance--John Miller
- --Jewish Colony in Brazil--The Chief Communities in Germany
- --Persecution in Frankfort--Dr. Chemnitz--The Vienna
- Congregation--Lipmann Heller--Ferdinand II's Zeal for the
- Conversion of Jews--Influence of the Thirty Years' War on
- the Fortunes of the Jews _page 676_
-
- 1618-1648 C.E.
-
-
-
-
-HISTORY OF THE JEWS
-
-
-
-
-HISTORY OF THE JEWS.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-CULTIVATION OF THE KABBALA, AND PROSCRIPTION OF SCIENCE.
-
- Progress of the Kabbala--Todros Halevi and his Sons--Isaac
- Allatif and his Kabbalistic Doctrines--Adventurous Career
- of Abraham Abulafia--He assumes the Character of Messiah
- --Opposition of Ben Adret--The Prophet of Avila--Joseph
- Jikatilla and his Kabbalistic Mazes--The Impostor Moses de
- Leon--Forgeries of the Kabbalists--Origin of the Zohar--
- Its Doctrines and Influence--Shem-Tob Falaquera--Isaac
- Albalag--Levi of Villefranche--Samuel Sulami and Meiri--
- Abba-Mari's Exaggerated Zeal--Jacob ben Machir Profatius and
- the Controversy regarding the Study of Science--Asheri--The
- Poet Yedaya Bedaresi.
-
-1270-1328 C.E.
-
-
-The secret science of the Kabbala, which hitherto had assumed a modest
-deportment and been of a harmless character, began to foment discord
-in Ben Adret's time, ensnare the intelligence and lead astray the
-weak. What it lacked in intrinsic truth and power of conviction, it
-endeavored to supply by presumptuousness. It had already spread from
-Gerona, its original seat, and from northern Spain by way of Segovia
-to southern Spain, as far as the Castilian capital, Toledo, the Jewish
-community of which had before strenuously opposed obscurantism. In the
-city of Toledo the Kabbala won the adherence, among others, of one man
-who, by his noble birth, his princely state, his high position, his
-wealth and learning, gave it great weight. This man, whose influence
-is even now not fully recognized, was Todros ben Joseph Halevi, of
-the noble Toledan family of Abulafia (born 1234, died after 1304).
-He was a nephew of that Meir Abulafia who had been so obstinate an
-adversary of Maimuni and rationalistic thought. Todros Abulafia took
-as a model his uncle, who in his old age had laid his hands on his
-head, and blessed him. When he grew up, he applied himself to the
-Talmud and to secret lore; but he must have been a man of affairs,
-too, for he obtained an honorable position at the court of Sancho IV,
-and was in special favor with the wise queen, Maria de Molina, as a
-physician and financier. By the Jews he was esteemed and venerated as
-their prince (Nasi). When the king and queen of Spain held a meeting in
-Bayonne with the king of France, Philip le Bel, to settle their mutual
-hostilities (1290), Todros Abulafia was in the train of the former, and
-received the most flattering homage from the Jews of southern France.
-Todros, like his uncle, was a determined opponent of philosophy and
-its devotees. He had no words bitter enough against the would-be wise
-people who hold everything which appears incompatible with logic as
-incredible and impossible. Even Maimuni, whom he highly respected, he
-censured for undervaluing the importance of the sacrifices so greatly
-as to explain them merely as a concession to the heathen propensities
-of the people, and for calling the offering of incense an expedient for
-purifying the air. He waged vehement warfare against the philosophy
-which denies the existence of evil spirits, which to him was identical
-with doubting the existence of angels. Having been initiated into
-the secret science by one of the earliest Kabbalists, perhaps by
-Jacob of Segovia, who formed a school of his own, Todros valued it
-as divine wisdom, to uncover whose veil to laymen was fraught with
-danger. The recognition of the secret doctrine by a person of so high a
-position could not but produce some effect. His sons, Levi and Joseph,
-likewise plunged headlong into its study. Two of the four Kabbalists
-of his time, who developed the Kabbala, and extended its influence,
-ranged themselves under the banner of Todros Abulafia, and dedicated
-their compositions to him. These four Kabbalists of the first rank,
-who established new theories with more or less success, were Isaac
-Ibn-Latif, Abraham Abulafia, Joseph Jikatilla, and Moses de Leon, all
-Spaniards. They obscured the mental light, with which men of intellect,
-from Saadiah to Maimuni, had illumined Judaism, and substituted for
-a refined religious belief, fantastic and even blasphemous chimeras.
-The intellectual degradation of the Jews in the following centuries
-is to a large extent their work. They led astray both their own times
-and posterity through designed or unintentional imposition, and the
-injuries which they inflicted on Judaism are felt even at the present
-day.
-
-The least harmful of these four was Isaac ben Abraham Ibn-Latif or
-Allatif (born about 1220, died about 1290). He no doubt owed his origin
-to the south of Spain, for he was acquainted with Arabic. Nothing is
-known of his history beyond the fact that he was on friendly terms
-with Todros Abulafia, to whom he dedicated one of his works. His
-writings, as has been said by one who came after him, seem to "stand
-with one foot on philosophy and with the other on the Kabbala." But
-Allatif only toyed with philosophical formulae, their meaning does
-not seem to have become known to him. He was not of a thoughtful
-nature, and did not enrich the Kabbala, although he attempted to give
-himself the appearance of following original methods, and avoided
-the usual Kabbalistic expressions. Allatif started with the thought
-that a philosophical view of Judaism was not the "right road to the
-sanctuary," and that it was, therefore, needful to seek a higher
-conception, but, instead of making the way clear, he concealed it by
-empty allusions and unmeaning phrases. Allatif laid more weight than
-his predecessors on the close connection between the spiritual and the
-material world--between God and His creation. For the Godhead is in
-all, and all is in it. In soul-inspiring prayers the human spirit is
-raised to the world-spirit (Sechel ha-Poel), to which it is united "in
-a kiss," and, so influencing the Divinity, it draws down blessings on
-the sublunar world. But not every mortal is capable of such spiritual
-and efficacious prayer; therefore, the prophets, the most perfect
-men, were obliged to pray for the people, for they alone knew the
-power of prayer. The unfolding and revelation of the Deity in the
-world of spirits, spheres and bodies, were explained by Isaac Allatif
-in mathematical formulae. Isaac Allatif must, however, be considered
-a clear thinker, when compared with his enthusiastic contemporary,
-Abraham Abulafia, who endeavored to establish a new order of things by
-Kabbalistic sophisms.
-
-Abraham ben Samuel Abulafia (born 1240, in Saragossa, died 1291) was
-an eccentric personage, full of whims, and fond of adventures. Endowed
-with a lively mind and with more than a moderate amount of knowledge,
-he renounced the ways of common sense to throw himself into the arms of
-enthusiasm. His whole life from his entry into manhood was a succession
-of adventures. His father, who had instructed him in the Bible and
-the Talmud, died when his son was a youth of eighteen, and two years
-later Abraham undertook a journey of adventure, as he relates, in order
-to discover the mythical river Sabbation or Sambation, and to become
-acquainted with the supposed Israelite tribes dwelling on its banks, no
-doubt with a Messianic purpose. His mind was in a constant tumult. He
-wrestled for clearness, but fell ever deeper into mazes and illusions.
-One thing, however, became evident to him, that the philosophy
-with which he had much occupied himself offered no certainty, and,
-therefore, no satisfaction to the religious mind thirsting after truth.
-Even the trite Kabbala as commonly accepted, with its doctrine about
-the Sefiroth, did not satisfy his soul, since both only nursed the
-pride of knowledge. He, a Kabbalist, criticised the unsoundness of this
-mystic theory so severely and correctly that it is surprising that
-he should have conceived still more insane notions. Abraham Abulafia
-sought after something higher, for prophetic inspiration, which alone
-opens the fountain of truth, without traversing the laborious path of
-systematic application.
-
-At length Abulafia believed that he had found what his soul was
-yearning for, and that through divine inspiration he had come upon a
-higher Kabbala, in relation to which the lower mystical doctrine and
-philosophy were only handmaids. This Kabbala alone, he maintained,
-offers the means of coming into spiritual communion with the Godhead,
-and of obtaining prophetic insight. This means was far from new, but
-the firm conviction of its effectiveness and his application of it are
-peculiar to Abulafia. To decompose the words of Holy Writ, especially
-the all-hallowed name of God, to use the letters as independent notions
-(Notaricon), or to transpose the component parts of a word in all
-possible permutations, so as to form words from them (Tsiruf), or
-finally to employ the letters as numbers (Gematria), these are the
-means of securing communion with the spirit-world. But this alone is
-not sufficient. He who desires to render himself worthy of a prophetic
-revelation, must adopt an ascetic mode of living, must remove himself
-from the turmoil of the world, shut himself up in a quiet chamber,
-deliver his soul from earthly cares, clothe himself in white garments,
-wrap himself up with Talith and Phylacteries, and devoutly prepare
-his soul, as if for an interview with the Deity. Besides, he must
-pronounce the letters of God's name at intervals, with modulations of
-the voice, or write them down in a certain order, at the same time
-making energetic movements, writhing and bending forward till the
-mind becomes dazed, and the heart filled with a glow. Then the body
-will be surprised by sleep, and a sensation will arise, as if the soul
-were released from the body. In this condition, if it become lasting
-through practice, the divine grace is poured into the human soul,
-uniting with it in a kiss, and the prophetic revelation follows quite
-naturally. This means of working himself up into a state of ecstasy
-Abulafia certainly practiced, exciting his heated fancy to delirium. He
-considered his Kabbala to be prophetic inspiration, by means of which
-he alone could penetrate into the secrets of the Torah. For the plain
-sense of the words and the simple practice of the religious precepts
-were merely for the uninitiated, like milk for children. Experts, on
-the other hand, find the higher wisdom in the numerical value of the
-letters and in the manifold changes of the words.
-
-In this way he laid down his Kabbala, in antithesis to the superficial
-or baser Kabbala, which occupies itself with the Sefiroth, and,
-as he gibingly said, erects a sort of Decem-unity instead of the
-Christian Trinity. He lectured on his Kabbala in Barcelona, Burgos,
-and Medina-Celi. So low was the general intelligence, that this
-half-insane enthusiast found old and young to listen to him. Two
-of his disciples, Joseph Jikatilla, and Samuel, alleged to be a
-prophet, both of Medina-Celi, proclaimed themselves to be prophets and
-workers of miracles. Abulafia appears, nevertheless, to have aroused
-opposition in Spain, or at least not to have found any real sympathy;
-he left his native country a second time, betaking himself once more
-to Italy, where he reckoned upon stronger support. In Urbino for the
-first time he produced prophetic writings, and alleged that God had
-spoken with him. At last he conceived the mad idea of converting the
-pope to Judaism (Sabbath-eve, 1281). The attempt cost him dear. He
-was arrested two days later in Rome, languished twenty-eight days in
-prison, and escaped the stake only through the circumstance that God,
-as he expressed it, had caused a double mouth (or tongue?) to grow in
-him. Possibly he told the pope that he, too, taught the doctrine of
-the Trinity. After this he was allowed to walk about Rome in freedom.
-Thence Abulafia proceeded to the island of Sicily, and in Messina
-he met with a favorable reception, gaining six adherents. Here he
-finally proclaimed that he was not only a prophet but the Messiah,
-and set forth his claims in writing (November, 1284). God, he said,
-had revealed to him His secrets, and had announced to him the end of
-the exile and the beginning of the Messianic redemption. The gracious
-event was to take place in the year 1290. Mysticism has always been the
-ground on which Messianic fancies have thriven.
-
-Through strictly moral deportment, ascetic life and revelations veiled
-in obscure formulae, perhaps also through his winning personality and
-boldness, Abraham Abulafia found many in Sicily who believed in him,
-and began to make preparations for returning to the Holy Land. But the
-intelligent part of the Sicilian congregation hesitated to join him
-without investigation. They addressed themselves to Solomon ben Adret,
-to obtain information from him respecting Abraham Abulafia. The rabbi
-of Barcelona, who was acquainted with Abulafia's earlier career, sent
-an earnest letter to the community of Palermo, in which he severely
-condemned the self-constituted Messiah as illiterate and dangerous.
-Naturally, Abulafia did not allow this attack to remain unanswered,
-but proceeded to defend himself from the denunciation. In a letter he
-justified his prophetic Kabbala, and hurled back Ben Adret's invectives
-in language so undignified that many thought the letter not genuine.
-
-But his abusive retort was of no avail, for other congregations and
-rabbis, who may have feared that a persecution might be the consequence
-of his fantastic doctrines, also expressed themselves against Abulafia.
-He was harassed so much in Sicily that he had to leave the island, and
-settle in the tiny isle of Comino, near Malta (about 1288). Here he
-continued to publish mystical writings, and to assert that he would
-bring deliverance to Israel. Persecution had embittered him. He leveled
-charges against his brethren in faith, who in their stubbornness would
-not listen to him: "Whilst the Christians believe in my words, the Jews
-eschew them, and absolutely refuse to know anything of the calculation
-of God's name, but prefer the calculation of their money." Of those
-who exclusively occupied themselves with the Talmud, Abulafia said
-that they were seized by an incurable disease, and that they were far
-inferior to those skilled in the higher Kabbala. Abraham Abulafia,
-besides twenty-six on other subjects, composed at least twenty-two
-so-called prophetic works, which, although the product of a diseased
-brain, were used by the later Kabbalists. What at last became of the
-prophetic and Messianic enthusiast and adventurer is not known.
-
-His extravagant conduct did not fail to produce evil consequences, even
-in his own time, and was as infectious as an epidemic. About the same
-time there arose in Spain two enthusiasts, of whom one was probably
-Abraham Abulafia's disciple. One of them made his appearance in the
-small town Ayllon (in the district of Segovia), the other in the large
-congregation of Avila. Both proclaimed themselves to be prophets, and
-announced in mystic language the advent of the Messianic kingdom. Both
-found followers. The adherents of the prophet of Avila related, that
-in his youth he had been ignorant, and could neither read nor write;
-that an angel, who appeared to him in his sleeping, and sometimes
-also in his waking moments, suddenly endowed him through higher
-inspiration, with the power of writing a comprehensive work, full of
-mystical ideas, and a diffuse commentary (without which at that time
-no fairly respectable book could be conceived). When the people of
-Avila and remote congregations heard of this they wondered greatly. The
-story excited extraordinary interest, and the representatives of the
-congregation of Avila consulted Solomon ben Adret, the last commanding
-authority of that time, as to whether they should accept this new
-prophecy.
-
-Himself a partial follower of the secret science, subscribing only
-to the Biblical and the Talmudical miracles, the rabbi of Barcelona
-replied that he would have considered the affair of the prophet of
-Avila as arrant fraud, if trustworthy people had not attested its
-truth. Still he could not possibly recognize him as a prophet, for he
-lacked the principal conditions which the Talmud lays down as essential
-to prophecy: outside of Palestine, prophecy is altogether impossible;
-the age is not suitable for prophetic revelation, and the prophetic
-spirit can not rest upon a perfectly ignorant person. It was incredible
-that a man should go to bed an idiot and get up a prophet. The story
-required the most painstaking and impartial investigation.
-
-In spite of the warning of the most honored rabbi of the time, the
-prophet of Avila pursued his course, and fixed the last day of the
-fourth month (1295) as the beginning of the Messianic redemption. The
-easily influenced and ignorant multitude made preparations for its
-coming, fasted, and spent money lavishly in alms, that they might be
-found acceptable in the Messianic kingdom, and be permitted to partake
-of its bliss. On the appointed day, the deluded people, dressed as on
-the Day of Atonement, hastened to the synagogues, and waited there
-to hear the trumpet-blasts announcing the Messianic advent. But the
-expected Messiah did not show himself, nor was there any sign of him.
-Instead, they are said to have noticed on their garments small crosses,
-for which they were totally unprepared, and which partly sobered and
-partly terrified them. It is possible that some of the incredulous in
-the congregation had fastened the crosses secretly on their garments,
-either to practice a joke upon their credulous brethren, or to point
-out to what end Messianic charlatanry was destined to lead them, and
-thus cure them of their delusion. Some of the impostor's followers
-are said to have gone over to Christianity in consequence of this
-incident; others, to have been plunged into melancholy, because they
-could not explain the presence of the crosses. What became of the
-prophets, or beguiled deceivers, of Ayllon and Avila is not related.
-Like Abraham Abulafia they were lost sight of, and have importance
-only as the excrescences of a diseased state. It is possible that
-another disciple of Abulafia, Joseph Jikatilla, who also was looked
-upon as a performer of miracles, and had his dwelling not far from
-Ayllon, played a part in the mad or deceitful pranks of the prophets of
-Ayllon and Avila. Joseph ben Abraham Jikatilla (born in Medina-Celi,
-died in Penjafiel, after 1305), heard, at the age of twenty years, an
-exposition of the bewildering secret doctrine of Abulafia, and whilst
-the latter still was in Spain, he composed a Kabbalistic book of his
-own, in which he exhibits the same eccentricities as his master. He,
-too, occupied himself with the mysticism of letters and numbers, and
-with the transposition of letters. Joseph Jikatilla's writings are in
-reality only an echo of Abraham Abulafia's fancies; the same delusion
-is apparent in both. But far more influential and more pernicious
-than these three Kabbalists, Allatif, Abulafia, and Jikatilla, was
-Moses de Leon, whose ascendancy was felt both by his contemporaries
-and posterity. Although a contemporary and fellow-specialist unmasked
-his performances, Moses de Leon succeeded in introducing into Jewish
-literature and thought a book which gave the Kabbala a firm foundation
-and wide extension, in brief, raised it to the zenith of its power. The
-question about Moses ben Shem Tob de Leon (born in Leon about 1250,
-died in Arevalo, 1305) is only whether he was a selfish or a pious
-impostor. His intention was certainly to deceive and lead astray, and
-in this respect he appears much baser than Abulafia, who at all events
-was sincere and naive in his delusion. A sciolist, who had mastered
-neither the Talmud nor any other subject thoroughly, Moses possessed
-the skill to use deftly the little that he knew, to write easily and
-fluently, to discover a connection between the most remote things and
-verses of Scripture piled up in the chamber of his memory, and to
-couple them with playful wit. Even the Kabbala was not present to him
-as a system; he knew merely its forms and technical terms, and employed
-them in a skillful manner.
-
-Of careless prodigality, Moses de Leon expended everything that he
-had without reflecting what would remain for the morrow; he made use
-of the Kabbala which had come into fashion to procure for himself a
-rich source of revenue. He led a wandering life, lived a long time in
-Guadalaxara, then in Viverro, in Valladolid, and finally in Avila. At
-first he published his intellectual productions under his own name
-(about 1285). His writings, however, were not sufficiently noticed, and
-brought him but little fame and money. Moses de Leon then hit upon a
-much more effective means for opening hearts and purses. He commenced
-the composition of books under feigned but honored names. If he put
-the doctrines of the Kabbala, worn threadbare, to be sure, into the
-mouth of an older, highly venerated authority, some imposing name from
-the dazzling past,--taking care, of course, to make the coloring and
-the method of presentation archaic--would not such a composition
-be eagerly swallowed? Would he not be richly rewarded if he hinted
-that he was in possession of so costly a treasure? Moses de Leon knew
-well the credulity of those who devoted themselves with more or less
-earnestness to the study of the Kabbala; how they eagerly sought for
-every word which they were led to think originated from ancient times.
-For, since the secret science had been promulgated, and had striven for
-recognition, doctrines which sounded Kabbalistic had been fathered upon
-old and illustrious names, and thus had found acceptance. But Moses de
-Leon did his work much more cleverly than most forgers. He found the
-most likely author for the secret doctrine, against whom there could be
-little or no objection, in the person of the Tanaite Simon bar Yochai,
-who is said to have spent thirteen years in a cave, solitary and
-buried in profound reflection, and whom ancient mysticism represented
-as receiving revelations. Simon bar Yochai was assuredly the right
-authority for the Kabbala. But he must not be permitted to write or
-speak Hebrew, for in this language the Kabbalists would recognize the
-echo of their own voices. He must express himself in Chaldee, in a
-half obscure language, peculiarly fit for secrets, and sounding as if
-from another world. And thus there came into the world a book, the
-book Zohar (brilliancy), which for many centuries was held by Jews
-as a heavenly revelation, and was and partly is even now regarded by
-Christians as an old tradition. But seldom has so notorious a forgery
-so thoroughly succeeded. Moses de Leon well knew how to produce the
-proper effect on credulous readers. He made Simon bar Yochai appear
-in splendor, surrounded by a halo, in the book Zohar, and impart his
-revelation to a circle of select pupils (sometimes twelve, sometimes
-six), "scholars who shine with heaven's light." "When they assembled
-to compose the Zohar, permission was granted to the prophet Elijah, to
-all the members of the celestial conclave, all the angels, spirits,
-and higher souls to act in sympathy with them, and the ten spiritual
-substances (Sefiroth) were charged with the duty of revealing to them
-deeply hidden secrets, reserved for the time of the Messiah." Or in
-another version: Simon bar Yochai summoned his followers to a great
-council, and heard the flapping of the wings of the celestial host, who
-also had assembled to listen to the disclosure of mysteries till then
-unknown even to the angels. The Zohar glorifies its author excessively.
-It calls him the holy light, who stands higher than the greatest
-prophet, Moses, "the faithful shepherd." "I swear by the holy heavens
-and the holy earth," the Zohar makes Simon bar Yochai exclaim, "that
-I behold now what no other mortal since Moses ascended Sinai for the
-second time has beheld, aye, even more than he. Moses knew not that
-his countenance shone; I, however, know that my countenance shines."
-On account of God's love for the writer of the Zohar, his generation
-merited the revelation of truths till then hidden. As long as he who
-illumines everything lives, the sources of the world are opened and
-all secrets are disclosed. "Woe to the generation forsaken by Simon
-bar Yochai." He is almost deified in the Zohar. His disciples once
-broke out into ecstatic praise that he had mounted the degrees to
-heavenly wisdom, which none of his predecessors had done; and of him
-it is written in Scripture, "All men are to appear before the lord,"
-_i.e._, before Simon bar Yochai. This extravagant glorification and
-self-deification, sufficient to mark a forgery, are not without design.
-They were to meet the objection, how the Kabbala, so long unknown, and
-kept secret by the prudent Kabbalists--for they had hesitated to
-impart any of it in writing--how this mysterious wisdom could all at
-once come to light, and be revealed to every one's knowledge. The Zohar
-frequently uses the following excuse: As the time in which Simon bar
-Yochai lived was especially meritorious and rich in grace, and as the
-Messianic period was near, the veil which had concealed the book so
-long could now be drawn aside.
-
-There are certainly very few compositions which have exercised so much
-influence as the Zohar, or which can be compared with it in regard to
-the remarkable nature of its contents and form. It is a book without
-beginning or end, of which it is unknown whether it once formed part
-of a whole, whether the extant portions originally belonged to it,
-or were added later, or whether at an earlier period more of it was
-in existence. It consists of three principal parts, with appendices
-and explanatory comments. The absence of form in this farrago made
-it possible for certain portions to be imitated. It is so easy and
-tempting to imitate its wild though sonorous style. Thus the forgery
-was counter-forged. It is not positively certain whether the Zohar
-is to be regarded as a running commentary to the Pentateuch, as a
-theosophic manual, or as a collection of Kabbalistic sermons. And its
-contents are just as curious, confused and chaotic as its form and
-external dress. The Zohar with its appendages in no wise develops
-a Kabbalistic system like Azriel's, neither does it unfold an idea
-like Abraham Abulafia, but plays with the Kabbalistic forms as with
-counters--with the En-Sof, with the number of the Sefiroth, with
-points and strokes, with vowels, accents, with the names of God and
-the transposition of their letters, as well as with the Biblical
-verses and Agadic sayings--casts them about in eternal repetition,
-and in this manner produces sheer absurdities. Occasionally it gives a
-faint suggestion of an idea, but in a trice it evaporates in feverish
-fancies, or dissolves in childish silliness.
-
-The underlying principle of the Zohar (if we may speak of principles in
-reference to this book) is that the historical narratives and religious
-statutes of the Bible were never intended to be understood in a plain,
-simple sense, but that they contain something higher, mysterious,
-supernatural. "Is it conceivable," the Zohar makes one of Simon bar
-Yochai's circle exclaim, "that God had no holier matters to communicate
-than these common things about Esau and Hagar, Laban and Jacob,
-Balaam's ass, Balak's jealousy of Israel, and Zimri's lewdness? Does a
-collection of such tales, taken in their ordinary sense, deserve the
-name of Torah? And can it be said of such a revelation that it utters
-the pure truth?" "If that is all the Torah contains," remarks Simon bar
-Yochai (or Moses de Leon), "we can produce in our time a book as good
-as this, aye, perhaps better. No, no! the higher, mystical sense of the
-Torah is its true sense. The Biblical narratives resemble a beautiful
-dress, which enraptures fools so that they do not look beneath it. This
-robe, however, covers a body, _i.e._, the precepts of the Law, and this
-again a soul, the higher soul. Woe to the guilty, who assert that the
-Torah contains only simple stories, and therefore look only upon the
-dress. Blessed are the righteous, who seek the real sense of the Law.
-The jar is not the wine, so stories do not make up the Torah." Thus
-the secret lore of Moses de Leon naturally has free play to pervert
-everything and anything, and give it the seal of sublimity, and in this
-manner to promulgate a false doctrine, not only absurd, sometimes even
-blasphemous and immoral. All laws of the Torah are to be considered
-as parts and constituents of a higher world; they resolve themselves
-into the mysteries of the masculine and feminine principle (positive
-and negative). Only when both parts meet, does the higher unity arise.
-Consequently, whenever any one transgresses one of the laws, he
-obscures the brilliant image of the higher world.
-
-It is almost impossible to give an idea of the abuse which the Zohar,
-or Moses de Leon, practices in the interpretation of Holy Writ, and
-how he twists the sense of the words. In the verse, "Raise your eyes to
-heaven, and see who has created this," a profound mystery is supposed
-to reside, which the prophet Elijah learned in the celestial school,
-and revealed to Simon bar Yochai; namely, that God had been unknown
-and obscure before the creation of the world, in a manner existing,
-and still not existing. He was the "Who" (the unknown subject). The
-creation is part of His self-revelation. It was by the creation that He
-first proclaimed Himself as God.
-
-The Zohar is particularly concerned with that side of man which is an
-eternal riddle to man,--the soul, its origin and end. Like the older
-Kabbalists, the Zohar assumed the pre-existence of the souls in the
-brilliant world of the Sefiroth. They are there wrapped in a spiritual
-robe, and entranced in the contemplation of God's light. When the souls
-are about to enter this world they assume an earthly garment, the body;
-but as soon as they are to leave the earth, the angel of death divests
-them of this earthly garment. If a soul lives piously and morally here
-below, it receives its former heavenly robe, and can once more enjoy
-the blissful ecstasy of God's presence; if not, particularly if it
-departs from the world impenitent, it wanders about naked and ashamed
-till purified in hell. The nakedness of the soul, paradise and hell
---depicted in fantastic, baroque, and terrible images--are themes
-for which the Zohar often and gladly makes digressions. What happens
-to the soul during sleep, and the shadows of life--sin, impurity in
-small and great things--are likewise favorite subjects for discussion
-in the Zohar, to which it frequently reverts, presenting them in the
-greatest variety of guises and repetitions. One of the older Kabbalists
-arrived at the notion that to the higher world, the world of light,
-of holiness, and of angels, there was a sharp antithesis--a world
-of darkness, of unholiness, of Satan, in short the principle of evil,
-which was likewise developed into ten degrees (Sefiroth) at the
-creation of the world. In spite of their opposite characters, the two
-worlds are of one origin, forming opposite poles, and are in the same
-relation to each other as the right side is to the left. Accordingly,
-evil is called in the language of the Kabbalists the left or other
-side. The Kabbalists gave another representation of the Satanic
-empire. On the border of the world of light, the world of darkness is
-situated, and encompasses it as the shell surrounds the kernel of the
-fruit. Hence the Zohar metaphorically designates evil, or sin, with
-its ten degrees, as shell (Kelifa). This side is the favorite topic
-of the Zohar; for here it can apply its peculiar exposition of the
-Scriptures. The ten Sefiroth of the left side, the Satanic kingdom, are
-enumerated and denominated by names which savor of barbarism. The names
-sound like those of the princes of the demons in the book of Enoch,
-and are perhaps borrowed thence: Samael or Samiel, Azael, Angiel,
-Sariel, Kartiel. The Zohar identifies all blasphemers and wicked
-people with the evil principle of the "shells" (Kelifoth)--the first
-serpent, Cain, Esau, Pharaoh, and Esau's empire, Rome, and the civil
-and spiritual power of Christendom in the Middle Ages, which rested
-on violence and injustice. Israel and righteous people, on the other
-hand, belong to the world of light, the right Sefiroth. "He who goes
-after the left side (sin), and defiles his actions, draws upon himself
-the impure spirits; they attach themselves to him, nor do they ever
-leave him." The laws of the Torah have no other object than to effect
-and cherish the union of the souls with the world of light. Every
-transgression of them brings the souls to the world of darkness, evil
-spirits, and impurity. The Zohar coarsely represents the connection of
-the souls with light or with darkness by the image of wedded union,
-as, in general, it asserts the masculine and feminine principle in the
-higher world, even in reference to the Deity. As long as Israel lives
-in exile, the divine unity is deficient and disrupted; God will become
-one only in those days when the Mistress (Matronita) will espouse the
-King.
-
-Moses de Leon would have left a gap, if he had not spoken of the
-Messianic period--the keynote of the Kabbala--and determined its
-date. In fact, the sudden revelation of the doctrine so long held
-secret rests on the assumption that the time of the Messiah is near.
-But here the forger betrays himself. Instead of indicating a period or
-a year for the appearance of the Messiah approximating the age of Simon
-bar Yochai (in the second century), the Zohar, with its casuistical
-playing with letters and numbers, demonstrated that it would happen in
-the beginning of the fourteenth century, therefore in the lifetime of
-the author. "When the sixtieth or the sixty-sixth year will pass the
-threshold of the sixth thousand, the Messiah will show himself;" but
-some time will pass before all nations will be conquered, and Israel
-be gathered together. The Messiah will first be summoned to appear on
-earth from his secret abode in Paradise, "the bird's nest," where he
-has been dwelling in bliss since the beginning of the world. A bloody
-conflict will then break out in the world. Edom and Ishmael (Christian
-and Mahometan nations) will vehemently contend with one another, and
-eventually both will be annihilated by a mightier conquering people.
-Signs and miracles will presage the time, and the resurrection of the
-dead and a general diffusion of the Kabbalistic knowledge of God will
-constitute the end of the world. Moses de Leon intended to arouse
-in the minds of his contemporaries the hope that they would behold
-the time of the Messiah with their own eyes. He was perhaps as much
-a victim to Messianic enthusiasm as Abraham Abulafia. Despite the
-Zohar's endeavor to exalt rabbinical Judaism and its law, and by a
-mystical explanation to give every custom, however trivial, a special
-signification and higher import, it carps at and criticises the Talmud
-and its method, though in an obscure, equivocal manner, and with the
-most innocent air in the world. It represents the study of the Kabbala
-as of much higher importance than the study of the Talmud, and even
-of the Bible. The Kabbala has the power of soaring, and is able to
-follow the flight of the Deity in His inscrutable guidance of things;
-the Talmud, on the other hand, and its adherents, have clipped wings,
-and cannot elevate themselves to higher knowledge. The Zohar compares
-the Mishna (Talmud) with a lowly slave; the Kabbala, on the other
-hand, with a powerful mistress. The former has to do with inferior
-matters, with "clean and unclean," with "permitted and prohibited,"
-with "what is and is not fit to be used." As long as this woman rules
-with her "now pure, at another time impure blood," the union of the
-Father with the Matrona (God with Israel) cannot take place. In the
-Messianic period, on the other hand, when the higher knowledge will
-awake, and gain the ascendency, the Kabbala will once more assert
-its dominion over the slave (Talmud), as in the time of the lawgiver
-Moses. The Zohar lastly compares the study of the Talmud with a rugged,
-unproductive rock which, when struck, gives out scanty drops of water,
-causing only disputes and discussions. The Kabbala, on the other hand,
-is like a spring flowing abundantly, to which only a word needs to be
-spoken to cause it to pour out its refreshing and vivifying contents.
-
-When the Zohar or Midrash of Simon bar Yochai was published, it aroused
-the greatest wonder among the Kabbalists. They seized upon it with
-avidity. Moses de Leon received vast multitudes of orders to send
-copies. The question, whence all at once had come so comprehensive
-a work of an old teacher of the Mishna, not a trace of which had
-been known till then, was thus answered: Nachmani had exhumed it in
-Palestine, had sent it to his son in Catalonia, by a whirlwind it had
-been carried to Aragon or Alicante (Valencia), where it had fallen into
-the hands of Moses de Leon, who alone possessed the original document.
-The repute of the newly discovered Kabbalistic treasure soon spread
-through the whole of Spain. The school of Abulafia at once gave the
-Zohar the tribute of its acknowledgment, and considered it indisputably
-genuine. Moses de Leon's wildest hopes were more than realized. There
-were, of course, Kabbalists who doubted that the Zohar had originated
-with Simon bar Yochai and his school, but none the less did they pay
-homage to the book as to a pure source for Kabbalistic theories. When
-the Kabbalist Isaac of Accho, who had escaped the massacre that had
-ensued upon the capture of that city, arrived in Spain, and saw the
-Zohar, he was staggered, and became desirous of coming to the root
-of the question, whether this alleged ancient Palestinian work was
-really genuine, as he had been born and educated in the Holy Land, had
-associated with Nachmani's pupils, and yet had never heard a syllable
-about it. When he met Moses de Leon in Valladolid, the latter took a
-solemn oath that he had in his house at Avila an old copy of the book
-from the hand of Simon bar Yochai, and pledged himself to submit it to
-Isaac of Accho for examination. But Moses de Leon became ill on his
-journey home, and died in Arevalo (1305). The veil around the origin
-of the Zohar was wrapped still closer. Two influential men of Avila,
-David Rafan and Joseph de Avila, had indeed discovered the simple
-truth from Moses de Leon's wife and daughter. Moses de Leon had never
-possessed the original copy, but had evolved it out of his own inner
-consciousness, and had written it with his own hand. His wife frankly
-related that she had often asked her husband why he published the
-productions of his own intellect under a strange name, and that he had
-answered that the Zohar would not, under his own name, have brought him
-any money, but assigned to Simon bar Yochai it had been a lucrative
-source of income.
-
-Thus wife and daughter, without being aware of the full gravity of
-their assuredly unassailable testimony, unmasked Moses de Leon as a
-forger. Nevertheless, the Zohar met with the unqualified applause
-of the Kabbalists, because it supplied a want which would have had
-to be provided for in one way or another. The Kabbalistic doctrine,
-which had already gained so much weight, had hitherto been without
-firm basis; it had no other authority than the very doubtful one of
-Isaac the Blind. Now the dignified figure of a teacher of the Mishna
-in communion with departed spirits and celestial hosts and angels
-confirmed the truths which were not only doubted by many at the time,
-but absolutely ridiculed. Should they, then, not cling to it and defend
-it? What Moses de Leon put into the mouth of Simon bar Yochai, "Many
-will range themselves round the book Zohar, when it becomes known, and
-nourish their minds with it at the end of days," actually happened soon
-after his death. If the Zohar did not bring the Kabbalists anything
-essentially new, it exhibited to them what they did know in so peculiar
-a form and language, that they were wonderstruck. Everything in it
-is contrived for effect, for illusion, and for fascination. The long
-discussions which Simon bar Yochai holds with his circle or with the
-"faithful shepherd," have dramatic power, especially the scene in
-which, in premonition of his speedy dissolution, he imparts once more
-what he so often had proclaimed. Full of effect, and, upon minds
-easily accessible to faith, of transporting and overwhelming influence,
-are the oft-recurring exclamations in the Zohar: Woe, woe to those
-who believe, or do not believe, or fail to respect, this and that.
-Sometimes short prayers are interspersed, which, being elevated and
-imaginative, are peculiarly fitted to fill the soul with mysterious
-awe. Even the characteristic terms introduced instead of the usual
-Kabbalistic forms are calculated to arouse interest by their double
-sense. The author designated God and the higher spiritual substances
-(Sefiroth) collectively or in their single parts and effects, as
-father, mother, the prototype of man, bride, matron, the white head,
-the large and the small face, the mirror, the higher heaven, the higher
-earth, lily, apple-orchard, and so on. The pious were gained over to
-the side of the Zohar, as it attributes to every religious custom and
-every practice a higher import, a higher sanctity, and a mysterious
-effect.
-
-So a new text-book of religion was by stealth introduced into Judaism.
-It placed the Kabbala, which a century before had been unknown, on the
-same level as the Bible and the Talmud, and to a certain extent on a
-still higher level. The Zohar undoubtedly produced good, in so far as
-it opposed enthusiasm to the legal dry-as-dust manner of the study of
-the Talmud, stimulated the imagination and the feelings, and cultivated
-a disposition that restrained the reasoning faculty. But the ills which
-it has brought on Judaism outweigh the good by far. The Zohar confirmed
-and propagated a gloomy superstition, and strengthened in people's
-minds the belief in the kingdom of Satan, in evil spirits and ghosts.
-
-Through its constant use of coarse expressions, often verging on the
-sensual, in contradistinction to the chaste, pure spirit pervading
-Jewish literature, the Zohar sowed the seeds of unclean desires, and
-later on produced a sect that laid aside all regard for decency.
-Finally, the Zohar blunted the sense for the simple and the true, and
-created a visionary world, in which the souls of those who zealously
-occupied themselves with it were lulled into a sort of half-sleep,
-and lost the faculty of distinguishing between right and wrong. Its
-quibbling interpretations of Holy Writ, adopted by the Kabbalists and
-others infected with this mannerism, perverted the verses and words
-of the Holy Book, and made the Bible the wrestling-ground of the most
-curious, insane notions. The Zohar even contains utterances which
-seem favorable to the Christian dogma of the Trinity of the Godhead.
-The mystics dismembered the fair form of Holy Writ, indulged in mad
-sport, and stupefied all sense for truth, but they were scarcely
-more guilty in this respect than the so-called philosophers of the
-time. Maimuni's attempt to bring Judaism and its religious literature
-into consonance with reason, to give certain too realistic verses
-of the Bible a philosophical, or at least a tolerable sense, and
-place religious precepts on the basis of an intelligible, acceptable
-purpose, encouraged half-learned men to explain everything and
-anything in the same way. Hence the allegorizing of the Scriptures,
-the Agada, and the rites, was carried to an incredible extreme. These
-pseudo-philosophers divested the stories of the creation and of the
-patriarchs of their historical character, and interpreted them as
-philosophical commonplaces, in which they sported with Aristotelian
-and Maimunist terms, as the Zohar with Kabbalistic terms. Abraham and
-Sarah, for example, denote to the allegorists matter and form, Pharaoh
-denotes vicious desires, Egypt the body, the land of Goshen the heart,
-Moses the divine spirit, and the Urim and Thummim, which the High
-Priest wore on his breast in the Temple, were the astrolabe of the
-astronomers, with which they calculated time, longitude and latitude.
-If there had been at that time any Jewish thinkers of the first rank,
-they would have made serious efforts to put a stop to this childish
-proceeding, whether Kabbalistic or pseudo-philosophical. But the age of
-Ben Adret happened to be poor in great intellects. Even the two chief
-representatives of the philosophy of that time, Shem-Tob Falaquera and
-Isaac Albalag, were not above mediocrity, and were themselves tainted
-with the current errors.
-
-There were, however, certain men of bolder spirit, who from
-philosophical premises drew conclusions endangering the stability of
-Judaism. Like their predecessors, the Alexandrine allegorists, many
-intelligent and consistent thinkers were induced at this time to
-disregard the ceremonies of Judaism by assigning erroneous purposes to
-religious precepts. As the ceremonies are intended simply to awaken
-certain religious, philosophical, or moral feelings, they argued, it
-is sufficient to call up these thoughts, to be penetrated by them,
-to occupy one's mind constantly with them, while the observance of
-religious customs is superfluous. Several members of this school denied
-Moses' prophetic character, accepting him only as an ordinary lawgiver,
-such as other nations had, and thus rejected the divinity of the Torah.
-The pseudo-philosophers cast a doubt upon the very fundamentals of
-Judaism, and thereby provoked a reaction injurious to free inquiry.
-
-The chief authority of this allegorical school was a man of vast
-erudition, but full of crotchets, who, without desiring it,
-occasioned violent conflicts. This was Levi ben Abraham ben Chayim,
-of Villefranche, not far from Perpignan (born about 1240, died after
-1315). Coming from a respectable family of scholars, he was deeply
-read in the Talmud; but he was more attracted by Maimuni's philosophy
-and Ibn-Ezra's astrology, being a warm adherent of the belief of the
-latter in the influence of the stars over human destiny. Of a volatile
-rather than a solid mind, Levi ben Chayim had no perfect conception
-of Maimuni's aims. To him Judaism resolved itself into philosophical
-platitudes, which, preposterous and childish as they sound to us, were,
-strange to say, regarded by the people of early times as profound
-wisdom. Ben Chayim was the disseminator of that superficial method
-satisfied with formulae instead of thoughts. He composed two chief
-works, one in verse, the other in prose, a kind of encyclopaedia, in
-which he applied the theory derived from Maimuni to all branches of
-knowledge. In these books he translated the historical narratives in
-the Bible into philosophical generalities, explained the standing
-still of the sun on the occasion of Joshua's victory as a natural
-occurrence, and in general, adopted any method of expounding which
-depends on word-twisting. Levi ben Chayim repudiated the allegorical
-interpretations of laws; in fact, he denounced the allegorists as
-heretics, and desired to preserve the historical character of the
-biblical narratives as much as possible. Like his prototype, Ibn-Ezra,
-he tried to keep secret his deepest convictions, so that not even his
-friends could fathom his ideas. This Judaism, disfigured by absurd
-philosophical interpretations, was not only privately taught, but
-preached in the synagogues.
-
-The home of this pseudo-philosophy was the not insignificant
-congregation of Perpignan, the capital of the province of Roussillon,
-which belonged to the kingdom of Aragon. Although the Jews had no
-enviable lot, and were compelled to live in the most miserable part of
-the town, that assigned to lepers, they nevertheless preserved a taste
-for science and free inquiry, and eagerly awaited the new theories
-taught by the exponents and followers of Maimuni's philosophy. Here
-poor Levi of Villefranche had found a place of refuge at the house
-of a rich and influential man, Don Samuel Sulami or Sen Escalita,
-whose piety, learning and liberality were praised beyond measure
-by his contemporaries. "From Perpignan to Marseilles there is not
-another who can be compared with Samuel Sulami in knowledge of the
-Law, benevolence, piety and humility. He gives charity in secret, his
-house is open to every traveler; and he is indefatigable in getting
-books for his collection." He corresponded on learned topics with
-Ben Adret, and took interest in the philosophical interpretation of
-the Bible and the Agada. Even the rabbi of Perpignan was a friend of
-free thought and a determined enemy of mummified orthodoxy and the
-unreflecting faith of the literalist. This was Don Vidal Menachem ben
-Solomon Meiri (born Elul, 1249, died about 1306), little celebrated
-in his own time, but none the less of great importance. Though not of
-commanding influence, he possessed an attractive personality. He had
-what nearly all his contemporaries sorely lacked, moderation and tact.
-These qualities are revealed particularly in Meiri's style. Nearly all
-the Jewish authors of Spain and Provence wrote their prose and verse
-in a redundant, bombastic style, as if the whole literary thesaurus of
-the Bible were needed to express a meager idea. The much-admired model
-of this time, the moral poet Yedaya Bedaresi, is so prolix in saying
-the most ordinary platitude, that one has to peruse whole pages of his
-apology, reflections, and miscellaneous writings before coming across
-a tolerable idea. The style in vogue, a mosaic of Biblical phrases,
-favored verbosity. But Don Vidal Meiri forms a glorious exception to
-this practice, his style being terse and clear. In his commentaries
-to the tractates of the Talmud which relate to ceremonial duties, he
-proceeds throughout in a methodical manner, advances from the general
-to the particular, arranges his material in lucid order, and seeks to
-give the reader information, not to confuse him. Of a similar character
-is Meiri's exposition of Holy Writ. The philosophers and mystics always
-endeavored to find some higher meaning in it, the simple explanation
-being too prosaic for them, and accordingly they put upon the Bible
-their own extravagant nonsense. Not so Meiri. He certainly assumed
-that there are many commands and narratives in the Bible which point
-to something higher than the literal meaning, but the majority of them
-must, he maintained, be taken quite literally. Meiri was naturally
-dissatisfied with the extravagant mannerisms of the allegorists, but
-it did not enter his mind to reject the good together with the bad, to
-interdict learning because of its abuse.
-
-These proceedings were not regarded quite so calmly by certain bigots,
-dwelling in the city which had produced the obscurantist Solomon of
-Montpellier, the proscriber of Maimuni and his compositions, and
-author of so much dissension and evil. Although pseudo-philosophical
-extravaganzas were not more dangerous than the follies of the
-Kabbalists, the watchers of Zion nevertheless overlooked the latter,
-and waged energetic warfare with the former, so that the philosophers
-obtained more weight than they would otherwise have had. The bigots of
-Montpellier well-nigh kindled the fire of discord in Jacob. The first
-instigator of this ill-timed zeal belonged to that class of men who
-mark off the province of faith according to an exact rule, denounce
-every movement and opinion which transgress their limit as heresy,
-and desire to have them rooted out with anathemas and scourges, where
-possible with fire and sword--a class of men in whom fanatical zeal
-cannot be separated from a kind of egoism. To this category belonged
-Abba-Mari ben Moses, of Montpellier, or, as his aristocratic title
-ran, Don Astruc En-Duran de Luenel. Of a respectable family, and of
-great influence in the capital of Languedoc, Abba-Mari was certainly
-not without culture, and he had great veneration for Maimuni and his
-compositions; but he had irrevocably attached himself to the Jewish
-creed as laid down by Nachmani, and was indignant if any one ventured
-to consider it from the point of view of another system. He did not
-object to miraculous tales; on the contrary, the more the better. The
-conclusions of philosophy and science, which denied the possibility
-of these miracles, in no way disturbed him. In the choice between
-Moses and Aristotle, or between the authorities of the Talmud and the
-upholders of philosophy, he was not for a moment doubtful to whom to
-give the preference. To be sure, this narrow-minded point of view is
-justifiable; but Abba-Mari wanted to thrust his opinion upon every
-one else, and to persecute all who thought otherwise. Not only did he
-hold in abomination the allegorical exegesis publicly preached, but he
-reprobated the study of all profane literature as the cause of this
-aberration. He regretted that the scourge could no more be brought into
-requisition to silence those who filled their minds with such learning
-as endangered religion.
-
-Abba-Mari, however, did not possess sufficient authority to proceed
-against Levi of Villefranche and his school. He addressed himself to
-the most influential rabbi of the time, Ben Adret of Barcelona, and
-charged that their perversities would accomplish the dissolution of
-Judaism, if a restraint were not put upon them. He importuned Ben
-Adret to exercise his great influence. The rabbi naturally found the
-circumstance deplorable that "strangers had forced their way through
-the gates of Zion." He exhorted Abba-Mari to organize a party to oppose
-this extravagant movement, but positively refused his support, as he
-did not like to interfere in the affairs of congregations abroad. Other
-bigots, however, took up the cause, and hurried it to a crisis, among
-them Don Bonafoux Vidal, of Barcelona, and his brother, Don Crescas
-Vidal, who had moved to Perpignan, both highly respected and learned,
-but as intolerant as Abba-Mari. Don Crescas made a proposition,
-which met with much applause. The study of science, and the reading
-of profane literature in general, was to be prohibited to Jewish
-youths till their thirtieth year. Only men of mature age, "who had
-filled their minds with the Bible and the Talmud, were to be allowed
-to warm themselves by the strange fires of philosophy and the natural
-sciences." Although Ben Adret did not feel disposed to take measures
-against the study of science, he nevertheless considered it his duty
-to persecute the provoker of so much animosity. He took umbrage at the
-pious Samuel Sulami for granting a heretic shelter in his house, thus
-giving him an opportunity to spread his pernicious views. He harassed
-Samuel Sulami so unmercifully, and subjected his conscience to such
-torment, that the man, not very remarkable for strength of character,
-became shaken in his previous convictions. When a daughter of his died
-he believed that it was a punishment for his sinfulness, and renounced
-his hospitality to Levi. Many members of the congregation of Perpignan
-bitterly resented the suspicion of heresy cast upon Levi, and as they
-knew Ben Adret to be a man of stainless character, they vented their
-dissatisfaction on the instigator, Abba-Mari, to whom they imputed
-sordid ulterior designs and personal motives.
-
-Abba-Mari and his allies, who felt themselves helpless without
-powerful support, labored without intermission to inflame the zeal of
-the Barcelona rabbinate, that it might forbid free inquiry and the
-study of science. At the same time they promised the co-operation of
-the whole congregation of Montpellier, which, being the chief one in
-southern France, would draw other communities after it. Ben Adret and
-his college, imagining from Abba-Mari's exaggerated description that
-Judaism was in the greatest danger, were at last determined to take up
-the matter, but desired first to sound the congregation of Montpellier
-as to its feeling on the subject, and for this purpose sent a letter
-to be read before the members in case they felt disposed to join them
-in interdicting the study of the natural sciences. But as soon as the
-proposed ban against the sciences became known, decided opposition
-arose among the most important men of the congregation.
-
-There was at that time in Montpellier a man, who by reason of his
-family, position, wealth and knowledge, was held in high estimation
-by his people, and who had imbibed a love for the sciences with his
-mother's milk. Jacob ben Machir Tibbon, known in Christian circles
-as Don Profiat, or Profatius (born about 1236, died after 1312), was
-descended on one side from the celebrated Meshullam of Luenel, the first
-to promote a revival of learning in southern France, and on the other
-side he was related to the Tibbonides. From his birth he was taught to
-look upon Judaism and science as twin sisters, dwelling together in
-the utmost harmony. Like all educated Jews of his time, he was well
-grounded in Jewish literature, the Bible, and the Talmud, practiced
-medicine as his profession, but devoted himself with particular zeal to
-mathematics and astronomy. His accurate observation of the inclination
-of the earth's axis to the orbit was taken by later master astronomers
-as the basis of their investigations. As he had acquired a knowledge
-of Arabic, he was able to translate useful scientific works from that
-language into Hebrew. His wealth of knowledge was not employed as a
-means of gratifying his vanity or ambition, but he properly regarded it
-as the distinction of man, enabling him to arrive at self-knowledge.
-Jacob Tibbon maintained that in the happy time of the Jewish people
-science had its home in their midst, but exile and suffering had
-banished it, and its former exponents now had to become students in
-order to learn the results arrived at by foreign nations. In his
-scientific labors Jacob ben Machir had a very noble end in view. He
-aimed at elevating his co-religionists in the eyes of the Christian
-world, and silencing the sneers of their enemies, who tauntingly said
-that they were destitute of all knowledge.
-
-This man was now asked to assist in banishing science from the Jewish
-world. If Abba-Mari wished to carry out in Montpellier his scheme of
-holding the Jewish youth aloof from the study of the sciences, he was
-bound to take Jacob ben Machir into consideration. For he was held
-in high esteem by his congregation on account of his many excellent
-traits and his meritorious achievements, and had the greatest influence
-with the members entitled to a vote. Indeed, he was the first to whom
-Abba-Mari disclosed the project, supported by the Barcelona rabbinate,
-against the study of the profane sciences, and he reckoned upon Jacob's
-co-operation. With impressive decisiveness, Profiat not only refused
-participation, but pointed out the sad consequences of so serious a
-step, and importuned him to omit the public reading of Ben Adret's
-letter. Abba-Mari and his ally, Todros of Beaucaire, nevertheless
-persisted in their determination, and summoned the members of the
-congregation to an important conference in the synagogue on a Sabbath
-(Elul-August, 1304). It was immediately apparent that the zealots had
-deceived themselves, or had been too confident in their assertion that
-the Jews of Montpellier would give unanimous consent to the interdict
-to be laid on science. A portion of the congregation even abstained
-from taking part in the deliberations, and Jacob ben Machir raised an
-emphatic protest against the proposed enslaving of the intellect. A
-violent discussion ensued, and the meeting dispersed without coming to
-a resolution. Soon a party, consisting of advocates of science, and
-of friends, adherents and parasites of the highly esteemed leader,
-rallied round Jacob Machir, the most distinguished representative of
-science. The obscurantists and the simple-minded attached themselves
-to Abba-Mari, so that the congregation became a prey to division and
-conflict. Each party endeavored to gain supporters, both within and
-without the community.
-
-It became a point of honor with Abba-Mari to bring the affair to a
-conclusion conformable to his own views, for his defeat had exposed his
-true position to Ben Adret and the Barcelona congregation. After the
-unfavorable issue of the first deliberation in the synagogue, he hardly
-ventured to answer the man whom he had assured of a unanimous adoption
-of his proposal. He, therefore, worked very energetically in collecting
-at least twenty-five signatures of members of the congregation, to give
-Ben Adret proof that he did not stand alone in his extreme views.
-
-It was no less a point of honor with Jacob Tibbon not to allow the
-interdiction of science to come into force. For he and the Tibbonides
-believed that the attacks were directed chiefly against their
-highly-venerated ancestors, Samuel Ibn-Tibbon and Jacob Anatoli,
-because the latter's book of sermons (Malmed) had been the first to
-explain away Biblical tales and religious laws, and at that time
-was used in certain quarters for Sabbath devotions. Ben Adret, at
-Abba-Mari's instigation, did, indeed, treat Anatoli, the favorite of
-the Tibbonides, with scorn. Of Samuel Ibn-Tibbon, the translator of
-Maimuni's works, and propagator of his theories, the austere bigots
-had not a good word to say. Judah ben Moses, his great-grandson,
-consequently became the soul of what may be called the Tibbonide party,
-which agitated against Abba-Mari's plan. To attract outsiders, the
-Tibbonides gave out that the adversaries of science once more had in
-view the denunciation of Maimuni and his compositions as heretical,
-and that Abba-Mari wanted to take up the position of Solomon of
-Montpellier. This was a very happy party manoeuvre; it won over even
-those who had shown indifference to the burning topic of the day,
-for they thought themselves in duty bound to take up arms on behalf
-of Maimuni's honor. The Tibbonide party, thus strengthened, sent a
-trenchant and pointed letter to Ben Adret and the Barcelonians, to
-ask them to reconsider their decision. It is true, they were not able
-to offer any convincing reasons for the admission of science into the
-Jewish curriculum; but the arguments which they set forth in its favor
-were considered satisfactory in a superficial age. They appealed to
-King Solomon's wisdom, "from the cedar of Lebanon to the hyssop on the
-wall," which, they said, referred to nothing but natural science. From
-the Talmud, too, reasons were adduced for the study of science. They
-would not admit the validity of the reply that it was not intended
-to interdict research generally, only to prohibit immature young men
-from its pursuit. That, they said, was an evasion of the main point at
-issue. For a man not familiar with science before his thirtieth year
-was permanently incapable of engaging in its study, and in advanced
-age could never retrieve the loss. The Tibbonides, moreover, protested
-that they were branded as heretics, because along with the Torah
-they paid homage to the profane sciences. They did not recognize the
-superiority of any one in piety and orthodoxy. Lastly, the Tibbonides
-exhorted Ben Adret and his college to bury the hatchet of denunciation
-and discord. The spirited and defiant tone assumed by Jacob ben Machir
-and his adherents greatly provoked the Barcelonians. The tension
-increased. Bitter and caustic letters flew hither and thither. Both
-sides labored to gain new adherents in other congregations, and to draw
-over the waverers. The communities of Argentiere, Aix, Avignon and
-Luenel, through their representatives, declared in favor of Abba-Mari
-and his followers. In Perpignan, the chief seat of the much-assailed
-enlightenment, a relative of Abba-Mari agitated in his favor. The
-latter was particularly desirous of securing the assistance of a man
-who, by reason of his noble birth and highly honorable position, had
-powerful influence in Perpignan and elsewhere. This was Kalonymos
-ben Todros of Narbonne, thought to be a descendant of the house of
-King David. Kalonymos did not at first appear inclined to take part
-in the proscription of science; but Abba-Mari from the one side and
-Ben Adret from the other assailed him with such pertinacity that at
-length he promised his consent and co-operation. As the Tibbonide party
-had also gained new adherents, Ben Adret himself shrank from pushing
-the controversy to extremes, and decided not to issue the decree
-of excommunication till at least twenty congregations had declared
-themselves unequivocally in favor of it.
-
-Whilst in southern France and Spain the balance was inclining now to
-one side, now to the other, in the dispute about the admission of
-scientific studies into Jewish circles, the German communities were
-passing through a series of the most deplorable events, which drove to
-Spain a man who spoke the deciding word in favor of the excommunication
-and proscription of free inquiry. He was of high morality, rare
-disinterestedness, of pure aspiration and sincere piety, and possessed
-profound Talmudical learning, but was filled with the fanatical hate
-of his countrymen against profane knowledge. The emigration of Asheri
-or Asher from Germany to Spain inaugurates an unhappy period for the
-Spanish and Provencal Jews in their efforts for the progress of culture.
-
-Asher ben Yechiel (born about 1250, died 1327) of the Rhine district,
-sprang from ancestors who centered their whole world in the Talmud. A
-disciple of the celebrated Meir of Rothenburg, Asher acquired the acute
-Tossafist method, composed Tossafist works, but had a finer sense
-of system and order than this school. After the death of his master,
-whose corpse the unprincipled emperor, Adolph of Nassau, refused to
-give up for burial without remuneration, Asheri was reckoned among
-the most influential rabbinical authorities of Germany. A paroxysm
-of persecutions of the Jews broke out in his time, far worse than
-those during the crusades; it robbed thousands of innocent men of
-their lives, or sentenced them to a lot worse than death. A civil war
-raged at that time in Germany between Adolph of Nassau and Albrecht
-of Austria, who were contending for the empty glitter of the German
-crown. This strife promised impunity for audacious attacks on the Jews,
-who were proscribed by the church and society, and an opportunity was
-easily found. A report was spread that the Jews of the little town
-of Roettingen (in Franconia) had desecrated a sacramental wafer and
-pounded it in a mortar, and blood was said to have flowed from it. A
-nobleman of the place, named Rindfleisch, took up the cause of the
-host alleged to have been desecrated, declared that he had received
-a mission from heaven to root out the accursed race of Jews, and
-gathered a credulous, besotted mob around him to assist in his bloody
-intentions. He and his troops first of all consigned the Jews of
-Roettingen to the flames (7th Iyar-20th April, 1298). From this place
-the rabble of slaughterers, under Rindfleisch's leadership, traveled
-from town to town, always swelling their numbers with others of their
-description, and destroyed all the Jews who fell into their hands, even
-those converted to Christianity. Rindfleisch, impelled by audacity and
-spurious enthusiasm, fairly forced the inhabitants of various towns to
-ill-treat their Jewish fellow-citizens brutally. The great community of
-Wuerzburg was completely blotted out (12th Ab-24th July). In Nuremberg
-the Jews had at first fled for refuge into the fortress, but being
-attacked there, too, they took to arms, and though assisted by humane
-Christians, were overpowered at last, and all butchered (22d Ab-1st
-August). Asheri's relative and fellow-student, Mordecai ben Hillel,
-who had compiled a very important rabbinical work, fell at about the
-same time, together with his wife and five children. Many parents, lest
-their children from fear of death should renounce their faith, threw
-them with their own hands into the flames, and plunged in after them.
-In Bavaria the congregations of Ratisbon and Augsburg were the only
-ones to escape the slaughter. In the first city, where they had the
-right of citizenship from time immemorial, the mayor protected them
-with great zeal. In Augsburg, too, the mayor and council defended them
-against the destroyers, Rindfleisch and his horde.
-
-This bloody persecution spread from Franconia and Bavaria to Austria,
-swept away more than a hundred and forty congregations and more than
-100,000 Jews, and lasted nearly half a year. The Jews of Germany all
-trembled, and were prepared to meet destruction. This would certainly
-have come if the civil war in Germany had not been brought to an
-end by the death of Emperor Adolph, and the election of Albrecht.
-The second Habsburger energetically restored the country to a state
-of peace, brought to book the perpetrators of the outrages on the
-Jews, and imposed fines on the towns which had participated in them,
-on the ground that he had suffered losses in his purse through the
-immolation of his "servi camerae" and their goods. The majority of
-the Jews baptized through fear returned to Judaism, apparently with
-the connivance of the emperor and the representatives of the church.
-The after-throes of this massacre were likewise bitter enough. The
-wives of those who had perished could not authenticate the death of
-their husbands through Jewish witnesses, as no men remained alive
-competent to give testimony. They could appeal only to the statement
-of baptized Jews, whose evidence was considered by many rabbis to be
-invalid according to the Talmudical marriage laws. Asheri, however, was
-sensible enough to unbend from this strictness, and allowed the widows
-to marry again on the evidence of baptized Jews returned to Judaism.
-
-Asheri did not feel very secure in Germany after this bloody massacre,
-or perhaps he was threatened with danger on the part of Emperor
-Albrecht. It was said that the emperor demanded of him the sum of
-money which the Jews were to pay as ransom for the imprisoned Meir
-of Rothenburg, for which Asheri had become security. He accordingly
-left Germany (summer of 1303), and traveled from one country to
-another with his wife, his eight sons and grandsons, and on account
-of his reputation, he was everywhere treated with the utmost respect,
-especially in Montpellier, even before the breaking out of the
-controversy. He finally settled in Toledo, the largest city of Spain
-(January, 1305). With joy the illustrious German rabbi was installed by
-the Toledo congregation in the vacant rabbinate. With Asheri the dismal
-spirit of over-piety, so hostile to knowledge, entered into the Spanish
-capital.
-
-Asheri did not conceal his antipathy to profane culture. He could not
-conceive how pious Jews, in southern France and in Spain, could occupy
-themselves with subjects outside of the Talmud. With the utmost scorn
-he discountenanced the very aspiration of the Spanish and Provencal
-Jews on which they prided themselves. He thanked his Creator that
-He had protected him from the baneful influence of science. He did
-not give the southern Frenchmen and the Spanish Jews credit for
-thoroughness even in knowledge of the Talmud, and maintained that the
-German and northern French Jews alone had inherited wisdom from the
-time of the destruction of the Temple. A man like this, incapable of
-appreciating the sciences, and harboring enmity to everything not
-in the Talmud, was bound to exercise an influence prejudicial to
-knowledge. Next to him Solomon ben Adret himself appeared more or less
-of a freethinker. Abba-Mari forthwith availed himself of the man, from
-whom he expected effectual support for his party. He requested him to
-express his views on the pending question. Asheri, of course, gave
-Abba-Mari his unqualified approval, but was of opinion that he did not
-go far enough, for the evil would not be eradicated, if the pursuit
-of the sciences were allowed at a ripe age. The poison of heresy had
-spread too far, every one was infected by it, and the pious were open
-to the reproach that they shut their eyes to it. His proposal was
-that a synod should be convoked, and a resolution be taken that study
-was to be devoted solely to the Talmud, while the sciences were to be
-pursued only when it was neither day nor night--that is, not at all.
-This exclusive fidelity to the Talmud, which rejected all compromise,
-advocated by an energetic man of pure character, made an overpowering
-impression on the unsettled minds of Spanish Jews. Ben Adret himself,
-who had hitherto always hesitated to lead the movement, all at once
-declared that he was prepared to pronounce the ban, if Abba-Mari and
-the prince, Kalonymos, would prepare it. An officious zealot, Samson
-ben Meir, disciple of Ben Adret, took upon himself to collect assenting
-signatures from twenty congregations. Toledo was especially reckoned
-upon, having been swayed by Asheri's mind, and next, Castile generally,
-which as a rule followed the guidance of the head community.
-
-How artificial and opposed to the sentiment of the majority this zeal
-was, became apparent especially in the congregation of Montpellier,
-styled the tower of Zion by Abba-Mari's party. In this congregation
-the zealots did not venture to collect signatures for the sentence of
-excommunication. As if in defiance, one of the Tibbonides announced
-that he would give a reading from Anatoli's book of sermons on a
-certain Sabbath, and immediately drew a numerous audience. Abba-Mari,
-who had repeatedly boasted to Ben Adret of his mighty influence, and
-had persuaded him that the whole congregation, except a few deluded
-people, were on his side, now had to admit that Montpellier was not
-to be reckoned upon in this affair. In the consciousness that their
-party was in a minority in southern France, the two leaders, Abba-Mari
-and Kalonymos, of Narbonne, made the ecclesiastical ban unexpectedly
-mild, both as to wording and contents. First, the reading of works on
-natural science and of metaphysical books only was to be prohibited,
-all other branches of learning being expressly allowed. Secondly, the
-writings of Jewish authors, even those dealing with natural science
-or metaphysics, were to be excluded from the inhibition. Abba-Mari,
-with a view to meeting his adversaries half-way, had made the proposal
-to fix the period when the study of every department of learning was
-to be allowed, not at the thirtieth, but at the twenty-fifth year
-of the student's age. Ben Adret, however, who could not tolerate
-half-measures nor brook retreat, had now become more severe. He who
-formerly had to be driven and urged on, now became the propeller.
-Asheri's influence is not to be mistaken. On the Sabbath of Lamentation
-in commemoration of the destruction of Jerusalem, he and his colleagues
-ordered the anathema against the study of the sciences to be read
-amid solemn ceremonies, the scroll of the Law in the arms of the
-reader (4th Ab-26th July, 1305). Whoever read any scientific book
-before the twenty-fifth year of his age was liable to the penalty of
-excommunication. The ban was to remain in force for half a century.
-The philosophical expounders of Holy Writ were doomed in the hereafter,
-and in this world subjected to excommunication, and their writings
-condemned to be burnt. As no exception was made of scientific works
-composed in Hebrew, according to the formulation of the ban, not
-only Anatoli's book of sermons was exposed to proscription, but also
-Maimuni's philosophical writings. Ben Adret and his college allowed
-only the study of medicine, on the ground that its practice is
-permitted in the Talmud. This was the first heresy-tribunal in Jewish
-history, and Ben Adret was at its head. The Dominicans had found docile
-emulators among the Jews.
-
-According to the communal system in the Middle Ages, every congregation
-was independent, and the resolutions of one congregation had no force
-with another. The ban accordingly had validity only in Barcelona,
-unless some other congregation confirmed it. Ben Adret, however,
-labored to have it adopted by other congregations. The sentence,
-signed by Ben Adret, his two sons, and more than thirty of the most
-influential members of the Barcelona congregation, was dispatched to
-the congregations of Spain, Languedoc, northern France, and Germany.
-But the ban was not so readily adopted as the authorities of Barcelona
-had flattered themselves it would be. Jacob ben Machir and his party
-had already received notice that a blow was being meditated against
-them, and accordingly made preparations for a countermove. They
-resolved from the first to frustrate the effect of the ecclesiastical
-interdict of the study of science. They drew up a resolution in
-Montpellier which contained three important points. A sentence of
-excommunication was to fall upon those who, out of religious scruples,
-ventured to debar or withdraw their sons, whatever their youth, from
-the study of any science whatsoever, regardless of the language in
-which it was treated; secondly, upon those who presumed to utter an
-irreverent or abusive word against the great Maimuni, and, lastly,
-also upon those who presumed to denounce a religious author on account
-of his philosophical system. The last point was introduced for the
-sake of Anatoli's memory, which his opponents had vilified. Thus
-there was ban against ban. Jacob Tibbon and his friends caused their
-resolution in favor of science and its advocates to be announced
-in the synagogue, and the great majority of the congregation of
-Montpellier took his side. Party zeal, however, impelled the Tibbonides
-to take an ill-advised step, which threatened to produce the same
-evil consequences as had ensued at the time of the first conflict in
-Montpellier with the obscurantists. As Jacob ben Machir Profatius
-and others of his party had influence with the governor of the city,
-they wished to secure his assistance in the event of their opponents'
-endeavoring violently to carry the Barcelona interdict into effect. The
-governor, however, explained to them that he was interested only in
-one point: that the Jewish youth should not be prevented from reading
-other than Talmudical works. He should strongly deprecate any attempt
-to discourage the study of extra-Talmudical literature, because, as he
-frankly expressed himself, he would not consent to their being deprived
-through fear of excommunication of the means to potential conversion to
-Christianity. To the other points he was indifferent.
-
-Abba-Mari and his party were now in despair on account of the activity
-of their opponents. As the resolution in favor of the unrestricted
-study of science had been adopted by the majority of the community,
-according to rabbinical law it was binding on the minority as well,
-and therefore on their leader, and they could not legally stand by
-the interdict of Barcelona. Thus the zealots, the provokers of the
-conflict, had their hands tied, and were caught in their own net.
-They did what they could; they protested against the resolution of
-the Tibbonides, and advertised their protest far and wide. But they
-could not conceal that they had suffered a defeat, and were obliged
-to consult certain authorities as to whether the resolutions of the
-Tibbonides were binding on them. Ben Adret was thus placed in an
-embarrassing position. The party of Jacob ben Machir believed, or
-wished to have it believed, that the prohibition of the rabbis of
-Barcelona in reference to the study of scientific books, was meant
-to apply to Maimuni's works, too. They obtained the credit of having
-taken up the cudgels in behalf of Maimuni's honor, and of contending
-for the glory of Judaism; whilst their opponents, Ben Adret included,
-through their narrow-mindedness and obstinacy, were exposing their
-religion to the scorn of educated Christians. The vindicators of
-science seemed to be continually gaining in public opinion. There now
-appeared on their side a young poet, whose eloquent defense, written
-in a highly imaginative style, made a great impression. It gives a
-faithful picture of the feeling and excitement which agitated the
-souls of the champions of science, and, therefore, awakens interest
-even in the present day. In a modest manner, but with manly spirit,
-the poet tells Ben Adret truths which he never had the opportunity of
-hearing in his own circle. This young poet, more famous through his
-letter than through his verses, was Yedaya En-Bonet ben Abraham, better
-known under the name of Bedaresi (of Beziers) and under the poetical
-pseudonym of Penini (born about 1280, died about 1340). Yedaya Penini,
-son of the bombastic poet, Abraham Bedaresi, had more talent as a poet
-than his father. He possessed a lively imagination and overflowing
-wealth of language, and lacked only restraining tact, and a dignified,
-universally acceptable, uplifting aim for poetry. This deficiency gave
-his poems the appearance of empty grandiloquence and artificiality.
-He had inherited the defect of his father, inability to control the
-superabundance of words by the law of beauty. He was too ornate, and
-he moralized, instead of elevating and impressing. In his seventeenth
-year Yedaya Bedaresi wrote a book of morals (Pardes), and in his
-earliest years, whilst his father was still alive, he composed a prayer
-of about one hundred verses, in which all the words begin with the
-same letter (Bekashoth ha-Memin), and which his father, and perhaps
-his contemporaries, admired, but which is nevertheless very insipid.
-An admirer of Maimuni and Ibn Ezra, Bedaresi considered science and
-philosophy of equal importance with Judaism, or, like most thoughtful
-men of that time, he believed that the one contained the other.
-
-Bedaresi conceived that his deepest convictions had been assailed
-by Ben Adret's anathema, and that it had in reality been directed
-against Maimuni's name, and, therefore, he could not restrain himself
-from addressing a sharp rebuke to the excommunicators. As he lived in
-Montpellier and was certainly attached to Jacob ben Machir's party, it
-is quite probable that he wrote the defense of Maimuni and of science,
-sent to Ben Adret, at their instigation (December, 1305, or January,
-1306). This missive, like most of those written in this controversy,
-was intended not only for the individual addressed, but for the Jewish
-reading public in general. After Bedaresi had expressed his respect for
-the upright, learned rabbi of Barcelona, he remarked that he and his
-friends were not indignant about the ban, for science was invulnerable,
-and could not be injured by the fulmination of excommunicators. They
-were only hurt that Ben Adret should brand the Jewish congregations
-of southern France as heretics and renegades, and expose them to
-contempt in his message to many congregations and countries. Ben Adret,
-he continued, had allowed himself to be taken in tow by Abba-Mari,
-and had made a mountain of a mole-hill. From time immemorial, from
-Saadiah's age, science was not only tolerated in Judaism, but cherished
-and fostered, because its importance in religious knowledge was
-indisputable. Moreover, the denouncers of heresy were not consistent;
-they excluded the science of medicine from the ban, although this
-science, like every other, had a side which was in conflict with
-religion. How could they dare impugn the writings of Maimuni, whose
-dazzling personality outshone all his great predecessors? At the end,
-Yedaya Bedaresi observed that violent faction fights had broken out in
-Montpellier. Did they wish to continue to foment party strife, that
-the absence of unity among the Jews might occasion the Christians
-unholy satisfaction? "We cannot give up science; it is as the breath
-to our nostrils. Even if Joshua would appear and forbid it, we could
-not obey him, for we have a warranty, who outweighs you all, Maimuni,
-who has recommended it, and impressed it upon us. We are ready to
-set our goods, our children, and our very lives at stake for it." In
-conclusion, he invited Ben Adret to advise his friends in Montpellier
-to relinquish heresy hunting, and desist from stirring the fire of
-discord.
-
-At the same time, furious disputes broke out in the church, between
-King Philip IV of France and Pope Boniface VIII, but here the subject
-of the dispute was not ideal good, not science and free research, but
-purely dominion, power and mammon. There was war to the knife between
-the chiefs of the two parties. The king accused the pope of heresy,
-simony, covetousness, perjury, and impurity. And the pope released the
-subjects from their oath to their hereditary king, and gave away his
-empire. The Jewish hostilities had neither the same wide range, nor yet
-the same bottomless wickedness.
-
-Ben Adret and several who had signed the decree of excommunication,
-Moses Iskafat Meles and Solomon Gracian, were so unpleasantly affected
-by Bedaresi's letter, and feared its effect so much, that they hastened
-to offer the explanation that they had in no wise animadverted upon
-Maimuni's writings, whom they revered in the highest degree. They even
-exhorted Abba-Mari's party to make peace with their opponents, to
-vindicate their dignity before their common enemy. But the controversy
-was now at a stage when it could no longer be settled peaceably. The
-mutual bitterness was too violent, and had become too personal. Each
-party claimed to be in the right from its own standpoint; neither could
-consent to a compromise nor make concessions. Each adhered to its own
-principles; the one sought to enforce the freedom of science, the other
-protested that Jewish youth, before maturity, must be guarded from the
-deleterious poison of knowledge. Whilst the adherents of Abba-Mari
-were seeking legal decisions to prove the ban of their opponents
-unauthorized, a sad event happened, which, like a whirlwind, tore
-friends asunder, and dashed enemies against each other.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-THE FIRST EXPULSION OF THE JEWS FROM FRANCE, AND ITS CONSEQUENCES.
-
- Philip le Bel--The Jews of France plundered and banished--
- Estori Parchi; Aaron Cohen; Laments of Bedaresi--Eleazar
- of Chinon, the Martyr--Return of the Jews to France; their
- Precarious Position--Progress of the Controversy regarding
- the Study of Philosophy--Abba-Mari and Asheri--Death of
- Ben Adret--Rabbinical Revival in Spain--Isaac Israeli II--
- Samuel and the Queen Maria Molina--Don Juan Emanuel and
- Judah Ibn-Wakar--The Jews of Rome--Robert of Naples and the
- Jews--Peril of the Jews in Rome--Kalonymos ben Kalonymos,
- his Satires--Immanuel and Dante--The Poet Judah Siciliano--
- Leone Romano and King Robert--Shemarya Ikriti--Position of
- Karaism--Aaron the Elder and the Prayer-Book of the Karaites.
-
-1306-1328 C.E.
-
-
-Philip IV, le Bel, at that time the king of France, one of those
-monarchs who made arrogant and unprincipled despotism familiar to
-Europe, suddenly issued a secret order (21st January, 1306), imposing
-the strictest silence, to the higher and lower officials throughout
-his kingdom, to put all the Jews of France under arrest on one and
-the same day, without warning of any kind. Before the Jews had fully
-recovered from fasting on the Day of Lamentation in remembrance of the
-destruction of Jerusalem, and as they were about to begin their daily
-business, the constables and jailors appeared, laid hands upon them,
-and dragged young and old, women and children, to prison (10th Ab-22d
-July). There they were told that they had to quit the country within
-the space of a month, leaving behind both their goods and the debts
-owing to them. Whoever was found in France after that time was liable
-to the penalty of death. What could have induced this prudent rather
-than clerical prince so suddenly to change his sentiments towards the
-Jews? It was certainly not clerical intolerance, nor was it yielding
-to the will of the people. For the French, even in the Middle Ages,
-were not bigoted, and it was not their wish to remove the Jews to free
-themselves from usurers. Avarice was the first motive of this cruel
-order. For Philip's feud with the pope, and his war with the rebellious
-Flemish, had so exhausted his treasury, and had rendered necessary
-so unsparing an extortion of money that, as the ballads of the time
-scoffingly said, "The fowl in the pot was not secure from the king's
-grasp." The king wanted to replenish his coffers from the property
-of the Jews. Another circumstance is said to have moved him to this
-hard-hearted resolution. The German emperor Albrecht, who at that time
-was not on good terms with Philip, had demanded the surrender of the
-kingdom of Arles; further, that he should deliver up Jesus' supposed
-crown of thorns, and lastly, that he should acknowledge the authority
-of the successor of Vespasian, Titus, and Charlemagne over the French
-Jews, _i.e._, yield to him a portion of the hard-earned property of the
-Jews. Philip is said to have consulted his lawyers, to decide to whom
-the authority over the Jews appertained, and as they adjudged it to the
-German emperor, the idea occurred to him to fleece the Jews of their
-property, and to send his "servi camerae" naked and bare to Albrecht.
-Before the world the king covered his act of violence, inhuman as it
-was unstatesmanlike, with the excuse that incredible outrages of the
-Jews had rendered their expulsion imperative. That he had aimed at the
-possessions of the Jews was shown by his relentless plundering. The
-officials left the unhappy Jews nothing beyond the clothes they wore,
-and to everyone not more than seemed necessary for a day's living (12
-gros Tournois). Wagonfuls of the property of the Jews, gold, silver
-and precious stones were transported to the king; and less valuable
-objects were sold at a ridiculously low price. At the appointed time
-(September, 1306), they were banished, about 100,000 souls, from the
-country which their ancestors had inhabited, in part at the time of the
-Roman republic, long before Christianity had spread into France. Some
-who could not separate themselves from their property and the country
-which they loved went over to Christianity. The whole congregation of
-Toulouse is said to have been guilty of this cowardice, which scarcely
-seems credible. The celebrated seats, at which so much intellect had
-been displayed, the colleges of Rashi, Tam, and the Tossafists: Troyes,
-Paris, Sens, Chinon, Orleans; the places in which a higher culture had
-had its temple: Beziers, Luenel, Montpellier, whence the combatants
-for and against science were plunged into common misery,--all these
-schools and synagogues were sold to the highest bidder or given away.
-A German or an English king might have destroyed the holy places of
-the Jews--King Philip le Bel made a present of a synagogue to his
---coachman. An approximate idea can be formed of the sums which the
-expulsion and robbery of the Jews brought in to the king, if it is kept
-in mind that the sale of the Jewish goods in the house of the prefect
-of Orleans alone brought in 337,000 francs.
-
-How many of the refugees, reduced to beggary, fell victims to the
-hardships of their journey cannot be known. The bitter plaints of
-those oppressed by the heavy affliction sound mournful and touching
-even at this distance of time. Estori Parchi, then a youth of many
-accomplishments and noble heart, a relative of Jacob ben Machir, whose
-parents had emigrated from Spain to southern France, thus describes his
-sorrow: "From the house of study have they torn me; naked was I forced
-as a young man to leave my ancestral home, and wander from land to
-land, from people to people, whose tongues were strange to me." Parchi
-at length found a resting-place in Palestine. Another fugitive, the
-learned Aaron Cohen of Narbonne, poured forth this elegy: "Unhappy me,
-I saw the misery of the banishment of the sons of Jacob, like a herd
-of cattle driven asunder. From a position of honor I was thrown into a
-land of darkness." The sudden turn of fortune which changed rich men
-into beggars, and exposed the delicate and those used to the comforts
-of life to bitter privation, filled the bombastic poet Yedaya Bedaresi
-with gloomy reflections. In vivid colors he painted the trouble and
-pain of life, and man's helplessness and nothingness. His "Trial of the
-World" (Bechinath Olam), suggested by personal observation and bitter
-experience, consequently makes a depressing and mournful impression,
-and reflects faithfully the melancholy feelings of the ill-starred race.
-
-The expulsion of the Jews from France by the stony-hearted Philip le
-Bel did not come off without martyred victims. Those who transgressed
-the time of grace, yet rejected solicitations to abjure their faith,
-were punished by death. A martyr of this time, Eleazar ben Joseph of
-Chinon, is specially famous. He was a learned, noble-minded man, a
-correspondent of Ben Adret, master of many distinguished disciples,
-among them the youthful Parchi, one of the last of the Tossafist
-school. He was condemned to the stake, although no crime could be laid
-at his door except that he was a Jew. With him died two brothers. The
-expatriated Jews dispersed in all parts of the world; many traveled
-to Palestine. But the majority remained as near as possible to the
-French borders, in Provence proper, at that time partly under German
-suzerainty, in the province of Roussillon, which belonged to the
-Aragonian king of Majorca, and in that island. Their intention was to
-wait for a favorable change of fortune, which would permit them to
-return to the land of their birth. They had not speculated falsely.
-King Philip himself was induced by avarice to unbend from his severity.
-
-The vehement struggle in Montpellier about permitting Jewish youth to
-engage in the study of the sciences, remarkable to relate, continued
-after the banishment from France (September, 1306), and the mutual
-hatred of the two parties was in no way abated by suffering. A portion
-of the Tibbonide party had settled in Perpignan, which belonged to the
-king of Majorca, who was no favorer of the Jews. At his command copies
-of the Talmud were once more delivered up to the _auto-da-fe;_ but
-as he hoped to gain some advantage by the settlement of intelligent,
-industrious Jews, he suffered them. Abba-Mari and another portion of
-the congregation of Montpellier at first took up their abode in the
-town of Arles, but as he could not stay there, he, too, emigrated to
-Perpignan (January, 1307). But the opposing party, which had influence
-with the king or governor, endeavored to hinder his settlement in that
-place. Abba-Mari's partisans, by making representations to the king,
-succeeded in obtaining permission for him to live in Perpignan. Here
-the controversy raged anew. Solomon ben Adret and Asheri, particularly
-the latter, whose decision of character had acquired for him the chief
-authority, again interfered. Asheri declared that he had given his
-signature in a half-hearted manner to the decree prohibiting young
-men from occupying themselves with profane studies; for, according to
-his opinion, it was too great a concession to permit it at the age
-of twenty-five. Science ought to be prohibited altogether, for it
-inevitably lures on to unbelief. The defenders of science were to be
-condemned without mercy, since the afflictions of exile had made no
-impression on them, suffering had not broken their spirit of defiance,
-and had not chastened their hardness of heart.
-
-This view, that qualities prejudicial to Judaism were inherent in
-science, gained supremacy after Ben Adret's death (1310), when Asheri
-was acknowledged in Spain and in the neighboring countries as the only
-authority in religious matters. Asheri, his sons and companions who
-had migrated with him from Germany, transplanted from the Rhine to
-vivacious Toledo that spirit of honest, but tormenting, narrow-minded
-and intolerant piety; that gloomy disposition which regards even
-harmless joy as a sin; that feeling of abjectness, which characterized
-the German Jews of the Middle Ages, and they inoculated the Spanish
-Jews with it. The free activity of the mind was checked. Asheri
-concentrated all his mental power on the Talmud and its exposition.
-His chief work was a compilation of the Talmud for practical use
-(1307-1314). On all occasions he endeavored to enforce a difficult,
-painful, and severe discipline. If any one desired to express his
-thoughts on any department of knowledge whatsoever, he had to array
-his subject in the garments of contrite orthodoxy. When the erudite
-Isaac ben Joseph Israeli II, of Toledo, published an astronomical work
-(1310), he had to adjust it to Talmudical standards, and introduce it
-by a confession of faith, for only in this manner could he find grace
-in Asheri's eyes.
-
-At about this time, during Asheri's rabbinate in Toledo, prominent Jews
-once more obtained influence at court. King Ferdinand IV (1295-1312)
-had a Jewish treasurer named Samuel, whose counsels he followed in
-political matters too. The dowager queen, Maria de Molina, who had
-held the reins of government during her son's minority, with feminine
-passionateness hated the favorite Samuel, who is said to have nourished
-the enmity between mother and son. One day, when Samuel was in Badajos,
-and was preparing to accompany the king to Seville, he was attacked by
-an assassin, and so severely wounded that he was left for dead. It is
-not known who instigated the deed. The king had such care and attention
-devoted to Samuel, that he recovered from his wounds.
-
-Don Ferdinand's death brought in its train a time of unquiet, of civil
-war, and social anarchy for Spain. As the Infante Alfonso was still
-a child in the cradle, several persons, the clever Maria de Molina,
-the young queen-mother Constantia, and the uncles of the young king
-contended for the guardianship and the regency, and provoked faction
-feuds in the country (1312-1326). Donna Maria de Molina, who conducted
-the government, did not extend her hate against her son's Jewish
-counselor to the community to which he belonged. As in the lifetime of
-her husband she had had a Jewish favorite, Todros Abulafia, so during
-her regency she had a Jewish treasurer, Don Moses. When the council of
-Zamora (1313) renewed canonical laws hostile to the Jews, the cortes of
-Burgos demanded the exclusion of Jews from all honors and offices, and
-the pope issued a bull that Christians were to be absolved from their
-debts to Jews on account of usury, the wise regent submitted only in
-part. She ordered that Jews should not bear high-sounding Christian
-names, nor enter into close intercourse with Christians; but she most
-emphatically declared herself against the unjust abolition of debts,
-and published a law that no debtor could make himself free of his
-obligation to professors of the Jewish faith by appealing to a papal
-bull.
-
-The regency of Don Juan Emanuel inaugurated an improvement in the
-condition of the Castilian Jews (1319-1325). The regent was a friend
-of learning, himself an author and poet, and was consequently held in
-esteem by educated Jews. A Jew of Cordova, Jehuda ben Isaac Ibn-Wakar,
-found high favor in his eyes, and probably acted as his treasurer. At
-his solicitation Juan Emanuel once more invested the rabbinate with
-penal jurisdiction, which the Jews had partly lost during the regency
-of Maria de Molina, and had practiced only privately.
-
-Jehuda Ibn-Wakar, however, was an admirer of Asheri, and, like
-the latter, of excessive piety, desiring to have every religious
-transgression punished with the utmost severity. When a Cordovan
-uttered a blasphemy in Arabic, Ibn-Wakar asked Asheri what was to be
-done with him, and the latter replied that his tongue should be cut
-out. A beautiful Jewess having had intercourse with a Christian, Don
-Juan Manuel resigned her to the punishment of the Jewish court, and
-Jehuda Ibn-Wakar condemned her to have her face disfigured by the
-removal of her nose, and Asheri confirmed the sentence.
-
-The southern Spanish and Castilian congregations still lived in peace,
-and in the undisturbed possession of their goods; on the other hand,
-the northern Spanish, and still more the southern French congregations
-were exposed to bloody attacks by fanatical hordes, which the church
-had unfettered, and then could not restrain. Jews once more lived in
-France. Louis X had recalled them nine years after their banishment
-(1315). This king, himself seized by a desire to abrogate the
-ordinances of his father and indict his counselors, had been solicited
-by the people and the nobility, who could not do without the Jews, to
-re-admit them into France. He accordingly entered into negotiations
-with them in reference to their return. But the Jews did not accept
-his proposal without deliberation, for they well knew the inconstancy
-of the French kings, and the fanatical hatred of the clergy against
-them. They hesitated at first, and then submitted their conditions.
-These were, that they be allowed to reside in the same places as
-before; that they should not be indictable for former transgressions;
-that their synagogues, churchyards, and books be restored to them,
-or sites be granted for new places of worship. They were to have the
-right of collecting the money owing to them, of which two-thirds
-should belong to the king. Their former privileges, as far as they
-were still in force, were to be again extended to them, or new ones
-conceded. King Louis accepted all these conditions, and granted them
-also the right of emigration under certain restrictions. In order to
-conciliate the clergy, he, on his side, imposed the conditions that
-they wear a badge of a certain size and color, and hold neither public
-nor private disputations on religion. Two high officials (prud'hommes,
-auditeurs des Juifs) were appointed to superintend the re-settlement
-of the Jews. Their residence in France was fixed for twelve years; if
-the king should resolve to expel them again after the expiration of
-that period, he put himself under the obligation to give them a year's
-warning that they might have time to make their preparations. The king
-published this decree, declaring that his father had been ill-advised
-to banish the Jews. As the voice of the people solicited their return,
-as the church desired a tolerant policy, and as the sainted Louis had
-set him the precedent of first banishing and then readmitting them,
-he had, after due consultation with the prelates, the barons, and
-his high council, permitted the return of the Jews. The French Jews
-streamed back in masses to their former dwelling-places, regarding
-this event as a miraculous redemption. When Louis X died a year after,
-and his brother Philip V, the Long, ascended the throne, he extended
-their privileges, and protected them especially from the enmity of the
-clergy; so that they and their books could be seized only by royal
-officers. But they were not free from vexation by the degenerate
-clergy, who insisted that the Jews of Montpellier, who thought they
-could venture on certain liberties, should re-affix the Jew-badge on
-their dress. At one time they accused the Jews of Luenel with having
-publicly outraged the image of Christ on the Purim festival; at
-another time they ordered that two wagonfuls of copies of the Talmud
-be publicly burned in Toulouse. Such occurrences, however, were mere
-child's play compared with what they had to endure from the bigoted
-multitude.
-
-Philip V had the idea, repugnant to the spirit of the time, of
-undertaking a crusade to wrest the Holy Land, after so many vain
-attempts, from the hands of the infidels. This enterprise appeared so
-foolish to the discerning, that even Pope John XXII, the second of the
-popes that resided in Avignon instead of at Rome, dissuaded him from
-it. Nevertheless, the fancy, as soon as it was known, inflamed the
-minds of the rude populace. A young man of excited imagination gave out
-that a dove had settled at one time on his head, at another, on his
-shoulder, and when he had sought to seize it, it had transformed itself
-into a beautiful woman, who urged him to gather a troop of crusaders,
-assuring him of victory. His utterances found credulous hearers, and
-the lower people, children, and swine-herds attached themselves to him.
-A wicked priest and an unfrocked Benedictine monk used the opportunity
-to force their way to the front, and thus arose in northern France
-(1320) a numerous horde of forty thousand shepherds (Pastoureaux,
-Pastorelli, Roim), who moved in procession from town to town carrying
-banners, and announced their intention of journeying across the sea to
-deliver the so-called holy sepulcher. Their attention was immediately
-turned to the Jews, possibly because they wanted to raise money for the
-purchase of weapons by robbing the Jews of their possessions, or a Jew,
-as is related, had made sport of their childish heroism. The massacre
-of the Jews by the shepherds (Gesereth-ha-Roim) is another bloody page
-in Jewish history.
-
-Nearly all the crusading enterprises had commenced with the murder of
-Jews; so this time. The shepherd-gangs which had collected near the
-town of Agen (on the Garonne) cut down all the Jews they met on their
-march from this place to Toulouse, if they refused to be baptized.
-About five hundred Jews had found refuge in the fortress of Verdun (on
-the Garonne), the commandant having placed a strong tower at their
-disposal. The shepherds took it by storm, and a desperate battle took
-place. As the Jews had no hopes of rescue, they had recourse in their
-despair to self-destruction. The unhappy people selected the oldest and
-most respected man of their number to slay them one after the other.
-The old man picked out a muscular young assistant in this ghastly
-business, and both went to work to rid their fellow-sufferers of their
-miserable lives. When at last the young man, after slaying his aged
-partner, was left alone, the desire of life came strong upon him; he
-declared to the besieging shepherds that he was ready to go over to
-them, and asked to be baptized. The latter were just or cruel enough
-to refuse the request, and tore the renegade to pieces. The Jewish
-children found in the tower were baptized by force. The governor of
-Toulouse zealously espoused the cause of the Jews, and summoned the
-knights to take the approaching shepherds prisoners. Thus many of them
-were brought in chains to the capital, and thrown into prison. But the
-mob, which sympathized with them, banded together, and set them at
-liberty, the result being that the greater part of the congregation
-of Toulouse was destroyed. A few seceded to Christianity. On the
-capture of the shepherds near Toulouse, the Jews in the neighborhood,
-who had been granted shelter in Castel-Narbonnais, thought that they
-were now free of all danger, and left their place of refuge. They were
-surprised by the rabble, and annihilated. Thus perished almost all
-the Jews in the neighborhood of Bordeaux, Gascogne, Toulouse, Albi,
-and other towns of southern France. Altogether, more than 120 Jewish
-congregations in France and northern Spain were blotted out through
-the rising of the Shepherds, and the survivors were so impoverished by
-spoliation that they were dependent upon the succor of their brethren
-in other parts, which flowed to them in abundance even from Germany.
-
-The following year, too, was very unfortunate for the Jews, the trouble
-again beginning in France. This persecution was occasioned by lepers,
-from whom it has its name (Gesereth Mezoraim). The unhappy people
-afflicted by leprosy in the Middle Ages were banished from society,
-declared dead as citizens, shut up in unhealthy quarters, and there
-tended after a fashion. Once, when certain lepers in the province of
-Guienne had been badly provided with food, they conceived and carried
-into effect the plan of poisoning the wells and rivers, through which
-many people perished (1321). When the matter was traced back to the
-lepers, and they were examined under torture, one of them invented,
-or somebody suggested to him, the lying accusation that the Jews had
-inspired them with the plan of poisoning the waters. The charge was
-generally believed; even King Philip V had no doubt about it. Sometimes
-it was asserted that the Jews wanted to take revenge for the sufferings
-experienced at the hands of the Shepherds the year before; again, that
-they had been persuaded by the Mahometan king of Granada to cause the
-Christians to be poisoned; or it was suggested that they had done it
-in league with the Mahometan ruler of Palestine, to frustrate the
-intended crusade of King Philip. In several places Jews were arrested
-on this accusation, unmercifully tortured, and some of them burnt
-(Tammuz--July, 1321). In Chinon a deep pit was dug, fire kindled in
-it, and eight Jewish men and women thrown in, who sang whilst dying.
-The mothers had previously cast in their children, to save them from
-forcible baptism. Altogether five thousand are said to have suffered
-death by fire in that year. Many were banished from France, and robbed
-by the heartless populace. Philip was convinced later on of the untruth
-of the accusation; but as the Jews had been accused, he seemed to think
-that the opportunity might be used to swell the treasury. Accordingly,
-the congregations were condemned by Parliament to a penalty of one
-hundred and fifty thousand pounds (Parisian); they were to apportion
-the contributions among themselves. Deputies (procureurs) from northern
-France (de la langue francaise) and from Languedoc, met and enacted
-that the southern French Jews, decimated and impoverished by the
-previous year's massacre, were to contribute forty-seven thousand
-pounds, and the remainder was to be borne by the northern French Jews.
-The wealthiest Jews were put under arrest as security for the payment
-of the fine, and their goods and debts distrained.
-
-In the same year a great danger threatened the oldest of the European
-communities. Misfortune came upon it the more unexpectedly as till
-then it had tasted but little of the cup of misery which the Jews of
-England, France and Spain so often had to drink to the dregs. It was
-because Rome did not belong to the pope, but to the families of Orsini
-and Colonna, to the Ghibellines and Guelphs--the great and minor
-lords, who fought out their party feuds in that city--that the Jews
-were left untouched by papal tyranny. It was well for them that they
-were little considered.
-
-At about this time the Roman Jews had made an advance in material
-welfare and intellectual culture. There were some who possessed houses
-like palaces, furnished with all the comforts of life. Since the time
-when, through the concurrence of favorable circumstances, they had
-tasted of the tree of knowledge, learning and poetry were cherished
-by the Italian Jews. The seeds which Hillel of Verona, Serachya ben
-Shaltiel and others had scattered, commenced to bear fruit. When the
-flower of intellectual glory in southern France began to decay through
-the severity of Talmudical rigorists and the bloody persecutions,
-it unfolded itself in Italy, especially in Rome. At that time the
-first rays of a new cultural development, breaking through the gloom
-of priestcraft and the rude violence of the Middle Ages, appeared
-in Italy. A fresh current of air swept the heavens in Italy in the
-beginning of the fourteenth century, the epoch of Dante, thawing the
-icy coat of the church and of knightdom, the two pillars of the Middle
-Ages. A sense of citizenship, the impulse towards liberty, enthusiastic
-love for science, were the striking symptoms of a new spirit, of a
-striving for rejuvenescence, which only the emperor, the embodiment
-of rude, ungainly knighthood, and the pope, the incarnation of the
-stern, unbending church, failed to perceive. Every greater or lesser
-Italian lord made it a point of honor to encourage art and science,
-and patronize poets, artists and learned men at his court. Nor were
-the Jews overlooked at this juncture. One of the most powerful Italian
-princes, Robert of Anjou, king of Naples, count of Provence (Arelat),
-vicar-general of the Papal States and for some time titular lieutenant
-of the Holy Roman empire, was a friend of science, a warm admirer also
-of Jewish literature, and consequently a protector of the Jews. Several
-Jewish litterateurs were his teachers, or at his instance undertook
-scientific and theological works.
-
-Either in imitation of the current practice or from sincere interest
-in Jewish literature, rich Jews, who played the part of small
-princes, invited Jewish authors into their circle, lightened their
-material cares by liberal support, and stimulated their activity by
-encouragement. Thus it came to pass that three Jewish Italian men of
-letters had the courage to compete with the Spaniards and Provencals.
-These were Leo Romano, Judah Siciliano, and above all the poet Immanuel
-Romi, who once more ennobled neo-Hebrew poetry, and raised it to a
-higher level. The Roman congregation at that time displayed exceptional
-interest in Jewish writings. Of Maimuni, the embodiment of science
-for them as for the rest of the Jewish world, they possessed the
-copious Religious Codex, and the translation of his "Guide;" but of
-his luminous Mishna commentary, composed originally in Arabic, only
-those parts which Charisi and Samuel Ibn-Tibbon had done into Hebrew.
-The representatives of the Roman congregations, to whom probably the
-poet Immanuel also belonged, wished to have a complete edition of the
-work, and sent a messenger to Barcelona to Ben Adret expressly for the
-purpose of procuring the remaining parts. The affair was not so simple
-as the Roman Jews had imagined. The greater portion of the anxiously
-desired commentary of Maimuni on the Mishna, on account of peculiar
-difficulties, was not yet rendered into Hebrew. The greatest obstacle
-was the circumstance that the Spanish Jews, except those in Toledo and
-in the neighborhood of the kingdom of Granada, had forgotten Arabic.
-Ben Adret, who wished to oblige the Roman congregation, endeavored
-to get the required portions translated into Hebrew. He encouraged
-scholars, learned both in Arabic and the Talmud, to undertake this
-difficult task, and Joseph Ibn-Alfual and Jacob Abbassi of Huesca,
-Solomon ben Jacob and Nathaniel Ibn-Almali, the last two physicians
-of Saragossa, and others divided the labor among themselves. Jewish
-literature is indebted for the possession of this most valuable work of
-Maimuni to the zeal of the Roman congregation, of Ben Adret, and these
-translators.
-
-The Roman community was roused from its peaceful occupations and
-undisturbed quiet by a rough hand, and awakened to the consciousness
-that it existed under the scourge of priestcraft and the caprice of its
-rulers.
-
-It is related that a sister of the pope (John XXII), named Sangisa,
-had repeatedly exhorted her brother to expel the Jews from the holy
-city of Christendom. Her solicitations had always been fruitless; she
-therefore instigated several priests to give testimony that the Jews
-had ridiculed by words and actions a crucifix which was carried through
-the streets in a procession. The pope thereupon issued the command
-to banish all the Jews from Roman territory. All that is certain is
-that the Jews of Rome were in great danger during that year, for they
-instituted an extraordinary fast, and directed fervent prayers to
-heaven (21 Sivan-18 June, 1321), nor did they fail to employ worldly
-means. They sent an astute messenger to Avignon to the papal court
-and to King Robert of Naples, the patron of the Jews, who happened to
-be in that city on state affairs. The messenger succeeded, through
-the mediation of King Robert, in proving the innocence of the Roman
-Jews in regard to the alleged insulting of the cross and the other
-transgressions laid to their charge. The twenty thousand ducats, which
-the Roman community is said to have presented to the sister of the
-pope, silenced the last objections. The Jews of Rome entered their
-school of trouble later than the Jews of other countries. For that
-reason it lasted the longer.
-
-Whilst King Robert was residing in southern France, he seems to have
-made the acquaintance of a learned, genial Jewish satirist, Kalonymos
-ben Kalonymos, and to have taken him into his service. This talented
-man (born 1287, died before 1337) possessed solid knowledge, was
-familiar with the Arabic language and literature (which was very
-remarkable in a Provencal), and in his youth (1307-1317) translated
-medical, astronomical, and philosophical writings from that language
-into Hebrew. Kalonymos ben Kalonymos was not merely a hewer of wood
-and drawer of water, an interpreter in the realm of science; he had
-intellect enough to make independent observations. Disregarding
-the province of metaphysical speculation, he was more interested
-in pure ethics, which he especially wished to inculcate in his
-co-religionists, "because neglect and ignorance of it leads men to all
-kinds of perversities and mutual harm." He did not treat the subject
-in a dry, uninteresting style, but sought to clothe it in attractive
-garments. With this end in view, Kalonymos adapted a part of the Arabic
-encyclopedia of science (which was in circulation under the name of
-"Treatises of the Righteous Brethren") for a dialogue between man and
-beasts, giving the theme a Jewish coloring.
-
-In another work, "Touchstone" (composed at the end of 1322), Kalonymos
-ben Kalonymos held up a mirror for his Jewish contemporaries, in which
-they could recognize their perversities, follies, and sins. To avoid
-giving himself the appearance of an irreproachable censor of morals, he
-enumerated his own sins, more in satire than as a confession. Kalonymos
-whimsically satirized even Judaism. He wished he had been born a woman,
-for then he would not have had to bear the burden of six hundred and
-thirteen religious laws, besides so many Talmudical restrictions and
-rigorous ordinances, which could not possibly be fulfilled, even when
-a man tried with the most exacting conscientiousness. As a woman,
-he would not have to trouble himself with so much reading, to study
-the Bible, the Talmud, and the subjects belonging to it, nor torment
-himself with logic, mathematics, physics, astronomy, and philosophy. By
-and by Kalonymos' satire grew deeply serious. The degradation of his
-Jewish co-religionists, and the bloody persecutions occasioned by the
-Shepherds and the lepers, dispelled his mocking humor, and satire was
-changed into lamentation. In Rome, which King Robert assigned to him as
-a place of residence, Kalonymos, having been furnished with letters of
-recommendation, obtained entry into a joyous, vivacious, imaginative
-circle of men, by whom he was stimulated to write a peculiar parody.
-He composed a treatise for the Jewish carnival (Purim), in which he
-imitated the tenor and spirit of the Talmud, its method, controversies,
-and digressions, with considerable wit. It is a fine parody, exciting
-laughter at every step, and one can not tell whether it was intended
-as a harmless carnival joke or as a satire on the Talmud. Kalonymos
-occupied a position of importance in the Roman congregation. Handsome
-in form, of abundant accomplishments, solid character, all his
-excellencies enhanced by the good opinion of King Robert of Naples,
-he was everyone's favorite. The Italian Jews were proud of him. But
-Kalonymos was not a true poet, still less an artist.
-
-Much more gifted, profound, and imaginative was his older friend
-and admirer, Immanuel ben Solomon Romi (born about 1265, died about
-1330). He was an anomaly in the Jewish society of the Middle Ages. He
-belonged to that species of authors whose writings are all the more
-attractive because not very decent. Of overflowing wit, extravagant
-humor, and caustic satire, he is always able to enchain his readers,
-and continually to provoke their merriment. Immanuel may be called the
-Heine of the Jewish Middle Ages. Immanuel had an inexhaustible, ready
-supply of brilliant ideas. And all this in the holy language of the
-Prophets and Psalmists. Granted that the neo-Hebrew poets and thinkers,
-the grammarians and Talmudists, had lent flexibility to the language,
-but none of Immanuel's predecessors had his power of striking from
-it showers of sparkling wit. But if, on the one side, he developed
-the Hebrew language almost into a vehicle for brilliant repartee,
-on the other side, he robbed it of its sacred character. Immanuel
-transformed the chaste, closely-veiled maiden muse of Hebrew poetry
-into a lightly-clad dancer, who attracts the attention of passers-by.
-He allows his muse to deal with the most frivolous and indelicate
-topics without the slightest concealment or shame. His collection of
-songs and novels tends to exert a very pernicious and poisonous effect
-upon hot-blooded youth. But Immanuel was not the hardened sinner, as
-he describes himself, who thought of nothing but to carry on amours,
-seduce the fair, and deride the ugly. He sinned only with the tongue
-and the pen, scarcely with the heart and the senses.
-
-Though he often indulges in unmeasured self-laudation, this simple
-description of his moral conduct must still be credited: "I never
-bear my enemies malice, I remain steadfast and true to my friends,
-cherish gratitude towards my benefactors, have a sympathetic heart,
-am not ostentatious with my knowledge, and absorb myself in science
-and poetry, whilst my companions riot in sensual enjoyments." Immanuel
-belonged to those who are dominated by their wit, and cannot refrain
-from telling some pointed witticism, even if their dearest friends are
-its victims, and the holiest things are dragged in the mire by it.
-He allowed himself to be influenced by the vivacity of the Italians
-and the Europeanized Jews, and put no curb upon his tongue. What
-is remarkable in this satirist is that his life, his position, and
-occupation seem to have been in contradiction with his poetical craft.
-In the Roman community he filled an honorable position, was something
-like a president, at all events a man of distinction. He appears to
-have belonged to the medical profession, although he made sport of
-the quackery of physicians. In short, he led the domestic life of his
-time, a life permeated by morality and religion, giving no opportunity
-for excess. But his honorable life did not prevent him from singing
-riotous songs, and from writing as though he were unconscious of the
-seriousness of religion, of responsibility and learning. Immanuel
-was acquainted, if not on intimate terms, with the greatest poet of
-the Middle Ages, the first to open the gates of a new epoch, and to
-prognosticate the unity of Italy in poetic phrase. Probably they came
-to know each other on one of Dante's frequent visits to Rome, either
-as ambassador or exile. Although their poetic styles are as opposite
-as the poles--Dante's ethereal, grave, and elevated; Immanuel's
-forcible, gay, and light--they, nevertheless, have some points of
-contact. Each had absorbed the culture of the past; Dante the catholic,
-scholastic, and romantic elements; Immanuel the biblical, Talmudical,
-Maimunist, philosophical, and neo-Hebraic products. Both elaborated
-this many-hued material, and molded it into a new kind of poetry. The
-Italians at that time were full of the impulse of life, and Immanuel's
-muse is inspired by the witchery of spring. He wrote ably in Italian,
-too, of which a beautiful poem, still extant, gives evidence. Immanuel
-was the first to adapt Italian numbers to the neo-Hebraic lyre. He
-introduced the rhyme in alternate lines (Terza rima in sonnet form),
-by which he produced a musical cadence. His poems are not equally
-successful. They are wanting not in imagination, but in tenderness
-and grace. His power lies in poetical prose (Meliza), where he can
-indulge in free and witty allusions. In this style he composed a host
-of short novels, riddles, letters, panegyrics, and epithalamia, which,
-by clever turns and comic situations, extort laughter from the most
-serious-minded readers.
-
-In one of his novels he introduces a quarrelsome grammarian of the
-Hebrew language, a verbal critic who takes the field in grammatical
-campaigns, and is accompanied by a marvelously beautiful woman.
-Immanuel enters into a hair-splitting disputation that he may have
-the opportunity of coquetting with the lovely lady. He suffers defeat
-in grammar, but makes a conquest in love. Immanuel's description of
-hell and paradise, in which he imitated his friend Dante, is full of
-fine satire. Whilst the Christian romantic poet shows gravity and
-elevation in his poetical creation, represents sinners and criminals,
-political opponents and enemies of Italy, cardinals and popes, as
-being tortured in hell, metes out, as it were, the severe sentences of
-judgment day; his Jewish friend, Immanuel, invents scenes in heaven
-and hell for the purpose of giving play to his humorous fancy. Dante
-wrote a divine, Immanuel a human, comedy. He introduces his pilgrimage
-to heaven and hell by relating that he once felt greatly oppressed by
-the burden of his sins, and experienced compunction; at this juncture
-his young friend Daniel, by whose untimely death he had lately been
-deeply affected, appeared to him, and offered to guide him through the
-dismal portals of hell and the elysian fields of the blessed. In the
-chambers of hell Immanuel observes all the wicked and godless of the
-Bible. Aristotle, too, is there, "because he taught the eternity of
-the world," and Plato, "because he asserted the reality of species"
-(Realism). Most of all he scourges his contemporaries in this poem.
-He inflicts the torment of the damned upon the deriders of science;
-upon a Talmudist who secretly led a most immoral life; upon men who
-committed intellectual thefts, and upon those who sought to usurp all
-the honors of the synagogue, the one to have his seat by the Ark of
-the Covenant, the other to read the prayers on the Day of Atonement.
-Quack doctors are also precipitated into hell, because they take
-advantage of the stupidity and credulity of the multitude, and bring
-trusting patients to a premature grave. His young, beatified guide
-goes with him through the gates of Paradise. How the departed spirits
-rejoice at the poet's approach! They call out, "Now is the time to
-laugh, for Immanuel has arrived." In the description of paradise and
-its inhabitants, Immanuel affects to treat his theme very seriously;
-but he titters softly within the very gates of heaven. Of course, he
-notices the holy men, the patriarchs, the pious kings and heroes of the
-Jewish past, the prophets and the great teachers, the poets, Jehuda
-Halevi and Charisi, the Jewish philosopher Maimuni. But next to King
-David, who fingers the harp and sings psalms, he observes the harlot
-Rahab who concealed the spies in Jericho, and Tamar who sat at the
-cross-roads waiting. Dante excludes the heathen world from paradise,
-because it did not acknowledge Christ, and had no share in the grace
-of salvation. Immanuel sees a troop of the blessed, whom he does not
-recognize, and asks their leader who they are. "These are," answers
-the latter, "righteous and moral heathens, who attained the height of
-wisdom, and recognized the only God as the creator of the world and the
-bestower of grace." The pious authors, David, Solomon, Isaiah, Ezekiel,
-on seeing Immanuel, darted forward to meet him; each one thanks him for
-having expounded his writings so well, and here older and contemporary
-exegetists come in for their share of Immanuel's sly satire.
-
-Neo-Hebraic poetry, which began with Jose ben Jose, and reached its
-zenith in Ibn-Gebirol and Jehuda Halevi, attains its final stage of
-development in Immanuel. The gamut had now been run. After Immanuel,
-the Hebrew muse became silent for a long time, and it required a fresh
-and powerful stimulus to awaken it from slumber to new energy. Verses
-were, of course, written after his days, and rhymes polished, but they
-are as far removed from poetry as a street-song from a soul-stirring
-melody. The fate of Hebrew poetry is illustrated in Immanuel's career.
-For a long period he was popular, every one sought his friendship, but
-in old age he fell into neglect and poverty. His own statement is that
-his generosity dissipated his means. He was as much derided as he had
-formerly been praised. He left Rome with his family, traveled about,
-and found repose at length at the house of a wealthy, influential
-friend of art (Benjamin?) in Fermo, who interested himself in him, and
-encouraged him to arrange the verses and poems written at different
-periods of his life into a symmetrical whole.
-
-The praises which Immanuel bestows on his own productions, and his
-boast that he casts the old poets into the shade, certainly tend to
-produce a bad impression. Nevertheless, like every expert in his
-profession, he was far removed from that repulsive vanity which
-perceives its own depreciation in the recognition of another. To true
-merit Immanuel gave the tribute of his warmest praise, and modestly
-conceded precedence to it. Not only did he extol the highly honored
-Kalonymos, basking in the sunshine of the king's favor, with the most
-extravagant figures of speech, but he praised almost more heartily the
-poet Jehuda Siciliano, who lived in straitened circumstances. He gave
-him the palm for poetical verse, maintaining his own superiority in
-poetical prose. But for Immanuel, nothing would have been known of this
-poet. Poor Siciliano had to waste his power in occasional poems for
-his subsistence, and was thus unable to produce any lasting work. With
-glowing enthusiasm Immanuel eulogizes his cousin, the young and learned
-Leone Romano, Jehuda ben Moses ben Daniel (born about 1292), whom he
-calls the "Crown of Thought." In paradise he allots to him the highest
-place of honor. Leone Romano was the teacher of King Robert of Naples,
-and instructed him in the original language of the Bible. He knew the
-language of learned Christendom, and was probably the first Jew to pay
-attention to scholastic philosophy. He translated for Jewish readers
-the philosophical compositions of Albertus Magnus, Thomas Aquinas,
-and others. Leone Romano composed original works of exegesis, set
-forth in philosophical method. Greatly as his contemporaries admired
-his learning and intellect, which had achieved so much when he had
-scarcely arrived at man's estate, he exercised no influence whatever on
-posterity.
-
-The Roman society which promoted science and poetry may be said to
-have included also the grandson of a Roman emigrant who took up his
-abode in Greece, Shemarya Ikriti (Cretan) of Negroponte (flourished
-1290-1320). He stood in close relation with the Roman community and
-King Robert. Familiar with Talmudical literature, as he probably was
-rabbi in Negroponte, he devoted himself to philosophical speculations,
-and was, perhaps, well read in the Greek philosophical literature
-in its original language. In his youth, Ikriti, like many of his
-contemporaries, occupied himself with translations of philosophical
-works. Later on he conceived a plan of practical utility, in which
-he thought he could turn his knowledge to account. He sought to
-smooth over the difference between the Rabbanites and the Karaites,
-and lastingly to reconcile the sects at enmity with each other
-for centuries, "that all Israel may once more be united in one
-fraternal bond." Shemarya of Negroponte was the first, perhaps the
-only Rabbanite, who, if he did not extend the hand of reconciliation
-to Karaism, at least showed a friendly disposition towards it. He
-recognized that both parties were in error; Karaism was wrong in
-rejecting Talmudical traditions unconditionally; but the Rabbanites
-sinned against truth in placing the Talmud in the forefront, and
-overlooking the Bible. In Greece there may have been Karaites at that
-time who had come from Constantinople. To these Shemarya Ikriti
-addressed himself to incline their minds towards union with the mother
-community.
-
-For the difficult task of bringing discordant faiths into harmony,
-much intelligence and energy were required, and Shemarya could
-furnish only good will. He was not deficient in knowledge, but his
-mental grasp was not sufficiently powerful. At the instance of King
-Robert, who interested himself in Jewish literature, he wrote a
-commentary on the Bible, and forwarded to him, with a dedication, the
-books first completed (1328). It read as follows: "To our noble king
-Robert, adorned like King Solomon with the crown of wisdom and the
-diadem of royalty, I send this exposition of the cosmogony and the
-Song of Songs." His Biblical commentaries were set forth with great
-diffuseness, covered a great range, and were not calculated to appeal
-to the Karaites, and draw them over to the side of rabbinical Judaism.
-His attempt at reconciliation miscarried, perhaps was not made in the
-proper spirit; for there was a disposition on the part of some Karaites
-to treat his overtures favorably, and his efforts would not have
-failed, if they had been conducted with skill. Nevertheless, Ikriti was
-held in such esteem in his time that the Roman congregation took an
-interest in his labors, entered into correspondence with him, while the
-Karaites assiduously read his works, and in later times considered him
-a member of their own party.
-
-Karaism was still dragging itself along in its decaying, stiffening
-form. Internal schisms remained unaccommodated. Different Karaite
-congregations celebrated the festivals at different times: the
-Palestinians, according to the observation of the new moon, and the
-extra-Palestinian congregations, in common with the Rabbanites. Their
-extremely severe marriage laws were not finally settled even at this
-epoch. Karaism at that time had three centers--Cairo in Egypt,
-Constantinople in the Byzantine Empire, and Sulchat (Eski-Crim) in the
-Crimean peninsula. Some importance was possessed by Aaron ben Joseph
-the Elder, physician in Constantinople (flourished about 1270-1300). He
-came originally from the Crimea, made extensive voyages, and acquired
-a knowledge of medicine and philosophy. Aaron I also made himself
-intimate with Rabbanite literature to a degree that few of his sect
-attained. He made use of Nachmani's commentary on the Pentateuch, and
-from this circumstance arose the mistake of later Karaites, that Aaron
-had sat at Nachmani's feet. His familiarity with Rabbanite literature
-had a beneficial effect on his style; he wrote much more clearly and
-intelligibly than most of the Karaite authors. He was even disposed to
-accept the tradition of the Talmud.
-
-He completely fixed the Karaite prayer book (Siddur Tefila), hitherto
-in an unsettled condition, incorporating into it hymns written by
-Gebirol, Jehuda Halevi, Ibn-Ezra, and other Rabbanite liturgical
-poets. Aaron himself possessed very little poetical genius, and his
-metrical prayers, with which he enriched the prayer book of the
-Karaites, have no great poetical merit, but by the admission of hymns
-written by Rabbanites into his compilation, he showed that he knew
-how to appreciate the devout sublimity in the prayers of the Spanish
-Jews, and that he was not altogether devoid of taste. If Shemarya,
-of Negroponte, had undertaken to effect a reconciliation between
-the Rabbanites and the Karaites in a more intelligent and energetic
-manner, there can be no doubt that Aaron would willingly have offered
-his assistance, provided, of course, that he had known of Shemarya's
-attempt. There was not wanting among Karaites a strong inclination for
-union. Owing to the activity of Abraham Maimuni II, a great-grandson
-of the renowned Maimuni, who had succeeded to the post of Chief
-(Nagid) of the Rabbanite communities in Egypt after the death of his
-father David, an important Karaite congregation in Egypt on one day
-openly acknowledged the teachings of the Rabbanites. In Palestine,
-too, frequent conversions of Karaites to Talmudical Judaism took
-place. On this account the rabbis of the time were more favorably
-disposed towards them. On the one hand, the strict Talmudist Samson
-of Sens denounced the Karaites as heathens, whose wine was not to be
-partaken of by orthodox Jews; on the other hand, Estori Parchi, who
-had been banished from Provence, and who, emigrating to Palestine, had
-settled in Bethshan, recognized them as co-religionists, led astray by
-erroneous notions, but not to be rejected.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-THE AGE OF THE ASHERIDES AND OF GERSONIDES.
-
- Condition of Palestine--Pilgrims and Immigrants--Shem Tob
- Ibn-Gaon--Favorable Position of the Jews in Castile under
- Alfonso XI--Persecution in Navarre--Joseph de Ecija and Samuel
- Ibn-Wakar--Increase of Anti-Jewish Feelings--Abner--Alfonso
- of Burgos, Convert to Christianity, and Persecutor of the
- Jews--Gonzalo Martinez--Fall of Martinez and Deliverance of the
- Jews--Decline of the Study of Science--The Study of the Talmud
- prosecuted with Renewed Vigor--Jacob and Judah Asheri--Isaac
- Pulgar, David Ibn-Albilla--The Provencal Philosophers
- Ibn-Kaspi, Leon de Bagnols, and Vidal Narboni--Decline of the
- Study of the Talmud in Germany--Emperor Louis of Bavaria and
- the Jews--Persecution by the "Leather-Arms."
-
-1328-1350 C.E.
-
-
-The Holy Land was once more accessible to its children. The Egyptian
-sultans, into whose power it passed after the fall of Accho and the
-expulsion of the Christians, were more tolerant than the Christian
-Byzantine emperors and the Frankish crusading kings. They did not
-hinder the coming of Jewish pilgrims who desired to lighten their
-over-burdened hearts by praying and weeping over the ruins of the past,
-so rich in recollections, or at the graves of their great men there
-interred; nor did they oppose the settlement of European exiles, who
-again cultivated the soil of the land of their fathers. The long, firm,
-yet mild, reign of the Mameluke sultan, Nassir Mahomet (1299-1341),
-was a happy time for the Jews who visited Palestine. Whilst under the
-rule of the Christian governors of the country no Jew was permitted to
-approach the former capital, at this time Jewish pilgrims from Egypt
-and Syria regularly came to Jerusalem, to celebrate the festivals, as
-in the time when the Temple shone in all its splendor. The Karaites
-established special forms of prayer for those who went on pilgrimages
-to Jerusalem: at their departure, the whole congregation assembled to
-give utterance in prayer to the bitter-sweet emotions connected with
-Zion. The immigrants who settled in Palestine engaged in agriculture.
-They came to feel so thoroughly at home there that the question was
-mooted whether the laws of tithes, of the year of release, and others
-ought not to be again carried into effect. In consequence of the
-freedom and tolerance which the Jews were enjoying, many enthusiastic
-spirits were again seized by the ardent desire to kiss the dust of the
-Holy Land. Emigration to Palestine, especially from the extreme west,
-became very common at this time.
-
-A pupil of Meir of Rothenburg, named Abraham, a painstaking copyist
-of holy writings, considered his dwelling in the Holy Land a mark of
-divine grace. Two young Kabbalists, Chananel Ibn-Askara and Shem Tob
-Ibn-Gaon from Spain, also traveled thither, probably to be nearer
-the source of the mystic doctrines, which fancy assigned to this
-country, and took up their residence in Safet. But instead of obtaining
-fresh information upon the doctrines of the Kabbala, one of them--
-Ibn-Askara died in his youth--introduced new features of the science.
-Shem Tob ben Abraham Ibn-Gaon, from Segovia (born 1283, died after
-1330), whose teacher in the Talmud had been Ben Adret, and in the
-Kabbala Isaac ben Todros, was a zealous adherent of the secret science,
-and described even Maimuni as a Kabbalist.
-
-The congregation of Jerusalem was at this time very numerous. A
-large portion of the Rabbanite community led a contemplative life,
-studied the Talmud day and night, and became engrossed with the secret
-lore of the Kabbala. There were also handicraftsmen, merchants, and
-several acquainted with the science of medicine, with mathematics and
-astronomy. The artistic work of the famous calligraphers of Jerusalem
-was in great demand, far and near. Hebron, too, possessed a vigorous
-community, whose members engaged chiefly in the weaving and dyeing of
-cotton-stuffs, and in the manufacture of glass wares, exported in large
-quantities. In the south of Palestine, in company with Mahometans,
-Jewish shepherds again pastured their flocks after the manner of the
-patriarchs. Their rabbi was also a shepherd, and delivered discourses
-upon the Talmud in the pasture fields for such as desired to obtain
-instruction.
-
-Although the Holy Land was the goal of ardent, longing hearts, yet
-it was no more a center for the dispersed of the Jewish race than it
-had been for a long time previous. It could not produce an original
-leader of any sort, and lived upon the crumbs of culture dropped by
-the Jews in Europe. The Kabbala, studied in Palestine since the time
-of Nachmani, was an exotic plant which could never flourish very well
-there, and degenerated into rankest superstition. The Holy Land did
-not even produce a Talmudical authority of widespread renown; also
-for earnest rabbinical studies it had become dependent upon Europe.
-The leadership of Judaism in the days after the death of Ben Adret
-and Asheri remained with Spain, not as formerly Aragon, but Castile,
-where the family of Asheri and their views prevailed. Here lived
-Talmudical authorities whose decisions were considered final. Here was
-still to be found, if not a flourishing state of science, at least
-appreciation of scientific research. In Castile, under the rule of the
-powerful and intelligent Alfonso XI, the Jews were in so prosperous a
-condition that, compared with other countries in Europe, this period
-may be called a Golden Age. Several clever Jews in succession, under
-the modest title of ministers of finance (Almoxarif), exercised an
-influence upon the course of politics. Not only the court, but also
-the great nobles, surrounded themselves with Jewish counselors and
-officers. In place of the humble, servile bearing, and the degrading
-badge which the church decreed for the Jews, the Jewish Spaniards
-still bore their heads erect, and clothed themselves in gold and
-silk. Dazzled by the glitter of this favorable state of affairs, some
-recognized the fulfillment of the old prophecy, "the scepter shall not
-depart from Judah," which Christians had so often employed in their
-attacks on Judaism.
-
-It is scarcely to be wondered at, if the Spanish Jews were unduly
-elated because of the promotion of a few from their midst to state
-offices. Such prominent public men were for the most part a protecting
-shield for the communities against the avaricious and turbulent lower
-orders of the nobility, against the stupid credulity and envy of the
-mob, and the serpent-like cunning of the clergy, lying concealed but
-ready to attack the Jews. Jewish ministers and counselors in the
-service and the retinue of the king, clothed in the costume of the
-court, and wearing at their sides the knightly sword, by these very
-circumstances, without special intercession, disarmed the enemies
-of their brethren in faith and race. The impoverished nobles, who
-possessed nothing more than their swords, were filled with envy of
-the rich and wise court Jews; but they were compelled to stifle their
-feelings. The masses, guided by appearances, did not venture, as was
-done in Germany, to ill-treat or slay any Jew they chanced across, as
-an outlaw and a pariah, because they knew that the Jews were held in
-high favor at court. They often overrated their influence, believing
-that the Jews at court could obtain a hearing with the king at any
-time. Even the haughty clergy were obliged to restrain themselves
-so long as Joseph of Ecija, Samuel Ibn-Wakar, and others, were in a
-position to counteract their influence.
-
-If the Castilian Jews compared the condition of their brethren in
-neighboring countries with their own, they must certainly have felt
-exalted, and entitled to be proud of their lot. In Aragon, at this
-time united into one kingdom with the islands of Majorca and Sicily,
-the persecuting spirit of the church, which Raymond de Penyaforte had
-stirred up, and Jayme I had perpetuated by means of oppressive laws,
-was rampant. In Navarre, which for half a century had belonged to the
-crown of France, the hatred against the Jews burned with a frenzy
-hitherto to be met with only in Germany. The last of the Capets,
-Charles IV, was dead, and with the accession of Philip VI to the French
-throne the House of Valois began. It is noteworthy that even Christians
-believed that the extinction of the lineal successors of Philip le Bel
-was retribution for his merciless expulsion of the Jews from France.
-The people of Navarre strove to separate themselves from the rule of
-France, and form an independent state. It is not known in how far the
-Jews stood in the way of their project. Anyhow it is certain that
-suddenly, throughout the whole country, a bloodthirsty enmity arose
-against the Jews, prompted by envy of their riches, and fostered by the
-monks. A Franciscan, named Pedro Olligoyen, made himself most prominent
-in goading on the deluded mob against the innocent Jews. In the large
-congregation of Estella a most horrible massacre began on a Sabbath
-(23d Adar-5th March, 1328). The infuriated mob raised the cry, "Death
-to the Jews, or their conversion."
-
-In vain did the Jews attempt to defend themselves in their streets;
-the inhabitants of the city, strengthened by troops from other places,
-besieged them, and took by storm the walls which surrounded the Jewish
-quarter, breaking them down and slaying almost all the Jews of the
-city. They also set fire to the Jewish houses, and reduced them to
-ashes. The description by an eye-witness of his own sufferings gives
-only a feeble idea of the horrors of this savage massacre in Estella.
-The murderers had slain the parents and the four younger brothers of
-Menachem ben Zerach, then barely twenty years old, afterwards a scholar
-of commanding influence. He himself was wounded by the murderers and
-knocked down, lying on the ground unconscious, from evening till
-midnight, beneath a number of corpses. A compassionate knight, a friend
-of Menachem's father, searched for him beneath the pile of corpses,
-took him to his house, and had him carefully tended till he recovered
-from his wounds. Similar scenes of barbarity were enacted in other
-parts of the country, especially in Tudela, the largest community in
-Navarre, and in the smaller ones of Falcos, Funes, Moncilla, Viana
-and others, but nowhere to so frightful an extent as in Estella. Over
-six thousand Jews perished in these massacres. Only the Jews of the
-capital, Pampeluna, appear to have escaped these savage attacks. The
-people of Navarre at length succeeded in their desire; their country
-was separated from France, and obtained a king of its own, Philip
-III, Count of Evreux and Angouleme. As soon as he was crowned, the
-relatives of the murdered entreated him to mete out justice. At first,
-Philip prosecuted the guilty persons in real earnest; he ordered the
-ringleaders, the Franciscan Pedro Olligoyen and others to be cast into
-prison, and laid a fine upon the cities in which these crimes had been
-committed. But, in course of time, he liberated all the imprisoned, and
-remitted the fine as an act of grace. He took good care, too, not to
-let the stolen property and the possessions of persons without heirs
-escape him; they had to be surrendered to him, just as in Germany.
-There was no objection to the Jews' being slaughtered, but the royal
-treasury was not to suffer loss on that account. This king and his
-successors imposed new burdens upon the wretched people. The Jews of
-Navarre now began to sink into degradation like those of Germany.
-
-The sun that was shining upon them in Castile at this time was,
-strictly speaking, only a false sun, but its glimmer, compared with the
-gloom wherein the congregations of other countries were steeped, gives
-at least momentary pleasure. Alfonso XI, as soon as he came of age,
-and obtained the sovereignty (1325-1380), had two Jewish favorites,
-Don Joseph of Ecija and Samuel Ibn-Wakar. The former, whose full name
-was Joseph ben Ephraim Ibn-Benveniste Halevi, had a pleasing exterior,
-understood music, and knew how to ingratiate himself with those in
-power. At the recommendation of his uncle, the king had made him
-not only minister of finance (Almoxarif), but also his confidential
-counselor (privado), whose opinion he highly valued. Joseph of Ecija
-possessed a state carriage, knights accompanied him as an escort on
-his journeys, and hidalgos dined at his table. On one occasion the
-king dispatched him on a very important and honorable mission which
-almost cost him his life. He was besieged by the citizens of Valladolid
-in the palace of the Infanta, and they demanded his surrender with
-tumultuous clamor. Some of Joseph's retinue succeeded in escaping from
-the city, and they hastened at full speed to the king, to whom they
-related what had taken place. Alfonso rightly considered this a revolt
-against his sovereignty. He marched rapidly against Valladolid, and
-summoned the knights of Old Castile to join him. For the sake of his
-Jewish favorite, he besieged the former capital of his kingdom, burnt
-many houses, and would have destroyed the place entirely, had not more
-moderate persons intervened, and explained to the king that the people
-were not so much embittered against Don Joseph as against Don Alvar
-Nunez, whose influence was most hateful to them. Don Alfonso thereupon
-condescended to remove Alvar from his public offices, whilst Don Joseph
-continued in favor with the king.
-
-The other favorite of King Alfonso was his physician, Don Samuel
-Ibn-Wakar (Abenhuacar). This man had a scientific education, was an
-astronomer, and perhaps the astrologer of his master. Although he
-occupied no public office, and took no part in state affairs, yet,
-through the favor of the king, he possessed very great influence. There
-existed between Don Joseph of Ecija and Ibn-Wakar the jealousy which is
-common among courtiers who bask in the rays of the same sun. On account
-of their rivalry, these two favorites sought to injure each other, and
-thus they and their co-religionists incurred the hatred of the people.
-
-Some wealthy Jews, probably relying upon the favorable position
-of their friends at court, carried on money transactions in an
-unscrupulous manner. They extorted a high rate of interest, and
-mercilessly persecuted their dilatory Christian debtors. The king
-himself encouraged the usury of the Jews and Moors, because he gained
-advantage therefrom. The complaints of the people against the Jewish
-and Mahometan usurers grew very numerous. The cortes of Madrid,
-Valladolid and other cities made this point the subject of petitions
-presented to the king, demanding the abolition of these abuses, and the
-king was compelled to yield to their entreaty.
-
-The minds of the people, however, remained embittered against the Jews.
-The cortes of Madrid thereupon called for several restrictive laws
-against the Jews, such as, that they should not be allowed to acquire
-landed property, and that Jewish ministers of finance and farmers
-of taxes should not be appointed (1329). Alfonso replied, that, in
-the main, things should continue as they had been before. Don Samuel
-Ibn-Wakar rose even higher in the royal favor. Don Alfonso intrusted
-him with the farming of the revenues derived from the importation
-of goods from the kingdom of Granada. He, moreover, obtained the
-privilege empowering him to issue the coinage of the realm at a lower
-standard. Joseph of Ecija now became jealous and offered a higher
-sum for the right of farming the import-taxes from Granada. When he
-thought he had supplanted his rival, the latter dealt him a severe
-blow. Ibn-Wakar succeeded in persuading the king that it would be more
-advantageous to the people of Castile to carry the protective system
-to its uttermost limits, and prohibit all imports from the neighboring
-Moorish kingdom (1330-1331).
-
-Whilst the two Jewish courtiers were striving to injure each other, the
-enemies of the Jews were busily at work to imperil their reputation
-and the existence of all the Castilian congregations. They inflamed
-the minds of the people by representing to them that, owing to the
-depreciation in the value of money, brought about by the farmer of the
-coinage, Ibn-Wakar, the price of the necessaries of life had risen,
-these articles being exported to the neighboring countries, where they
-were bartered for silver, which had a higher value in their own land.
-The enemies of the Jews also brought the influence of the church to
-bear to arouse the prejudices of the king against all the Jews. Their
-champion was a Jew, who no sooner had embraced Christianity, than he
-became a fanatical persecutor of his brethren. This was the infamous
-Abner, the forerunner of the baptized and unbaptized Jew-haters, who
-prepared, and at length accomplished, the humiliation and banishment of
-the Spanish Jews.
-
-Abner of Burgos, or as he was afterwards called, Alfonso Burgensis de
-Valladolid (born about 1270, died about 1346), was well acquainted
-with biblical and Talmudical writings, occupied himself with science,
-and practiced medicine. His knowledge had destroyed his religious
-belief, and turned him not only against Judaism, but against all
-faiths. Troubled by cares for his subsistence, Abner did not obtain
-the desired support from his kinsmen in race. He was too little of a
-philosopher to accept his modest lot. His desires were extravagant,
-and he was unable to find the means to satisfy them. In order to be
-able to live in ease and splendor, Abner determined, when nearly sixty
-years of age, to adopt Christianity, although this religion was as
-little able to give him inward contentment as that which he forsook.
-As a Christian, he assumed the name of Alfonso. The infidel disciple
-of Aristotle and Averroes accepted an ecclesiastical office; he became
-sacristan at a large church in Valladolid, to which a rich benefice was
-attached, enabling him to gratify his worldly desires. He attempted
-to excuse his hypocritical behavior and his apostasy by means of
-sophistical arguments.
-
-Alfonso carried his want of conscientiousness so far that not long
-after his conversion to Christianity he attacked his former brethren
-in faith and race with bitter hate, and showed the intention of
-persecuting them. Owing to his knowledge of Jewish literature, it
-was easy for him to discover its weak points, employ them as charges
-against Judaism, and draw the most hateful inferences. Alfonso was
-indefatigable in his accusations against the Jews and Judaism, and
-composed a long series of works, in which he introduced arguments
-partly aggressive, partly defensive of his new faith against the
-attacks upon it by the Jews. In his abuse of Judaism, the Hebrew
-language, in which he composed with much greater ease than in Spanish,
-was made to do service.
-
-Alfonso had the brazen impudence to send one of his hateful writings
-to his former friend, Isaac Pulgar. The latter replied in a sharply
-satirical poem, and pressed him close in his polemical writings. The
-Jews of Spain had not yet become so disheartened as to suffer such
-insolent attacks in silence. Another less renowned writer also answered
-Alfonso, and thus a violent literary warfare broke out.
-
-Alfonso of Valladolid, however, did not content himself with polemical
-writings; he boldly presented himself before King Alfonso XI, and
-laid his accusations against the Jews before him. He raked up anew
-the remark of the Church Father Jerome and others, that the Jews had
-introduced into their book of prayer a formula of imprecation against
-the God of the Christians and his adherents. The representatives of
-the Jewish community in Valladolid, probably summoned by the king to
-justify themselves, emphatically denied that the imprecation originally
-leveled against the Minim (Nazarenes) referred to Jesus and his
-present followers. Alfonso, however, would not admit the validity of
-this exculpation, and pledged himself to prove his charges against
-the Jews in a disputation. The king of Castile thereupon commanded
-the representatives of the Valladolid community to enter upon a
-religious discussion with the sacristan. It took place in the presence
-of public officials and Dominicans. Here Alfonso Burgensis repeated
-his accusations, and was victorious, inasmuch as, in consequence of
-this disputation, King Alfonso issued an edict (25th February, 1336)
-forbidding the Castilian communities, under penalty of a fine, to use
-the condemned prayer or formula of imprecation. Thus the enemies of the
-Jews succeeded in winning over the king, who was really well-disposed
-towards the Jews. More ominous events were to happen.
-
-King Alfonso was not very constant; he transferred his favor from one
-person to another. He took into his confidence a man unworthy of the
-distinction, named Gonzalo Martinez (Nunez) de Oviedo, originally
-a poor knight, who had been promoted through the patronage of the
-Jewish favorite, Don Joseph of Ecija. Far from being grateful to his
-benefactor, he bore deep hatred against him who had thus raised him,
-and his hostile feeling extended to all Jews. When he had risen to
-the post of minister of the royal palace, and later to that of Grand
-Master of the Order of Alcantara (1337), he revealed his plan of
-annihilating the Jews. He lodged a formal charge against Don Joseph and
-Don Samuel Ibn-Wakar, to the effect that they had enriched themselves
-in the service of the king. He obtained the permission of the king to
-deal with them as he chose, so as to extort money from them. Thereupon
-Gonzalo ordered both of them, together with two brothers of Ibn-Wakar,
-and eight relatives with their families, to be thrown into prison, and
-confiscated their property. Don Joseph of Ecija died in prison, and
-Don Samuel died under the torture to which he was subjected. This did
-not satisfy the enemy of the Jews. He now sought to destroy two other
-Jews, who held high positions at court--Moses Abudiel and (Sulaiman?)
-Ibn-Yaish. He implicated them in a charge, pretending all the while
-to be friendly towards them. Through their downfall Gonzalo Martinez
-thought to carry into effect his wicked plan against the Castilian Jews
-without difficulty.
-
-The Moorish king of Morocco, Abulhassan (Alboacin), whose help was
-implored by his oppressed co-religionists in Granada, had sent a very
-large army under the command of his son, Abumelik, over the straits
-to undertake a vigorous campaign against Castile. On the reception
-of this news, terror spread throughout Christian Spain. King Alfonso
-forthwith appointed Gonzalo Martinez, Master of the Order of Alcantara,
-as general in charge of this war, and invested him with plenary power.
-But funds were wanting; at the deliberation on ways and means of
-procuring them, Gonzalo propounded his plan for depriving the Jews of
-their wealth, and then expelling them from Castile. By this means,
-large supplies of money would flow into the royal treasury; for all
-the Christians who were dunned by the Jews would willingly pay large
-sums of money to rid themselves of their enemies. Fortunately this
-proposal met with opposition in the royal council, and even from the
-most prominent clergyman in Castile, the archbishop of Toledo. The
-latter urged that the Jews were an inexhaustible treasure for the king,
-of which the state should not deprive itself, and that the rulers
-of Castile had guaranteed them protection and toleration. Don Moses
-Abudiel, who obtained information concerning the council held to decide
-on the weal or woe of the Jews, advised the congregations to institute
-public fasts, and to supplicate the God of their fathers to frustrate
-the wickedness of Gonzalo. The latter marched to the frontier against
-the Moorish army, and secured an easy victory. It happened, fortunately
-for the Spaniard, that the Moorish general, Abumelik, fell pierced by
-an arrow, and his army, filled with dismay at this event, was defeated
-and put to rout. The vainglory of the Grand Master of Alcantara now
-attained a high pitch. He thought to obtain such great importance in
-Spanish affairs that the king would be compelled to approve of all
-measures proposed by him. He was, indeed, filled with that pride which
-precedes a fall.
-
-The feeble hand of a woman was the cause of his downfall. The beautiful
-and sprightly Leonora de Guzman, who had so enthralled the king with
-her charms that he was more faithful to her than to his wife, hated the
-favorite Gonzalo Martinez, and succeeded in making the king believe
-that he spoke ill of him. Alfonso desiring to learn the real truth of
-the matter sent a command to Gonzalo to present himself before him
-in Madrid; he, however, disobeyed the royal command. To be able to
-defy the anger of the king, he stirred up the knights of the Order of
-Alcantara and the citizens of the towns assigned to his government,
-to rebel against his sovereign, entered into traitorous negotiations
-with the king of Portugal and with the enemy of the Christians, the
-king of Granada. Alfonso was forced to lead his nobles against him, and
-besiege him in Valencia de Alcantara. In mad defiance, Gonzalo directed
-arrows and missiles to be aimed at the king, which mortally wounded a
-man in the vicinity of Alfonso. But some of the knights of the Order of
-Alcantara forsook their Grand Master, and surrendered the stronghold to
-the king. There remained nothing for Gonzalo except to yield. He was
-condemned to death as a traitor, and was burnt at the stake (1336), and
-thus ended the man who had sworn to annihilate the Jews. The Castilian
-congregations thereupon celebrated a new festival of deliverance, in
-the same month in which the evil plans of Haman against the Jews had
-recoiled on his own head. Alfonso again received the Jews into his
-favor, and raised Moses Abudiel to a high position at his court. From
-this time till the day of his death, Alfonso XI acted justly towards
-his Jewish subjects.
-
-It may be thought that, under these on the whole favorable
-circumstances, the Jews occupied themselves with their intellectual
-culture, which had already developed its full blossom; but it was not
-so. Castile in particular, and all Spain, at this epoch, were very
-deficient in men who cultivated Jewish science. The Talmud constituted
-the only branch of study which intellectual men attended to, and even
-here there was no particular fertility. Decrease in strength manifested
-itself even in the study of the Talmud. The most famous rabbis of
-this period had so great a mistrust of their own powers that they no
-longer dared take an independent view of anything, and relied more
-and more upon the conclusions of older authorities. They made it very
-convenient for themselves by slavishly following Maimuni's Code in
-practical decisions, deviating from it only in such particulars as
-Asheri had objected to. The latter had pretty well succeeded, if not
-in altogether destroying the inclination of the Spanish Jews to engage
-in scientific inquiry, at least in bringing science into disrepute, and
-thus weakening its study. The distinguished supporters of philosophy
-henceforth no more came from Spain; the few that came into prominence
-were from southern France. These were Ibn-Kaspi, Gersonides and
-Narboni. Asheri and his sons, who inherited his hostility to science,
-in causing the view to become general throughout Spain, that a man
-should not engage in higher questions concerning Judaism and its
-connection with philosophy, did not consider that by this means the
-spirit of the Spanish Jews would become enfeebled and incapacitated
-for Talmudical investigations, too. The Jewish sons of Spain were
-not so well suited for the study of narrow Talmudism as the German
-Jews. Prevented from occupying themselves with science, they lost
-their buoyancy of spirit, and became unfit for the studies permitted.
-Even their pleasure in song and their poetical talents died away.
-Occasionally a poem was still produced, but it consisted merely of
-rude and unimaginative rhymes. In time they were no better than the
-German Jews, whom they had before so greatly despised. Even their prose
-style, on which the Spanish Jews had formerly bestowed so much care,
-degenerated for the most part into spiritless verbosity. The charming
-writer, Santob de Carrion, who as early as the time of Alfonso XI had
-clothed his thoughts in beautiful Spanish verse, was a solitary poet,
-whose song awoke no echo.
-
-The eight sons of Asheri, his relatives, who had emigrated with
-him from Germany to Toledo, together with his numerous grandsons,
-dominated Spanish Judaism from this time onwards. They introduced
-a one-sided Talmudical method of instruction deeply tinged with a
-gloomy, ascetic view of religion. The most famous of the sons of Asheri
-were Jacob (Baal ha-Turim) and Jehuda, both intensely religious,
-and of unselfish, self-sacrificing dispositions; they were, however,
-limited to a very narrow range of ideas. Both were as learned in the
-Talmud as they were ignorant in other subjects, and possessed every
-quality calculated to bring the decay of religion into accord with the
-increasing sufferings of the Jews in this third home of their race.
-
-Jacob ben Asheri (born about 1280, died 1340) was visited by bitter
-misfortunes. His life was one chain of sufferings and privations; but
-he bore all with patience, without murmur or complaint. Although his
-father, Asheri, had brought much wealth with him to Spain, and had
-always been in good circumstances, yet his son, Jacob, had to suffer
-the bitterest pangs of poverty. Nevertheless, he received no salary as
-a rabbi: in fact, he does not appear to have filled that post at any
-time. As with all the family of Asheri, both sons and grandsons, the
-Talmud constituted his exclusive interest in life; but he displayed
-more erudition than originality. His sole merit consists in the fact
-that he brought the chaos of Talmudical learning into definite order,
-and satisfied the need of the time for a complete code of laws for
-religious practice.
-
-Owing to his German origin and to his residence in Spain, Jacob Asheri
-became familiar with the productions of the different schools and
-authorities in their minutest details. He was thus well suited to
-control this chaotic mass and reduce it to order. On the basis of the
-labors of all his predecessors in this field, especially of Maimuni,
-Jacob compiled a second religious code (in four parts, Turim, shortened
-to Tur, about 1340). This work treated solely of religious practice,
-that is, of the ritual, moral, marriage and civil laws. He omitted all
-such things as had fallen into disuse since the destruction of the
-Temple and because of altered circumstances. With the composition of
-this work, a new phase in the inner development of Judaism may be said
-to begin.
-
-Jacob's code forms part of a graduated scale, by means of which it
-can be ascertained to how low a level official Judaism had sunk since
-the time of Maimuni. In Maimuni's compilation thought is paramount;
-every ritual practice, of whatever kind, whether good or bad, is
-brought into connection with the essence of religion. In Jacob's
-code, on the other hand, thought or reasoning is renounced. Religious
-scrupulousness, which had taken so firm a hold of the German Jewish
-congregations, inspires the laws, and imposes the utmost stringency
-and mortifications. Maimuni, in accepting religious precepts as
-obligatory, was guided entirely by the Talmud, and but seldom included
-the decisions of the Geonim as invested with authority. Asheri's
-son, on the contrary, admitted into his digest of religious laws
-everything that any pious or ultra-pious man had decided upon either
-out of scrupulosity or as a result of learned exposition. In his
-code, the precepts declared to be binding by rabbinical authorities
-far outnumbered those of Talmudic origin. One might almost say that
-in Jacob Asheri's hands, Talmudical Judaism was transformed into
-Rabbinism. He even included some of the follies of the Kabbala in his
-religious digest.
-
-Jacob's code is essentially different from that of Maimuni, not only in
-contents, but also in form. The style and the language do not manifest
-the conciseness and lucidity of Maimuni's. Notwithstanding this, his
-code soon met with universal acceptance, because it corresponded to
-a want of the times, and presented, in a synoptical form, all the
-ordinances relating to the ritual, to marriage, and civil laws binding
-on the adherents of Judaism in exile under the rule of various nations.
-Rabbis and judges accepted it as the criterion for practical decisions,
-and even preferred it to Maimuni's work. A few of the rabbis of that
-age refused to forego their independence, and continued to pronounce
-decisions arrived at by original inquiry, and therefore paid little
-heed to the new religious code. The great majority of them, on the
-other hand, not only in Spain, but also in Germany, were delighted to
-possess a handy book of laws systematically presenting everything worth
-knowing, making deep, penetrative research superfluous, and taxing
-the memory more than the understanding. Thus Jacob's Tur became the
-indispensable manual for the knowledge of Judaism, as understood by the
-rabbis, for a period of four centuries, till a new one was accepted
-which far surpassed the old.
-
-His brother, Jehuda Asheri, was on a par with Jacob in erudition and
-virtue, but did not possess similar power of reducing chaos to order.
-He was born about 1284, and died in 1349. After the death of his
-father, the community of Toledo elected him as Asheri's successor in
-the rabbinate of the Spanish capital. He performed the functions of his
-office with extraordinary scrupulousness, without respect of persons,
-and was able to call the whole community to witness that he had never
-been guilty of the slightest trespass. When Jehuda Asheri, on account
-of some small quarrel with his congregation, resolved to take up his
-abode in Seville, the entire community unanimously begged of him to
-remain in their midst, and doubled his salary. In spite of this show of
-affection, he did not feel comfortable in Spain, and in his will he is
-said to have advised his five sons to emigrate to Germany, the original
-home of his family. The persecution of the German Jews, during the year
-of the epidemic pestilence, probably taught them that it was preferable
-to dwell in Spain. By reason of his position in the most important
-of the congregations and of his comprehensive rabbinical learning,
-Jehuda Asheri was regarded as the highest authority of his age, and was
-preferred even to his brother Jacob.
-
-Seeing that even the study of the Talmud, so zealously pursued
-in Spain, had fallen into this state of stagnation and lassitude,
-the other branches of science could not complain that they made no
-progress, or were not attentively cultivated. The study of the Bible,
-Hebrew grammar, and exegesis were entirely neglected; we can recall
-hardly a single writer who earnestly occupied himself with these
-subjects. Owing to the energetic zeal of Abba-Mari, the interdict
-of Ben Adret, and the pronounced aversion of Asheri, reasoning had
-fallen into disrepute and decay. The truly orthodox shunned contact
-with philosophy as the direct route to heresy and infidelity, and
-pseudo-pious people behaved in a yet more prudish fashion towards
-it. It required courage to engage in a study inviting contempt and
-accusations of heresy. The Kabbala, too, had done its work, in dimming
-the eyes of men by its illusions. There were but few representatives of
-a philosophical conception of Judaism in those days; these were Isaac
-Pulgar, of Avila, David Ibn-Albilla of Portugal, and Joseph Kaspi of
-Argentiere, in southern France.
-
-Levi ben Gerson, or Leon de Bagnols, was more renowned and more
-talented than any of these. He was also called Leo the Hebrew, but
-more usually by his literary name Gersonides (born 1288, died about
-1345). He belonged to a family of scholars, and among his ancestors
-he reckoned that Levi of Villefranche who had indirectly caused the
-prohibition of scientific study. In spite of the interdict of Ben
-Adret forbidding the instruction of youths in science, Gersonides was
-initiated into it at a very early age, and before he had reached his
-thirtieth year he was at work at a comprehensive and profound work
-upon philosophy. Gersonides was gifted with a versatile and profound
-intellect, and averse to all superficiality and incompleteness. In
-astronomy he corrected his predecessors, and made such accurate
-observations that specialists based their calculations upon them. He
-invented an instrument by means of which observations of the heavens
-could be made more certain. This discovery filled him with such ecstasy
-that he composed a Hebrew poem, a kind of riddle, upon it, though he
-was an unpoetical man, and had his head filled with dry calculations
-and logical conclusions. He also wrote works upon the science of
-medicine, and discovered new remedies. At the same time he was held in
-very high repute by his contemporaries as a profound Talmudist, and
-inspired by his love for systematic arrangement, wrote a methodology of
-the Mishna.
-
-Maestro Leon de Bagnols, as he was called as a physician, fortunately
-did not belong to the Jews of France proper: he successively lived
-in Orange, Perpignan, and in Avignon, at this time the home of
-popedom. Therefore, he had not been a sufferer in the expulsion of his
-co-religionists from this land; but his heart bled at the sight of the
-sufferings which the exiles were made to undergo. He moreover escaped
-from the effects of the rising of the Shepherds, and the subsequent
-bitter calamities. At about the same time, his fertile powers of
-production began to put forth fruit, and he began the series of
-writings which continued for more than twenty years (1321-1343). None
-of his writings created such a sensation as his work on the philosophy
-of religion (Milchamoth Adonai). In this he set forth the boldest
-metaphysical thoughts with philosophical calmness and independence, as
-if paying no heed to the fact that by his departure from the hitherto
-received notions upon these questions, he was laying himself open to
-the charges of heresy and heterodoxy. "If my observations are correct,"
-he remarked, "then all blame leveled against me, I regard as praise."
-Leon de Bagnols belonged to a class of thinkers seldom met with, who,
-with majestic brow, seek truth for its own intrinsic value, without
-reference to other ends and results which might cause conflict. Levi
-ben Gerson thus expressed his opinion upon this subject: Truth must be
-brought out and placed beneath the glare of open daylight, even if it
-should contradict the Torah in the strongest possible manner. The Torah
-is no tyrannical law, which desires to force one to accept untruth as
-truth, on the contrary, it seeks to lead man to a true understanding of
-things. If the truth arrived at by investigation is in harmony with the
-utterances of the Bible, then so much the better. In his independence
-of thought, the only parallel to Gersonides among Jewish inquirers
-is Spinoza. Unlike many of his predecessors, he would not look upon
-science as a body of occult doctrines designed for an inner circle of
-the initiated. He moreover refused to follow slavishly the authorities
-in philosophy regarded as infallible. He propounded independent views
-in opposition not only to Maimuni and Averroes, but also to Aristotle.
-Leon de Bagnols did not establish a perfect and thoroughly organized
-system of the philosophy of religion, but treated of the difficulties
-which interested the thinkers of the age more incisively than any of
-his predecessors.
-
-In spite of his great ability, Gersonides exercised very little
-influence upon Judaism. By the pious, he was denounced as a heretic,
-because of his independent research, and his ambiguous attitude towards
-the doctrine of the creation. They took the title of his chief work,
-"The Battles of the Lord," to mean "Battles against the Lord." So much
-the warmer was his reception by Christian inquirers after truth. Pope
-Clement VI, during the lifetime of the author, commanded his treatise
-upon astronomy and the newly-invented instrument to be translated into
-Latin (1342).
-
-Of a similar nature was another representative of philosophical Judaism
-of this age, Moses ben Joshua Narboni, also called Maestro Vidal (born
-about 1300, died 1362). His father Joshua, who belonged to a family
-in Narbonne, but resided in Perpignan, was so warmly interested in
-Jewish, that is to say Maimunistic, philosophy, that in spite of the
-interdict hurled against all who studied the subject, he instructed
-his son therein when he was thirteen years old. Vidal Narboni became
-an enthusiastic student. He divided his admiration between Maimuni
-and Averroes, his writings consisting chiefly of commentaries upon
-their works. His travels from the foot of the Pyrenees to Toledo and
-back again to Soria (1345-1362) enriched and amended his knowledge. He
-was interested in anything worth knowing, and made observations with
-great accuracy. No calamities or troubles succeeded in damping his
-zeal in the inquiry after truth. In consequence of the Black Death,
-an infuriated mob fell upon the community at Cervera. Vidal Narboni
-was compelled to take to flight with the rest of the congregation; he
-lost his possessions, and, what was more painful to him, his precious
-books. These misfortunes did not disturb him; he took up the thread of
-his work where it had been interrupted. He accomplished no entirely
-independent or original work; he was a true Aristotelian of Averroist
-complexion. Narboni conceived Judaism as a guide to the highest degree
-of theoretical and moral truth: the Torah has a double meaning--
-the one simple, direct, for the thoughtless mob, and the other of a
-deeper, metaphysical nature for the class of thinkers--a common
-opinion in those times, Gersonides alone demurring. Narboni, too, gave
-expression to heretical views, that is, such as are contrary to the
-ordinarily accepted understanding of Judaism, but not with the freedom
-and openness of Levi ben Gerson. He rejected the belief in miracles,
-and attempted to explain them away altogether, but defended man's
-freedom of will by philosophical arguments. Death overtook him in the
-very midst of his labors when, advanced in years, he was on the point
-of returning to his native land from Soria, on the other side of the
-Pyrenees, where he had spent several years.
-
-Though the Karaite, Aaron ben Elia Nicomedi, may be reckoned among the
-philosophers of this time, he can scarcely be admitted into the company
-of Levi ben Gerson and the other Provencal thinkers. His small stock of
-philosophical knowledge was a matter of erudition, not the result of
-independent thought. Aaron II, of Nicomedia (in Asia Minor, born about
-1300, died 1369), who probably lived in Cairo, was indeed superior
-to his ignorant brother Karaites, but several centuries behind the
-Rabbanite philosophers. His thoughts sound like a voice from the grave,
-or as of one who has slumbered for many years, and speaks the language
-of antiquity, not understood by the men of his own day.
-
-Aaron ben Elia was not even able to indicate the end aimed at by his
-work, "The Tree of Life." Without being himself fully conscious of his
-motives, he was guided in its composition by jealous rivalry of Maimuni
-and the Rabbanites. It vexed him sorely that Maimuni's religious
-philosophical work, "The Guide," was perused and admired not only by
-Jews, but also by Christians and Mahometans, whilst the Karaites had
-nothing like it. Aaron desired to save the honor of the Karaites by his
-"Tree of Life." He sought to detract from the merits of the work of
-Maimuni, and remarked that some of the statements to be found in the
-book had been made by Karaite philosophers of religion. Notwithstanding
-this, he followed Maimuni most minutely, and treated only of those
-questions which the latter had raised; but he sought to solve them not
-by the aid of philosophy, but by the authority of the Bible.
-
-The history of this period, when dealing with events in Germany, has
-nothing but calamities to record: bloody assaults, massacres, and
-the consequent intellectual poverty. Asheri and his sons were either
-deluded or unjust when they preferred bigoted Germany to Spain, at that
-time still tolerable, and cast longing looks thitherwards from Toledo.
-From the time of Asheri's departure till the middle of the century,
-misfortune followed upon misfortune, till nearly all the congregations
-were exterminated. On account of this state of affairs, even the study
-of the Talmud, the only branch of learning pursued in Germany with
-ardor and thoroughness, fell into decay. How could the Germans gather
-intellectual strength, when they were not certain about one moment
-of their lives, or their means of sustenance? Their state in a most
-literal way realized the prophetical threat of punishment: "Thy life
-shall hang in doubt before thee; and thou shalt fear day and night.
-In the morning thou shalt say, Would God it were even! and at even
-thou shalt say, Would God it were morning! for the fear of thine heart
-wherewith thou shalt fear." Emperor Louis, the Bavarian, is reported to
-have been favorably inclined towards the Jews, which is said to have
-made them proud. But this is idle calumny both against the emperor and
-the Jews. No German ruler before him had treated his "servi camerae"
-so badly, pawned them and sold them, as Louis the Bavarian. He also
-imposed a new tax upon the Jews, the so-called golden gift-pence. As
-the emperors had gradually pawned all the revenues derived from their
-"servi camerae" to enable them to satisfy their immediate necessity for
-money, Louis the Bavarian was driven to cogitate upon some new means
-of obtaining supplies from them. He promulgated a decree (about 1342),
-which commanded that every Jew and Jewess in the German Empire above
-the age of twelve, and possessed of at least more than twenty florins,
-should pay annually to the king or the emperor a poll-tax of a florin.
-He probably derived his right, if, indeed, the question of right was
-considered in reference to the treatment of Jews, from the fact that
-the German emperors were in possession of all the prerogatives once
-claimed by those of Rome. As the Jews, since the days of Vespasian and
-Titus, had been compelled to pay a yearly tax to the Roman emperors,
-the German rulers declared themselves the direct heirs to this golden
-gift-pence.
-
-Hitherto the massacres of Jews in Germany had taken place only at
-intervals, and in a few places; but now, under the reign of Louis,
-owing to riots and civil wars, they became much more frequent.
-During two consecutive years (1336-1337), a regularly organized
-band of peasants and rabble, who called themselves "the beaters of
-the Jews," made fierce attacks upon them with unbridled fury and
-heartless cruelty. Two dissolute noblemen were at the head of this
-troop; they gave themselves the name of Kings Leather-arm (Armleder)
-from a piece of leather which they wore wound round the arm. In this
-persecution, as in that of Rindfleisch, the fanaticism and blind
-superstition inculcated by the church played an important part. One of
-the Leather-arms announced that he had received a divine revelation
-which directed him to visit upon the Jews the martyrdom and the wounds
-which Jesus had suffered, and to avenge his crucifixion by their
-blood. Such a summons to arms seldom remained unanswered in Germany.
-Five thousand peasants, armed with pitchforks, axes, flails, pikes,
-and whatever other weapons they could lay hands upon, gathered around
-the Leather-arms, and inflicted a bloody slaughter upon the Jewish
-inhabitants of Alsace and the Rhineland as far as Suabia. As frequently
-happened during such barbarous persecutions, numbers of Jews, on this
-occasion also, put an end to their own lives, after having slain
-their children to prevent their falling into the hands of the Church.
-Emperor Louis the Bavarian did indeed issue commands to protect the
-heretic Jews (April, 1337), but his help came too late, or was of
-little effect. At length the emperor succeeded in capturing one of the
-Leather-arms, whom he ordered to be executed.
-
-At about the same time a bloody persecution, prompted by the frenzy
-of avarice, was set on foot in Bavaria. The councilors of the city
-of Deckendorf (or Deggendorf) desired to free themselves and all the
-citizens from their debts to the Jews, and enrich themselves besides.
-To carry out this plan, the fable of the desecration of the host by the
-Jews, with the accompaniment of the usual miracles, was spread abroad.
-When the populace had been incited to a state of fanatical frenzy, the
-council proceeded to execute the project which it had secretly matured
-outside the town, so as not to arouse any suspicion among the Jews. On
-the appointed day (30th September, 1337), at a signal from the church
-bell, the knight Hartmann von Deggenburg, who had been initiated in
-the conspiracy, rode with his band of horsemen through the open gates
-into Deckendorf, and was received with loud rejoicing. The knight and
-the citizens thereupon fell upon the defenseless Jews, put them to
-death by sword and fire, and possessed themselves of their property. In
-honor of the miracles performed by the host that had been pierced by
-the knives of the Jews, a church of the Holy Sepulcher was erected, and
-appointed as a shrine for pilgrims; and the puncheons which the Jews
-had used, together with the insulted host, were placed beneath a glass
-case, and guarded as relics. For many centuries they were displayed for
-the edification of the faithful,--perhaps are still displayed. The
-lust for slaughter spread abroad into Bavaria, Bohemia, Moravia, and
-Austria. Thousands of Jews perished by different forms of torture and
-death. Only the citizens of Vienna and Ratisbon protected their Jewish
-inhabitants against the infuriated mob. The friendly efforts of Pope
-Benedictus XII were of little avail against the brutal spirit of the
-then Christian world.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-THE BLACK DEATH.
-
- Rise of the False Accusation against Jews of Poisoning the
- Wells--Massacres in Southern France and Catalonia--The
- Friendly Bull of Pope Clement VI--Terrible Massacres in all
- Parts of Germany--Confessions wrung from the Jews on the Rack
- --The Flagellants as a Scourge for the Jews--King Casimir of
- Poland--Persecution in Brussels--The Black Death in Spain
- --Don Pedro the Cruel and the Jews--Santob de Carrion and
- Samuel Abulafia--Fall of Don Pedro and its Consequences for the
- Jews--Return of the Jews to France and Germany--The "Golden
- Bull"--Manessier de Vesoul--Matathiah Meir Halevi--Synod at
- Mayence.
-
-1348-1380 C.E.
-
-
-The assistance of the pope was of very little use to the Jews, and
-the protection of the German emperor was like the support of a broken
-reed. Within ten years they learned this comfortless experience; for
-soon came most mournful days for the Jewish communities in most parts
-of Europe where the cross held sway, to which the slaughter by the
-Leather-arms and the brutal atrocities of Deckendorf were but a weak
-prelude.
-
-The glimpse of good fortune which the Spanish Jews enjoyed under
-Alfonso XI served only to bring down upon their brethren in the
-other Christian countries a widespread, intense, indescribably cruel
-persecution with which none of the massacres that had hitherto taken
-place can be compared. The destroying angel called the Black Death,
-which carried on its ravages for over three years, made its way from
-China across lands and seas into the heart of Europe, heralded by
-premonitory earthquakes and other terrifying natural phenomena. Sparing
-neither rank nor age, it left a devastated track behind, sweeping
-away a fourth part of all mankind (nearly 25,000,000) as with a
-poison-laden breath and stifling every noble impulse. In Europe the
-invisible Death with its horrors turned the Christians into veritable
-destroying angels for the Jews. Those whom the epidemic had spared
-were handed over to torture, the sword, or the stake. Whilst neither
-Mahometans nor Mongols who suffered from the plague attacked the Jews,
-Christian peoples charged the unhappy race with being the originators
-of the pestilence, and slaughtered them _en masse_. The church had so
-often and impressively preached that infidels were to be destroyed;
-that Jews were worse than heretics, even worse than unbelieving
-heathens; that they were the murderers of Christians and the slayers
-of children, that at last its true sons believed what was said, and
-carried its doctrines into effect. Owing to the prevailing misery,
-discipline and order, obedience and submissiveness were at an end, and
-each man was thrown upon his own resources. Under these circumstances,
-the effects of the education of the church appeared in a most hideous
-form. The Black Death had indeed made itself felt among Jews also; but
-the plague had visited them in a comparatively milder form than the
-Christians, probably on account of their greater moderation, and the
-very careful attention paid their sick. Thus the suspicion arose that
-the Jews had poisoned the brooks and wells, and even the air, in order
-to annihilate the Christians of every country at one blow.
-
-It was charged that the Spanish Jews, supposed to be in possession
-of great power and influence over the congregations of Europe, had
-hit upon this diabolical scheme; that they had dispatched messengers
-far and wide with boxes containing poison, and by threats of
-excommunication had coerced the other Jews to aid in carrying out their
-plans, and that these directions issued from Toledo, which might be
-viewed as the Jewish capital. The infatuated populace went so far as
-to name the man who had delivered these orders and the poison. It was
-Jacob Pascate, said they, from Toledo, who had settled in Chambery
-(in Savoy), from which as a center he had sent out a troop of Jewish
-poisoners into all countries and cities. This Jacob, together with a
-Rabbi Peyret, of Chambery, and a rich Jew, Aboget, was said to have
-dealt largely in the manufacture and sale of poisons. The poison,
-prepared by the Jewish doctors of the black art in Spain, was reported
-to be concocted from the flesh of a basilisk, or from spiders, frogs
-and lizards, or from the hearts of Christians and the dough of the
-consecrated wafers. These and similar silly stories invented by
-ignorant, or, perhaps, malicious people, and distorted and exaggerated
-by the heated imagination, were credited not alone by the ignorant mob,
-but even by the higher classes. The courts of justice earnestly strove
-to learn the real truth of these rumors, and employed the means for
-confirming a suspicion used by the Christians of the Middle Ages with
-especial skill--torture in every possible form.
-
-As far as can be ascertained, these tales concerning the poisoning of
-the brooks and wells by Jews first found credence in southern France,
-where the Black Death as early as the beginning of the year 1348 had
-obtained many victims. In a certain town of southern France, on one
-day (the middle of the month of May), the whole Jewish congregation,
-men, women, and children, together with their holy writings, were cast
-into the flames. From that place the slaughter spread to Catalonia and
-Aragon. In these provinces, in the same year, anarchy was rife, because
-the nobles and people had revolted against the king, Don Pedro, in
-order to secure certain of their privileges against the encroachments
-of the monarch. When the tales of the poisoning of the wells had taken
-firm root in the minds of the people of these countries also, the
-inhabitants of Barcelona gathered together on a Saturday (towards
-the end of June), slew about twenty persons, and pillaged the Jewish
-houses. The most distinguished men of the city received the persecuted
-people under their protection, and aided by a terrible storm, loud
-thunder and flashes of lightning, they made a successful attack upon
-the deluded or plunder-seeking assailants of the Jews.
-
-A few days later the community at Cervera was attacked in a similar
-manner, eighteen of its members killed, and the rest compelled to
-flee. The Jewish philosopher, Vidal Narboni, happened to be in the
-town, and in the assault he lost his possessions and his books. All
-the congregations of northern Spain knew themselves in danger of being
-attacked; they instituted public fasts, implored mercy from heaven,
-and barricaded those of their quarters which were surrounded by walls.
-In Aragon, however, the higher classes came to the help of the Jews.
-Pope Clement VI, who had taken so much interest in the astronomical
-works of Gersonides, and who, terrified at the approach of death,
-had shut himself up in his room, still felt for the sufferings of
-an innocent, persecuted people. He issued a bull in which, under
-pain of excommunication, he prohibited anyone from killing the Jews
-without proper judicial sentence, or from dragging them by force to
-be baptized, or from despoiling them of their goods (the beginning
-of July). This bull was probably of some use in southern France, but
-in the other parts of the Christian world it produced no effect. One
-country followed the example of another. The ideally beautiful region
-surrounding Lake Geneva next became the scene of a most frightful
-persecution. At the command of Amadeus, duke of Savoy at that time,
-several Jews suspected of poisoning were arrested and imprisoned in
-two small towns, Chillon and Chatel, on Lake Geneva. A commission of
-judges was appointed to inquire into the charges brought against the
-prisoners, and, if convicted, they were to be severely punished.
-In this country, then, a prince and his tribunal believed the
-preposterous fable of the poisoning by Jews. On the Day of Atonement
-(15th September, 1348), three Jews and a Jewess in Chillon were made
-to undergo torture: the surgeon Valavigny, from Thonon, Bandito and
-Mamson, from Ville-Neuve, and, three weeks later, Bellieta and her son
-Aquet. In their pain and despair, they told the names of the persons
-from whom they had received the poison, and admitted that they had
-scattered it in different spots near wells and brooks. They denounced
-themselves, their co-religionists, their parents and their children as
-guilty. Ten days later the merciless judges again applied the torture
-to the enfeebled woman and her son, and they vied with each other in
-their revelations. In Chastelard five Jews were put to the torture, and
-they made equally incredible confessions of guilt. Aquet made the wild
-statement that he had placed poison in Venice, in Apulia and Calabria,
-and in Toulouse, in France. The secretaries took down all these
-confessions in writing, and they were verified by the signatures of
-their authors. To remove all doubts concerning their trustworthiness,
-the crafty judges added that the victims were only very lightly
-tortured. In consequence of these disclosures, not only the accused who
-acknowledged their crime, but all the Jews in the region of Lake Geneva
-and in Savoy were burnt at the stake.
-
-The report of the demonstrated guilt of the Jews rapidly made its way
-from Geneva into Switzerland, and here scenes of blood of the same
-horrible description were soon witnessed. The consuls of Berne sent
-for the account of the proceedings of the courts of justice at Chillon
-and Chastelard. They then put certain Jews to the torture, extracted
-confessions from them, and kindled the funeral pyre for all the Jews
-(September).
-
-The annihilation of the Jews on the charge of poisoning was now
-systematically carried out, beginning with Berne and Zofingen (canton
-Aargau). The consuls of Berne addressed letters to Basle, Freiburg,
-Strasburg, Cologne, and many other places, with the announcement that
-the Jews had been found guilty of the crime imputed to them; and also
-sent a Jew, bound in chains, under convoy, to Cologne, that every one
-might be convinced of the diabolical plans of the Jews. In Zurich the
-charge of poisoning the wells was raised together with that of the
-murder of a Christian child. There, also, those who appeared to be
-guilty were burnt at the stake, the rest of the community expelled
-from the town, and a law passed forbidding them ever to return thither
-(21st September). The persecution of the Jews extended northwards with
-the pestilence. Like the communities around Lake Geneva, Jews in the
-cities surrounding Lake Constance, in St. Gall, Lindau, Ueberlingen,
-Schaffhausen, Constance (Costnitz), and others, were burnt at the
-stake, put to the wheel, or sentenced to expulsion or compulsory
-baptism. Once again Pope Clement VI took up the cause of the Jews; he
-published a bull to the whole of Catholic Christendom, in which he
-declared the innocence of the Jews regarding the charge leveled against
-them. He produced all possible reasons to show the absurdity of the
-accusation, stating that in districts where no Jew lived the people
-were visited by the pestilence, and that Jews also suffered from its
-terrible effects. It was of no avail that he admonished the clergy to
-take the Jews under their protection, and that he placed the false
-accusers and the murderers under the ban (September). The child had
-become more powerful than its parent, wild fancy stronger than the
-papacy.
-
-Nowhere was the destruction of the Jews prosecuted with more
-thoroughness and more intense hatred than in the Holy Roman Empire.
-In vain the newly-elected emperor, Charles IV, of Luxemburg, issued
-letter after letter forbidding the persons of the Jews, his "servi
-camerae," to be touched. Even had he possessed more power in Germany,
-he would not have found the German people willing to spare the Jews.
-The Germans did not commit their fearful outrages upon the Jews merely
-for the sake of plunder, although a straightforward historian of that
-epoch, Closener of Strasburg, remarks that "their goods were the poison
-which caused the death of the Jews." Sheer stupidity made them believe
-that Jews had poisoned the wells and rivers. The councils of various
-towns ordered that the springs and wells be walled in, so that the
-citizens be not poisoned, and they had to drink rain water or melted
-snow. Was it not just that the Jews, the cause of this evil, should
-suffer?
-
-There were some too sensible to share the delusion that the Jews were
-the cause of the great mortality. These few men deserve a place in
-history, for, despite their danger, they could feel and act humanely.
-In the municipal council of Strasburg, the burgomaster Conrad (Kunze)
-of Wintertur, the sheriff, Gosse Sturm, and the master workman, Peter
-Swaber, took great trouble to prove the Jews innocent of the crimes
-laid at their door, and defended them against the fanatical attack
-of the mob and even against the bishop. The councilors of Basle and
-Freiburg likewise took the part of the unhappy people. The council of
-Cologne wrote to the representatives of Strasburg that it would follow
-the example of the latter town with regard to the Jews; for it was
-convinced that the pestilence was to be considered as a visitation
-from God. It would, therefore, not permit the Jews to be persecuted
-on account of groundless reports, but would protect them with all its
-power, as in former times. In Basle, however, the guilds and a mob
-rose in rebellion against the council, repaired with their flags to
-the city hall, insisted that the patricians who had been banished on
-account of their action against the Jews, should be recalled, and the
-Jews banished from the city. The council was compelled to comply with
-the first demand; as to the second, it deferred its decision until
-a day of public meeting, when this matter was to be considered. In
-Benfelden (Alsace) a council was actually held to consider the course
-to be followed with regard to Jews. There were present Bishop Berthold
-of Strasburg, barons, lords, and representatives of the towns. The
-representatives of Strasburg bravely maintained the cause of the
-Jews, even against the bishop, who either from malice or stupidity
-was in favor of their complete destruction. Although they repeatedly
-demonstrated that the Jews could not be the cause of the pestilence,
-they were out-voted, and it was decided to banish the Jews from all the
-cities on the upper Rhine (towards the close of 1348).
-
-The Jews of Alsace, through the decision of Benfelden, were declared
-outlaws, and were either expelled from the various places they visited,
-or burnt. A hard fate overtook the community of Basle. On an island
-of the Rhine, in a house especially built for the purpose, they were
-burnt to death (January 9th, 1349), and it was decided that within the
-next two hundred years no Jew should be permitted to settle in that
-city. A week later all the Jews of Freiburg were burnt at the stake
-with the exception of twelve of the richest men, who were permitted to
-live that they might disclose the names of their creditors, for the
-property of the victims fell to the community. The community of Speyer
-was the first sacrifice amongst the communities of the Rhineland. The
-mob rose up and killed several Jews, others burning themselves in their
-houses, and some going over to Christianity. The council of Speyer
-took the property of the Jews, and confiscated their estates in the
-neighborhood. The council of Strasburg remained firm in its protection
-of the Jews, sending out numerous letters to obtain proofs of their
-innocence. But from many sides came unfavorable testimony. The council
-of Zaehringen said that it was in possession of the poison the Jews had
-scattered. When tried it proved fatal to animals. The council would not
-let it go out of its hands, but would show it to a messenger.
-
-A castellan of Chillon had the confessions of the Jews tortured in
-the district of Lake Geneva copied, and sent them to the council of
-Strasburg. Only the council of Cologne encouraged Wintertur to support
-the cause of the Jews, and to take no notice of the demands of their
-enemies. At length the trade-guilds rose against Wintertur and his two
-colleagues, who were deposed from office. A new council was chosen that
-favored the persecutions of the Jews. In the end, the entire community
-of Strasburg--2,000 souls--were imprisoned. The following day, on
-a Sabbath (14th February, 1349), they were all dragged to the burial
-ground. Stakes were erected, and they were burnt to death. Only those
-who in despair accepted the cross were spared. The new council decreed
-that for a period of a hundred years no Jew should be admitted into
-Strasburg. The treasures of the Jews were divided amongst the burghers,
-some of whom were loth to defile themselves with the money, and, by the
-advice of their confessors, devoted it to the church.
-
-Next came the turn of Worms, the oldest Jewish community in Germany.
-The Jews of this town had the worst to fear from their Christian
-fellow-citizens, Emperor Charles IV having given them and their
-possessions to the town in return for services, so that "the city
-and the burghers of Worms might do unto the Jews and Judaism as they
-wished, might act as with their own property." When the council
-decreed that the Jews should be burnt, the unfortunates determined to
-anticipate the death which awaited them from the hangman. Twelve Jewish
-representatives are said to have repaired to the town hall and begged
-for mercy. When this was refused to them, they are said to have drawn
-forth the weapons concealed in their clothes, to have fallen on the
-councilors, and killed them. This story is legendary; but it is a fact
-that nearly all the Jews of Worms set fire to their houses, and that
-more than 400 persons were burned to death (10th Adar-1st March, 1349).
-The Jews of Oppenheim likewise burnt themselves to death to escape
-being tortured as poisoners (end of July). The community of Frankfort
-remained secure so long as the rival emperors, Charles IV and Gunther
-of Schwarzburg, were fighting in that neighborhood; the latter holding
-his court in Frankfort. When he died, and the contest was ended, the
-turn of the Jews of Frankfort came to be killed. On being attacked they
-burned themselves in their houses, causing a great conflagration in the
-city. In Mayence, where the Jews had hitherto been spared, a thief,
-during a flagellation scene, stole his neighbor's purse. An altercation
-arose, and the mob seized the opportunity to attack the Jews. They
-had, no doubt, been prepared, and 300 of them took up arms, and
-killed 200 of the mob. This aroused the anger of the entire Christian
-community, which likewise took to arms. The Jews fought a considerable
-time; at length, overpowered by the enemy, they set fire to their
-houses (24th August). Nearly 6,000 Jews are said to have perished in
-Mayence. In Erfurt, out of a community of 3,000 souls, not one person
-survived, although the council, after their slaughter in the whole of
-Thuringia, including Eisenach and Gotha, had long protected them. In
-Breslau, where a considerable community dwelt, the Jews were completely
-destroyed. Emperor Charles gave orders to seize the murderers and give
-them their due punishment. But he had taken no steps to hinder the
-horrible slaughter enacted everywhere, although informed of the plots
-against the Jews. In Austria, also, the outcry was made that the Jews
-were poisoners, and terrible scenes ensued. In Vienna, on the advice
-of Rabbi Jonah, all the members of the congregation killed themselves
-in the synagogue. In Krems, where there was a large congregation, the
-populace of the town, assisted by that of a neighboring place named
-Stein and the villages, attacked the Jews, who set fire to their houses
-and died (September, 1349), only a few being saved.
-
-In Bavaria and Suabia, persecution was also rife, and the communities
-of Augsburg, Wuerzburg, Munich, and many others succumbed. The Jews
-of Nuremberg, through its extensive commerce, possessed great riches
-and grand houses, and were the especial objects of dislike to the
-Christians. Their destruction was so imminent that Emperor Charles IV
-freed the council from responsibility if they should be injured against
-its wish.
-
-At length their fate was fulfilled. On a spot afterwards called
-Judenbuehl (Jews' hill), the followers of the religion of love erected
-a pile, and all those who had not emigrated were burnt or killed.
-The council of Ratisbon did its utmost to save the community, the
-oldest in the south of Germany. For here also the mob demanded the
-annihilation or banishment of the Jews. The dukes of Bavaria, the sons
-of Emperor Louis, who favored the persecution of the Jews, had given
-the people permission in writing to "treat the Jews as they liked,
-according to honor or necessity, and banish them with or without
-justice." Margrave Louis of Brandenburg, son of Emperor Louis, one of
-the partisans of the rival emperor, Gunther of Schwarzburg, showed his
-religious feeling by giving orders to burn all the Jews of Koenigsberg
-(in Neumark), and to confiscate their goods. So inhuman were people
-in those days that the executioner boasted of his deed, and gave
-documentary evidence that Margrave Louis had commanded the Jews to be
-burnt. In North Germany there lived but few Jews, except in Magdeburg,
-but there, too, they were burnt or banished. In Hanover (in 1349) the
-flagellants were rampant. Outside of Germany, amongst the nations
-still uncivilized, there were comparatively few persecutions. Louis,
-King of Hungary, an enthusiast for his faith, drove the Jews out of
-his land, not as poisoners, but as infidels, who opposed his scheme of
-conversion, although he had given them equal rights with the Christians
-and privileges besides. The Hungarian Jews who remained true to their
-faith emigrated to Austria and Bohemia. In Poland, where the pestilence
-also raged, the Jews suffered but slight persecution, for they were
-favored by King Casimir the Great. At the request of some Jews who had
-rendered services to him, the king, after his ascent upon the throne
-(October 9th, 1334) confirmed the laws enacted nearly a century before
-by Boleslav Pius, duke of Kalish, or rather by Frederick the Valiant,
-archduke of Austria, and accepted by the king of Hungary and various
-Polish princes. Holding good only in the dukedom of Kalish and Great
-Poland, they were extended by Casimir to the whole of the Polish
-empire. Thirteen years later, Casimir altered the laws by which the
-Jews were permitted to lend money at interest, but we must not deduce
-that he was inimical to the Jews, for he expressly states that he made
-this limitation only at the request of the nobility. In the years of
-the pestilence, too, Casimir appears to have protected the Jews against
-the outbreaks of the misguided multitude, for the accusation of the
-poisoning of wells by the Jews had traveled from Germany across the
-Polish frontier, and had roused the populace against them. Massacres
-occurred in Kalish, Cracow, Glogau, and other cities, especially on
-the German frontier. If the number of Jews stated to have been killed
-in Poland (10,000) be correct, it bears no relation to the enormous
-multitudes who fell as victims in Germany. Later (1356) Casimir is said
-to have taken a beautiful Jewish mistress named Esther (Esterka), who
-bore him two sons (Niemerz and Pelka) and two daughters. The latter are
-said to have remained Jewesses. In consequence of his love to Esther,
-the king of Poland is supposed to have bestowed special favors and
-privileges on some Jews, probably Esther's relations. But the records,
-handed down by untrustworthy witnesses, cannot be implicitly believed.
-
-At all events, the Jews of Poland fared better than those of Germany,
-seeing that they were placed on an equality, if not with the Roman
-Catholics, yet with the Ruthenians, Saracens, and Tartars. The Jews
-were permitted to wear the national costume and gold chains and swords,
-like the knights, and were eligible for military service.
-
-As on the eastern frontier of Germany, the Jews on the western side,
-in Belgium, were also persecuted at the period of the Black Death.
-In Brussels a wealthy Jew stood in great favor with the duke of
-Brabant, John II. When the flagellants came, and the death of his
-co-religionists was imminent, this Jew entreated his patron to accord
-them his protection, which John willingly promised. But the enemies
-of the Jews had foreseen this, and ensured immunity from punishment
-through the duke's son. They attacked the Jews of Brussels, dragged
-them into the streets, and killed all--about 500.
-
-In Spain, the congregations of Catalonia, which, after those of
-Provence, supplied the first victims, conceived a plan to prevent the
-outrages of fanaticism. They determined to establish a common fund in
-support of their people who should become destitute through a mob or
-persecution. They were to choose deputies to entreat the king (Don
-Pedro IV) to prevent the recurrence of such scenes of horror. Other
-concessions were to be sought, but the plan was never carried into
-effect, owing to delay on the part of the Jews of Aragon, and also
-probably because too much was expected of the king. The Jews under
-Aragonian rule were still behind those in the kingdom of Castile.
-
-In Castile also the Black Death had held its gruesome revelries; but
-here the population, more intelligent than elsewhere, did not dream of
-holding the Jews responsible for its ravages. In Toledo and Seville
-the plague snatched away many respected members of the community,
-particularly from the families of Abulafia, Asheri, and Ibn-Shoshan.
-The grief of the survivors is vividly depicted in such of the tombstone
-inscriptions of the Toledo Jewish cemetery as have come down to us.
-King Alfonso XI was amongst the victims of the insidious plague, but
-not even a whisper charged the Jews with responsibility for his death.
-During the reign of Don Pedro (1350-1369), Alfonso's son and successor,
-the influence of the Castilian Jews reached a height never before
-attained. It was the last luster of their splendid career in Spain,
-soon to be shrouded in dark eventide shadows. The young king, only
-fifteen years of age when called to the throne, was early branded by
-his numerous enemies with the name of "Pedro the Cruel." His favors to
-the Jews had a share in procuring him this nickname, although he was
-not more cruel than many of his predecessors and successors. Don Pedro
-was a child of nature with all the good and the bad qualities implied;
-he would not submit to the restrictions of court etiquette, nor allow
-himself to be controlled by political considerations. Through the
-duplicity and faithlessness of his bastard brothers, sons of Alfonso's
-mistress, Leonora de Guzman--the same who had unconsciously saved the
-Jews from imminent destruction--the king was provoked to sanguinary
-retaliation. The instinct of self-preservation, the maintenance of his
-royal dignity, filial affection, and attachment to an early love, had
-more to do with his reckless, bloody deeds than inherent cruelty and
-vengeance. The young king, destined to come to so sad an end, involving
-the Castilian Jews in his fall, was from the beginning of his reign
-surrounded by tragic circumstances. His mother, the Portuguese Infanta
-Donna Maria, had been humiliated and deeply mortified by her husband at
-the instigation of his mistress, Leonora de Guzman. Don Pedro himself
-had been neglected for his bastard brothers, and particularly for his
-elder half-brother, Henry de Trastamara. The first important duty of
-his reign, then, was to obtain justice for his humiliated mother, and
-degrade the rival who had caused her so much misery. That he tolerated
-his bastard brothers is a proof that he was not of a cruel disposition.
-His severity was felt more by the grandees and hidalgos, who trampled
-on justice and humanity, and ill-treated the people with cavalier
-arrogance. Only in these circles Don Pedro had bitter enemies, not
-amongst the lower orders, which, when not misled, remained faithful to
-him to death. The Jews also were attached to him. They risked property
-and life for their patriotism, because he protected them against
-injustice and oppression, and did not treat them as outcasts. The Jews
-certainly suffered much through him, not in the character of patient
-victims, as in Germany and France, but as zealous partisans and fellow
-combatants, who shared the overthrow of their leader with his Christian
-followers.
-
-Shortly after Don Pedro had ascended the throne, when the grief
-caused by the death of King Alfonso XI was still fresh, a venerable
-Jewish poet ventured to address to the new monarch words of advice in
-well-balanced Spanish verses. This poet, Santob (Shem Tob) de Carrion,
-from the northern Spanish town of that name (about 1300-1350), a
-member of a large community, has been entirely neglected in Jewish
-literature. Christian writers have preserved his memory and his verses.
-Santob's (or as abbreviated, Santo's) poetical legacy deserves to
-be treasured. His verses flow soft and clear as the ripples of an
-unsullied spring, dancing with silvery brightness out of its rocky
-hollow. He had not only thoroughly mastered the sonorous periods of the
-Spanish language, at that time in a transition state between tenderness
-and vigor, but had enriched it. Santob embodied the practical wisdom of
-his time in beautiful strophes. His "Counsels and Lessons," addressed
-to Don Pedro, have the character of proverbs and apothegms. He drew
-upon the unfailing wealth of maxims of the Talmud and later Hebrew
-poets for his verse, and the sweetness of his poetry was derived from
-various sources.
-
-Santob's verses are not always of this gentle, uncontroversial
-character. He did not hesitate to speak sternly to those of his
-co-religionists who had become wealthy by the king's bounty, and he
-denounced the prejudice with which Spanish Christians regarded whatever
-was of Jewish origin. Even to the young king he was in the habit of
-indulging in a certain amount of plain speaking; and in his stanzas,
-more than 600 in number, he often drew for his majesty's benefit
-suggestive pictures of virtue and vice. He reminded the king, too, of
-promises made to Santob by his father, and bade him fulfill them. From
-this it would appear that our Jewish troubadour, who wooed the muse so
-successfully, was not a favorite of fortune. Little, however, is known
-of him beyond his verses, and we have no knowledge of the reception
-which his representations met at the hands of Don Pedro.
-
-To other prominent Jews the king's favor was unbounded. Don Juan
-Alfonso de Albuquerque, his tutor and all-powerful minister,
-recommended for the post of minister of finance a Jew who had rendered
-him great services, and the king appointed Don Samuel ben Meir Allavi,
-a member of the leading family of Toledo, the Abulafia-Halevis, to a
-state situation of trust, in defiance of the decision of the cortes
-that Jews should no longer be eligible. Samuel Abulafia not only became
-treasurer-in-chief (Tesoreo mayor), but also the king's confidential
-adviser (privado), who had a voice in all important consultations and
-decisions. Two inscriptions referring to Don Samuel, one written during
-his lifetime, the other after his death, describe him as noble and
-handsome, instinct with religious feeling, a benevolent man, "who never
-swerved from the path of God, nor could he be reproached with a fault."
-
-Another Jew who figured at Don Pedro's court was Abraham Ibn-Zarzal,
-the king's physician and astrologer. Don Pedro was, indeed, so
-surrounded by Jews, that his enemies reproached his court for its
-Jewish character. Whether the protection he extended to his Jewish
-subjects was due to the influence of these Jewish favorites or to his
-own impulses is unknown. On opening for the first time the cortes of
-Valladolid (May, 1351), he was presented with a petition, praying him
-to abolish the judicial autonomy enjoyed by the Jewish communities and
-their right to appoint their own Alcaldes; he replied that the Jews,
-being numerically a feeble people, required special protection. From
-Christian judges they would not obtain justice, or their cases would be
-delayed.
-
-Whilst the relatives of the young king were intriguing to arrange
-a marriage between him and Blanche, daughter of the French Duc de
-Bourbon, he fell in love with Maria de Padilla, a clever, beautiful
-lady of a noble Spanish family. It is said that he was formally
-married to her in the presence of witnesses. At any rate, he caused
-the marriage proposals to Blanche to be withdrawn; but the Bourbon
-princess, either of her own accord, or at the instance of her ambitious
-relatives, insisted on coming to Spain to assume the diadem. Her
-resolve brought only sorrow to herself and misfortune to the country.
-The nearest relatives of the king strained every nerve to procure
-the celebration of the marriage, and in this they succeeded; but Don
-Pedro remained with his bride only two days. The result of this state
-of things was that to the old parties in the state another was added,
-some grandees taking part with the deserted queen, others with Maria de
-Padilla. To the latter belonged Samuel Abulafia and the Jews of Spain.
-The reason assigned was that Blanche, having observed with displeasure
-the influence possessed by Samuel and other Jews at her husband's
-court, and the honors and distinctions enjoyed by them, had made the
-firm resolve, which she even commenced to put into execution, to
-compass the fall of the more prominent Jews, and obtain the banishment
-of the whole of the Jewish population from Spain. She made no secret of
-her aversion to the Jews, but, on the contrary, expressed it openly.
-For this reason, it is stated, the Jewish courtiers took up a position
-of antagonism to the queen, and, on their part, lost no opportunity of
-increasing Don Pedro's dislike for her. If Blanche de Bourbon really
-fostered such anti-Jewish feelings, and circumstances certainly seem
-to bear out this view, then the Jews were compelled in self-defense to
-prevent the queen from acquiring any ascendency, declare themselves for
-the Padilla party, and support it with all the means in their power.
-Dissension and civil war grew out of this unhappy relation of the king
-to his scarcely recognized consort. Albuquerque, who was first opposed
-to the queen, and then permitted himself to be won over to her side,
-fell into disgrace, and Samuel Abulafia succeeded him as the most
-trusted of the king's counselors. Whenever the court moved, Samuel,
-with other eminent grandees, was in attendance on the king.
-
-One day Don Pedro's enemies, at their head his bastard brothers,
-succeeded in decoying him, with a few of his followers, into the
-fortress of Toro. His companions, among whom was Samuel Abulafia, were
-thrown into prison, and the king himself was placed under restraint
-(1354). Whilst a few of the loyal grandees and even the Grand Master
-of Calatrava were executed by the conspirators, the favorite Samuel
-was, strange to say, spared. Later on he succeeded in escaping with
-the king. Having shared his royal master's misfortune, he rose still
-higher in his favor, and the esteem in which he was held by the king
-was largely increased by his successful administration of the finances,
-which he had managed so as to accumulate a large reserve, of which few
-of Don Pedro's predecessors had been able to boast. The treacherous
-seizure of the king at Toro formed a turning point in his reign. Out
-of it grew a fierce civil war in Castile, which Don Pedro carried on
-with great cruelty. In this, however, the Jewish courtiers had no hand;
-even the enemies of the Jews do not charge the Jewish minister with any
-responsibility for Don Pedro's excesses. The bastard brothers and their
-adherents endeavored to seize the chief town, Toledo. Here Don Pedro
-had numerous partisans, amongst them the whole of the Jewish community,
-and they contested the entrance of the brothers. One of the gates was,
-however, secretly opened to them by their friends, and they immediately
-attacked the quarters in which the Jews lived in large numbers. In
-Alcana street they put to the sword nearly 12,000 people, men and
-women, old and young. But in the inner town they failed to make any
-impression, the Jews having barricaded the gates and manned the walls,
-together with several noblemen belonging to the king's party (May,
-1355). A few days later Don Pedro entered Toledo. By his adherents
-in the city he was received with enthusiasm, but he dealt out severe
-retribution to all who had assisted his brothers.
-
-Samuel Abulafia, by the wisdom of his counsels, his able financial
-administration, and his zeal for the cause of Maria de Padilla,
-continued to rise in the favor of the king. His power was greater
-than that of the grandees of the realm. His wealth was princely, and
-eighty black slaves served in his palace. He seems to have lacked
-the generosity which would have suggested employing some portion of
-his power and prosperity for the permanent benefit of his race and
-religion. He certainly "sought to promote the welfare of his people,"
-as an inscription tells us; but he failed to understand in what this
-welfare consisted. Against injustice and animosity he protected
-his brethren, promoted a few to state employment, and gave them
-opportunities for enriching themselves, but he was far from being
-what Chasdai Ibn-Shaprut and Samuel Ibn-Nagrela had been to their
-co-religionists. Samuel Abulafia appears to have had little sympathy
-with intellectual aspirations, or with the promotion of Jewish science
-and poetic literature. He built synagogues for several of the Castilian
-communities, and one of especial magnificence at Toledo, but not a
-single establishment for the promotion of Talmudic study.
-
-The Abulafia synagogue at Toledo which, transformed into a church, is
-still one of the ornaments of the town, was, like most of the Spanish
-churches of that period, built partly in the Gothic, partly in the
-Moorish style. It consisted of several naves separated from each other
-by columns and arches. The upper part of the walls is decorated with
-delicately cut arabesques, within which, in white characters on a green
-ground, the eightieth Psalm may be read in Hebrew. On the north and
-south sides are inscriptions in bas-relief, reciting the merits of
-Prince Samuel Levi ben Meir. The community offers up its thanks to God,
-"who has not withdrawn His favor from His people, and raised up men to
-rescue them from the hands of their enemies. Even though there be no
-longer a king in Israel, God has permitted one of His people to find
-favor in the eyes of the king, Don Pedro, who has raised him above the
-mighty, appointed him a councilor of his realm, and invested him with
-almost royal dignities." The name of Don Pedro appears in large and
-prominent letters, suggesting that this prince, in intimate relations
-with the Jews, belonged, one may say, to the synagogue. In conclusion,
-the wish is expressed that Samuel may survive the rebuilding of the
-Temple, and officiate there with his sons as chiefs of the people.
-
-This large and splendid synagogue was completed in the year 1357. For
-the following year the beginning of the Messianic period had been
-predicted, a century before, by the astronomer Abraham ben Chiya
-and the rabbi and Kabbalist Nachmani, and, a few decades before, by
-the philosopher Leon de Bagnols. As this prophecy was not literally
-fulfilled, many Jews began to regard the eminence attained by Samuel
-and other leading Jews as a suggestion of the scepter of Judah. It
-was a dangerous aberration, whose pitfalls were fully appreciated by
-Nissim Gerundi ben Reuben (about 1340-1380), rabbi of Barcelona, the
-most important rabbinical authority of his day. Justly fearing that
-the belief in the coming of a Messiah would suffer discredit by the
-non-fulfillment of such prophecies, he preached against the calculation
-of the end of the world from expressions in the book of Daniel.
-
-Don Samuel exercised too decided an influence over the king to avoid
-making enemies. Even had he been a Christian, the court party would
-have devised schemes to bring about his fall. Attempts were made to
-stir up the Castilian population against the Jews, particularly
-against the Jewish minister, not only by Don Pedro's bastard brother,
-Don Henry, and Queen Blanche, but by all formerly in the king's
-service. Don Pedro Lopez de Ayala, poet, chronicler, and the king's
-standard-bearer, has given us, in one of his poems, a picture of the
-feelings of the courtiers for favored Jews: "They suck the blood
-of the afflicted people; they lap up their possessions with their
-tax-farming. Don Abraham and Don Samuel, with lips as sweet as honey,
-obtain from the king whatever they ask." Samuel's fall was desired
-by many. It is even said that some Toledo Jews, envious of his good
-fortune, charged him with having accumulated his enormous wealth at his
-royal master's expense. Don Pedro confiscated Samuel's entire fortune
-and that of his relatives, 170,900 doubloons, 4,000 silver marks, 125
-chests of cloth of gold and silver and 80 slaves from the minister,
-and 60,000 doubloons from his relatives. According to some writers,
-an extraordinary quantity of gold and silver was found buried under
-Samuel's house. Don Pedro ordered his former favorite to be imprisoned
-at Toledo and placed upon the rack at Seville, in order to force him
-to disclose further treasures. He, however, remained firm, revealed
-nothing, and succumbed under the torture (October or November, 1360).
-His gravestone recites in simple phrase how high his position had been,
-and how his soul, purified by torture, had risen to God. Concerning Don
-Pedro, the inscription has not a single condemnatory expression.
-
-Samuel Abulafia's death did not change the friendly relations between
-the king and the Jews. They remained faithful to him, and he continued
-to confer important distinctions on members of their body. They
-consequently came in for a share of the hatred with which the enemies
-of the king regarded him. The king resolved to put to death his
-detested consort (1361). Whatever the character of the queen, whether
-she was a saint or the reverse, whether or not she had deserved her
-fate, the method of her death must ever remain a stain on Don Pedro's
-memory. In spite of the animosity with which De Ayala regarded the
-Jews, there is no intimation in his chronicle that any of Don Pedro's
-Jewish favorites were concerned in this crime. It was reserved for
-a later period to invent fables identifying them with the king's
-guilt. A story was forged to the effect that a Jew had administered
-poison to the queen on the king's order, because she had insisted
-on the expulsion of the Jews from Spain. A French romance, in which
-an endeavor is made to varnish the deeds and misdeeds of the French
-adventurers who fought against Don Pedro and the Jews, attributes the
-queen's death to a Jewish hand.
-
-Don Pedro announced publicly, before the assembled cortes at Seville,
-that his marriage with Blanche of Bourbon had been illegal, inasmuch
-as he had been previously married to Maria de Padilla. He called
-witnesses, among them a few of the clergy, and these confirmed his
-statement on oath. Through the murder of Blanche, and its consequences,
-an opportunity offered itself to Don Henry de Trastamara to obtain
-allies for the dethronement of the king, and of this he was not slow
-to avail himself. The Bourbons in France and the king promised him
-aid, and allowed him to enlist the wild lances of the so-called great
-or white company, who, at the conclusion of the war with England, were
-rendering France insecure. The pope, displeased at the favors shown by
-Don Pedro to the Jews, also supported Don Henry, and placed the king of
-Spain under the ban.
-
-To invest his rebellion with a tinge of legality and win the feelings
-of the people, Don Henry blackened his brother's character, picturing
-him as an outcast who had forfeited the crown because he had allowed
-his states to be governed by Jews, and had himself become attached to
-them and their religion. Don Henry carried his calumnies so far as to
-state that not only his mistress, Maria de Padilla, was a Jewess, but
-that Don Pedro himself was of Jewish extraction.
-
-With the mercenaries of the "white company," graceless banditti, Henry
-crossed the Pyrenees to make war on and, if possible, depose his
-brother. At the head of these French and English outlaws stood the
-foremost warrior of his time, the hero and knight-errant, Bertrand du
-Guesclin (Claquin), celebrated for his deeds of daring, his ugliness,
-and his eccentricity, who, like the Cid, has been glorified by legend.
-The Jews consistently cast in their fortunes with those of the Don
-Pedro party, and supported it with their money and their blood. They
-flocked to its standard in the field, and garrisoned the towns against
-the onslaughts of Don Henry and Du Guesclin. The wild mercenaries
-to whom they were opposed avenged themselves not only on the Jewish
-soldiers, but also on those who had not borne arms.
-
-The approach of the enemy compelled Don Pedro to abandon Burgos, the
-capital of Old Castile, and at an assembly of the inhabitants it was
-prudently resolved not to contest Don Henry's entrance. On taking
-possession of the town, where he was first proclaimed king (March,
-1360), Henry levied a fine of 50,000 doubloons on the Jewish community,
-and canceled all outstanding debts due from Christians to Jews. The
-Jews of Burgos, unable to pay this large contribution, were compelled
-to sell their goods and chattels, even the ornaments on the scrolls of
-the Law. Those who could not make up their share of the contribution
-were sold into slavery. The whole of Spain fell to the conqueror in
-consequence of Don Pedro's neglect to concentrate round himself that
-portion of the population on which he could rely, or to buy over the
-free lances of the "white company," as he had been advised. The gates
-of Toledo, the capital, were opened to the victor, although Don Pedro's
-party, to which the Jews belonged, strongly counseled defense. Upon the
-Toledo community Don Henry also levied a heavy fine for its fidelity to
-the legitimate king. Don Pedro's last refuge was Seville, which he also
-lost.
-
-Once again fortune smiled on Don Pedro, after he was compelled to cross
-the Pyrenees as a fugitive, and leave the whole of his country in the
-hands of the enemy. The heroic Prince of Wales, called the Black Prince
-from the color of his armor, being in the south of France, undertook
-to come to the aid of the deposed monarch both for the sake of a
-legitimate cause, and in expectation of rich rewards in money and land.
-Henry de Trastamara was compelled to leave Spain (1367). The whole
-of the peninsula hailed the victor Don Pedro and his ally, the Black
-Prince, with enthusiasm, as it had previously rejoiced at the triumph
-of his brother and the wild Constable of France, Bertrand du Guesclin.
-Soon, however, the scene changed. The Black Prince left Don Pedro, and
-Don Henry returned with new levies from France. The northern towns of
-Spain again fell before his arms. The citizens of Burgos opened their
-gates to the conqueror, but the Jews remained true to the unfortunate
-Don Pedro. Assisted by a few loyal noblemen, they bravely defended the
-Jewry of Burgos, and were subdued only by the superior strength of the
-enemy. They obtained a favorable capitulation, providing for their
-undisputed continuance in the town, but they were forced to pay a war
-indemnity of one million maravedis.
-
-This time the Christian population was desirous of profiting by the
-revolt against Don Pedro. The cortes of Burgos represented to Henry
-that the Jews, having been favorites and officials under the former
-king, were largely responsible for the civil war, and that he should
-sanction a law to exclude them in future from all state employment,
-including the post of physician to the king or queen, and also from the
-right of farming taxes. To this Don Henry replied that such a practice
-had not been countenanced by any former king of Castile. He would,
-however, not consult with the Jews at his court, nor permit them the
-exercise of functions which might prove detrimental to the country.
-From this it is evident that Henry had no particular aversion to the
-Jews. Possibly, he feared that by oppressing them he might drive them
-to acts of desperation.
-
-Don Pedro still counted many adherents in the country. Most of the
-Jewish communities remained true to him, and Jews served in his army,
-and fought against the usurper for the king, who to the last treated
-them with special favor. Even when in despair he was obliged to call to
-his assistance the Mahometan king of Granada, he impressed upon that
-monarch the duty of protecting the Jews. Notwithstanding this, the Jews
-endured indescribable sufferings at the hands of both friend and foe.
-Don Pedro being entirely dependent on the auxiliaries of the Black
-Prince and on those of the Mahometan king, his wishes with respect to
-the Jews were not regarded. The community of Villadiego, celebrated for
-its benevolence and the promotion of learning, was utterly destroyed
-by the English. The same evil fortune befell Aguilar and other
-communities. The inhabitants of Valladolid, who paid allegiance to Don
-Henry, plundered the Jews, demolished their eight synagogues, despoiled
-them of their treasures, and tore up the sacred writings. A period of
-shocking degeneracy followed. Wherever Don Henry came, he laid the
-Jews under heavy contributions, precipitating them into poverty, and
-leaving them nothing but their lives. The Mahometan king, Don Pedro's
-ally, carried three hundred Jewish families as prisoners from Jaen to
-Granada. Still worse was the treatment of the violent Du Guesclin. A
-prey to French Jew-hatred, he could not look upon Jews as his equals in
-party strife and war, but only as slaves who had dared draw the sword
-against their masters. The misery was so great at this time that many
-Jews became converts to Christianity.
-
-The community of Toledo suffered most severely. In emulation of Don
-Pedro's Christian adherents, they made the greatest sacrifices for the
-defense of the town, and endured a long and frightful siege. The famine
-during the investment was so great that the unfortunates consumed,
-not only the parchment of the Law, but even the flesh of their own
-children. Through hunger and war the greater portion of the Toledo
-community perished--according to some 8,000 persons, according to
-others more than 10,000. At last, at Montiel, Don Henry defeated his
-brother, who had been abandoned by all his partisans (14th March,
-1369). Don Pedro's end was tragic. When the brothers met, Henry is
-said to have hurled these insulting words in his face: "Where is the
-Jew, the son of a harlot, who calls himself king of Castile?" They
-then closed in a struggle. Don Pedro was overcome, and beheaded by his
-brother's general, Du Guesclin. Pope Urban V could not contain his
-delight on hearing the news of Don Pedro's death. "The church must
-rejoice," he wrote, "at the death of such a tyrant, a rebel against the
-church, and a favorer of the Jews and Saracens. The righteous exult in
-retribution." The humiliation and abasement of the Spanish Jews, which
-the papacy had so long failed to accomplish, was obtained unexpectedly
-by the civil war in Castile. At Montiel they suffered a defeat pregnant
-with consequences fatal to their future.
-
-Had a traveler, like Benjamin of Tudela, journeyed through Europe in
-the latter half of the fourteenth century, with the object of visiting,
-enumerating, and describing the various Jewish communities, he would
-have had a dismal picture to give us. From the Pillars of Hercules and
-the Atlantic Ocean to the banks of the Oder or the Vistula, he would
-have found in many districts no Jews at all, and elsewhere only very
-small, poverty-stricken, wretched communities, still bleeding from
-the wounds inflicted by the plague-maddened populace. According to
-human calculation, the destruction of the Jews in western and central
-Europe was imminent. Those who had survived the pitiless massacre,
-or been spared a desperate suicide, had lost courage. Communal ties
-were for the most part rent asunder. The recollection of the scenes of
-horror through which they had passed long agitated the small number of
-surviving Jews, and left them no hope of better times. Lord Byron's
-elegiac lines--
-
- "The wild dove hath her nest, the fox his cave,
- Mankind their country--Israel but the grave,"
-
-are applicable to the whole of the mediaeval history of the Jews, but
-to no period more than to this. Western and central Europe had become
-for the descendants of the patriarchs and the prophets one vast grave,
-which insatiably demanded new victims.
-
-It is remarkable that the Jews had become indispensable to the
-Christian population, in spite of the venomous hatred with which the
-latter regarded them. Not only princes, but cities, and even the
-clergy, had a mania for "possessing Jews." A few years after the
-terrible frenzy which followed the Black Death, German citizens and
-their magistrates hastened to re-admit the Jews; they soon forgot
-their vow, that for a hundred or two hundred years no Jew should dwell
-within their walls. The bishop of Augsburg applied to Emperor Charles
-IV for the privilege "to receive and harbor Jews." The electors,
-ecclesiastical as well as secular, were bent upon curtailing the
-exclusive right of the German emperor to possess serfs of the chamber
-(servi camerae), and upon acquiring the same right for themselves.
-Gerlach, archbishop of Mayence, especially exerted himself to wrest
-this privilege from Emperor Charles IV, his success being to no small
-extent due to the desire of the emperor to retain his popularity
-amongst the electors. At an imperial Diet held at Nuremberg in
-November, 1355, where a kind of German constitution, known as the
-"Golden Bull," was promulgated, the emperor conferred on the electors,
-in addition to the right of discovery of metal and salt mines, the
-privilege to hold Jews; that is to say, he yielded to them this source
-of revenue in addition to such sources as deposits of metal and salt.
-But it was only to the electors that the emperor conceded this right;
-he retained his rights over the "servi camerae" living under the rule of
-the minor princes and in cities. The archiepiscopal elector of Mayence
-lost no time in utilizing the new privilege, and immediately employed
-a Jew to obtain others for him. Thus the Jews were at once repelled
-and attracted, shunned and courted, outlawed and flattered. They were
-well aware that it was not for their own sake that they were tolerated,
-but solely on account of the advantages they afforded the authorities
-and the population. How, then, could they be expected not to devote
-themselves to money-making, the sole means by which they were enabled
-to drag out a miserable existence?
-
-In France, as in Germany, financial considerations induced the rulers
-to consent to the re-admission of the Jews. The embarrassments
-resulting from frequent wars with England, particularly felt after
-the captivity of King John (September, 1356), threatened to reduce
-this chivalrous land to the condition of a province of the English
-crown. Money especially was wanting. Even to ransom the imprisoned
-king the assembled States-General did not vote supplies, or they
-burdened their grant with heavy conditions. The third estate rose in
-rebellion, and encouraged the peasants to throw off the yoke of the
-nobles. Anarchy reigned throughout the country. At this juncture the
-Jews, with their financial skill, appeared to the dauphin Charles,
-who acted as regent during the captivity of the king, as providential
-deliverers of the state. A clever Jew, Manessier (Manecier) de Vesoul,
-actively negotiated the return of the Jews to France, whence they had
-been so frequently banished. The dauphin-regent had granted permission
-to a few Jews to return, but if the impoverished state or court was
-to reap any real benefit from such return, it was necessary that it
-should take place on a large scale. Hence, the plan which Manessier
-submitted to the prince was approved in every detail, and the return
-of the Jews for twenty years was authorized under the most favorable
-conditions. Neither the Jews nor their representative, Manessier,
-cared to take advantage of so important an offer without the consent
-of the imprisoned king. The plan was accordingly submitted to him
-for confirmation. At the instance of Manessier de Vesoul, the Jews
-at the same time laid before the king a memorial setting forth that
-they had been unjustly expelled from France, and that they could not
-forget the land of their birth. The imprisoned monarch then issued a
-decree (March, 1360), by which, with the consent of the higher and
-lower clergy, the higher and lower nobility, and the third estate,
-permission was granted to all Jews to enter France and reside there
-for twenty years. They were allowed to take up their abode in any part
-of the country, in large and small towns, villages and hamlets, and to
-possess, not only houses, but also lands.
-
-The head of every Jewish family was, however, compelled, on entering
-the country, to pay a sum of fourteen florins (florins de Florence) for
-himself, and one florin for each child or other member of his family;
-besides this, he became liable to an annual Jew tax of seven florins,
-and one for each individual of his household. On the other hand, the
-emigrants were to enjoy extensive privileges. They were not amenable
-to the jurisdiction of the ordinary courts or officials, but had a
-special justiciary in the person of Count d'Etampes, a prince of the
-blood royal, who acted as their protector (gardien, conservateur), and
-whose duty it was to appoint investigating judges and commissioners,
-and to safeguard the interests of the community when endangered. Cases
-of misdemeanor and crime amongst themselves were to be tried by two
-rabbis and four assessors. From the decisions of this tribunal there
-was no appeal. The property of the convicted Jewish criminal, however,
-became forfeited to the king, to whom, in addition, the rabbis had to
-pay the sum of one hundred florins. For past misdemeanors and crimes
-the king granted them a complete amnesty. They were protected against
-the violence of the nobles and the petty annoyances of the clergy.
-They could not be forced to attend Christian services or discourses.
-Their furniture, cattle, and stores of grain and wine, as well as their
-sacred books, not merely the Bible, but copies of the Talmud also, were
-to be guaranteed against confiscation, so that the public burning of
-the Talmud at Paris could not be repeated. The amplest protection was
-given their trade. They were allowed to charge 80 per cent interest (4
-deniers on the livre) on loans, and to take pledges, their rights upon
-which were safeguarded by a fence of laws. Manessier de Vesoul himself,
-the active and zealous negotiator of these privileges, was appointed
-to a high position at court. He became receiver general (procureur
-or receveur-general), and in this capacity was responsible for the
-punctual payment of the Jew taxes, his commission being nearly 14 per
-cent. The result of the granting of these privileges was that the Jews
-entered France in large numbers, even foreigners being permitted to
-settle there, or take up a more or less protracted residence.
-
-The extensive privileges granted to the Jews excited envy. The
-Christian physicians, exposed to the competition of Jewish doctors,
-complained that the latter had not passed a public examination, and
-denounced them as charlatans. The judges and officials, without power
-over the Jews and having no opportunity for extorting money from them,
-complained that they abused their privileges. The clergy, indignant
-at the favored position of the Jews, but having no real grievance,
-complained that they no longer wore the prescribed badge. The feeble
-king allowed an order to be extorted from him, to some extent in
-contradiction of his own decree, by which only such Jews were to be
-permitted to practice medicine as had passed an examination, and
-all Jews, not excepting those even who enjoyed especial privileges
-(Manessier and his family), were to wear a red and white wheel-shaped
-badge (rouelle) of the size of the royal seal. Finally the Jews were
-re-committed to the jurisdiction of the ordinary courts, and the
-earlier arrangements annulled.
-
-As soon as the politic dauphin ascended the throne, under the title
-of Charles V, and adopted a strict system of government, to deliver
-himself from dependence on the States-General (May, 1364), he proceeded
-to assure himself of the sources of revenue possessed by the Jews. He
-restored the privileges partly abolished by his father, lengthened the
-period of residence by six years, and secretly granted permission to
-Hebrew money dealers to exceed the charge of 80 per cent on loans. At
-the instance of Manessier de Vesoul, always zealous in the interests
-of his co-religionists, the Jews were again withdrawn from the
-jurisdiction of the ordinary tribunals, and committed to the care of
-their official protector, Count d'Etampes. The clergy, whose hatred of
-the Jews bordered on inhumanity, were rendered powerless. In the south
-of France, the heads of the church had threatened with excommunication
-any Christians who should trade with Jews, or provide them with fire,
-water, bread, or wine, and by this means, had so stirred up the
-fanaticism of the people, that the lives and property of the Jews were
-imperiled. To counteract this, the governor of Languedoc issued, in the
-name of the king, an ordinance informing the officials, both lay and
-ecclesiastical, that all who exhibited hostility toward the Jews would
-be unsparingly punished in person and substance.
-
-During the reign of Charles V (1364-1380), then, the condition of
-the Jews was at least endurable. Manessier remained receiver general
-of the Jew taxes for the north of France (Langue d'Oyl), and the
-same functions were discharged by Denis Quinon in Languedoc. On the
-complaint of the latter that a few Jewish converts, in conjunction
-with the Christian clergy, had forced their former brethren to attend
-the churches to hear sermons, the king issued a rescript (March, 1368)
-severely prohibiting all such unseemly compulsion. Subsequently,
-Charles prolonged the period for remaining in the country by ten
-years, and later on by six more. All this was brought about by the
-indefatigable Manessier (1374). His zeal in the Jewish cause and
-the advantages the king derived from his exertions were rewarded
-by the exemption of himself and his family from every kind of tax,
-contribution and service to the crown (1375).
-
-Although the German and French Jews appeared to revive after their
-dreadful sufferings, it was only a material revival; their spirit
-remained dead. Their intellectual powers had disappeared. In France,
-where, during more than two centuries, from Rashi to the last of the
-Tossafists, the study of the Talmud had been carried to its most
-flourishing point, and where remarkable acuteness and intellectual
-depth had been developed, the new emigrants exhibited so astonishing
-an ignorance that they were obliged to commence their studies anew.
-The indulgences of the kings, John and Charles, certainly spoke of
-rabbis who should be invested with authority to try Jewish criminals;
-but there was not a single profound Talmudist among them; indeed,
-according to the avowal of contemporary writers, not more than five
-of even mediocre attainments. The only devotee of Talmudical study,
-Matathiah ben Joseph Provenci, has left nothing in writing to testify
-to his ability. Held in such esteem by Charles V that he and his
-family were exempted from wearing the distinctive badges prescribed
-by law, and apparently related to the receiver general, Manessier de
-Vesoul, Matathiah was in the best position to deal with the prevailing
-ignorance. He re-established a college at Paris, assembled pupils,
-expounded the Talmud to them, ordained them to rabbinical offices,
-and caused copies of the Talmud to be written. In consequence of his
-energy and his comparatively great learning, he was chosen by the newly
-established French communities to the office of chief rabbi and chief
-justice in civil and penal cases, his appointment being confirmed by
-the king. His school had to supply the communities with rabbis, but his
-pupils enriched rabbinical literature by their contributions as little
-as he himself. Even Provence, once so fruitful of Jewish literature,
-had become intellectually impoverished.
-
-In Germany, where the rabbis had once been so proud of their
-traditional knowledge, the Black Death, with its attendant
-persecutions and banishments, had so thinned the ranks of the Jews
-that extraordinary intellectual decay had set in. The illiterate and
-the superficial, in the absence of better men, were inducted into
-rabbinical offices. This mischievous practice was vigorously opposed by
-Meir ben Baruch Halevi, a rabbi, who, in his time, passed for a great
-authority in Germany (1370-1390). Rabbi at Vienna, as his father had
-been before him, Meir Halevi (Segal) ordered that no Talmudical student
-should exercise rabbinical functions unless authorized by a rabbi of
-standing. Until then it had been the practice for anyone who felt able
-and willing to assume the rabbinical office without further ceremony,
-or, if he perchance settled in the neighborhood of his teacher, to
-obtain permission from him. As from the time of Gershom of Mayence
-there had always been great Talmudists in Germany, public opinion
-counteracted the abuse of this liberty; for had an unqualified person
-arrogated to himself the exercise of rabbinical functions, he would
-have incurred general derision and contempt. After the Black Death,
-however, this deterrent lost much of its force through the scarcity of
-Talmudists. The order of Meir of Vienna, that every rabbi should be
-ordained, that he should earn the title (Morenu), and that, without
-such preparation, he should be precluded from dealing with matrimonial
-matters, marriages and divorces, was dictated by the exigencies of the
-times, not the presumptuousness of its author. The insignificance of
-even the most respected of the German rabbis of this period is apparent
-from the fact that not one of them has left any important Talmudical
-work; that, on the contrary, they all pursued a course productive of
-mental stagnation. Meir Halevi, his colleague Abraham Klausner, and
-Shalom, of Austria, rabbi at Neustadt, near Vienna, devoted themselves
-exclusively to writing down and perpetuating the customs of the
-communities (Minhagim), to which, formerly, but very little attention
-had been given. They and their disciples, Isaac Tyrnau of Hungary, and
-Jacob Moelin (Maharil) have left behind them nothing but such insipid
-compilations. If the Austrian school, which at this time preponderated,
-was so wanting in intellectuality, how much more the Rhenish, from
-which only names have come down to us.
-
-Through the disasters that resulted from the Black Death, the memories
-of old times had become so obliterated that the Rhenish rabbis found
-themselves compelled, in consequence of differences of opinion on
-points of marriage law, to convene a synod, exclusively for the purpose
-of restoring old regulations. At the meeting at Mayence (15th Ab-5th
-August, 1381) a few of the rabbis, together with some of the communal
-leaders, renewed the old decisions of Speyer, Worms and Mayence
-(Tekanoth Shum); as, for instance, that the childless widow should be
-released, without extortion or delay, from the obligation of marrying
-her brother-in-law, and should receive a definite portion of the
-property left by her husband. Among the rabbis who took part in this
-synod there is not one name of note.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-THE AGE OF CHASDAI CRESCAS AND ISAAC BEN SHESHET.
-
- The Jews of Spain after the Civil War--Joseph Pichon and
- Samuel Abrabanel--The Apostates: John of Valladolid--Menachem
- ben Zerach, Chasdai Crescas, and Isaac ben Sheshet--Chayim
- Gallipapa and his Innovations--Prevot Aubriot and the Jews of
- Paris--The French Rabbinate--Revival of Jewish Influence in
- Spain--The Jews of Portugal--The Jewish Statesmen, David and
- Judah Negro--Rabbis and Clergy--Persecutions in Germany and
- Spain--The First Germs of the Inquisition--Second Expulsion of
- the Jews from France--The Convert, Pessach-Peter--Lipmann of
- Muehlhausen.
-
-1369-1380 C.E.
-
-
-The heart of the Jewish race had become not less crippled and sickly
-than its members. In Spain disintegrating forces were at work on
-the firm nucleus of Judaism, which had so long defied the corroding
-influences of ecclesiastical and civil animosity. The prince, whom
-the Jews at the dictates of their loyalty had so sturdily resisted,
-against whom they had even taken up arms; the bastard, Don Henry de
-Trastamara; the rebel who had brought civil war upon his native land,
-and flooded it with a marauding soldiery; the fratricide, who had burst
-the bonds alike of nature and law, had, after the victory of Montiel,
-seized the scepter with his blood-stained hands, and placed the stolen
-crown of Castile on his guilty head. Of the large Jewish population, a
-considerable proportion had, during the protracted and embittered civil
-war, met death on the field of battle, in the beleaguered towns, and,
-armed and unarmed alike, at the swords of the mercenaries of the "white
-company."
-
-The Jewish community of Toledo, the Castilian capital--the "Crown
-of Israel" of the Middle Ages, and, in a measure, the Jerusalem of
-the Occident--did not number, after the raising of the siege, as
-many hundreds of Jews as previously thousands. The remainder of the
-Jews of Castile had been reduced to beggary by the depredations and
-confiscations of friend and foe. Not a few, in their despair, had
-thrown themselves into the arms of Christianity. A striking picture of
-the unhappy condition of the Castilian communities at this period is
-furnished by a contemporary writer, Samuel Carca: "In truth, plunderers
-followed on plunderers, money vanished from the purse, souls from the
-bodies; all the precursory sufferings of the Messianic period arrived
---but the Redeemer came not!"
-
-After Don Henry's victory, the Jews had good reason to tremble. One
-pretext for making war on his brother was the favor shown by Don Pedro
-to Jews. Now he had become the arbiter of their destinies. Would he
-not, like another Vespasian or Hadrian, place his foot on the necks of
-the vanquished? The gloomiest of their anticipations, however, were not
-realized. Don Henry II was as little able to dispense with the Jews as
-his predecessors, or the French and German princes. Jews were the only
-financiers able to keep the state exchequer in prosperity and order,
-and for this purpose Don Henry stood in need of them more than ever.
-During the war he had incurred debts for the payment of the troops with
-which Du Guesclin had assisted him, and for help received in other
-quarters he had made promises which had to be redeemed. The country
-had become impoverished by the protracted war. Who was to procure
-the necessary sums, and provide for the systematic collection of the
-taxes, if not the Jews? Henry was not blind to the merits of the Jews
-exemplified in their constancy to his brother. Instead of punishing the
-conquered, he appreciated their fidelity, saying: "Such subjects a king
-must love and reward, because they maintained proper loyalty to their
-conquered king unto death, and did not surrender to the victor."
-
-Don Henry, then, was guilty of the conduct which, in the case of his
-brother, he branded as a crime in the eyes of all Christendom; he
-employed able Jews in the service of the state, confiding to them the
-finances in particular. Two Jews from Seville, Don Joseph Pichon and
-Don Samuel Abrabanel, he appointed to important posts, the former as
-receiver general of taxes, and Almoxarif to the king, by whom he was
-held in high esteem. Other Jews, distinguished for their ability or
-their wealth, had access to Don Henry's court.
-
-If the king bore the Jews no grudge for the part they had taken in the
-war against him, the general population was not so magnanimous. The
-nobility and the commonalty could not forgive their having confronted
-them as foes in the besieged towns and on the open battle-fields. A
-passion for vengeance, linked with the usual Jew-hatred, blinded them
-to the benefits which the Jews contributed to the welfare of the state,
-and their only thought was how to gratify their resentment. The Jews,
-being the vanquished, ought, as they thought, to be reduced to a kind
-of serfdom. The hostile feeling of the populace manifested itself on
-the assembling of the first cortes at Toro (1371). Here the enemies
-of the Jews opened the attack. The cortes expressed to the king their
-displeasure that this "evil, audacious race," these enemies of God
-and Christendom, were employed in "high offices" at court and by the
-grandees of the realm, and that the farming of the taxes was confided
-to them, by which means feeble Christians were held in subjection and
-fear. The cortes accordingly made explicit demands upon the crown
-with respect to the Jews. From that time forward they were not to
-be eligible for any kind of state employment; they were to live in
-Jewish quarters separated from the Christian population, be forced
-to wear Jew-badges, be prohibited from appearing in public in rich
-apparel, from riding on mules, and from bearing Christian names. To
-Don Henry these demands were very unwelcome, but he dared not refuse
-some concessions. The majority he dismissed with the remark that in
-his treatment of Jews he only followed the example of his ancestors,
-especially that of his father, Alfonso XI. The two restrictions
-conceded were, if not of material significance, yet calculated to
-have a sinister effect. These were that the Castilian Jews should
-don the degrading badges, and give up their Spanish names. The pride
-of the Jews, equal to that of the grandees and the hidalgos, was
-deeply wounded. A century and a half had elapsed since the canonical
-law concerning the Jew-badge, the outcome of papal intolerance and
-arrogance, had been promulgated. During the whole of that period the
-Jews of Castile had been able to prevent its application to themselves,
-but now they also were to be compelled to wear the stigma on their
-garments. They who had been accustomed to hold their heads high, and
-rejoice in sounding titles, were, like the German Jews, to slink along
-with downcast eyes, and be called by their Oriental names. They could
-not accustom themselves to this humiliating situation.
-
-In consequence of an outcry made by some of his subjects, who had been
-ruined by loans from Jewish creditors, and complained of usurious
-interest, Don Henry made encroachments upon their private rights. He
-decided that if the Christian debtors discharged their obligations
-within a short space of time, they need refund only two-thirds of the
-principal borrowed.
-
-The misery resulting from the civil war and the new restrictions
-exercised a depressing effect on the Castilian Jews. Their most
-prominent men, those who had access to court, and possessed wealth and
-influence, especially Samuel Abrabanel, exerted themselves to remedy
-the gloomy state of affairs. They particularly endeavored to restore
-the abased, impoverished, and disorganized community of Toledo; but it
-was beyond their power to revive the scholarly culture and intellectual
-distinction to which the Toledo community had been as much indebted
-for its leading position as to the prosperity of its members. The
-unhappy war, and the evils following in its trail, had stunted the
-Jewish mind, and diverted it from intellectual to material interests.
-Disorganization proceeded with great strides. Indifference to
-scientific work resulted in so general an ignorance, that what formerly
-every tyro was familiar with now passed for transcendent wisdom. We
-have an example of the mawkishness to which the new Hebrew poetry had
-fallen in the verses of the poetaster Zarak (Zerach) Barfat, who, in a
-poetical paraphrase of the book of Job, completely marred the beauties
-of that work of art. Just at this period men of learning and ability
-were urgently required, for representatives of Christianity began to
-make earnest and energetic attacks on Judaism to obtain converts from
-amongst its adherents.
-
-Don Henry had much to thank the clergy for; they had sanctified his
-usurpation, and acquiesced in his arrogated succession. From gratitude
-and a false conception of religiousness, he conceded much to them. At
-his command, Jews were again forced to take part in religious debates,
-in which there was much to lose and nothing to gain.
-
-Two baptized Jews received from the king the privilege of holding
-religious discussions in every province and town of Castile, which they
-might compel Jews to attend.
-
-One of these apostates was John of Valladolid. At Burgos the discussion
-took place before Archbishop Gomez of Toledo. At Avila the whole
-community was compelled to repair to the great church (1375), where
-the debate was carried on in the presence of many Christians and
-Mahometans. Moses Cohen de Tordesillas, who was as familiar with
-Christian as with Jewish theological authorities, appeared on behalf of
-the Jews. He entered upon his dangerous enterprise with trepidation,
-for he had had an opportunity to form an estimate of Christian charity.
-During the civil war, Christian marauders had robbed him of all his
-possessions, and had even personally ill-used him in order to force
-him to embrace Christianity. All these trials he had suffered with the
-courage of strong convictions, but he had become so poverty-stricken
-that he had to accept support from the community of Avila.
-
-Moses de Tordesillas did not find his part in the discussion too
-difficult. The apostate John of Valladolid laid stress on the
-proposition that the dogmas of Christianity--the Messianic claim, the
-Divinity and Incarnation of Jesus, the Trinity, and the Virginity of
-the "Mother of God"--could be demonstrated from the Old Testament.
-It was consequently not difficult for his Jewish opponent to confute
-his arguments. After four debates John was obliged to abandon his task,
-vanquished. This, however, did not conclude the matter. A pupil of the
-apostate, Abner-Alfonso, appeared soon after, and challenged Moses de
-Tordesillas to a debate on the Talmud and Agadic texts. In case of
-refusal, he threatened publicly to impeach the Talmud as the source of
-anti-Christian sentiments. Moses was again forced to meet a series of
-silly assertions and charges, and to drag himself through the thorny
-length of another controversy. By the advice of the Avila community, he
-committed to writing the principal arguments used in these discussions
-under the title, "Ezer ha-Emuna," and sent them to his Toledan
-brethren for use under similar circumstances. Moses de Tordesillas'
-disputations, notwithstanding the difficulties of his position, were
-characterized by calmness and equanimity. Not a word of abuse or
-invective escaped him, and he counseled his Toledo brethren not to
-permit themselves to be tempted by their zeal to vexatious expressions,
-"for it is a fact," he said, "that the Christians possess the power and
-disposition to silence truth by force." Toledo, formerly recognized as
-the teacher of Jewry, was now obliged to play the part of pupil, and
-follow formularies in the disputations to which its members might be
-invited.
-
-As if the more far-seeing Jews had anticipated the approach of the
-gloomiest era of Spanish Judaism, they provided their co-religionists
-for the coming struggle with casque and buckler, so that the inexorable
-foe might not surprise them unarmed. A Spanish Jew, contemporary with
-Moses de Tordesillas, compiled a polemical work, more exhaustive than
-its predecessor, defending Judaism and attacking Christianity. Shem-Tob
-ben Isaac Shaprut of Tudela had at an early age been forced into the
-position of a defender of his brethren against proselytizing attempts.
-Cardinal Don Pedro de Luna, who later on, as Pope Benedict XIII,
-brought so much confusion into the church and evil on the Jews, was
-possessed of a perfect mania for conversion and religious controversy.
-At Pampeluna he summoned Shem-Tob ben Shaprut to a debate on original
-sin and salvation, and the latter was compelled to sustain his part in
-the presence of bishops and learned prelates. The war between England
-and Castile, the scene of which was Navarre, obliged Shem-Tob ben
-Shaprut, with many other Jews, to quit the country (1378) and settle
-in the neighboring town of Tarazona, in Aragon. Observing here that
-Jews of the stamp of John de Valladolid were extremely zealous in the
-promotion of religious discussions, the conversion of weaklings, and
-the maligning of Jewish literature, he published (1380) a comprehensive
-work ("Eben Bochan"), unmasking the speciousness of the arguments
-deduced by Christian controversialists from the Bible and the Talmud.
-The work is written in the form of a discussion between a believer in
-the unity of God and a Trinitarian. To enable the Jews to use weapons
-out of the Christian armory, Shem-Tob ben Shaprut translated into
-Hebrew extracts from the four Gospels, with incisive commentaries.
-Subsequently the anti-Jewish work of the apostate Abner-Alfonso fell
-into his hands, and he refuted it, argument by argument.
-
-These polemical works did not prove of far-reaching importance; at any
-rate, their effect was not what their authors had expected. The Jews
-of Spain did not so much stand in need of writings as of men of force
-of character, commanding personality and dignity, able to raise, if
-not the masses, at least the half-educated classes, and imbue them
-with somewhat of their own spirit. The ban against scientific studies,
-pronounced by excessive fear and extreme religiousness, notably avenged
-itself. It dwarfed the intelligence of the people, and deprived them
-of that capacity for appreciating the signs of the times which only a
-liberal education can develop. Even faith suffered from this want of
-culture in the rising generation. Only one Jew of profound philosophic
-genius stands out prominently in the history of this period, and the
-influence he exerted over a rather small circle was due less to his
-superior intelligence than to his position and Talmudic knowledge.
-The majority of the Spanish rabbis, if not actually hostile, were
-indifferent to the sciences, especially to religious philosophy. Only
-laymen devoted themselves to such pursuits, and they were neither
-exhaustive in their inquiries nor creative in their speculations.
-It is characteristic of this period that Maimuni's philosophical
-"Guide of the Perplexed" was entirely neglected, the fashion being
-to read and discuss Ibn-Ezra. The fragmentary nature of the writings
-of this commentator, the ingenuity and acuteness, the disjointedness
-of thought, the variety of matter, which characterize his work,
-appealed to the shallowness of this retrograde generation. Shem-Tob ben
-Shaprut, Samuel Carca, Joseph Tob-Elem, Ezra Gatino, and others wrote
-super-commentaries on Ibn-Ezra's commentary on the Pentateuch. The
-solution of riddles propounded by Ibn-Ezra, and the discovery of his
-secrets, and explanations of his obscurities, seriously exercised the
-minds of large circles of students.
-
-The Talmud, with which the more thoughtful minds, prompted by a
-religious bias, continued to be engaged, fared no better than secular
-learning. Here, also, a state of stagnation, if nothing worse, had
-supervened. The rabbis of some large communities were not even able
-to discharge one of their chief duties, the explanation of the Talmud
-to their disciples. A French Talmudist, Solomon ben Abraham Zarfati,
-who had settled at Majorca, could venture to speak slightingly of
-the Spanish rabbis, not excepting the celebrated Nissim Gerundi, and
-compare them disparagingly with the French and German rabbis. A measure
-of the average intelligence of the rabbis of this period is yielded by
-the works of Menachem ben Zerach, chief rabbi of Toledo, even after its
-misfortunes a very important Jewish community.
-
-Menachem ben Aaron ben Zerach (born 1310, died 1385) counted several
-martyrs in his family. His father, Aaron, was one of the unfortunates
-whom the cupidity and tyranny of a French king had banished. With the
-limited means spared by legalized robbery he had settled in Estella, a
-not inconsiderable Navarrese community. His father, mother, and four
-brothers perished in the massacre of Jews instigated by a Dominican
-friar. Young Menachem was severely wounded in this outbreak, and might
-have succumbed but for the assistance of a nobleman of his father's
-acquaintance. On his recovery he devoted himself daily to Talmudical
-study, and later on attended the celebrated school of the Asheride
-Judah of Toledo. After he had passed his fortieth year, Menachem ben
-Zerach became chief of an academy, the care of which was confided to
-him by the Alcala (de Henares) community. During the civil war in
-Castile he was wounded and plundered by the lawless soldiery, and of
-his entire fortune, only his house, field, and collection of books
-remained. Don Samuel Abrabanel assisted him in his distress, so that
-he was enabled to recover somewhat from his misfortunes. Through his
-interposition Menachem was called from Alcala to assume the rabbinate
-of Toledo, where he opened an academy. As the disciple and successor
-of Jehuda Asheri, considerable Talmudical attainments were with
-justice expected of him. But he did not rise above the mediocrity of
-his times. To remedy the increasing ignorance of religious forms and
-duties, he wrote a compendium of theoretic and practical Judaism ("Zeda
-la-Derech," 1374), as comprehensible as it was short, for the use of
-prominent Jews, who, employed at court and by the grandees, had not
-sufficient leisure to search an extensive literature for instruction.
-His work is interspersed with scientific elements--psychological
-and religio-philosophical--but it is weak and commonplace, full of
-platitudes, and its several parts do not cohere. Even the Talmudical
-elements are neither profound nor original. The only redeeming feature
-is that it is conceived in a warm, sympathetic spirit, distinguishing
-it from the usually dry rabbinical disquisitions.
-
-Only two men of this time are raised by their character and learning
-above the dead level of prevailing mediocrity: Chasdai Crescas and
-Isaac ben Sheshet. They both lived in the kingdom of Aragon, where the
-Jews under Pedro IV and Juan I were neither so poor nor so oppressed as
-their brethren in Castile. Chasdai Crescas and Isaac ben Sheshet were
-not sufficiently great to dominate their contemporaries, or prescribe
-their own views as rules of conduct; they were, however, the foci of
-large circles, and were frequently appealed to for final decisions on
-complicated and difficult questions. Both worked earnestly for the
-maintenance and furtherance of Judaism, for the preservation of peace
-in the communities at home and abroad, and for the consolation and
-re-animation of the broken in spirit, notwithstanding that their means
-were limited, and the times unpropitious.
-
-Chasdai ben Abraham Crescas (born 1340, died 1410), originally of
-Barcelona, and subsequently of Saragossa, where he ended his days, did
-not belong to the class of ordained rabbis, but he had been educated
-on Talmudical lines, and was an accomplished Talmudist. His wealth
-and his occupations seem to have indisposed him for this honorable
-position. Chasdai Crescas was in close relation with the court of Juan
-I, of Aragon, was frequently consulted on important state questions,
-and also had much intercourse with the grandees of the kingdom. In the
-views of the various schools of philosophy he was well versed; the
-independence and depth of thought he evinced in dealing with them stamp
-him an original thinker. His ideas, of course, were largely based upon
-religious, or rather Jewish convictions, which, however, he presented
-in an original form. Chasdai Crescas was the first to recognize the
-weak points of the prevailing Aristotelianism, and he attacked it with
-irresistible force. Of his youth nothing is known, and it is impossible
-to say under what influences those ripe powers of mind were developed
-which enabled him to question the authority not only of Maimonides
-and Gersonides, but of Aristotle himself. His ancestors were learned
-Talmudists, and his grandfather enjoyed a reputation equal to that of
-the famous Asheri family. In Talmudical studies he was a disciple of
-Nissim Gerundi, of Barcelona. Chasdai Crescas was kind and gentle, a
-friend in need, and a faithful defender of the weak. During the unhappy
-days which broke upon the Jews of Spain in his lifetime, he devoted all
-his powers to the mitigation of the disasters which befell his brethren.
-
-Similar in character, but fundamentally opposed to him in the
-disposition of his mind, was his friend and senior, Isaac ben Sheshet
-Barfat (Ribash, born 1310, died about 1409). A native of Barcelona, and
-having studied under Ben Adret's son and pupils, Isaac ben Sheshet may,
-in a measure, be considered a disciple of Ben Adret. He acquired his
-teacher's capacity for seizing the spirit of the Talmud and expounding
-it lucidly, and far surpassed him in hostility to secular studies. Ben
-Adret had permitted the circumstances of his times to extort from him
-the prohibition of such studies, as far as raw youths were concerned;
-Ben Sheshet, in his rigid orthodoxy, took the view that even mature
-men should hold aloof from them, although at that period there was but
-little fear of heresy. The physical sciences and philosophy, he held,
-should be completely avoided, as they were calculated to undermine the
-two essential supports of the Torah, the doctrines of the creation, and
-of a Providence; because they exalted reason over faith, and generated
-doubts of miracles. In Gersonides, and even Maimuni, Ben Sheshet found
-illustrations of the pernicious effects of philosophic speculation.
-He granted that they were men of incomparable genius, but he insisted
-that they had been seduced by philosophy to adopt heterodox views, and
-explain certain miracles of the Bible rationalistically. Ben Sheshet
-was of high moral character; his disposition was kindly, and on several
-occasions he willingly sacrificed his personal interests to advance the
-common good and to promote peace. But when he suspected the violation
-of a Talmudical precept or the non-observance of even an unessential
-custom, his mildness was immediately transformed into most obdurate
-severity.
-
-On account of his Talmudical learning, his clear, penetrating
-intellect, and his irreproachable character, he was much sought
-after. The important community of Saragossa elected him its rabbi.
-Immediately on taking office, Isaac ben Sheshet gave an illustration
-of the tenacity with which he clung to the letter of the Law, even
-when it conflicted with the spirit. He observed, with regret, that the
-practice obtained of reading the book of Esther on the feast of Purim
-in a Spanish translation, for the benefit of the women. This practice
-had been introduced into other Spanish communities, and was not only
-applauded by all men of common sense, but had even been authorized by a
-few rabbis, who considered it unobjectionable from a Talmudical point
-of view. Ben Sheshet raised a cry of alarm, as if Judaism had been
-threatened with ruin. He called to his assistance the authority of his
-teacher, Nissim Gerundi, and together they opposed the excellent custom
-with sophistical argument. They appear to have been successful in
-abolishing it.
-
-Still more characteristic of Isaac ben Sheshet is his quarrel with
-Chayim ben Gallipapa, a rabbi, stricken in years, whose opinions
-differed from those of the rabbi of Saragossa. This man (born 1310,
-died 1380), rabbi of Huesca and Pampeluna, was a singular figure in the
-Middle Ages, whom it is difficult to classify. Whilst the rabbis of the
-time, particularly since the rise of the Asheride teaching, exceeded
-all bounds in the imposition of burdensome observances, and always, in
-cases of doubt, decided in favor of their most rigorous fulfillment,
-Gallipapa took the opposite view, and maintained that the aim of all
-Talmudical exegesis should be to disencumber life. The times, he
-considered, had improved, and neither the ignorance of the people
-nor the fear of defection was so great as to warrant such severity.
-This principle was no mere theory with Gallipapa, for he followed it
-practically. The freedom he suggested concerned matters of comparative
-insignificance, but at that time every trifle was regarded as
-important. On certain dogmas, also, Gallipapa held independent views.
-The Messianic belief which, since the time of Maimonides, had become
-an article of faith, to deny which was heresy, he boldly set aside.
-Gallipapa considered that the prophecies, in Isaiah and Daniel, of the
-great prosperity of Israel in the future, had been fulfilled in the
-days of the Maccabees, and wrote a work on the subject. Against this
-hardy innovator, a storm naturally arose. A neighboring rabbi, Chasdai
-ben Solomon, of Tudela, a man of not over-fine sensibilities, denounced
-him to Isaac ben Sheshet, and the latter lectured the venerable
-Gallipapa, who had sent disciples into the world, as if he had been a
-mere schoolboy. He adjured Chayim Gallipapa to avoid scandal and give
-no opportunity for schism amongst his brethren. The modest attempt at
-reform went no further.
-
-This severe tendency in matters of religion was the natural outcome
-of the prevailing spiritual needs; and it must be confessed that the
-more rigorous, the better it was adapted to them. Isaac ben Sheshet
-and his friend Chasdai Crescas, who, although no enemy of secular
-learning, entertained the same view as his colleague, and defended his
-orthodoxy on philosophic grounds, were considered, after the death
-of Nissim Gerundi, the most eminent rabbinical authorities of their
-day, not in Spain only. From far and near, inquiries were addressed to
-them, principally to Isaac ben Sheshet, but also to Chasdai Crescas.
-The proudest rabbis and the largest communities invoked their counsel,
-and were content to abide by their decisions. The court of Aragon
-also regarded them as the leaders of the Jewish communities, but this
-operated to their disadvantage. In consequence of the denunciation
-of some malevolent person, the ground of which is unknown, the king,
-Don Pedro IV, ordered Chasdai Crescas, Isaac ben Sheshet, his brother,
-Crescas Barfat, the aged Nissim Gerundi of Barcelona, and two others,
-to be thrown into prison. After a long time, they were released on
-bail. We may believe Isaac ben Sheshet, when he assures us that he and
-his fellow-prisoners were all innocent of the offense or crime laid
-to their charge. Their innocence must have come to light, for they
-afterwards remained unmolested.
-
-The authority of Chasdai Crescas and Isaac ben Sheshet was appealed to
-by the French communities to settle an important point in a dispute
-about the chief rabbinate of France. A change, largely the outcome of
-the political condition of the country, had come over the circumstances
-of these communities. Manessier de Vesoul, the zealous defender and
-protector of his co-religionists, was dead (about 1375-1378). Of his
-four sons--Solomon, Joseph, Abraham, and Haquinet--the eldest
-succeeded to his father's post of receiver general of the Jew taxes
-and political representative of the French Jews, and the second became
-a convert to Christianity. Solomon and his brothers enjoyed the same
-esteem at the royal court as their father. They were exempted from
-wearing the humiliating Jew badge, and they diligently cared for the
-interests of their brethren. Among Jews, however, they do not seem
-to have obtained the consideration that their father had enjoyed. On
-the death of the king, Charles V, their importance ceased altogether.
-The regent Louis, Duke of Anjou, confirmed, for a consideration, the
-privileges acquired by the French Jews (14th October, 1380), and
-prolonged their term of sufferance in the land by another five years.
-His protection, however, did not reach far, or rather it involved the
-Jews in his own unpopularity. The impoverished population of Paris,
-driven to despair by burdensome taxation, loudly and stormily demanded
-redress of the young king and the regent. Egged on by a nobility
-involved in debt, they included the Jews in their outcry, and demanded
-that the king should expel from the country "these shameful usurers
-who have ruined whole families." The people did not stop at words; at
-the instigation of the nobles, they attacked the houses of the Jews
-(November 16th, 1380), robbed the exchequer of the receiver general
-(of the Vesoul family), pillaged their dwelling-houses, destroyed the
-bonds of the debtors, appropriated the accumulated pledges, murdered
-a few Jews, and tore children from the arms of fleeing and weeping
-Jewish mothers to baptize them forthwith. A large number of Jews
-saved themselves by flight to the fort Chatelet. The regent was much
-irritated by this violent outbreak, but was unable to punish the
-offenders at once on account of the excited state of the people. He
-ordered that the Jews be reinstated in their homes, and the plunder
-restored to them. Few complied with the order. The prevot of Paris,
-Hugues Aubriot--a man of considerable energy, who had beautified and
-enlarged the French capital--also interested himself in the Jews.
-In particular, he brought about the restitution of the stolen and
-baptized children. For this he was violently attacked by men whose
-learning should have taught them better. Aubriot, by his orderly
-administration, had made enemies of the university professors and
-students, who denounced as criminal his interference for the benefit
-of the Jews. He was accused before the bishop of Paris of having held
-intercourse with Jewish women, and even of being a secret adherent of
-Judaism. He was found guilty of heresy and infidelity, and made to pay
-with imprisonment for his humane conduct towards the Jews. Not only
-in Paris, but also in other towns where the people rose against heavy
-taxation, Jews fell victims to the popular excitement. Four months
-later, similar bloody scenes were enacted in Paris and the provinces
-when the rising of the Maillotins (so called from the mallets with
-which the insurgents were armed) took place. For three or four days in
-succession Jews were again plundered, ill-treated, and murdered (March
-1st, 1381). The king, Charles VII, or rather the regent, attempted to
-protect the Jews and to obtain some indemnification of their losses.
-They were, however, unable to recover from the blow they had received.
-In these tumults the sons of Manessier de Vesoul appear either to have
-lost their lives, or, at any rate, their position of influence.
-
-This change in the fortunes of the French Jews brought in its train
-a violent communal dispute, the excitement of which extended far and
-wide. The chief rabbi, Matathiah Provenci, had been gathered to his
-fathers. The communities had elected his eldest son, Jochanan, in his
-place, and the king had confirmed their choice. He had been in office
-five years, and was projecting the establishment of an academy, when
-a former pupil of his father, one Isaiah ben Abba-Mari, arrived in
-France from Savoy with the authorization of the German chief rabbi,
-Meir ben Baruch Halevi, granting to him alone the right to maintain
-an academy and ordain pupils as rabbis. Whoever exercised rabbinical
-functions without his authority and, especially, meddled with marriages
-and divorces, was threatened with excommunication. All unauthorized
-documents were declared null and void. By virtue of his authority, and
-in consequence of Jochanan's refusal to subordinate himself to him,
-Isaiah relieved him of his office (about 1380-1390). The Vesoul family
-being extinct or having lost prestige, Jochanan found himself without
-influential support. Many of the French Jews, however, were extremely
-wroth at this violent, imperious behavior of the immigrant rabbi. They
-condemned the presumptuousness of the German rabbi, Meir Halevi, in
-treating France as though it were a German province, and protested
-against his dictating laws to the French communities, as it had always
-been the custom to regard each community, and certainly the Jews of
-each country, as independent. The result was a storm of indignation,
-which increased considerably when Isaiah proceeded to appoint his own
-relatives to the various rabbinates. It being impossible to settle
-the dispute by an appeal to the home-authorities, Jochanan turned
-with his grievance to the two foremost representatives of Spanish
-Judaism, Chasdai Crescas and Isaac ben Sheshet. Both these "Catalonian
-grandees," as they were called, pronounced in favor of Jochanan. This
-decision, however, was not destined to bring about lasting peace, for
-the days of the Jews in France were numbered.
-
-The storm on this occasion arose in Spain, and convulsed for a time
-the entire Jewish race. The golden age of the Spanish Jews had passed
-away; still they were more firmly established in the Peninsula than in
-any other country. It required a series of violent shocks, extending
-over an entire century, to completely uproot them, whilst in France
-they were swept away by a breath, like twigs planted in quicksand. For
-the sanguinary drama which commenced towards the end of the fourteenth
-century, and ended in the latter part of the fifteenth, the Spanish
-Jews were themselves largely to blame. It is true that the many had
-to suffer for the few, for when the enemies of the Jews complained of
-their obsequious attendance at court and on the grandees, of their
-wealth accumulated by usury, and their flaunting in silks and satins,
-blame was due only to a few of the most prominent, for whose follies
-and extravagances the masses were not responsible. Indeed, there were
-Jews who complained that their moral sense was deeply wounded by the
-selfishness and covetousness of their wealthy brethren. "For these
-troubles," says one, "the titled and wealthy Jews are greatly to be
-held responsible; their only consideration is for their position and
-money, whilst for their God they have no regard." In fact, the union
-that had previously been the chief source of strength among the Spanish
-Jews, was broken up. Jealousy and envy among the Jewish grandees had
-undermined fraternal feeling, which formerly had induced each to merge
-his interests in those of the community at large, and all to combine
-for the defense of each. Generosity and nobility of mind, once the
-brilliant qualities of the Spanish Jews, had now become almost extinct.
-A contemporary writer pictures their degeneracy in darkest hues, and if
-only one half of what he tells us is true, their decline must have been
-grave indeed.
-
-"The majority of wealthy Jews," says Solomon Alami in his "Mirror of
-Morals," or "Letter of Warning," "who are admitted to royal courts, and
-to whom the keys of public exchequers are confided, pride themselves
-on their dignities and wealth, but give no thought to the poor. They
-build themselves palaces, drive about in splendid equipages, or ride
-on richly caparisoned mules, wear magnificent apparel, and deck their
-wives and daughters like princesses with gold, pearls, and precious
-stones. They are indifferent to their religion, disdain modesty, hate
-manual labor, and live in idleness. The wealthy love dancing and
-gaming, dress in the national costume, and go about with sleek beards.
-They fill themselves with dainties, whilst scholars starve on bread
-and water. Hence, the rabbis are despised, for all classes prefer to
-have their sons taught the lowest of handicrafts to bringing them up to
-the study of the Law. At sermon time, the great resign themselves to
-sweet slumber, or talk with one another, and the preacher is frequently
-disturbed by men and women at the back of the synagogue. On the other
-hand, how devout are the Christians in their houses of worship! In
-every town the noble live at variance with one another, and stir up
-discord on the most trivial questions. Still worse is the jealousy with
-which they regard each other; they slander one another before the king
-and the princes."
-
-It is certainly true that at this period secret denunciations, once
-almost unknown among the Jews, were exceedingly rife, even rabbis
-being occasionally the victims. As the aged Nissim Gerundi, Isaac
-ben Sheshet, Chasdai Crescas, and their friends were victimized by
-the conspiracy of some miserable calumniator, so an attempt was made
-to ruin the rabbi of Alkolea de Cinca, En-Zag Vidal de Tolosa, by
-representations to the queen of Aragon.
-
-The rabbis, who, with one or two assessors, constituted courts of
-justice for criminal cases, dealt severely with such traitors, and
-even sentenced them to death. In the communities of Castile, Aragon,
-Valencia, and Catalonia, the privilege of passing death-sentences
-was of great antiquity. The Jewish courts required for the execution
-of such sentences special sanction from the king in a sealed letter
-(Albala, Chotham); but, if necessary, this could be obtained through
-the medium of Jewish courtiers, or by bribery. Such proceedings,
-however, only increased the evil they were designed to cure. The
-accused were made short work of without exhaustive inquiry, or
-sufficient testimony, and this naturally infuriated their relatives and
-friends. It did not unfrequently occur that utterances were construed
-as treasonable which had no such character. The ill-advised action
-of the Jewish court of Seville (or Burgos) on an unfounded charge of
-disloyalty to the community preferred against an eminent and beloved
-co-religionist was, if not the actual cause, at any rate the occasion
-of the first widespread and sanguinary persecution of the Jews in
-Spain, the final result being the total expulsion of the Jews from the
-Peninsula.
-
-Joseph Pichon, of Seville, high in favor with the king of Castile,
-Don Henry II, whose receiver general of taxes he had been, was
-accused of embezzlement by some jealous Jewish courtiers. He was
-imprisoned by the king, condemned to pay a fine of 40,000 doubloons,
-and then set free. He afterwards retrieved his reputation, and became
-extraordinarily popular among the Christian population of Seville. To
-avenge his wrongs, or possibly with a view to his own vindication, he
-had entangled his enemies in a serious accusation, when Don Henry died.
-His son, Don Juan I, was crowned at Burgos, the capital of Old Castile
-(1379). During the coronation festivities, a Jewish court of justice
-(at Burgos or Seville) condemned Pichon as an enemy to the community
-and a traitor (Malshim, Malsin), without affording him an opportunity
-of being heard in defense. Some Jews, having access to the court, asked
-permission of the young king to execute a dangerous member of their own
-body without mentioning his name. Confidants of the king are said to
-have been bribed to obtain the royal signature to this decree. Provided
-with the king's warrant and the death sentence of the rabbinical
-college, Pichon's enemies repaired to the chief of police (Alguacil),
-Fernan Martin, and obtained his assistance at the execution. Early
-on the morning of the 21st August, two or three Jews, together with
-Martin, entered Pichon's house whilst he was yet asleep, and awoke him
-under the pretext that his mules were to be seized for debt. As soon as
-he appeared at the door of his dwelling, he was arrested by the Jews
-intrusted with the carrying out of the sentence, and, without a word,
-beheaded.
-
-Whether Pichon had deserved death, even according to rabbinical law,
-or whether he fell a victim to the intrigues of his enemies, is not
-known. It is not difficult to understand that so cruel an act should
-have stirred up widespread indignation. The anger of the young king
-knew no bounds when he learnt that his coronation festivities had been
-stained with the murder of one who had rendered his father substantial
-services, and that his own sanction had been surreptitiously obtained.
-He immediately ordered the execution of the Jews who had carried
-out the sentence, and of a Jewish judge of Burgos. Even the chief
-of police, Fernan Martin, was ordered to be put to death for the
-assistance he had given; but at the intercession of some nobles, his
-life was spared, and his punishment commuted to the chopping off of
-one hand. This incident had other grave consequences. The king at
-once deprived the rabbis and Jewish courts of justice of jurisdiction
-in criminal cases, on the ground of their abuse of the privilege.
-At the first meeting of the cortes at Soria (1380), he made this
-restriction a permanent statute. By its terms the rabbis and communal
-leaders were thenceforth prohibited from decreeing punishments of
-death, dismemberment, or exile, and in criminal cases were to choose
-Christian judges. One of the reasons assigned was that, according to
-the prophets, the Jews were to be deprived of all power and freedom
-after the advent of Jesus. The still exasperated king then arraigned
-the Jews on other charges. He accused them particularly of cursing
-Christians and the Christian church in their prayers, and with
-receiving Mahometans, Tartars, and other foreign persons into the pale
-of Judaism, and having them circumcised. These alleged practices were
-forbidden under heavy penalties. The feeling against the Jews was
-not limited to the king and the court circle. The entire population
-of Castile was roused by the apparently unjust execution of Joseph
-Pichon, and by the circumstance that his death was not the work of
-irresponsible individuals, but of the foremost leaders of the Jewish
-community. In Seville, where Pichon had been very popular, the fury
-against the Jews rose to such a height that, had the opportunity
-presented itself, summary vengeance would have been taken.
-
-Accusations against the Jews and petitions for the restriction of their
-liberties became the order of the day at the meetings of the cortes,
-as formerly at the councils of the Visigothic kings. The infuriated
-Don Juan acquiesced in this agitation, in so far as it did not tend
-to the detriment of the royal finances. At the cortes of Valladolid
-(1385), he granted the petition for the legalization of the canonical
-restrictions, presented by the clergy, and accordingly prohibited the
-living together of Jews and Christians, and the suckling of Jewish
-infants by Christian nurses, under pain of public whipping. He also
-consented to the passing of a law excluding Jews (and Mahometans) from
-the post of treasurer to the king, queen, or any of the royal family.
-
-Curiously, it was the quarrel over the chief rabbinate of Portugal that
-snatched the crown of that country, at the moment when it was within
-his grasp, from this monarch, who cannot be said to have been wholly
-hostile to the Jews. By a treaty with King Ferdinand of Portugal,
-it had been agreed that, male heirs to the crown failing, he, or
-rather his second wife, the Portuguese Infanta Beatrice (Brites),
-should have the first right to the succession. In Portugal the Jews
-had always been tolerated, and, up to the time of their expulsion
-from the country, suffered no persecution. During the reign of King
-Ferdinand (1367-1383), their position was exceptionally happy. Since
-the thirteenth century (1274), the government of the community had
-been more completely in its own hands than in any other European
-country. Some of their peculiar institutions dated even further back.
-At the head of the Portuguese Jews was a chief rabbi (Ar-Rabbi Mor),
-possessing almost princely privileges. On account of the importance of
-the office he was always appointed by the king, who conferred it as a
-reward for services rendered to the crown, or to add to the dignity
-of some particular favorite. The chief rabbi used a special signet,
-administered justice in all its branches, and issued decrees under
-his own sign-manual with the addendum: "By the grace of my lord, the
-king, Ar-Rabbi Mor of the communities of Portugal and Algarve." It was
-his duty to make an annual circuit of all the Portuguese communities,
-to investigate their affairs, invite individuals to lay before him
-their grievances, even against the rabbis, and remedy abuses wherever
-they existed. On these journeys he was accompanied by a Jewish judge
-(Ouvidor), a chancellor (Chanceller) with his staff, a secretary
-(Escrivao), and a sheriff (Porteiro jurado), to carry out the sentences
-of his court. The chief rabbi or Ar-Rabbi Mor, appointed in each of
-the seven provinces of the kingdom provincial rabbis (Ouvidores)
-subject to him. These rabbis were established in the seven principal
-provincial Jewish centers, Santarem, Vizeu, Cavilhao, Porto, Torre de
-Montcorvo, Evora and Faro. They governed the provincial communities,
-and were the judges of appeal for their several districts. The local
-rabbis were elected by the general body of contributing members of the
-community; but the confirmation of their election and their investiture
-proceeded from the chief rabbi, under a special deed issued in the
-name of the king. The judicial authority of the rabbis extended to
-criminal cases, and they retained this privilege much longer than their
-Spanish brethren. Public documents had to be written in the vernacular.
-The Jewish form of oath was very simple, even in litigation with
-Christians; it required nothing but the presence of a rabbi and the
-holding up of the Torah.
-
-The king, Don Ferdinand, had two Jewish favorites, who supervised his
-monetary affairs: Don Judah, his chief treasurer (Tesoreiro Mor),
-and Don David Negro, of the highly-respected Ibn-Yachya family, his
-confidant and counselor (Almoxarif). When this frivolous and prodigal
-monarch died, and the regency was undertaken by the queen, Leonora--a
-princess whose beauty rendered her irresistible, but who was hated for
-her faithlessness and feared for her vindictiveness and craft--the
-municipal authorities of Lisbon approached her with an urgent prayer
-for the abolition of sundry unpopular measures of the late king. Among
-other things they asked that Jews and Moors should no longer be allowed
-to hold public offices. Leonora craftily replied that during the
-lifetime of the king she had exerted herself to procure the exclusion
-of Jews from public offices, but her representations had always been
-unheeded. Immediately after the king's death she had removed Judah
-and David Negro from the public service, and dismissed all the Jewish
-receivers of taxes. She nevertheless retained Judah in her immediate
-circle, anticipating that, on account of his wealth and experience,
-he might prove of use to her. Leonora's scheme to obtain absolute
-authority and share the government with her paramour was frustrated by
-the still craftier bastard Infante Don Joao, Grand Master of Avis. In
-the art of winning public favor and turning it to account, Don Joao
-was a master, and he soon brought things to such a pass that the queen
-regent was forced to leave the capital. Burning for revenge, Leonora
-invoked the aid of her son-in-law, King Don Juan of Castile, with the
-result that a sanguinary civil war was commenced. In opposition to the
-aristocratic faction, supporting the queen regent and the Castilians,
-there arose a popular party, which enthusiastically espoused the cause
-of Don Joao of Avis. Leonora was obliged to fly before the hatred of
-her people and take refuge in Santarem. Among her escort were the two
-Jewish grandees, Judah and David Negro, who had escaped from Lisbon
-in disguise. Hither came King Juan of Castile; and Leonora, in order
-to be enabled to take full vengeance on her enemies, renounced the
-regency in his favor, and placed at his disposal all her adherents,
-comprising the entire Portuguese nobility, together with a large number
-of fortresses. The idea of the Castilian king in undertaking this
-enterprise was to unite the crowns of Portugal and Castile; but for the
-realization of this project a thorough understanding between Leonora
-and her son-in-law and her ungrudging co-operation were indispensable.
-This important harmony was disturbed by a question as to the
-appointment of a chief rabbi, and owing to this dispute their agreement
-was transformed into bitter and disastrous enmity.
-
-The rabbinate of Castile became vacant in 1384. Leonora, desiring to
-obtain the appointment for her favorite Judah, made application to the
-king on his behalf. At the instance of his wife Beatrice, he conferred
-the dignity upon David Negro. Leonora's anger at this rebuff was
-expressed with vehemence. She is reported to have said to her circle
-of adherents: "If the king refuses so trivial a favor, the first I
-have asked of him, to me, a woman, a queen, a mother, one who has
-done so much for him, what have I and what have you to expect? Even
-my enemy, the Grand Master of Avis, would not have treated me thus.
-You will do better to go over to him, your legitimate master." Leonora
-transferred to her son-in-law, King Juan, all the hatred with which
-she had formerly regarded the Grand Master of Avis. She organized a
-conspiracy to murder him, the details of which she confided to the
-former treasurer Judah. The plot was, however, discovered by the
-chief rabbi elect, David Negro, who saved the king's life. Don Juan
-immediately caused the queen dowager to be arrested and thrown into
-prison. Judah also was imprisoned, and ordered to be executed, but at
-the energetic intercession of his rival, David Negro, his life was
-spared. This quarrel with and imprisonment of his mother-in-law cost
-Don Juan all support in Portugal. Thenceforth he encountered resistance
-on every side, and was obliged to resort to forcible measures for the
-subjugation of the country. His plans, however, all failed, and in the
-end he found himself compelled to renounce his hope of a union of the
-two lands.
-
-A few rabbis intrigued to obtain rabbinical office, and involved
-their several communities in much unseemly strife, as, for example,
-David Negro and Judah, Isaiah ben Abba-Mari and Jochanan in France,
-Solomon Zarfati and En-Vidal Ephraim Gerundi in the Island of Majorca,
-and Chasdai ben Solomon and Amram Efrati in Valencia, but it must
-be acknowledged that such incidents were of rare occurrence. To the
-majority, the rabbinate was as a holy priesthood, the duties of which
-they sought to discharge in all purity of heart and deed, with devotion
-and self-denial. They were generally examples to their communities, not
-only in learning and piety, but in high-mindedness, conscientiousness,
-and the purity of their morals. Even the less worthy cannot be charged
-with anything more serious than a desire for place, and a certain
-degree of irascibility. It would be a gross libel on their memory to
-compare them with the servants of the church during the same period.
-At no time in its history had Christianity more reason to be ashamed
-of its representatives than during the fourteenth and the succeeding
-century. Since the papacy had established itself at Avignon, it had
-become a perfect hot-bed of vice, the contagion of which spread over
-the clergy down to the lowliest friar. Besides, there arose passionate
-strife between pope and anti-pope, between one college of cardinals
-and another, dividing the whole of Christendom into two huge, bitterly
-hostile camps. It was only natural that the clergy should infect the
-lay world with their immeasurable dissoluteness and vice. Yet these
-degenerate, inhuman and degraded Christian communities presumed to
-treat the modest, virtuous, pious Jews as outcasts and accursed of God.
-Although superior in everything save wickedness and the virtues of a
-robber chivalry, they were denied the commonest rights of man. They
-were baited and slaughtered like beasts of the field. In Noerdlingen the
-entire Jewish community, including women and children, was murdered
-(1384). All over Suabia they were persecuted, and in Augsburg they were
-imprisoned until a ransom of 20,000 florins was paid. A characteristic
-illustration is furnished by the following occurrence: The rabbis and
-communal leaders of central Germany had determined to hold a synod at
-Weissenfels, in Saxony, for the purpose of deliberating upon certain
-religious questions, and adopting resolutions of public utility
-(1386). They had provided themselves with safe-conduct passes from
-the Saxon princes, it being unsafe for Christians to travel on the
-public highroads, and, of course, much more so for Jews. Nevertheless,
-a party of German robber-nobles, anticipating rich booty, waylaid the
-travelers on their return journey, and, having plundered and ill-used
-them, threw them into prison, and liberated them only on the payment of
-a ransom of 5,000 groschen. The rabbis and their companions complained
-to the princes of this attack, and the latter, indignant at the
-disrespect with which their authority had been treated, summoned the
-noble marauders to answer the charges urged against them. The line of
-defense adopted by the spokesman of the accused was that they had no
-idea of disregarding the safe-conduct passes of the princes, but that
-they held the opinion that the Jews, the enemies of the church, did not
-deserve the protection of Christian authorities. The speaker continued
-that, for his own part, wherever he met the enemies of Christ, he would
-give them no quarter. A defense of this kind could not fail to obtain
-applause. Its spirit was that of the majority of the Christians of
-that day. The accused were absolved from blame, and the Jews dismissed
-without redress, "for the defense captivated the princes."
-
-The art of poetry, which should beautify life, began to work like
-poison on the moral atmosphere of the Jews. For some centuries past
-romantic works had variously portrayed the character of a creditor,
-who, as equivalent for a debt, claimed a certain portion cut from
-the body of his creditor, either a liege lord from his vassal, or
-a nobleman from a burgher. At first this was harmless fiction, but
-afterwards it was turned against the Jews, as though only a Jewish
-Shylock could be capable of such hardness of heart as to insist on the
-payment of a pound of flesh from a Christian. Thus cannibal hatred of
-Christians was foisted on the Jews, and received credence. Romances
-took up the theme, and made it popular.
-
-The depraved, dissolute clergy--a class of men who, in an age of
-public decency, would have been objects of universal contempt, or might
-have earned the corrections of a Bridewell--affected to feel insulted
-by contact with the Jews, and, under the pretext that their cloth was
-disgraced by them, caused new scenes of horror and cruelty. In Prague,
-since the time of Charles IV the chief city of Germany, a bloody
-persecution was set on foot by their agency. A local priest--perhaps
-one of those whom Emperor Wenceslaus had caused to be pilloried with
-their concubines--passed through the Jewish quarter on Easter Sunday
-(April 18th, 1389) with the host, to visit a dying person. Jewish
-children playing in the street--it was one of the latter days of the
-Passover feast--were throwing sand at one another, and a few grains
-happened to fall upon the priest's robe. His attendants immediately
-turned upon the children, and cruelly beat them. Their cries quickly
-brought their parents to their rescue, whereupon the priest fled to
-the market-place, loudly proclaiming that his holy office had been
-profaned by Jews. To invest the incident with the necessary importance,
-he exaggerated it, and said that he was pelted with stones until forced
-to drop the host. The citizens and lower orders of Prague immediately
-banded themselves together, and, armed with murderous weapons of every
-description, made a violent attack upon the houses of the Jews. As
-usual, they offered their victims the choice between death and baptism,
-but they found them steadfast in their faith. Many thousands perished
-in the massacre, which lasted a whole day and night. Several of the
-Jews, among them their venerable rabbi, first took the lives of their
-wives and children, and then their own, to escape the cruelties of
-their enemies. The synagogue was laid in ashes, and the holy books and
-scrolls torn and trodden under foot. Not even the burial ground escaped
-the fury of these Christian zealots. The corpses in the streets were
-stripped of their clothing, left naked, and then burnt.
-
-For the same offense--that is, for no offense at all--the
-communities in the vicinity of the Bohemian capital were "confined,
-oppressed, ill-treated and persecuted." The reigning pope issued a bull
-condemning the outrages (July 2d, 1389), and based his action upon
-the edict of Pope Innocent IV, which enacted that Jews should not be
-forcibly baptized, nor disturbed in the observance of their festivals;
-but he failed to produce an impression on the consciences of the
-faithful. It was in vain, too, that the Jews appealed to their liege
-lord, the German emperor Wenceslaus, in whose capital the persecution
-had originated. This prince--who, had he not been an emperor, would
-certainly have been a freebooter--was a man of sense only on the rare
-occasions when he was not intoxicated. His reply to the representations
-of his Jewish subjects was that they had deserved the attacks made upon
-them, as they had had no right to show themselves outside their houses
-on Easter Sunday. For the goods and chattels they had left behind them
-he exhibited more concern, promptly ordering them to be appropriated
-to his empty exchequer. This was the measure of his general attitude
-towards the Jews. During several years he attempted to possess himself
-of their monetary claims on his Christian subjects, and to carry out
-his design he convened (1385) a conference of representatives of the
-Suabian cities, which met at Ulm. Despite the impoverishment of the
-German communities, he exacted from every Jew, even from every Jewish
-youth and maiden, the so-called "golden penny" poll-tax, amounting to
-one gulden annually. He openly declared that the possessions of the
-Jews were his personal property, and forbade them to sell or mortgage
-anything. And still Emperor Wenceslaus was not the worst of rulers in
-the eyes of the Jews. The rabbi, Avigedor Kara, of Prague, boasted his
-friendship; and the Jews of Germany whispered significantly to one
-another that his allegiance to the teaching of Christ was very weak.
-
-This storm of spoliation and persecution had no far-reaching
-consequences in the history of the German Jews. It could not affect
-their abject condition, for they had been too long accustomed to turn
-their cheeks submissively to the smiter. Quite different were the
-effects of a contemporary persecution in Spain. Here the very heart
-of the Jewish race was attacked, and the results made themselves felt
-in the history of the whole Jewish people. The Spanish Jews had until
-then been more hated than despised; the horrors of this persecution,
-however, so thoroughly cowed their spirits, so paralyzed their
-energies, and humbled their pride, that they, too, became the scorn
-of their oppressors. As in Prague, the outbreak was the work of an
-ecclesiastic and a mob, but here it assumed the vastest proportions,
-and developed permanent results, the operations of which were
-disastrous in the extreme. It arose in Seville through the agitation
-of a fanatical priest, Ferdinand (Ferrand) Martinez, who seemed to
-consider implacable hatred of the Jews as the essence of his religion.
-His discourses were devoted to stirring up the populace against them,
-and he thundered against their hardened infidelity, their pride, their
-heaped-up riches, their greed, and their usury. In Seville he found
-the people only too ready to listen to him, for there the Jews were
-hated with special intensity. The citizens could not forgive them the
-important part they had played in the civil war between Don Pedro
-and Don Henry II, and particularly the suspicious circumstances of
-the death of Joseph Pichon, who had been so popular among them. As
-long as Don Juan I lived, Martinez took care to restrain the mob from
-open violence, for though the king regarded the Jews with but little
-affection, he was in the habit of punishing lawless outbreaks with
-the utmost severity. No sooner was he dead, however, than the bigoted
-cleric thought he might dare the utmost. The circumstances of the
-government were favorable to the development of his plans. The new
-monarch, Henry III, was a boy of only eleven years of age, and in the
-council of regency discord reigned, threatening to involve the country
-in another civil war.
-
-One day (March 15, 1391)--a memorable day, not only for the Jews and
-for Spain, but for the history of the entire world, for on that day
-the first germ of the monstrous Inquisition was created--Martinez,
-preaching as usual against the Jews, deliberately incited the mob to
-riot in the expectation that many Jews would abjure their religion.
-The passions of the multitude became inflamed, and broke out in wild
-uproar. The authorities of the city, the Mayor (Alguacil mayor), Don
-Alvar Perez de Guzman, and two of the magistrates interposed to
-protect the Jews, arresting two of the ringleaders in the riot, and
-ordering them to be flogged. This proceeding excited the fanatical
-mob only the more. In their fury they put a large number of Jews to
-death, and threatened with a like fate the governor of the city, Don
-Juan Alfonso, and the officials who were attempting to shield the
-unfortunate Hebrews. A few of the leading Jews of Seville, perceiving
-that the local authorities were not strong enough to grapple with the
-rising, hurried to the court of the young king, and appealed to the
-council of regency to stop the slaughter of their brethren. Their
-representations were favorably received. Messengers were dispatched
-forthwith to Seville with instructions to tell the populace to abstain
-from further outrage. The local nobility seconded the action of the
-king, and, ranging themselves on the side of the Jews, succeeded
-in mastering the rioters. When the Christian inhabitants of the
-neighboring towns showed a disposition to imitate the scenes enacted
-in Seville, the council of regency also sent messengers thither armed
-with the same powers. Thus, for a brief moment, the threatened Jew-hunt
-was delayed, but by no means suppressed. It was soon renewed with
-greater violence, and on a far more extended scale. The young king and
-a few of the members of the council of regency were probably earnest
-in their desire not to permit the massacres, but, unfortunately,
-they were not sufficiently interested to take adequate precautions
-against them. One such precaution should have been to silence the
-outrage-monger, Ferdinand Martinez, or at least to prohibit his
-inflammatory harangues; but they did nothing of the kind. They left
-him perfectly free to level his poisonous eloquence at the Jews, and
-he was not slow to take advantage of their inaction. Encouraged by the
-dissensions in the government, and the disorder which consequently
-reigned throughout the entire land, he again set himself to stir up
-the rabble of Seville, and this time with greater success. Hardly three
-months after the last outbreak, the mob resumed (June 6th, 1391) its
-holy work of massacre by setting fire to the Jewish quarter (Juderia)
-and slaughtering its inhabitants. The result was that, of the important
-and wealthy community of Seville, which had numbered 7,000 families,
-or 30,000 souls, but few remained. Murder counted not more than 4,000
-victims, but to escape death the majority permitted themselves to be
-baptized. Women and children were sold into Mahometan slavery by the
-bloody rioters. Of the three synagogues of Seville two were transformed
-into churches. Among the large number who sought refuge from fire and
-sword at the baptismal font was Samuel Abrabanel, the ancestor of
-the afterwards celebrated Abrabanel family, and an ornament of his
-community in the reign of Don Henry II, with whom he possessed great
-influence. He adopted the Christian name of Juan de Sevilla.
-
-From Seville the persecution swept like a raging torrent over a large
-portion of Spain. Its progress was stimulated more by a craving for
-plunder than by fanatical eagerness to proselytize. Cordova, the parent
-community of the Peninsula, the mold in which the high character of
-Spanish Judaism had been cast, was the next scene of its activity.
-Here also many Jews were cruelly murdered, and a large number forced
-to embrace Christianity. On the fast day commemorating the fall of
-Jerusalem (Tammuz 17th-June 20th) the population of the capital,
-Toledo, rose against the largest Jewish community in Spain. The blood
-of the believers in the unity of God, who steadfastly refused to change
-their faith, deluged the streets. Among the many martyrs who fell at
-Toledo were the descendants of the Asheri family. They met death with
-the same unflinching courage as their German brethren. Jehuda ben
-Asher II, one of Asheri's great-grandsons, who lived in Burgos, but
-happened to be at Toledo, took with his own hands the lives of his
-mother-in-law and wife, and then his own. Here also a large number
-went over to Christianity. About seventy communities were visited by
-this terrible persecution, among them those of Ecija, Huete, Logrono,
-Burgos, Carrion, and Ocana. At Ascalona not a single Jew remained
-alive. The thoroughly maddened Christian population meditated a similar
-fate for the Moors, or Mahometans, living in the kingdom of Seville.
-The more prudent among them, however, pointed out the danger of such
-a step, reminding them that the Christians living in the Mahometan
-kingdom of Granada, or held as prisoners by the Moors on the other side
-of the straits of Gibraltar, might be sacrificed in retaliation. The
-massacre of the Moors was consequently abandoned. The Jews alone were
-made to drain the cup of bitterness to the dregs, because they were
-too weak to protect themselves. Nothing demonstrates more impressively
-that the clergy had succeeded in transforming the people into a race of
-cut-throats.
-
-In the kingdom of Aragon, where both ruler and people were opposed to
-Castile, and, as a rule, held that to be wrong which in the latter
-state was considered right, the hatred and persecution of the Jews
-were promoted with the same zeal. Here the government was in the
-hands of the weak but well-meaning king, Juan I, who, absorbed by his
-love of music and the chase, wielded but little authority, and was
-the laughing-stock of his generally uncultured subjects. About three
-weeks after the outbreak at Toledo, the inhabitants of the province of
-Valencia rose against the Jews (Ab 7th-July 9th). Of the 5,000 souls
-that constituted the Jewish community in the city of Valencia, not one
-was left. Some 250 were murdered, a few saved themselves by flight,
-and the rest embraced Christianity. Throughout the length and breadth
-of the kingdom the defenseless Jews were attacked with fire and sword,
-the community of Murviedro alone being spared.
-
-The sanguinary madness then crossed the sea, and alighted on the island
-of Majorca. In the capital, Palma, a crowd of roughs and sailors
-paraded the Monte-Zion street, in which the Jews resided, and holding
-aloft a cross, rudely formed by tying together two cudgels, shouted
-"Death to the Jews" (August 2d-Ellul 1st). One sturdy Jew, assaulted
-by the rabble, ventured to defend himself, and severely punished his
-assailants. Hereupon the mob broke out in uncontrollable violence, and
-300 martyrs fell to its fury. Among the victims was the rabbi, En-Vidal
-Ephraim Gerundi, whose controversy with Solomon Zarfati has already
-been referred to. A large number of Jews here also sought safety in
-baptism.
-
-Three days later, as if by previous arrangement, the Jew-massacres
-began in Barcelona, one of the proudest homes of Jewish intelligence.
-The great wealth which the Jews of this city had acquired by their
-extensive maritime commerce appears to have excited the envy of the
-Christians, and tempted them to outrage. On the 5th August, a Sabbath,
-on which was held a minor festival in honor of Mary, the mob attacked
-the Jews as if to honor their queen of heaven with human sacrifices.
-In the first assault, close upon 250 victims fell. The larger portion
-of the community were harbored and cared for in the citadel by the
-governor of the town; but here again the rabble opposed the nobility.
-They attacked the citadel with crossbows, laid siege to it in due form,
-and ultimately set it on fire. When the imprisoned Jews saw that there
-was no longer a chance of being saved, a large number slew themselves
-with their own hands, or threw themselves from the walls. Others
-sallied forth from the fortress to meet their assailants in the open
-field, and fell in honorable combat. Among the martyrs was the noble
-Chasdai Crescas' young and only son, then on the eve of his marriage.
-Eleven thousand Jews are said to have been baptized on this occasion.
-Only a very few escaped, and not one remained in Barcelona. The same
-fate befell the communities of Lerida, Gerona, and other towns, in
-each case a large number of Jews being murdered, some being baptized,
-and a very few escaping by flight. In Gerona, where the community was
-distinguished for rigid piety, the number of converts to Christianity
-was exceedingly small, the rabbis setting their flocks an example
-by their steadfastness and contempt for death. In Catalonia, as in
-Valencia, but few Jews were spared, and they owed their good fortune to
-the protection received--in exchange, of course, for large sums of
-money--in the castles of the nobility. In Aragon itself the outbreaks
-were not so serious, as the Jewish communities had made a timely and
-prudent offer of all their wealth for the protection of the court.
-
-For three months fire and sword raged unresisted in the majority of
-the Spanish Jewries. When the storm abated, the Jews remaining were
-so broken in spirit that they did not venture forth from their places
-of refuge. The sad occurrences were described in a heart-breaking,
-tearful epistle to the community of Perpignan, which Chasdai Crescas,
-who had been robbed of an only son and his entire fortune, penned in
-answer to their sympathetic inquiries. Thus, to Spanish Jews came
-the tragical fate which had befallen their German brethren, hardly
-half a century before, at the time of the Black Death. They also had
-acquired materials for bitter songs of lamentation, which they inserted
-in the Jewish liturgy. But the consequences of the persecution were
-even more terrible than the persecution itself. Their pride was
-completely crushed, and their spirit permanently darkened. They who
-had formerly held their heads so proudly aloft, now slunk timidly
-along, anxiously avoiding every Christian as a possible murderer or
-instigator of murderous assaults. If hundred Jews were assembled, and a
-single rough abused them, they fled like a flock of frightened birds.
-This persecution gave them their first experience of the bitterness
-of exile, for, notwithstanding many untoward circumstances, they had
-always imagined themselves secure and at home in Spain. Now, for the
-first time, their haughty demeanor was humbled. They were no longer
-the men who had so valiantly wielded the sword in the armies of Don
-Pedro. In Portugal alone the Jews were free from fanatical attacks.
-Its king, Don Joao I, enjoyed a popularity to which, in a crisis, he
-was able to appeal. As his instructions were cheerfully obeyed, he was
-able to preserve order and put down outbreaks with a firm hand. The
-chief rabbi, Don Moses Navarro, brought under his notice the two bulls
-of the popes Clement VI and Boniface IX, in which force was forbidden
-in converting Jews. The king immediately issued an order (July 17th,
-1392) prohibiting persecutions. Wide publicity was given to the bulls
-in every town in Portugal, and they were inserted among the statutes of
-the realm. Portugal thus became an asylum for the persecuted Jews of
-Spain.
-
-The Jews of the south of France were not entirely exempted from the
-horrors of this persecution. The tempest which had crossed the sea to
-the island of Majorca also whirled over the snow-capped Pyrenees, and
-caught up the Jews of Provence in its deadly eddies. No sooner was
-intelligence received of the bloody massacres of the Jews of Spain than
-the populace of Provence rose, and began to plunder and murder their
-Jewish neighbors.
-
-The Jews in France had been permitted to settle in the country only
-for a specified time, and, although this term was frequently extended,
-their thoughts were necessarily always directed towards possible
-banishment. They were compelled to amass and keep in readiness
-sufficient money to enable them, at any moment, to start life afresh
-in another land. Like their ancestors in Egypt, they were ready for an
-exodus, their loins girded, their shoes on their feet, and their staffs
-in their hands. Although the acquisition of land was allowed them,
-they were obliged to concentrate themselves on the money business,
-and pursue the advantages offered by each moment. Necessity made
-them usurers. Some among them charged a higher rate of interest than
-permitted by the privileges granted them, and exacted even compound
-interest from dilatory debtors. But it was the king himself who forced
-them to immoderate, exasperating usury, by the extravagant demands
-he made upon their purses to meet the expenses of his wars, and the
-Jews could fulfill his demands only by transgressing the laws, but
-their exactions naturally rendered them hateful in the eyes of the
-general public. That Jewish creditors frequently had ill-intentioned
-or tardy Christian debtors imprisoned to force them to discharge their
-liabilities tended to increase the bitterness. The exercise of this
-right was regarded as a triumph of "the children of the devil over the
-children of heaven." The public became so angered at their possessing
-the privilege that the king, Charles VI, was obliged to abolish it. On
-the other hand, the necessity of maintaining the privilege was shown to
-be so imperative--the Jews being threatened with the entire loss of
-their outstanding debts--that the king and parliament had to grant it
-a month later in a modified form. They permitted the Jews to imprison
-only the debtors who, in their bonds, made themselves answerable with
-their bodies.
-
-A trifling circumstance sufficed to kindle into a flame these embers
-of Jew-hatred in France. A wealthy Israelite, Denys Machault, of
-Villa-Parisis, became a convert to Christianity, and then suddenly
-disappeared. The affair became the subject of strange rumors. Some said
-that he had been murdered by Jews; others that he had been hurried
-abroad with a view to providing him with an easy means of returning to
-Judaism. The clergy interested themselves in the mystery, fanatical
-appeals were made to the people, and, eventually, the Paris tribunals
-prosecuted seven prominent Hebrews. A commission of priests and
-lawyers subjected the accused to the rack, and extorted the confession
-that they had advised Denys Machault to abandon his new faith. The
-commission condemned them to the stake as promoters of apostasy from
-Christianity. Parliament substituted an apparently milder punishment.
-It ordered the accused to be scourged in three of the public places
-of Paris, kept in goal until Denys Machault re-appeared, and then,
-stripped of all their possessions, expelled the country. From the
-publicity given to this affair, it created an extraordinary sensation,
-and still further inflamed the popular passions against the Jews.
-
-For about three months the court extended a protecting wing over
-the unfortunate Jews, but soon withdrew it in face of the stormy,
-menacing clamor of the clergy and people. At last the enemies of the
-Jews prevailed upon the king to promulgate the order of banishment.
-Doubtless with malice aforethought the day chosen for the issue of
-the decree was the solemn Fast of Atonement (September 17th, 1394),
-when the Jews were afflicting their souls during the entire day in the
-synagogues. The prolonged term granted for their sojourn in the country
-not having expired, it became necessary to put forward an excuse for
-ignoring the convention. The royal decree was not able to impute to
-the Jews specific crimes or misdemeanors, and, consequently, confined
-itself to vague generalities. It had been reported to his majesty
-by trustworthy persons, including many of his lieutenants and other
-officials, that complaints had been made concerning offenses committed
-by the Jews against the Christian religion and the special laws drawn
-up for their control. That meant that they had encouraged baptized
-Jews to recant, and had practiced extortionate usury--the latter
-Charles had partly approved and partly condoned. The decree then stated
-that his majesty had made the irrevocable law that henceforth no Jews
-should be allowed to reside or tarry in any part of France, either in
-Languedoil or Languedoc (northern and southern France).
-
-Thus, ninety years after their first expulsion by Philip le Bel, and
-after a second sojourn of thirty-four years, the French Jews were
-compelled once more to grasp the wanderer's staff. Charles, however,
-dealt more leniently with them than his heartless ancestor. They were
-not, as before, robbed of all their possessions, and turned adrift
-stripped to the skin. On the contrary, Charles VI issued orders to
-the prevot of Paris and his provincial governors, instructing them to
-see that no harm come to the Jews, either in their persons or their
-chattels, and that they cross the frontier safely. Time was also
-allowed them up to the 3d November to collect their debts. They did not
-leave France until the end of 1394 or the beginning of the following
-year. To some of the nobility and towns the expulsion was not a welcome
-measure. Thus, the Count de Foix wished at all hazards to retain the
-community of Pamier, and had to be forced by royal officers to expel
-the Jews. In Toulouse twelve Jewish families, and in the vicinity
-seven more, remained behind, so that they must have received special
-indulgences. Jews also remained in the provinces not directly dependent
-on the French crown--in the Dauphine, in Provence proper, and in
-Arles, these being fiefs of the German empire. The flourishing seaport,
-Marseilles, possessed a Jewish community for a long time after the
-expulsion. Even the popes of Avignon tolerated Jews in Avignon and
-Carpentras, the chief towns of their small ecclesiastical province
-of Venaissin; and here they remained until very recent times, using
-a ritual of their own, which differed from that of their Spanish and
-their French brethren. The papacy had now little to fear from the
-helpless, enfeebled Jews; hence, doubtless, this parade of toleration.
-
-The exiles who failed to find an asylum in the tolerant principalities
-of France emigrated to Germany and Italy; only a few directed their
-steps to Spain, formerly the most hospitable refuge for persecuted
-Jews. Since the massacres of 1391 that country had become a purgatory
-to the native Jews, and so long as foreign Jews could find a shelter
-elsewhere, they naturally avoided its frontiers. French communities
-migrated in a body to Piedmont, and settled in the towns of Asti,
-Fossano, and Moncalvo, where they could maintain unchanged their old
-synagogue ritual. The fate of the larger number of the French exiles
-may be described in the words of Amos: "As if a man did flee from
-a lion, and a bear met him; or went into the house, and leaned his
-hand on the wall, and a serpent bit him." Almost everywhere they were
-met with a storm of barbarity, not unfrequently stirred up against
-them by baptized Jews. In Germany an apostate named Pessach, who,
-with Christianity, had adopted the name of Peter, brought serious
-accusations against his brethren in race, with a view to bringing
-about another persecution. To the usual charges that the Jews called
-Jesus the crucified or the hanged, and that they cursed the Christian
-clergy in one of their prayers, Pessach-Peter added others. He stated
-that an abusive allusion to Jesus was contained in the sublime Alenu
-prayer, which pictures the future reign of God on earth, and he made
-other lying and ludicrous charges. The result was that a large number
-of the Jews of Prague were arrested and imprisoned (August 3d, 1399).
-Among them was the foremost and, perhaps, only really learned German
-Jew of the Middle Ages, Lipmann (Tab-Yomi) of Muehlhausen, a scholar
-accomplished alike in Biblical and Talmudical lore, who had read not
-only Karaite authors, but also the New Testament in a Latin version.
-The clergy called upon him to answer Pessach-Peter's charges. His
-defense was forcible, but seems to have had little effect, for on
-the day Emperor Wenceslaus was deposed, and Rupert of the Palatinate
-elected his successor (August 22d, 1400), seventy-seven Jews were
-executed, and three weeks later three more led to the stake.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-JEWISH APOSTATES AND THE DISPUTATION AT TORTOSA.
-
- The Marranos--The Satirists--Pero Ferrus of Alcala, Diego
- de Valencia, and Villasandino--Astruc Raimuch and Solomon
- Bonfed--Paul de Santa Maria and his Zealous Campaign against
- the Jews--Joshua Ibn-Vives--Profiat Duran (Efodi)--Meir
- Alguades--The Philosophy of Crescas--Death of Henry III of
- Castile and Unfavorable Change in the Position of the Jews--
- Messianic Dreams of the Kabbalists--Jews seek an Asylum in
- Northern Africa--Simon Duran--Geronimo de Santa Fe, Vincent
- Ferrer and Benedict XIII--Anti-Jewish Edict of Juan II--
- Special Jewish Costume--Conversion of Jews owing to Ferrer's
- Violent Efforts--Disputation at Tortosa--The Jewish Spokesmen
- at the Conference--Incidents of the Meeting--Geronimo
- instigates the Publication of a Bull for the Burning of the
- Talmud--Pope Martin V befriends the Jews.
-
-1391-1420 C.E.
-
-
-The baptized Jews who had abandoned their faith during the terrible
-persecution of 1391 became a source of considerable trouble to their
-Spanish brethren. They had embraced the cross only to save their lives,
-or the lives of those dear to them; for, surely, they had found no
-convincing demonstration of the truth of the Christian religion in
-the violence of its missionaries, or in the death agonies of their
-brethren in race who had perished rather than apostatize. Dazed and
-broken-hearted, these forced converts (Anusim) to Christianity felt
-more intense antipathy to their new religion than when they had been
-openly opposed to it. It was natural for them to resolve to take the
-first opportunity of casting away their disguise, and returning to
-Judaism with increased zeal. Many of these new Christians emigrated to
-the neighboring Moorish countries; to Granada or across the straits
-to Morocco, Tunis, or Fez, where the people, wiser and more tolerant
-than Christian Europe, gladly opened their doors to a wealthy and
-industrious race. The majority, unable to leave Spanish territory,
-yet averse to wholly discarding their ancient faith, joined in Jewish
-ceremonies and celebrations whilst outwardly appearing Christians.
-The kings of Castile, Aragon and Majorca, who had disapproved of
-conversions by mob violence, allowed the Jews to do as they pleased.
-The authorities either did not or would not see their relapse into
-Judaism, and the Inquisition had not yet been established in Spain.
-These forced converts gradually formed themselves into a peculiar
-class, outwardly Christians, at heart Jews. By the populace, who
-nicknamed them Marranos, or "The Damned," they were regarded with
-more distrust and hatred than the openly observant Jews, not because
-of their secret fidelity to Judaism, but on account of their descent
-and inborn intelligence, energy, and skill. Baptized Jews, who had
-been glad to disencumber themselves of their Judaism, shared in these
-feelings of aversion. They were the worldlings who valued wealth, rank,
-and luxury above religion, or the over-educated whose philosophy had
-led them to skepticism, and whose selfishness induced them to welcome
-a change which brought them out of the narrow confines of a small
-community, and opened up a wider world to them. Their hearts had never
-been with Judaism, and they had adhered to it only out of respect
-or a certain compunction. To them, forced baptism was a relief from
-chafing fetters, a welcome coercion to overcome scruples which had
-always sat lightly upon them. For their own advantage they simulated
-devotion to Christianity, but were on that account neither better nor
-more religious men. The unscrupulous among them found special pleasure
-in the persecution of their former religion and its followers. To
-gratify their malice, they brought charges against rabbis and other
-representative Jews, or any member of the community, thus endangering
-the existence of the whole body of Jews in the country. It was bad
-enough that the latter had been robbed of so many able and learned men
---physicians, authors, poets--and that the church had been enriched
-by their wealth and intelligence; but these very forces were used to
-inflict further mischief on the Jews that had remained steadfast.
-Knowing the faults of their former brethren, the converts could easily
-attack them. Don Pero Ferrus, a baptized Jew, made the community and
-rabbis of Alcala the target for his ridicule. In a poem he represents
-himself exhausted from want of sleep finding repose at last in the
-synagogue of this town, when suddenly he is disturbed, and scared away
-without mercy by "Jews with long beards and slovenly garments come
-thither for early morning prayer." A sharp rejoinder to this effort of
-Ferrus' "buffoon tongue" was put forth by a Jewish poet in the name
-of the Alcala community. Spanish poetry reaped considerable advantage
-from these passages at arms. Verse, up to that period starched, solemn,
-and stately as the punctilious ceremonial of the Madrid court, in the
-hands of Judaeo-Christian satirists acquired the flexibility, wit and
-merriment of neo-Hebraic poetry at its best. This tone and style were
-gradually adopted by Christian poets, who borrowed expressions from
-Jewish writers to give point to their epigrams. Not only the apostate,
-the monk, Diego de Valencia, used Hebrew words in lampoons on the Jews,
-but the same practice was adopted with surprising dexterity by the
-Christian satirist, Alfonso Alvarez de Villasandino, the "poet prince"
-of his day. A malicious critic might have been inclined to say that
-Spanish poetry was in process of being Judaized.
-
-A few of the new-Christians showed as active a zeal in the propagation
-of Christianity as if they had been born Dominicans, or as if they felt
-isolated in their new faith among the old Christians, and yearned for
-the companionship of their former friends. A newly-baptized physician,
-Astruc Raimuch, of Fraga, who, as a Jew, had been a pillar of
-orthodoxy, exerted himself to make converts, taking to himself the name
-of Francisco God-flesh (Dios-Carne). He spread his snares particularly
-with a view to entrapping one of his young friends. A fluent writer of
-Hebrew, Astruc-Francisco drew up a letter in that language, dwelling on
-the decline of Judaism and enthusiastically propounding the dogmas of
-Christianity. His applications of Biblical texts to the doctrines of
-the Trinity, Original Sin, Redemption, and the Lord's Supper, appear
-almost droll in Hebrew. His friend's answer was meek and evasive, every
-word carefully weighed to avoid offending the delicate sensibilities
-of the church and its zealous servants. More spirited was the reply
-of the satirical poet, Solomon ben Reuben Bonfed, who in rhymed prose
-set himself to confute Astruc-Francisco's arguments with unsparing
-incisiveness. Apologizing in his introduction for interfering between
-two friends, he proceeded to point out that as a Jew the questions
-discussed concerned him nearly, whilst the misstatements made rendered
-it impossible for him to remain silent. Solomon Bonfed examined
-somewhat minutely the dogmas of the Incarnation, Original Sin, and
-Transubstantiation, showing them to be irrational and untenable. He
-justly said: "You twist and distort the Bible text to establish the
-Trinity. Had you a Quaternity, you would demonstrate it quite as
-strikingly and convincingly from the books of the Old Testament."
-
-Of all the Jews baptized in 1391, however, none inflicted so much
-injury on his former brethren as Rabbi Solomon Levi of Burgos (born
-1351-1352, died 1435), who as a Christian rose to very important
-ecclesiastical and political dignities under the name of Paul
-Burgensis, or de Santa Maria. Previous to his change of creed he
-had been a rabbi, and he was well versed in Biblical, Talmudical,
-and Rabbinical literature. As a Jew he was extremely orthodox and
-punctilious, passing in his own circle for a pillar of the faith. His
-nature was, however, shrewd and calculating. Ambitious and vain to the
-last degree, he soon began to regard as too narrow his sphere of action
-within the walls of the college, which during a long period counted him
-amongst its students and teachers. He longed for a life of bustling
-activity. To obtain a state appointment, he sought access to court, and
-began to live like a grandee, with equipage and horses and numerous
-retinue. It was his ambition to become a Jewish Almoxarif or even to
-obtain a higher appointment. His occupations bringing him into daily
-contact with Christians, and frequently involving him in religious
-controversies, he devoted some attention to church literature, in
-order to be able to make a display of learning. The massacres of 1391
-dissipated his last hope of obtaining high preferment as a Jew, and
-he consequently resolved, in his fortieth year, to be baptized. To
-derive the best advantage from his conversion, the new Christian,
-Paul de Santa Maria, caused it to be understood that he had embraced
-Christianity willingly, as a result of the convincing arguments put
-forth in the theological writings of the schoolman Thomas Aquinas. The
-Jews received such protestations with distrust. Knowing him well, they
-did not scruple to ascribe his conversion to a craving for rank and
-power. After his change of creed, his family, wife and sons, renounced
-him.
-
-For a commoner, the only road to high office lay through the church.
-Solomon-Paul knew this well, and at once proceeded to Paris and
-attended the University, where he pursued theology. His knowledge
-of Hebrew gave him a great advantage, and helped him to distinguish
-himself. It was not long before the quondam rabbi became a duly
-ordained Catholic priest. Then he betook himself to the papal court
-at Avignon, where the haughty, obstinate, and proselytizing cardinal,
-Pedro de Luna, reigned as anti-pope under the title of Benedict XIII.
-Here, during the stormy church schism, favorable opportunities for
-intrigue and personal advancement presented themselves. Paul won the
-pope's favor by his shrewdness, zeal, and eloquence. He was appointed
-archdeacon of Trevinjo and canon of Seville, his first steps on the
-ladder of the Catholic hierarchy. He abandoned himself to the most
-ambitious dreams: he might become a bishop, a cardinal, and why not
-the pope? The times were propitious. He boasted that he was descended
-from the most ancient and the noblest branch of the Hebrew race, the
-tribe of Levi, the same that had given birth to Mary, the mother of
-Jesus. He was not an ordinary priest sprung from the people, but had
-ancestors bound to be acknowledged and distinguished by the church. On
-the recommendation of the pope, he was later on overwhelmed with honors
-and favors by the king of Castile, Don Henry III, and his ambition was
-satisfied.
-
-The apostasy of so respected a rabbi as Solomon Burgensis not only
-created the greatest astonishment among Jews, but filled them with
-anxiety. Would this example not find imitators in a time of so much
-trouble and temptation? Would it not bias waverers, or at least
-encourage pretending Christians to persevere in the course begun? The
-prevailing disquietude was increased when it was found that after
-his own conversion Paul considered it his duty to convert his former
-co-religionists. To this end he left no stone unturned. With voice
-and pen he assailed Judaism, seeking his weapons in Jewish literature
-itself. Not long after his conversion he addressed a letter to his
-former acquaintance, Joseph (Jose) Orabuena, physician in ordinary
-to King Charles III of Navarre, and chief rabbi of the Navarrese
-communities, in which he stated that he acknowledged and honored Jesus
-as the Messiah whose advent had been foretold by the prophets, and
-invited Orabuena to follow his example. To another chief rabbi, Don
-Meir Alguades, physician in ordinary to the Castilian king, Don Henry
-III, Paul de Santa Maria addressed a Hebrew satire in prose and verse,
-in which he ridiculed the innocent celebration of the Jewish feast of
-Purim. As if grudging the Jews the moderate pleasures in which they
-indulged during this festival, he exaggerated their love of drink, and
-boasted of his own sobriety. Paul evinces in this satire considerable
-skill in handling the new-Hebrew language, but, notwithstanding his
-opportunities, he exhibits little wit.
-
-As soon as he had acquired a position at the papal court at Avignon, he
-devoted himself to calumniating the Jews with a view to bringing about
-new persecutions. His purpose became so obvious that the cardinal of
-Pampeluna himself, and other ecclesiastics, ordered him to desist. It
-is true the Jews had to pay dearly for his silence. He also intrigued
-against Chasdai Crescas. So far did this apostate carry his enmity
-to Judaism that he advised the king, Don Henry III, to abstain from
-employing both Jews and new-Christians in state offices. Did he wish
-to render impossible the rivalry of some fellow-Hebrew, his superior
-in adroitness? In his writings Paul de Santa Maria exhibited as much
-hatred of Judaism as of Jews. While the Franciscan monk, Nicholas
-de Lyra, a born Christian, held up the works of Jewish commentators
-like Rashi as models of simple exegesis, the former rabbi found
-every observation of a Rabbinical writer insipid, nonsensical, and
-scandalous. On the other hand, the most ridiculous commentary of a
-church writer was to him a lofty, unsurpassable work.
-
-Thoughtful Jews were not slow to recognize their bitterest foe in
-this new-Christian, and they prepared for a severe struggle with him,
-notwithstanding that their choice of weapons was limited. Christians
-were not only free to say what they pleased in demonstration and
-defense of their doctrines, but could appeal to the summary authority
-of the sword and the dungeon. Jews were forced to all kinds of
-circumlocution and ambiguity to avoid provoking the violence of their
-adversaries. The gallant stand of a mere handful of Jews against power
-and arrogance should excite the admiration of all whose sympathies are
-not with victorious tyranny, but with struggling right.
-
-The campaign against Paul de Santa Maria was opened by a young man,
-Joshua ben Joseph Ibn-Vives of Lorca (Allorqui), a physician and an
-Arabic scholar, who had formerly sat at the feet of the renegade
-rabbi. In an humble epistle, as though a docile pupil were addressing
-an illustrious master, Joshua Allorqui administered many a delicate
-reproof to his apostate teacher, and at the same time, by his naive
-doubts, dealt destructive blows at the fundamental doctrines of
-Christianity. He observes in his introduction that the conversion of
-his beloved teacher had to him more than to others been a source of
-astonishment and reflection, as his example had been a main support
-of his own religious belief. He was at a loss to conceive the motives
-of the sudden change. He could not think that he had been led away by
-desire for worldly distinction, "for I well remember," he says, "how,
-surrounded by riches and attendants, thou didst yearn for thy former
-humble state with its life of retirement and study, and how it was thy
-wont to speak of thy high position as empty mockery of happiness." Nor
-could he suppose that Paul's Jewish convictions had been disturbed
-by philosophic doubt, as up to the moment of his baptism he had
-conscientiously observed all the ceremonial laws, and had known how to
-discriminate between the kernel of philosophic truth which harmonizes
-with religion and the pernicious shell which so often passes for the
-real teaching. Could it be that the sanguinary persecution of the Jews
-had led him to doubt the possibility of the enduring power of Judaism?
-But even this theory was untenable, for Paul could not be unaware
-of the fact that only a minority of Jews live under Christian rule,
-that the larger numbers sojourn in Asia, and enjoy a certain degree
-of independence; so that if it pleased God to allow the communities
-in Christian lands to be extirpated, the Jewish race would not by any
-means disappear from the face of the earth. There remained, continued
-Joshua Vives of Lorca, the assumption that Paul had carefully studied
-Christianity, and had come to the conclusion that its dogmas were well
-founded. He begged him, therefore, to impart to him the convictions at
-which he had arrived, and thus dissipate the doubts which he (Joshua)
-still entertained as to the truth of Christianity. Allorqui then
-detailed the nature of his doubts, covertly but forcibly attacking the
-Christian system. Every sentence in this epistle was calculated to cut
-the Jew-hating new-Christian to the quick. The evasive and embarrassed
-reply, which Paul indited later on, clearly indicated how he had winced
-under this attack.
-
-The philosopher, Chasdai Crescas, also came forward in gallant defense
-of the religion of his fathers. He composed (1396) a polemical treatise
-(Tratado), in which he tested philosophically the Christian articles of
-faith, and demonstrated their untenableness. This work was addressed
-to Christians more than to Jews, and was particularly intended for the
-perusal of Spaniards of high rank whose friendship Chasdai Crescas
-enjoyed. Hence it was written not in Hebrew but in Spanish, which
-the author employed with ease, and its tone was calm and moderate.
-Chasdai Crescas set forth the unintelligibility of the doctrines of
-the Fall, the Redemption, the Trinity, the Incarnation, the Immaculate
-Conception, and Transubstantiation, and examined the value of baptism,
-the coming of Jesus, and the relation of the New Testament to the Old,
-with dispassionate deliberation, as if he did not know that he was
-dealing with questions which might at any moment light the fires of an
-auto-da-fe.
-
-At about the same time an accomplished Marrano, who had relapsed
-into Judaism, published a pungent attack on Christianity and the
-new-Christians. In the entire history of Judaeo-Christian controversy no
-such stinging satire had been produced on the Jewish side as that now
-issued by the physician, astronomer, historical student, and grammarian
-Profiat Duran. During the bloody persecution of 1391 in Catalonia,
-Profiat Duran, otherwise Isaac ben Moses, or, as he called himself in
-his works, Efodi (Ephodaeus), had been forced to simulate conversion
-to Christianity. He was joined by his friend David Bonet Buen-Giorno.
-Both resolved at a convenient opportunity to abandon their hated
-mask and emigrate to Palestine, where they could freely acknowledge
-Judaism. Their affairs being arranged, Profiat Duran traveled to a
-seaport town in the south of France, and there awaited his friend.
-The latter, in the meantime, was sought out by or came across the
-Jew-hating apostate, Solomon Paul de Santa Maria, and was prevailed
-upon to remain a Christian. What was Profiat Duran's astonishment when
-he received a letter announcing, with much exultant vaporing, the
-definite acknowledgment of Christianity by En Bonet, who exhorted him
-also to remain in the pale of his adopted faith. The letter contained
-an enthusiastic panegyric of Paul de Santa Maria, who had been taken
-into the favor of the king of Castile. Profiat Duran could not remain
-silent. In reply, he inflicted punishment on his friend, and more
-particularly on the proselytizing Paul, in an epistle characterized
-by the keenest irony, which has not yet lost its sting. It pretends
-to assent to everything advanced by Bonet, and to confirm him in his
-resolve to remain a Christian. "Be not ye like your fathers" (Altehi
-ka-Abothecha) is the refrain throughout, and so artfully is this
-admonition employed that Christians used it (under the title Alteca
-Boteca) as an apology for Christianity. Whilst thus pretending to
-criticise the errors of the older faith, Profiat Duran dwells on the
-Christian dogmas, naively describing them in their most reprehensible
-form. He concentrates on the weaknesses of Christianity the full light
-of reason, Scriptural teaching and philosophic deduction, apparently
-with no desire to change his friend's intention. A portion of the
-satire is directed against the Jew-hater Paul de Santa Maria, upon
-whom Bonet had bestowed unstinted praise. "Thou art of opinion that he
-may succeed in becoming pope, but thou dost not inform me whether he
-will go to Rome, or remain at Avignon"--a cutting reference to the
-papal schism distracting the church. "Thou extollest him for having
-made efforts to free Jewish women and children from the obligation of
-wearing the Jew badge. Take the glad tidings to the women and children.
-For myself, I have been told that he preached mischief against the
-Jews, and that the cardinal of Pampeluna was compelled to order him
-to be silent. Thou art of opinion that he, thy teacher, will soon
-receive the miter or a cardinal's hat. Rejoice, for then thou also
-must acquire honors, and wilt become a priest or a Levite." Towards
-the end Profiat Duran changes irony into a tone of seriousness: he
-prays his former friend not to bear as a Christian the name of his
-respected father who, had he been alive, would sooner have had no son
-than one faithless to his religion. As it is, his soul in Paradise
-will bewail the faithlessness of his son. This satirical epistle was
-circulated as a pamphlet. Its author sent copies not only to his former
-friend, but also to the physician of the king of Castile, the chief
-rabbi, Don Meir Alguades. So telling was the effect produced, that the
-clergy, as soon as they discovered its satirical character, made it the
-subject of judicial inquiry, and committed it to the flames. At the
-request of Chasdai Crescas, Profiat Duran wrote another anti-Christian
-work, not, however, a satire, but in the grave language of historical
-investigation. In this essay he showed, from his intimate acquaintance
-with the New Testament and the literature of the church, how in course
-of time Christianity had degenerated.
-
-Favored and promoted by the anti-pope, Benedict XIII, of Avignon, Paul
-of Burgos rose higher and higher; he became bishop of Carthagena,
-chancellor of Castile and privy counselor to the king, Don Henry III.
-His malice did not succeed in prejudicing the king against the Jews,
-or inducing him to bar them from state employment. Don Henry had two
-Jewish physicians, in whom he reposed especial confidence. One, Don
-Meir Alguades, an astronomer and philosopher, he appointed, perhaps in
-imitation of Portugal, to the chief rabbinate of the various Castilian
-communities. He was always in the king's train, and it is probable that
-to some extent he influenced him favorably towards his co-religionists.
-The other was Don Moses Zarzel (Carcal), who celebrated in rich Spanish
-verse the long wished for birth of an heir to the Castilian throne,
-borrowing the beauties of the neo-Hebraic poetry to do honor to the
-newly-born prince, in whose hands, he prophesied, the various states
-of the Pyrenean Peninsula would be united. The calm, as between two
-storms, which the Spanish Jews enjoyed during the reign of Don Henry
-was favorable to the production of a few literary fruits, almost the
-last of any importance brought forth in Spain. None of these works was
-epoch-making; they were useful, however, in keeping alive the spirit
-of better times, and in preventing the treasures of Jewish literature
-from being forgotten. Profiat Duran managed to make people forget
-his baptism and to settle down quietly in Spain or Perpignan, where
-he commentated Maimuni's philosophy, and some of Ibn-Ezra's works.
-He also composed a mathematical and calendarial essay (Chesheb-Efod)
-and an historical account of the persecutions to which his race
-had been subjected since the dispersion. His best work is a Hebrew
-grammar ("Maase Efod," written about 1403), in which he summarizes the
-results of older writers, rectifies their errors, and even attempts to
-formulate the principles of Hebrew syntax.
-
-A production of more than common merit was written by Chasdai Crescas,
-now on the brink of the grave, his spirits shattered by persecution. He
-was a profound, comprehensive thinker, whose mind never lost itself in
-details, but was forever striving to comprehend the totality of things.
-His scheme for a work treating, in the manner of Maimuni, of all phases
-and aspects of Judaism, investigating the ideas and laws out of which
-Jewish teaching had gradually developed, and reharmonizing the details
-with the whole where the connection had ceased to be apparent, bears
-witness to the extraordinary range of his learning and the perspicacity
-of his mind. The work was to be at once a guide to Talmudical study
-and a practical handbook. Death appears to have prevented the
-accomplishment of this gigantic enterprise, only the philosophic
-portion, or introduction, being completed. In this introduction Chasdai
-Crescas deals, on the one hand, with the principles of universal
-religion, the existence of God, His omniscience and providence,
-human free-will, the design of the universe, and, on the other, with
-the fundamental truths of Judaism, the doctrines of the creation,
-immortality, and the Messiah.
-
-Crescas was less dominated by the Aristotelian bias of mediaeval
-philosophy than his predecessors. It had lost its halo for him; he
-perceived its weaknesses more clearly than others, and probed them more
-deeply. With bold hands he tore down the supports of the vast edifice
-of theory constructed by Maimuni on Aristotelian grounds to demonstrate
-the existence of God and His relation to the universe, and, conversant
-with the whole method of scholastic philosophy, he combated it with
-destructive force.
-
-While the philosophy of his day appeared to him thus vague and
-illusory, he considered the foundations of Judaism unassailable, and
-set himself to show the futility of the criticisms of the former. The
-acknowledgment of Divine omniscience led him to the daring statement
-that man in his actions is not quite free, that everything is the
-necessary result of a preceding occurrence, and that every cause, back
-to the very first, is bound to determine the character of the final
-action. The human will does not follow blind choice, but is controlled
-by a chain of antecedent circumstances and causes. To what extent can
-the doctrine of reward and punishment be admitted, if the will is not
-free? Chasdai Crescas' answer to this is that reward and punishment
-wait on intentions, not on actions. He who, in purity of heart, wishes
-to accomplish good--which must, of course, necessarily follow--
-deserves to be rewarded, as the man who willingly promotes evil,
-deserves punishment. The highest good to which man can aspire, and the
-end of all creation, is spiritual perfection, or bliss everlasting,
-not to be obtained, as the philosophers imagine, by filling the mind
-with metaphysical theories, but only through the active love of God.
-This is the substance of all religion and particularly of Judaism. From
-this point of view it may with justice be said that "the world was
-created for the sake of the Torah," for the aim of the Law is to lead
-to immortality by means of ideas and commandments and the guidance of
-thoughts and actions.
-
-Chasdai Crescas, the first to distinguish between universal religion
-and specific forms, such as Judaism and Christianity, propounded,
-deviating from Maimuni's system, only eight peculiarly Jewish tenets.
-His just objection to Maimuni's thirteen articles of faith was that
-they were either too many or too few, inasmuch as they blended
-indiscriminately fundamental truths common to all religions, and
-teachings peculiar to Judaism.
-
-Together with Profiat Duran and Chasdai Crescas, Don Meir Alguades,
-the Castilian chief rabbi, appeared, in the brief interval between
-two bloody persecutions in Spain, as a writer of philosophic works.
-He was not an independent inquirer; he merely translated the ethics
-of Aristotle (1405, in collaboration with Benveniste Ibn-Labi) into
-Hebrew, making the work accessible to Jews, who, in practical life,
-lived up to its principles better than the Greeks, who produced them,
-or the Christians, who, in the pride of faith and church doctrine,
-considered themselves above the necessity of conforming to the
-requirements of morality.
-
-Throughout the reign of Don Henry III of Castile the life of the Jews
-was tolerable. The young but vigorous monarch severely punished Fernan
-Martinez, the prime mover in the massacres of 1391, as a warning
-against further excesses. He permitted the Jews to acquire land,
-renewed the law of his ancestor, Alfonso XI, and relieved his Jewish
-tax-farmers and finance administrators from restrictions. As soon
-as he died (the end of 1406) the affairs of the Jews again took an
-unfavorable turn, foreshadowing unhappy times. The heir to the crown,
-Juan II, was a child, barely two years old. The regency devolved on
-the queen-mother, Catalina (Catherine) of Lancaster, a capricious,
-arrogant and bigoted young woman, who imagined that she ruled, while
-she was herself ruled by her various favorites. The co-regent, Don
-Ferdinand, later king of Aragon, who was intelligent and kind, allowed
-himself to be guided by the clergy. By his side in the council of
-state sat the apostate rabbi, Solomon _alias_ Paul de Santa Maria,
-another and more mischievous Elisha-Acher, in whose eyes Judaism was
-an abomination, and every Jew a stumbling-block. The deceased king,
-Don Henry III, had appointed him executor of his will and tutor to
-his heir; he consequently had an influential voice in the council of
-the regency. What a prospect for the Jews of Castile! It was not long
-before they were made to feel the hostile spirit of the court. First it
-exhibited itself in attempts to humiliate the more notable Jews who had
-intercourse with the court circle and the grandees of the kingdom, and
-occupied positions of distinction. The intention was to dismiss them
-from these positions with the reminder that they belonged to a despised
-caste.
-
-An edict was issued (October 25th, 1408), in the name of the infant
-king, reviving the anti-Jewish statutes of the code of Alfonso the
-Wise. "Whereas the exercise of authority by Jews may conduce to the
-prejudice of the Christian faith," their occupation of posts in which
-they might possess such authority was forbidden for all future time.
-Every Jew permitting himself to be invested with official functions,
-either by a nobleman or a municipality, was to be fined twice the
-amount of the revenue of such post, and, if his fortune did not suffice
-to make up the required amount, it would be confiscated, and the
-delinquent become liable to a punishment of fifty lashes. A Christian
-appointing a Jew to a post of influence would also be punished with
-a fine. To insure the working of the edict, it was enacted that the
-informer and the court of law concerned in a case should secure each
-one-third of the confiscated estates. Officials were charged to make
-the edict known everywhere, and carefully to watch that its injunctions
-were carried out. It is impossible not to suspect the hand of Paul de
-Santa Maria in this decree. No one knew better than he the strong and
-the weak points in the character of the Spanish Jews, and he doubtless
-calculated that Jewish notables, in danger of losing their official
-employment and high social position, would go over to Christianity,
-while the faithful, excluded from intercourse with Christian society
-and from participation in the public life of the country, would suffer
-a decline similar to that of the German Jews.
-
-At the same time he vented his hate on Meir Alguades, the physician
-of the dead king. The queen-regent had no cause to injure this Jewish
-notable; only Paul could desire his ruin, because he was the mainstay
-of his opponents and the leader of those who held him up to contempt.
-With the object of procuring his downfall, a vindictive accusation
-was trumped up against him. While the queen-mother, with the infant
-king, was staying at Segovia, some priests charged a Jew of the town
-with having bought a consecrated host from the sacristan, in order
-to blaspheme it. They further stated that the holy wafer had worked
-such terrible wonders while in the possession of the Jew, that in fear
-and trembling he had delivered it up to the prior of a monastery.
-Whether this story was fabricated, or whether there was a grain of
-truth in a bushel of fiction, it is impossible to say; it sufficed,
-however, to attract the serious attention of the bishop, Velasquez de
-Tordesillas, who caused a number of Jews to be arrested as accomplices
-in the crime, among them Don Meir Alguades. Criminal proceedings were
-formally commenced by order of the queen-regent, and Alguades and
-his fellow-prisoners were subjected to torture, and confessed their
-guilt. It is stated that in his agony Meir Alguades made a confession
-of another kind--that the king, Henry III, had come by his death
-at his hands. Although everybody knew that the king had been ailing
-from his youth, Don Meir--who must have been specially interrogated
-while under torture as to whether he had poisoned the king--was put
-to death in the most inhuman manner. He was torn limb from limb. The
-same fate befell the other prisoners. Still not satisfied, the bishop
-of Segovia accused some Jews of having bribed his cook to poison his
-food, and they also were put to death. At about this time one of the
-synagogues in Segovia was transformed into a church.
-
-The troubled times, projecting shadows of a still more unhappy future,
-produced the melancholy phenomenon of another Messianic frenzy. Again
-it arose in the minds of mystics. The Zohar having adroitly been raised
-to the dignity of an approved authority, the Kabbala daily acquired
-more influence, although it was not studied in proportion to the
-zeal with which its authority was advocated. Three Kabbalists were
-particularly active in exciting the emotions and turning the heads
-of the people--Abraham of Granada, Shem Tob ben Joseph, and Moses
-Botarel. The first composed (between 1391 and 1409) a Kabbalistic work,
-a farrago of strange names of the Deity and the angels, of transposed
-letters, and jugglery with vowels and accents. Abraham of Granada
-had the hardihood to teach that those who could not apprehend God
-by Kabbalistic methods belonged to the weak in faith, were ignorant
-sinners, and like the depraved and the apostate were overlooked by
-God, and not found worthy of His special providence. He thought that
-the relinquishment of their religion by cultured Jews was explained by
-their fatal application to scientific study, and their contempt for the
-Kabbala. On the other hand, he professed to see in the persecutions of
-1391, and in the conversion of so many prominent Jews to Christianity,
-the tokens of the Messianic age, the suffering that must precede it,
-and the approach of the redemption. Shem Tob ben Joseph Ibn-Shem Tob
-(died 1430) accused the Jewish philosophers, Maimuni, Gersonides, and
-others, of seducing the people to heresy and infidelity, and with
-being the real cause of apostasy in troubled times. In a work entitled
-"Emunoth" he made violent attacks on Jewish thinkers and philosophic
-studies generally, and taught that the salvation of Israel lies in the
-Kabbala, the oldest Jewish tradition, and the genuine, pure truth. The
-entire book is composed of grave charges against the more enlightened
-school of Jewish thinkers, and panegyrics of Kabbalistic nonsense.
-
-These two men, Abraham of Granada and Shem Tob, though narrow-minded,
-were sincere, differing in this respect from Moses Botarel (or
-Botarelo), also a Spaniard, from Cisneros, in Castile, who pursued his
-course with fraudulent intent. He gave out that he was a thaumaturge
-and prophet; he announced himself even as the Messiah. He prophesied
-that in the spring month of 1393 the Messianic age would be ushered
-in by extraordinary marvels. Later on he wrote a work full of lies
-and delusions. In his pride and boastfulness, he addressed a circular
-letter to all the rabbis of Israel, declaring that he was in a position
-to solve all doubts, and throw light on all mysteries, that he was
-the chief of the great Synhedrin, and a great deal more in the same
-charlatanic strain.
-
-As in the days of the oppression by the Visigothic kings, an asylum for
-persecuted Jews was formed on that portion of the African coast facing
-Spain. Many of the north African towns, such as Algiers, Miliana,
-Constantine, Buja, Oran, Tenes, and Tlemcen, were filled with Jews
-fleeing from the massacres of 1391, and with new-Christians anxious to
-get rid of the Christianity which they had been forced to embrace,
-but which they hated cordially. Almost daily there came fresh troops
-of refugees from all parts of Spain and Majorca. They transplanted
-to their new fatherland their intelligence, wealth, industry, and
-commercial enterprise. The Mahometan Berber princes, then more tolerant
-and humane than the Christians, received them without imposing a poll
-tax. At first the Mahometan population grumbled a little at so sudden
-and considerable an increase in the number of inhabitants, fearing
-that the price of provisions would be raised. When, however, the
-narrow-mindedness and selfishness of their complaints were pointed out
-to them by an intelligent kadi they were satisfied, and the Jews were
-allowed to settle in their midst in peace. The small Berber communities
-formed since the cessation of the Almohade persecution a century
-before, acquired greater importance through this immigration. The
-new-comers preponderated in numbers over the native Jews, so that the
-latter, to a certain extent, were forced to adopt the Spanish communal
-organization and the Sephardic ritual. The Spaniards, in fact, became
-the leading element in the old African communities.
-
-The distinguished rabbi, Isaac ben Sheshet-Barfat, who had escaped
-from Spain and settled in Algiers, was recognized by the king of
-Tlemcen as chief rabbi and judge of all the communities. This he owed
-to the influence of one of his admirers, Saul Astruc Cohen, a popular
-physician and an accomplished man, who not only practiced his art
-gratuitously, but spent his fortune in relieving both Mahometan and
-Jewish poor. In the name of the king the local rabbis were forbidden
-to assume clerical or judicial functions without the authority of
-the chief rabbi, Isaac ben Sheshet. This in no way detracted from
-the esteem in which Ben Sheshet was held, and applications for the
-decision of difficult questions continued to pour in upon him. In
-Algiers he continued to oppose wrong-doing with the conscientiousness
-and impartiality that had always characterized him. Among the members
-of his community was a mischievous personage (Isaac Bonastruc?), who
-had considerable influence with the Algerian authorities. Actuated
-by self-interest he was desirous of stopping the daily increasing
-immigration of Marranos, and to this end persuaded the kadi to
-impose a tax of one doubloon on every immigrant. Finding that troops
-of fugitives continued to arrive, he set himself to work upon the
-selfishness of the community, so that they might oppose any further
-influx of their brethren. Fifty-five new-Christians, who had recanted,
-from Valencia, Barcelona, and Majorca, were waiting to land in the
-harbor of Algiers, but were refused permission by Jews. This was
-tantamount to throwing them on the mercy of Christian executioners.
-Such selfishness and injustice the chief rabbi, Isaac ben Sheshet,
-could not tolerate, and he laid the ban on the heartless Jews, who
-tried to escape the punishment. So determined was his attitude that,
-with the assistance of Astruc Cohen and his brother, the Marranos were
-ultimately brought safe to land. In Africa Ben Sheshet-Barfat worked
-for nearly twenty years, promoting the welfare of his co-religionists
-and the interests of religion and morality. His declining years were
-embittered by the persistent attacks of a young rabbi, Simon ben Zemach
-Duran, an able Talmudist, who had emigrated from Majorca.
-
-Ben Sheshet was succeeded on his death by Simon Duran (born 1361, died
-1444). The community of Algiers elected him on condition that he did
-not seek a ratification of his appointment from the king, probably
-because the authority derived by his predecessor from the royal
-confirmation had been too uncontrolled. Simon Duran, an accomplished
-mathematician and physician, was the first Spanish-Jewish rabbi to
-take pay. He publicly excused himself for doing so, on the ground of
-his necessitous circumstances. During the persecutions in Majorca a
-portion of his large fortune had been lost, and the remainder had been
-sacrificed in bribing the informers who threatened to deliver him as a
-Judaizing Christian to the Dominican Moloch. He had arrived in Algiers
-almost a beggar, and the healing art, by which he had hoped to earn a
-subsistence, had brought him nothing, physicians enjoying but little
-consideration among the Berbers. Subsequently Simon Duran justified
-the payment of rabbis from the Talmud. Were the abbots, bishops, and
-princes of the church equally conscientious?
-
-As if the Jews of Spain had not had enough enemies in the poor,
-indolent burghers and nobles, who regarded their opulence with so much
-jealousy, in the clergy, who cloaked their immorality with zeal for
-the propaganda of the faith, or in the upstart converts, who sought
-to disguise their Jewish origin by a show of hatred of their former
-brethren, there arose at about the beginning of the fifteenth century
-three new Jew-haters of the bitterest, most implacable type. One was
-a baptized Jew, another a Dominican friar, and the third an abandoned
-anti-pope. On these three men, Joshua Lorqui, Fra Vincent Ferrer, and
-Pedro de Luna, or Benedict XIII, the responsibility must rest for the
-events which directly conduced to the most terrible tragedy in the
-history of the Jews of Spain. Joshua Lorqui of Lorca assumed on his
-baptism the name Geronimo de Santa Fe, became physician in ordinary
-to the Avignon pope, Benedict, and, like his teacher, Solomon-Paul
-de Santa Maria, considered it his mission in life to draw his former
-brethren over to Christianity by every possible means. Vincent Ferrer,
-afterwards canonized, was one of those gloomy natures to whom the
-world appears a vale of tears, and who would wish to make it one. In
-saint-like virtue, indeed, he stood alone among the clergy and monks
-of his day. The pleasures of life had no charm for him; for gold
-and worldly distinction he thirsted not; he was penetrated with true
-humility, and entered on his work with earnestness. Unfortunately, the
-degeneracy and foulness of society had impressed him with the fantastic
-idea that the end of the world was at hand, and that mankind could
-be saved only by adopting the Christian faith and a monastic mode of
-life. Vincent Ferrer consequently revived flagellation. He marched
-through the land with a troop of fanatics who scourged their naked
-bodies with knotted cords, and incited the masses to adopt the same
-form of penance, believing that it would bring about the salvation of
-the world. Gifted with a sympathetic voice, an agreeable manner, and
-considerable eloquence, this Dominican friar soon obtained ascendancy
-over the public mind. When amid sobs he recalled the sufferings of
-Jesus, and depicted the approaching end of the world, the emotions of
-his auditors became violently agitated, and he could lead them to good
-or to evil. He had given up a high position at the papal court to lead
-the life of a flagellant and barefooted friar. This helped to increase
-the number of his admirers and disciples, for renunciation of position
-and wealth on the part of an ecclesiastic was without parallel. Ferrer,
-however, abused his power by the promotion of sanguinary deeds.
-He directed his fanatical denunciations not only against Jews and
-heretics, but even against friends who had helped to raise him from the
-dust. The terrible demoralization of the church is illustrated in this
-monk. The wrangling of three contemporary popes, each declaring himself
-to be the vicegerent of God, one of whom, John XXIII (1410-1415),
-had exhausted the catalogue of vices and deadly sins, a pirate, a
-trafficker in indulgences, an assassin, and a debauchee--all this did
-not so strikingly indicate the prevailing degeneracy as the fanatical
-excesses of one really pure, moral nature like Vincent Ferrer. The
-dove had become transformed into a venomous snake, the lamb into a
-rapacious beast. So much viciousness cannot be spontaneous in human
-character, in the adherents of Christianity; it must have been derived
-from the Christian teaching itself.
-
-Unlike Wycliffe and other reformers, Ferrer did not raise his voice
-against the shortcomings of the church, but devoted himself to Jews
-and heretics, whom he hated as adversaries of Christianity and
-opponents of the infallibility of the pope. With pen and voice he
-opened a crusade against Jews, which he sustained for several years.
-His most vehement invective was aimed at the Spanish new-Christians,
-who during the massacres of 1391 had gone over to the church, but
-still largely conformed to Judaism. Partly from fear of incurring the
-severe punishment attaching to apostasy, partly won over by the fiery
-eloquence of the preacher, the Marranos made a contrite confession
-of faith, which Ferrer regarded as a great victory for the church, a
-triumph for the truths of Christianity, leading him to hope that the
-conversion of the entire body of Jews might be vouchsafed to him. By
-his influence with the people, who honored him as a saint, he was very
-useful to the kings of Spain in putting down popular risings during the
-civil wars without bloodshed. Encouraged by the consideration of the
-Castilian royal family, Ferrer craved permission not only to preach
-in the synagogues and mosques, but to force Jews and Mahometans to
-listen to his addresses. A crucifix in one arm, the Torah in the other,
-escorted by flagellants and spearmen, he called upon the Jews, "with a
-terrible voice," to enrol themselves under the cross.
-
-Seraphic as he was, Vincent Ferrer was not averse to the employment of
-force. He represented to the Spanish rulers that the Jews should be
-strictly isolated, as their intercourse with the Christian population
-was calculated to injure the true faith. His suggestions met with
-too ready a response. Through him and the other two conversionists,
-unspeakable sorrows were brought upon the Spanish Jews; indeed,
-the years from 1412 to 1415 may be reckoned among the saddest in
-the sorrowful history of the Jewish people. Shortly after Ferrer's
-appearance at the most Christian court, the regent Donna Catalina, the
-Infante Don Ferdinand, and the apostate Paul Burgensis de Santa Maria,
-in the name of the child-king, Juan II, issued an edict of twenty-four
-articles (January 12th, 1412), the aim of which was to impoverish
-and humiliate the Jews, and reduce them to the lowest grade in the
-social scale. It ordered that they should live in special Jew-quarters
-(Juderias), provided with not more than one gate each, under pain of
-confiscation of fortune and personal chastisement. No handicraft was to
-be exercised by them; they were not to practice the healing art, nor
-transact business with Christians. It goes without saying that they
-were forbidden to hire Christian servants and fill public offices.
-Their judicial autonomy was abolished, not only in criminal cases, in
-which they had long ceased to exercise it, but also in civil disputes.
-The edict prescribed a special costume for the Jews. Both men and women
-were to wear long garments, in the case of males, of coarse stuffs.
-Whoever dressed in the national costume, or in fine materials, became
-liable to a heavy fine; on a repetition of the offense, to corporal
-punishment and confiscation of property. The wearing of the red Jew
-badge was, of course, insisted upon. Males were prohibited from shaving
-the beard or cutting the hair under pain of one hundred lashes. No Jew
-was to be addressed, either in conversation or in writing, by the title
-"Don," to the infringement of which a heavy fine was also attached.
-They were interdicted from carrying weapons, and might no longer move
-from town to town, but were to be fixed to one place of abode. The Jew
-detected in an evasion of the latter restriction was to lose his entire
-property, and be made a bondman of the king. Grandees and burghers were
-sternly enjoined to afford not the slightest protection to Jews.
-
-It is not unwarrantable to assume the influence of the apostate Paul
-de Santa Maria in the details of these Jew-hating laws. They singled
-out the most sensitive features of the Jewish character, pride and
-sense of honor. Wealthy Jews, in the habit of appearing in magnificent
-attire and with smoothly-shaven chins, were now to don a disfiguring
-costume, and go about with stubbly, ragged beards. The cultivated, who
-as physicians and advisers of the grandees had enjoyed unrestricted
-intercourse with the highest ranks, were to confine themselves to
-their Jew quarter, or be baptized, baptism being the hoped-for result
-of all these cruel restrictions, enforced with merciless vigor. A
-contemporary writer (Solomon Alami) describes the misery caused by the
-edict: "Inmates of palaces were driven into wretched nooks, and dark,
-low huts. Instead of rustling apparel we were obliged to wear miserable
-clothes, which drew contempt upon us. Prohibited from shaving the
-beard, we had to appear like mourners. The rich tax-farmers sank into
-want, for they knew no trade by which they could gain a livelihood, and
-the handicraftsmen found no custom. Starvation stared everyone in the
-face. Children died on their mothers' knees from hunger and exposure."
-
-Amid this tribulation the Dominican Ferrer invaded the synagogues,
-crucifix in hand, preached Christianity in a voice of thunder, offering
-his hearers enjoyment of life and opportunities of preferment, or
-threatening damnation here and hereafter. The Christian populace,
-inflamed by the passionate eloquence of the preacher, emphasized his
-teaching by violent assaults on the Jews. The trial was greater than
-the unhappy Castilian Jews could bear. Flight was out of the question,
-for the law forbade it under a terrible penalty. It is not surprising,
-then, that the weak and lukewarm among them, the comfort-loving and
-worldly-minded, succumbed to the temptation, and saved themselves by
-baptism. Many Jews in the communities of Valladolid, Zamora, Salamanca,
-Toro, Segovia, Avila, Benavente, Leon, Valencia, Burgos, Astorga, and
-other small towns, in fact, wherever Vincent Ferrer preached, went
-over to Christianity. Several synagogues were turned into churches
-by Ferrer. In the course of his four months' sojourn (December,
-1412-March, 1413) in the kingdom of Castile, this proselyte-monger
-inflicted wounds upon the Jews from which they bled to death.
-
-When, however, he repaired to the kingdom of Aragon--summoned thither
-to advise on the rival claims of several pretenders to the throne--
-and when through his exertion the Castilian Infante, Don Ferdinand,
-was awarded the Aragonese crown (June, 1414), a trifling improvement
-took place in the condition of the Castilian Jews. The regent, Donna
-Catalina, issued a new edict in the name of her son (17th July).
-In this document the Jews were still interdicted the exercise of
-handicrafts, but were allowed, under a multitude of conditions, to
-visit markets with their merchandise. The prohibition to hire Christian
-or Mahometan domestics was confirmed; but, on the other hand, the
-employment of day-laborers and gardeners for the fields and vineyards
-of Jews, and shepherds for their flocks, was permitted. The new law
-triflingly allowed Jews to trim their hair and to clip with shears, but
-not entirely remove, their beards; a fringe of hair was ordered to be
-left on the chin, and shaving with the razor was forbidden, as though
-the queen-regent and her sage counselors were anxious that Jewish
-orthodoxy should not be wronged. The new decree conceded the wearing of
-dress materials of a value of sixty maravedis (under the former edict
-the value had been fixed at half this sum), but imposed a funnel-shaped
-head-covering, to which it was forbidden to attach tassels. The
-vehemence with which the edict declaimed against the ostentation of
-Jewish women disclosed its female authorship. Under this decree,
-freedom of domicile was once more accorded to Jews. It is noteworthy
-that the new edict applied only to Jews, whereas its predecessor
-restricted Mahometans as well.
-
-With the transfer of the fanatical Ferrer to Aragon, the communities
-of that kingdom began to experience trials and misfortunes. The
-newly-elected king, Don Ferdinand, owed his crown to Ferrer, for as
-arbitrator between the rival pretenders he had warmly espoused his
-cause, proclaimed him king, and united the populace in his favor.
-Ferdinand consequently paid exceptional veneration to his saintliness,
-appointed him his father-confessor and spiritual adviser, and granted
-him his every wish. Foremost among Ferrer's aspirations was the
-conversion of the Jews, and to advance it the king commanded the Jews
-of Aragon to give every attention to his discourses. The zealous
-proselytizer made a tour of the kingdom, vehemently denouncing the Jews
-in every town he visited. His intimidations succeeded in converting a
-large number, particularly in Saragossa, Daroca, Tortosa, Valencia, and
-Majorca. Altogether Ferrer's mission to the Jews of Castile and Aragon
-is said to have resulted in not less than 20,500 forced baptisms.
-
-This, however, did not end the woes of Spanish Jews. Pope Benedict XIII
-had still worse troubles in store for them, employing as his instrument
-his newly-baptized Jewish physician, Joshua Lorqui, otherwise Geronimo
-de Santa Fe. This pope, deposed by the council of Pisa as schismatic,
-heretic and forsworn, deprived of his spiritual functions and put
-under the ban, projected the conversion of the entire body of Jews in
-Spain to the church, at that time the object of universal opprobrium.
-On the Pyrenean peninsula he was still regarded as the legitimate pope,
-and from this base of operations he used every effort to procure a
-general acknowledgment of his authority. He was not slow to perceive
-that the general conversion of the Jews would powerfully assist his
-design. If it were vouchsafed to him to overcome at last the obstinacy,
-blindness and infidelity of Israel, and to bring it under the
-sovereignty of the cross--would it not be the greatest triumph for
-the church and for himself? Would it not put all his enemies to shame?
-Would not the faithful range themselves under the pope who had so
-glorified the church? What better proof could he give that he was the
-only true pontiff?
-
-To promote this scheme, Benedict, by the authority of the king, Don
-Ferdinand, summoned (towards the end of 1412) the most learned rabbis
-and students of Scripture in the kingdom of Aragon to a religious
-disputation at Tortosa. The apostate Joshua Lorqui, who was well read
-in Jewish literature, was to prove to the Jews, out of the Talmud
-itself, that the Messiah had come in the person of Jesus. The design
-was to operate on the most prominent Jews, the papal court being
-convinced that, their conversion effected, the rank and file would
-follow of their own accord. Geronimo carefully selected the names of
-those to be invited, and the pope or the king attached a punishment to
-their non-attendance. What were the Jews to do? To come or to remain
-away, to accept or to refuse, was equally dangerous. About twenty-two
-of the most illustrious Aragonese Jews answered the summons. At their
-head was Don Vidal ben Benveniste Ibn-Labi (Ferrer), of Saragossa, a
-scion of the old Jewish nobility, a man of consideration and culture,
-a physician and neo-Hebrew poet. Among his companions were Joseph
-Albo, of Monreal, a disciple of Chasdai Crescas, distinguished for his
-philosophic learning and genuine piety; Serachya Halevi Saladin, of
-Saragossa, translator of an Arabic philosophic work; Matathias Yizhari
-(En Duran?), of the same town, also a polished writer; Astruc Levi, of
-Daroca, a man of position; Bonastruc Desmaestre, whose presence was
-most desired by the pope, because he was learned and distinguished; the
-venerable Don Joseph, of the respected Ibn-Yachya family, and others of
-lesser note.
-
-Although the Jewish notables summoned to the disputation were men
-of liberal education, and Don Vidal even spoke Latin fluently, none
-of them possessed that stout-heartedness and force of character
-which impress even the most vindictive enemy, and which Nachmani so
-conspicuously displayed when alone he encountered two of the bitterest
-adversaries of Judaism--the Dominican General De Penyaforte and
-the apostate Pablo Christiani. A succession of humiliations and
-persecutions had broken the manhood of even the proudest in Jewry, and
-had transformed all into weaklings. They were no match for perilous
-times. When Benedict's summons reached them, they trembled. They
-agreed to act with circumspection and calmness, not to interrupt
-their opponent, and, above all, to be united and harmonious, but they
-disregarded these resolutions, exposed their weakness, and eventually
-broke up into factions, each of which took its own course.
-
-Duly commissioned by his schismatic master, the renegade Geronimo drew
-up a program. In the first place, proofs were to be adduced from the
-Talmud and cognate writings that the Messiah had already come in the
-person of Jesus of Nazareth. The papal court flattered itself that
-this would bring about widespread conversion of the Jews, but, in
-case of failure, there was to follow a war of extermination against
-the Talmud on account of the abominations it contained, and the
-support it afforded the Jews in their blindness. Geronimo de Santa Fe
-accordingly composed a treatise on the Messianic character and Divinity
-of Jesus as illustrated in Jewish sacred writings. He collected all
-the specious arguments, the sophistries and text twistings which his
-predecessors had developed from their obscure, senseless, Scriptural
-interpretations, added nonsense of his own, declared playful Agadic
-conceits to be essential articles of faith, and refuted Jewish views
-of the questions discussed. He enumerated twenty-four conditions of
-the coming of the Messiah, and exerted himself to show that they had
-all been fulfilled in Jesus. His fundamental contention was that the
-Christians constituted the true Israel, that they had succeeded the
-Jewish people in Divine favor, and that the Biblical terms, mountain,
-tent, temple, house of God, Zion and Jerusalem were allegorical
-references to the church. An instance of his ridiculous arguments
-may be mentioned. Like John of Valladolid, he saw in the irregular
-formation of a letter in a word in Isaiah a deep mystery, indicating
-the virginity of Mary, and the realization of the Messianic period by
-the advent of Jesus. From another prophetic verse he expounded the
-immaculate conception of Jesus in so indecent a manner that it is
-impossible to repeat his explanation. This treatise, which blended the
-Patristic and the Rabbinic spirit, having been examined by the pope and
-his cardinals, was ordered to serve as the theme of the disputation.
-
-No more remarkable controversy was ever held. It occupied sixty-eight
-sittings, and extended, with few interruptions, over a year and nine
-months (from February, 1413, until the 12th November, 1414). In the
-foreground stands a pope, abandoned by almost the whole of Christendom,
-and hunted from his seat, anxious for a favorable issue, not for the
-glorification of the faith, but for his own temporal advancement; by
-his side, a baptized Jew, combating Rabbinical Judaism with Rabbinical
-weapons; and in the background, a frenzied Dominican preacher with his
-escort of flagellants, promoting a persecution of the Jews to give
-force to the conversionist zeal of Tortosa. The helpless, bewildered
-Jews could only turn their eyes to heaven, for on earth they found
-themselves surrounded by bitter enemies. When, at their first audience
-with Pope Benedict (6th February, 1413), they were asked to give their
-names for registration, they were seized with terror; they imagined
-their lives in jeopardy. The pope quieted them with the explanation
-that it was only a customary formality. On the whole he treated
-them at first with kindness and affability, the usual attitude of
-princes of the church when they have an end to attain. He assured
-them that no harm would befall them; that he had summoned them merely
-to ascertain whether there was any truth in Geronimo's statement
-that the Talmud attested the Messianic character of Jesus, and he
-promised them the fullest freedom of speech. At the end of the first
-audience he dismissed them graciously, assigned quarters to each of
-the notables, and gave instructions that their comfort should be cared
-for. A few prophesied from this friendly reception a successful issue
-for themselves and their cause, but they knew little of Rome and the
-vicegerents of God.
-
-A few days later the disputation began. When the Jewish notables
-entered the audience hall, they were awe-struck by the splendor of
-the scene: Pope Benedict, on an elevated throne, clad in his state
-robes; around him the cardinals and princes of the church, resplendent
-in jeweled vestments; beyond them nearly a thousand auditors of the
-highest ranks. The little knot of defenders of Judaism trembled before
-this imposing and confident array of the forces of Christianity.
-The pope himself presided, and opened the sitting with an address
-to the Jews. He informed them that the truth of neither Judaism
-nor Christianity was to be called into question, for the Christian
-faith was above discussion and indisputable, and Judaism had once
-been true, but had been abrogated by the later dispensation. The
-disputation would be confined to the single question, whether the
-Talmud recognized Jesus as the Messiah. The Jews were consequently
-limited to mere defense. At a sign from the pope, the convert Geronimo
-stood forth, and, after a salutation of the papal toe, delivered
-himself of a long-winded harangue, abounding in Christian, Jewish, and
-even scholastic subtleties, and full of praise of the magnanimity and
-graciousness of the pope in endeavoring to bring the Jews into the way
-of salvation. His text, applied to the Jews, was a verse from Isaiah:
-"If ye be willing and obedient, ye shall eat the good of the land; but
-if ye refuse and rebel, ye shall be devoured with the sword"--which
-disclosed the final argument of the church. In reply, Vidal Benveniste,
-who had been elected spokesman by the notables, delivered a speech
-in Latin, which evoked a compliment from the pope. Don Vidal exposed
-Geronimo's malignity in threatening the sword and other punishments
-before the arguments on either side were heard. The pope acknowledged
-the justice of the reproof, and said in extenuation that Geronimo had
-still the boorishness derived from his Jewish origin. The notables
-plucked up courage to petition the pope to release them from further
-controversy, giving as their reason that their opponent employed
-scholastic methods of reasoning, in which it was impossible for them
-to follow him, as their faith was founded not on syllogisms but on
-tradition. The pope naturally declined to accede to this request, but
-invited them to continue the discussion on the following day, and had
-them escorted to their quarters by officers of high rank.
-
-Overwhelmed with anxiety, the Jewish notables and the entire community
-of Tortosa assembled in the synagogue to implore help of Him who had so
-often stood by their fathers in their hours of need, and to pray that
-acceptable words might be put into their mouths, so that by no chance
-expression they should provoke the wild beasts seeking to devour them.
-Serachya Halevi Saladin gave expression to the gloomy feelings of the
-congregation in his sermon.
-
-For a time the controversy retained its friendly character. Geronimo
-quoted obscure Agadic passages from the Talmud and other Hebrew
-writings to establish his astounding contention that the Talmud
-attests that Jesus was the Messiah. Generally the pope presided at the
-disputations, but occasionally grave matters affecting his own position
-necessitated his absence. The maintenance of his dignity was threatened
-by the convening of the council of Constance by the Christian princes,
-which constituted itself the supreme court in the conflict between the
-three popes. Consequently, Benedict had to hold frequent consultations
-with his friends. On these occasions, his place was taken by the
-general of the Dominicans or the chamberlain of the papal palace.
-The proofs adduced by Geronimo in support of his statements were so
-absurd that it should have been easy for the Jewish delegates to refute
-them. But their words were wilfully misinterpreted, so that in several
-instances it was recorded in the protocol that they had conceded the
-point under discussion. A few of them consequently committed their
-refutations to writing; but they still met with arbitrary treatment.
-Some points raised by them were condemned as not pertinent to the
-discussion. The Jewish delegates, who had entered on the controversy
-with unwilling hearts, were exhausted by the talking and taunting,
-and were anxious to avoid retort. Suddenly the pope threw aside his
-mask of friendliness, and showed his true disposition by threatening
-them with death. Sixty-two days the war of tongues had lasted, and
-the representatives of Judaism showed no sign of their much-hoped-for
-conversion. Their power of resistance appeared to grow with the battle.
-So, in the sixty-third sitting, the pope changed his tactics. At his
-command Geronimo now came forward as the censor of the Talmud, accusing
-it of containing all kinds of abominations, blasphemy, immorality and
-heresy, and demanding its condemnation. A few new-Christians, among
-them Andreas Beltran (Bertrand) of Valencia, the pope's almoner,
-valiantly seconded this demand.
-
-Geronimo had prepared, at the instance of the pope, a treatise
-with this purpose in view. He had collected all the extravagances
-accidentally uttered by one or two of the hundreds of Agadists figuring
-in the Talmud. Shameless malice or ignorance dictated manifestly
-false accusations against the Talmud. Thus, he stated that it
-permitted the beating of parents, blasphemy, and idolatry, also the
-breaking of oaths, provided that on the previous Day of Atonement the
-precaution had been taken to declare them invalid. Conscientiousness
-in respect to oaths and vows he thus construed as perfidy, and, like
-Nicholas-Donin, drew the conclusion that the Jews did not fulfill their
-obligations towards Christians. Of course, he revived the calumny of
-Alfonso of Valladolid, that the Jews cursed the Christians in their
-daily prayers. Every inimical reference in the Talmud to heathens or
-Jewish Christians, Geronimo interpreted as applying to Christians,
-a fabrication with disastrous consequences, inasmuch as the enemies
-of the Jews repeated these deadly charges without further inquiry.
-When the attacks on the Talmud unexpectedly became the subject of
-discussion, the Jewish representatives defended the arraigned points,
-but were so hard pressed that they split up into two parties. Don
-Astruc Levi handed in a written declaration, setting forth that he
-ascribed no authority to the Agadic sentences quoted incriminating the
-Talmud; that he held them as naught, and renounced them. The majority
-of the notables supported him. To save the life of the whole they
-sacrificed a limb. Joseph Albo and Ferrer (Don Vidal) alone maintained
-their ground, declaring that the Talmudic Agada was a competent
-authority, and that the equivocal passages had a different meaning from
-that ascribed to them, and were not to be interpreted literally. So the
-machinations of the pope and his creatures had at least succeeded in
-bringing about a division in the ranks of the defenders of Judaism.
-
-The principal object of the disputation--the conversion of the
-Jews _en masse_ through the example of their most prominent leaders
---was not attained. All the means employed failed--the benignant
-reception, the threats of violence, the attack on Jewish convictions.
-An expedient, calculated entirely for effect, had also been tried,
-which, it was thought, would so mortify the notables that, dazed
-and overwhelmed, they would throw down their arms and surrender at
-discretion. The fanatical proselytizer Vincent Ferrer had returned
-from Majorca to Catalonia and Aragon, and, surrounded by his
-terror-inspiring band of flagellants, had renewed his mission to the
-Jews, amid dismal chants and fiery exhortations to embrace the cross.
-Again he succeeded in winning over many thousands to Christianity.
-In the great Jewish communities of Saragossa, Calatajud, Daroca,
-Fraga and Barbastro, the conversions were limited to individuals;
-but smaller congregations, such as those of Alcaniz, Caspe, Maella,
-Lerida, Alcolea and Tamarite, hemmed in by hostile Christians, who
-spared neither limb nor life, went over in a body to Christianity. All
-these proselytes were gradually brought, in small and large troops, to
-Tortosa, and conducted, at the order of the pope, into the audience
-hall, where, before the entire assembly, they made public profession
-of the Christian faith. Living trophies, they were intended to shadow
-forth the impending victory of the church, dishearten the defenders of
-Judaism, and press upon them the conviction that, as in their absence
-the Jewish communities were melting away, all resistance on their part
-was in vain. It is no small merit that Don Vidal, Joseph Albo, Astruc
-Levi, and their companions refused to yield to the pressure. The pope
-saw his hopes shattered. Not a single notable wavered, and conversions
-of large masses did not take place. The great communities of Aragon and
-Catalonia remained true to their faith, with the exception of a few
-weaklings, amongst them some relations of Vidal Benveniste. The council
-of Constance would soon meet, and Benedict would be unable to appear
-before it as the triumphant conqueror of Judaism--would have no
-special claim to preference over the other two competing popes.
-
-In his disappointment he vented his spleen on the Talmud and the
-already restricted liberties of the Jews. At the last sitting of the
-disputation he dismissed the Jewish notables with black looks, from
-which they easily divined his evil intentions. Various obstacles
-prevented him from putting them into force for six months, when (May
-11th, 1415) they were embodied in a bull of eleven clauses. The Jews
-were forbidden to study or teach the Talmud and Talmudic literature;
-all copies of the Talmud were to be sought out and confiscated.
-Anti-Christian works, written by Jews, especially one entitled
-"Mar Mar Jesu," were not to be read under pain of punishment for
-blasphemy. Every community, whether large or small, was prohibited
-from possessing more than one simple, poorly appointed synagogue. The
-Jews were to be strictly separated from Christians, were not to eat,
-bathe, or do business with them. They were to occupy no official posts,
-exercise no handicrafts, not even practice medicine. The wearing of the
-red or yellow Jew badge was also enjoined by this bull. Finally, all
-Jews were to be forced to hear Christian sermons three times a year--
-during Advent, at Easter, and in the summer. In the first sermon the
-Prophets and the Talmud were to be used to prove that the true Messiah
-had come; in the second, their attention was to be directed to the
-abominations and heresies contained, according to Geronimo's treatise,
-in the Talmud, alone responsible for their infidelity; and in the third
-it was to be impressed upon them that the destruction of the temple and
-the dispersion of the Hebrew people had been predicted by the founder
-of Christianity. At the close of each sermon the bull was to be read
-aloud. The strict execution of this malignant edict was confided by the
-pope to Gonzalo de Santa Maria, son of the apostate Paul, who had been
-taken over to Christianity by his father.
-
-Fortunately, the vindictive schemes of Pope Benedict never came into
-active operation. While he was still engaged in tormenting the Jews,
-the council of Constance decreed his deposition. As he had obstinately
-opposed the advice of the king, Don Ferdinand, and the German emperor,
-Sigismund, to lay aside the tiara of his own initiative, he was
-abandoned by his Spanish protectors. The weapons he had employed
-recoiled upon himself. His last adherents were drawn from him by
-Vincent Ferrer's fanatical preaching. The flagellant priest not only
-exhorted the king of Aragon to renounce "this unfrocked and spurious
-pope," but he held forth everywhere--in the churches and the open
-streets--that "a man like this pope deserves to be pursued to death
-by every right-thinking Christian." Deserted by his protectors, his
-friends, and even his proteges, there now remained to Pedro de Luna,
-of all his possessions, only the small fortress of Peniscola, and even
-here King Ferdinand, urged on by Santa Maria, the pope's creature,
-threatened him with a siege. In the end this ambitious and obstinate
-man covered himself with ridicule by attempting to continue to play
-the part of pope in his tiny palace. He appointed a college of four
-cardinals, and pledged them before his death not to recognize the pope
-elected at Constance, but to choose a successor from among their own
-body. When he died, his college elected two popes instead of one. Such
-was the infallibility of the church, into the pale of which it was
-sought to force the Jews. What became of the malicious apostate, Joshua
-Lorqui-Geronimo de Santa Fe, after the fall of his master, is not
-known. In Jewish circles he was remembered by the well-earned sobriquet
-of "The Calumniator" (Megadef). King Ferdinand of Aragon, who had
-always allowed himself to be influenced by enemies of the Jews, died in
-1416. His death was followed, after a short interval, by that of the
-Jew-hating regent, Catalina of Castile, the instrument of Vincent's
-Jew-hunt (1418), and finally by that of Vincent himself (1419), who had
-the mortification to see the flagellant movement, to which he owed his
-saintly reputation, condemned by the council of Constance, he himself
-being compelled to disband his "white troop."
-
-Although the chief persecutors of the Jews had disappeared, the
-unhappy conditions created by them remained. The exclusive laws of
-Castile and the bull of Pope Benedict were still in force. Ferrer's
-proselytizing campaigns had severely crippled the Spanish, and even
-foreign communities. In Portugal alone they met with no success. The
-Portuguese ruler, Don Joao I, had other interests to pursue than the
-conversion of Jews. He was then occupied in that first conquest on
-the coast of Africa, opposite to Portugal, which laid the foundation
-of the subsequent maritime supremacy of the Portuguese. When Vincent
-Ferrer petitioned King Joao for permission to come to Portugal in order
-to make the pulpits and streets resound with his dismal harangues on
-the sinfulness of the world and the blindness and obstinacy of the
-Jews, the Portuguese king informed him that he "might come, but with
-a crown of red-hot iron on his head." Portugal was the only refuge on
-the Pyrenean peninsula from the proselytizing rage of the flagellant
-preacher, and many Spanish Jews who had the means of escaping fled
-thither. Don Judah Ibn Yachya-Negro, held in high esteem by King Joao
-I, and, perhaps, appointed by him chief rabbi of Portugal, represented
-to him the horrors of enforced baptism, and the necessary insincerity
-of the professions of unwilling converts. The king consequently issued
-his commands that the immigrant new-Christians should not be interfered
-with or delivered up to Spain.
-
-In other parts of Europe, where the fanatical Dominican had been, or
-whither reports of his deeds or misdeeds had penetrated, the Jews
-were forced to drain the cup of bitterness to the dregs. In Savoy,
-which Vincent Ferrer had visited, they were obliged to hide themselves
-with their holy books in mountain caves. In Germany, persecutions of
-Jews had always found a congenial soil, and they were promoted by the
-anarchy which prevailed during the reign of Sigismund and the sessions
-of the council of Constance. Even the Italian communities, though
-for the most part undisturbed, lived in continual anxiety, lest the
-movement strike a responsive chord in their politically distracted
-land. They convened a great synod, first at Bologna, then at Forli
-(1416-1418), to consider what measures might be adopted to avert the
-threatened danger.
-
-Happily, at this moment, after a long schism, bitter strife and a
-plurality of anti-popes, the council of Constance elected a pope,
-who, though full of dissimulation, was not the most degraded in the
-college of cardinals. Martin V, who was said by his contemporaries
-to have appeared simple and good before his election, but to have
-shown himself afterwards very clever and not very kind, received the
-Jews with scant courtesy when, during his progress through Constance,
-they approached him carrying lighted tapers in festive procession,
-and offered him the Torah with a prayer for the confirmation of their
-sufferance. From his white palfrey with silk and gold trappings he
-answered them: "You have the law, but understand it not. The old has
-passed away, and the new been found." (The blind finding fault with the
-seeing.) Yet he treated them with leniency. At the request of Emperor
-Sigismund, he confirmed the privileges granted to the Jews of Germany
-and Savoy by the preceding emperor, Rupert, denouncing attacks on their
-persons and property, and the practice of converting them by force. The
-emperor, who may be accused of thoughtlessness but not of a spirit of
-persecution, thereupon issued his commands to all the German princes
-and magistrates, cities and subjects, to allow his "servi camerae"
-the full enjoyment of the privileges and immunities which had been
-given them by the pope (February 26th, 1418). A deputation of Jews,
-commissioned by the Italian synod, also waited upon the now generally
-acknowledged pope, and craved his protection. Even the Spanish Jews
-appear to have dispatched an embassy to him, consisting of two of their
-most distinguished men, Don Samuel Abrabanel and Don Samuel Halevi.
-When the Jews complained of the insecurity of their lives, the attacks
-on their religious convictions, and the frequent desecration of their
-sanctuaries, the pope issued a bull (January 31st, 1419), with the
-following preamble:
-
- "Whereas the Jews are made in the image of God, and a remnant
- of them will one day be saved, and whereas they have besought
- our protection, following in the footsteps of our predecessors
- we command that they be not molested in their synagogues; that
- their laws, rights, and customs be not assailed; that they
- be not baptized by force, constrained to observe Christian
- festivals, nor to wear new badges, and that they be not
- hindered in their business relations with Christians."
-
-What could have induced Pope Martin to show such friendly countenance
-to the Jews? Probably he had some idea of checkmating by this means
-the Jew-hating Benedict, who still played at being pope in his obscure
-corner. The principal consideration probably was the rich gifts with
-which the Jewish representatives approached him. Although at the
-council of Constance no cardinal was poorer than Martin, and his
-election was in great measure owing to this fact, on the throne of St.
-Peter he showed no aversion to money. On the contrary, everything might
-be obtained from him if money were paid down; without it, nothing.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-THE HUSSITES. PROGRESS OF JEWISH LITERATURE.
-
- The Hussite Heresy--Consequences for the Jews involved in the
- Struggle--Jacob Moelin--Abraham Benveniste and Joseph Ibn-Shem
- Tob in the Service of the Castilian Court--Isaac Campanton,
- the Poet Solomon Dafiera--Moses Da Rieti--Anti-Christian
- Polemical Literature--Chayim Ibn-Musa--Simon Duran and his
- Son Solomon--Joseph Albo as a Religious Philosopher--Jewish
- Philosophical Systems--Edict of the Council of Basle against
- the Jews--Fanatical Outbreaks in Majorca--Astruc Sibili and his
- Conversion to Christianity.
-
-1420-1442 C.E.
-
-
-Meanwhile history received a fresh impulse, which, although coming
-from weak hands, produced a forward movement. The spreading corruption
-in the church, the self-deifying arrogance of the popes and the
-licentiousness of priests and monks revolted the moral sense of the
-people, opened their eyes, and encouraged them to doubt the very
-foundations of the Roman Catholic system. No improvement could be
-expected from the princes of the church, the jurists and diplomatists
-who met in council at Constance to deliberate on a scheme of thorough
-reform. They had only a worldly object in view, seeking to gloss over
-the prevailing rottenness by transferring the papal power to the high
-ecclesiastics, substituting the rule of an aristocratic hierarchy
-for papal absolutism. A Czech priest, John Huss, of Prague, inspired
-by the teachings of Wycliffe, spoke the magic word that loosened the
-bonds in which the church had ensnared the minds of men. "Not this
-or that pope," he said in effect, "but the papacy and the entire
-organization of the Catholic church constitute the fundamental evil
-from which Christendom is suffering." The flames to which the council
-of Constance condemned this courageous priest only served to light
-up the truth he had uttered. They fired a multitude in Bohemia, who
-entered on a life and death struggle with Catholicism. Whenever a
-party in Christendom opposes itself to the ruling church, it assumes
-a tinge of the Old Testament, not to say Jewish, spirit. The Hussites
-regarded Catholicism, not unjustly, as heathenism, and themselves as
-Israelites, who must wage holy war against Philistines, Moabites, and
-Ammonites. Churches and monasteries were to them the sanctuaries of a
-dissolute idolatry, temples to Baal and Moloch and groves of Ashtaroth,
-to be consumed with fire and sword. The Hussite war, although largely
-due to the mutual race-hatred of Czechs and Germans, and to religious
-indignation, began in a small way the work of clearing the church
-doctrine of its mephitic elements.
-
-For the Jews, this movement was decidedly calamitous, the
-responsibility for which must rest, not with the wild Hussites, but
-with the Catholic fanaticism stirred up against the new heresy. The
-former went little beyond denunciations of Jewish usury; at the most,
-sacked Jewish together with Catholic houses. Of special Hussite
-hostility to the Jews no evidence is forthcoming. On the other hand,
-Catholics accused Jews of secretly supplying the Hussites with
-money and arms; and in the Bavarian towns near the Boehmerwald, they
-persecuted them unmercifully as friends and allies of the heretics. The
-Dominicans--the "army of anti-Christ" as they were called--included
-the Jews in their fierce pulpit denunciations of the Hussites, and
-inflamed the people and princes against them. The crusades against the
-Hussites, like those against the Mahometans and Waldenses, commenced
-with massacres of Jews. Revived fanaticism first affected the Jews in
-Austria--a land which, like Spain, passed from liberal tolerance
-of Jews to persecution, and in bigotry approximated so close to the
-Iberian kingdom that it ultimately joined it. The mind of Archduke
-Albert, an earnest and well-intentioned prince, was systematically
-filled with hatred against the "enemies of God." Fable after fable
-was invented, which, devoid even of originality, sufficed to drive to
-extreme measures a man of pure character, ignorant of the lying devices
-of the Jew-haters. Three Christian children went skating in Vienna;
-the ice broke through, and they were drowned. When the anxious parents
-failed to find them, a malicious rumor was set on foot that they had
-been slaughtered by Jews, who required their blood for the ensuing
-Passover celebration. Then a Jew was charged with a crime calculated
-to incense the populace to a still greater degree. The wife of the
-sacristan of Enns was said to have purloined the consecrated host from
-the church, and sold it to a wealthy Jew named Israel, who had sent
-it to a large number of Jewish communities in and out of Austria. The
-charges of Jewish murders of Christian children and Jewish profanations
-of hosts had not lost their charm in the fifteenth century, and their
-inventors could calculate their effect with accuracy. By order of the
-archduke, the sacristan's wife and her two accomplices or seducers,
-Israel and his wife, were brought to Vienna, examined, and forced to
-confess. The records of the case are silent as to the means employed to
-obtain the avowal of guilt; but the procedure of mediaeval Christendom
-in such trials is well known.
-
-Archduke Albert issued the order that in the early morning of the 23d
-May, 1420 (10th Sivan), all the Jews in his realm should be thrown into
-prison, and this was promptly done. The moneyed Jews were stripped
-of their possessions, and the poor forthwith banished the country.
-In the gaols, wives were separated from their husbands, and children
-from their parents. When from helplessness they fell to hopelessness,
-Christian priests came to them with crosses in their hands and honeyed
-words on their lips to convert them. A few of the poorer-spirited saved
-their lives by accepting baptism. The more resolute slew themselves and
-their kinsfolk by opening their veins with straps, cords, or whatever
-they found to hand. The spirit of the survivors was broken by the
-length and cruelty of their imprisonment. Their children were taken
-from them, and immured in cloisters. Still they remained firm, and on
-the 13th March (9th Nisan), 1421, after nearly a year's confinement,
-they were committed to the flames. In Vienna alone more than a hundred
-perished in one field near the Danube. Another order was then issued by
-Archduke Albert, forbidding Jews to stay thenceforth in Austria.
-
-The converts proved no gain to the church. The majority seized the
-first opportunity of emigrating and relapsing into Judaism. They bent
-their steps to Bohemia, rendered tolerant by the Hussite schism,
-or northwards to Poland and southwards to Italy. How attached the
-Austrian Jews were to their religion is shown by the conduct of one
-clever youth. Having received baptism, he had become the favorite of
-Duke Frederick, afterwards the German emperor, but, although living
-in luxury, he was seized with remorse for his apostasy, and boldly
-expressed his desire to return to Judaism. Frederick exerted himself
-to dissuade his favorite from this idea. He begged, entreated, and
-even threatened him; he sent a priest to advise him; all, however, in
-vain. Finally, the duke handed the "obstinate heretic and backslider"
-over to the ecclesiastical authorities, who condemned him to the stake.
-Unfettered and with a Hebrew song on his lips the Jewish youth mounted
-the scaffold.
-
-In the meantime, the devastating war broke out between the fierce
-Hussites and the not less barbarous Roman Catholics, between the
-Czechs and the Germans. A variety of nationalities participated in
-the sanguinary struggle as to the use of the cup by the laity in
-the eucharist. Emperor Sigismund, who found it impossible to subdue
-the insurrection with his own troops, summoned the imperial army to
-his standard. Wild free-lances, men of Brabant and Holland, were
-taken into his pay. From all quarters armed troops poured into the
-Bohemian valleys and against the capital, Prague, where the blind
-hero, Zisca, bade defiance to a world of foes. On the way, the German
-imperial army exhibited its courage by attacks on the defenseless
-Jews. "We are marching afar," exclaimed the mercenaries, "to avenge
-our insulted God, and shall those who slew him be spared?" Wherever
-they came across Jewish communities, on the Rhine, in Thuringia and
-Bavaria, they put them to the sword, or forced them to apostatize. The
-crusaders threatened, on their return from victory over the Hussites,
-to wipe the Jewish people from the face of the earth. Jewish fathers
-of families true to their faith gave orders that, at a certain signal,
-their children should be killed to avoid falling into the hands of
-the bloodthirsty soldiery. Letters of lamentation over the threatened
-disaster, calling upon him to implore the intervention of heaven, were
-addressed from far and near to the illustrious rabbi of Mayence, Jacob
-ben Moses Moelin Halevi (Maharil, born 1365, died 1427), the most pious
-rabbi of his time. His arrangement of the synagogue ritual and melodies
-is used to this day in many German communities, and their colonies in
-Poland and Hungary. Jacob Moelin ordered a general fast, accompanied by
-fervent prayer, and his instructions were circulated from one community
-to another throughout the land. The German congregations forthwith
-assembled for solemn mourning and humiliation, and fasted during four
-days between New Year and Atonement (8th-11th September, 1421), and
-for three successive days after Tabernacles, the observance being
-as strict as on the most sacred fast days of the Jewish calendar. It
-was a time of feverish tension for the German Jews. In their despair
-they prayed that victory might be vouchsafed to the Hussites, and it
-seemed as if their supplications were heard. For, shortly afterwards,
-the imperial army and its mercenary allies assembled near Saatz were
-stricken with such terror at the news of Zisca's approach, that they
-sought safety in disorderly flight, disbanding in all directions, and
-hurrying home by different routes. Famished and footsore, a few of the
-very men who had vowed death and extirpation to the Jews, appeared at
-the doors of their houses, begging for bread, which was gladly given
-them. Privation had so reduced the fugitives that they could not have
-harmed a child.
-
-The Dominican clergy commissioned to preach against the Hussites
-did not cease to foster Catholic hatred of Jews. From their pulpits
-they thundered against heretics and Jews alike, cautioning the
-faithful against holding intercourse with them, and consciously and
-unconsciously inciting to attacks on their persons and property. The
-Jews flew for help to the pope, Martin V--doubtless not with empty
-hands--and again obtained a very favorable bull (23d February,
-1422), in which Christians were enjoined to remember that their
-religion had been inherited from Jews, who were necessary for the
-corroboration of Christian truth. The pope forbade the monks to preach
-against intercourse between Jews and Christians, and declared null
-and void the ban with which transgressors had been threatened. He
-recommended to Catholics a friendly and benevolent attitude towards
-their Hebrew fellow-citizens, severely denounced violent attacks upon
-them, and confirmed all the privileges which had from time to time
-been granted by the papacy. This bull was, however, as ineffectual as
-the protection which Emperor Sigismund had so solemnly promised the
-Jews. A persecuting spirit continued to animate the Christian church.
-The monks did not cease to declaim against the "accursed" Jewish
-nation; the populace did not refrain from tormenting, injuring and
-murdering Jews; even succeeding popes ignored the bull, and restored
-the odious canonical restrictions in all their stringency. Turning a
-deaf ear to both pope and emperor, the citizens of Cologne expelled
-the Jewish community, perhaps the oldest in Germany. The exiles took
-up their abode at Deutz (1426). In the South German towns, Ravensburg,
-Ueberlingen and Lindau, the Jews were burnt because of a lying blood
-accusation (1431).
-
-The literary work of the German Jews was, as a consequence, poor
-and inconsiderable. Anxiety and persecution had deadened their
-intellect. Even in Talmudical study the German rabbis hardly rose above
-mediocrity, and gave nothing of consequence to the world. Some rabbis
-were installed by the reigning prince; at least Emperor Sigismund
-commissioned one of his Jewish agents, Chayim of Landshut, "to
-appoint three rabbis (Judenmeister) in Germany." Under such auspices,
-appointments were probably determined less by merit than by money.
-For a college, in which students were prepared for the rabbinate, a
-heavy tax had to be paid, notwithstanding that the instruction was
-given gratuitously. Besides Jacob Moelin, only one name of importance
-emerges from the darkness of this period, Menachem of Merseburg, or,
-as he was generally called, Meil Zedek. He wrote a comprehensive work
-on the practice of the Talmudic marriage and civil law, which the
-Saxon communities adopted for their authoritative guidance. He, at
-least, departed from the beaten track of his older contemporaries or
-teachers, Jacob Moelin and Isaac Tyrnau, who attached value to every
-insignificant detail of the liturgy. By and by Menachem of Merseburg
-was recognized as an authority, and an excellent regulation drawn up by
-him received universal assent. Among the Jews at that period, marriages
-took place at a very early age; girls in their teens were hurried into
-matrimony. According to Talmudical law a girl, under age, who had been
-given in marriage by her mother or brothers and not by her father, was
-permitted, on attaining her majority, in her twelfth year, and even
-much later under some circumstances, to dissolve her union without
-further ceremony than a declaration of her intention to do so, or the
-contracting of another marriage (Miun). Menachem of Merseburg felt the
-indecency of so sudden and often capricious a dissolution of marriage,
-and he decided that formal bills of divorce should be required.
-
-The literary achievements of the Spanish Jews during this period were
-not of a higher character; they exhibited unmistakable signs of decay,
-notwithstanding that their situation had become more tolerable since
-the death of the bigoted and wanton queen regent, Catalina, and the
-fall of the anti-pope, Benedict XIII, and his Jewish accomplices.
-Don Juan II--or, rather, his favorite, Alvaro de Luna, to whom the
-management of the state was confided--stood too much in need of the
-assistance of Jewish financiers during the frequently recurring civil
-wars and insurrections to do anything to offend them. Hence, during his
-reign, restrictive laws against the Jews seem to have been enacted only
-to be broken. Jews were again admitted to public employment, regardless
-of the fact that such appointments had been sternly forbidden both
-by kings and popes. An influential Jew, Abraham Benveniste, surnamed
-Senior, distinguished for his intelligence and wealth, was invested
-with a high dignity at the court of Don Juan, and was thus in a
-position to frustrate threatened persecutions of his co-religionists.
-Also Joseph ben Shem Tob Ibn-Shem Tob, a cultivated and fruitful
-writer, proficient in philosophic studies, was in the service of the
-state under Juan II. On the one hand, the cortes did not fail to remind
-the king that by his father's laws and by papal decrees the Jews were
-excluded from public offices, and, on the other hand, Pope Eugenius
-IV, successor to Martin V, strained every effort to humiliate the Jews
-and harden their lot, even forbidding Don Juan to befriend them; but
-these representations were of no avail. To the cortes of Burgos the
-king replied evasively that he would cause an examination to be made of
-the laws promulgated in regard to the Jews by his father, and of the
-papal bulls, and he would take care to observe everything calculated to
-promote the service of God and the welfare of the state. Against the
-pope's interference with his crown-rights he entered a protest.
-
-This king gave permission to the no less noble than wealthy rabbi,
-Abraham Benveniste, to hold a meeting of delegates from various
-communities in the royal palace of Avila (1432). These delegates were
-to bring harmony into the state of moral and religious disorder caused
-by the attacks of the masses in 1412-1415. The smaller communities were
-without teachers, the large ones without rabbis and preachers. Many of
-them had been reduced to poverty, and the richer members were unwilling
-to contribute to the support of religious institutions. Evil ways and
-denunciations by the unscrupulous had acquired the upper hand, because
-the representative men and the few rabbis did not venture to punish the
-evildoers. Abraham Benveniste, therefore, framed a statute (the law of
-Avila), which compelled people to establish schools and colleges, to
-introduce order into the communities, and to punish miscreants. Juan II
-confirmed this statute.
-
-The literature of the Spanish Jews, however, was powerless to recover
-itself. Despite the calm succeeding the storm, it seemed to wither
-like autumn leaves. The decline was most marked in the department
-of Talmudic study. After the emigration of Isaac ben Sheshet and the
-death of Chasdai Crescas, no Spanish rabbi obtained more than local
-authority and reputation. The only upholder of the traditions of
-the rabbinate was Isaac ben Jacob Campanton, who lived to be more
-than a hundred years old (born 1360, died at Penafiel 1463); but he
-produced only one work (Darke ha-Talmud), which exhibited neither
-genius nor learning. Still, in his day, Campanton passed for the Gaon
-of Castile. Neo-Hebraic poetry, which had blossomed so profusely on
-Spanish soil, faded and drooped. Of those who cultivated it during
-this period only a few are remembered--Solomon Dafiera, Don Vidal
-Benveniste, the leading speaker on the Jewish side at the disputation
-of Tortosa, and Solomon Bonfed. The most gifted was the last. He was
-ambitious to emulate Ibn-Gebirol; but he possessed little more than the
-sensitiveness and moroseness of his great exemplar, like him imagining
-himself to be the sport of fortune, with a prescriptive right to
-lamentation.
-
-The Jews of Italy failed to distinguish themselves in poetry even
-during the Medici period, in spite of the high culture which, with
-the Hussite movement, was eating away the foundations of mediaeval
-Catholicism. Since Immanuel Romi, the Jews of Italy had produced but
-one poet; even he was not a poet in the noblest sense of the word.
-Moses ben Isaac (Gajo) da Rieti, of Perugia (born 1388, died after 1451
-), a physician by profession, a dabbler in philosophy, and a graceful
-writer in both Hebrew and Italian, might have passed for an artist if
-poetry were a thing of meter and rhyme, for in his sublimely conceived
-poem both were faultless. His desire was to glorify in poetry Judaism
-and Jewish antiquity, the sciences, and the illustrious men of all
-ages. He employed an ingenious form of verse, in which the stanzas
-were connected by threes by means of cross-rhymes. But Da Rieti's
-language is often rough, many of his allusions show want of taste, and
-where he should rise to lofty thought he sinks into puerilities. Only
-in one respect does his work mark an advance in neo-Hebrew poetry. He
-breaks entirely with the traditional Judaeo-Arabic method of a single
-rhyme. There is variety in his versification; the ear is not wearied
-by monotonous repetition of the same or similar sounds, and the lines
-fall naturally into stanzas. He also avoids playing on Biblical verses,
-the objectionable habit of Judaeo-Spanish poets. In a word, Da Rieti
-supplied the correct form for neo-Hebrew poetry, but he was unable to
-vivify it with an attractive spirit. Yet the Italian Jews adopted a
-part of his poem into their liturgy, and recited extracts daily.
-
-From the Apennine Peninsula let us turn back to the Pyrenean, where
-the pulsation of historic life among the Jews, though gradually
-becoming weaker, still was stronger than in the other countries in
-which they were dispersed. The two branches of intellectual activity
-which formerly, in their palmy days, had exercised every mind--the
-severe study of the Talmud and the airy pursuit of the poetic muse--
-had lost their predominance in the Spanish Jewries. The systematic
-study of the Scriptures also was no longer properly cultivated. The
-literary activity of this period was almost exclusively directed
-towards combating the intrusiveness of the church, repelling its
-attacks on Judaism, and withstanding its proselytizing zeal. Faithful
-and strong-minded Jewish thinkers held it a duty to proclaim their
-convictions aloud, and to admonish waverers and strengthen them. The
-more the preaching monks, especially apostates of the stamp of Paul de
-Santa Maria, Geronimo de Santa Fe, and Pedro de la Caballeria, exerted
-themselves to prove that the Christian Trinity was the true God of
-Israel, taught and typified in the Bible and the Talmud, and the more
-the church stretched forth its tentacles towards the Jews, straining
-every nerve to fold them in its fatal embrace, the more necessary was
-it for the synagogue to watch over its sacred trust, and guard its holy
-of holies from idolatrous desecration. It was especially necessary
-that the weaker-minded should be spared confusion in religious and
-doctrinal matters. Hence Jewish preachers devoted themselves more than
-ever to expounding the doctrine of the unity of God in their pulpits.
-They pointed out the essential and irreconcilable difference between
-the Jewish and the Christian conception of the Deity, and characterized
-their identification as false and impious. The time resembled that
-other epoch in Jewish history when Hellenized Jews tried to induce
-their brethren to deny God, and were supported by the secular arm.
-Some preachers, in their zeal, went to extremes. Instead of relying
-exclusively on the convincing demonstrations in the Bible text, or on
-the attractive illustrations of the Agada, they resorted to the armory
-of scholasticism, employing the formulae of philosophy and, in the
-presence of the Torah, and by the side of the Hebrew prophets and the
-Talmudical sages, quoted Plato, Aristotle, and Averroes.
-
-This controversial literature, cultivated on a large scale, was
-designed to defend Judaism against calumny and abuse, rather than
-to convert a single Christian soul. Its aim was to open the eyes of
-Jews, so that ignorance or credulity might not lead them into the
-snares prepared for them. Doubtless it also desired to stir up the
-new-Christians, and to re-animate their Jewish spirit beneath the
-disguise they had assumed to save their lives. Hence the majority of
-the polemical writings of the day were merely vindications of Judaism
-from the old charges fulminated by Nicholas de Lyra a century before,
-or more recently by Geronimo de Santa Fe and others, and widely
-circulated by the Christian clergy. Solomon-Paul of Burgos, who had
-been appointed bishop of his native town, wrote, in his eighty-second
-year (1434, a year before his death), a venomous tract against Judaism
---"Searching the Scriptures" (Scrutinium Scriptuarum)--in the form
-of a dialogue between a teacher and his pupil, the unbelieving Saul and
-the converted Paul. Solomon-Paul does not seem to have retained much
-of the wit which, according to Jewish and Christian panegyrists, had
-at one time distinguished him--it had probably become blunted amid
-the luxurious ease of the episcopal palace--for his tract, devoutly
-Christian and Catholic in tone, is pointless and dull. Another ex-rabbi
-who devoted himself to attacking Judaism was Juan de Espana, also
-called Juan the Old (at Toledo), a convert who in old age had embraced
-Christianity under the influence of Vincent Ferrer's proselytizing
-efforts. He wrote a treatise on his own conversion and a Christian
-commentary on the seventy-second Psalm, in both of which he asserted
-the genuineness of his change of creed, and urged the Jews to abjure
-their errors. How many weak-minded Jews must have been influenced by
-the zeal, earnest or hypocritical, of such men as these, belonging to
-their own race, and learned in their literature!
-
-It is impossible to exaggerate the services of the men who, deeply
-impressed with the gravity of the crisis, threw themselves into
-the breach, with exhortations to their co-religionists to remain
-faithful to their creed. In defiance of the dangers which menaced
-them, they scattered their inspiriting discourses far and wide.
-Foremost among them were the men who had distinguished themselves
-at the Tortosa disputation by their unyielding attitude and their
-courage in withstanding the unjustifiable attacks upon the Talmud--
-Don Vidal (Ferrer) Ibn-Labi and Joseph Albo. The former drew up in
-Hebrew a refutation of Geronimo's impeachment of the Talmud (Kodesh
-ha-Kodashim), and the latter circulated, in Spanish, an account of
-a religious controversy he had sustained with an eminent church
-dignitary. Isaac ben Kalonymos, of a learned Provencal family named
-Nathan, who associated a great deal with learned Christians, and
-frequently had to defend his religious convictions, wrote two polemical
-works, one entitled "Correction of the False Teacher," directed against
-Geronimo's libelous essay, and the other, called "The Fortress,"
-of unknown purpose. He also compiled a laborious work of reference
-intended to assist others in defending Judaism from attack. Isaac
-Nathan, in his intercourse with Christians, often had to listen to
-criticisms of Judaism, or evidences drawn from the Hebrew Bible, in
-favor of Christian dogmas, which he found were always based on false
-renderings of Hebrew words. To put an end to these illusory outgrowths
-of prevailing ignorance of the original text of the Scriptures, or,
-at least, to lighten the labors of his brethren in refuting them, he
-resolved to compile a comprehensive digest of the linguistic materials
-of the Bible, by which the actual meaning of each word should be made
-clear. According to the plan adopted, any one can ascertain, at a
-glance, both how often a certain word occurs in the Bible, and its
-varying meanings according to the contexts. The work thus undertaken
-by Isaac Nathan was of colossal scope, and occupied a long series of
-years (September, 1437-1445). It was a Bible concordance, that is, the
-verses were grouped alphabetically under the reference words according
-to roots and derivations. The existing Latin concordances served in a
-measure as models, although their purpose was the less ambitious one of
-assisting preachers to find texts. Isaac Nathan, who produced various
-other works, by this concordance rendered inestimable and lasting
-service to the study of the Bible, although his labor was of a purely
-mechanical kind. Originating from the temporary needs of the polemical
-situation, it has been, and will ever remain, a powerful weapon for
-ensuring the triumph of Judaism in its struggles with other religious
-systems.
-
-The philosopher, Joseph Ibn-Shem Tob (born 1400, died a martyr 1460),
-who was a voluminous writer, a popular preacher, and a frequenter of
-the Castilian court, also entered the lists against Christianity to
-expose the fallacy and unreasonableness of its dogmas. In his frequent
-intercourse with Christians of distinction, both clerical and lay, he
-found it necessary to make himself thoroughly acquainted with Christian
-theology that he might adduce cogent arguments in reply to those who
-wished to convert him, or in his presence made the oft-reiterated
-statement of the falsity of Judaism. Occasionally a regular controversy
-in defense of his creed was forced upon him. The fruits of his studies
-and thought he committed to writing in the shape of a small treatise,
-entitled "Doubts of the Religion of Jesus," in which he criticised
-with unsparing logic the dogmas of Original Sin, Salvation, and
-Incarnation. Besides, he wrote, for the instruction of his brethren, a
-detailed commentary on Profiat Duran's satire on Christianity, and made
-available for them, by means of a Hebrew translation, Chasdai Crescas'
-polemical work against the Christian religion, originally written in
-Spanish. Strange to say, the Spanish Jews preferred, as a rule, Hebrew
-books to those in the language of their adopted country.
-
-Among the authors of polemical works against Christianity a
-contemporary of Joseph Ibn-Shem Tob deserves special mention. History
-has hitherto forgotten Chayim Ibn-Musa, from Bejar, in the neighborhood
-of Salamanca (born about 1390, died about 1460), a physician,
-versifier and writer, who had access to the Spanish court and the
-grandees through his medical skill, and so, frequent opportunities
-of discussing questions of doctrine with ecclesiastics and learned
-laymen. A colloquy preserved by Chayim Ibn-Musa illustrates the spirit
-which prevailed in Spain before the hateful Inquisition silenced all
-freedom of speech. A learned ecclesiastic once asked Ibn-Musa why,
-if Judaism, as he maintained, was the true faith, the Jews could not
-possess themselves of the Holy Land and Jerusalem? Ibn Musa replied
-that they had lost their country through the sins of their fathers, and
-could regain it only by perfect atonement and purgation. He, in turn,
-propounded a question: Why are the Christians no longer in possession
-of the Holy Sepulcher? and why does it, together with all the sites
-associated with the Passion, continue in the hands of Mahometan
-infidels, notwithstanding that Christians, by means of confession and
-absolution, and through the medium of the nearest available priest,
-can free themselves at any moment from sin? Before the ecclesiastic
-could bethink himself of a suitable reply, a knight, who had formerly
-been in Palestine, interposed: The Mahometans are the only people
-who deserve to possess the site of the Temple and the Holy Land, for
-neither Christians nor Jews hold houses of prayer in so much honor
-as they. The Christians, during the night before Easter (Vigils),
-perpetrate shameful abominations in the churches at Jerusalem, abandon
-themselves to debauchery, harbor thieves and murderers, and carry on
-bloody feuds within their precincts. They dishonor their character in
-the same way as the Jews profaned their Temple. Therefore, God, in His
-wisdom, has deprived the Jews and the Christians of the Holy City, and
-has intrusted it to the Mahometans, because, in their hands, it is
-safe from desecration. To his observation the Christian priest and the
-Jewish physician could oppose only abashed silence.
-
-Chayim Ibn-Musa devoted himself to the task of discrediting the chief
-sources of the materials of Christian attacks on Judaism, the writings
-of the Franciscan Nicholas de Lyra. He not only refuted the assertions
-put forward in those works, but deprived them of the soil upon which
-they fed. The ever-recurring controversies between Jews and Christians
-led to no conclusions, and left each party in the belief that it had
-gained a victory, because they generally turned on secondary questions,
-the disputants never discussing fundamental premises, but wrangling,
-each from his undemonstrated basis. Chayim Ibn-Musa wished to introduce
-method into these controversies, and to lay down clear principles for
-the defense of Judaism. Accordingly, he drew up rules which, strictly
-observed, were bound to lead to a definite result. In the first
-place, he advised Jews invariably to hold fast in a disputation to
-the simple meaning of the Scriptures, always to take the context into
-account, and especially to avoid allegorical or symbolical methods
-of interpretation, which left Christian polemics free to introduce
-arbitrary theories. Further, Jewish disputants were to announce that
-they ascribed no authority in matters of belief either to the Chaldaic
-translation of the Bible (Targum) or to the Greek (Septuagint), these
-being the sources of the false proofs adduced by Christians. He
-counseled them to abandon even Agadic exegesis, and not to hesitate to
-declare that it had no weight in determining the doctrines of Judaism.
-These and similar rules Chayim Ibn-Musa applied to the writings of
-Nicholas de Lyra, successfully refuting them from beginning to end in a
-comprehensive work, justly entitled "Shield and Sword."
-
-The anti-Christian polemical literature of this period was further
-enriched by two writers, father and son, living in Algiers, far
-removed from the scenes of the Christian propaganda. But Simon ben
-Zemach Duran and his son, Solomon Duran, were Spaniards by birth and
-education. In his philosophic exposition of Judaism, the former devoted
-a chapter to Christianity, maintaining, in answer to Christian and
-Mahometan objections, the inviolability of the Torah. This chapter,
-entitled "Bow and Buckler," and described as being "for defense and
-attack," proves the contention of older writers, and more recently of
-Profiat Duran, that Jesus' intention was not to abolish Judaism. The
-rabbi of Algiers exhibits extraordinarily wide acquaintance with the
-literature of the New Testament and thorough familiarity with church
-doctrine, combats each with weapons taken from its own arsenal, and
-criticises unsparingly.
-
-Solomon Duran I (born about 1400, died 1467), who succeeded his father
-in the Algerian rabbinate, combined with profound Talmudic knowledge
-a decided leaning towards a rationalistic apprehension of Judaism.
-Unlike his father and his ancestor, Nachmani, he was a sworn enemy of
-the Kabbala. During his father's lifetime and at his request, he wrote
-a refutation of the shameless, lying accusations brought against the
-Talmud by Geronimo de Santa Fe. In an exhaustive treatise ("Letter on
-the Conflict of Duties") he deals sharply with Geronimo's sallies. He
-repels the accusation that the Talmud teaches lewdness, and proves
-that it really inculcates extreme continence. Jews who regulate their
-lives according to Talmudical prescriptions scrupulously abstain from
-carnal sins, holding them in great abhorrence, and pointing with scorn
-at persons guilty of them. How, asks Solomon Duran, can Christians
-reproach Jews with unchastity--they, whose holiest men daily commit
-sins which dare not be mentioned to modest ears, and which have become
-proverbial as "Monk's sin" (peccato dei frati).
-
-Religious philosophy, which had been raised to the perfection of a
-science only by Jewish-Spanish thinkers, had its last cultivators in
-Spain during this period. The same men who protected Judaism against
-the onslaughts of Christianity defended it against benighted Jews who
-wished to banish light, and, like the Dominicans, desired to establish
-blind faith in the place of reason and judgment. Zealots like Shem Tob
-Ibn-Shem Tob and others, biased by their narrow Talmudical education,
-and misled by the Kabbala, saw in scientific inquiry a byroad to
-heresy. Perceiving that for the most part cultivated Jews succumbed to
-the proselytizing efforts of Vincent Ferrer and Pope Benedict, men of
-the stamp of Shem Tob were confirmed in their belief that philosophic
-culture, nay, reflection on a religious topic, irretrievably lead
-to apostasy. The logical result of religious impeachment of science
-was the condemnation of Maimuni and all the Jewish thinkers who
-had allowed reason to have weight in religious questions. Against
-this form of bigotry Joseph Albo entered the lists with a complete
-religio-philosophical work (Ikkarim, "fundamental teachings"), in which
-he attempted to separate the essential doctrines of Judaism from the
-non-essential, and to fix the boundary line between belief and heresy.
-
-Joseph Albo (born about 1380, died about 1444), of Monreal, one of
-the principal representatives of Judaism at the Tortosa disputation,
-who, probably through the intolerance of Pope Benedict, had emigrated
-to Soria, was a physician and a pupil of Chasdai Crescas, hence well
-acquainted with the physical sciences and the philosophic thought of
-his time. Although a strict adherent of Talmudical Judaism, he was,
-like his teacher, not averse to philosophic ideas. Indeed, he tried to
-reconcile them, without, of course, permitting Judaism to yield a jot
-to philosophy. Albo had not, however, the profundity of his teacher; as
-a thinker he was superficial, commonplace, and incapable of writing
-with logical sequence. On the advice of his friends, he undertook to
-investigate in how far freedom of inquiry in religious matters was
-possible within the limits of Judaism. At the same time he wished to
-fix the number of articles of faith and to decide the question whether
-the number thirteen adopted by Maimuni was correct, or whether it could
-be increased or lessened without justly bringing a charge of heresy
-on him who made the change. Thus originated his religio-philosophical
-system, the last on Spanish soil. Albo's style differs widely from
-that of his predecessors. He was a preacher--one of the cleverest
-and most graceful--and this circumstance exercised marked influence
-on his method of exposition. It is easy, comprehensible, popular and
-captivating. Albo has the knack of explaining every philosophic idea by
-a striking illustration, and of developing it by skillful employment
-of Bible verses and Agadic aphorisms. What his style thus gained, on
-the one hand, in intelligibility and popularity, it lost, on the other,
-through a certain redundancy and shallowness.
-
-It is a remarkable fact that Albo, who thought that he was developing
-his religio-philosophical system exclusively in the native spirit
-of Judaism, placed at its head a principle of indubitably Christian
-origin; so powerfully do surroundings affect even those who exert
-themselves to throw off such influence. The religious philosopher
-of Soria propounded as his fundamental idea that salvation was the
-whole aim of man in this life, and that Judaism strongly emphasized
-this aspect of religion. His teacher, Chasdai Crescas, and others,
-had considered man's aim the bliss of the future life, to be found
-in proximity to the Deity and in the union of the soul with the
-all-pervading spirit of God. According to Albo highest happiness
-consists not so much in the exaltation of the soul as in its salvation.
-That is the nucleus of Albo's religio-philosophical system. Man
-attains only after death the perfection for which he is destined by
-God; for this higher life his mundane existence is but a preparation.
-How can he best utilize his term of preparation? There are three
-kinds of institutions for the reclamation of man from barbarism and
-his advancement to civilization. The first is Natural Law, a sort of
-social compact to abstain from theft, rapine and homicide; the second
-is State Legislation, which cares for order and morals; and the third
-is Philosophical Law, which aims at promoting the enduring happiness of
-man, or, at least, at removing obstacles in the way of its realization.
-All these institutions, even when highly developed, are powerless
-to assist the real welfare of man, the redemption of his soul, his
-beatitude; for they concern themselves only with actions, with proper
-conduct, but do nothing to inculcate the views or supply the principles
-which are to be the mainsprings of action. If the highest aim of man
-be eternal life or beatitude after death, then there must be a Divine
-Legislation, without which man in this world must always be groping
-in darkness and missing his highest destiny. This Divine Legislation
-must supply all the perfections lacking in its mundane counterpart. It
-must have for its postulate a perfect God, who both wishes and is able
-to promote the redemption of man; it must further bear witness to the
-certainty that this God has revealed an unalterable Law calculated to
-secure the happiness of man; and finally it must appoint a suitable
-requital for actions and intentions. Hence this Divine Legislation has
-three fundamental principles: the Existence of God, the Revelation of
-His Will, and just Retribution after Death. These are the three pillars
-on which it rests, and it requires none other.
-
-Judaism, then, according to Albo, is a discipline for eternal
-salvation. It is "the Divine Legislation" (Dath Elohith), and, as
-such, comprises many religious laws--613 according to the customary
-calculation--to enable each individual to promote his own salvation.
-For even a single religious precept fulfilled with intelligence
-and devotion, and without mental reservation or ulterior motive,
-entitles man to salvation. Consequently, the Torah, with its numerous
-prescriptions, is not intended as a burden for its disciples, nor are
-the Jews threatened, as Christian teachers maintain, with a curse in
-the event of their not observing the entire number of commandments.
-On the contrary, the object is to render easy the path to higher
-perfection. Therefore, the Agada says that every Israelite has a share
-in Eternal Life (Olam ha-ba), for each one can obtain this end by the
-fulfillment of a single religious duty.
-
-Arrived at this point, the religious philosopher of Soria propounds
-the question whether Judaism can ever be altered as previous
-dispensations were by the Sinaitic Revelation. This question required
-specially careful consideration, as Christians always maintained that
-Christianity was a new revelation, as Judaism had been in its time;
-that the "New Covenant" took the place of the "Old," and that by the
-Gospel, the Torah had been fulfilled, _i. e._, abrogated. Albo had
-acknowledged the existence of rudimentary revelations previous to that
-of Sinai, and to avoid being entrapped by the consequences of his
-own system he put forward a peculiar distinction. That which God had
-once revealed by His own mouth direct to man was, by virtue of that
-fact, unalterable and binding for all time; but that which had been
-communicated only by a prophetic intermediary might suffer change or
-even annulment. The Ten Commandments which the Israelites had received
-direct from God, amid the flames of Sinai, were unalterable; in them
-the three cardinal principles of a divine legislation are laid down.
-On the other hand, the remaining prescriptions of Judaism, imposed on
-the people solely through the mediation of Moses, were open to change
-or even revocation. But this instability of a portion, perhaps a large
-portion, of the Jewish religious law was only a theory, propounded
-simply as a possibility. In practice the obligations of the Torah were
-to be regarded as binding and unalterable, until it should please God
-to reveal other laws through the medium of a prophet as great as Moses,
-and in as open and convincing a manner as on Sinai. Hitherto no prophet
-had made good his claim so far as to render necessary the rescinding of
-any portion of Judaism.
-
-Albo's religious system is far from satisfactory. Based upon the
-Christian doctrine of salvation, it was compelled to regard faith, in
-a Christian sense, as the chief condition of the soul's redemption,
-and the ordinances of Judaism as sacraments, similar to baptism or
-communion, upon which salvation was dependent. Nor is the development
-of his theory strictly logical. Too often the arts of the preacher take
-the place of severe reasoning, and for the illustration of his ideas he
-indulges in prolix sermons in exposition of Biblical and Agadic texts.
-
-A bolder thinker than Albo, but, like him, a preacher, was his junior
-contemporary, Joseph Ibn-Shem Tob. At one time, when in disgrace with
-the king of Castile, and leading a wandering life, he held forth every
-Sabbath to large audiences. He had been well schooled in philosophy.
-His Kabbalistical, gloomy and fanatical father, who denounced
-philosophy as a primary source of evil, damned Aristotle to hell, and
-even accused Maimuni of heterodoxy, must have been scandalized when
-his son Joseph plunged deep, and with all his heart, into the study
-of Aristotle and Maimuni. But Joseph did not hesitate to stigmatize
-the error of his father and of those who thought the employment of
-philosophic methods opposed to the interests of religion. He, on the
-contrary, held that they were essential for the attainment of the
-higher destiny to which all men, especially Israelites, are called.
-The cultured, philosophical Jew who intelligently discharges all the
-religious duties of Judaism obviously realizes his high aim much sooner
-than the Israelite who practices his ceremonial blindly, without wisdom
-or understanding. Science is also of great value in enabling human
-intelligence to discriminate error. It is the nature of man's imperfect
-intellect to foster truth and error side by side; but knowledge teaches
-how to distinguish between the true and the false. On the other hand,
-gaps in philosophical teaching are bridged over by the Sinaitic Law.
-In so far as the latter conceives the happiness of man in the survival
-of the spirit after the destruction of the body, it is immeasurably
-the superior of philosophy. Judaism also names the means of attaining
-eternal happiness--the conscientious fulfillment of religious
-obligations. On this point, Joseph Shem Tob's view approximates that
-of Joseph Albo. In his eyes, also, the commandments of Judaism have a
-sacramental character, but he does not emphasize salvation so much as
-Albo. Joseph Ibn-Shem Tob went so far, however, as to deny that the
-objects of the religious laws were knowable, and, to a certain extent,
-ascribed to them a mystical influence.
-
-None of these writings of the first half of the fifteenth century,
-philosophical or polemical, was the fruit of leisure and an unfettered
-spirit. All were stimulated into existence by the urgent necessities
-of the times, and were put forth to protect the religious and moral
-treasure-house from pressing danger. In order not to succumb, Judaism
-was forced simultaneously to strengthen itself from within and ward off
-attacks from without.
-
-It was, indeed, more than ever necessary for Judaism to arm itself,
-doubly and trebly; its darkest days were approaching. Again the grim
-church fiend arose, and the gruesome shadow of its extended wings swept
-anxiously across Europe. As in the time of Innocent III, so again at
-this period the church decreed the degradation and proscription of
-the Jews. The old enactments were solemnly renewed by the official
-representatives of Christendom, assembled in OEcumenical Council at
-Basle, where they had declared their infallibility, and even sat in
-judgment on the papacy. Curious, indeed! The council could not arrange
-its own concerns, was powerless to bring the mocking Hussites back
-to the bosom of Mother Church, despaired of putting an end to the
-dissoluteness and vice of the clergy and monks, yet gave its attention
-to the Jews to lead them to salvation. Leprous sheep themselves, they
-sought to save unblemished lambs! The Basle church council, which sat
-for thirteen years (June, 1431-May, 1443), examining all the great
-European questions, gave no small share of its attention to the Jews.
-Their humiliation was necessary for the strengthening of Christian
-faith--such was the ground on which the council proceeded at its
-nineteenth sitting (September 7th, 1434), when it resolved to revise
-the old and devise new restrictions. The canonical decrees prohibiting
-Christians from holding intercourse with Jews, from rendering them
-services, and from employing them as physicians, excluding them from
-offices and dignities, imposing on them a distinctive garb, and
-ordering them to live in special Jew-quarters, were renewed. A few
-fresh measures were adopted, new in so far as they had not previously
-been put forward by the highest ecclesiastical authorities. These
-provided that Jews should not be admitted to university degrees, that
-they should be made, if necessary, by force, to attend the delivery
-of conversionist sermons, and that at the colleges means should be
-provided for combating Jewish heresy by instruction in Hebrew, Chaldee,
-and Arabic. Thus the OEcumenical Council, which gave itself out as
-inspired by the Holy Ghost, designed the conversion of all Jews. It
-adopted the program of Penyaforte, Pablo Christiani, and Vincent
-Ferrer, who had counseled systematic application of pressure to induce
-the Jews to abandon "their infidelity." On the baptized Jews, too,
-the Basle church council bestowed special attention. They were to be
-favored, but also carefully watched, lest they marry Jews, keep the
-Sabbath and Jewish feasts, bury their dead according to Jewish rites,
-or, in fact, follow any Jewish observances.
-
-A fanatical paroxysm broke out afresh in various towns of Europe,
-commencing in the island of Majorca. The remnant of the congregation
-of Palma was hated alike by the priests and the mob, and both gave
-a willing ear to the rumor that the Jews, during Holy Week, had
-crucified the Moorish servant of a Jew, and put him to the torture. The
-reputed martyr was still living, but, nevertheless, Bishop Gil-Nunjoz
-caused two Jews to be imprisoned as ringleaders. Thereupon arose a
-contest between the bishop and the governor, Juan Desfar, the latter
-maintaining that as the Jews were the property of the king, he alone
-could condemn them. The bishop was obliged to hand over the Jews, who
-were locked up in the governor's jail. The priests, however, incited
-the mob against the governor and the Jews, and before Juan Desfar
-could arrange for a hearing, the people were prepossessed against
-him. A court composed chiefly of Dominicans and Franciscans was
-called together, and employed the rack as the most effectual means of
-obtaining the truth from the witnesses. One of the accused put to the
-torture acknowledged all that was desired, and pointed out any Jews who
-happened to be mentioned as his accomplices. An unprincipled Jew named
-Astruc Sibili, who lived in strife with many members of the community,
-and feared to be involved in the blood accusation, came forward as the
-denouncer of his co-religionists. Apparently of his own accord Astruc
-Sibili acknowledged that the servant had been crucified, and pointed
-out several Jews as the murderers. Although he kept himself clear from
-all complicity in the matter, Astruc Sibili was soon punished for his
-denunciations--he was thrown into prison as an accomplice. The fate
-of the informer and the flight of several Jewish families, justly
-fearing a repetition of massacres, from Palma to a mountain in the
-vicinity, excited the Christian inhabitants yet more. The fugitives
-were pursued, placed in fetters, and brought back to the city, their
-flight being considered a proof of the guilt of the entire community.
-Astruc Sibili and three others were condemned to be burnt at the stake,
-but their punishment was commuted to death by hanging, on condition
-that they be baptized. To this they agreed, considering baptism the
-last straw by which their lives might be saved. The whole community,
-men, women and children, two hundred in all, went over to Christianity
-to escape a horrible death. The priests had ample employment in
-baptizing the converts. How little they believed in the imputed crime
-of the condemned was shown when, the gallows being reached, the
-priests, encouraging the mob to do the same, demanded the pardon of
-the condemned. The governor yielded to the voice of the people, and
-by a procession and amid singing they were escorted to the church,
-where a _Te Deum_ was chanted. Thus ended the community of Majorca,
-which had lasted over a thousand years, and had greatly contributed to
-the well-being of the island. With it disappeared the prosperity of
-this fruitful and favored island. Simon Duran, deeply grieved at the
-secession of the community of Palma, which he had lovingly cherished,
-silenced his conscience with the thought that he had not been remiss in
-exhortation.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-CAPISTRANO AND HIS PERSECUTION OF THE JEWS.
-
- Pope Eugenius IV, under the Influence of Alfonso de Cartagena,
- changes his Attitude towards the Jews--His Bull against the
- Spanish and Italian Jews in 1442--Don Juan II defends the
- Jews--Pope Nicholas V's Hostility--Louis of Bavaria--The
- Philosopher Nicholas of Cusa and his Relation to Judaism--John
- of Capistrano--His Influence with the People is turned against
- the Jews--Capistrano in Bavaria and Wuerzburg--Expulsion
- of the Breslau Community--Expulsion of the Jews from Bruenn
- and Olmuetz--The Jews of Poland under Casimir IV--Capture
- of Constantinople by Mahomet II--The Jews find an Asylum in
- Turkey--The Karaites--Moses Kapsali--Isaac Zarfati--Position
- of the Jews of Spain--Persecutions directed by Alfonso de
- Spina--The Condition of the Marranos.
-
-1442-1474 C.E.
-
-
-About the middle of the fifteenth century, venomous hatred of Jews,
-become characteristic of Spain and Germany, began to increase, and at
-the end of that century reached its highest development. In Spain it
-was stimulated principally by envy of the influential positions still
-enjoyed by Jews in spite of misfortune and humiliation; in Germany,
-on the contrary, where the Jews moved like shadows, it arose from
-vague race-antipathy, of which religious differences formed only one
-aspect. An unfortunate event for the German communities was the death
-of Emperor Sigismund (towards the end of 1437) at the moment when the
-council of Basle was casting a threatening glance in their direction.
-This prince was not a reliable protector of the Jews. Often enough he
-bled them to relieve his ever-recurring pecuniary embarrassments, and
-he even charged them with the expenses of the council of Constance.
-But so far as lay in his power he set his face against the bloody
-persecutions of his Hebrew subjects. He was succeeded as German
-king and emperor by the Austrian Archduke Albert, who had already
-distinguished himself by inhumanity towards Jews. Albert II was a
-deadly enemy of Jews and heretics. He could not exterminate either, for
-the Hussites had courage and arms, and the Jews were an indispensable
-source of money; but whenever it was sought to injure them he gladly
-assisted. When the town council of Augsburg decided to expel the Jewish
-community (1439), the emperor joyfully gave his consent. Two years
-were granted them to dispose of their houses and immovables; at the
-end of that time they were one and all exiled, and the grave-stones in
-the Jewish cemetery used to repair the city walls. Fortunately for the
-Jews, Albert reigned only two years, and the rule of the Holy Roman
-Empire, or rather the anarchy by which it was convulsed, devolved on
-the good-natured, weak, indolent, and tractable Frederick III. As a set
-off, two fanatical Jew-haters now arose--Pope Eugenius IV and the
-Franciscan, John of Capistrano, a cut-throat in the guise of a lowly
-servant of God.
-
-Eugenius, whom the council of Basle had degraded step by step,
-depriving him of his dignities and electing another pope in his place,
-ultimately triumphed through the treachery of some of the principal
-members of the council and the helplessness of the German princes, and
-was again enabled to befool the Christian nations. Eugenius, though of
-narrow, monkish views, was at first not unfavorably disposed towards
-the Jews. At the beginning of his pontificate, he confirmed the
-privileges granted Jews by his predecessor, Martin V, promised them
-his protection, and forbade their forcible baptism. But he was soon
-influenced in an opposite direction, and developed extraordinary zeal
-in degrading the Jews and withdrawing all protection from them. The
-prime mover in this conversion seems to have been Alfonso de Cartagena,
-a son of the apostate Paul de Santa Maria. Appointed bishop of Burgos
-on the death of his father, Alfonso warmly espoused the cause of Pope
-Eugenius at the council of Basle, and hence rose high in the favor of
-the pontiff. He alone could have been the author of the complaints
-against the pride and arrogance of the Castilian Jews which induced
-the pope to issue the bull of 1442. This document was addressed to
-the bishops of Castile and Leon (10th August, 1442), and was to the
-effect that it had come to the knowledge of his Holiness that the
-Jews abuse the privileges granted them by former popes, blaspheming
-and transgressing to the vexation of the faithful and the dishonor of
-the true faith. He felt himself compelled, therefore, to withdraw the
-indulgences granted by his predecessors--Martin and other popes--
-and to declare them null and void. At the same time Eugenius repeated
-the canonical restrictions in a severer form. Thus, he decreed that
-Christians should not eat, drink, bathe, or live with Jews (or
-Mahometans), nor use medicines of any kind purveyed by them. Jews (and
-Mahometans) should not be eligible for any office or dignity, and
-should be incompetent to inherit property from Christians. They were
-to build no more synagogues, and, in repairing the old, were to avoid
-all ornamentation. They were to seclude themselves from the public
-eye during Passion Week, to the extent even of keeping their doors
-and windows closed. The testimony of Jews (and Mahometans) against
-Christians was declared invalid. Eugenius' bull emphatically enjoined
-that no Christian should stand in any relation of servitude to a Jew,
-and should not even kindle a fire for him on the Sabbath; that Jews
-should be distinguished from Christians by a peculiar costume, and
-reside in special quarters. Furthermore, every blasphemous utterance
-by a Jew about Jesus, the "Mother of God," or the saints, was to be
-severely punished by the civil tribunals. This bull was ordered to
-be made known throughout the land, and put in force thirty days
-later. Heavy penalties were to be exacted for offenses under it. If
-the culprit was a Christian, he was to be placed under the ban of the
-church, and neither king nor queen was to be exempt; if a Jew, then
-the whole of his fortune, personal and real, was to be confiscated
-by the bishop of the diocese, and applied to the purposes of the
-church. By means of circular letters, Eugenius exhorted the Castilian
-ecclesiastics to enforce the restrictions without mercy. He dared not
-be outdone in Jew-hatred by the council of Basle. At about the same
-time, or perhaps earlier, Eugenius issued a bull of forty-two articles
-against the Italian Jewish communities, in which, among other things,
-he ordered that, under pain of confiscation of property, Jews should
-not read Talmudic literature.
-
-The papal bull for Castile was proclaimed in many of the towns, as it
-would appear, without the consent of the king, Juan II. The fanatics
-had won the day; all their wishes were fulfilled. The misguided people
-at once considered Jews and Mahometans outlawed, and proceeded to
-make violent attacks on their persons and property. Pious Christians
-interpreted the papal ordinances to mean that they were not to continue
-commercial relations of any kind with the Jews. Christian shepherds
-forthwith abandoned the flocks and herds committed to their charge by
-Jews and Mahometans, and plowmen turned their backs upon the fields.
-The union of towns (Hermandad) framed new statutes for the more
-complete oppression of the proscribed of the church. In consternation
-the Jews appealed to the king of Castile. Their complaints had all
-the more effect upon him as their damage meant damage to the royal
-exchequer. Accordingly, Juan II, or rather his favorite, Alvaro de
-Luna, issued a counter decree (April 6th, 1443). He expressed his
-indignation at the shamelessness which made the papal bull an excuse
-for assaults on the Jews and Mahometans. Canonical, royal and imperial
-law agreed in permitting them to live undisturbed and unmolested among
-Christians. The bull of Pope Eugenius placed Jews and Mahometans under
-certain specific restrictions; but it did not follow that they might
-be robbed, injured or maltreated, that they might not engage in trade
-or industry, nor work as weavers, goldsmiths, carpenters, barbers,
-shoe-makers, tailors, millers, coppersmiths, saddlers, rope-makers,
-potters, cartwrights or basket-makers, or that Christians might not
-serve them in these pursuits. Such service involved neither relaxation
-of Christian authority nor dangerous intimacy with Jews. Nor did it
-appear that the avocations mentioned conferred any of that prestige
-which solely the bull was designed to deny to Jews.
-
-Christians should certainly abstain from the medicines of Jewish or
-Moorish physicians, unless compounded by Christian hands; but this did
-not mean that skillful doctors of the Jewish or the Mahometan faith
-should not be consulted, or their medicines not used, when no Christian
-physician was available. Juan II imposed upon the magistracy the duty
-of safeguarding the Jews and Mahometans, as objects of his special
-protection, and instructed them to punish Christian offenders with
-imprisonment and confiscation of goods. He furthermore ordered that his
-pleasure be made known throughout the land by public criers, in the
-presence of a notary.
-
-Whether this sophistical decree was of any real use to the Jews is
-doubtful. Don Juan II had not much authority in his kingdom, and
-was obliged to make frequent concessions to hostile parties, with
-whom his own son occasionally made common cause. The Castilian Jews
-were consequently abandoned to the arbitrary authority of the local
-magistrates during the remainder of the reign of this well-meaning but
-weak monarch, and were obliged to come to terms with them whenever
-protection was required against violence or false accusations. Did any
-misfortune threaten a Jew, then the tailor would fly to his princely
-patron, or the goldsmith to a grandee of high position, and seek to
-avert it by supplications or gold. It was truly no enviable situation
-in which the Jews found themselves.
-
-Eugenius' successor, Pope Nicholas V (March, 1447-March, 1455),
-continued the system of degrading and oppressing the Jews. As
-soon as he ascended the throne of St. Peter he devoted himself to
-abolishing the privileges of the Italian Jews, which Martin V had
-confirmed and Eugenius had not formally revoked, and subjecting them
-to exceptional laws. In a bull, dated June 23d, 1447, he repeated
-for Italy the restrictions which his predecessor had formulated for
-Castile, re-enacting them in the fullest detail, not even omitting the
-prohibition against the lighting of fires for Jews on the Sabbath. But
-though Nicholas' bull was only a copy, it had much more real force than
-the original; for its execution was confided to the pitiless Jew-hater
-and heretic-hunter, John of Capistrano. On him devolved the duty of
-seeing, either in person or through his brother Franciscans, that the
-provisions of the bull were literally obeyed, and infractions strictly
-punished. If, for example, a Jewish physician provided a suffering
-Christian with the means of regaining health, Capistrano was authorized
-to confiscate the whole of the offender's fortune and property. And the
-saintly monk, with heart of stone, was just the man to visit such a
-transgression with unrelenting severity.
-
-The Jew-hatred of the council of Basle and the popes spread like a
-contagion over a wide area. The fierce and bigoted Bavarian Duke of
-Landshut, Louis the Rich--"a hunter of game and Jews"--had all
-the Jews of his country arrested on one day (Monday, October 5th,
-1450), shortly after his accession to power. The men were thrown into
-prison, the women shut up in the synagogues, and their property and
-jewelry confiscated. Christian debtors were directed not to pay their
-Jewish creditors more than the capital they had originally borrowed,
-and to deduct from that the interest already paid. After four weeks of
-incarceration the unhappy Jews were obliged to purchase their lives
-from the turbulent duke for 30,000 gulden, and then, penniless and
-almost naked, they were turned out of the country. Gladly would Louis
-have meted out the same treatment to the large and rich community
-of Ratisbon, which was within his jurisdiction. As, however, his
-authority was recognized only to a limited extent, and as the Jews of
-the city were under the protection of the council and its privileges,
-he was obliged to content himself with levying contributions. Many
-Jews are said to have been driven by anxiety and want into embracing
-Christianity.
-
-As the rest of the European Jews regarded their Spanish brethren as an
-exalted and favored class, so the papacy directed special attention to
-them in order to put an end to their favorable position in the state.
-Either on the proposition of the king to modify the severe canonical
-restrictions against Jews, or on the petition of their enemies to
-confirm them, Pope Nicholas V issued a new bull (March 1st, 1451). He
-confirmed the old exclusions from Christian society and all honorable
-walks of life, and entirely abolished the privileges of the Spanish and
-the Italian Jews.
-
-The unpitying harshness of canonical legislation against the children
-of Israel was unconsciously based on fear. All-powerful Christianity
-dreaded the influence which the Jewish mind might exert on the
-Christian population in too familiar intercourse. What the papacy
-concealed in the incense-clouds of its official decrees was disclosed
-by a philosophical writer and cardinal standing in close relation
-with the papal court. Nicholas de Cusa (from Cues on the Moselle),
-the last devotee of scholasticism, into which he tried to introduce
-mystic elements, enthusiastically advocated, in the face of the
-dissensions of Christendom, a union of all religions in one creed.
-The church ceremonies he was prepared to sacrifice, nay, he was ready
-to accept circumcision, if, by such means, non-Christians could be
-won over to the belief in the Trinity. He feared, as he distinctly
-said, the stiffneckedness of the Jews, who cling so stubbornly to
-their monotheism; but he consoled himself with the reflection that
-an unarmed handful could not disturb the peace of the world. It is
-true, the Jews were unarmed; but, mentally, they were still powerful,
-and Nicholas resolved to devote himself to the task of depriving
-them of intellectual strength. The pope had appointed him legate for
-Germany, where he was to reform church and cloister (1450-1451). But
-the cardinal also occupied himself with the Jewish question. At the
-provincial council of Bamberg he put into force the canonical statute
-concerning Jew badges, which provided that men should wear round
-pieces of red cloth on their breasts, and women blue stripes on their
-head-dresses--as if the branding of Jews could heal the dissolute
-clergy and their demoralized flocks of their uncleanness. The only
-result of the isolation of the Jews was their protection from the taint
-of prevailing immorality. The cardinal was not successful in purifying
-the clergy, or in putting an end to the fraud of bleeding hosts and
-miracle-working images, against which he had exclaimed so loudly. The
-church remained corrupt to the core. There would have been abundant
-cause to fear the Jews, if they had been permitted to probe the
-suppurating wounds.
-
-Especially troublesome to the church were the thousands of baptized
-Jews in Spain, who had been driven into its fold by the massacres,
-pulpit denunciations, and legal restrictions to which their race
-was exposed. Not only the lay new-Christians, but also those who had
-taken orders or had assumed the monk's garb, continued to observe,
-more or less openly, the Jewish religious laws. The sophistry of the
-converts, Paul de Santa Maria and Geronimo de Santa Fe, regarding
-the testimony in the Old Testament and the Talmudic Agada to the
-Messiahship of Jesus, the Incarnation of God, the Trinity and other
-church dogmas, impressed the Marranos but little. In spite of baptism,
-they remained stiff-necked and blind, _i. e._, true to the faith of
-their fathers. Don Juan of Castile, at the instigation of his favorite,
-Alvaro de Luna, who was anxious to strike at his arch-enemies, the
-new-Christians, complained to Pope Nicholas V of the relapses of the
-Marranos, and the pontiff knew of no remedy but force. He addressed
-rescripts to the bishop of Osma and the vicar of Salamanca (November
-20th, 1451), empowering them to appoint inquisitors to inquire
-judicially into cases of new-Christians suspected of Judaizing. The
-inquisitors were authorized to punish the convicted, imprison them,
-confiscate their goods and disgrace them, to degrade even priests, and
-hand them over to the secular arm--a church euphemism for condemning
-them to the heretic's stake. This was the first spark of the hell-fire
-of the Inquisition, which perpetrated more inhumanity than all the
-tyrants and malefactors branded by history. At first this bull seems
-to have been ineffectual. The times were not ripe for the bloody
-institution. Besides, the Christians themselves helped to keep up the
-connection of the baptized Jews with their brethren in race. They
-denied equal rights to new-Christians of Jewish or Mahometan origin,
-and wished to exclude them from all posts of honor. Against this
-antipathy, inherent in the diversity of national elements, the pope was
-compelled to issue a bull (November 29th, 1451), but it was powerless
-to uproot the prejudice. It could be removed only by higher culture,
-not at the dictation of a church chief, even though he boasted of
-infallibility.
-
-How absurd, then, to continue driving such proselytes into the church!
-Yet this was done by the Franciscan monk, John of Capistrano (of
-Neapolitan origin), who is responsible for immense injury to the Jews
-of many lands. This mendicant friar, of gaunt figure and ill-favored
-appearance, possessed a winning voice and an iron will, which enabled
-him to obtain unbounded influence, not only over the stupid populace,
-but also over the cultivated classes. With a word he could fascinate,
-inspire, or terrify, persuade to piety or incite to cruelty. Like the
-Spanish Dominican, Vincent Ferrer, the secret of Capistrano's power
-lay not so much in his captivating eloquence as in the sympathetic
-modulations of his voice and the unshakable enthusiasm with which he
-clung to his mistaken convictions. He himself firmly believed that,
-with the blood he had gathered from the nose of his master, Bernard
-of Siena, and his _capuche_, he could cure the sick, awake the dead
-and perform all kinds of miracles, and the misguided people not
-only believed but exaggerated his professions. His strictly ascetic
-life, his hatred of good living, luxury and debauchery, made an
-impression the deeper from its striking contrast to the sensuality
-and dissoluteness of the great bulk of the clergy and monks. Wherever
-Capistrano appeared, the people thronged by thousands to hear him, to
-be edified and agitated, even though they did not understand a syllable
-of his Latin addresses. The astute popes, Eugenius IV and Nicholas
-V, recognized in him a serviceable instrument for the restoration of
-the tottering authority of St. Peter. They rejoiced in his homilies
-on the infallibility of the papacy and his fiery harangues on the
-extermination of heretics, and the necessity of withstanding the
-victoriously advancing Turks. They offered no objection if, at the
-same time, he thought proper to vent his monkish gall upon harmless
-amusements, pastimes and the elegancies of life, seeing that they
-themselves were not disturbed in their enjoyments and pleasures. Among
-the standing themes of Capistrano's exciting discourses--second only
-to his rancor against heretics and Turks, and his tirades against
-luxury and sports--were his denunciations of the impieties and the
-usury of Jews. This procured his appointment by Pope Nicholas to the
-post of inquisitor of the Jews, his duty being to superintend the
-enforcement of the canonical restrictions against them. He had in
-Naples occupied the position of inquisitorial judge for the Jews, on
-the nomination of Queen Joanna, who had empowered him to punish with
-the severest penalties any failure to observe the ecclesiastical law or
-wear the Jew badge.
-
-When this infuriate Capuchin visited Germany, he spread terror and
-dismay among the Jews. They trembled at the mention of his name. In
-Bavaria, Silesia, Moravia, and Austria, the bigotry of the Catholics,
-already at a high pitch on account of the Hussite schism, was further
-stirred by Capistrano, and, the Bohemian heretics being beyond its
-reach, it vented itself upon Jews. The Bavarian dukes, Louis and
-Albert, who had on one occasion before driven the Jews out of their
-territories, were made still more fanatical by Capistrano. The former
-demanded of certain counts, and of the city of Ratisbon, that they
-expel the Jews. The burgomaster and town council, however, refused, and
-would not withdraw the protection and the rights of citizenship which
-the Jews had enjoyed from an early period. But they could not shield
-them from the hostility of the clergy. Eventually even the Ratisbon
-burghers, despite their good will for their Jewish fellow-citizens,
-fell under the influence of Capistrano's fanaticism, and allowed
-themselves to be incited to acts of unfriendliness. In the midwife
-regulations, promulgated during the same year, occurs a clause
-prohibiting Christian midwives from attending Jewish women, even in
-cases where the lives of the patients were at stake.
-
-The change of public feeling in respect to the Jews, brought about by
-Capistrano, is strikingly illustrated by the conduct of one eminent
-ecclesiastic before and after the appearance of the Capuchin in
-Germany. Bishop Godfrey, of Wuerzburg, reigning duke of Franconia,
-shortly after his accession to the government of the duchy, had granted
-the fullest privileges to the Jews. More favorable treatment they
-could not have desired. For himself and his successors he promised
-special protection to all within his dominions, both to those settled
-and those who might settle there later. They were to be freed from
-the authority of the ordinary tribunals, lay and ecclesiastical, and
-to have their disputes inquired into and adjudicated by their own
-courts. Their rabbi (Hochmeister) was to be exempt from taxes, and
-to be allowed to receive pupils in his _Yeshiba_ at his discretion.
-Their movements were to be unrestricted, and those who might desire to
-change their place of residence were to be assisted to collect their
-debts, and provided with safe-conduct on their journeys. It was further
-promised that these privileges should never be modified or revoked,
-and the dean and chapter unanimously recognized and guaranteed them
-"for themselves and their successors in the chapter." Every Jew who
-took up his abode within Bishop Godfrey's jurisdiction was provided
-with special letters of protection. But after Capistrano had begun his
-agitation, how different the attitude towards Jews! We soon find the
-same bishop and duke of Franconia issuing, "on account of the grievous
-complaints against the Jews in his diocese," a statute and ordinance
-(1453) decreeing their banishment. They were allowed until the 18th
-January of the following year to sell their immovables, and within
-fourteen days after that date, they were to leave, for "he (the bishop)
-would no longer tolerate Jews in his diocese." The towns, barons,
-lords, and justices were enjoined to expel the Jews from their several
-jurisdictions, and Jewish creditors were deprived of a portion of the
-debts owing to them. When Jews were concerned, inhuman fanaticism could
-beguile a noble-hearted prince of the church and an entire chapter of
-ecclesiastics into a flagrant breach of faith.
-
-Capistrano's influence was most mischievous for the Jews of Silesia.
-Here he showed himself in truth to be the "Scourge of the Jews," as
-his admirers called him. The two chief communities in this province,
-which belonged half to Poland and half to Bohemia, were at Breslau
-and Schweidnitz, and the Jews composing them, not being permitted to
-possess real property, and being, besides, largely engaged in the
-money traffic, had considerable amounts of money at their command. The
-majority of the nobles were among their debtors, and several towns were
-either themselves debtors or had become security for their princes.
-Hence it is not unlikely that some debtors of rank secretly planned
-to evade their liabilities by ridding themselves of the Jews. At any
-rate the advent of the fanatical Franciscan afforded an opportunity for
-carrying out such a design.
-
-Capistrano came to the Silesian capital on the invitation of the
-bishop of Breslau, Peter Novak, who found himself unable to control
-his subordinate ecclesiastics. Summoning the clergy to his presence,
-the Franciscan preacher upbraided them for their sinful, immoral, and
-sensual lives. The doors of the church in which the interview took
-place were securely bolted, so that no lay ear might learn the full
-extent of the depravity of the ministers of the Gospel. But nearer to
-his heart than the reclamation of the clergy was the extermination of
-the Hussites, of whom there were many in Silesia, and the persecution
-of the Jews. The frenzied fanaticism with which Capistrano's harangues
-inspired the people of Breslau directed itself principally against the
-Jews. A report was spread that a Jew named Meyer, one of the wealthiest
-of the Breslau Israelites, in whose safe-keeping were many of the bonds
-of the burghers and nobles, had purchased a host from a peasant, had
-stabbed and blasphemed it, and then distributed its fragments among
-the communities of Schweidnitz, Liegnitz, and others for further
-desecration. It need hardly be said that the wounded host was alleged
-to have shed blood. This imbecile fiction soon reached the ears of the
-municipal authorities, with whom it found ready credence. Forthwith
-all the Jews of Breslau, men, women and children, were thrown into
-prison, their entire property in the "Judengasse" seized, and, what
-was most important to the authors of the catastrophe, the bonds of
-their debtors, worth about 25,000 Hungarian gold florins, confiscated
-(2d May, 1453). The guilt of the Jews was rendered more credible by
-the flight of a few of them, who were, however, soon taken. Capistrano
-assumed the direction of the inquiry into this important affair. As
-inquisitor, the leading voice in the prosecution of blasphemers of the
-consecrated wafer by right belonged to him. He ordered a few Jews to
-be stretched on the rack, and personally instructed the torturers in
-their task--he had experience in such work. The tortured Israelites
-confessed. Meantime another infamous lie was circulated. A wicked
-baptized Jewess declared that the Breslau Jews had once before burnt
-a host, and that, on another occasion, they had kidnaped a Christian
-boy, fattened him, and put him into a cask studded with sharp nails,
-which they rolled about until their victim gave up the ghost. His
-blood had been distributed among the Silesian communities. Even the
-bones of the murdered child were alleged to have been found. The guilt
-of the Jews appeared established in these various cases, and a large
-number, in all 318 persons, were arrested in different localities,
-and brought to Breslau. Capistrano sat in judgment upon them, and
-hurried them to execution. At the Salzring--now Bluecherplatz--where
-Capistrano resided, forty-one convicted Jews were burnt on one day (2d
-June, 1453). The rabbi (Phineas?) hanged himself; he had also counseled
-others to take their own lives. The remainder were banished from
-Breslau, all their children under seven years of age having previously
-been taken from them by force, baptized, and given to Christians to
-be brought up. This was Capistrano's wish, and in a learned treatise
-he explained to King Ladislaus that it was in consonance with the
-Christian religion and orthodoxy. The honest town clerk, Eschenloer,
-who did not venture to protest aloud against these barbarities, wrote
-in his diary, "Whether this is godly or not, I leave to the judgment of
-the ministers of religion." The ministers of religion had transformed
-themselves into savages. The goods of the burnt and banished Jews were,
-of course, seized, and with their proceeds the Bernardine church was
-built. It was not the only church erected with bloody money. In the
-remaining Silesian towns the Jews fared no better. Some were burnt, and
-the rest chased away, stripped almost to the skin.
-
-When the young king, Ladislaus, was petitioned by the Breslau town
-council to decree that from that time forward no Jew would be allowed
-to settle in Breslau, not only did he assent "for the glory of God
-and the honor of the Christian faith," but he added, in approval of
-the outrages committed, "that they (the Silesian Jews) had suffered
-according to their deserts," a remark worthy of the son of Albert II,
-who had burnt the Austrian Jews. The same monarch also sanctioned--
-doubtless at the instigation of Capistrano, who passed several months
-at Olmuetz--the expulsion of the Jews from the latter place and from
-Bruenn.
-
-The echoes of Capistrano's venomous eloquence reached even Poland,
-disturbing the Jewish communities there from the tranquillity they
-had enjoyed for centuries. Poland had long been a refuge for hunted
-and persecuted Jews. Exiles from Germany, Austria and Hungary found a
-ready welcome on the Vistula. The privileges generously granted them
-by Duke Boleslav, and renewed and confirmed by King Casimir the Great,
-were still in force. The Jews were, in fact, even more indispensable
-in that country than in other parts of Christian Europe; for in Poland
-there were only two classes, nobles and serfs, and the Jews supplied
-the place of the middle class, providing merchandise and money, and
-bringing the dead capital of the country into circulation. During a
-visit which Casimir IV paid to Posen shortly after his accession,
-a fire broke out in this already important city, and, with the
-exception of its few brick houses, it was totally destroyed. In this
-conflagration, the original document of the privileges granted the Jews
-a century before by Casimir the Great perished. Jewish deputations from
-a number of Polish communities waited upon the king, lamenting the
-loss of these records, so important to them, and praying that new ones
-might be prepared according to existing copies, and that all their old
-rights might be renewed and confirmed. Casimir did not require much
-persuasion. In order that they might live in security and contentment
-under his happy reign, he granted them privileges such as they had
-never before enjoyed in any European state (14th August, 1447). This
-king was in no respect a slave of the church. So strictly did he keep
-the clergy within bounds that they charged him with persecuting and
-robbing them. He forbade their meddling in affairs of state, saying
-that in such matters he preferred to rely on his own powers.
-
-Either the king was misled by a false copy of the original charters,
-or he desired to avail himself of the opportunity of enlarging their
-scope without appearing to make fresh concessions; at all events, the
-privileges accorded under the new statute were, in many respects, more
-considerable than those formerly enjoyed by the Jews. Not alone did
-it permit unrestricted trading and residence all over the then very
-extensive kingdom of Poland, but it annulled canonical laws often laid
-down by the popes, and only recently re-enacted by the general church
-council of Basle. Casimir's charter mentioned that Jews and Christians
-might bathe together, and in all respects enjoy free intercourse with
-each other. It emphatically decreed that no Christian could summon
-a Jew before an ecclesiastical tribunal, and that if a Jew was so
-summoned, he need not appear. The palatines in their several provinces
-were enjoined to see that the Jews were not molested by the clergy, and
-generally to extend to them powerful protection. Furthermore, no Jew
-might be accused of using Christian blood in the Passover ceremonies,
-or of desecrating hosts, "Jews being innocent of such offenses, which
-are repudiated by their religion." If a Christian charged an individual
-Jew with using Christian blood, his accusation had to be supported
-by native, trustworthy Jewish witnesses and four similarly qualified
-Christian witnesses, and then the accused was to suffer for his
-crime, and his co-religionists were not to be dragged into it. In the
-event, however, of the Christian accuser not being in a position to
-substantiate his charge by credible testimony, he was to be punished
-with death. This was a check on ever-recurring calumny with its train
-of massacres of Jews. Casimir also recognized the judicial autonomy of
-the Jewish community. In criminal cases between Jews, or between Jews
-and Christians, the ordinary tribunals were not to interfere, but the
-palatine, or his representative, assisted by Jews, was to adjudicate.
-In minor law-suits the decision was to rest with the Jewish elders
-(rabbis), who were permitted to inflict a fine of six marks in cases
-where their summonses were not obeyed. To keep the authority of the
-Jewish courts within reasonable bounds, Casimir's charter enacted that
-the ban should be pronounced on a Jew only with the concurrence of the
-entire community. Truly, in no part of Christian Europe were the Jews
-possessed of such important privileges. They were renewed and issued
-by the king with the assent of the Polish magnates. Also the Karaite
-communities of Troki, Luzk, etc., received from Casimir a renewal and
-confirmation of the privileges granted them by the Lithuanian Duke
-Witold in the thirteenth century.
-
-The clergy looked with jealous eyes on this complaisance to the
-Jews, and zealously worked to induce the king to change his friendly
-attitude. At the head of the Polish priesthood thus hostile to the
-Jews stood the influential bishop and cardinal of Cracow, Zbigniev
-Olesnicki. The protection accorded the Jews and Hussites by the king
-was to him a source of deep chagrin, and, to give effective vent to
-his feelings, he sent in hot haste for the heretic-hunter Capistrano.
-Capistrano entered Cracow in triumph, and was received by the king
-and the clergy like a divine being. During the whole of his stay in
-Cracow (August 28th, 1453, to May, 1454), aided by Bishop Zbigniev, he
-stirred up King Casimir against the Hussite heretics and the Jews. He
-publicly remonstrated with him on the subject, threatening him with
-hell-fire and an unsuccessful issue to his war with the Prussian order
-of knights, if he did not abolish the privileges enjoyed by Jews, and
-abandon the Hussite heretics to the church. It was easy to predict a
-defeat at the hands of the Prussian knights, seeing that the pope and
-the whole of the Polish church were secretly assisting them against
-Casimir.
-
-Therefore, when the Teutonic knights, in aid of their Prussian allies,
-took the field against Poland, and the Polish army, with King Casimir
-at its head, was ignominiously put to flight (September, 1454), the
-game of the clerical party was won. They spread the rumor that the
-disaster to Poland was a consequence of the king's favor to Jews and
-heretics. To retrieve his fallen fortunes, and to undertake a vigorous
-campaign against the Prussians, Casimir needed the assistance of Bishop
-Zbigniev, and the latter was in a position to make his own terms.
-The Jews were sacrificed--the king was compelled to give them up.
-In November, 1454, Casimir revoked all the privileges he had granted
-the Jews, on the ground that "infidels may not enjoy preference over
-the worshipers of Christ, and servants may not be better treated than
-sons." By public criers the king's resolve was made known throughout
-the land. Besides, Casimir ordered that the Jews of Poland wear a
-special costume to distinguish them from Christians. Capistrano was
-victorious all along the line. Through him the Jews were abased even
-in the land where they had been most exalted. The results of this
-misfortune were not long in showing themselves. The Jewish communities
-mournfully wrote to their brethren in Germany, "that 'the monk' had
-brought grievous trouble," even to those who lived under the scepter of
-the king of Poland, whose lot had formerly been so happy that they had
-been able to offer a refuge to the persecuted of other lands. They had
-not believed that an enemy could reach them across the Polish frontier;
-and now they had to groan under the oppression of the king and the
-magnates.
-
-Meanwhile, heavy but deserved judgment descended on Christendom. After
-an existence of more than a thousand years the sin-laden Byzantine
-empire, which had stood its ground for centuries in spite of its
-rottenness, had at length collapsed with the fall of Constantinople
-(May 29th, 1453). The Turkish conqueror, Mahomet II, had given New Rome
-over to slavery, spoliation, massacre, and every horror and outrage,
-yet had, by no means, requited the wrongs she had inflicted on others
-and herself. From Constantine, the founder of the Byzantine empire,
-who placed a blood-stained sword in the hands of the church, to the
-last of the emperors, Constantine Dragosses, of the Palaeologus family,
-everyone in the long series of rulers (with the exception of the
-apostate Julian) was more or less inspired by falsehood and treachery,
-and an arrogant, hypocritical, persecuting spirit. And the people, as
-well as the servants of state and church, were worthy of their rulers.
-From them the German, Latin and Slavonic peoples had derived the
-principle that the Jews ought to be degraded by exceptional laws, or
-even exterminated. Now, however, Byzantium itself lay shattered in the
-dust, and wild barbarians were raising the new Turkish empire on its
-site. Heavy vengeance had been exacted. Mahomet II, the conqueror of
-Constantinople, threw a threatening glance at the remainder of Europe,
-the countries of the Latin Church. The whole of Christendom was in
-danger; yet the Christian rulers and nations were unable to organize
-an effective resistance against the Turkish conquerors. The perfidy
-and corruption of the papacy now bore bitter fruit. When the faithless
-pope, Nicholas V, called upon Christendom to undertake a crusade
-against the Turks, his legates at the diet of Ratisbon were compelled
-to listen to unsparing denunciation of his corruption. Neither the pope
-nor the emperor, they were told, had any real thought of undertaking a
-war against the Turks; their sole idea was to squander upon themselves
-the money they might collect. When the Turks made preparations to
-invade Hungary, and threatened to carry the victorious crescent from
-the right to the left side of the Danube, Capistrano preached himself
-hoarse to kindle enthusiasm for a new crusade. His tirades had ceased
-to draw. Their only effect was to assemble a ragged mob of students,
-peasants, mendicant friars, half-starved adventurers and romantic
-fanatics. The ghost of mediaevalism vanished before the dawn of a new
-day.
-
-It seems almost providential that, at a moment when the persecutions
-in Europe were increasing in number and virulence, the new Turkish
-empire should have arisen to offer an hospitable asylum to the hunted
-Jews. When, three days after the chastisement which he inflicted
-on Constantinople, the sultan, Mahomet II, proclaimed that all the
-fugitive inhabitants might return to their homes and estates without
-fear of molestation, he gave a benevolent thought to the Jews. He
-permitted them to settle freely in Constantinople and other towns,
-allotted them special dwelling-places, and allowed them to erect
-synagogues and schools. Soon after his capture of Constantinople,
-he ordered the election of a Greek patriarch, whom he invested
-with a certain political authority over all the Greeks in his new
-dominions, and also nominated a chief rabbi to preside over the Hebrew
-communities. This was a pious, learned, upright Israelite, named Moses
-Kapsali. Mahomet even summoned this rabbi to the divan, and singled
-him out for special distinction, giving him a seat next to the mufti,
-the Chief Ulema of the Mahometans, and precedence over the patriarch.
-Moses Kapsali (born about 1420, died about 1495), also received from
-the sultan a kind of political suzerainty over the Jewish communities
-in Turkey. The taxes imposed upon the Jews he had to apportion among
-communities and individuals; he had to superintend their collection
-and to pay them into the sultan's exchequer. He was furthermore
-empowered to inflict punishment on his co-religionists, and no rabbi
-could hold office without his sanction. In short, he was the chief and
-the official representative of a completely organized Jewish communal
-system.
-
-This favorable situation of the Jews had a stimulating effect on the
-degenerate Karaites, who migrated in considerable numbers from Asia,
-the Crimea and southern Poland, to take up their abode with their more
-happily placed brethren in Constantinople and Adrianople. The Karaites,
-whose fundamental principle is the study and reasonable interpretation
-of the Bible, were in so lamentable a state of ignorance, that their
-entire religious structure had become a system of authorized dogmas
-and traditions more rigid even than that of the Rabbanites. The extent
-of their intellectual decline may be measured by the fact that in the
-course of a century they failed to produce a single moderately original
-theological writer. Those with a bent for study were compelled to sit
-at the feet of Rabbanite teachers and receive from them instruction
-in the Scriptures and the Talmud. The proud masters of Bible exegesis
-had become the humble disciples of the once despised Rabbanites. The
-petrifaction of Karaism is illustrated by an event in European Turkey.
-A Karaite college, consisting of Menachem Bashyasi, his son Moses
-Bashyasi, Menachem Maroli, Michael the Old, his son Joseph, and a few
-others, had permitted the lights necessary for the Sabbath eve to be
-prepared on Friday, so that the holy day need not be spent in darkness.
-The college gave adequate reasons for the innovation. According to
-a Karaite principle, not only an ecclesiastical authority, but any
-individual is justified in abolishing an ancient custom, or annulling
-former decisions, if he can cite sufficient exegetical authority.
-Nevertheless, stormy opposition arose (about 1460) against this
-decision, aimed at a custom derived, perhaps, from Anan, the founder
-of Karaism, and hence possessing the sacredness conferred by the rust
-of seven centuries. Schism and friction were the result. The section
-of the community which ventured to prepare the lights required for the
-Sabbath eve was abused, and charged with heresy. Moreover, the schism
-relating to the commencement of the festivals was still unhealed.
-The Palestinian Karaite communities and their neighbors continued to
-distinguish between an ordinary and a leap year by the state of the
-barley harvest, and to regulate their festivals by the appearance
-of the new moon. On the other hand, the communities in Turkey, the
-Crimea, and southern Poland, used the calendar of the Rabbanites. These
-hereditary differences were eating more and more into the solidarity of
-the sect, for there was no means of composing them, and agreeing upon
-uniform principles.
-
-The conspicuous decrepitude of Karaism and the ignorance of its
-followers afforded the Rabbanites in the Turkish empire an opportunity
-for reconciling them to Talmudic Judaism, or, at least, overcoming
-their bitter hostility towards it. Rabbanite teachers, Enoch Saporta,
-an immigrant from Catalonia, Eliezer Kapsali, from Greece, and Elias
-Halevi, from Germany, stipulated that their Karaite pupils, whom they
-instructed in the Talmud, should thenceforward abstain, in writing and
-in speech, from reviling Talmudic authorities, and from desecrating
-the festivals of the Rabbanite calendar. In the difficult position in
-which studiously inclined Karaites found themselves, they could not
-do otherwise than give this promise. The Turkish chief rabbi, Moses
-Kapsali, was of opinion that, as the Karaites rejected the Talmud, they
-might not be taught in it. But he was a disciple of the strict German
-school, which, in its gloomy ultra-piety, would allow no concessions,
-even though the gradual conversion of a dissenting sect could be
-effected.
-
-When contrasted with the miserable condition of the Jews in Germany,
-the lot of those who had taken up their abode in the newly-risen
-Turkish empire must have seemed unalloyed happiness. Jewish immigrants
-who had escaped the ceaseless persecutions to which they had been
-subjected in Germany expressed themselves in terms of rapture over the
-happy condition of the Turkish Jews. Unlike their co-religionists under
-Christian rule, they were not compelled to yield up the third part of
-their fortunes in royal taxes; nor were they in any way hindered in the
-conduct of business. They were permitted to dispose of their property
-as they pleased, and had absolute freedom of movement throughout the
-length and breadth of the empire. They were subject to no sumptuary
-laws, and were thus able to clothe themselves in silk and gold, if they
-chose.
-
-The fruitful lands taken from the slothful Greek Christians were
-occupied by them, and offered rich reward to their industry. Turkey
-was, in short, correctly described by an enthusiastic Jew as a land "in
-which nothing, absolutely nothing, is wanting." Two young immigrants,
-Kalmann and David, thought that if German Jews realized but a tenth
-part of the happiness to be found in Turkey, they would brave any
-hardships to get there. These two young men persuaded Isaac Zarfati,
-who had journeyed in Turkey in earlier times, and whose name was by no
-means unknown in Germany, to write a circular letter to the Jews of the
-Rhineland, Styria, Moravia and Hungary, to acquaint them with the happy
-lot of Jews under the crescent as compared with their hard fate under
-the shadow of the cross, and to call upon them to escape from the
-German house of bondage and emigrate to Turkey. The lights and shadows
-of his subject could not have been more sharply defined than they are
-in Zarfati's letter (written in 1456), whose graphic, often somewhat
-too artificial language does not readily lend itself to translation:
-
-"I have heard of the afflictions, more bitter than death, that have
-befallen our brethren in Germany--of the tyrannical laws, the
-compulsory baptisms and the banishments. And when they flee from one
-place, a yet harder fate befalls them in another. I hear an insolent
-people raising its voice in fury against the faithful; I see its hand
-uplifted to smite them. On all sides I learn of anguish of soul and
-torment of body; of daily exactions levied by merciless extortioners.
-The clergy and the monks, false priests, rise up against the unhappy
-people of God and say: 'Let us pursue them even unto destruction; let
-the name of Israel be no more known among men.' They imagine that their
-faith is in danger because the Jews in Jerusalem might, peradventure,
-buy the Church of the Sepulcher. For this reason they have made a
-law that every Jew found upon a Christian ship bound for the East
-shall be flung into the sea. Alas! how evilly are the people of God
-in Germany entreated; how sadly is their strength departed! They are
-driven hither and thither, and they are pursued even unto death. The
-sword of the oppressor ever hangs over their heads; they are flung into
-the devouring flames, into swift flowing rivers and into foul swamps.
-Brothers and teachers! friends and acquaintances! I, Isaac Zarfati,
-from a French stock, born in Germany, where I sat at the feet of my
-teachers, I proclaim to you that Turkey is a land wherein nothing is
-lacking. If ye will, all shall yet be well with you. The way to the
-Holy Land lies open to you through Turkey. Is it not better for you
-to live under Moslems than under Christians? Here every man may dwell
-at peace under his own vine and his own fig-tree. In Christendom, on
-the contrary, ye dare not clothe your children in red or in blue,
-according to your taste, without exposing them to insult and yourselves
-to extortion; and, therefore, are ye condemned to go about meanly
-clad in sad-colored raiment. All your days are full of sorrow, even
-your Sabbaths and the times appointed for feasting. Strangers enjoy
-your goods; and, therefore, of what profit is the wealth of your rich
-men? They hoard it but to their own sorrow, and in a day it is lost
-to them for ever. Ye call your riches your own--alas! they belong
-to your oppressors. They bring false accusations against you. They
-respect neither age nor wisdom; and, though they gave you a pledge
-sealed sixty-fold, yet would they break it. They continually lay double
-punishments upon you, a death of torment and confiscation of goods.
-They prohibit teaching in your schools; they break in upon you during
-your hours of prayer; and they forbid you to work or conduct your
-business on Christian feast-days. And now, seeing all these things, O
-Israel, wherefore sleepest thou? Arise, and leave this accursed land
-for ever!"
-
-Isaac Zarfati's appeal induced many Jews to emigrate forthwith to
-Turkey and Palestine. Their grave demeanor, extreme piety, and peculiar
-apparel at once distinguished them from the Jews of Greece and the
-Orient, and ere long the new-comers exercised considerable influence
-upon the other inhabitants of the countries in which they settled.
-
-There were peculiar circumstances connected with the prohibition of the
-emigration of Jews to Palestine. The Jewish inhabitants of Jerusalem
-had obtained permission from a pasha to build a synagogue on one of
-the slopes of Mount Zion. The site of this synagogue adjoined a piece
-of land owned by Franciscan monks, or rather containing the ruins of
-one of their chapels, known as David's chapel. When this permission
-was given to the Jews, the monks raised as much clamor as though all
-Palestine, including the Holy City, had been their peculiar inheritance
-since the beginning of time. They forthwith carried their complaints to
-the pope, and represented that, if the Jews were permitted to take such
-liberties as this, it would not be long before they took possession of
-the Church of the Holy Sepulcher itself. The pope at once issued a bull
-directing that no Christian shipowner should convey Jewish emigrants to
-the Holy Land. As the Levantine trade was at that time almost entirely
-in the hands of the Venetians, the doge was prevailed upon to issue
-stringent orders to all the shipmasters of the mainland and the islands
-not to give passage to Palestine to any Jews.
-
-It is, indeed, strange that, while the Christian powers were under the
-impression that they had hemmed in the children of Israel on all sides
-like hunted animals, the Turks of Eastern Europe opened a way of escape
-to them. Ere another half century had passed, their Spanish brethren,
-savagely hunted from the Peninsula, were destined to seek the same
-asylum.
-
-It must, however, be admitted that under the sway of the Castilian
-king, Henry IV, and that of John II, of Aragon, the condition of the
-Spanish Jews was one of comparative peace and comfort. But it was the
-calm that went before the storm. The doubly impotent Castilian king
-was gentle to a degree ill-befitting a ruler of men. Although, as
-Infante, Don Henry had allowed himself to be persuaded by his partisans
-to replenish his exhausted coffers by plundering the houses, not only
-of the Jews, but also of the new-Christians or converts from Judaism,
-he had no personal antipathy to the people of Israel. A Jewish
-physician was his confidential minister. Not long after his accession
-to the throne he had even sent him to the Portuguese court on the most
-delicate mission of obtaining the hand of the young, beautiful princess
-of Portugal for his sovereign. The Jewish diplomatist brought his
-mission to a successful conclusion, but was assassinated in the hour of
-his success.
-
-In spite of the papal bull and the repeated ordinances of the cities,
-Don Henry employed a Jewish farmer of taxes, one Don Chacon, a native
-of Vitoria; and he, too, fell a sacrifice to his office. A rabbi, Jacob
-Ibn-Nunez, his private physician, was appointed by Henry to apportion
-and collect the tribute of the Jews of Castile; while Abraham Bibago,
-yet another Jew of eminence, stood high in the favor of John II of
-Aragon.
-
-The example of the courts naturally affected the greater nobles, who,
-when their own interests were not concerned, troubled themselves very
-little about ecclesiastical edicts. The practice of medicine was still
-entirely in the hands of Jews, and opened to them the cabinets and the
-hearts of kings and nobles. It was in vain that papal bulls proclaimed
-that Christians should not employ Jewish physicians. There were few
-or no Christians who understood the healing art, and the sick had no
-recourse save to the skill of the Jews. Even the higher clergy had but
-little regard for the bulls of Eugenius, Nicholas, and Calixtus. They
-had too much care for the health of the flesh to refuse the medical aid
-of the Jews on account of a canonical decree. Most of the tyrannical
-restrictions belonging to the minority of John II and the times of the
-regent Catalina were completely forgotten. Only on one point did Henry
-insist with rigor. He would not permit the Jews to clothe themselves
-luxuriously. This was partly on account of his own preference for
-simplicity of dress, partly because he was desirous that the envy of
-Christians should not be excited against them. Under the mild rule of
-Don Henry, the Jews who had been more or less compulsorily baptized
-either returned to their faith, or at least observed the Jewish ritual
-unmolested. During the Feast of the Passover they lived upon rice
-entirely in order, on the one hand, to partake of nothing leavened,
-and, on the other, to avoid the suspicion of Judaism.
-
-Hatred of the Jew, which burnt most fiercely in the great towns,
-naturally made it impossible for the orthodox to behold without
-indignation this favoritism towards the supposed enemies of their
-faith, and they made use of a weapon whose efficacy had been proved in
-other lands. The cry went forth: The Jews have put Christian children
-to death! Then came the report that "a Jew in the neighborhood of
-Salamanca had torn a child's heart out;" or, "Jews elsewhere have cut
-pieces of flesh out of a living Christian child," and so on. By means
-of such rumors, the fanaticism of the mob was speedily inflamed, the
-magistrates took up the matter, and the accused Jews were thrown into
-prison.
-
-The king, well aware of the origin and object of these accusations,
-had them thoroughly sifted, with the result that the innocence of the
-accused was completely established. Notwithstanding this fact, the
-enemies of the Jews maintained their guilt. Some insinuated that the
-judges had been bribed; while others asserted that the new-Christians
-had exerted themselves in behalf of their kinsmen, and that the king
-himself was partial to them.
-
-Among all their enemies the man who raged most bitterly and fiercely
-against the Spanish Jews was a preacher in Salamanca, Alfonso de Spina,
-a Franciscan monk, of the same order and opinions as Capistrano.
-Instead of the venomed tongue, he used the poisoned pen against them.
-This man enjoyed a certain amount of fame, because he happened to have
-accompanied Alvaro de Luna, the once all-powerful minister of John
-II, to the scaffold as his confessor. This bigoted priest thundered
-unceasingly from the altar steps against the Jews and their patrons,
-and especially against the new-Christians as secret adherents of
-their former faith. As his preaching did not appear to him to produce
-sufficient effect, De Spina issued, in 1460, a virulent work in
-Latin, directed against Jews, Moslems, and other heretics, under the
-title "Fortalitium Fidei." In this book he collected everything that
-the enemies of the Jews had ever written or said against them. He
-reproduced every absurd legend and idle tale that he could procure,
-and seasoned the whole collection with every device of rhetoric that
-his malice could suggest. In his opinion it was only right and natural
-that all Moslems and heretics should be exterminated root and branch.
-Against the Jews, however, he proposed to employ apparently lenient
-measures. He would simply take their younger children from them, and
-bring them up as Christians, an idea for which he was indebted to
-the scholastic philosopher, Duns Scotus, and his fellow Franciscan,
-Capistrano. De Spina most deeply deplored that the various laws for
-the persecution of the Jews, promulgated during the minority of John
-II, were no longer in force under his successor. In most trenchant
-words he rebuked the king, the nobles and the clergy for the favor that
-they showed to Jews; and, in order to inflame the mob, he untiringly
-retailed all the old fables of child-murder, theft of the host, and
-the like, in the most circumstantial narrative, and insinuated that
-the partiality of the king permitted these abominable crimes to go
-unpunished.
-
-The fanaticism aroused by Alfonso de Spina was by no means without
-effect; indeed, the most lamentable consequences ere long resulted from
-it. A monk, crucifix in hand, proposed a general massacre of the Jews
-of Medina del Campo, near Valladolid, and his words were favorably
-received. The inhabitants of the town fell upon the Jews, and burnt
-several of them alive with the sacred books which they happened to
-find in their possession. Murder was naturally followed by plunder
-of the victims' goods. The king had the ringleaders of this outrage
-punished; but this was all that he could do. He was unable to prevent
-a recurrence of such scenes. He had been compelled to recognize the
-abject position of the Jews officially in the statute book which his
-advisers, his secret enemies, Don Pacheco, Marquis of Villena, and
-the Count of Valencia, prepared at his request. Don Pacheco, who by
-his intrigues brought both king and country to confusion, was himself
-of Jewish blood, his mother, who had married a Spanish noble, being
-the daughter of a Jew named Ruy Capron. Notwithstanding this fact, he
-included the most odious enactments in Don Henry's revised statute
-book. All the earlier disabilities were revived: the exclusion of Jews
-from all offices, even from practice as apothecaries, the wearing of
-distinctive badges, restriction to the Jewries of towns, and even
-confinement to their houses during Holy Week.
-
-The civil war kindled by the intrigues of Don Pacheco and other
-courtiers through the burlesque deposition of Don Henry in Avila, and
-the coronation of his younger brother, Alfonso, bore more heavily on
-the Jews than even on the general population of Castile.
-
-In 1467 Alfonso's party had by treason become master of Segovia, and
-immediately a riot against the Jews began here. The enemies of this
-unhappy people spread the report that, on the suggestion of their
-rabbi, Solomon Picho, the Jews of the little community of Sepulveda,
-not far from Segovia, had during Holy Week so cruelly tortured a
-Christian child that it died upon the cross (April, 1468). On the
-motion of Bishop Juan Arias, of Avila, of Jewish race, several Jews
-(eight or sixteen, according to different accounts), whom the popular
-voice had accused, were hauled from Sepulveda to Segovia, and there
-condemned to the stake, the gallows and the bowstring, whereupon
-the Christians of Sepulveda fell upon the few remaining Jews of the
-community, massacred some, and hunted the rest from the neighborhood.
-Is it not strange that in Castile and in Silesia, in Italy and in
-Poland, the selfsame accusations were raised, and followed by the same
-sentences?
-
-Scarcely was Alfonso's party dissolved by the death of its puppet king
-before another sprang up, which professed to defend the rights of the
-Infanta Isabella, sister of Don Henry. The utter weakness which Henry
-betrayed encouraged the rebels to make the most outrageous assaults
-upon his prerogatives. The cortes convened at Ocana in 1469, wishing
-to humiliate him, took up the Jewish question. They reminded him
-of the laws of his ancestors, and told him to his face that he had
-violated these laws by endowing Jews with the chief offices in the
-collection of the royal revenues. They further asserted that, owing
-to this distinguished example, even princes of the church had farmed
-out the revenues of their dioceses to Jews and Moslems, and that the
-tax-farmers actually levied their contributions in the churches. In
-conclusion, they insisted that the edicts be once more stringently
-enforced, and that heavy penalties be imposed for their transgression.
-
-The finances of this monarch, who, in consequence of his liberality
-and the expense of putting down the ever-recurring revolts against
-his authority, was in constant need of money, would have been in a
-sorry condition had he intrusted them to Christian tax-farmers. The
-latter bid only a small amount for the privilege; moreover, they might
-have made use of the rebellious factions to rid themselves of their
-obligations. A king who said to his treasurer: "Give to these that they
-may serve me, and to those that they may not rob me; to this end I am
-king, and have treasures and revenues for all purposes"--such a king
-could not dispense with Jewish financiers.
-
-Thus there existed, in Castile, an antagonism between the edicts
-against the Jews and the interests of the state; and this antagonism
-roused the mob, inspired alike by ecclesiastical fanaticism and envious
-greed against their Jewish fellow-townsmen, to the perpetration of
-bloody outrages. The fury of the orthodox was also excited against
-the new-Christians, or Marranos, because, happier than their former
-fellow-believers, they were promoted to the highest offices in the
-state by reason of their superior talents.
-
-The marriage of the Infanta Isabella with Don Ferdinand, Infante of
-Aragon, on the 19th of October, 1469, marked a tragical crisis in
-the history of the Spanish Jews. Without the knowledge of her royal
-brother, and in open breach of faith--since she had solemnly promised
-to marry only with his consent--she had followed the advice of her
-intriguing friends, and had given her hand to the Prince of Aragon,
-who, both in Jewish and in Spanish history, under the title of "The
-Catholic," has left an accursed memory behind him. Don Abraham Senior
-had promoted this marriage, hoping by it to increase the welfare of his
-brethren. Many new complications arose in Castile out of this union.
-Isabella's partisans, anticipating that under her rule and that of her
-husband the persecution of the Jews would be made legal, took up arms
-in Valladolid, Isabella's capital, and fell upon the new-Christians
-(September, 1470). The victims assumed the defensive, but were soon
-compelled to surrender. Thereupon they sent a deputation to Henry,
-begging him to protect them. The king did, indeed, collect troops,
-and march against the rebellious city, but he had to be grateful that
-he himself was well received by the citizens, and could not think of
-punishing even the ringleaders.
-
-Two years later the new-Christians underwent a persecution, which
-surely must have caused them to repent having taken shelter at the
-foot of the cross. The religious populace blamed the Marranos, not
-altogether without reason, for confessing Christianity with their lips
-while in their souls they despised it. It was said that they either
-did not bring their children to be baptized, or if they were baptized,
-took them back to their houses and washed the stain of baptism off
-their foreheads. They used no lard at their tables, only oil; they
-abstained from pork, celebrated the Jewish Passover, and contributed
-oil for the use of the synagogues. They were further said to have but
-small respect for cloisters, and were supposed to have profaned sacred
-relics and debauched nuns. The new-Christians, were, in fact, looked
-upon as a cunning and ambitious set of people, who sought eagerly for
-the most profitable offices, thought only of accumulating riches, and
-avoided hard work. They were believed to consider themselves as living
-in Spain as Israel did in Egypt, and to hold it to be quite permissible
-to plunder and outwit the orthodox. These accusations were not by any
-means merited by the new-Christians as a body, but they served to
-inflame the mob, and caused it to hate the converts even more bitterly
-than the Jews themselves.
-
-The outbreak above referred to arose as follows: A certain princess
-was going through the streets of Cordova with the picture of the
-Virgin under a canopy, and a girl, a new-Christian, either by accident
-or design, poured some water out of a window on the canopy. The
-consequence was a frenzied rising against the converted Jews. An
-excited smith incited the Christian mob to avenge the insult offered
-to the holy picture--for it was said that the girl had poured
-something unclean upon it--and in an instant her father's house
-was in flames. The nobles sought to defend the Marranos, and in the
-skirmish, the smith was killed. This so enraged the already furious
-mob that the men-at-arms were forced to retire. The houses of the
-new-Christians were now broken into, plundered, and then reduced to
-ashes; while those who had not been able to save themselves by flight
-were massacred in the most barbarous manner (March 14th-15th, 1472).
-The fugitives were hunted like wild beasts in the chase. Wherever
-they were seen, the most horrible death inevitably awaited them. Even
-the peasant at work in the field struck them down without ado. The
-slaughter which thus began at Cordova spread rapidly from town to town.
-Those of the Cordovan fugitives who had found a temporary refuge in
-Palma lost no time in seeking a stronghold to afford them protection
-from the tempest of persecution. One of their company, Pedro de
-Herrera, held in the highest respect both by his fellow-sufferers and
-the governor, De Aguilar, went to Seville to seek an interview with
-the duke of Medina-Sidonia, lieutenant-governor of the province. He
-asked for the fortress of Gibraltar as a city of refuge for himself
-and his brethren, under their own command. In return, he promised to
-pay a considerable yearly tribute. The duke had signified his consent
-to this proposition, and the new-Christians had betaken themselves to
-Seville to sign the contract, when the friends of the duke took alarm.
-They believed that the Marranos were not to be trusted, and expressed
-the fear that they might enter into an alliance with the Moors, and
-deliver the key of the Spanish coast into their hands. The duke,
-however, insisted upon completing the contract, whereupon the opponents
-of the scheme gave the signal to the mob of Seville, which instantly
-rose against the new-Christians in an outburst of fanatical frenzy. It
-was with difficulty that the governor protected them. They were forced
-to return hastily to Palma, were waylaid by the country people, and
-ill-treated and plundered (1473).
-
-Thus the plan of Pedro de Herrera and his friends served only to bring
-greater misery upon them, endangering the whole body of new-Christians
-as well as the Jews themselves. As early as this, the idea took shape
-among both the converted and the unbaptized Jews to leave the now
-inhospitable Peninsula and emigrate to Flanders or Italy.
-
-Attacks upon the new-Christians were now so frequent that they
-suggested to the cunning and ambitious minister, Pacheco, the means
-of carrying out a _coup d'etat_. This unscrupulous intriguer, who for
-two decades had kept Castile in constant confusion, saw with secret
-chagrin that the reconciliation of Don Henry with his sister and
-successor bade fair to completely annul his influence. To bring about
-new complications he determined to gain possession of the citadel
-(Alcazar) of Segovia, at that time occupied by the king. With this end
-in view, he instigated, through his dependents, another assault upon
-the baptized Jews, during the confusion of which his accomplices were
-to seize Cabrera, the governor of the castle, and, if possible, the
-king himself. The conspiracy was betrayed only a few hours before it
-was to be carried into action; but the attack upon the new-Christians
-was perpetrated. Armed bands perambulated the streets of Segovia, broke
-into the houses of the Marranos, and slew every man, woman and child
-that fell into their hands (May 16th, 1474).
-
-The crowning misfortune of the Jewish race in Spain came in the death
-of Don Henry in the following December. The rulers of the united
-kingdoms of Aragon and Castile now were his sister, the bigoted
-Isabella, who was led by advisers hostile to the Jews, and Ferdinand,
-her unscrupulous husband, who pretended to be excessively pious.
-Sad and terrible was the fate that impended over the sons of Jacob
-throughout the length and breadth of the Pyrenean Peninsula.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-THE JEWS IN ITALY AND GERMANY BEFORE THE EXPULSION FROM SPAIN.
-
- Position of the Jews of Italy--The Jewish Bankers--Yechiel
- of Pisa--His Relations with Don Isaac Abrabanel--Jewish
- Physicians, Guglielmo di Portaleone--Revival of Learning among
- Italian Jews--Messer Leon and Elias del Medigo--Pico di
- Mirandola, the Disciple of Medigo--Predilection of Christians
- for the Kabbala--Jochanan Aleman--Religious Views of Del
- Medigo--German Rabbis immigrate into Italy--Joseph Kolon,
- his Character and his Feud with Messer Leon--Judah Menz an
- Antagonist of Del Medigo--Bernardinus of Feltre--Jews banished
- from Trent on a False Charge of Child-Murder--The Doge of
- Venice and Pope Sixtus IV befriend the Jews--Sufferings of the
- Jews of Ratisbon--Israel Bruna--Synod at Nuremberg--Emperor
- Frederick III.
-
-1474-1492 C.E.
-
-
-The Spanish Jews would have belied their native penetration and the
-wisdom born of bitter experience had they not foreseen that their
-position would ere long become unbearable.
-
-Because they did foresee it, they turned their gaze towards those
-countries whose inhabitants were most favorably disposed towards Jews.
-Italy and the Byzantine Empire, just wrested from the cross, were
-now the countries of greatest toleration. In Italy, where men saw
-most clearly the infamy of the papacy and the priesthood, and where
-they had most to suffer from their selfishness, the church and her
-servants were utterly without influence over the people. The world-wide
-commerce of the wealthy and flourishing republics of Venice, Florence,
-Genoa and Pisa, had in a measure broken through the narrow bounds
-of superstition, and enlarged men's range of vision. The interests
-of the market-place had driven the interests of the church into the
-background. Wealth and ability were valued even in those who did
-not repeat the Catholic confession of faith. Not only the merchants,
-but also the most exalted princes were in need of gold to support
-the mercenary legions of their Condottieri in their daily feuds. The
-Jews, as capitalists and skillful diplomatists, were, therefore, well
-received in Italy. This is proved by the fact that when the city of
-Ravenna was desirous of uniting itself to Venice, it included among the
-conditions of union the demand that wealthy Jews be sent to it to open
-credit-banks and thus relieve the poverty of the populace.
-
-Jewish capitalists received, either from the reigning princes or the
-senates, in many Italian cities, extensive privileges, permitting
-them to open banks, establish themselves as brokers, and even charge
-a high rate of interest (20 per cent). The archbishop of Mantua in
-1476 declared in the name of the pope that the Jews were permitted to
-lend money upon interest. The canonical prohibition of usury could
-not withstand the pressure of public convenience. The Jewish communal
-regulations also tended to guard the bankers from illegal competition,
-for the rabbis threatened with the ban all those members of the
-community who lent money on interest without proper authorization.
-
-A Jew of Pisa, named Yechiel, controlled the money market of Tuscany.
-He was, by no means, a mere heartless money-maker, as the Christians
-were wont to call him, but rather a man of noble mind and tender
-heart, ever ready to assist the poor with his gold, and to comfort the
-unfortunate by word and deed. Yechiel of Pisa was also familiar with
-and deeply interested in Hebrew literature, and maintained friendly
-relations with Isaac Abrabanel, the last of the Jewish statesmen of
-the Peninsula. When Alfonso V of Portugal took the African seaboard
-towns of Arzilla and Tangier, and carried off Jews of both sexes and
-every age captive, the Portuguese community became inspired with the
-pious desire to ransom them. Abrabanel placed himself at the head of
-a committee to collect money for this purpose. As the Portuguese Jews
-were not able to support the ransomed prisoners until they found means
-of subsistence, Abrabanel, in a letter to Yechiel of Pisa, begged him
-to make a collection in Italy. His petition was heeded.
-
-The Jews of Italy were found to be desirable citizens, not only for
-their financial ability, but also for their skill as physicians. In his
-letter to Yechiel, Abrabanel asked whether there were Jewish physicians
-in the Italian states, and whether the princes of the church employed
-them. "Physicians," he said, "possess the key to the hearts of the
-great, upon whom the fate of the Jews depends."
-
-A celebrated Jewish doctor, Guglielmo (Benjamin?) di Portaleone, of
-Mantua, first was physician in ordinary to Ferdinand of Naples, who
-ennobled him; he next entered the service of Duke Galeazzo Sforza, of
-Milan, and in 1479 became body physician to Duke Ludovico Gonzaga.
-He was the founder of a noble house and of a long line of skillful
-Italian physicians. There even arose an intimate relation between
-Jews and Christians in Italy. When a wealthy Jew--Leo, of Crema--
-on the marriage of his son, arranged magnificent festivities which
-lasted eight days, a great number of Christians took part, dancing and
-enjoying themselves to the intense displeasure of the clergy. Totally
-forgotten seemed the bull in which Nicholas V had quite recently
-forbidden under heavy penalties all intercourse of Christians with
-Jews, as well as the employment of Jewish physicians. In place of
-the canonically prescribed livery of degradation, the Jewish doctors
-wore robes of honor like Christians of similar standing; while the
-Jews connected with the courts wore golden chains and other honorable
-insignia. The contrast between the condition of Jews in Italy and that
-of their brethren in other lands is well illustrated by two similar
-incidents, occurring simultaneously in Italy and Germany, but differing
-greatly in their issues.
-
-The mother of a family in Pavia, in consequence of differences with
-her husband, had given notice of her desire to be received into
-the Catholic Church. She was put into a convent where she was to
-be prepared for baptism. The bishop's vicar, with other spiritual
-advisers, was earnestly occupied with the salvation of her soul, when
-she was suddenly seized with remorse. The bishop of Pavia, far from
-punishing her for this relapse, or seeking to oppose her desire,
-interceded for her with her husband. He advised him to take her out of
-the convent forthwith, and testified most favorably as to her behavior,
-so that her husband, a descendant of the family of Aaron, might not be
-obliged, under the Jewish law, to put her away.
-
-In the same year a spiteful fellow in Ratisbon, Kalmann, a precentor
-(Chazan), took the fancy to turn Christian. He frequented the convent,
-attended church, and at length the bishop received him in his house,
-and instructed him in the Christian religion. To curry favor with the
-Christians he calumniated his fellow-believers by asserting that they
-possessed blasphemous writings against Christianity. Kalmann also came
-to rue the step he had taken. He secretly attended the synagogue,
-and at length, during the absence of the bishop, left his house, and
-returned to the Jews. The clergy of Ratisbon were infuriated against
-him, arraigned him before the Inquisition, and charged him with having
-sought to blaspheme the church, God, and the blessed Virgin. He was
-specially charged with having said that, if baptized, he would remain
-a Christian only till he found himself at liberty. On the strength of
-this, he was condemned, and put to death by drowning.
-
-Wherever even a little indulgence was granted the Jews, their dormant
-energy revived; and the Italian Jews were able to display it all the
-sooner from the fact that they had gained a certain degree of culture
-in the days of Immanuel and Leone Romano. They took an active part in
-the intellectual revival and scientific renascence which distinguished
-the times of the Medici. Jewish youths attended the Italian
-universities, and acquired a liberal education. The Italian Jews were
-the first to make use of the newly-discovered art of Gutenberg, and
-printing-houses soon rose in many parts of Italy--in Reggio, Ferrara,
-Pieva di Sacco, Bologna, Soncino, Iscion, and Naples. In the artistic
-creations of the time, however, in painting and sculpture, the Jews had
-no share. These lay outside their sphere. But several educated Jews did
-not a little for the advancement and spread of science in Italy. Two
-deserve especial mention: Messer Leon and Elias del Medigo, the latter
-of whom not only received the light of science, but also shed it abroad.
-
-Messer Leon, or, by his Hebrew name, Judah ben Yechiel, of Naples,
-flourished between 1450 and 1490, and was both rabbi and physician in
-Mantua. In addition to being thoroughly versed in Hebrew literature,
-he was a finished Latin scholar, and had a keen appreciation of the
-subtleties of Cicero's and Quintilian's style. Belonging to the
-Aristotelian school, he expounded several of the writings of the
-philosopher so highly esteemed in synagogue and church, and wrote
-a grammar and a book on logic, in the Hebrew language, for Jewish
-students. More important than these writings is his Hebrew rhetoric
-(Nofeth Zufim), in which he lays down the laws upon which the grace,
-force and eloquence of the higher style depend, and proves that the
-same laws underlie sacred literature. He was the first Jew to compare
-the language of the Prophets and Psalmists with Cicero's--certainly
-a hardy undertaking in those days when the majority of Jews and
-Christians held the Scriptures in such infinite reverence that a
-comparison with profane pagan literature must have seemed a species
-of blasphemy. Of course, this was possible only in the times of the
-Medici, when love for Greek and Latin antiquities rose to positive
-enthusiasm. Messer Leon, the learned rabbi of Mantua, was liberal in
-all respects. He was never weary of rebuking the formal pietists for
-striving to withhold foreign influences from Judaism, as though it
-could be profaned by them. He was rather of opinion that Judaism could
-only gain by comparisons with the culture of the ancient classical
-literatures, since thereby its beauty and sublimity would be brought to
-light.
-
-Elias del Medigo, or Elias Cretensis (1463-1498), the scion of a
-German family that had emigrated to Crete, is a striking figure in
-later Jewish history. He was the first great man produced by Italian
-Judaism. His was a mind that shone clearly and brilliantly out of
-the clouds which obscured his age; the mind of a man of varied and
-profound knowledge, and of both classical and philosophical culture.
-So completely had he assimilated the Latin literary style that he was
-able, not only to issue works in that language, but also to present
-Hebrew syntax under Latin analogies.
-
-Medigo kept aloof from the vacuity of Italian sciolists, who were
-under the spell of the newly-discovered neo-Platonic philosophy
-introduced by Ficinus. He gave allegiance to those sound thinkers,
-Aristotle, Maimuni, and Averroes, whose systems he made known to
-Christian inquirers in Italy, by tongue and pen, through the medium
-of translations and in independent works. That youthful prodigy of
-his time, Count Giovanni Pico di Mirandola, made the acquaintance of
-Medigo, and became his disciple, friend and protector. Mirandola,
-who was a marvel by reason of his wonderful memory, wide erudition,
-and dialectic skill, and was, moreover, on friendly terms with the
-ruling house of the Medicis in Tuscany, learnt from his Jewish friend
-the Hebrew language, and the Arabic development of the Aristotelian
-philosophy, but he might also have learnt clearness of thought from him.
-
-On one occasion a quarrel on a learned subject broke out in the
-University of Padua. The professors and students were divided into
-two parties, and, according to Christian custom, were on the point of
-settling the question with rapier and poniard. The University, acting
-with the Venetian senate, which was desirous of ending the dispute,
-called upon Elias del Medigo to act as umpire. Everyone confidently
-expected a final settlement from his erudition and impartiality. Del
-Medigo argued out the theme, and by the weight of his decision brought
-the matter to a satisfactory conclusion. The result was that he became
-a public lecturer on philosophy, and discoursed to large audiences in
-Padua and Florence. The spectacle was, indeed, notable. Under the very
-eyes of the papacy, ever striving for the humiliation and enslavement
-of the Jews, Christian youths were imbibing wisdom from the lips of a
-Jewish teacher. Against the protectors of Jews in Spain it hurled the
-thunders of excommunication, while in Italy it was forced passively to
-behold favors constantly showered upon the Jews by Christians.
-
-Pico di Mirandola, a scholar rather than a thinker, took a fancy to
-plunge into the abysses of the Kabbala. He was initiated into the
-Kabbalistic labyrinth by a Jew, Jochanan Aleman, who had emigrated from
-Constantinople to Italy. Aleman, himself a confused thinker, made him
-believe that the secret doctrine was of ancient origin, and contained
-the wisdom of the ages. Mirandola, who had a marvelous faculty of
-assimilation, soon familiarized himself with the Kabbalistic formulae,
-and discovered confirmations of Christian dogma in them; in fact, he
-found far more of Christianity than of Judaism. The extravagances of
-the Kabbala demonstrated in his eyes the doctrines of the Trinity,
-the Incarnation, Original Sin, the Fall of the Angels, Purgatory, and
-Eternal Punishment. He lost no time in translating several Kabbalistic
-writings from Hebrew into Latin in order to bring this occult lore to
-the knowledge of Christian readers. Among the nine hundred points which
-Pico, at the age of twenty-four, pledged himself to defend--to which
-end he invited all the learned of the world to Rome, and undertook to
-pay the cost of their journeys--was this: No science affords more
-certainty as to the Godhead of Christ than Kabbala and magic! Even Pope
-Sixtus IV (1471-1484) was by this means so strongly attracted to the
-Kabbala that he was eager to procure Latin translations of Kabbalistic
-writings for the benefit of the Catholic faith.
-
-It is a striking proof of his sober mind and healthy judgment that
-Elias del Medigo kept himself aloof from all this mental effeminacy
-and childish enthusiasm for the pseudo-doctrine of the Kabbala. He had
-profound contempt for the Kabbalistic phantom, and did not hesitate
-to expose its worthlessness. He had the courage openly to express his
-opinion that the Kabbala is rooted in an intellectual swamp, that
-no trace of this doctrine is to be found in the Talmud, that the
-recognized authorities of ancient Judaism knew nothing of it, and that
-its supposed sacred and ancient groundwork, the Zohar, was by no means
-the work of the celebrated Simon bar Yochai, but the production of a
-forger. In short, he considered the Kabbala to be made up of the rags
-and tatters of the neo-Platonic school.
-
-Del Medigo had, in fact, very sound and healthy views on religion.
-Although a warm adherent of Judaism, entertaining respect also for its
-Talmudic element, he was yet far from indorsing and accepting as truth
-all that appears in the Talmud. When requested by one of his Jewish
-disciples, Saul Cohen Ashkenasi, of Candia, to give his confession of
-Jewish faith, especially his views on the signs which distinguish a
-true religion, Elias Cretensis issued a small but pregnant work, "The
-Investigation of Religion" (Bechinath ha-Dath), which gives a deep
-insight into his methods of thought.
-
-It cannot be maintained that Del Medigo suggested novel trains of
-thought in his work. In general, the Italians were not destined to
-endow Judaism with new ideas. Moreover, he occupied the standpoint
-of belief rather than of inquiry, and his aim was to defend, not
-to cut new paths. Standing alone in the mental barrenness of his
-age, Del Medigo's sound views are like an oasis in the desert. He
-must be credited, too, with having recognized as deformities, and
-with desiring to remove, the additions to Judaism by Kabbalists and
-pseudo-philosophers.
-
-Unfortunately, the rabbis who emigrated from Germany to Italy assumed
-an attitude distinctly hostile to philosophical investigation and its
-promoters, Elias del Medigo and Messer Leon. With their honest, but
-one-sided, exaggerated piety, they cast a gloomy shadow wherever their
-hard fate had scattered them. Fresh storms breaking over the German
-communities had driven many German Jews, the most unhappy of their
-race, into transalpine lands. Under Emperor Frederick III, who for half
-a century had with astounding equanimity beheld most shameless insults
-to his authority on the part of an ambitious nobility, a plundering
-squire-archy, a demoralized clergy, and the self-seeking patricians of
-the smaller towns, the Jewish communities but too often saw their cup
-of bitterness overflow. Frederick himself was by no means hostile to
-them. On the contrary, he frequently issued decrees in their favor.
-Unhappily, his commands remained for the most part a dead letter, and
-his laxity of rule encouraged the evil-minded to the commission of
-the most shameful misdeeds. It was dangerous for the German Jews to go
-beyond the walls of their cities. Every man was their foe, and waylaid
-them to satisfy either his fanaticism or his cupidity. Every feud that
-broke out in the decaying German empire brought misery to them.
-
-Among exiles from Mayence were two profound Talmudic scholars. They
-were cousins, by name Judah and Moses Menz. The former emigrated to
-Padua, and there received the office of rabbi, while the latter at
-first remained in Germany, and then passed over to Posen. As the result
-of expulsion or oppression, many rabbis were emigrating from all parts
-of Germany, and on account of their superior Talmudic knowledge these
-German emigrants were elected to the most distinguished rabbinical
-positions in Italy. They re-indoctrinated with their prejudice and
-narrowness of vision the Italian Jews, who were making determined
-efforts to free themselves from the bonds of the Middle Ages.
-
-The most distinguished rabbis of Italy were at that time Judah Menz
-and Joseph Kolon, and precisely these two were most inimical to any
-liberal manifestation within Judaism, and most strenuously opposed the
-advocates of freedom. Joseph ben Solomon Kolon (flourished 1460-1490)
-was of French extraction, his ancestors having been expelled from
-France; but he passed his youth in Germany, and belonged to the German
-school. He subsequently lived with his relatives in Chambery until
-the Jews were hunted out of Savoy. With many companions in misfortune
-he went to Lombardy, where he gained his living by teaching; finally
-he became rabbi of Mantua. Endowed with extraordinary penetration,
-and fully the equal of the German rabbis in the depth of his Talmudic
-learning, Joseph Kolon was celebrated in his day as a Rabbinical
-authority of the first magnitude, and his academy rivaled the German
-school itself. He was consulted by both German and Italian communities.
-On scientific subjects and all matters outside the Talmud he was as
-ignorant as his German fellow-dignitaries. A resolute, decided nature,
-Joseph Kolon was a man of rigid views on all religious matters. His
-ruggedness involved him in unpleasant relations with Moses Kapsali in
-Constantinople, and in a heated controversy with the cultured Messer
-Leon in his own community. However well they might agree for a time,
-Joseph Kolon, the strict Talmudist, and Messer Leon, the cultured man
-of letters, could not long tolerate each other. When the conflict
-between them broke out, the whole community of Mantua took sides in
-their feud, and split into two parties as supporters of the one or
-the other. The strife at length became so keen that in 1476-1477 Duke
-Joseph of Mantua banished them both from the city; after which Kolon
-became rabbi of Pavia.
-
-Still more strained were the relations between the rabbi Judah Menz and
-the philosopher Elias del Medigo. The former (born 1408, died 1509), a
-man of the old school, of comprehensive knowledge of Talmudic subjects,
-and of remarkable sagacity, was most resolutely opposed to scientific
-progress and freedom in religious matters, and after his expulsion from
-Mayence transplanted the narrow spirit of the German rabbis to Padua
-and Italy in general.
-
-The relatively secure and honorable position of the Jews in Italy did
-not fail to rouse the displeasure of fanatical monks, who sought to
-cover with the cloak of religious zeal either their dissolute conduct
-or their ambitious share in worldly affairs. The colder the Christian
-world grew towards the end of the fifteenth century with regard to
-clerical institutions, the more bitterly did the monastic orders rage
-against the Jews. Preaching friars made the chancels ring with tirades
-against them, and openly advocated their utter extermination. Their
-most desperate enemy at this time was the Franciscan Bernardinus of
-Feltre, a worthy disciple of the bloodthirsty Capistrano. The standing
-text of his sermons was: Let Christian parents keep a watchful eye on
-their children lest the Jews steal, ill-treat, or crucify them.
-
-He held up Capistrano, the Jew-slayer, as the type and model of a
-true Christian. In his eyes friendly and neighborly intercourse with
-Jews was an abomination, a most grievous sin against canonical law.
-Christian charity, he admitted, directs that Jews, being human, be
-treated with justice and humanity; but at the same time the canonical
-law forbids Christians to have any dealings with them, to sit at their
-tables, or to allow themselves to be treated by Jewish physicians. As
-the aristocracy everywhere, in obedience to their own interests, took
-the part of the Jews, Bernardinus inflamed the lower classes against
-the Jews and their patrons. Because certain Jewish capitalists had been
-successful, he depicted all Jews as vampires and extortioners, and
-roused the ill will of the populace against them. "I, who live on alms
-and eat the bread of the poor, shall I be a dumb dog and not howl when
-I see the Jews wringing their wealth from Christian poverty? Yea! shall
-I not cry aloud for Christ's sake?" Such is a fair specimen of his
-preaching.
-
-Had the Italian people not been actuated by strong good sense,
-Bernardinus would have become for the Jews of Italy what, in the
-beginning of the same century, the Dominican, Vincent Ferrer, had been
-to the Jews of Spain, and Capistrano, to the communities of Germany and
-the Slav countries. The authorities sorely hindered Bernardinus in his
-business of Jew-baiting, and his bloodthirsty sermons mostly failed
-of effect. When he was conducting his crusade in Bergamo and Ticini,
-Duke Galeazzo, of Milan, forbade him to proceed. In Florence, in fact
-everywhere in Tuscany, the enlightened prince and the senate took the
-part of the Jews with vigor. The venomous monk spread the report that
-they had allowed themselves to be bribed with large sums by Yechiel
-of Pisa and other wealthy Jews. As Bernardinus was inciting the youth
-of the city against the Jews, and a popular rising was imminent, the
-authorities ordered him to quit Florence and the country forthwith,
-and he was compelled to submit (1487). Little by little, however, by
-dint of untiring repetition of the same charges, he managed so far to
-inflame public opinion against the Jews that even the Venetian senate
-was not always able to protect them. Finally, he succeeded in bringing
-about a bloody persecution of the Jews, not, indeed, in Italy, but in
-the Tyrol, whence it spread to Germany.
-
-While Bernardinus was preaching in the city of Trent, he remarked with
-no little chagrin the friendly relation between Jews and Christians.
-Tobias, a skillful Jewish physician, and an intelligent Jewess, named
-Brunetta, were on most friendly terms with the upper classes, enjoying
-their complete confidence. This roused his ire not a little, and he
-made the chancels of Trent ring with savage tirades against the Jews.
-Some Christians called him to account for his hatred of Jews, remarking
-that though they were without the true faith, those of Trent were
-worthy folk. The monk replied: "Ye know not what misfortune these good
-people will bring upon you. Before Easter Sunday is past they will
-give you a proof of their extraordinary goodness." It was easy for him
-to prophesy, for he and a few other priests had arranged a cunning
-plan, which not only brought about the ruin of the community of Trent,
-but also caused the greatest injury to the Jews of various countries.
-Chance aided him by creating a favorable opportunity.
-
-In Holy Week of 1475 a three-year-old child, named Simon, the son of
-poor Christian parents, was drowned in the Adige, and the corpse was
-caught in a grating close to the house of a Jew. In order to anticipate
-misrepresentation of the event, he hurried to Bishop Hinderbach to give
-him notice of the occurrence. The bishop took two men of high position
-with him, went to the place, and had the body carried into the church.
-As soon as the news spread, Bernardinus and other hostile priests
-raised a fierce outcry against the Jews, saying that they had tortured
-and slain the child, and then flung it into the water. The body of
-the supposititiously ill-treated child was exhibited, in order to
-inflame the fury of the populace against them. The bishop had all the
-Jews of Trent, high and low, cast into prison, commenced proceedings
-against them, and called a physician, Matthias Tiberinus, to testify
-to the violent death of the child. A baptized Jew, one Wolfkan, from
-Ratisbon, an engrosser, came forward with the most fearful accusations
-against his former co-religionists. His charges the more readily found
-credence as the imprisoned Jews confessed under torture that they had
-slain Simon, and drunk his blood on the night of the Passover. Brunetta
-was said to have supplied the weapons for the purpose. A letter also
-was said to have been found in the possession of a rabbi, Moses,
-which had been sent from Saxony, asking for Christian blood for the
-next Passover. Only one of the tortured victims, a man named Moses,
-endured every torment without confirming the lying accusations of his
-enemies. The result was that all the Jews of Trent were burnt, and it
-was resolved that no Jew should thenceforth settle in the city. Four
-persons only became converts to Christianity, and were pardoned.
-
-The bishop of Trent, Bernardinus, and the monks of all orders made
-every effort to utilize this occurrence for the general ruin of the
-Jews. The corpse of the child was embalmed, and commended to the
-populace as a holy relic. Thousands made pilgrimages to its remains,
-and ere long it was believed by the faith-drunken pilgrims that they
-had seen a halo about the remains of the child Simon. So much was said
-about it that even its inventors came to believe in the martyrdom. From
-every chancel the Dominicans proclaimed the new miracle, and thundered
-against the infamy of the Jews. Two lawyers from Padua who visited
-Trent in order to convince themselves of the truth of the occurrence
-were almost torn to pieces by the fanatical mob. It was imperative that
-the marvel be believed in, and so the Jews of all Christian countries
-were jeopardized anew. Even in Italy they dared not go outside the
-towns lest they be slain as child-murderers.
-
-The doge, Pietro Mocenigo, and the Venetian senate, on the complaint
-of the Jews about the insecurity of their lives and property, issued
-orders to the podesta of Padua energetically to defend them against
-fanatical outbreaks, and to forbid the preaching friars to inflame
-the mob against them. The doge accompanied the orders with the remark
-that the rumor that Jews had slain a Christian child in Trent was a
-fabrication, a device invented by their enemies to serve some purpose.
-When Pope Sixtus IV was urged to canonize little Simon he steadfastly
-refused, and sent a letter to all the towns of Italy, on October 10th,
-1475, forbidding Simon of Trent to be honored as a saint until he could
-investigate the matter, and thus he allayed the popular excitement
-against the Jews. The clergy, nevertheless, permitted the bones of
-Simon to be held sacred, and instituted pilgrimages to the church built
-for his remains.
-
-Through this circumstance Jew hatred in Germany gained fresh vigor.
-The citizens of Frankfort-on-the-Main exhibited, on the bridge leading
-to Sachsenhausen, a picture representing in hideous detail a tortured
-child, and the Jews leagued with the devil in their bloody work.
-The news of the child-murder in Trent spread like wildfire through
-the Christian countries, and became the source of new sufferings to
-Jews. Nowhere were these sufferings so severe as in the free city of
-Ratisbon, containing one of the oldest Jewish communities in South
-Germany. It was held to be not only very pious but of distinguished
-morality, and it was considered a high honor to intermarry with the
-Jews of Ratisbon. Within the memory of man no native Jew had been
-brought before the tribunal for any moral lapse. The community was
-regarded as the most learned in the land, and the parent of all German
-communities. It possessed chartered liberties, which the emperors,
-in consideration of a crown-tax, were accustomed to renew on their
-accession. The Jews of Ratisbon were half recognized as burghers, and
-mounted guard with the Christians as militia. One might almost say that
-the Bavarian princes and corporations vied with each other in favoring
-them--of course, merely to share their purses. In the latter half of
-this century they had become a veritable bone of contention between the
-Duke of Bavaria-Landsberg and Frederick III, who, hard pressed on all
-sides, not only in the empire, but even in his own possessions, hoped
-to fill his empty coffers with the wealth of the Jews.
-
-In addition to these the Kamerau family made claims upon the Jews of
-Ratisbon, as well as the town council, and, of course, the bishop.
-These contradictory and mutually hostile demands made the position of
-the Jews anything but a bed of roses. First from one side and then from
-another came orders to the council to imprison the Jews, their chiefs,
-or their rabbi, at that time the sorely-tried Israel Bruna, until,
-worn out by confinement, they decided to pay what was claimed. The
-council did indeed seek to shield them, but only so long as no danger
-threatened the citizens, or the Jews did not compete with the Christian
-guildmembers.
-
-To escape these cruel and arbitrary extortions, prudence directed that
-they place themselves under the protection of one of the Hussite nobles
-or captains. They would thus enjoy more security than was possible
-under the so-called protection of the emperor, since the fiery Hussites
-were not a little feared by the more sluggish Germans. Although they
-had to some extent abandoned their heretical fanaticism, and had taken
-service under the Catholic sovereigns, their desperate valor was still
-a source of terror to the orthodox clergy. The event proved that the
-Jews had acted wisely in appealing to their protection.
-
-A bishop named Henry was elected in Ratisbon, a man of gloomy nature,
-to whom the sentiment of mercy was unknown, and he naturally insisted
-on the enforcement of the canonical restrictions against the Jews. As
-examples to others, for instance, he mercilessly punished a Christian
-girl who had entered the service of a Jew, and a Christian barber who
-had let blood for a Jewish customer. His animosity was contagious. On
-one occasion, when the Jewish midwife was sick, and a Christian was
-about to attend some Jewish women, the council actually dared not give
-her the required permission without the episcopal sanction.
-
-Bishop Henry and Duke Louis, one in their hatred of Jews, now pursued
-what seemed to be a preconcerted plan for the ruin or conversion of
-the Jews of Ratisbon. On the one hand, they obtained the acquiescence
-of the pope, and on the other, the assistance of influential persons
-on the city council. Their campaign began with attempts at conversions
-and false accusations, for which they availed themselves of the
-assistance of a couple of worthless converted Jews. One of these, Peter
-Schwarz by name, wrote slanderous and abusive pamphlets against his
-former co-religionists. The other, one Hans Vayol, heaped the vilest
-calumnies upon the aged rabbi, Israel Bruna, amongst other things
-charging him with purchasing from him a seven-year-old Christian child
-and slaughtering it, and the rabbi of Ratisbon, already bowed down by
-sorrow and suffering, was charged with the death of the child.
-
-Israel Bruna (of Bruenn, born 1400, died 1480) was one of those sons of
-sorrow who seem to fall from one misfortune into another. He appears to
-have been exiled from Bruenn, where he was recognized as a Rabbinical
-authority, and after many wanderings, to have traveled by way of Prague
-to Ratisbon. He settled there, and wished to perform the functions
-of rabbi for those who might place confidence in him. But a Talmudic
-scholar who resided in the city, one Amshel, a layman, not an elected
-rabbi, raised objections to his competitor, and forbade Israel Bruna
-to hold discourses before disciples, to deal with matters of divorce,
-to exercise any Rabbinical functions, or to divide the honors of the
-office with himself. As each had his followers, a schism arose in the
-community of Ratisbon. His two teachers, Jacob Weil and Isserlein,
-upholders of the freedom of the Rabbinical office and pronounced
-opponents of spiritual officialism, took the part of the persecuted
-Israel Bruna, with whom David Sprinz, a rabbi of Nuremberg, also
-took sides. These men proved in the clearest manner that any Jew is
-competent to assume Rabbinical functions, provided he possesses the
-requisite knowledge, is authorized by a recognized teacher, and leads
-a pious and moral life. They further adduced in favor of Israel Bruna
-the fact that he contributed his quota to the communal treasury, and
-was therefore a worthy member of the community. The breach nevertheless
-remained open, and Israel Bruna was often exposed to insults from the
-opposite party. Once when he was about to hold a discourse, several
-of the ringleaders left the lecture-room, and were followed by many
-others. Disciples of his opponent secretly painted crosses on his seat
-in the synagogue, wrote the hateful word "heretic" (Epicuros) beside
-them, and offered other insults to him. As time went on, after the
-death of the great rabbis, Jacob Weil and Israel Isserlein, Bruna was
-recognized as a Rabbinical authority, and from far and near questions
-were sent to him. His misfortunes, however, did not cease. When Emperor
-Frederick demanded the crown-tax from the community of Ratisbon, Duke
-Louis opposed the payment, and the council was unable to decide which
-side to assist. The emperor thereupon threw Israel Bruna into prison
-to force him to threaten his people with the ban if they did not pay
-over the third part of their possessions. He was released only on
-bail of his entire property; and, in addition, the fearful charges of
-child-murder and other capital crimes were raised against the decrepit
-old man by the converted Jew, Hans Vayol. Bishop Henry and the clergy
-were only too ready to gratify their hatred of Jews by means of this
-accusation, and the besotted populace gave all the more credence to the
-falsehood, as rumors of the death of Christian children at the hands of
-Jews daily increased. No one in Ratisbon doubted that gray old Israel
-Bruna had foully murdered a Christian child, and he was on the point of
-being put to death on the demand of the clergy. To withdraw him from
-the fury of the mob, the council, which feared to be made answerable,
-imprisoned him.
-
-In the meantime the anxious community appealed, not only to the
-emperor, but also to the Bohemian king, Ladislaus, more feared than the
-emperor; and ere long stringent directions came from both to release
-the rabbi instantly without ransom. The council, however, excused
-itself on the plea of fear of the bishop and the mob. Thereupon
-followed a mandate from the emperor to defer the execution of Israel
-Bruna until he came to the diet at Augsburg. The council was still
-less satisfied with this order, for it feared to lose its jurisdiction
-over the Jews. It accordingly prepared to take decisive action in the
-matter. The accuser, Hans Vayol, was led on the stone bridge, where
-the executioner stood in readiness. He was informed that he must die,
-and admonished not to go into eternity with a lie on his lips. The
-hardened sinner maintained his accusations against the Jews in general,
-but confessed that the rabbi, Israel Bruna, was innocent of the charge
-of child-murder, and on receipt of another rescript from the emperor,
-Vayol was banished, and the rabbi released from prison. He was,
-however, compelled to take an oath that he would not revenge himself
-for his long sufferings. This poor, feeble graybeard--how could he
-have avenged himself?
-
-At this juncture the news of the martyrdom of Simon of Trent reached
-Ratisbon, and added fuel to the fire. Bishop Henry was delighted to
-have an opportunity of persecuting the Jews with impunity in the
-interest of the faith. He had heard something of this child-murder on
-his journey to Rome. On his return, he urged the council to institute
-a rigid inquiry respecting the Jews accused by Wolfkan. The result of
-the extorted confessions was the imprisonment of the whole community.
-Sentinels stood on guard day and night at the four gates of the Jewry
-of Ratisbon, and permitted no one to enter or go out. The possessions
-of the whole community were confiscated by the commissioners and judges
-who took an inventory of everything. A horrible fate threatened the
-unhappy children of Israel.
-
-This trial, which caused considerable attention in its day, proved
-quite as prejudicial to the citizens as to the Jews themselves.
-Immediately after the inquiry began, several Jews of Ratisbon had
-betaken themselves to Bohemia and to the emperor, and tried by every
-means to save their unhappy brethren. They knew that to explain their
-righteous cause gold, and plenty of it, would be above all things
-necessary. For this reason several Bavarian rabbis assembled in a synod
-at Nuremberg, and decided that the Bavarian communities and every
-individual not absolutely impoverished should contribute a quota to
-make up the amount necessary to free the accused Jews of Ratisbon. When
-the safety of their brethren was in question, the Jews, however fond
-they might be of money, were by no means parsimonious. The intercession
-of the Bohemian nobles under whose protection several of the Ratisbon
-community had placed themselves led to no result. Far more efficacious
-were the golden arguments which the ambassadors of the community laid
-before Emperor Frederick and his advisers. It is only just to say
-that this usually feeble sovereign displayed considerable ability
-and firmness in this inquiry. He was so strongly convinced of the
-falsehood of the blood accusation against the Jews that he would not
-allow himself to be deceived by any trickery. He dispatched rescript
-after rescript to the council of Ratisbon, ordering the immediate
-release of the imprisoned Jews, the cessation of the durance of the
-community, and the restoration of their property. The council, through
-fear of the bishop and the duke, delayed the execution of the order,
-and the emperor became furious at the obstinacy of the citizens when
-news was brought to him that, in spite of the imperial command, they
-had already executed some of the Jews. He thereupon declared the city
-to have fallen under the ban of the empire on account of its obstinate
-disobedience, and summoned it to answer for its contumacy. At the same
-time he sent the imperial chancellor to deprive the city of penal
-jurisdiction and to threaten it with other severe penalties.
-
-Frederick, as a rule weak, showed surprising firmness on this
-occasion. New and shameless charges were nevertheless brought by the
-clergy against the Jews. In Passau they were accused of having bought
-consecrated wafers from a Christian, and profaned them; whereupon
-certain marvels were said to have occurred. For this the bishop of
-Passau had a great number of Jews put to death, some "mercifully" by
-the sword, others at the stake, and others by means of red-hot pincers.
-In memory of this inhumanity and "to the glory of God," a new church
-was built near the scene of the atrocities. A Jew and a Jewess of
-Ratisbon were accused of complicity in this crime, and thrown into
-prison with the others. All the details were brought to the notice of
-the emperor in order to rouse his anger. He, however, maintained his
-conviction that the Jews of Ratisbon were innocent, and issued a new
-order to the effect that those in prison on the charge of profaning the
-host were neither to be tortured nor put to death, but to be treated
-like other prisoners. In vain the council sent deputy after deputy to
-the imperial court. Frederick roundly declared, "In justice and honor
-I neither can nor will permit these Jews to be slain, and the men of
-Ratisbon who have so long hardened themselves in their disobedience
-shall certainly not sit in judgment upon them."
-
-Thus, after long resistance, the council was compelled to kiss the rod,
-and give a written promise to release the imprisoned Jews, and not to
-drive any out of the city on account of this trial. Further, the city
-was sentenced to pay a fine of 8,000 gulden into the imperial exchequer
-and to find bail in 10,000 gulden--which latter burden, strangely
-enough, the Jews had to bear. An appeal to the pope was out of the
-question, since experience had taught that "the papal court was even
-more greedy of gold than the imperial."
-
-When the community of Ratisbon was informed of this conclusion of the
-affair, and of the conditions under which it could gain its freedom--
-by paying not only the sum imposed upon itself, but also the fine of
-the city and the costs of the proceedings--it refused. The delegates
-said that the total exceeded the possessions of the Jews, as they had
-been deprived, for three long years, of freedom and all opportunity
-of earning money. They preferred their present miserable state to
-becoming beggars. So they remained two years longer in durance, partly
-on account of lack of money, and partly by reason of the excessive bail
-demanded. They were finally set at liberty on taking an oath that they
-would not take revenge, nor convey their persons or their goods out of
-the city of Ratisbon.
-
-All the Jews living in Suabia were expelled, doubtless in consequence
-of false accusations in connection with the child-murder of Trent.
-As late as in the eighteenth century, the shameless falsehood was
-repeated, and in many parts entailed upon the Jews the sacrifice of
-life and property.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-THE INQUISITION IN SPAIN.
-
- Jewish Blood in the Veins of the Spanish Nobility--The Marranos
- cling to Judaism and manifest Unconquerable Antipathy to
- Christianity--Ferdinand and Isabella--The Dominicans, Alfonso
- de Ojeda, Diego de Merlo, and Pedro de Solis--The Catechism
- of the Marranos--A Polemical Work against the Catholic Church
- and Despotism gives a Powerful Impulse to the Inquisition--The
- Tribunal is established in 1480--Miguel Morillo and Juan
- de San Martin are the first Inquisitors--The Inquisition
- in Seville--The "Edict of Grace"--The Procession and the
- Auto-da-fe--The Numbers of the Accused and Condemned--Pope
- Sixtus IV and his Vacillating Policy with Regard to the
- Inquisition--The Inquisition under the first Inquisitor
- General, Thomas de Torquemada; its Constitutions--The Marranos
- of Aragon--They are charged with the Death of the Inquisitor
- Arbues--Persecutions and Victims--Proceedings against two
- Bishops Favorable to the Jews, De Avila and De Aranda.
-
-1474-1483 C.E.
-
-
-A Jewish poet called Spain the "hell of the Jews;" and, in very
-deed, those foul fiends in monks' cowls, the inventors of the Holy
-Inquisition, made that lovely land an Inferno. Every misery, every
-mortal pang, conceived only by the most extravagant imagination of
-poet; every horror that can thrill the heart of man to its lowest
-depths, these monsters in the garb of humility brought upon the Jews of
-the Hesperian Peninsula.
-
-These Calibans also said, "'Burn but their books;' for therein lies
-their power." The Dominicans wished to destroy not only the bodies,
-but the very soul and spirit of the Jews. Yet they were not able to
-quench the life of Judaism. They only succeeded in transforming the
-Spanish paradise into one vast dungeon, in which the king himself was
-not free. The Inquisition, created by the begging friars, wounded the
-Jew deeply, yet not mortally. His wounds are now almost healed; but
-Spain suffers still, perhaps beyond hope of cure, from the wounds dealt
-by the Inquisition. Ferdinand the Catholic and Isabella the Bigot,
-who, through the union of Aragon and Castile, laid the foundation for
-the greatness of Spain, prepared the way, at the same time, by the
-establishment of the Inquisition, for her decay and final ruin.
-
-The new-Christians, who dwelt by hundreds and thousands throughout
-the kingdoms of Aragon and Castile, were so many thorns in monkish
-flesh. Many of them held high offices of state, and by means of their
-wealth wielded great and far-reaching influence. They were also
-related to many of the old nobility; indeed, there were few families
-of consequence who had not Jewish blood in their veins. They formed a
-third part of the townspeople, and were intelligent, industrious, and
-peaceful citizens. These Marranos, for the most part, had preserved
-their love for Judaism and their race in the depths of their hearts.
-As far as they could, they observed Jewish rites and customs, either
-from piety or from habit. Even those who, upon philosophical grounds,
-were indifferent to Judaism, were not less irreconcilably hostile to
-Christianity, which they were compelled to confess with their lips.
-Although they did not have their children circumcised, they washed the
-heads of the infants immediately after baptism. They were, therefore,
-rightly looked upon by the orthodox clergy either as Judaizing
-Christians, or as apostate heretics. They took no count of the origin
-of their conversion, which had been accomplished with fire and sword.
-They had received the sacrament of baptism, and this condemned them and
-their descendants to remain in the Christian faith, however hateful it
-might be to them. Rational legislation would have given them liberty
-to return to Judaism, and, in any case, to emigrate, in order to avoid
-scandal. But the spiritual powers were full of perversity. That which
-demands the freest exercise of the powers of the soul was to be brought
-about by brute force, to the greater glory of God!
-
-During the lifetime of Don Henry IV the clerical members of the cortes
-of Medina del Campo had persistently advanced the proposal that a court
-of Inquisition be instituted to bring recusant or suspected Christians
-to trial, and inflict severe punishment with confiscation of goods.
-Unfortunately for the clericals, the king was by no means zealous for
-the faith or fond of persecution; and so this decision of the cortes,
-like many others, remained a dead letter. The Dominicans, however,
-promised themselves greater results under the new sovereigns--Queen
-Isabella, whose confessors had reduced her to spiritual slavery, and
-Don Ferdinand, who, by no means so superstitiously inclined, was
-quite ready to use religion as the cloak of his avarice. It is said
-that the confessor, Thomas de Torquemada, the incarnation of the
-hell-begotten Holy Inquisition, had extorted from the Infanta Isabella
-a vow that, when she came to the throne, she would devote herself to
-the extirpation of heresy, to the glory of God and the exaltation of
-the Catholic faith. She was now queen; "her throne was established; and
-her soul was sufficiently beclouded to believe that God had raised her
-solely to cleanse Spanish Christianity from the taint of Judaism."
-
-The prior of a Dominican monastery, Alfonso de Ojeda, who had the ear
-of the royal consorts, made fearful representations to them as to the
-offenses of the new-Christians against the faith. Aided by two others
-of like mind, he strained every nerve to set the Inquisition in motion
-against the Marranos; and the papal nuncio in Spain, Nicolo Franco,
-supported the proposition of the monk for a tribunal to call them to
-account for their transgressions.
-
-Without further consideration Don Ferdinand, seeing that his coffers
-would be filled with the plunder of the accused, gave his assent to
-the scheme. The more scrupulous queen hesitated, and the royal pair
-decided to appeal to the pope for advice. The two Spanish ambassadors
-at the court of Rome, the brothers Francisco and Diego de Santillana,
-earnestly pressed the pope and the college of cardinals to grant the
-request of their sovereigns. Sixtus IV, from whom anything, good or
-bad, could be obtained for gold, immediately grasped the money-making
-aspect of the Holy Inquisition. In November, 1478, he issued a bull
-empowering the sovereigns to appoint inquisitors from among the clergy,
-with full authority to sit in judgment on all heretics, apostates,
-and their patrons, according to the laws and customs of the ancient
-Inquisition, sentence them, and--most important point of all--
-confiscate their goods.
-
-Isabella, who had been somewhat favorably influenced in behalf of
-the new-Christians, was not inclined to adopt rigorous measures to
-begin with. At her direction, the archbishop of Seville, Cardinal
-Mendoza, prepared a catechism in 1478 for the use of new-Christians,
-and issued it to the clergy of his diocese, in order that they might
-instruct the Marranos in the articles, the sacraments, and the usages
-of the Christian religion. The authors of this measure displayed
-strange simplicity in believing that the baptized Jews would allow an
-antipathy, which every day found new incitement, to be appeased by the
-dry statements of a catechism. The Marranos naturally remained in what
-the church considered their blindness; that is to say, in the purity of
-their monotheism and their adherence to their ancestral religion.
-
-It happened that a Jew or a new-Christian grievously offended the
-sovereigns by the publication of a small work in which he exposed at
-once the idolatrous cult of the church and the despotic character of
-the government. Hereupon the queen became more and more inclined
-to assent to the proposals for the establishment of the bloody
-tribunal. The work made so strong an impression that the queen's
-father-confessor, in 1480, published a refutation by royal command. The
-attitude of the court became more and more hostile to new-Christians,
-and when the commission appointed by the sovereigns to inquire into
-the improvement or obstinacy of the Marranos reported that they were
-irreclaimable, it was authorized to frame the statute for the new
-tribunal. The commission was composed of the fanatical Dominican,
-Alfonso de Ojeda, and the two monks--one in mind and order--Pedro
-de Solis and Diego de Merlo.
-
-Had demons of nethermost hell conspired to torment innocent men to
-the last verge of endurance and to make their lives one ceaseless
-martyrdom, they could not have devised more perfect means than those
-which the three monks employed against their victims.
-
-The statute was ratified by the sovereigns, and the tribunal of the
-Holy Inquisition was appointed on September 17th, 1480. It was composed
-of men well fitted to carry out the bloody decree: the Dominican Miguel
-Morillo, inquisitor in the province of Roussillon, and renowned as
-a converter of heretics by means of torture; Juan de San Martin; an
-assessor, the abbot Juan Ruez, and a procurator fiscal, Juan Lopez
-del Barco. These men were formally confirmed by Sixtus IV as judges
-in matters of faith, and of heretics and apostates. The tribunal was
-first organized for the city of Seville and its neighborhood, as this
-district stood immediately under royal jurisdiction, and, therefore,
-possessed no cortes, and because it contained a great many Marranos.
-Three weeks later the sovereigns issued a decree calling upon all
-officials to render the inquisitors every assistance in their power.
-
-It is noteworthy that as soon as the creation of the tribunal became
-known, the populace everywhere looked upon it with displeasure, as
-though suspicious that it might be caught in the net spread for
-the Marranos. While the cortes of Medina del Campo proposed the
-establishment of a court for new-Christians, the great popular assembly
-at Toledo in the same year--the first after the accession of
-Ferdinand and Isabella--maintained absolute silence on the question,
-as though it desired to have no share in the unholy work. The mayor
-and other officials of Seville proved so disinclined to assist the
-inquisitors that it was necessary to issue a second royal decree on
-December 27th, 1480, directing them to do so. The nobles, allied with
-the converted Jews either through blood or friendship, stood stoutly
-by them, and sought by every means to protect them against the new
-tribunal.
-
-As soon as the new-Christians of Seville and the neighborhood received
-news of the establishment of the Inquisition, they held a meeting to
-consider means of turning aside the blow aimed at them. Several wealthy
-and respected men of Seville, Carmona and Utrera, among them Abulafia,
-the financial agent of the royal couple, prepared to do battle with
-their persecutors. They distributed money and weapons among the people,
-to enable them to defend themselves. An old man urged the conspirators
-to armed resistance; but the conspiracy was betrayed by the daughter
-of one of its members, and all fell into the hands of the tribunal.
-Others, who had collected their possessions, and fled to the province
-of Medina-Sidonia and Cadiz, under whose governors they hoped to
-receive protection against the threatened persecution, were deceived,
-for the Inquisition went to work with remorseless severity. As soon as
-it had taken up its quarters in the convent of St. Paul at Seville,
-on January 2d, 1481, it issued an edict to the governor of Cadiz and
-other officials to deliver up the Marranos and distrain their goods.
-Those who disobeyed were threatened not only with excommunication,
-but also with the punishment assigned, as sharers of their guilt,
-to all who showed sympathy to heretics--confiscation of goods and
-deprivation of office.
-
-The Inquisition inspired so much terror that the nobility lost no time
-in imprisoning those to whom they had lately promised protection, and
-in sending them in custody to Seville. The number of these prisoners
-was so great that the tribunal was soon obliged to seek another
-building for its functions. It selected a castle in Triana, a suburb of
-Seville. On the gate of this house of blood were inscribed, in mockery
-of the Jews, certain verses selected from their Scriptures:--"Arise,
-God, judge Thy cause;" "Catch ye foxes for us," which plainly showed
-the utter heartlessness of their judges. Fugitives when caught were
-treated as convicted heretics. So early as the fourth day after the
-installation of the tribunal, it held its first sitting. Six Marranos
-who had either avowed their old religion before their judges, or made
-horrible confessions on the rack, were condemned and burnt alive. The
-tale of victims grew to such proportions that the city authorities
-set apart a special place as a permanent execution ground, which
-subsequently became infamous as the Quemadero, or place of burning.
-Four huge caricatures of prophets distinguished this spot, existing
-to the present day to the shame of Spain and Christianity. For three
-hundred years the smoke of the burnt-offering of innocence ascended to
-heaven from this infernal spot.
-
-With that mildness of mien which skillfully covers the wisdom and
-the venom of the serpent, Miguel Morillo and his coadjutors gave to
-the new-Christians guilty of relapse into Judaism a certain time in
-which to declare their remorse. Upon doing this they would receive
-absolution, and be permitted to retain their property. This was the
-Edict of Grace; but it was not wanting in threats for those who should
-permit the time of respite to elapse, and be denounced by others as
-backsliders. The full vigor of the canonical laws against heresy and
-apostasy would then be exercised against them. The credulous in crowds
-obeyed the summons. Contritely they appeared before the tribunal,
-lamented the awful guilt of their lapse into Judaism, and awaited
-absolution and permission to live in peace. But now the inquisitors
-imposed the condition that they declare by name, position, residence
-and other particulars all persons of their acquaintance whom they knew
-to be apostates. This declaration they were to substantiate on oath. In
-the name of God they were asked to become accusers and betrayers--the
-friend of his friend, the brother of his brother, and the son of his
-father. Terror, and the assurance that the betrayed should never know
-the names of their betrayers, loosed the tongues of the weak-hearted,
-and the tribunal soon had a long list of heretics upon whom to carry
-out its bloody work.
-
-Not only the hunted Marranos, every Spaniard was called upon by an
-edict of the inquisitors to become an informer. Under threat of
-excommunication every one was bound to give, within three days, a list
-of acquaintances guilty of Jewish heresy. It was a summons to the most
-hateful vices of mankind to become allies of the court: to malice,
-hatred and revenge, to sate themselves by treachery; to greed, to
-enrich itself; and to superstition, to gain salvation by betrayal.
-
-And what were the signs of this heresy and apostasy? The Inquisition
-had published a very complete, practical guide on the subject, so
-that each informer might find good grounds for his denunciation. The
-following signs of heresy were set forth: if baptized Jews cherished
-hopes of a Messiah; if they held Moses to be as efficacious for
-salvation as Jesus; if they kept the Sabbath or a Jewish feast; if
-they had their children circumcised; if they observed the Jewish
-dietary laws; if they wore clean linen or better garments on the
-Sabbath, laid tablecloths, or lit no fire on this day, or if they went
-barefoot on the Day of Atonement, or asked pardon of each other. If
-a father laid his hands in blessing on his children without making
-the sign of the cross; if one said his prayers with face turned to
-the wall, or with motions of the head; or if he uttered a benediction
-(Baraha, Beracha) over the wine-cup, and passed it to those seated at
-the table with him, he was to be deemed recalcitrant. As a matter of
-course, neglect of the usages of the church was the strongest ground
-for suspicion and accusation. Again, if a new-Christian repeated a
-psalm without adding the Gloria; or if he ate meat on fast-days; or if
-a Jewish woman did not go to church forty days after her lying-in; or
-if parents gave their children Jewish names, the charge of heresy was
-held proved.
-
-Even the most innocent actions, if they happened to coincide with
-Jewish usages, were regarded as signs of aggravated heresy. If anyone,
-for instance, on the Jewish Feast of Tabernacles accepted gifts from
-the table of Jews, or sent them; or if a new-born child was bathed in
-water in which gold coins and grains of corn had been placed; or if a
-dying man in his last moments turned his face to the wall--all such
-actions were held to be signs of heresy.
-
-By such means unscrupulous people were given ample opportunity for
-denunciation, and the tribunal was enabled to accuse of heresy the
-most orthodox proselytes when it desired to destroy their influence or
-confiscate their property. Naturally the dungeons of the Inquisition
-were soon filled with Jewish heretics. Fully 15,000 were thrown into
-prison at the outset. The Christian priests of Moloch inaugurated
-the first auto-da-fe, on January 6th, 1481, with a solemn procession,
-repeated innumerable times during the following three hundred years.
-The clergy in their gorgeous vestments and with crucifixes; the
-grandees in black robes with their banners and pennons; the unhappy
-victims in the hideous San Benito, short and clinging, painted with a
-red cross, and flames and figures of devils; the accompanying choir
-of a vast concourse--so the executioners with proud bearing and
-the victims in most miserable guise marched to the place of torment.
-Arrived there the inquisitors recited their sentence on the victims.
-To the horror of the scene was added the ghastly mockery that the
-tribunal did not execute the sentence of death, but left it to the
-secular judge; for the church, though steeped to the lips in blood, was
-supposed not to desire the death of the sinner. The Jewish heretics
-were given to the flames forthwith, or, if penitent, they were first
-strangled. In the first auto-da-fe, at which the bishop, Alfonso de
-Ojeda, preached the inauguration sermon, only six Judaizing Christians
-were burnt. A few days later the conspirators of Carmona, Seville,
-and other towns, and three of the most wealthy and respected of the
-Marranos, among whom was Diego de Suson, the possessor of ten millions,
-and Abulafia, formerly a Talmudic scholar and a rabbi, were burnt
-to death. On the 26th of March seventeen victims suffered death by
-fire on the Quemadero. In the following month a yet greater number
-were burnt; and up to November of the same year 298 burnt-offerings
-to Christ gasped out their lives in flame and smoke in the single
-district of Seville. In the archbishopric of Cadiz no less than 2,000
-Jewish heretics were burnt alive in the course of that year, most of
-them being wealthy or well-to-do, their possessions, of course, going
-to the royal exchequer. Not even death afforded a safeguard against
-the fury of the Holy Office. These ghouls of religion tore from
-their graves the corpses of proselytes who had died in heresy, burnt
-them, confiscated their possessions in the hands of their heirs, and
-condemned the latter to obscurity and poverty that they might never
-aspire to any honorable office. Here was a splendid field for the
-avarice of the king. When it was impossible to convict a wealthy heir,
-it was only necessary to establish proofs of a relapse to Judaism
-against his dead father, and then the property fell partly to the king,
-partly to the Holy Inquisition!
-
-Many Marranos saved themselves by flight from the clutches of the
-merciless persecutors, and took refuge in the neighboring Moslem
-kingdom of Granada, in Portugal, Africa, Provence, or Italy. Those
-who reached Rome approached the papal court with bitter complaints
-about the savage and arbitrary proceedings of the Inquisition against
-themselves and their companions in misery. As the complainants did not
-come with empty hands, their cause usually obtained a ready hearing.
-On the 29th of January, 1482, the pope addressed a severe letter to
-Ferdinand and Isabella, censuring the conduct of the Inquisition in no
-measured terms. He stated that he had been assured that the proceedings
-of the tribunal were contrary to all forms of justice, that many were
-unjustly imprisoned, and subjected to fearful tortures. Innocent people
-had been denounced as heretics, and their property taken from their
-heirs. In this letter the pope admitted that he had issued the bull for
-the institution of the Inquisition without due consideration!
-
-Sixtus further stated that, in strict justice, he ought to depose the
-inquisitors, De Morillo and San Martin; but out of consideration for
-their majesties he would allow them to remain in possession of their
-offices, only so long, however, as no further complaints were made
-against them. Should protests again be raised he would restore the
-inquisitorial office to the bishops, to whom it properly belonged. The
-pope refused the request of Don Ferdinand to institute in the other
-provinces of the united kingdom extraordinary tribunals for the trial
-of heretics.
-
-But Don Ferdinand also knew how to apply the golden key to the
-papal cabinet, and obtained a bull sanctioning the establishment
-of the Inquisition in the provinces of Aragon. In this bull, dated
-February 11th, 1482, Sixtus appointed six monks and clerics as chief
-inquisitors, among them Thomas de Torquemada, general of the Dominicans
-of Avilo, a monk already infamous for his bloodthirsty fanaticism.
-In another letter, of the 17th of April, he invested these men with
-discretionary powers, in virtue of which they were able to dispense
-with certain forms of common law, the hearing of witnesses and the
-admission of pleaders for the defense. Thus were fresh victims brought
-to the stake.
-
-In the kingdom of Aragon, however, where the nobility and the middle
-class had a weighty voice in public matters, the condemnation of Jewish
-heretics without formal trial raised such formidable opposition that
-Cardinal Borgia, afterwards the infamous Alexander VI, and the king
-himself, petitioned the pope for a modification of the conditions
-governing the practice of the tribunal. In a letter of the 10th of
-October, Sixtus excused himself from making any radical changes in
-consequence of the absence of the cardinals, who had fled from Rome
-in mortal fear of the plague. But he abrogated the conditions which
-too flagrantly violated the principles of common law; that is to say,
-he ordered that accuser and witnesses should be confronted with the
-accused, and that the process should be conducted in public.
-
-The Inquisition also met with great opposition in Sicily, an appanage
-of the kingdom of Aragon. The people and even the authorities took the
-part of the new-Christians, and shielded them from the persecution
-of their bloodthirsty judges. Christians themselves openly charged
-that the victims were not executed out of zeal for the faith, but from
-insatiable greed which sought ceaseless confiscations. The bigoted
-Isabella was sorely troubled at having her pious desire to devote the
-proselytes to death thus evilly represented, and even the pope behaved
-as though it wounded him to the heart. (February, 1483.)
-
-Sixtus IV had the greatest interest in maintaining friendly relations
-with the Spanish court, and, therefore, made every concession with
-regard to the Inquisition. As it often happened that Christian
-proselytes condemned by the tribunal, who had succeeded in escaping to
-Rome, purchased absolution from the papal throne, with the infliction
-of only a light, private penance, the sovereigns saw that their
-efforts to purge the Christian faith by the extermination of Jewish
-proselytes, especially by the confiscation of their goods, were most
-unpleasantly thwarted. The court, therefore, insisted that the pope
-appoint a judge of appeals in Spain itself, so that the rulings of the
-Inquisition might not be reversed in foreign countries, where all kinds
-of unfavorable influences might be brought to bear. The pope agreed to
-this proposition, and appointed Inigo Manrique chief judge of appeals
-in cases in which the condemned moved for a revision of their trial.
-This measure was, however, of very doubtful benefit to the unfortunate
-culprits, for upon what ground could they base their appeal when the
-trial had been conducted in secret, and neither accuser nor witnesses
-were known to them? It is altogether likely, too, that the tribunal did
-not leave them very much time to institute proceedings for the revision
-of the verdict. Between the passing of the sentence and the last act of
-the auto-da-fe only a very short interval elapsed.
-
-Another measure of the Spanish court, calculated to deprive the accused
-of the last hope of acquittal, was approved by the pope. Baptized Jews,
-or new-Christians descended from them, frequently held bishoprics, and
-were naturally favorably inclined to their unfortunate and persecuted
-brethren in race. At the request of the Spanish court, the pope issued
-a bull decreeing that no bishop, vicar, or member of the upper clergy
-descended from a Jewish family, whether paternally or maternally,
-should sit as a judge in any court for the trial of heretics. From
-this prohibition there was only a step to the condemnation of clergy
-of Jewish blood to the stake. Both his own frame of mind and his
-political position now inclined the pope to encourage the sovereigns in
-the prosecution of their bloody work. He reminded them that Jesus had
-established his kingdom on earth solely by the extirpation of idolatry
-and the extermination of idolators, and he pointed to the recent
-victories which the Spaniards had gained over the Moslems in Granada
-as the reward of heaven for their efforts towards the purification of
-the faith--that is to say, for the burning of new-Christians and the
-confiscation of their goods.
-
-Had his Holiness, Sixtus IV, not been infamous as a monster of
-depravity, sensuality and unscrupulousness, who appointed boys that
-he had himself abused to bishoprics and the cardinal dignity, and who
-bestowed no clerical office without payment--as his contemporary,
-Infessura, the chancellor of Rome, has recorded--his conduct with
-regard to the Holy Inquisition would have been sufficient to brand
-him with immortal infamy. Within a short period he published the most
-contradictory decisions, and did not take the trouble to veil his
-inconsistency with the most flimsy pretense. Scarcely had he proclaimed
-the utmost rigors against Judaizing heretics, and appointed a tribunal
-of appeals, than he partly abrogated these bulls, and issued another
-prescribing milder proceedings to the Inquisition, only to alter this
-policy in its turn.
-
-The hated Marranos, among them the high-spirited Juan de Seville, had
-exerted themselves to procure from the papal court a decree to the
-effect that those who had undergone private penance in Rome should not
-be submitted to the oppression and persecution of the avaricious king
-and his bloodthirsty inquisitors, but should be regarded and treated
-as orthodox Christians. At first the pope consented, and issued a
-bull on August 2d, 1483, "to be held in eternal remembrance and as
-guide for the future," in which he especially directed that rigor be
-tempered with mercy in dealing with the new-Christians, seeing that the
-severity of the Inquisition had overstepped the bounds of justice. The
-bull enacted that all new-Christians who had confessed their remorse
-to the confessor-general in Rome, and had been assigned a penance,
-should not be pursued by the Inquisition, and should have their trials
-suppressed. It exhorted the king and queen, "by the bowels of Jesus
-Christ," to remember that in mercy and kindness alone may man resemble
-God, and that, therefore, they might in this follow in the steps of
-Jesus, whose peculiar attribute it was to show mercy and to pardon.
-The pope permitted this bull to be copied indefinitely, each copy to
-have the authority of the original, in order that the papal attitude
-with regard to new-Christians might be made universally known. Sixtus
-concluded with the statement that he issued this bull entirely of his
-own motion, not in obedience to external influence, although it was
-well known in high circles that it had been bought with new-Christian
-gold. The sovereigns, however, would have nothing to do with mercy or
-forbearance; they desired the death of the culprits and the possession
-of their property. Nor was the pope really inclined to mild measures.
-A few days later, on August 13th, he recalled this bull, excusing
-himself to the king for its tenor, and said that it had been issued
-in too great haste. Such was the consistency and infallibility of his
-Holiness, Pope Sixtus IV!
-
-In vain Don Juan de Seville, who had procured the promulgation of the
-favorable bull, endeavored to circulate it. He failed to find any
-clerical official in Spain to copy and confirm it. He, therefore,
-applied to the Portuguese archbishop of Evora, who caused it to be
-copied by his notary and recognized as authentic. The Inquisition,
-however, was extremely suspicious of those who had sought and obtained
-indulgences at Rome, and Don Juan de Seville and his companions fell at
-length into its hands, and were severely punished.
-
-Terrible though the tribunal had hitherto been; though many thousands
-of compulsory proselytes and their descendants, during its three short
-years of existence, had been cast into the flames, left to rot in its
-dungeons, driven from their country, or reduced to beggary, it was
-child's play compared with what it became when placed under the control
-of a priest whose heart was closed to every sentiment of mercy, whose
-lips breathed only death and destruction, and who united the savagery
-of the hyena with the venom of the snake. Until now the Inquisition had
-been confined to southern Spain, to the districts of Seville and Cadiz,
-and the Christian province of Andalusia. In the remaining provinces
-of Spain it had hitherto been unable to get a footing, in consequence
-of the resistance offered to its introduction by the cortes. Through
-the opposition of the people, the wicked will of the inquisitors
-Morillo and Juan de San Martin had remained inoperative; their uplifted
-arm was paralyzed by innumerable difficulties. If here and there a
-few courts were held in the remaining districts of Spain, they were
-isolated and without organization, and were thus unable to furnish
-each other with victims. King Ferdinand thus had not yet collected
-treasure enough, nor had the pious Isabella beheld a sufficient number
-of new-Christians writhing in the flames. For their joint satisfaction
-they now persuaded the pope to appoint an inquisitor-general who
-should constitute, direct, and supervise the several courts, that
-none of the suspected Marranos might avoid their fate, and that the
-opposition of the populace might be broken down by every species
-of terrorism. In cold blood, and with little interest even for the
-faith itself, the pope assented; and in May, 1483, appointed the
-Dominican, Thomas de Torquemada, hitherto prior of a monastery in
-Segovia, inquisitor-general of Spain. There are certain men who are
-the embodiment of good or evil sentiments, opinions and principles,
-and fully illustrate their extremest consequences. Torquemada was the
-incarnation of the Holy Inquisition with all its devilish malice, its
-heartless severity, its bloodthirsty ferocity.
-
-"Out of Rome hath arisen a savage monster of such wondrous shape and
-hideous appearance that at the sound of its name all Europe trembles.
-Its carcass is of iron, tempered in deadly poison, and covered with
-scales of impenetrable steel. A thousand venom-dropping wings support
-it when it hovers over the terrified earth. Its nature is that of the
-ravening lion and the snake of the African desert. Its bite is more
-terrible than that of the hugest monster. The sound of its voice slays
-more speedily than the deadly glance of the basilisk. From its eyes and
-mouth stream fire and ceaseless lightnings. It feeds on human bodies,
-and its drink is human tears and blood. It excels the eagle in the
-speed of its flight, and where it broods its black shadow spreads the
-gloom of night. Though the sun shine never so clearly, the darkness of
-Egypt follows in its track. Wheresoever it flies, every green meadow
-that it touches, every fruitful tree on which it sets foot, withers and
-dies. With its destroying fangs it roots up every herb that grows, and
-with the poison of its breath it blasts the circle in which it moves to
-a desert like that of Syria, where no green thing grows, no grass-blade
-sprouts."
-
-Thus did a Jewish poet, Samuel Usque, himself singed by its flames,
-depict the Inquisition.
-
-The inscription which the poet Dante placed upon the portal of Hell--
-
- "All hope abandon, ye who enter here!"
-
-would have been even more suitable to the dungeons of the Holy
-Inquisition, which the cruel energy of Torquemada now established in
-nearly all the great towns of Spain. He at once instituted three new
-tribunals in Cordova, Jaen and Villareal (Ciudad-Real), and, later
-on, one in Toledo, the capital of southern Spain. The offices of the
-Inquisition were entirely filled by him with hypocritical and fanatical
-Dominicans, whom he made the tools of his will, so that they worked
-like an organism with a single head, ready at his word to perpetrate
-the most hideous barbarities with a composure that cannibals might
-have envied. In those days Spain was filled with the putrefaction of
-the dungeon, the stench of corpses, and the crackling of the flames in
-which were burning innocent Jews, forced into a faith the falsity of
-which was demonstrated by every action of the servants of the church. A
-wail of misery piercing bone and marrow went through that lovely land;
-but their Catholic majesties paralyzed the arm of every man prompted
-by mercy to put a stop to the butchery. At the court itself there
-sat a commission on the affairs of Jewish Christians, of which the
-inquisitor-general held the presidency.
-
-Don Ferdinand wished to perpetuate the jurisdiction of the Inquisition
-in his hereditary lands, in order to fill his purse with the spoils
-of the new-Christians settled there. During the assembly of the
-cortes at Tarazona, in April, 1484, he laid his plans before his privy
-council, and canceled the ancient privileges of the country, which had
-existed from the earliest times, and which provided that no native of
-Aragon, whatever his crime, should suffer confiscation of his property.
-The inquisitor-general accordingly appointed for the archbishopric
-of Saragossa two inquisitors who rivaled himself in bloodthirsty
-fanaticism, the canon, Pedro Arbues de Epila, and the Dominican,
-Gaspard Juglar. A royal ordinance was now issued to all officials and
-nobles, directing them to give every assistance to the inquisitors.
-The grand justiciary of Aragon, though of Jewish origin, and other
-dignitaries, were obliged to take an oath that they would spare no
-efforts to exterminate the culprits condemned by the tribunal.
-
-Torquemada, the very soul of the Inquisition, now decided to publish
-a code for the guidance of the judges, so that the net might be
-drawn as closely as possible round his victims. The whole body of
-inquisitors was assembled to consider this design, and, under the
-title of "Constitutions," issued, on October 29th, 1484, a code of
-laws, calculated to inspire the utmost horror had no more been done
-than commit them to paper. It has been asserted that the monkish
-inquisitors merely copied the anti-Jewish enactments of the councils
-under the Visigothic kings. It is true that the decrees of Receswinth
-threatened with death, by fire or stoning, all new-Christians convicted
-of adherence to Jewish customs. The comparison is, nevertheless,
-incorrect. For not the enactments against heresy, but their
-enforcement, distinguishes the "Constitutions" of the Inquisition as
-the most hideous ever fashioned by human wickedness. It was as though
-the most malicious demons had taken counsel to discover how they might
-bring innocent human beings to destruction.
-
-One decree ordained a respite of thirty days for those who of their
-own free will would tender confession of their relapse to Judaism.
-These were to be spared all punishment and confiscation of goods with
-the exception of a moderate fine. They were, however, compelled to put
-their confession into writing, to give exact answers to all questions
-put to them, and especially to betray their fellow-offenders, and even
-those whom they only suspected of Judaizing tendencies. Those who
-confessed after the expiration of the time of respite were to lose
-all their property, even that which they had possessed at the time of
-their falling away from Christianity, and though it had passed into
-other hands. Only new-Christians under twenty years old were exempted
-from loss of property in the event of later confessions; but they were
-compelled to bear a mark of infamy composed of flaming crosses, the
-San Benito, upon their clothing, and to take part in the processions
-and attend high mass in this guise. Those whose remorse awakened after
-the appointed day were indeed to receive indulgence, but they were to
-remain branded for life. Neither they nor their descendants were ever
-to hold any public office, nor to wear any garment embroidered with
-gold, silver or pearls, or made of silk or fine wool, and they were
-condemned to bear the "fiery cross" for ever. Should the inquisitors
-discover that the confession of a penitent was insincere, it was their
-duty to deny him absolution, to treat him as a recalcitrant, and to
-consign him to the flames. If a penitent made only a partial confession
-of his sins, he, too, was condemned to death. The evidence against a
-Judaizing Christian might, when not otherwise convenient, be taken
-through other persons. It was not necessary to place this testimony
-before the accused in full detail, but merely as an abstract. If, in
-spite of the evidence laid before him, he maintained that he had never
-relapsed into Judaism, he was condemned to the flames as impenitent.
-Inconclusive proofs of relapse brought against a Marrano stretched him
-upon the rack; in case he confessed under torture, he was submitted
-to a second trial. If he then adhered to what he had confessed under
-torture he was condemned; if he denied it, he underwent the torture
-again. In those cases in which an accused person failed to answer to
-the summons issued against him, he was condemned as a contumacious
-heretic, _i. e._, his property was confiscated.
-
-In the face of such proceedings--the parody of a trial--and the
-pre-determination on the part of the judge to consider the accused
-guilty, how was it possible for any Marrano to prove his innocence?
-The dungeon and the rack frequently made the accused so indifferent
-to their fate and so weary of life that they made confessions as to
-themselves, their friends and even their nearest relatives which
-appeared to vindicate the necessity for the Inquisition. The trial of
-every new-Christian involved others in apparent guilt, and brought
-new examinations and new accusations in its train, thus furnishing an
-ever-increasing number of victims to the Holy Office.
-
-The towns of the kingdoms of Aragon and Valencia had from the
-first manifested the greatest displeasure at the introduction of
-the Inquisition. Up to this period they had been less despotically
-governed than Castile, and were exceedingly jealous of their freedom.
-Above everything the Aragonese valued, as the apple of their eye, the
-privilege which forbade the confiscation of goods even on account
-of the gravest offenses. Now the officers of the Inquisition were
-to be invested with unlimited power over life and property. The
-new-Christians, who held high offices and influential positions in
-Aragon, were naturally eager to foment and increase the discontent.
-In Teruel and Valencia, in 1485, disastrous popular risings broke out
-against the Inquisition, and were quelled only after great bloodshed.
-The Marranos and those of Jewish descent did not, however, surrender
-their project of paralyzing the Inquisition in Aragon. Some of the
-highest dignitaries of state were numbered among them; as, for example,
-Luis Gonzalez, royal secretary of state for Aragon; Alfonso de
-Caballeria, the vice-chancellor; his brother, the king's major-domo;
-Philip Clemente, chief notary; and such high hidalgos as the Counts of
-Aranda, together with many knights, among whom were the valiant Juan
-de Abadia, whose sister was burnt for heresy, and Juan Perez Sanchez,
-whose brothers were at court.
-
-As soon as the first victims fell under the Inquisition in Saragossa,
-influential new-Christians brought pressure to bear upon the cortes
-to induce them to protest, both to the king and to the pope, against
-the introduction of the tribunal into Aragon. Commissioners were
-sent to the royal and papal courts to effect in person the repeal of
-the ordinances. They expected but little trouble in Rome, for there
-everything was to be had for money. With the king it seemed to be a
-matter of much greater difficulty. Ferdinand remained obstinately fixed
-in the resolution to exterminate the Jewish Christians by means of the
-Inquisition, and to acquire their property. When the commissioners
-sent news to their friends in Aragon of the failure of their efforts,
-Perez Sanchez conceived a plot to remove Pedro Arbues, chief inquisitor
-for Aragon, in order to cripple the activity of the Inquisition by
-terrorism, and to force the king to give way. He imparted his project
-to his friends, and many bound themselves to stand by him. In order
-to win over the entire body of new-Christians, and to induce them to
-stand firmly together, the leaders of the conspiracy laid them under
-contribution for the expenses of carrying out the project. A hidalgo,
-Blasco de Alagon, collected the money, and Juan de Abadia undertook to
-hire the assassins, and to see that the death of Arbues was achieved.
-This conspiracy was joined by many distinguished persons of Jewish
-descent in Saragossa, Tarazona, Calatayud, Huesca and Barbastro.
-
-Juan de Abadia procured two trustworthy men, Juan de Esperaindo and
-Vidal de Uranso, with four assistants, to accomplish the death of the
-inquisitor Arbues. The intended victim appears to have suspected the
-plot, for he protected his body with a shirt of mail and his head with
-a species of steel cap. Before daybreak on the 15th of September,
-1485, as he was entering the church with a lantern to hear early mass,
-the conspirators followed him. As soon as he had fallen on his knees,
-Esperaindo struck him on the arm with his sword, while Vidal wounded
-him in the neck. He was borne out of the church bathed in blood, and
-died two days later. The conspirators took instant flight. As soon as
-the news of the attack on the chief inquisitor spread in Saragossa
-it produced a violent reaction. The orthodox Christians assembled in
-crowds crying in tones of fury: "To the flames with the Jew-Christians!
-They have murdered the chief inquisitor!" The Marranos would have
-been massacred in a body there and then, had not the royal bastard,
-the youthful Archbishop Alfonso of Aragon, mounted his horse, and
-restrained the crowd by an armed force, promising them the fullest
-satisfaction by the severe punishment of the guilty persons and their
-accomplices.
-
-King Ferdinand made good use of the unfortunate conspiracy in the
-establishment of the Inquisition in Aragon. The sovereigns carried
-public mourning for the murdered Arbues to the verge of idolatry. A
-statue was consecrated to his memory, in honor of his services to
-religion and the extermination of Jewish heretics. The Dominicans
-were by no means displeased at the death of the chief inquisitor.
-They were, in fact, in need of a martyr to enable them to surround
-their tribunal of blood with a halo of glory. They used every effort
-to raise Pedro Arbues to the rank of saint or Christian demi-god. It
-was not long before they fabricated a divine communication from the
-sainted heretic-slayer, in which he exhorted all the world to support
-and carry forward the Holy Inquisition, and soothed the scruples of the
-members of the tribunal, on account of the enormous number of men they
-had consigned to the flames, by assuring them that the most honorable
-places in heaven awaited them as the reward of their pious efforts.
-
-The unsuccessful conspiracy of the Marranos in Saragossa afforded a
-vast number of fresh victims to the Christian Moloch. A few of the
-conspirators made full confession, and so the inquisitors soon had
-a complete list of the culprits. These were pursued with redoubled
-vigor as Judaizing heretics and enemies of the Holy Office. Those
-who had borne a leading part in the conspiracy, as soon as they fell
-into the hands of their judges, were dragged through the streets of
-Saragossa, their hands were hewn off, and they were then hanged. Juan
-de Abadia escaped this dishonorable fate by killing himself in prison.
-More than two hundred Jewish Christians were burnt as accomplices, a
-yet greater number were condemned to perpetual imprisonment, among
-them a high dignitary of the Metropolitan Church of Saragossa, and
-not a few women of gentle birth. Francisco de Santa Fe also died
-at the stake. Even those who had given shelter to the conspirators
-for a brief period during their flight were compelled to attend an
-auto-da-fe as penitents, and lost their civil rights. How far the
-inhumanity of the persecutors went is especially shown by one of the
-punishments inflicted. A conspirator, Gaspard de Santa Cruz, had been
-successful in making his escape to Toulouse, and there died in peace.
-The Inquisition, not content with burning him in effigy, laid hands
-upon his son as an accomplice in his father's flight, and condemned him
-to travel to Toulouse to communicate his sentence to the Dominicans of
-that city, and to desire them to exhume the body of his father and burn
-it. The weak son performed his disgraceful mission, and brought back
-to Saragossa the certificate of the Dominicans to the effect that the
-corpse of the father had been dishonored on the prayer of the son.
-
-Certain towns of northern Spain, such as Lerida and Barcelona, still
-obstinately resisted the introduction of the Inquisition. Their
-resistance proved vain. The iron will of Fernando and the bloodthirsty
-fanaticism of Torquemada overcame every obstacle, and the papal
-court was obliged to give its assent to every proposal. From that
-time forth the number of victims continued to increase. On the 12th
-of February, 1486, an auto-da-fe was celebrated in Toledo with 750
-human burnt-offerings, while on the 2d of April in the same year, 900
-victims were offered up, and on the 7th of May, 750. On the 16th of
-August twenty-five Jewish heretics were burnt alive in Toledo; on the
-following day two priests suffered; and on the 10th of December 950
-persons were condemned to shameful public penance. In the following
-year, when the Inquisition was established in Barcelona and on the
-island of Majorca, two hundred Marranos suffered death by fire in
-these places alone. A Jew of that time, Isaac Arama, writes on this
-subject as follows: "In these days the smoke of the martyr's pyre
-rises unceasingly to heaven in all the Spanish kingdoms and the isles.
-One-third of the Marranos have perished in the flames, another third
-wander homeless over the earth seeking where they may hide themselves,
-and the remainder live in perpetual terror of a trial." So the tale
-of victims grew from year to year under the eleven tribunals which
-transformed the fair land of Spain into a blazing Tophet, whose flames
-soon reached and devoured the Christians themselves.
-
-The pitiless persecution of the new-Christians had its origin perhaps
-even more in the racial hatred of the pure-blooded Spaniards towards
-the children of Judah than in religious fanaticism. Persons of Jewish
-descent, whom it was impossible justly to accuse of heresy, were
-included in the accusations simply because they held high offices. They
-were not permitted to enjoy any dignity or to exercise any influence in
-the country. The inquisitor-general, Torquemada, even laid hands upon
-two bishops of Jewish blood, De Avila and De Aranda, so that, if it
-were impossible to consign them to the flames, he might at least expel
-them from their sees.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-EXPULSION OF THE JEWS FROM SPAIN.
-
- Friendship of Marranos and Jews--Torquemada demands of
- the Rabbis of Toledo the Denunciation of Marranos--Judah
- Ibn-Verga--Jewish Courtiers under Ferdinand and Isabella
- --Isaac Abrabanel: his History and Writings--The Jews of
- Portugal under Alfonso V--The Ibn-Yachya Brothers--Abrabanel's
- Flight from Portugal to Spain--The Jews of Granada: Isaac
- Hamon--Edict of Banishment promulgated by Ferdinand and
- Isabella--Its Consequences--Departure from Spain--Number of
- the Exiles--Decline in the Prosperity of Spain after the
- Banishment of the Jews--Transformation of Synagogues and
- Schools into Churches and Monasteries--The Inquisition and the
- Marranos--Deza, the Successor of Torquemada.
-
-1483-1492 C.E.
-
-
-The monster of the Inquisition, having poured out its wrath on the
-new-Christians, now stretched its arms over the Jews, and delivered
-them to a miserable fate. The connection between the Jews and the
-Marranos was too close for the former not to be made to participate in
-the misfortunes of the latter. They were in intimate relations with
-each other, were bound to each other by close, brotherly ties. The
-Jews experienced heartfelt pity for their unfortunate brethren, so
-unwillingly wearing the mask of Christianity, and strove to keep them
-in touch with the Jewish community. They instructed Christian-born
-Marranos in the rites of Judaism, held secret meetings with them
-for prayer, furnished them with religious books and writings, kept
-them informed of the occurrence of fasts and festivals, supplied
-them at Easter with unleavened bread, and throughout the year with
-meat prepared according to their own ritual, and circumcised their
-new-born sons. In Seville, in fact in the whole of Andalusia, there
-were countless new-Christians, baptized at the time of the furious
-attack upon the Jews by Ferdinand Martinez, and later during the
-persecution of 1391, so that it offered a good field for the activity
-of Jews who were endeavoring to bring back turncoat brethren into
-the ranks of Judaism. One of the most active in this work was Judah
-Ibn-Verga, of Seville, Kabbalist and astronomer, who was held in high
-estimation by the governor of Andalusia. The king and queen intended
-to call the Inquisition into existence here, and the first step was
-to separate the Jews from Christians, especially new-Christians, and
-to destroy every connecting link between them. The cortes of Toledo
-insisted on the enforcement of the stringent regulations--hitherto
-so frequently evaded--for special Jewish (and Moorish) quarters, but
-the strictly executed law of separation, made to take effect all over
-the kingdom, could not sever the loving relations existing between
-Jews and Marranos. In spite of all, the closest intercommunion was
-maintained, only more secretly, more circumspectly. The greater the
-danger of discovery, the the greater the charm of meeting, despite the
-Argus eyes of priestly spies and their myrmidons, for mutual solace and
-encouragement. These meetings of the Jews and Moors, from the secrecy
-with which they were conducted, and the danger attending them, wore a
-romantic aspect. A loving bond of union was thus created, which grew
-closer and stronger for every effort to loosen it.
-
-The fiendish Torquemada strove by every possible means to destroy these
-ties. As soon as he had become grand inquisitor, he issued a command
-that Marranos should present themselves for confession, ordered the
-rabbis of Toledo to be convened, and exacted from them an oath that
-they would inform against new-Christians who observed Jewish rites
-and ceremonies, and would excommunicate Jews who refused to become
-witnesses against their own people. They were threatened with heavy
-punishment if they refused to take this oath (1485). What a tragical
-struggle for the rabbis of Toledo! They themselves were to lend a hand
-to wrench their faithful brethren from Judaism, and deliver them over
-to Christianity, or, rather, to the stake! Surely, they could not be
-brought to this, and preferred to suffer punishment! Judah Ibn-Verga,
-ordered by the inquisitors to deliver over pseudo-Christians who
-secretly clung to Judaism, chose to leave his native Seville, and
-fled to Lisbon, where he eventually died a martyr's death. Since the
-inquisitors could not attain their ends through Jews, who, despite all
-measures, continued their secret intercourse with new-Christians, they
-urged the king and queen to issue a mandate for the partial expulsion
-of the Jews from Andalusia, especially from Seville.
-
-The Castilian and Aragonese Jews might have known, from these sad
-events, that their sojourn could not be of long duration; but they
-loved Spain too dearly to part from her except under compulsion.
-Besides, the king and queen often protected them from unfair treatment.
-When they removed to special Jewish quarters, Ferdinand and Isabella
-were at great pains to shield them from annoyance and chicanery.
-Moreover, under the rule of these Catholic sovereigns there were Jewish
-tithe and tax collectors, and, finally, the Jews relied upon the fact
-that they were indispensable to the Christians. The sick preferred
-to seek advice with Jewish physicians, the lower classes consulted
-Jews on legal questions, and even asked them to read the letters or
-documents which they received from the clergy. In addition to all this,
-it happened that, at the time when Torquemada was casting his snares
-over the Moors and Jews, the celebrated Abrabanel received an important
-post at the court of Castile, and enjoyed unlimited confidence. Under
-his protection the Spanish Jews hoped to be able to defy the fury of
-the venomous Dominicans. Abrabanel's favored position at court, the
-geniality of his character, his affection for the Hebrew race, his love
-of learning, and his tried wisdom, brought back the time of Samuel
-Nagrela, and lulled the Jews with false hopes.
-
-Don Isaac ben Judah Abrabanel (born in Lisbon 1437, died in Venice
-1509) worthily closes the list of Jewish statesmen in Spain who,
-beginning with Chasdai Ibn-Shaprut, used their names and positions
-to protect the interests of their race. In his noble-mindedness, his
-contemporaries saw proofs of Abrabanel's descent from the royal house
-of David, a distinction on which the Abrabanels prided themselves,
-and which was generally conceded to them. His grandfather, Samuel
-Abrabanel, who, during the persecution of 1391, but probably only for
-a short time, lived as a Christian, was a large-hearted, generous man,
-who supported Jewish learning and its votaries. His father, Judah,
-treasurer to a Portuguese prince, was wealthy and benevolent. Isaac
-Abrabanel was precocious, of clear understanding, but sober-minded,
-without imagination and without depth. The realities of life, present
-conditions and events, he grasped with unerring tact; but what was
-distant, less obvious to ordinary perceptions, lay veiled in a mist
-which he was unable to penetrate or dispel. The origin of Judaism, its
-splendid antiquity, and its conception of God, were favorite themes
-with Abrabanel from his youth upward, and when still quite a young man
-he published a treatise setting forth the providence of God and its
-special relation to Israel. Philosophical conceptions were, however,
-acquired, not innate with him; he had no ability to solve metaphysical
-questions. On the other hand, he was a solid man of business, who
-thoroughly understood finance and affairs of state. The reigning king
-of Portugal, Don Alfonso V, an intelligent, genial, amiable ruler,
-was able to appreciate Abrabanel's talents; he summoned him to his
-court, confided to him the conduct of his financial affairs, and
-consulted him on all important state questions. His noble disposition,
-his sincerely devout spirit, his modesty, far removed from arrogance,
-and his unselfish prudence, secured for him at court, and far outside
-its circle, the esteem and affection of Christian grandees. Abrabanel
-stood in friendly intimacy with the powerful, but mild and beneficent
-Duke Ferdinand of Braganza, lord of fifty towns, boroughs, castles, and
-fortresses, and able to bring 10,000 foot-soldiers and 3,000 cavalry
-into the field, as also with his brothers, the Marquis of Montemar,
-Constable of Portugal, and the Count of Faro, who lived together in
-fraternal affection. With the learned John Sezira, who was held in high
-consideration at court, and was a warm patron of the Jews, he enjoyed
-close friendship. Abrabanel thus describes his happy life at the court
-of King Alfonso:
-
- "Tranquilly I lived in my inherited house in fair Lisbon. God
- had given me blessings, riches and honor. I had built myself
- stately buildings and chambers. My house was the meeting-place
- of the learned and the wise. I was a favorite in the palace of
- Alfonso, a mighty and upright king, under whom the Jews enjoyed
- freedom and prosperity. I was close to him, was his support,
- and while he lived I frequented his palace."
-
-Alfonso's reign was the end of the golden time for the Jews of the
-Pyrenean Peninsula. Although in his time the Portuguese code of laws
-(Ordenacoens de Alfonso V), containing Byzantine elements and canonical
-restrictions for the Jews, was completed, it must be remembered that,
-on the one hand, the king, who was a minor, had had no share in framing
-them, and, on the other, the hateful laws were not carried out. In his
-time the Jews in Portugal bore no badge, but rode on richly caparisoned
-horses and mules, wore the costume of the country, long coats, fine
-hoods and silken vests, and carried gilded swords, so that they could
-not be distinguished from Christians. The greater number of the
-tax-farmers (Rendeiros) in Portugal were Jews. Princes of the church
-even appointed Jewish receivers of church taxes, at which the cortes
-of Lisbon raised complaint. The independence of the Jewish population
-under the chief rabbi and the seven provincial rabbis was protected in
-Alfonso's reign, and included in the code. This code conceded to Jews
-the right to print their public documents in Hebrew, instead of in
-Portuguese as hitherto commanded.
-
-Abrabanel was not the only Jewish favorite at Alfonso's court. Two
-brothers Ibn-Yachya Negro also frequented the court of Lisbon. They
-were sons of a certain Don David, who had recommended them not
-to invest their rich inheritance in real estate, for he saw that
-banishment was in store for the Portuguese Jews.
-
-As long as Isaac Abrabanel enjoyed the king's favor, he was as a
-"shield and a wall for his race, and delivered the sufferers from
-their oppressors, healed differences, and kept fierce lions at bay,"
-as described by his poetical son, Judah Leon. He who had a warm heart
-for all afflicted, and was father to the orphan and consoler to the
-sorrowing, felt yet deeper compassion for the unfortunate of his own
-people. When Alfonso conquered the port of Arzilla, in Africa, the
-victors brought with them, among many thousand captive Moors, 250
-Jews, who were sold as slaves throughout the kingdom. That Jews and
-Jewesses should be doomed to the miseries of slavery was unendurable to
-Abrabanel's heart. At his summons a committee of twelve representatives
-of the Lisbon community was formed, and collected funds; then, with
-a colleague, he traveled over the whole country and redeemed the
-Jewish slaves, often at a high price. The ransomed Jews and Jewesses,
-adults and children, were clothed, lodged, and maintained until they
-had learned the language of the country, and were able to support
-themselves.
-
-When King Alfonso sent an embassy to Pope Sixtus IV to congratulate
-him upon his accession to the throne, and to send him tidings of his
-victory over the Moors in Africa, Doctor John Sezira was one of the
-ambassadors. One in heart and soul with Abrabanel, and friendly to
-the Jews, he promised to speak to the pope in their favor and behalf.
-Abrabanel begged his Italian friend, Yechiel of Pisa, to receive John
-Sezira with a friendly welcome, to place himself entirely at his
-disposal, and convey to him, and to the chief ambassador, Lopes de
-Almeida, how gratified the Italian Jews were to hear of King Alfonso's
-favor to the Jews in his country, so that the king and his courtiers
-might feel flattered. Thus Abrabanel did everything in his power for
-the good of his brethren in faith and race.
-
-In the midst of prosperity, enjoyed with his gracious and cultured wife
-and three fine sons, Judah Leon, Isaac and Samuel, he was disturbed by
-the turn of affairs in Portugal. His patron, Alfonso V, died, and was
-succeeded by Don Joao II (1481-1495), a man in every way unlike his
-father--stronger of will, less kindly, and full of dissimulation. He
-had been crowned in his father's lifetime, and was not rejoiced when
-Alfonso, believed to be dead, suddenly re-appeared in Portugal. Joao
-II followed the tactics of his unscrupulous contemporary, Louis XI of
-France, in the endeavor to rid himself of the Portuguese grandees in
-order to create an absolute monarchy. His first victim was to be Duke
-Ferdinand of Braganza, of royal blood, almost as powerful and as highly
-considered as himself, and better beloved. Don Joao II was anxious to
-clear from his path this duke and his brothers, against whom he had a
-personal grudge. While flattering the Duke of Braganza, he had a letter
-set up against him, accusing him of a secret, traitorous understanding
-with the Spanish sovereigns, the truth of which has not to this day
-been satisfactorily ascertained. He arrested him with a Judas kiss,
-caused him to be tried as a traitor to his country, sent him to the
-block, and took possession of his estates and wealth (June, 1483). His
-brothers were forced to fly to avoid a like fate. Inasmuch as Isaac
-Abrabanel had lived in friendly relations with the Duke of Braganza and
-his brothers, King Joao chose to suspect him of having been implicated
-in the recent conspiracies. Enemies of the Jewish statesman did their
-best to strengthen these suspicions. The king sent a command for him
-to appear before him. Not suspecting any evil, Abrabanel was about to
-obey, when an unknown friend appeared, told him his life was in danger,
-and counseled him to hasty flight. Warned by the fate of the Duke of
-Braganza, Abrabanel followed the advice, and fled to Spain. The king
-sent mounted soldiery after him, but they could not overtake him, and
-he reached the Spanish border in safety. In a humble but manly letter
-he declared his innocence of the crime, and also the innocence of the
-Duke of Braganza. The suspicious tyrant gave no credence to the letter
-of defense, but caused Abrabanel's property to be confiscated, as also
-that of his son, Judah Leon, who was already following the profession
-of a physician. His wife and children, however, he permitted to remove
-to Castile.
-
-In the city of Toledo, where he found refuge, Isaac Abrabanel was
-honorably received by the Jews, especially by the cultured. A circle
-of learned men and disciples gathered round the famous, innocently
-persecuted Jewish statesman. With the rabbi, Isaac Aboab, and with the
-chief tithe-collector, Abraham Senior, he formed a close friendship.
-The latter, it seems, at once took him into partnership in the
-collection of taxes. Abrabanel's conscience pricked him for having
-neglected the study of the Law in following state affairs and mammon,
-and he attributed his misfortunes to the just punishment of heaven. He
-at once began to write, at the earnest entreaty of his new friends, an
-exposition of the books of the earlier prophets, hitherto, on account
-of their apparent simplicity, neglected by commentators. As he had
-given thought to them before, he soon completed the work. Certainly, no
-one was better qualified than Abrabanel to expound historical biblical
-literature. In addition to knowledge of languages, he had experience of
-the world, and the insight into political problems and complications
-necessary for unraveling the Israelitish records.
-
-He had the advantage over other expositors in using the Christian
-exegetical writings of Jerome, Nicholas de Lyra, and the baptized
-Paul of Burgos, and taking from them what was most valuable.
-Abrabanel, therefore, in these commentaries, shed light upon many
-obscure passages. They are conceived in a scholarly style, arranged
-systematically, and before each book appear a comprehensible preface
-and a table of contents, an arrangement copied from Christian
-commentators, and adroitly turned to account by him. Had Abrabanel
-not been so diffuse in style, and not had the habit of introducing
-each Scriptural chapter with superfluous questions, his dissertations
-would have been, or, at all events, would have deserved to be, more
-popular. Nor should he have gone beyond his province into philosophical
-inquiry. Abrabanel accepted the orthodox point of view of Nachmani
-and Chasdai, merely supplementing them with commonplaces of his own.
-He was not tolerant enough to listen to a liberal view of Judaism and
-its doctrines, and accused the works of Albalag and Narboni of heresy,
-classing these inquirers with the unprincipled apostate, Abner-Alfonso,
-of Valladolid. He was no better pleased with Levi ben Gerson, because
-he had resorted to philosophical interpretations in many cases, and did
-not accept miracles unconditionally. Like the strictly orthodox Jews of
-his day, such as Joseph Jaabez, he was persuaded that the humiliations
-and persecutions suffered by the Jews of Spain were due to their
-heresy. Yet, did German Jews, wholly untouched by heretical philosophy,
-suffer less than their brethren in Spain? Only a brief time was granted
-to Abrabanel to pursue his favorite study; the author was once more
-compelled to become a statesman. When about to delineate Judaean and
-Israelite monarchs, he was summoned to the court of Ferdinand and
-Isabella to be intrusted with the care of their finances. The revenues
-seem to have prospered under his management, and during his eight years
-of office (March, 1484-March, 1492) nothing went wrong with them. He
-was very useful to the royal pair by reason of his wisdom and prudent
-counsel. Abrabanel himself relates that he grew rich in the king's
-service, and bought himself land and estates, and that from the court
-and the highest grandees he received great consideration and honor.
-He must have been indispensable, seeing that the Catholic sovereigns,
-under the very eyes of the malignant Torquemada, and in spite of
-canonical decrees and all the resolutions repeatedly laid down by the
-cortes forbidding Jews to hold office in the government, were compelled
-to intrust this Jewish minister of finance with the mainspring of
-political life! How many services Abrabanel did for his own people
-during his time of office, grateful memory could not preserve by reason
-of the storm of misfortunes which broke upon the Jews later; but in
-Castile, as he had been in Portugal, he was as a wall of protection
-to them. Lying and fearful accusations from their bitter foes, the
-Dominicans, were not wanting. At one time it was said that the Jews
-had shown disrespect to some cross; at another, that in the town of
-La Guardia they had stolen and crucified a Christian child. From this
-tissue of lies, Torquemada fabricated a case against the Jews, and
-condemned the supposed criminals to the stake. In Valencia they were
-declared to have made a similar attempt, but to have been interrupted
-in the deed (1488-1490). That the Castilian Jews did not suffer
-extinction for the succor they afforded the unfortunate Marranos, was
-certainly owing to Abrabanel.
-
-Meantime began the war with Granada, so disastrous for the Moors and
-Jews, which lasted with intervals for ten years (1481-1491). To this
-the Jews had to contribute. A heavy impost was laid upon the community
-(Alfarda--Strangers' Tax), on which the royal treasurer, Villaris,
-insisted with the utmost strictness. The Jews were, so to say, made
-to bring the fagots to their own funeral pyre, and the people, adding
-insult to injury, mocked them. In the province of Granada, which by
-pride had brought about its own fall, there were many Jews, their
-numbers having been increased by the Marranos who had fled thither to
-avoid death at the stake. Their position was not enviable, for Spanish
-hatred of Jews was strongly implanted there; but their creed was not
-attacked, and their lives were not in constant peril. Isaac Hamon was
-physician in ordinary to one of the last kings of Granada, and enjoyed
-high favor at court. One day a quarrel arose in the streets of Granada,
-and the bystanders implored the disputants to leave off in the name of
-their prophet, but in vain. But when they were bidden to give over in
-the name of the royal physician, they yielded. This occurrence, which
-testified that Isaac Hamon was held in more respect by the populace
-than the prophet Mahomet, roused certain bigoted Mahometans to fall
-upon the Jews of Granada and butcher them. Only those escaped who found
-refuge in the royal castle. The Jewish physicians of Granada came to
-the resolution henceforth not to clothe themselves in silken garments,
-nor ride on horseback, in order to avoid exciting the envy of the
-Mahometans.
-
-After long and bloody strife the beautiful city of Granada fell
-into the hands of the proud Spaniards. Frivolous Muley Abu-Abdallah
-(Boabdil), the last king, signed a secret treaty with Ferdinand and
-Isabella (25th November, 1491) to give up the town and its territory by
-a certain time. The conditions, seeing that independence was lost, were
-tolerably favorable. The Moors were to keep their religious freedom,
-their civil laws, their right to leave the country, and above all their
-manners and customs, and were only required to pay the taxes which
-hitherto they had paid the Moorish king. The renegades--that is to
-say, Christians who had adopted Islam, or, more properly speaking,
-the Moorish pseudo-Christians--who had fled from the Inquisition
-to Granada, and returned to Islam, were to remain unmolested. The
-Inquisition was not to claim jurisdiction over them. The Jews of
-the capital of Granada, of the Albaicin quarter, the suburbs and
-the Alpujarras, were included in the provisions of the treaty. They
-were to enjoy the same indulgences and the same rights, except that
-relapsed Marranos were to leave the city, only the first month after
-its surrender being the term allowed for emigration; those who stayed
-longer were to be handed over to the Inquisition. One noteworthy
-point, stipulated by the last Moorish king of Granada, was that no
-Jew should be set over the vanquished Moors as officer of justice,
-tax-gatherer, or commissioner. On January 2d, 1492, Ferdinand and
-Isabella, with their court, amid ringing of bells, and great pomp and
-circumstance, made their entry into Granada. The Mahometan kingdom of
-the Peninsula had vanished like a dream in an Arabian Nights' legend.
-The last prince, Muley Abu-Abdallah, cast one long sad farewell look,
-"with a last sigh," over the glory forever lost, and retired to the
-lands assigned to him in the Alpujarras, but, unable to overcome his
-dejection, he turned his steps towards Africa. After nearly eight
-hundred years the whole Pyrenean Peninsula again became Christian, as
-it had been in the time of the Visigoths. But heaven could not rejoice
-over this conquest, which delivered fresh human sacrifices to the lords
-of hell. The Jews were the first to experience the tragical effect of
-this conquest of Granada.
-
-The war against the Mahometans of Granada, originally undertaken
-to punish attempts at encroachment and breach of faith, assumed
-the character of a crusade against unbelief, of a holy war for the
-exaltation of the cross and the spread of the Christian faith. Not only
-the bigoted queen and the unctuous king, but also many Spaniards were
-dragged by this conquest into raging fanaticism. Are the unbelieving
-Mahometans to be vanquished, and the still more unbelieving Jews to
-go free in the land? This question was too pertinent not to meet
-with an answer unfavorable to the Jews. The insistence of Torquemada
-and friends of his own way of thinking, that the Jews, who had long
-been a thorn in their flesh, should be expelled, at first met with
-indifference, soon began to receive more attention from the victors.
-Then came the consideration that owing to increased opulence,
-consequent on the booty acquired from the wealthy towns of conquered
-Granada, the Jews were no longer indispensable. Before the banner of
-the cross waved over Granada, Ferdinand and Isabella had contemplated
-the expulsion of the Jews. With this end in view, they had sent an
-embassy to Pope Innocent VII, stating that they were willing to banish
-the Jews from the country, if he, Christ's representative, the avenger
-of his death, set them the example; but even this abandoned pope, who
-had seven illegitimate sons and as many daughters, and who, soon after
-his accession to the papal chair, had broken a solemn oath, was opposed
-to the expulsion of the Jews. Meshullam, of Rome, having heard of the
-pope's refusal, with great joy announced to the Italian and Neapolitan
-communities that Innocent would not consent to the expulsion. The
-Spanish sovereigns decided on the banishment of the Jews without the
-pope's consent.
-
-From the enchanted palace of the Alhambra there was suddenly issued by
-the "Catholic Sovereigns" a proclamation that, within four months, the
-Spanish Jews were to leave every portion of Castile, Aragon, Sicily and
-Sardinia under pain of death (March 31, 1492). They were at liberty
-to take their goods and chattels with them, but neither gold, silver,
-money, nor forbidden articles of export--only such things as it was
-permitted to export. This heartless cruelty Ferdinand and Isabella
-sought to vindicate before their own subjects and before foreign
-countries. The proclamation did not accuse the Jews of extravagant
-usury, of unduly enriching themselves, of sucking the marrow from the
-bones of the people, of insulting the host, or of crucifying Christian
-children--not one syllable was said of these things. But it set forth
-that the falling away of the new-Christians into "Jewish unbelief" was
-caused by their intercourse with Jews. The proclamation continued that
-long since it would have been proper to banish the Jews on account
-of their wily ways; but at first the sovereigns had tried clemency
-and mild means, banishing only the Jews of Andalusia, and punishing
-only the most guilty, in the hope that these steps would suffice. As,
-however, these had not prevented the Jews from continuing to pervert
-the new-Christians from the Catholic faith, nothing remained but for
-their majesties to exile those who had lured back to heresy the people
-who had indeed fallen away, but had repented and returned to holy
-Mother Church. Therefore had their majesties, in council with the
-princes of the church, grandees, and learned men, resolved to banish
-the Jews from their kingdom. No Christian, on pain of confiscation of
-his possessions, should, after the expiration of a certain term, give
-succor or shelter to Jews. The edict of Ferdinand and Isabella is good
-testimony for the Jews of Spain in those days, since no accusations
-could be brought against them but that they had remained faithful to
-their religion, and had sought to maintain their Marrano brethren in
-it. A legend relates that their majesties were embittered against the
-Jews, because the Infante had found the picture of a crucified Holy
-Child in an orange which a Jewish courtier had given him.
-
-The long-dreaded blow had fallen. The Spanish Jews were to leave the
-country, round which the fibers of their hearts had grown, where lay
-the graves of their forefathers of at least fifteen hundred years,
-and towards whose greatness, wealth, and culture they had so largely
-contributed. The blow fell upon them like a thunderbolt. Abrabanel
-thought that he might be able to avert it by his influence. He
-presented himself before the king and queen, and offered enormous
-sums in the name of the Jews if the edict were removed. His Christian
-friends, eminent grandees, supported his efforts. Ferdinand, who took
-more interest in enriching his coffers than in the Catholic faith, was
-inclined to yield. Then the fanatical grand inquisitor, Torquemada,
-lifted up his voice. It is related that he took upon himself to rush
-into the presence of the king and queen, carrying the crucifix aloft,
-and uttering these winged words: "Judas Iscariot sold Christ for thirty
-pieces of silver; your highnesses are about to sell Him for 300,000
-ducats. Here He is, take Him, and sell Him!" Then he left the hall.
-These words, or the influence of other ecclesiastics, had a strong
-effect upon Isabella. She resolved to abide by the edict, and, of
-bolder spirit than the king, contrived to keep alive his enmity against
-the Jews. Juan de Lucena, a member of the royal council of Aragon, as
-well as minister, was equally active in maintaining the edict. At the
-end of April heralds and trumpeters went through the whole country,
-proclaiming that the Jews were permitted to remain only till the end
-of July to set their affairs in order; whoever of them was found after
-that time on Spanish ground would suffer death.
-
-Great as was the consternation of the Spanish Jews at having to tear
-themselves from the beloved land of their birth and the ashes of their
-forefathers, and go forth to an uncertain future in strange lands,
-among people whose speech they did not understand, who, perhaps, might
-be more unfriendly towards them than the Spanish Christians, they
-had to bestir themselves and make preparation for their exodus. At
-every step they realized that a yet more cruel fate awaited them. Had
-they been able, like the English Jews at the end of the thirteenth
-century, and the French a century later, to take their riches with
-them, they might have been able to provide some sort of miserable
-existence for themselves; but the Jewish capitalists were not permitted
-to take their money with them, they were compelled to accept bills
-of exchange for it. But Spain, on account of its dominant knightly
-and ecclesiastical element, had no places of exchange like those in
-Italy, where commercial notes were of value. Business on a large scale
-was in the hands, for the most part, of Jews and new-Christians, and
-the latter, from fear, had to keep away from their brethren in race.
-The Jews who owned land were forced to part with it at absurd prices,
-because no buyers applied, and they were obliged to beg the Christians
-for even the meanest thing in exchange. A contemporary, Andreas
-Bernaldez, pastor of Los Palacios, relates that the most magnificent
-houses and the most beautiful estates of the Jews were sold for a
-trifle. A house was bartered for an ass, and a vineyard for a piece
-of cloth or linen. Thus the riches of the Spanish Jews melted away,
-and could not help them in their day of need. In Aragon, Catalonia
-and Valencia, it was even worse with them. Torquemada, who on this
-occasion exceeded his former inhumanity, forbade the Christians to have
-any intercourse with them. In these provinces Ferdinand sequestrated
-their possessions, so that not only their debts, but also the claims
-which monasteries pretended to have upon them were paid. This fiendish
-plan he devised for the benefit of the church. The Jews would thereby
-be driven to despair, and turn to the cross for succor. Torquemada,
-therefore, imposed on the Dominicans the task of preaching Christianity
-everywhere, and of calling upon the Jews to receive baptism, and thus
-remain in the land. On the other side, the rabbis bade the people
-remain steadfast, accept their trials as tests of their firmness, and
-trust in God, who had been with them in so many days of trouble. The
-fiery eloquence of the rabbis was not necessary. Each one encouraged
-his neighbor to remain true and steadfast to the Jewish faith. "Let
-us be strong," so they said to each other, "for our religion, and
-for the Law of our fathers before our enemies and blasphemers. If
-they will let us live, we shall live; if they kill us, then shall we
-die. We will not desecrate the covenant of our God; our heart shall
-not fail us. We will go forth in the name of the Lord." If they had
-submitted to baptism, would they not have fallen into the power of the
-blood-stained Inquisition? The cross had lost its power of attraction
-even for lukewarm Jews, since they had seen upon what trivial pretexts
-members of their race were delivered over to the stake. One year before
-the proclamation of banishment was made, thirty-two new-Christians in
-Seville were bound living to the stake, sixteen were burned in effigy,
-and 625 sentenced to do penance. The Jews, moreover, were not ignorant
-of the false and deceitful ways in which Torquemada entrapped his
-victims. Many pseudo-Christians had fled from Seville, Cordova and
-Jaen, to Granada, where they had returned to the Jewish faith. After
-the conquest of the town, Torquemada proclaimed that if they came back
-to Mother Church, "whose arms are always open to embrace those who
-return to her with repentance and contrition," they would be treated
-with mildness, and in private, without onlookers, would receive
-absolution. A few allowed themselves to be charmed by this sweet voice,
-betook themselves to Toledo, and were pardoned--to a death of fire.
-Thus it came about that, in spite of the preaching of the Dominicans,
-and notwithstanding their indescribably terrible position, few Jews
-passed over to Christianity in the year of the expulsion from Spain.
-Among persons of note, only the rich tax-collector and chief rabbi,
-Abraham Senior, his son, and his son-in-law, Meir, a rabbi, went over,
-with the two sons of the latter. It is said that they received baptism
-in desperation, because the queen, who did not want to lose her clever
-minister of finance, threatened heavier persecution of the departing
-Jews, if these did not submit. Great was the rejoicing at court over
-the baptism of Senior and his family. Their majesties themselves and
-the cardinal stood as sponsors. The newly-baptized all took the family
-name of Coronel, and their descendants filled some of the highest
-offices in the state.
-
-Their common misfortune and suffering developed among the Spanish Jews
-in those last days before their exile deep brotherly affection and
-exalted sentiments, which, could they have lasted, would surely have
-borne good fruit. The rich, although their wealth had dwindled, divided
-it fraternally with the poor, allowing them to want for nothing, so
-that they should not fall into the hands of the church, and also paid
-the charges of their exodus. The aged rabbi, Isaac Aboab, the friend
-of Abrabanel, went with thirty Jews of rank to Portugal, to negotiate
-with King Joao II, for the settlement of the Jews in that country, or
-for their safe passage through it. They succeeded in making tolerably
-favorable conditions. The pain of leaving their passionately loved
-country could not be overcome. The nearer the day of departure came,
-the more were the hearts of the unhappy people wrung. The graves of
-their forefathers were dearer to them than all besides, and from these
-they found parting hardest. The Jews of the town of Vitoria gave to
-the community the Jewish cemetery and its appertaining grounds in
-perpetuity, on condition that it should never be encroached upon, nor
-planted over, and a deed to this effect was drawn up. The Jews of
-Segovia assembled three days before their exodus around the graves of
-their forefathers, mingling their tears with the dust, and melting the
-hearts of the Catholics with their grief. They tore up many of the
-tombstones to bear them away as memorial relics, or gave them to the
-Moors.
-
-At last the day arrived on which the Spanish Jews had to take staff in
-hand. They had been accorded two days respite, that is, were allowed
-two days later than July 31st for setting forth. This date fell
-exactly upon the anniversary of the ninth of Ab, which was fraught
-with memories of the splendor of the old days, and had so often found
-the children of Israel wrapped in grief and misery. About 300,000 left
-the land which they so deeply loved, but which now became a hateful
-memory to them. They wandered partly northwards, to the neighboring
-kingdom of Navarre, partly southwards, with the idea of settling in
-Africa, Italy or Turkey. The majority, however, made for Portugal.
-In order to stifle sad thoughts and avoid the melancholy impression
-which might have moved some to waver and embrace the cross in order
-to remain in the land, some rabbis caused pipers and drummers to
-go before, making lively music, so that for a while the wanderers
-should forget their gnawing grief. Spain lost in them the twentieth
-part of her most industrious, painstaking, intelligent inhabitants,
-its middle class, which created trade, and maintained it in brisk
-circulation, like the blood of a living organism. For there were
-among the Spanish Jews not merely capitalists, merchants, farmers,
-physicians and men of learning, but also artisans, armor and metal
-workers of all kinds, at all events no idlers who slept away their
-time. With the discovery of America, the Jews might have lifted Spain
-to the rank of the wealthiest, the most prosperous and enduring of
-states, which by reason of its unity of government might certainly
-have competed with Italy. But Torquemada would not have it so; he
-preferred to train Spaniards for a blood-stained idolatry, under which,
-in the sunlight of the Lutheran Reformation, pious men were condemned
-to chains, dungeons, or the galleys, if they dared read the Bible.
-The departure of the Jews from Spain soon made itself felt in a very
-marked manner by the Christians. Talent, activity, and prosperous
-civilization passed with them from the country. The smaller towns,
-which had derived some vitality from the presence of the Jews, were
-quickly depopulated, sank into insignificance, lost their spirit of
-freedom and independence, and became tools for the increasing despotism
-of the Spanish kings and the imbecile superstition of the priests. The
-Spanish nobility soon complained that their towns and villages had
-fallen into insignificance, had become deserted, and they declared
-that, could they have foreseen the consequences, they would have
-opposed the royal commands. Dearth of physicians was sternly felt,
-too. The town of Vitoria and its neighborhood was compelled, through
-the withdrawal of the Jews, to secure a physician from a distance,
-and give him a high salary. In many places the people fell victims
-to quacks, boastful bunglers, or to the superstition of deceiving
-or self-deceived dealers in magic. In one word, Spain fell into a
-condition of barbarism through the banishment of the Jews, and all the
-wealth which the settlement of American colonies brought to the mother
-country only helped to render its inhabitants more idle, stupid, and
-servile. The name of the Jews died out of the country in which they had
-played so important a part, and the literature of which was so filled
-with Jewish elements that men of intelligence were constantly reminded
-of them. Schools, hospitals, and everything which the Jews could not
-or dared not take away with them, the king confiscated. He changed
-synagogues into churches, monasteries or schools, where the people
-were systematically kept ignorant, and trained for meanest servility.
-The beautiful synagogue of Toledo, which Don Pedro's Jewish statesman,
-Samuel Abulafia, had erected about a century and a half before, was
-transformed into a church (de neustra Senora de San Benito), and,
-with its Moorish architecture, its exquisite columns, and splendid
-proportions, is to this day a magnificent ornament to the city. In the
-other cities and towns of Spain, which live in the chronicles of Jewish
-history, in Seville, Granada, Cordova, in densely-populated Lucena,
-Saragossa and Barcelona, every trace was lost of the sons of Jacob, or
-of the Jewish nobility, as the proud Jews of Spain styled themselves.
-Jews, it is true, remained behind, Jews under the mask of Christianity,
-Jewish Christians, or new-Christians, who had afforded their departing
-brethren active help. Many of them had taken charge of their gold and
-silver, and kept it till they were able to send it on by the hands of
-trusted persons, or had given them bills of exchange on foreign places.
-These negotiations were often of no avail, for when the fanatical king
-and queen heard of them, they sent for the treasure left behind, or
-sought to prevent the payment of the checks.
-
-Great as were the obstacles, the Marranos did not cool in their zeal
-for their exiled brethren. They pursued those guilty of inhuman
-brutality to the wanderers with bitter hatred, and delivered them
-over to the Inquisition--turning the tool against its makers. At
-the instigation of the Marranos, the brother of Don Juan de Lucena,
-the powerful minister of Ferdinand, was thrown into the prison of the
-Inquisition, kept there under a strong guard, and none of his relatives
-allowed to see him, the minister, whose position exempted him from the
-power of the Inquisition, having counseled the banishment of the Jews,
-and practically assisted in it, and his brother having relentlessly
-confiscated the property they had left behind. Torquemada complained
-that Don Juan was persecuted by the new-Christians on account of his
-faith. The Marranos, now more than ever on their guard, lest they give
-the slightest offense, had to cross themselves assiduously, count their
-beads, and mumble paternosters, while inwardly they were attached more
-than ever to Judaism. Frequently their feelings outran their will,
-they broke the bonds of silence, and this was productive of heavy
-consequences. Thus a Marrano in Seville, on seeing an effigy of Christ
-set up in church for adoration, cried out, "Woe to him who sees, and
-must believe such a thing!" Such expressions in unguarded moments
-naturally afforded the best opportunity for inquiry, imprisonment,
-the rack and autos-da-fe, not merely for the individual caught in the
-act, but for his relatives, friends, and everybody connected with him
-who had any property. It had, moreover, grown to be a necessity to
-the people, hardened by the frequent sight of the death agonies of
-sacrificial victims, to witness a solemn tragedy of human sacrifice now
-and again. It is, therefore, not astonishing, that under the first
-inquisitor-general, Thomas de Torquemada, in the course of fourteen
-years (1485-1498) at least two thousand Jews were burned as impenitent
-sinners. He was so hated that he lived in constant fear of death. Upon
-his table he kept the horn of a unicorn, to which the superstition of
-the time ascribed the power of nullifying the effect of poison. When
-Torquemada went out, he was attended by a body-guard (Familares) of
-fifty, and two hundred foot-soldiers, to protect him from assault. His
-successor, the second inquisitor-general, Deza, erected still more
-scaffolds; but it soon came to pass that the men of blood butchered
-each other. Deza before his death was accused of being secretly a Jew.
-When the persecutions against the remaining Moors and Moriscos, and
-against the followers of the German reformer Luther, were added to
-those of the Marranos, Spain, under the wrath of the Holy Inquisition,
-became literally a scene of human slaughter. With justice nearly all
-the European princes, and even the parliament of Paris, bitterly blamed
-the perverseness of Ferdinand and Isabella in having driven out so
-useful a class of citizens. The sultan Bajasid (Bajazet) exclaimed:
-"You call Ferdinand a wise king, he who has made his country poor and
-enriched ours!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-EXPULSION OF THE JEWS FROM NAVARRE AND PORTUGAL.
-
- The Exiles from Navarre--Migration to Naples--King Ferdinand
- I of Naples and Abrabanel--Leon Abrabanel--Misfortunes of
- the Jews in Fez, Genoa, Rome, and the Islands of Greece--The
- Sultan Bajazet--Moses Kapsali--Spanish Jews in Portugal--The
- Jewish Astronomers, Abraham Zacuto and Jose Vecinho--The Jewish
- Travelers, Abraham de Beya and Joseph Zapateiro--Outbreak of
- the Plague among the Spanish Jews in Portugal--Sufferings
- of the Portuguese Exiles--Judah Chayyat and his
- Fellow-Sufferers--Cruelty of Joao II--Kindly Treatment by
- Manoel changed into Cruelty on his Marriage--Forcible Baptism
- of Jewish Children--Levi ben Chabib and Isaac Caro--Pope
- Alexander VI--Manoel's Efforts on Behalf of the Portuguese
- Marranos--Death of Simon Maimi and Abraham Saba.
-
-1492-1498 C.E.
-
-
-The Jews of northern Spain, in Catalonia and Aragon, who turned
-their steps to neighboring Navarre, with the idea of seeking shelter
-there, were comparatively fortunate. Here at least was a prospect of
-a livelihood, and a possibility of looking round for other places of
-refuge. The Inquisition had met with courageous resistance from the
-rulers and the people of Navarre. When some Marranos, concerned in
-the murder of Arbues, the inquisitor, fled to this kingdom, and the
-bloodthirsty heresy-mongers demanded that they be given up to the
-executioners, the town of Tudela declared that it would not suffer
-such unrighteous violence to people who had sought its protection, and
-closed the gates against their emissaries. In vain did king Ferdinand,
-who had an eye upon Navarre, threaten it with his anger. The citizens
-of Tudela remained firm. A Navarrese prince, Jacob of Navarre, suffered
-for the shelter he gave to a hunted Marrano. The inquisitors suddenly
-arrested, imprisoned and sentenced him, as an enemy of the Holy
-Office, to shameful exposure in a church, where his list of offenses
-was publicly read out, and absolution promised him only if he submitted
-to flagellation from priestly hands. Several other towns of Navarre
-gave protection to the fugitives, and about 12,000 Castilian wanderers
-took up their quarters in Navarre. Count of Lerin probably received
-the greater number of these. But the Jews enjoyed only a few years
-of peace in Navarre; for upon the vehement urging of King Ferdinand,
-who followed the fugitives with bitterest enmity and persecution, the
-king of Navarre gave them the choice between wandering forth again
-and baptism. The greater number adopted Christianity, because there
-was only a short time for preparation, and no time for thinking. In
-the community of Tudela, so famous for steadfast piety, 180 families
-submitted to baptism.
-
-Also those Castilian Jews were fortunate who, instead of indulging
-themselves in the vain hope that the edict would be recalled, did not
-stay until the last day, but made their way, before the end of the
-respite, to Italy, Africa, or Turkey. They did not lack the means of
-getting away. The Spanish Jews had such widespread repute, and their
-expulsion had made so much stir in Europe, that crowds of ships were
-ready in Spanish seaports to take up the wanderers and convey them to
-all parts, not only the ships of the country, but also Italian vessels
-from Genoa and Venice. The ship-owners saw a prospect of lucrative
-business. Many Jews from Aragon, Catalonia and Valencia desired to
-settle in Naples, and sent ambassadors to the king, Ferdinand I,
-to ask him to receive them. This prince was not merely free from
-prejudice against the Jews, but was kindly inclined towards them, out
-of compassion for their misfortunes, and he may have promised himself
-industrial and intellectual advantage from this immigration of the
-Spanish Jews. Whether it was calculation or generosity, it is enough
-that he bade them welcome, and made his realm free to them. Many
-thousands of them landed in the Bay of Naples (24th August, 1492), and
-were kindly received. The native Jewish community treated them with
-true brotherly generosity, defrayed the passage of the poor not able to
-pay, and provided for their immediate necessities.
-
-Isaac Abrabanel, also, and his whole household, went to Naples. Here
-he lived at first as a private individual, and continued the work of
-writing a commentary upon the book of Kings, which had been interrupted
-by his state duties. When the king of Naples was informed of his
-presence in the city, he invited him to an interview, and intrusted him
-with a post, in all likelihood in the financial department. Probably
-he hoped to make use of Abrabanel's experience in the war with which
-he was threatened by the king of France. Whether from his own noble
-impulses, or from esteem for Abrabanel, the king of Naples showed the
-Jews a gentle humanity which startlingly contrasted with the cruelty of
-the Spanish king. The unhappy people had to struggle with many woes;
-when they thought themselves free of one, another yet more merciless
-fell upon them. A devastating pestilence, arising out of the sad
-condition to which they had been reduced, or from the overcrowding of
-the ships, followed in the track of the wanderers. They brought death
-with them. Scarcely six months had they been settled on Neapolitan soil
-when the pestilence carried numbers of them off, and King Ferdinand,
-who dreaded a rising of the populace against the Jews, hinted to
-them that they must bury their corpses by night, and in silence.
-When the pest could no longer be concealed, and every day increased
-in virulence, people and courtiers alike entreated him to drive them
-forth. But Ferdinand would not assent to this inhuman proceeding; he
-is said to have threatened to abdicate if the Jews were ill-treated.
-He had hospitals erected for them outside the town, sent physicians
-to their aid, and gave them means of support. For a whole year he
-strove, with unexampled nobility, to succor the unfortunate people,
-whom banishment and disease had transformed into living corpses.
-Those, also, who were fortunate enough to reach Pisa found a brotherly
-reception. The sons of Yechiel of Pisa fairly took up their abode on
-the quay, so as to be ready to receive the wanderers, provide for their
-wants, shelter them, or help them on their way to some other place.
-After Ferdinand's death, his son, Alfonso II, who little resembled
-him, retained the Jewish statesman, Abrabanel, in his service, and,
-after his resignation in favor of his son, took him with him to
-Sicily. Abrabanel to the last remained faithful to this prince in his
-misfortunes (January, 1494, to June, 1495).
-
-After the conquest of Naples by the weak-headed knight-errant king
-of France, Charles VIII, the members of the Abrabanel family were
-torn apart and scattered. None of them, however, met with such signal
-misfortune as the eldest son, Judah Leon Medigo (born 1470, died 1530).
-He had been so well beloved at the Spanish court that they were loath
-to part with him, and would gladly have kept him there--of course,
-as a Christian. To attain this end, a command was issued that he be
-not permitted to leave Toledo, or that his one-year-old son be taken
-from him, baptized immediately, and that in this manner the father
-be chained to Spain. Judah Abrabanel, however, got wind of this plot
-against his liberty, sent his son, with his nurse, "like stolen goods,"
-secretly to the Portuguese coast; but as he himself did not care to
-seek shelter in the country where his father had been threatened with
-death, he turned his face towards Naples. His suspicions of the king
-of Portugal were only too speedily justified. No sooner did Joao hear
-that a relative of Abrabanel was within his borders than he ordered the
-child to be kept as hostage, and not to be permitted to go forth with
-the other Jews. Little Isaac never saw his parents and grandparents
-again. He was baptized, and brought up as a Christian. The agony of the
-father at the living death of his lost child was boundless. It gave him
-no rest or peace to his latest hour, and it found vent in a lamentation
-sad in the extreme. Yet what was the grief for one child, compared with
-the woes which overtook the thousands of Jews hunted out of Spain?
-
-Many of them found their way to the nearest African seaport towns,
-Oran, Algiers and Bugia. The inhabitants, who feared that their towns
-would be overcrowded from such a vast influx, shot at the Jews as
-they landed, and killed many of them. An eminent Jew at the court
-of Barbary, however, addressed the sultan in behalf of his unhappy
-brethren, and obtained leave for them to land. They were not allowed to
-enter the towns, probably because the pestilence had broken out among
-them, too. They could only build themselves wooden huts outside the
-walls. The children collected wood, and their elders nailed the boards
-together for temporary dwellings. But they did not long enjoy even this
-miserable shelter, as one day a fire broke out in one of the huts, and
-soon laid the whole camp in ashes.
-
-Those who settled in Fez suffered a still more terrible lot. Here also
-the inhabitants would not admit them, fearing that such an influx of
-human beings would raise the price of the necessaries of life. They had
-to encamp in the fields, and live on roots and herbs like cattle. On
-the Sabbath they stripped the plants with their teeth, in order not to
-desecrate the holy day by gathering them. Starvation, pestilence, and
-the unfriendliness of the Mahometan people vied with each other in
-inflicting misery upon the Jews. In their awful despair, fathers were
-driven to sell their children as slaves to obtain bread. Mothers killed
-their little ones that they might not see them perish from the pangs
-of hunger. Avaricious captains took advantage of the distress of the
-parents to entice starving children on board their vessels with offers
-of bread, and, deaf to the cries and entreaties of the parents, carried
-them off to distant lands, where they sold them for a good price.
-Later, the ruler of Fez, probably at the representation of the original
-Jewish inhabitants, proclaimed that Jewish children who had been sold
-for bread, and other necessaries of life, should be set at liberty.
-
-The descriptions by their contemporaries of the sufferings of the
-Jews make one's hair stand on end. They were dogged whithersoever
-they went. Those whom plague and starvation had spared, fell into the
-hands of brutalized men. The report got about that the Spanish Jews
-had swallowed the gold and silver which they had been forbidden to
-carry away, intending to use it later on. Cannibals, therefore, ripped
-open their bodies to seek for coin in their entrails. The Genoese
-ship-folk behaved most inhumanly to the wanderers who had trusted their
-lives to them. From avarice, or sheer delight in the death agonies of
-the Jews, they flung many of them into the sea. One captain offered
-insult to the beautiful daughter of a Jewish wanderer. Her name was
-Paloma (Dove), and to escape shame, the mother threw her and her other
-daughters and then herself into the waves. The wretched father composed
-a heartbreaking lamentation for his lost dear ones.
-
-Those who reached the port of Genoa had to contend with new miseries.
-In this thriving town there was a law that Jews might not remain there
-for longer than three days. As the ships which were to convey the Jews
-thence required repairing, the authorities conceded the permission for
-them to remain, not in the town, but upon the Mole, until the vessels
-were ready for sea. Like ghosts, pale, shrunken, hollow-eyed, gaunt,
-they went on shore, and if they had not moved, impelled by instinct to
-get out of their floating prison, they might have been taken for so
-many corpses. The starving children went into the churches, and allowed
-themselves to be baptized for a morsel of bread; and Christians were
-merciless enough not merely to accept such sacrifices, but with the
-cross in one hand, and bread in the other, to go among the Jews and
-tempt them to become converted. Only a short time had been granted them
-on the Mole, but a great part of the winter passed before the repairs
-were completed. The longer they remained, the more their numbers
-diminished, through the passing over to Christianity of the younger
-members, and many fell victims to plagues of all kinds. Other Italian
-towns would not allow them to land even for a short time, partly
-because it was a year of famine, partly because the Jews brought the
-plague with them.
-
-The survivors from Genoa who reached Rome underwent still more bitter
-experiences; their own people leagued against them, refusing to
-allow them to enter, from fear that the influx of new settlers would
-damage their trade. They got together 1,000 ducats, to present to the
-notorious monster, Pope Alexander VI, as a bribe to refuse to allow the
-Jews to enter. This prince, himself unfeeling enough, was so enraged
-at the heartlessness of these men against their own people, that he
-ordered every Roman Jew out of the city. It cost the Roman congregation
-2,000 ducats to obtain the revocation of this edict, and they had to
-take in the refugees besides.
-
-The Greek islands of Corfu, Candia, and others became filled with
-Spanish Jews; some had dragged themselves thither, others had been
-sold as slaves there. The majority of the Jewish communities had great
-compassion for them, and strove to care for them, or at all events
-to ransom them. They made great efforts to collect funds, and sold
-the ornaments of the synagogues, so that their brethren might not
-starve, or be subjected to slavery. Persians, who happened to be on
-the island of Corfu, bought Spanish refugees, in order to obtain from
-Jews of their own country a high ransom for them. Elkanah Kapsali,
-a representative of the Candian community, was indefatigable in his
-endeavors to collect money for the Spanish Jews. The most fortunate
-were those who reached the shores of Turkey; for the Turkish Sultan,
-Bajazet II, showed himself to be not only a most humane monarch, but
-also the wisest and most far-seeing. He understood better than the
-Christian princes what hidden riches the impoverished Spanish Jews
-brought with them, not in their bowels, but in their brains, and he
-wanted to turn these to use for the good of his country. Bajazet caused
-a command to go forth through the European provinces of his dominions
-that the harassed and hunted Jews should not be rejected, but should be
-received in the kindest and most friendly manner. He threatened with
-death anyone who should ill-treat or oppress them. The chief rabbi,
-Moses Kapsali, was untiringly active in protecting the unfortunate
-Jewish Spaniards who had come as beggars or slaves to Turkey. He
-traveled about, and levied a tax from the rich native Jews "for the
-liberation of the Spanish captives." He did not need to use much
-pressure; for the Turkish Jews willingly contributed to the assistance
-of the victims of Christian fanaticism. Thus thousands of Spanish Jews
-settled in Turkey, and before a generation had passed they had taken
-the lead among the Turkish Jews, and made Turkey a kind of Eastern
-Spain.
-
-At first the Spanish Jews who went to Portugal seemed to have some
-chance of a happy lot. The venerable rabbi, Isaac Aboab, who had gone
-with a deputation of thirty to seek permission from King Joao either to
-settle in or pass through Portugal, succeeded in obtaining tolerably
-fair terms. Many of the wanderers chose to remain in the neighboring
-kingdom for a while, because they flattered themselves with the hope
-that their indispensableness would make itself evident after their
-departure, that the eyes of the now blinded king and queen of Spain
-would be opened, and they would then receive the banished people with
-open arms. At the worst, so thought the refugees, they would have
-time in Portugal to look round, decide which way to go, and readily
-find ships to convey them in safety to Africa or to Italy. When the
-Spanish deputies placed the proposition before King Joao II to receive
-the Jews permanently or temporarily in Portugal, the king consulted
-his grandees at Cintra. In presenting the matter, he permitted it to
-be seen that he himself was desirous of admitting the exiles for a
-pecuniary consideration. Some of the advisers, either from pity for the
-unhappy Jews, or from respect for the king, were in favor of granting
-permission; others, and these the majority, either out of hatred for
-the Jews, or a feeling of honor, were against it. The king, however,
-overruled all objections, because he hoped to carry on the contemplated
-war with Africa by means of the money acquired from the immigrants. It
-was at first said that the Spanish refugees were to be permitted to
-settle permanently in Portugal. This favor, however, the Portuguese
-Jews themselves looked upon with suspicion, because the little state
-would thus hold a disproportionate number of Jews, and the wanderers,
-most of them penniless, would fall a heavy burden upon them, so
-that the king, not of an amiable disposition, would end by becoming
-hostile to all the Jews in Portugal. The chief men, therefore, of the
-Jewish-Portuguese community met in debate, and many gave utterance to
-the cruel view that they themselves would have to take steps to prevent
-the reception of the Spanish exiles. A noble old man, Joseph, of the
-family of Ibn-Yachya, spoke warmly for his unfortunate brethren; but
-his voice was silenced. There was no more talk of their settling in
-Portugal, but only of the permission to make a short stay, in order to
-arrange for their journey. The conditions laid down for the Spanish
-Jews were: Each one, rich or poor, with the exception of babes, was
-to pay a stipulated sum (eight gold-cruzados, nearly one pound) in
-four instalments; artisans, however, such as metal-workers and smiths,
-who desired to settle in the country, only half of this amount. The
-rest were permitted to stay only eight months, but the king undertook
-to furnish ships at a reasonable rate for transporting them to other
-lands. Those found in Portugal after the expiration of this period, or
-not able to show a receipt for the stipulated payment, were condemned
-to servitude. On the promulgation of these conditions, a large number
-of Spanish Jews (estimated at 20,000 families, or 200,000 souls) passed
-over the Portuguese borders. The king assigned to the wanderers certain
-towns, where they had to pay a tax to the inhabitants. Oporto was
-assigned to the families of the thirty deputies, and a synagogue was
-built for them. Isaac Aboab, the renowned teacher of many disciples,
-who later took positions as rabbis in Africa, Egypt and Palestine, died
-peacefully in Oporto; his pupil, famous as a geographer and astronomer,
-Abraham Zacuto, pronounced his funeral oration (end of 1492). Only a
-few of his fellow-sufferers were destined to die a peaceful death.
-
-The feverish eagerness for discovering unknown lands and entering
-into trading relations with them, which had seized on Portugal, gave
-practical value to two sciences which hitherto had been regarded as the
-hobby or amusement of idlers and dilettanti--namely, astronomy and
-mathematics, the favorite pursuits of cultured Jews of the Pyrenean
-Peninsula. If India, the land of gold and spices, upon which the minds
-of the Portuguese were set with burning desire, was to be discovered,
-then coasting journeys, so slow and so dangerous, would have to be
-given up, and voyages made thither upon the high seas. But the ships
-ran the risk of losing their way on the trackless wastes of the ocean.
-Venturesome mariners, therefore, sought astronomical tables to direct
-their way by the courses of the sun and the stars. In this science
-Spanish Jews had the mastery. A Chazan of Toledo, Isaac (Zag) Ibn-Said,
-had published astronomical tables in the thirteenth century, known
-under the name of Alfonsine Tables, which were used with only slight
-alterations by the scientific men of Germany, France, England and
-Italy. As Joao II of Portugal now wished to send ships to the Atlantic
-for the discovery of India by way of the African sea-coast, he summoned
-a sort of astronomical congress for the working out of practical
-astronomical tables. At this congress, together with the famous
-German astronomer, Martin Behaim, and the Christian physician of King
-Rodrigo, there sat a Jew, the royal physician, Joseph (Jose) Vecinho,
-or de Viseu. He used as a basis the perpetual astronomical calendar,
-or Tables of the Seven Planets, which Abraham Zacuto, known later as
-a chronicler, had drawn up for a bishop of Salamanca, to whom he had
-dedicated it. Joseph Vecinho, together with Christian scientists, also
-improved upon the instrument for the measurement of the altitude of
-the stars, the nautical astrolabe, indispensable to mariners. By its
-aid Vasco da Gama first found it possible to follow the seaway to the
-Cape of Good Hope and India, and thus, perhaps, Columbus was enabled
-to discover a new continent. The geographical knowledge and skill of
-two Jews, Rabbi Abraham de Beya and Joseph Zapateiro de Lamego, were
-also turned to account by King Joao II, who sent them to Asia to obtain
-tidings of his emissaries to the mythical land of Prester John.
-
-Although King Joao thus employed learned and skillful Jews for his own
-ends, he had no liking for the Jewish race: he was indifferent, or
-rather inimical, to them directly they came in the way of his bigotry.
-In the year in which he dispatched Joseph Zapateiro and Abraham de
-Beya to Asia, at the instigation of Pope Innocent VIII he appointed a
-commission of the Inquisition for the Marranos who had fled from Spain
-to Portugal, and, like Ferdinand and Isabella in Spain, delivered over
-those who had Jewish leanings, either to death by fire or to endless
-imprisonment. Some Marranos having taken ship to Africa, and there
-openly adopted Judaism, he prohibited, under penalty of death and
-confiscation, baptized Jews or new-Christians from leaving the country
-by sea. On the breath of this heartless monarch hung the life or death
-of hundreds of thousands of Jewish exiles.
-
-Against those unfortunates in Portugal, not only evil-minded men,
-but nature itself, fought. Soon after their arrival in Portugal, a
-cruel pestilence began to rage among them, destroying thousands. The
-Portuguese, who also suffered from the plague, believed that the
-Jews had brought it into the country; and, indeed, all that they had
-suffered, the oppressive heat at the time of their going forth, want,
-misery, and all kinds of devastating diseases, may have developed
-it. A considerable number of the Spanish refugees died of the plague
-in Portugal. The population on this account murmured against the
-king, complaining that the pestilence had followed in the track of
-the accursed Jews, and established itself in the country. Don Joao,
-therefore, had to insist more strenuously than he otherwise would have
-done upon the condition that all who had settled in Portugal should
-leave at the expiration of the eight months. At first he put ships at
-their disposal, at moderate rates of transportation, according to his
-agreement, and bade the captains treat their passengers with humanity,
-and convey them whither they wished to go. But these men, inspired
-by Jew hatred and avarice, once upon the seas, troubled themselves
-but little about the king's orders, since they had no need to fear
-complaints about their inhumanity. They demanded more money than had
-originally been bargained for, and extorted it from the helpless
-creatures. Or, they carried them about upon the waste of waters till
-their stock of provisions was exhausted, and then demanded large sums
-for a fresh supply of food, so that at last the unfortunates were
-driven to give their clothes for bread, and were landed anywhere in a
-nearly naked state. Women and young girls were insulted and violated in
-the presence of their parents and relatives, and disgrace was brought
-upon the name of Christian. Frequently these inhuman mariners landed
-them in some desolate spot of the African coasts, and left them to
-perish from hunger and despair, or to fall a prey to the Moors, who
-took them prisoners.
-
-The sufferings of the exiled Jews who left Portugal in ships are
-related by an eye-witness, the Kabbalist, Judah ben Jacob Chayyat, of
-a noble and wealthy family. The vessel on which he, his wife, and two
-hundred and fifty other Jews, of both sexes and all ages, had embarked,
-left the harbor of Lisbon in winter (beginning of 1493), and lingered
-four months upon the waves, because no seaport would take them in for
-fear of the plague. Provisions on board naturally ran short. The ship
-was captured by Biscayan pirates, plundered and taken to the Spanish
-port of Malaga. The Jews were not permitted to land, nor to set sail
-again, nor were provisions given them. The priests and magistrates of
-the town desired to incline them to the teaching of Christ by the pangs
-of hunger. They succeeded in converting one hundred persons with gaunt
-bodies and hollow eyes. The rest remained steadfast to their own faith,
-and fifty of them, old men, youths, maidens, children, among them
-Chayyat's wife, died of starvation. Then, at last, compassion awoke
-in the hearts of the Malagese, and they gave them bread and water.
-When, after two months, the remainder of them received permission to
-sail to the coasts of Africa, they encountered bitter sufferings in
-another form. On account of the plague they were not permitted to land
-at any town, and had to depend upon the herbs of the field. Chayyat
-himself was seized, and flung by a malicious Mahometan into a horrible
-dungeon full of snakes and salamanders, in order to force him to adopt
-Islamism; in case of refusal, he was threatened with death by stoning.
-These continuous, grinding cruelties did not make him waver one instant
-in his religious convictions. At last he was liberated by the Jews of
-a little town, and carried to Fez. There so severe a famine raged that
-Chayyat was compelled to turn a mill with his hands for a piece of
-bread, not fit for a dog. At night he and his companions in misery who
-had strayed to Fez slept upon the ash-heaps of the town.
-
-Carefully as the Portuguese mariners strove to conceal their
-barbarities to the Jews, their deeds soon came to light, and frightened
-off those who remained behind from emigrating by sea. The poor
-creatures, moreover, were unable to raise the necessary money for
-their passage and provisions. They, therefore, put off going from day
-to day, comforting themselves with the hope that the king would be
-merciful, and allow them to remain in Portugal. Don Joao, however,
-was not a monarch whose heart was warmed by kindness and compassion.
-He maintained that more Jews had come into Portugal than had been
-stipulated for, and insisted, therefore, that the agreement be strictly
-carried out. Those who remained after the expiration of eight months
-were made slaves, and sold or given to those of the Portuguese nobility
-who cared to take their pick from them (1493).
-
-King Joao went still further in his cruel dealings with the unhappy
-Spanish Jews. The children of from three to ten years of age whose
-parents had become slaves, he ordered to be transported by sea to the
-newly-discovered San Thomas or Lost Islands (Ilhas perdidas), there to
-be reared in the tenets of Christianity. The weeping of the mothers,
-the sobbing of the children, the rage of the fathers, who tore their
-hair in agony, did not move the heartless despot to recall his command.
-Mothers entreated to be allowed to go with their children, threw
-themselves at the king's feet as he came out of church, and implored
-him to leave them at least the youngest. Don Joao had them dragged from
-his path "like bitches who had their whelps torn from them." Is it to
-be wondered at that mothers, with their children in their arms, sprang
-into the sea to rest united in its depths? The Islands of San Thomas,
-whither the little ones were taken, were full of lizards and venomous
-snakes, and inhabited by criminals transported thither from Portugal.
-Most of the children perished on the journey, or became the prey of
-wild beasts. Among the survivors it happened that brothers and sisters,
-in ignorance of their relationship, married each other. Perhaps the
-king's barbarity to the Jews must be accounted for by the bitter gloom
-which mastered him at the death of his only legitimate son.
-
-After the death of Joao II, who sank in wretchedness into his grave
-(end of October, 1495), he was succeeded by his cousin Manoel, a
-great contrast in disposition to himself--an intelligent, amiable,
-gentle-minded man, and a lover of learning. There seemed some prospect
-of a better star's rising upon the remnant of the banished Jews in
-Portugal. King Manoel, finding that the Jews had remained in his
-kingdom beyond the allotted time only from fear of many forms of death
-upon the ocean, gave all the slaves their freedom. The money which,
-beside themselves with joy, they offered him for this, he refused. It
-is true that his ulterior motive, as Bishop Osorius tells us, was to
-win them over to Christianity by clemency. The Jewish mathematician
-and astronomer, Abraham Zacuto, who had remained in Lisbon, having
-come thither from northern Spain, where he had taught his favorite
-science even to Christians, was made chief astrologer. Zacuto served
-the king not merely in the latter capacity. Although a man of limited
-understanding, unable to rise above the superstition of his day, he had
-sound knowledge of astronomy, and published a work upon that science,
-besides preparing his astronomical tables. He also invented a correct
-metal instrument for measuring the altitude of the stars, to replace
-the clumsy and inaccurate wooden one used hitherto by mariners.
-
-Under King Manoel, in whose reign Portugal's domains were enlarged
-by acquisitions in India and America, the Jews were able to breathe
-awhile. It appears that soon after ascending the throne he issued a
-command that the accusations against them for murdering children should
-not be recognized by courts of justice, since they were malicious,
-lying inventions. Nor would he allow the fanatical preaching friars to
-utter denunciations against them.
-
-Very short, however, was the gleam of happiness for the Jews under
-Manoel: the somber bigotry of the Spanish court changed it into
-terrible gloom. No sooner had the young king of Portugal mounted the
-throne than their majesties of Spain began to entertain the idea of
-marriage relations with him in order to turn an inimical neighbor
-into a friend and ally. They proposed marriage with their younger
-daughter, Joanna, who afterwards became notorious on account of her
-jealous disposition and her madness. Manoel lent a willing ear to the
-proposal of an alliance with the Spanish court, but preferred the elder
-sister, Isabella II, who had been married to the Infante of Portugal,
-and had soon after become a widow. Isabella had strong repugnance to a
-second marriage; but her confessor knew how to overrule her objections,
-and made her believe that if she consented she would have opportunity
-to glorify the Christian faith. The Spanish court had marked with
-chagrin and vexation that the Portuguese king had received the Jewish
-and Mahometan refugees, and King Manoel's friendly treatment of them
-was a thorn in their flesh. Ferdinand and Isabella thought that by
-falling in with the Portuguese king's wishes, they would attain their
-end. They, therefore, promised him the hand of their eldest daughter
-upon condition that he join with Spain against Charles VII, and send
-the Jews out of Portugal, both the native and the refugee Jews. The
-conditions were very disagreeable to King Manoel, who was on good
-terms with France, and reaped great advantage from the wealth, energy,
-intelligence, and knowledge of the Jews.
-
-He consulted with his lords and council upon this question, fraught
-with such importance for the Jews. Opinions upon it were divided.
-Manoel hesitated for some time, because his noble nature shrank from
-such cruelty and faithlessness. The Infanta Isabella spoke the deciding
-word. She entertained fanatical, almost personal hatred against the
-Jews. She believed or was persuaded by the priests that the misfortunes
-and unhappiness which had befallen King Joao in his last days were
-occasioned by his having allowed Jews to enter his kingdom; and,
-nourished as she had been at the breast of superstition, she was
-afraid of ill-luck in her union with Manoel if Jews were permitted to
-remain in Portugal. What dreary lovelessness in the heart of a young
-woman! Irreconcilable strife of feelings and thoughts was thus raised
-in the soul of King Manoel. Honor, the interest of the state, humanity,
-forebade his proscribing and expelling the Jews; but the hand of the
-Spanish Infanta, and the Spanish crown were to be secured only by the
-misery of the Jews. Love turned the balance in favor of hate. When
-the king was expecting his bride to cross the borders of his kingdom,
-he received a letter from her saying that she would not set foot in
-Portugal until the land was cleansed of the "curse-laden" Jews.
-
-The marriage contract between Don Manoel and the Spanish Infanta,
-Isabella, then, was sealed with the misery of the Jews. It was
-signed on the 30th of November, 1496, and so early as the 24th of
-the following month, the king caused an order to go forth that all
-the Jews and Moors of his kingdom must receive baptism, or leave the
-country within a given time, on pain of death. In order to relieve his
-conscience, he showed clemency in carrying his edict into effect. He
-lengthened the term of their stay until the October of the following
-year, so that they had time for preparation. He further appointed three
-ports, Lisbon, Oporto, and Setubal, for their free egress. That he
-sought to allure the Jews to Christianity, by the prospect of honor
-and advancement, was so entirely due to the distorted views of the
-times, that he cannot be held responsible for it; as it was, only a few
-submitted to baptism.
-
-Precisely Manoel's clement behavior tended to the greater misery of the
-Jews. Having ample time to prepare for their departure, and not being
-forbidden to take gold and silver with them, they thought that there
-was no need to hurry. Perhaps the king would change his mind. They
-had friends at court who were agitating in their favor. Besides, the
-winter months were not a good time to be upon the ocean. The majority,
-therefore, waited until spring. In the meantime King Manoel certainly
-did change his mind, but only to increase their fearful misery. He was
-much vexed at finding that so few Jews had embraced Christianity. Very
-unwillingly he saw them depart with their wealth and their possessions,
-and sought ways and means to retain them, as Christians, of course, in
-his own kingdom. The first step had cost him a struggle, the second was
-easy.
-
-He raised the question in council whether the Jews could be brought
-to baptism by force. To the honor of the Portuguese clergy it must be
-said that they expressed themselves as opposed to this. The bishop
-of Algarve, Ferdinand Coutinho, cited ecclesiastical authorities and
-papal bulls to the effect that Jews might not be compelled to adopt
-Christianity, because a free, not a forced, confession was required.
-Manoel, however, was so bent upon keeping the industrious Jews with
-him, that he openly declared that he did not trouble himself about
-laws and authorities, but would act upon his own judgment. From Evora
-he issued (beginning of April, 1497) a secret command that all Jewish
-children, boys and girls, up to the age of fourteen, should be taken
-from their parents by force on Easter Sunday, and carried to the
-church fonts to be baptized. He was advised by a reprobate convert,
-Levi ben Shem Tob, to take this step. In spite of the secrecy of the
-preparations, several Jews found it out, and were about to flee with
-their children from the "stain of baptism." When Manoel heard it, he
-ordered the forced baptism of children to be carried out at once.
-Heartrending scenes ensued in the towns where Jews lived when the
-sheriffs strove to carry away the children. Parents strained their dear
-ones to their breasts, the children clung convulsively to them, and
-they could be separated only by lashes and blows. In their despair over
-the possibility of being thus for ever sundered, many of them strangled
-the children in their embraces, or threw them into wells and rivers,
-and then laid hands upon themselves. "I have seen," relates Bishop
-Coutinho, "many dragged to the font by the hair, and the fathers clad
-in mourning, with veiled heads and cries of agony, accompanying their
-children to the altar, to protest against the inhuman baptism. I have
-seen still more horrible, indescribable violence done them." In the
-memory of his contemporaries lingered the frightful manner in which a
-noble and cultured Jew, Isaac Ibn-Zachin, destroyed himself and his
-children, to avoid their becoming a prey to Christianity. Christians
-were moved to pity by the cries and tears of Jewish fathers, mothers
-and children, and despite the king's commands not to assist the Jews,
-they concealed many of the unfortunates in their houses, so that at
-least for the moment they might be safe; but the stony hearts of King
-Manoel and his young wife, the Spanish Isabella II, remained unmoved
-by these sights of woe. The baptized children, who received Christian
-names, were placed in various towns, and reared as Christians. Either
-in obedience to a secret order, or from excessive zeal, the creatures
-of the king not only seized children, but also youths and maidens up to
-the age of twenty, for baptism.
-
-Many Jews of Portugal probably embraced Christianity in order to remain
-with their children; but this did not satisfy the king, who, not from
-religious zeal, but from political motives, had hardened his heart.
-All the Jews of Portugal, it mattered not whether with or without
-conviction, were to become Christians and remain in the country. To
-attain this end, he violated a solemn promise more flagrantly than his
-predecessor. When the time of their departure came closer, he ordered
-the Jews to embark from one seaport only, that of Lisbon, although,
-at first, he had allowed them three places. Therefore, all who wished
-to go, had to meet in Lisbon--20,000 souls, it is said, with burning
-grief in their hearts, but prepared to suffer anything to remain true
-to their convictions. The inhuman monarch allowed them lodgings in the
-city, but he placed so many hindrances in the way of their embarkation,
-that time passed by, and the day arrived when they were to forfeit
-life, or at least liberty, if found upon Portuguese soil. He had all
-who remained behind locked in an enclosed space (os Estaos) like oxen
-in stalls, and informed them that they were now his slaves, and that
-he could do with them as he thought fit. He urged them voluntarily
-to confess the Christian faith, in which case they should have honor
-and riches; otherwise they would be forced to baptism without mercy.
-When, notwithstanding this, many remained firm, he forbade bread or
-water to be given them for three days, in order to render them more
-pliable. This means did not succeed any better with the greater number
-of them: they chose to faint with starvation rather than belong to a
-religion which owned such followers as their persecutors. Upon this,
-Manoel proceeded to extreme measures. By cords, by their hair and
-beard, they were dragged from their pen to the churches. To escape this
-some sprang from the windows, and their limbs were crushed. Others
-broke loose and jumped into wells. Some killed themselves in the
-churches. One father spread his _tallith_ over his sons, and killed
-them and himself. Manoel's terrible treatment comes into more glaring
-prominence when compared with his behavior to the Moors. They, too,
-had to leave Portugal, but no hindrances were placed in their way,
-because he feared that the Mahometan princes in Africa and Turkey
-might retaliate upon the Christians living in their domains. The Jews
-had no earthly protector, were weak and helpless, therefore, Manoel,
-whom historians call the Great, permitted himself to perpetrate
-such atrocities. In this fashion many native Portuguese and refugee
-Spanish Jews were led to embrace Christianity, which they--as their
-Christian contemporaries relate with shame--had openly scorned.
-Some, at a later period, became distinguished Rabbinical authorities,
-like Levi ben Chabib, afterwards rabbi in Jerusalem. Those who escaped
-with their lives and their faith attributed it to the gracious and
-wondrous interposition of God. Isaac ben Joseph Caro, who had come from
-Toledo to Portugal, there lost his adult and his minor sons ("who were
-beautiful as princes"), yet thanked his Creator for the mercy that in
-spite of peril on the sea he reached Turkey. Abraham Zacuto, with his
-son Samuel, also was in danger of death, although (or because) he was
-King Manoel's favorite, astrologer and chronicler. Both, however, were
-fortunate enough to pass through the bitter ordeal, and escape from
-Portugal, but they were twice imprisoned. They finally settled in Tunis.
-
-The stir which the enforced conversion of the Jews caused in Portugal
-did not immediately subside. Those who had submitted to baptism through
-fear of death, or out of love for their children, did not give up the
-hope that by appealing to the papal court they might be able to return
-to their own faith, seeing that, as all Europe knew, Pope Alexander VI
-and his college of cardinals, as base as himself, would do anything for
-money. A witticism was then going the rounds of every Christian country:
-
- Vendit Alexander Claves, Altaria, Christum;
- Emerat ista prius, vendere jure potest.
-
-Rome was a market of shame--a hill of Astarte--a mart of
-unwholesomeness--but there the innocent, also, could buy their
-rights. The Portuguese new-Christians now sent a deputation of seven
-of their companions in misery to Pope Alexander, and they did not
-forget to take a purse of gold with them. The pope and the so-called
-holy college showed themselves favorably inclined towards them,
-especially Cardinal de Sancta Anastasia took them under his patronage.
-The Spanish ambassador, Garcilaso, however, was instructed by their
-Spanish majesties to oppose them. Despite his influence the affairs
-of the Portuguese Jews must have taken a favorable turn, for King
-Manoel decided to make concessions. He issued a mild decree (May 30th,
-1497), in which he granted amnesty to all forcibly baptized Jews, and
-a respite of twenty years, during which they were not to be brought
-before the tribunal of the Inquisition for their adherence to Judaism.
-It was said that it was necessary for them first to lay aside their
-Jewish habits, and accustom themselves to the ways of the Catholic
-faith, for which they needed time. Further, the decree ordered that,
-on the expiration of this term, a regular examination should be made
-of those accused of Judaizing practices, and if the case was decided
-against them, their goods should not be confiscated, as in Spain, but
-given over to their heirs. Finally, the decree ordained that those
-baptized physicians and surgeons who did not understand Latin might
-make use of Hebrew books of reference. Practically this allowed the
-enforced Christians to live in secret, without fear of punishment,
-as Jews, and to retain all their books. For, who, in Portugal, in
-those days, could distinguish a book of medicine from any other work
-in the Hebrew language? The students of the Talmud could thus follow
-their favorite researches and studies under the mask of Catholicism.
-This amnesty benefited the Portuguese Marranos, but not those who had
-immigrated into Portugal, by a clause which Manoel had inserted out of
-deference to the Spanish court, or, more particularly, to the Spanish
-Infanta Isabella. For she insisted that the Marranos who had fled out
-of Spain into Portugal should be delivered over to the Moloch of the
-Inquisition. In the marriage contract between the king of Portugal
-and the fanatical Isabella (August, 1497), it was expressly set down
-that all persons of the Hebrew race coming under condemnation of the
-Inquisition, who sought refuge in Portugal, must leave within a month's
-time.
-
-Thus many thousand Portuguese Jews became pseudo-Christians, but with
-the firm resolve to seize the first opportunity to get away, so that in
-a free country they might openly practice a religion only the dearer to
-them for all they had suffered for it. Their souls, as the poet Samuel
-Usque writes, had not been stained by the baptism imposed on them.
-There were some Jews, however, who had refused baptism with all their
-might. Among them was Simon Maimi, apparently the last chief rabbi
-(Arrabi mor) in Portugal, a scrupulously pious man; also his wife, his
-sons-in-law, and some others. They were closely imprisoned, because
-they would not forswear Judaism, nor observe the rites of the church.
-To bring them to conversion, Simon Maimi and his fellow sufferers,
-official rabbis, were most inhumanly tortured. They were immured up
-to the neck in their prison, and left for three days in this fearful
-position. When they nevertheless remained firm, the walls were torn
-down; three had died, among them Simon Maimi, whose conversion was
-most important, because his example would have influenced the others.
-Two Marranos imperiled their lives to secure the corpse of the pious
-martyr, that they might inter it in the Jewish burial-ground, although
-it was strictly forbidden to bury the Jewish victims of Christian
-sacrifice otherwise than by the executioner's hands. A few Marranos
-secretly attended their deeply-lamented saint to his last rest, and
-celebrated a mourning service over his grave. Manoel permitted the few
-remaining Jews to depart not long after, probably on the death of
-Isabella, the instigator of all his barbarities to the Jews. She died
-at the birth of the heir to the thrones of Portugal and Spain, August
-24th, 1498, and the Infante died two years later. One of the remnant
-dismissed was Abraham Saba, a preacher and Kabbalist author, whose two
-children were baptized by force and taken from him. The companions of
-Simon Maimi and his sons-in-law remained in prison a long time, were
-afterwards sent to Arzilla, in Africa, there condemned to work at the
-trenches on the Sabbath, and died at last a martyr's death.
-
-Eighty years later, Manoel's great-grandson, the adventurous king,
-Sebastian, led the flower of the Portuguese people to fresh conquests
-in Africa. In a single battle the power of Portugal was broken, her
-nobility slain, or cast into prison. The captives were carried to Fez,
-and there, in the slave-market, offered for sale to the descendants of
-the barbarously treated Portuguese Jews. The unhappy Portuguese nobles
-and knights were, however, glad to be bought by Jews, as they well knew
-the mild and humane nature of the followers of the "God of vengeance."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-RESULTS OF THE EXPULSION OF THE JEWS FROM SPAIN AND PORTUGAL. GENERAL
-VIEW.
-
- Widespread Consequences of the Expulsion--The Exiles--Fate
- of the Abrabanel Family--Leon Medigo--Isaac Akrish--The
- Pre-eminence of Jews of Spanish Origin--The North-African
- States: Samuel Alvalensi, Jacob Berab, Simon Duran II--The
- Jews of Algiers, Tripoli and Tunis--Abraham Zacuto, and Moses
- Alashkar--Egypt: Isaac Shalal, David Ibn-Abi Zimra--The
- Jews of Cairo--Selim I--Cessation of the Office of Nagid--
- Jerusalem--Obadyah di Bertinoro--Safet and Joseph Saragossi
- --The Jews of Turkey--Constantinople--Elias Mizrachi: the
- Karaites--The Communities of Salonica and Adrianople--The Jews
- of Greece--Elias Kapsali--The Jews of Italy and the Popes:
- Bonet de Lates--The Ghetto in Venice--Samuel Abrabanel and
- Benvenida Abrabanela--Abraham Farissol--The Jews of Germany and
- their Sorrows--Expulsion of the Jews from Various Towns--The
- Jews of Bohemia--Jacob Polak and his School--The Jews of Poland.
-
-1496-1525 C.E.
-
-
-The expulsion of the Jews from the Pyrenean Peninsula, unwise as it
-was inhuman, forms in various ways a well-marked turning-point in the
-general history of the Jewish race. It involved not only the exiles,
-but the whole Jewish people, in far-reaching and mostly disastrous
-consequences. The glory of the Jews was extinguished, their pride
-humbled, their center displaced, the strong pillar against which
-they had hitherto leant broken. The grief caused by this sad event
-was shared by the Jews in every country which had news of it. They
-all felt as if the Temple had been destroyed a third time, as if the
-sons of Zion had a third time been condemned to exile and misery.
-Whether from fancy or pride, it was supposed that the Spanish (or,
-more correctly, the Sephardic) Jews were the posterity of the noblest
-tribe, and included among them descendants in a direct line from King
-David; hence the Jews looked upon them as a kind of Jewish nobility.
-And now these exalted ones had been visited by the severest affliction!
-Exile, compulsory baptism, death in every hideous form, by despair,
-hunger, pestilence, fire, shipwreck, all torments united, had reduced
-their hundreds of thousands to barely the tenth part of that number.
-The remnant wandered about like specters, hunted from one country
-to another, and princes among Jews, they were compelled to knock as
-beggars at the doors of their brethren. The thirty millions of ducats
-which, at the lowest computation, the Spanish Jews possessed on their
-expulsion, had melted away in their hands, and they were thus left
-denuded of everything in a hostile world, which valued the Jews at
-their money's worth only. At the same period many German Jews were
-driven from cities in the East and in the West, but their misery
-did not equal that of the Spanish Jews. They had known neither the
-sweetness of a country that they could call their own, nor the comforts
-of life; they were more hardy, or, at least, accustomed to contempt and
-harsh treatment.
-
-Half a century after the banishment of the Jews from Spain and
-Portugal, we everywhere meet with fugitives: here a group, there a
-family, or solitary stragglers. It was a kind of exodus on a small
-scale, moving eastwards, chiefly to Turkey, as if the Jews were to
-approach their original home. But their very wanderings, until they
-again reached secure dwelling-places, and in a measure were settled,
-were heartrending through the calamities of every description, the
-humiliations, the contumely, sufferings worse than death, that they
-encountered.
-
-The ancient family of Abrabanel did not escape heavy disasters and
-constant migrations. The father, Isaac Abrabanel, who had occupied a
-high position at the court of the accomplished king, Ferdinand I, and
-of his son Alfonso, at Naples, was forced, on the approach of the
-French, to leave the city, and, with his royal patron, to seek refuge
-in Sicily. The French hordes plundered his house of all its valuables,
-and destroyed a choice library, his greatest treasure. On the death of
-King Alfonso, Isaac Abrabanel, for safety, went to the island of Corfu.
-He remained there only till the French had evacuated the Neapolitan
-territory; then he settled at Monopoli (Apulia), where he completed or
-revised many of his writings. The wealth acquired in the service of
-the Portuguese and Spanish courts had vanished, his wife and children
-were separated from him and scattered, and he passed his days in sad
-musings, out of which only his study of the Scriptures and the annals
-of the Jewish people could lift him. His eldest son, Judah Leon Medigo
-Abrabanel, resided at Genoa, where, in spite of his unsettled existence
-and consuming grief for the loss of his young son, who had been taken
-from him, and was being brought up in Portugal as a Christian, he still
-cherished ideals. For Leon Abrabanel was much more highly accomplished,
-richer in thought, in every way more gifted than his father, and
-deserves consideration not merely for his father's, but for his own
-sake. Leon Abrabanel practiced medicine to gain a livelihood (whence
-his cognomen _Medigo_); but his favorite pursuits were astronomy,
-mathematics, and metaphysics. Shortly before the death of the gifted
-and eccentric Pico de Mirandola, Leon Medigo became acquainted with
-him, won his friendship, and at his instigation undertook the writing
-of a philosophical work.
-
-Leon Medigo, in a remarkable manner, entered into close connection with
-acquaintances of his youth, with Spanish grandees, and even with King
-Ferdinand, who had driven his family and so many hundred thousands
-into banishment and death. For he became the private physician of the
-general, Gonsalvo de Cordova, the conqueror and viceroy of Naples.
-The heroic, amiable, and lavish De Cordova did not share his master's
-hatred against the Jews. In one of his descendants Jewish literature
-found a devotee. When King Ferdinand, after the conquest of the kingdom
-of Naples (1504), commanded that the Jews be banished thence, as from
-Spain, the general thwarted the execution of the order, observing that,
-on the whole, there were but few Jews on Neapolitan territory, since
-most of the immigrants had either again left it, or had become converts
-to Christianity. The banishment of these few could only be injurious
-to the country, since they would settle at Venice, which would benefit
-by their industry and riches. Consequently the Jews were allowed to
-remain a while longer on Neapolitan territory. But to exterminate
-the Spanish and Portuguese Marranos who had settled there, Ferdinand
-established the terrible Inquisition at Benevento. Leon Medigo for over
-two years was De Cordova's physician (1505-1507), and King Ferdinand
-saw him when he visited Naples. After the king's departure and the
-ungracious dismissal of the viceroy (June, 1507), Leon Abrabanel,
-having nowhere found suitable employment, returned to his father,
-then living at Venice, whither he had been invited by his second son,
-Isaac II, who practiced medicine first at Reggio (Calabria), then at
-Venice. The youngest son, Samuel, afterwards a generous protector of
-his co-religionists, was the most fortunate of the family. He dwelt
-amidst the cool shades of the academy of Salonica, to which his father
-had sent him to finish his education in Jewish learning. The elder
-Abrabanel once more entered the political arena. At Venice he had the
-opportunity of settling a dispute between the court of Lisbon and the
-Venetian Republic concerning the East-Indian colonies established
-by the Portuguese, especially concerning the trade in spices. Some
-influential senators discerned Isaac Abrabanel's correct political and
-financial judgment, and thenceforth consulted him in all important
-questions of state policy. But suffering and travel had broken his
-strength; before he reached seventy years, he felt the infirmities
-of old age creeping over him. In a letter of reply to Saul Cohen
-Ashkenasi, an inhabitant of Candia, a man thirsting for knowledge, the
-disciple and intellectual heir of Elias del Medigo, Abrabanel complains
-of increasing debility and senility. Had he been silent, his literary
-productions of that time would have betrayed his infirmity. The baited
-victims of Spanish fanaticism would have needed bodies of steel and the
-resisting strength of stone not to succumb to the sufferings with which
-they were overwhelmed.
-
-We have a striking instance of the restless wanderings of the Jewish
-exiles in the life of one of the sufferers, who, though insignificant,
-became known to fame by his zeal to raise the courage of the
-unfortunate. To Isaac ben Abraham Akrish, a Spaniard, a great traveler
-and a bookworm (born about 1489, died after 1575), Jewish literature
-owes the preservation of many a valuable document. Akrish said, half
-in joke, half in earnest, that he must have been born in the hour when
-the planet Jupiter was passing through the zodiacal sign of the Fishes,
-a nativity which indicates a wandering life. For, though lame in both
-feet, he spent his whole life in traveling from city to city, on land
-and on sea. When a boy, Akrish was banished from Spain, and at Naples
-he underwent all the sufferings which seem to have conspired against
-the exiles. Thus he limped from nation to nation, "whose languages he
-did not understand, and who spared neither old men nor children," until
-in Egypt, in the house of an exile, he found a few years' rest. Who
-can follow all the wandering exiles, with sore feet, and still sorer
-hearts, until they somewhere found rest, or the peace of the grave?
-
-But the very enormity of the misery they endured raised the dignity of
-the Sephardic Jews to a height bordering on pride. That they whom God's
-hand had smitten so heavily, so persistently, and who had undergone
-such unspeakable sorrow, must occupy a peculiar position, and belong
-to the specially elect, was the thought or the feeling existing more
-or less clearly in the breasts of the survivors. They looked upon
-their banishment from Spain as a third exile, and upon themselves
-as favorites of God, whom, because of His greater love for them, He
-had chastised the more severely. Contrary to expectation, a certain
-exaltation took possession of them, which did not, indeed, cause them
-to forget, but transfigured, their sufferings. As soon as they felt
-even slightly relieved from the burden of their boundless calamity, and
-were able to breathe, they rose with elastic force, and carried their
-heads high like princes. They had lost everything except their Spanish
-pride, their distinguished manner. However humbled they might be, their
-pride did not forsake them; they asserted it wherever their wandering
-feet found a resting-place. And to some extent they were justified.
-They had, indeed, since the growth of the tendency among Jews towards
-strict orthodoxy and hostility to science, and since their exclusion
-from social circles, receded from the high scientific position they
-had held, and forfeited the supremacy they had maintained during many
-centuries; yet they far surpassed the Jews of all other countries in
-culture, manners, and also in worth, as was shown by their external
-bearing and their language. Their love for their country was too great
-to allow them to hate the unnatural mother who had cast them out.
-Hence, wherever they went, they founded Spanish or Portuguese colonies.
-They carried the Spanish tongue, Spanish dignity and distinction
-to Africa, Syria, and Palestine, Italy and Flanders; wherever fate
-cast their lot they cherished and cultivated this Spanish manner so
-lovingly, that it has maintained itself to this day in full vigor
-among their descendants. Far from being absorbed by the rest of the
-Jewish population in countries which had hospitably received them, they
-considered themselves a privileged race, the flower and nobility of
-the Jewish nation, kept aloof from others, looked down upon them with
-contempt, and not unfrequently dictated laws to them. This arose from
-the fact that the Spanish and Portuguese Jews spoke the languages of
-their native countries (which by the discoveries and conquests of the
-sixteenth century had become the languages of the world) with purity,
-took part in literature, and associated with Christians on equal
-terms, with manliness, and without fear or servility. On this point
-they contrasted with the German Jews, who despised pure and beautiful
-speech, the very thing which constitutes a true man, and considered
-a corrupt jargon and isolation from the Christian world as proofs of
-religious zeal. The Sephardic Jews attached importance to forms of all
-kinds, to taste in dress, to elegance in their synagogues, as well as
-to the medium for the exchange of thought. The Spanish and Portuguese
-rabbis preached in their native tongues, and laid great stress on pure
-pronunciation and euphony. Hence their language did not degenerate,
-at least not in the first centuries after their expulsion. "In the
-cities of Salonica, Constantinople, Alexandria, Cairo, Venice, and
-other resorts of commerce, the Jews transact their business only in
-the Spanish language. I have known Jews of Salonica who, though still
-young, pronounced Castilian as well as myself, and even better." This
-is the judgment of a Christian writer about half a century after their
-expulsion.
-
-The contempt which even Isaac Abrabanel, mild and broken though he
-was, entertained for the barbarous jargon spoken by German Jews is
-characteristic. He was surprised to discover in a letter, sent to
-him by Saul Cohen of Candia, a native of Germany, a finished Hebrew
-style and close reasoning, and freely expressed his astonishment: "I
-am surprised to find so excellent a style among the Germans (Jews),
-which is rare even among their leaders and rabbis, however gifted
-they may be in other respects. Their language is full of awkwardness
-and clumsiness, a stammering without judgment." This superiority of
-the Jews of Spanish descent in culture, bearing, social manners, and
-knowledge of the world, was appreciated and admired by other Jews,
-especially by German Jews, with whom they everywhere came into contact.
-Hence Spanish Jews could presume to play the role of masters, and
-frequently, in spite of their paucity of numbers, they dominated a
-majority speaking other tongues. In the century after their expulsion
-they are almost exclusively the leaders; the names of their spokesmen
-are heard everywhere; they furnished rabbis, authors, thinkers and
-visionaries, whilst German and Italian Jews occupied a humble place.
-In all countries, except Germany and Poland, into which they had not
-penetrated, or only as solitary individuals, the Sephardic Jews were
-the leaders.
-
-The northern coast of Africa, and the inhabitable regions inland,
-were full of Jews of Spanish descent. They had congregated there in
-great numbers during the century from the persecution of 1391 to their
-total expulsion. From Safi (Assafi), the most southwestern town of
-Morocco, to Tripoli in the northeast, there were many communities, of
-varying numbers, speaking the Spanish language. Though mostly hated,
-arbitrarily treated, and often compelled by petty barbarian tyrants and
-the uncivilized, degenerate Moorish population to wear a disgraceful
-costume, yet prominent Jews found opportunities to distinguish
-themselves, to rise to high honors and acquire widespread influence.
-In Morocco a rich Jew, learned in history, who had rendered important
-services to the ruler of that country, was held in high esteem. At Fez,
-where there existed a community of five thousand Jewish families, who
-monopolized most trades, Samuel Alvalensi, a Jew of Spanish descent,
-was greatly beloved by the king, on account of his ability and his
-courage, and so trusted by the populace that it accepted him as its
-leader. In the struggle between the two reigning families, the Merinos
-and the Xerifs, he sided with the former, led one thousand four hundred
-Jews and Moors against the followers of the latter, and defeated them
-at Ceuta. A very numerous Jewish community of Spanish descent occupied
-the greater portion of Tlemcen, or Tremcen, an important town, where
-the court resided. Here Jacob Berab (born 1474, died 1541), fleeing
-from Spain, found a refuge. He was one of the most active men among the
-Spanish emigrants, and the most acute rabbi of his age. At the same
-time, he was a crusty, dogmatical and quarrelsome man, who had many
-enemies, but also many admirers. Born at Maqueda, near Toledo, Jacob
-Berab, after passing through many dangers, suffering want, hunger and
-thirst, reached Tlemcen, whence he went to Fez, the Jewish community
-of which chose him, a needy youth, for their rabbi, on account of his
-learning and sagacity. There he conducted a college until the fanatic
-Spaniards made conquests in northern Africa, and disturbed the quiet
-asylum that the Jews had found there.
-
-The reduced community of Algiers was under the direction of Simon
-Duran II, a descendant of the Spanish fugitives of 1391 (born 1439,
-died after 1510), a son of Solomon Duran, the rabbi with philosophic
-culture. Like his brother, he was considered in his day a high
-rabbinical authority, and the advice of both was sought by many
-persons. Of as noble a disposition as his father, Simon Duran was the
-protector of his co-religionists and the sheet-anchor of the Spanish
-exiles who came within his reach, for he shunned neither cost nor
-danger when the religion, morals and safety of his compatriots were
-in question. Fifty fugitive Jews, who had suffered shipwreck, had
-been cast on the coast of Seville, where the fanatical Spaniards, in
-accordance with the edict, put them into prison, and kept them there
-for two years. They were in daily expectation of death, but finally
-they were pardoned--that is to say, sold for slaves. As such they
-reached Algiers in a deplorable condition; but by the exertions of
-Simon Duran they were redeemed for the sum of seven hundred ducats,
-which the small community managed to collect.
-
-Two eminent Spanish Jews, the aged historian and astronomer, Abraham
-Zacuto, and a younger man, Moses Alashkar, found a refuge at Tunis.
-Zacuto, who had taught mathematics and astronomy to Christian and
-Mahometan pupils in Spain, and whose published writings were widely
-read and made use of, was nevertheless compelled to wander about like
-an outlaw, and had only with difficulty escaped death. He seems to have
-spent some quiet years at Tunis, where he completed his more celebrated
-than useful chronicle ("Sefer Yochasin," 1504), history it cannot be
-called. It is an epitome of Jewish history, with especial reference
-to the literature of the Jews. It has the merit of having promoted
-historical research among Jews, but lacks artistic arrangement and
-completeness. It is a mere compilation from works accessible to the
-writer, who has even failed to give a complete sketch of the history
-of his own times, the sufferings of the Spanish and Portuguese Jews.
-Zacuto's chronicle was a child of his old age and misery; he wrote
-it with a trembling hand, in fear of impending events, and without
-sufficient literary materials. On this account it must be judged
-leniently.
-
-A contemporary of Zacuto at Tunis was Moses ben Isaac Alashkar, as
-deeply learned a Talmudist as his teacher, Samuel Alvalensi. He was
-a correct thinker, and devoid of narrow one-sidedness. He plunged
-into the dark labyrinths of the Kabbala, yet, at the same time,
-raised his eyes to the bright heights of philosophy--a mental
-_mesalliance_ possible in those days. Alashkar even defended Maimuni
-and his philosophical system against the charge of heresy brought by
-obscurantists.
-
-Terrified by the perils which the Spanish arms foreboded to the Jews of
-northern Africa, Zacuto and Alashkar, with many others, appear to have
-quitted Tunis. They were but too well acquainted with the cruelties
-practiced against Jews by the ultra-Catholic Spaniards. The former
-went to Turkey, where he died shortly after his arrival (before 1515).
-Alashkar fled to Egypt, where his extensive learning and wealth secured
-for him an honorable position.
-
-Egypt, especially its capital, Cairo, had become the home of many
-Jewish-Spanish fugitives, who had in a short time acquired an influence
-surpassing that of the original Jewish inhabitants. On their arrival,
-all the Jewish communities were, as of old, ruled by a Jewish chief
-justice or prince (Nagid, Reis). The office was then held by the noble
-and rich Isaac Cohen Shalal, a man of upright character, learned in
-the Talmud, who employed his wealth and the high esteem in which he
-was held by all, even including the Egyptian Mameluke sultan, for the
-benefit of his community and the fugitives who settled in their midst.
-He impartially promoted deserving men of the Spanish immigration to
-offices, whereby they gradually obtained paramount influence. The
-Spanish scholar, Samuel Sidillo (or Sid, Ibn-Sid), a disciple of the
-last Toledan rabbi, Isaac de Leon, highly venerated in his day on
-account of his piety and his profound rabbinical knowledge, found
-a refuge at Cairo. A Spanish fugitive who acquired still higher
-distinction was David Ibn-Abi Zimra (born 1470, died about 1573). A
-disciple of the mystic Joseph Saragossi, he was rich in knowledge and
-virtues, as well as in property and distinguished descendants, and
-he soon outshone the natives, acquiring the reputation of being the
-highest rabbinical authority in Egypt. Many other Spanish rabbinical
-scholars found rest in Egypt; to those already named, including
-Jacob Berab and Moses Alashkar, we may add Abraham Ibn-Shoshan, all
-eventually becoming official rabbis.
-
-Political changes in Egypt placed the Spaniards at the head of the
-Jewish communities in that country. The land of the Nile, together
-with Syria and Palestine, whose conquest was so difficult a task for
-the sultans of Constantinople, finally became the well-secured prey
-of Selim I, who won a splendid victory over the Mameluke sultan in a
-decisive battle not far from Aleppo (1517). His march from Syria to
-Egypt was a triumphal progress. Selim spent the summer of that year
-in remodeling the order of things in Egypt, reducing it to a real
-dependency of Turkey, turning it, in fact, into a province, ruled by
-a viceroy, a pasha entirely devoted to him. Abraham de Castro, a Jew
-of Spanish descent, was appointed by Selim master of the mint for the
-new Turkish coinage, and, by his wealth and influence, he acquired
-great weight among Turkish officials and the Egyptian Jews. De Castro
-was very benevolent; he annually spent three thousand gold florins
-in alms, and in every way took lively interest in the affairs of his
-co-religionists.
-
-Selim, or his viceroy, appears to have introduced an entirely new order
-into the management of the Egyptian Jews. For ages a chief rabbi and
-judge had ruled all the communities; the person holding the office
-had possessed a kind of princely power, similar to that formerly
-exercised by the princes of the exile in Babylon. The chief rabbi
-or prince (Nagid) nominated the rabbis of the communities, had the
-supreme decision of disputes among Jews, confirmed or rejected every
-new regulation, was even authorized to decree corporal punishment for
-offenses and crimes committed by Jews under his jurisdiction. From
-these functions he derived a considerable revenue, but all this ceased
-with the Turkish conquest. Every community was thenceforth declared
-independent in the election of its head, and allowed to manage its own
-affairs. The last Jewish-Egyptian prince or chief rabbi was deposed
-from his dignity, and betook himself with his riches to Jerusalem,
-where he became a benefactor of its growing community. The office of
-rabbi of Cairo was bestowed on the Spanish immigrant David Ibn-Abi
-Zimra, on account of his upright character, learning, benevolent
-disposition, and chiefly, probably, on account of his wealth. His
-authority rose to such a degree that he could venture to abolish a very
-ancient custom, which excessive conservatism had dragged along from
-century to century, like a dead limb. The Babylonian Jews had more
-than eighteen hundred years before adopted the Syrian or Seleucidan
-chronology (_Minyan Yavanim_, _Minyan Shetaroth_), in memory of
-the victory of the Syrian king Seleucus over the other generals of
-Alexander the Great. The Syrian empire and the Seleucidae had perished
-long ago, Syria had by turns become the prey of Romans, Byzantines,
-Mahometans, Mongols and Turks; nevertheless, the Babylonian and
-Egyptian Jews had retained that chronology, employing it not only
-in historical records and secular papers, but also in the dating of
-documents of divorce and similar deeds. Whilst the Jews of Palestine
-and of Europe had gradually adopted other chronologies, as "After the
-Destruction of the Temple," or "Since the Creation" (_aera mundi_),
-the Babylonian and Egyptian Jews so pertinaciously adhered to the
-Seleucidan era as to declare invalid every letter of divorce not so
-dated. Ibn-Abi Zimra abolished this antiquated chronology, as far as
-Egypt was concerned, introducing in its stead the already accepted
-mode of reckoning from the Creation, and his innovation met with no
-opposition. The ascendency of the immigrant Sephardic Jews over the
-majority of the original community (the Mostarabi) was so great and
-so well established, that the former, in spite of the objections of
-the latter, succeeded in the bold attempt to abolish an ancient and
-beautiful custom, introduced by Maimuni himself. The Mostarabian Jews
-for more than three centuries had been accustomed to have the chief
-prayer said aloud in the synagogue, by the reader (Chazan), without
-themselves participating in it. But to the pious immigrants from the
-Peninsula this custom, though promoting decorum and devotion, appeared
-illegal, anti-Talmudic, if not heretical, and they zealously set to
-work to abolish it. Terrible sufferings had hardened the hearts of the
-Sephardic Jews, and they were but too ready to exercise the utmost
-severity in religious matters, and slavishly to follow the letter. The
-rabbi, David Ibn-Abi Zimra, was their leader.
-
-During his term of office a great danger hovered over the Cairo
-community. The fourth viceroy of Egypt, Achmed Shaitan (Satan),
-harbored the design of severing Egypt from Turkey, and making himself
-its independent master. Having succeeded in his first measures, he
-proposed to the Jewish superintendent of the mint, Abraham de Castro,
-to have his name placed on the coins. De Castro pretended compliance,
-but asked for a written order. Having obtained it he secretly left
-Egypt, and hastened to the court of Solyman I, at Constantinople, to
-inform the sultan of the treacherous design of the pasha, which was
-thus frustrated. Achmed vented his rage on the Jews, threw some of
-them, probably De Castro's friends and relatives, into prison, and
-permitted the Mamelukes to plunder the Jewish quarter of Cairo. He
-then sent for twelve of the most eminent Jews, and commanded them
-within a short time to find an exorbitant sum of money, threatening
-them, in case of non-compliance, with a cruel death for themselves and
-their families. For greater security he retained them as hostages. To
-the supplications of the Jewish community for mercy and delay, the
-tyrant replied by more terrible threats. In their hopelessness the Jews
-of Cairo turned in fervent prayer to God. Meanwhile the collectors
-had got together a considerable sum, which they offered as a payment
-on account. But as it scarcely amounted to the tenth part of Achmed's
-demand, his private secretary had the collectors put in irons, and
-threatened them, and all the members of the community, with certain
-death on that very day, as soon as his master left his bath. At the
-very moment when the secretary uttered these words, the pasha was
-attacked in his bath by Mahomet Bey, one of his vizirs, and some other
-conspirators, and severely wounded. Achmed Shaitan made good his escape
-from the palace, but was betrayed, overtaken, cast into fetters and
-then beheaded. The imprisoned Jews were set free, and their community
-escaped a great peril. The Egyptian Jews for a long period afterwards
-commemorated the day of their deliverance (Adar 27th or 28th, 1524--a
-Cairoan Purim, Furin al-Mizrayim).
-
-By the immigration of Spaniards and Portuguese, Jerusalem and other
-Palestinian cities also obtained a great increase of members to their
-congregations, and considerable importance. Here, too, the immigrants
-in a short time became the social and religious leaders. In the very
-brief period of seven years the number of Jewish families in the Holy
-City grew from scarcely seventy to two hundred, and again within
-the space of two decades (1495-1521), it rose from two hundred to
-fifteen hundred. The influx of new settlers had largely augmented the
-prosperity of the Jewish inhabitants of Jerusalem. Whilst formerly
-nearly all the members of the community were in a state of destitution,
-three decades afterwards there were only two hundred receiving alms.
-And what is of greater importance, morality was greatly benefited by
-the immigrants. Jerusalem was no longer the den of robbers found by
-Obadyah (Obadiah) di Bertinoro (1470-1520), who had immigrated from
-Italy. The members of the community were no longer harassed to death,
-and driven to despair or voluntary exile by a rapacious, tyrannical
-and treacherous faction; harmony, union, a sense of justice, and peace
-had found an abode with them. There was indeed a show of excessive
-piety, but it no longer flagrantly contrasted with a revoltingly
-immoral mode of life. Obadyah di Bertinoro, the gentle and amiable
-Italian preacher, had greatly contributed to this improvement of the
-moral tone of Jerusalem; for more than two decades he taught the
-growing community, by precept and example, genuine piety, nobility
-of sentiment and relinquishment of barbarian coarseness. After his
-arrival at Jerusalem, he wrote to his friends: "If there were in this
-country one sagacious Jew, who knew how to lead a community gently
-and justly, not Jews only, but also Mahometans would willingly submit
-to him, for the latter are not at all hostile to the Jews, but full
-of consideration for strangers. But there is not one Jew in this
-country possessing either sense or social virtues; all are coarse,
-misanthropical and avaricious." Bertinoro did not anticipate that he
-himself would soften that coarseness, improve the morals, mitigate
-that immorality, ennoble that baseness. But his genial, amiable manner
-disarmed evil and healed the sores he had discovered, lamented, and
-pitilessly exposed. Obadyah was the guardian angel of the Holy City,
-he cleansed it from pollution, and clothed it with a pure festival
-garment. "Were I to attempt proclaiming his praise," writes an Italian
-pilgrim to Jerusalem, "I should never cease. He is the man who is held
-in the highest esteem in the country; everything is done according to
-his orders, and no one dares gainsay his words. From all parts he is
-sought after and consulted; his merits are acknowledged by Egyptians
-and Babylonians, and even Mahometans honor him. Withal, he is modest
-and humble; his speech is gentle; he is accessible to every one. All
-praise him and say: He is not like an earthly being. When he preaches
-every ear listens intently; not the least sound is heard, his hearers
-are so silently devout." Exiles from the Pyrenean Peninsula supported
-him in his humane work.
-
-To the intervention of Obadyah di Bertinoro, and of those who shared
-his opinions, probably were due the excellent ordinances which the
-community voluntarily imposed on itself, and for remembrance graved on
-a tablet in the synagogue. They were directed against the abuses which
-had crept in by degrees. These ordinances included amongst others the
-following decrees: In disputes between Jews, the Mahometan authorities
-are to be applied to only in the utmost necessity. The Jewish judge or
-rabbi is not to be allowed to compel wealthy members of the community
-to make advances for communal wants. Students of the Talmud and widows
-shall not contribute to the communal funds. Jews are not to purchase
-bad coin, and, if they acquire any accidentally, are not to pass it.
-The pilgrims to the grave of the prophet Samuel are not to drink wine,
-for men and women traveled together, the latter unveiled, and if the
-men had been excited by wine, great mischief might have ensued.
-
-The Holy City acquired still higher importance by the immigration of
-Isaac Shalal, with his riches, experience, and authority.
-
-Safet in Galilee, the youngest town of Palestine, next to Jerusalem
-acquired the largest Jewish population and considerable importance,
-which increased to such a degree that Safet not only rivaled, but
-excelled the mother-city. At the end of the fifteenth and the beginning
-of the next century it sheltered only some three hundred Jewish
-families, original inhabitants (Moriscos), Berbers, and Sephardim. It
-did not at first possess any eminent native expounder of the Talmud,
-who might have become a leader. It owed its importance and far-reaching
-influence to the arrival of a Spanish fugitive, under whose direction
-the community was strengthened. Joseph Saragossi became for Safet what
-Obadyah di Bertinoro had been for Jerusalem. Driven from Saragossa,
-he passed through Sicily, Beyrout and Sidon, in which latter place he
-resided for some time, and finally reached Safet, where he settled.
-Joseph Saragossi possessed a mild, fascinating character, and
-considered it the task of his life to preach peace and restore harmony
-in private and communal life. Even among Mahometans he worked in a
-conciliating and appeasing spirit, and on this account he was loved and
-revered as an angel of peace. At one time he wished to leave Safet. The
-inhabitants fairly clung to him, and promised him an annual salary of
-fifty ducats, two thirds of which the Mahometan governor of the town
-offered to furnish. Joseph Saragossi transplanted the study of the
-Talmud to Safet, and also that of the Kabbala, as he was an ultra-pious
-mystic. Through him the hitherto untainted community became a nest of
-Kabbalists.
-
-In Damascus, the half-Palestinian capital of Syria, there also arose,
-by the side of the very ancient Mostarabian community, a Sephardic
-congregation, composed of fugitives, and numbering five hundred Jewish
-families. Within a short time after their arrival, the Spaniards built
-a splendid synagogue at Damascus, called Khataib. They speedily
-increased to such a degree as to separate into several congregations,
-according to the states from which they had originally come.
-
-The main stream of the Jewish-Spanish emigration flowed towards Turkey
-in Europe; the greater part of the remnant of the three hundred
-thousand exiles found an asylum in that country, where the inhabitants
-did not take love as their watchword. The sultans Bajazet, Selim I
-and Solyman I, not only tolerated the fugitive Jews, but gave them a
-hearty welcome, and granted them the liberties enjoyed by Armenians and
-Greeks. A Jewish poet enthusiastically described the freedom of his
-co-religionists in Turkey. "Great Turkey, a wide and spreading sea,
-which our Lord opened with the wand of His mercy (as at the exodus from
-Egypt), that the tide of thy present disaster, Jacob, as happened with
-the multitude of the Egyptians, should therein lose and exhaust itself.
-There the gates of freedom and equal position for the unhindered
-practice of Jewish worship are ever open, they are never closed against
-thee. There thou canst renew thy inner life, change thy condition,
-strip off, and cast away false and erroneous doctrines, recover thy
-ancient truths, and abandon the practices which, by the violence of the
-nations among whom thou wast a pilgrim, thou wert compelled to imitate.
-In this realm thou art highly favored by the Lord, since therein He
-granteth thee boundless liberty to commence thy late repentance."
-
-The immigrant Jews at first enjoyed very happy days in Turkey, because
-they were a godsend to this comparatively new state. The Turks were
-good soldiers, but bad citizens. The sultans, frequently on bad terms
-with Christian states, could place but indifferent trust in the Greeks,
-Armenians, and Christians of other national creeds; they looked upon
-them as born spies and traitors. But they could depend on the fidelity
-and usefulness of the Jews. Hence they were, on the one hand, the
-business people, and on the other, the citizen class of Turkey. They
-not only carried on the wholesale and retail commerce by land and sea,
-but were the handicraftsmen and the artists. The Marranos especially
-who had fled from Spain and Portugal manufactured for the warlike Turks
-new armor and firearms, cannons and gunpowder, and taught the Turks how
-to use them. Thus persecuting Christianity itself furnished its chief
-enemies, the Turks, with weapons which enabled them to overwhelm the
-former with defeat after defeat, humiliation on humiliation. Jewish
-physicians especially were held in high esteem in Turkey; they were
-for the most part clever disciples of the school of Salamanca, and, on
-account of their skill, higher education, secrecy and discretion, were
-preferred to Christian, and even to Mahometan doctors. These Jewish
-physicians, mostly of Spanish descent, acquired great influence with
-grand sultans, vizirs and pashas.
-
-Sultan Selim had for his physician in ordinary Joseph Hamon, an
-immigrant probably from Granada. Hamon's son and nephew successively
-held the same office. The son, Moses Hamon (born 1490, died about
-1565), physician to the wise sultan Solyman, on account of his skill
-and manly, determined character, enjoyed even higher reputation and
-influence than his father. He accompanied the sultan in his warlike
-expeditions, and brought back from Persia, whither he had followed
-Solyman on a triumphal progress, a learned man, Jacob Tus or Tavs
-(about 1535), who translated the Pentateuch into Persian. This version,
-accompanied by Chaldean and Arabic translations, was afterwards printed
-at the expense of Hamon, who was justly considered a protector of his
-brethren and a promoter of Judaism.
-
-The Jews were also in great request in Turkey as linguists and
-interpreters, they having acquired knowledge of many languages through
-their wanderings among foreign nations.
-
-The capital, Constantinople, held within its walls a very numerous
-Jewish community, which was daily increased by new fugitives from the
-Peninsula, so that it became the largest in Europe, numbering probably
-thirty thousand souls. It had forty-four synagogues, consequently as
-many separate congregations. For the Jewish community in the Turkish
-capital and other towns did not form a close corporation, but was
-divided into groups and sections, according to their native places,
-each of which was anxious to retain its own customs, rites and liturgy,
-and to possess its own synagogue and rabbinical college. Hence there
-were not only Castilian, Aragonese and Portuguese congregations, but
-still more restricted associations, Cordovan, Toledan, Barcelonian,
-Lisbon groups (Kahals), besides German, Apulian, Messinian and
-Greek. Every petty congregation apportioned among its members the
-contributions, not only for its worship, officials, the maintenance of
-the poor, its hospitals and schools, but also for the taxes payable to
-the state. These latter at first were trifling: a poll-tax on every one
-subject to taxation (charaj), and a kind of rabbinical tax levied on
-the congregation, according to the three different classes of property,
-of 200, 100 and 20 aspers. The family of the physician Hamon alone was
-exempt from taxes.
-
-At first the native Jews, who formed the majority, had complete
-preponderance over the immigrants. The office of chief rabbi, after the
-death of the meritorious but unappreciated Moses Kapsali, was held by
-Elias Mizrachi, probably descended from an immigrant Greek family, who
-under the sultans Bajazet, Selim I, and perhaps also under Solyman,
-had a seat in the divan like his predecessor, and was the official
-representative of the whole body of Turkish Jews. He deservedly held
-this post on account of his rabbinical and secular knowledge, and
-upright, impartially just character. Elias Mizrachi (born about 1455,
-died between 1525 and 1527), a disciple of the German school, and a
-profound Talmudist and strictly pious man, was no enemy to science. He
-not only understood, but taught mathematics and astronomy, gave public
-lectures thereon, as also on the Talmud, and compiled handbooks on
-these subjects, some of which became such favorites as to be translated
-into Latin. In his youth he was a Hotspur, and had a feud with the
-Karaites in Turkey. But in his old age he felt more kindly towards
-them, and employed his weighty influence to avert a wrong which the
-ultra-pious were about to inflict on them. A few obscurantists, chiefly
-members of the Apulian congregation at Constantinople, attempted to
-interrupt, in a violent manner, the neighborly intercourse which for
-half a century had existed between Rabbanites and Karaites. They
-assembled the members of the congregation, and, with the Sefer Torah
-in their hand, excommunicated all who should henceforth instruct
-Karaites, whether children or adults, in the Bible or the Talmud, or
-even in secular sciences, such as mathematics, natural history, logic,
-music, or even the alphabet. Nor were Rabbanite servants any longer to
-take service with Karaite families. These fanatics intended to raise
-an insuperable barrier between the followers of the Talmud and those
-of the Bible. But the majority of the Constantinople community were
-dissatisfied with this bigoted measure. The tolerant Rabbanites of
-the capital held a meeting to frustrate the plan of the zealots. But
-the latter behaved so outrageously and with such violence, bringing
-a fierce rabble provided with cudgels into the synagogue where the
-consultation was to be held, that the conveners of the meeting had no
-chance of being heard, and the act of excommunication was carried by
-an insolent minority, in defiance of the sound arguments and opposition
-of the majority. Then Rabbi Elias Mizrachi openly and vigorously
-opposed this unreasonable, illegal and violent proceeding, showing
-in a learned discourse how unjust and opposed to the Talmud was the
-rejection of the Karaites. He impressed on the zealots the fact that
-by their intolerant severity they would bring about the decay of the
-instruction of the young, since hitherto emulation to surpass their
-Karaite companions had been a great incentive to Rabbanite scholars.
-
-The Turkish Jews in those days had a kind of political representative,
-an advocate (Kahiya), or chamberlain, who had access to the
-sultan and his great dignitaries, and was appointed by the court.
-Shaltiel, otherwise an unknown personage, but said to have been of
-noble character, held the office under Solyman. With a population
-looking contemptuously on unbelievers, with provincial pashas ruling
-arbitrarily, and with fanatical Greek and Bulgarian Christians,
-instances of injustice and violent proceedings against the Jews in the
-Turkish empire were not of rare occurrence; on all such occasions the
-Kahiya Shaltiel interposed on behalf of his co-religionists, and, by
-means of money liberally spent at court, obtained redress.
-
-The community next in importance in Turkey was that of Salonica (the
-ancient Thessalonica), which, though an unhealthy town, possessed
-attractions for the immigrants of Spain and Provence; for this once
-Greek settlement offered more leisure for peaceful occupation than
-the noisy capital of Turkey. Ten congregations at least were soon
-formed here, the most of Sephardic origin. Eventually they increased
-to thirty-six. Salonica, in fact, became a Jewish town, with more Jews
-than Gentiles. A Jewish poet, Samuel Usque, calls the town "a mother
-of Judaism, built on the deep foundation of the Lord, full of excellent
-plants and fruitful trees, such as are found nowhere else on earth.
-Their fruit is glorious, because it is watered by an abundance of
-benevolence. The greatest portion of the persecuted and banished sons
-from Europe and other parts of the earth have met therein, and been
-received with loving welcomes, as if it were our venerable mother,
-Jerusalem." Within a short period the Sephardic immigrants acquired
-complete supremacy over their co-religionists, even over the original
-community, so that the leading language of Salonica became Spanish,
-which German and Italian Jews had to learn, if they wished to maintain
-intercourse with the Spanish immigrants. The son of one of the last
-Jewish-Spanish ministers of finance, Judah Benveniste, had settled
-here. From his paternal inheritance he had saved enough to possess
-a noble library; he was the standard around which his heavily-tried
-brethren could rally. Representatives of Talmudic learning were
-naturally found among the sons of the Pyrenean Peninsula only, such as
-the Taytasaks, a family of scholars, and Jacob Ibn-Chabib, though even
-they were not men of the first eminence. Spanish immigrants, such as
-the physicians Perachyah Cohen, his son Daniel, Aaron Afia (Affius),
-and Moses Almosnino, also cultivated philosophy and astronomy to some
-extent. But the chief study was that of the Kabbala, in which the
-Spaniards, Joseph Taytasak, Samuel Franco, and others, distinguished
-themselves. Salonica in Turkey and Safet in Palestine in time became
-the chief seats of Kabbalistic extravagance. Of less importance was
-Adrianople, the former residence of the Turkish sultans, though there
-also, as at Nicopolis, communities in which the Sephardic element
-predominated were formed.
-
-To the towns of Amasia, Broussa, Tria and Tokat in Asia Minor, the
-Spanish fugitives furnished inhabitants. Smyrna, which later on had
-a large Jewish population, was then of little importance. Greece,
-however, could show some large communities. Calabrese, Apulian, Spanish
-and Portuguese fugitives settled at Arta or Larta, by the side of the
-original inhabitants, Rumelians and Corfuites. They seem to have done
-well here, for we read that the Jewish youth were much given to gayety
-and dancing, thereby greatly offending the ultra-pious. Not unimportant
-communities existed at Patras, Negropont and Thebes. The Thebans were
-considered very learned in Talmudic lore. The rites of the community of
-Corfu were followed by the other Jews of Greece. There was an important
-community at Canea, on the island of Candia, belonging to Venice. At
-their head were two famous families, the Delmedigos, sons and relatives
-of the philosopher Elias del Medigo, and the Kapsalis, connections
-of the former chief rabbi of Turkey. Judah Delmedigo (the son of the
-teacher of Pico di Mirandola), and Elias ben Elkanah Kapsali, finished
-their studies under the same rabbi, Judah Menz, of Padua; nevertheless,
-they were not at one in their views. As both held the office of rabbi
-at Canea, there was constant friction between them. If the one declared
-anything to be permissible, the other exerted all his learning and
-ingenuity to prove the contrary; yet both were worthy men of high
-principle, and both were well versed in general literature.
-
-Elias Kapsali (born about 1490, died about 1555) was a good historian.
-When the plague devastated Candia, and plunged the inhabitants into
-mourning, he composed (in 1523) a history of the Turkish dynasty in a
-very agreeable Hebrew style, in lucid and elevated language, free from
-pompous and barbarous diction. Kapsali merely aimed at relating the
-truth. Interwoven with the Turkish narrative was the history of the
-Jews, showing in gloomy colors the tragic fate of the Spanish exiles,
-as he had heard it from their own lips. Though in this composition
-he had the subsidiary intention of cheering the people during the
-continuance of the plague, his work may serve as a sample of a fine
-Hebrew historical style. It has, indeed, found imitators. Kapsali
-forsook the dry diction of the chroniclers, and as an historian was far
-superior to his predecessor, Abraham Zacuto. Considering that Kapsali
-was a rabbi by profession, and that in consultations and the giving
-of opinions he was bound to make use of a corrupt jargon, his work
-displays much versatility and talent.
-
-Italy at this period swarmed with fugitive Jews. Most of those driven
-from Spain, Portugal and Germany first touched Italian soil, either to
-settle there under the protection of some tolerant ruler, or to travel
-on to Greece, Turkey, or Palestine. Strangely enough, among the masters
-of Italy the popes were most friendly to the Jews: Alexander VI, Julius
-II, Leo X, and Clement VII, were pursuing interests, or devoting
-themselves to hobbies, which left them no time to think of torturing
-Jews. The popes and their cardinals considered the canonical laws only
-in so far as they needed them for the extension of their power or to
-fill their money-bags. Totally oblivious of the decree of the council
-of Basle, which enacted that Christians were not to consult Jewish
-physicians, the popes and cardinals themselves chose Jews as their
-physicians in ordinary. It appears that, owing to the secret warfare,
-the intrigues and the frequent use of poison, which, since Alexander
-VI, had been rife in the curia, where every one looked on his companion
-as an enemy, Jewish physicians were in favor, because there was no
-danger of their offering a pope or cardinal a poisoned cup instead of a
-salutary remedy. Alexander VI had a Jewish physician, Bonet de Lates, a
-native of Provence, who practiced astrology, prepared an astronomical
-circle, and sent the pope the Latin description thereof with a fulsome
-dedication. Bonet de Lates afterwards became the favorite physician in
-ordinary to Leo X, and influenced his conduct. Julius II had for his
-physician Simon Zarfati, who in other respects also enjoyed his masters
-confidence. Cardinals and other high princes of the church followed
-their examples, and generally intrusted their sacred bodies to Jewish
-doctors, who consequently were much sought after in Italy. Following
-the example of the popes, the northern Italian cities received fugitive
-Jews, even pseudo-Christians re-converted to Judaism, from Spain and
-Germany, and admitted them to all the privileges of free intercourse.
-Even the popes permitted Marranos to settle at Ancona, notwithstanding
-their having been baptized. The most important communities in Italy
-were formed, after the annihilation of the Jews of Naples, by an influx
-from other countries into Roman and Venetian territory; in the latter,
-Venice and the flourishing city of Padua, in the former, Rome and the
-port of Ancona, receiving most of them. Two opposite views with regard
-to Jews swayed the council of the egotistical Venetian republic. On the
-one hand, this commercial state did not wish to lose the advantages
-that Jewish connections might bring, though at the same time it was
-loath to foster them, for fear of offending the Levantine Jews, their
-co-religionists in Turkey; on the other hand, the Venetian merchants
-were full of trade envy against Jews. Hence the latter were caressed or
-oppressed as the one or the other party predominated in the Signoria.
-Venice was the first Italian city wherein Jews resided which set apart
-a special quarter as a Ghetto (March, 1516).
-
-As a rule the immigrant Jews, Spaniards or Germans, obtained supremacy
-in Italy over native Jews, both in rabbinical learning and communal
-relations. The Abrabanels played an important part in Italy. The
-head of the family, Isaac Abrabanel, indeed, was too much bowed down
-by age and suffering to exercise much influence in any direction. He
-died before Jewish affairs had assumed a settled condition. His eldest
-son, Leon Medigo, likewise made no impression on his surroundings; he
-was too much of a philosophical dreamer and idealist, a poetic soul
-averse to dealing with the things of this world. Only the youngest of
-the three brothers, Samuel Abrabanel (born 1473, died about 1550) left
-his mark on his contemporaries. He was considered the most eminent
-Jew in Italy, and his community venerated him like a prince. He alone
-inherited his father's financial genius, and, after his return from
-the Talmudic college at Salonica, appears to have availed himself
-of it, and to have been employed in the department of finance by
-the viceroy of Naples, Don Pedro de Toledo. At Naples he acquired a
-considerable fortune, valued at more than 200,000 zechins. He employed
-his wealth to gratify the disposition hereditary in his family to
-practice noble beneficence. The Jewish poet, Samuel Usque, gives an
-enthusiastic description of his heart and mind: "Samuel Abrabanel
-deserves to be called Trismegistus (thrice great); he is great and wise
-in the Law, great in nobility, and great in riches. With his wealth
-he is always magnanimous, a help in the sorrows of his brethren. He
-joins innumerable orphans in wedlock, supports the needy, and redeems
-captives, so that he possesses all the great qualities which make the
-prophet."
-
-To increase his happiness heaven had given him a companion in life, the
-complement of his high virtues, whose name, Benvenida Abrabanela, was
-uttered by her contemporaries with devout veneration. Tender-hearted,
-deeply religious, wise and courageous, she was a pattern of refinement
-and high breeding, qualities more highly esteemed in Italy than in any
-other European country. Don Pedro, the powerful Spanish viceroy of
-Naples, allowed his second daughter, Leonora, to be on intimate terms
-with Benvenida, that she might learn by her example. When this daughter
-afterwards became Duchess of Tuscany, she kept up her acquaintance
-with the Jewish lady, and called her by the honored name of mother.
-This noble pair, Samuel Abrabanel and Benvenida, in whom tenderness
-and worldly wisdom, warm attachment to Judaism and social intercourse
-with non-Jewish circles were combined, were at once the pride and the
-sheet-anchor of the Italian Jews, and of all who came under their
-beneficent influence. Samuel Abrabanel, though not so well versed in
-the Talmud as his poetic worshiper represents him to have been, was a
-friend and promoter of Jewish knowledge. To fill the office of rabbi at
-Naples, he sent for David Ibn-Yachya and his young, courageous wife,
-who had fled from Portugal (1518); and, as the congregation was too
-small to pay his salary, Abrabanel paid it himself. In his house the
-learned Yachya lectured on the Talmud, and probably also on Hebrew
-grammar. He thus formed a center for Jewish science in southern Italy.
-Christian men of science also resorted to Abrabanel's house.
-
-The chief seat of Talmudic or rabbinical studies was at that time
-at Padua, where presided not Italians but immigrant Germans. Judah
-Menz, of Mayence, even at his great age of more than a hundred years,
-exercised attractive power over studious disciples from Italy, Germany,
-and Turkey, as though from his lips they would learn the wisdom of
-a time about to pass away. To be a pupil of Menz, was considered a
-great honor and distinction. After he died, his son, Abraham Menz,
-undertook the direction of the college (1504-1526); but his authority
-was not undisputed. The native Jews have in no direction left names of
-note. The chronicles mention some famous Jewish-Italian physicians,
-who also distinguished themselves in other branches, such as Abraham
-de Balmes (1521), of Lecce, physician and friend of Cardinal Grimani.
-De Balmes possessed philosophical knowledge, and wrote a work on
-the Hebrew language, which was published with a Latin translation
-by a Christian. Other Jewish physicians of the same age were Judah,
-or Laudadeus de Blanis, at Perugia, a worshiper of the Kabbala, and
-Obadyah, or Servadeus de Sforno (Sfurno, born about 1470, died 1550), a
-physician of Rome and Bologna, who, besides medicine, studied biblical
-and philosophical subjects, and dedicated some of his Hebrew writings
-with a Latin translation to King Henry II, of France. But, as far as we
-are now able to judge of these highly praised compositions, they are
-mediocre, and the authors, even in their own times, enjoyed but local
-reputation. It is certain that De Balmes and Sforno are far beneath
-Jacob Mantin, who, driven from Tortosa to Italy, there distinguished
-himself as a physician and philosopher, leaving a famous name behind
-him. Mantin (born about 1490, died about 1549) was a great linguist;
-beside his native language and Hebrew, he understood Latin, Italian
-and Arabic. He was a deeply learned physician and philosopher, and
-translated medical and metaphysical works from Hebrew or Arabic into
-Latin. He was held in high esteem as physician by a pope and the
-ambassador of Charles V at Venice. But his learning was marred by his
-iniquitous character; envy and ambition led him to commit wicked deeds,
-to accuse and persecute innocent persons, even his own co-religionists.
-
-In those days there lived in Italy a man, who, though not distinguished
-by any brilliant achievement, was superior to nearly all his
-co-religionists by a qualification better and rarer than literary
-ability. He was gifted with common sense and a fine understanding,
-which led him not to judge of things by appearances, or from a limited
-point of view. Abraham Farissol (born 1451, died about 1525), a native
-of Avignon, for reasons unknown, perhaps from want, had emigrated to
-Ferrara. He supported himself by copying books, and also, it would
-appear, by officiating as chorister at the synagogue. Though he was
-in needy circumstances, and confined within narrow surroundings, his
-perception was acute, his horizon wide, and his judgment matured. Like
-most of his learned contemporaries in Italy, he commented on the Bible,
-and his independence of thought in the midst of the dense credulity of
-his time constitutes his claim upon pre-eminence. He said of himself,
-"As regards miracles, I belong to those of little faith." Farissol was
-the first Jewish author who, instead of studying the starry firmament,
-astronomy and astrology (to which Jewish authors of the Middle Ages
-were but too much inclined), turned his attention to investigate
-the configuration and phenomena of our globe. He was influenced to
-undertake these studies by the marvelous discoveries of the southern
-coasts of Africa and India by the Portuguese, and of America by the
-Spaniards. Penetrating mediaeval mist and the deceptive illusions
-of fancy, Farissol saw things as they actually are, and deeming it
-necessary to point them out, he scoffed at ignorant men who, in their
-pseudo-learned conceit, considered geography of no account. He had to
-show conclusively that the Book of books, the holy record of the Torah,
-attached importance to geographical data, in doing which he indicated a
-new point of view for the comprehension of the Bible: it was not to be
-explained by allegories and metaphysical or Kabbalistic reveries, but
-by actual facts and the plain meaning of the words.
-
-Farissol had access to the court of the duke of Ferrara, Hercules
-d'Este I, one of the best princes of Italy, who vied with the
-Medici in the promotion of science. The duke took delight in his
-conversation, and often invited him to discuss religious questions
-with learned monks. It seemed as if frequent religious disputations and
-intellectual encounters were to be renewed on Italian soil. Farissol
-displayed philosophical calm, besides caution, and forbearance for
-the sensibilities of his opponents, when touching upon their weak
-points. At the request of the duke of Ferrara, Farissol wrote down in
-Hebrew the substance of his discourses with the monks, and reproduced
-it in Italian, to give his opponents an opportunity for refutation.
-But his polemical and apologetic work is of much less value than his
-geographical writings, which he completed in his old age, with one foot
-in the grave. They display Farissol's clear mind, common sense and
-extensive learning.
-
-The Italian Jews had at least the right of free discussion with
-Christians. But as soon as they crossed the Alps into Germany they
-breathed raw air, politically as well as atmospherically. Few Sephardic
-fugitives visited this inhospitable land. The German population was as
-hostile to Jews as the Spanish. True, the Germans had no occasion to
-envy Jews on account of the position and influence of Jewish magnates
-at royal courts, but they grudged them even their miserable existence
-in the Jews' lanes in which they were penned up. They had been banished
-from some German districts, from Cologne, Mayence and Augsburg, and
-not a Jew was to be found in all Suabia. From other parts they were
-expelled at about the same time as from Spain. Emperor Frederick III
-to his last hour protected those outlawed by all the world. He even
-had a Jewish physician, a rarity in Germany, the learned Jacob ben
-Yechiel Loans, whom he greatly favored, and made a knight. Frederick
-is said on his death-bed to have strongly recommended the Jews to his
-son, enjoining on him to protect them, and not to listen to calumnious
-accusations, whose falsity he had fathomed. It appears that Jacob Loans
-also enjoyed the favor of Emperor Maximilian, whose lot it was to rule
-over Germany in very troublous times. He transferred this favor to
-Loans' relatives, for he appointed a certain Joseph ben Gershon Loans,
-of Rosheim, in Alsace, as official representative of all German Jews at
-the diet. This Joseph (Josselman, Joselin) was distinguished neither
-by his rabbinical knowledge, nor his position, nor riches; yet, to a
-certain extent, he was the official representative of German Judaism.
-His most striking qualities were untiring activity, when it was
-necessary to defend his unfortunate co-religionists, his love of truth,
-and fervent clinging to his faith and people. Born 1480, died 1555, for
-half a century he vigorously protected his co-religionists in Germany,
-and became security for them when the ruling powers insisted on special
-bail. The Jews, therefore, praised and blessed him as their "Great
-Defender."
-
-But the very fact that the German Jews needed a defender proves that
-their condition was not easy. For Emperor Maximilian was not a man
-of decided character, but was swayed by all kinds of influences and
-insinuations; nor did he always follow his father's advice. His conduct
-towards the Jews, therefore, was always wavering; now he granted, or
-at least promised, them his protection; now he offered his help, if
-not for their sanguinary persecution, at least for their expulsion or
-humiliation. At times he lent ear to the lying accusations that the
-Jews reviled the host, and murdered infants, falsehoods diligently
-promulgated by Dominican friars, and, since the alleged martyrdom of
-young Simon of Trent, readily believed. Hence, during Maximilian's
-reign, Jews were not only expelled from Germany and the adjoining
-states, but were hunted down and tortured; they were in daily
-expectation of the rack, and of the martyr's death, so that a special
-confession of sins was drawn up for such cases, and the innocently
-accused, summoned to apostatize, sealed their confession with death,
-and joyfully sacrificed themselves for the One God. When, either with
-the sanction or by the passive permission of the emperor, Jews were
-banished, he felt no compunction in confiscating their property and
-turning it into money.
-
-The emperor did not, indeed, expel the Nuremberg community, but for
-a pecuniary consideration gave the citizens leave to do so. Yet
-Christians presumed to reproach Jews with making money unjustly,
-whereas only the rich did so, and then only on a small scale.
-Immediately after the emperor's accession, the townsmen of Nuremberg
-appealed to him to permit the expulsion of the Jews on account of
-"loose conduct." This "loose conduct" was explained in the indictment
-to be the reception of foreign co-religionists, whereby the normal
-number of Jews had been excessively increased in the town; the practice
-of inordinate usury; fraud in recovery of debts, whereby honest
-tradesmen had been impoverished, and finally the harboring of rogues
-and vagabonds. To stir up hatred against them, and to confirm the Latin
-reading (_i. e._, the educated) classes, in the illusion that Jews were
-blasphemers, revilers of the host and infanticides, the rich citizen,
-Antonius Koberger, had the venomous anti-Jewish _Fortalitium fidei_
-of the Spanish Franciscan, Alfonso de Spina, reprinted at his own
-expense. After long petitioning, Emperor Maximilian at last granted the
-prayer of Nuremberg, "on account of the fidelity with which the town
-had ever served the imperial house," abrogated the privileges enjoyed
-by the Jews, and allowed the town council to fix a time for their
-expulsion, stipulating, however, that the houses, lands, synagogues,
-and even the Jewish cemetery should fall to the imperial treasury. He,
-moreover, granted to Nuremberg the privilege of being forever exempt
-from receiving Jews within its walls (July 5th, 1498). The town council
-at first allowed four months only for the exodus--and the cultured,
-virtuous and humanity-preaching patrician, Willibald Pirkheimer,
-afterwards so strong a pillar of the Humanists, was then a member of
-the council! Upon the supplications of the unfortunate people, the
-short reprieve was prolonged by three months. But the Jews, summoned to
-the synagogue by the sheriffs, had to swear to leave the town by that
-time. At last, on March 10th, 1499, the much reduced community left
-Nuremberg, to which it had returned after the Black Death.
-
-At about the same time the Jews of other German towns, Ulm, Nordlingen,
-Colmar, and Magdeburg, were sent into banishment.
-
-The community of Ratisbon, then the oldest in Germany, was to fare
-still worse; even then it heard the warning voice to prepare for
-expulsion. Since the inhabitants of that imperial city, through the
-disputes with the Jews growing out of the false blood-accusation,
-had suffered humiliation and pecuniary loss at the hands of Emperor
-Frederick, the former friendly feeling between Jews and Christians had
-given way to bitterness and hatred. Instead of attributing to the right
-cause the troubles and misfortunes which had come upon the town by its
-attempted secession from the empire, the citizens charged the Jews
-with being the authors of their misfortunes, and vented their anger on
-them. The priests, exasperated by the failure of their plot against
-the Jews, daily stirred up the fanaticism of the populace, openly
-preaching that the Jews must be expelled. The millers refused to sell
-them flour, the bakers, bread (1499), for the clergy had threatened
-the tradespeople with excommunication if they supplied them with food.
-On certain days Jews were not admitted into the market place, on
-others they were allowed to make their purchases only after stated
-hours, when the Christians had satisfied their wants. "Under severe
-penalties," imposed by the senate, Christians were prohibited from
-making purchases for Jews; the former were to "secure the glory of God
-and their own salvation" by being cruel to the latter. The town council
-seriously discussed applying to Emperor Maximilian to give his consent
-to the expulsion of the Jews, allowing about twenty-four families to
-remain. For a few years more they were permitted to drag on a miserable
-existence. Besides Ratisbon, only two large communities remained in
-Germany, viz., at Frankfort-on-the-Main and Worms, and even these were
-often threatened with expulsion.
-
-There were many Jews in Prague, but this town was not in Germany
-proper; Bohemia was counted a private possession of the crown, under
-the rule of Ladislaus, king of Hungary. The Bohemian Jews were not too
-well off under him; the Jewish quarter in Prague was often plundered
-by the populace. The citizens were sincerely anxious to expel the Jews
-from Bohemia. But the latter had their patrons, especially among the
-nobility. When, at a diet, the question of the expulsion or retention
-of the Jews arose, the decree was passed (August 7th, 1501) that the
-crown of Bohemia was for all time to tolerate them. If any one of them
-offended against the law, he only was to be punished; his crime was not
-to be visited on the whole Jewish community. King Ladislaus confirmed
-this decision of the diet, only to break it very shortly after, for the
-citizens of Prague were opposed to it, and spared no pains to frustrate
-its fulfillment. They so strongly prejudiced the king against the
-Jews as to induce him to decree their expulsion, and to threaten with
-banishment such Christians as should venture to intercede for them. By
-what favorable dispensation they remained in the country is not known.
-Though in daily expectation of expatriation, they grew reconciled to
-having their habitation on the verge of a volcano. A descendant of the
-Italian family of printers, Soncinus, named Gershon Cohen, established
-a Hebrew printing office at Prague (about 1503), the first in Germany,
-nearly four decades after the foundation of Hebrew printing offices in
-Italy.
-
-The Prague community does not seem to have excelled in learning; for
-some time not a single scientific work, not even one on a Talmudic
-or rabbinical subject, issued from the press of Gershon; it merely
-supplied the needs of the synagogue, whilst Italian and Turkish offices
-spread important ancient and contemporary works. We find but one
-rabbinical authority mentioned in those days: Jacob Polak (born about
-1460, died about 1530), the originator of a new method of Talmud study,
-a foreigner, and, with the exception of his namesake Jacob Berab,
-in the East, the most profound and sagacious Talmudist of his time.
-Curiously enough, the astonishing facility of ingenious disquisition on
-the basis of the Talmud (Pilpul), attributed to Polak, which attained
-its highest perfection in Poland, proceeded from a native of Poland.
-
-After Italy and Turkey, Poland was in those days a refuge for hunted
-and exiled wanderers, chiefly for those from Germany. Here, as well as
-in Lithuania, united with Poland under one sovereign, Jews enjoyed a
-better position than in the neighboring lands beyond the Vistula and
-the Carpathians, though the monk Capistrano had for a while interrupted
-the good understanding between the government and the Jews.
-
-Kings and the nobility were, to a certain extent, dependent on them,
-and, when other interests did not conflict, generally granted them
-privileges, because with their capital and commerce they were able
-to turn the territorial wealth of the country into money, and to
-supply its inhabitants, poor in coin, with the necessary funds. The
-farming of the tolls and the distilleries were mostly in the hands
-of Jews. It goes without saying that they also possessed land, and
-carried on trades. Against 500 Christian there were 3,200 Jewish
-wholesale dealers in Poland, and three times as many artificers,
-including workers in gold and silver, smiths and weavers. The statute
-of Casimir IV, so favorable to Jews, was still in force. For though,
-constrained by the fanatical monk Capistrano, he had abrogated it, yet
-in view of the advantages that the crown of Poland derived from the
-Jews, he re-enacted the same laws a few years after. The Jews were
-generally treated as citizens of the state, and were not compelled to
-wear ignominious badges; they were also allowed to carry arms. After
-the death of this politic king, two opponents arose against them:
-on the one hand, the clergy, who saw in the favored position of the
-Polish Jews an offense to Christianity, and on the other, the German
-merchants, who, long settled in Polish towns, had brought with them
-their guilds and old-fashioned prejudices, and hated the Jewish traders
-and artificers from sheer envy. United they succeeded in prejudicing
-the successors of Casimir, his sons John Albert and Alexander, against
-the Jews, so that their privileges were abolished, and the Jews
-themselves confined to particular quarters, or even banished altogether
-from certain towns (1496-1505). But the next sovereign, Sigismund
-I (1506-1548), was favorably disposed towards them, and repeatedly
-protected them against persecution and expulsion. The strongest
-supporters, however, of the Polish Jews were the Polish nobility, who
-hated the Germans from national and political antipathy, and therefore,
-both from policy and inclination, favored the Jews, and used them as
-their tools against the arrogant Germans. And since the nobles held
-the high official posts, the laws against Jews, to the vexation of the
-clergy and the guilds, remained a dead letter. Poland, therefore, was
-an asylum much sought after by persecuted Jews. If a Jew who had turned
-Christian, or a Christian, wished to become a Jew, he could do so as
-freely in Poland as in Turkey.
-
-The rabbis were important agents for the crown. They had the privilege
-of collecting the poll-tax from the communities and paying it over
-to the state. Therefore, the rabbis of large towns, appointed or
-confirmed by the king, became chiefs in the administration of communal
-affairs, represented the Jews before the crown, and bore the title
-of chief rabbi. The rabbis retained the civil jurisdiction, and
-were authorized to banish unworthy members, and even to inflict the
-punishment of death. But in Poland, the country which for several
-centuries was to become the chief home of the Talmud and the nursery
-of Talmudic students and rabbis, which was long enveloped, as it were,
-in a Talmudic atmosphere, there were no prominent Talmudists at the
-beginning of the sixteenth century; it became the home of the Talmud
-only after the immigration of numerous German scholars. Coming from
-the districts of the Rhine and Main, from Bavaria, Suabia, Bohemia,
-and Austria, swarms of Jewish families settled on the banks of the
-Vistula and the Dnieper, having lost their fortunes, but bringing with
-them their most precious possessions, which they defended with their
-lives, and which they could not be robbed of, namely, their religious
-convictions, the customs of their fathers, and their Talmudic learning.
-The German rabbinical school, which at home had no breathing-space,
-established itself in Poland and Lithuania, in Ruthenia and Volhynia,
-spread in all directions, and, impregnated with Slavonic elements,
-transformed itself into a peculiar, a Polish school.
-
-But the Jewish-German fugitives transplanted to Poland not only the
-knowledge of the Talmud, but also that of the German language, as
-then spoken; this they imparted to the native Jews, and it gradually
-superseded the Polish or Ruthenian tongue. As the Spanish Jews turned
-portions of European and Asiatic Turkey into a new Spain, the German
-Jews transformed Poland, Lithuania, and the territories belonging
-thereto, into a new Germany. For several centuries, therefore, the
-Jews were divided into Spanish and German speaking Jews, the Italian
-speaking members being too small in number to count, especially as in
-Italy the Jews were compelled to understand either Spanish or German.
-The Jews settled in Poland gradually cast off their German awkwardness
-and simplicity, but not the language. They honored it as a palladium,
-as a holy remembrance; and though in their intercourse with Poles they
-made use of the language of the country, in the family circle, and in
-their schools and prayers, they adhered to German. They valued it, next
-to Hebrew, as a holy language. It was a fortunate thing for the Jews
-that at the time when new storms gathered over their heads in Germany,
-they found on her borders a country which offered them a hospitable
-welcome and protection. For a tempest burst in Germany, which had its
-first beginnings in the narrow Jewish circle, but eventually drew on
-the Jews the attention of all Christendom. An eventful, historical
-birth, which was to change the face of European affairs, lay, so to
-speak, in a Jewish manger.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-REUCHLIN AND THE TALMUD.
-
- Antecedents of the Convert John Pfefferkorn--Pfefferkorn and
- the Dominicans of Cologne--Hoogstraten, Ortuinus Gratius
- and Arnold of Tongern--Victor von Karben--Attacks on the
- Talmud and Confiscation of Copies in Frankfort--Reuchlin's
- Hebrew and Kabbalistic Studies--The Controversy concerning
- the Talmud--Activity on both Sides--Public Excitement--
- Complete Victory of Reuchlin's Efforts in Defense of Jewish
- Literature--Ulrich von Hutten--Luther--Revival of Hebrew
- Studies.
-
-1500-1520 C.E.
-
-
-Who could have anticipated that from the German nation, everywhere
-considered heavy and stupid, from the land of lawless knights, of daily
-feuds about trifles, of confused political conditions, where everyone
-was both despot and slave, mercilessly oppressing his inferiors, and
-pitifully cringing to his superiors--who could have anticipated that
-from this people and this country would proceed a movement destined
-to shake European affairs to their center, create new political
-conditions, give the Middle Ages their death-blow, and set its seal
-on the dawn of a new historical era? A reformation of church and
-politics, such as enlightened minds then dreamt of, was least expected
-from Germany. Yet there slumbered latent powers in that country, which
-only needed awaking to develop into regenerating forces. The Germans
-still adhered to ancient simplicity of life and severity of morals,
-pedantic, it is true, and ludicrous in manifestation; whilst the
-leading Romance countries, Italy, France and Spain, were suffering from
-over-refinement, surfeit and moral corruption. Because the Germans
-had retained their original Teutonic dullness, the clergy could not
-altogether succeed in infecting them with the poison of their vicious
-teaching. Their lower clergy, compared with that of other European
-countries, was more chaste and modest. The innate love of family life
-and genial association, which the Germans have in common with Jews,
-preserved them from that moral depravity to which the Romance nations
-had already succumbed. In the educated circles of Italy, especially
-at the papal court, Christianity and its doctrines were sneered at;
-the political power they conferred alone being valued. But in Germany,
-where there was little laughter, except in taverns, Christianity was
-treated as a more serious matter; it was looked upon as an ideal, which
-had once been alive, and would live again.
-
-But these moral germs in the German race were so deeply buried that
-it needed favorable circumstances to bring them to light, and cause
-them to stand forth as historical potencies. However much the Germans
-themselves may ignore it, the Talmud had a great share in the awakening
-of these slumbering forces. We can boldly assert that the war for and
-against the Talmud aroused German consciousness, and created a public
-opinion, without which the Reformation, like many other efforts, would
-have died in the hour of birth, or, perhaps, would never have been
-born at all. A paltry grain of sand caused the fall of an avalanche,
-which shook the earth around. The instrument of this mighty change
-was an ignorant, thoroughly vile creature, the scum of the Jewish
-people, who does not deserve to be mentioned in history or literature,
-but whom Providence seems to have appointed like some noisome insect
-involuntarily to accomplish a useful work.
-
-Joseph Pfefferkorn, a native of Moravia, was by trade a butcher, and,
-as may easily be surmised, illiterate. His moral turpitude was even
-greater than his ignorance. He committed a burglary, was caught,
-condemned to imprisonment by Count de Guttenstein, and released only
-at the urgent prayers of his relatives, and on payment of a fine. It
-appears that he hoped to wash away this disgrace with baptismal water;
-the church was not scrupulous, and received even this despicable
-wretch, when at the age of thirty-six he presented himself with wife
-and children, to be received into Christianity (about 1505?). He
-seems to have been baptized at Cologne; at any rate, he was kept and
-made much of by the ignorant, proud and fanatical Dominicans of that
-city. Cologne was an owls' nest of light-shunning swaggerers, who
-endeavored to obscure the dawn of a bright day with the dark clouds
-of superstition, hostile to knowledge. At their head was Hochstraten
-(Hoogstraten), an inquisitor or heretic-hunter, a violent, reckless
-man, who literally longed for the smell of burning heretics, and in
-Spain would have been a useful Torquemada. His counterpart was Arnold
-of Tongern (Tungern), a Dominican professor of theology. The third
-in the coalition was Ortuin de Graes, of Deventer (who Latinized his
-name to Ortuinus Gratius), the son of a clergyman. Ortuin de Graes
-entertained so violent a hatred against Jews that it could not have
-been due solely to religious zeal. He made it his special business
-to stir up the wrath of the Christians by anti-Jewish writings. But
-as he was too ignorant to concoct a book or even a pamphlet, he
-surrounded himself with baptized Jews, who had to supply him with
-materials. A Jew, who, during a persecution or for some reason, had
-become a convert to Christianity in his fiftieth year, and assumed
-the name of Victor von Karben, though he had but little Hebrew and
-rabbinical learning, was dubbed rabbi, in order to give more weight to
-his attacks on Judaism and to his confession of Christianity. It is
-not precisely known whether Victor von Karben, who sorrowfully stated
-that on his conversion he left his wife, three children, brothers and
-dear friends, voluntarily or by compulsion reproached the Jews with
-hating Christians and reviling Christianity. He supplied Ortuinus
-Gratius with materials for accusations against them, their Talmud,
-their errors and abominations, which Ortuinus worked up into a book.
-But Victor von Karben appears, after all, not to have been of much
-service, or he was too old (born 1442, died 1515) to assist in the
-execution of a deep scheme, destined to bring profitable business to
-the Dominicans, the heresy-judges of men and writings. But they needed
-a Jew for this purpose; their own order had not long before got into
-rather bad odor. Pfefferkorn was the very man for them. He lent his
-name to a new anti-Jewish publication, written in Latin by Ortuinus
-Gratius. It was entitled "A Mirror for Admonition," inviting the Jews
-to be converted to Christianity. This first anti-Jewish book with
-Pfefferkorn's name dealt gently with the Jews, even sought to show the
-groundlessness of the frequent accusations with regard to stealing and
-murdering Christian children. It entreats Christians not to banish the
-Jews, nor to oppress them too heavily, since to a certain extent they
-are human beings. But this friendliness was only a mask, a feeler put
-forth to gain firm ground. For the Cologne Dominicans aimed at the
-confiscation of the Talmudic writings, as in the days of Saint Louis of
-France. This was distantly pointed to in Pfefferkorn's first pamphlet,
-which endeavored to throw suspicion on the Talmud, and adduced three
-reasons to explain the stiff-necked unbelief of Jews: their practice
-of usury, the fact that they were not compelled to go to church, and
-their attachment to the Talmud. These obstacles once removed, Jews
-would throng to church in crowds. The pamphlet, therefore, admonished
-princes and people to check the usury of the Jews, to compel them
-to attend church and listen to sermons, and to burn the Talmud. It
-admitted that it is not just to infringe upon the Jews' claim to
-their writings, but Christians did not hesitate, in certain cases, to
-do violence to Jews, and compared with that the confiscation of the
-Talmudic books was a venial offense. This was the sole object of the
-pamphlet under Pfefferkorn's name. It was generally believed in Germany
-that the Cologne owls expected to do a good stroke of business; if
-they could induce the ruling powers to sequestrate all copies of the
-Talmud, Dominicans, as inquisitors, would have the disposal of them,
-and the Jews, who could not do without the Talmud, would pour their
-wealth into Dominican coffers to have the confiscation annulled. Hence,
-in the succeeding two years, still putting Pfefferkorn forward as the
-author, they published several pamphlets, wherein it was asserted to
-be a Christian duty to expel all Jews, like so many mangy dogs. If the
-princes would not do so, the people were to take the matter into their
-own hands, solicit their rulers to deprive the Jews of all their books
-except the Bible, forcibly take from them all pledges, above all, see
-that their children be brought up as Christians, and expel the adults
-as incorrigible rogues. It was no sin to do the worst to Jews, as they
-were not freemen, but body and soul the property of the princes. If
-they refused to listen to the prayer of their subjects, the people were
-to assemble in masses, even create a riot, and impetuously demand the
-fulfillment of the Christian duty of degrading the Jews. The masses
-were to declare themselves champions of Christ, and carry out his will.
-Whoso did an injury to Jews was a follower of Christ; whoso favored
-them was worse than they, and would hereafter be punished with eternal
-suffering and hell fire.
-
-But Pfefferkorn, Ortuinus Gratius and the Cologne Dominicans had come
-too late in the day. Riots for the killing of Jews, though they were no
-less hated and despised than in the times of the crusades and of the
-Black Death, were no longer the fashion. Princes were little disposed
-to expel the Jews, since with them a regular revenue would disappear.
-Zeal for the conversion of Jews had considerably cooled down; in fact,
-many Christians pointed scornfully at baptized Jews, saying that they
-resembled clean linen: as long as it is fresh the eye delights in it,
-after a few days' wear it is cast aside as soiled. Thus a converted
-Jew, immediately after his baptism, is cherished by the Christians;
-when some days have passed he is neglected, avoided, and finally made
-sport of.
-
-The German Jews, dreading new dangers from Pfefferkorn's zeal,
-endeavored to thwart him. Jewish physicians, usually held in high
-favor at the courts of princes, appear to have exerted their influence
-with their patrons to show the falsity of Pfefferkorn's accusations,
-and to render them ineffectual. Even Christians manifested their
-dissatisfaction with the machinations of the baptized Jew, and loudly
-proclaimed Pfefferkorn to be a worthless fellow and a hypocrite, who
-was not to be believed, his object being simply to delude the foolish,
-and fill his own purse. He, therefore, published a new pamphlet
-(March, 1509), which he impudently entitled "The Enemy of the Jews."
-This venomous libel reiterated all his former accusations, and showed
-how the Jews, by charging interest on interest, impoverished the
-Christians. He blackened the character of Jewish physicians, saying
-that they were quacks, who endangered the lives of their Christian
-patients. It was, therefore, necessary to expel the Jews from
-Germany, as Emperor Maximilian had driven them from Austria, Styria
-and Carinthia; or if allowed to remain, they were to be employed in
-cleansing the streets, sweeping chimneys, removing filth and carrion,
-and in similar occupations. But, above all, every copy of the Talmud,
-and all books relating to their religion, the Bible excepted, were to
-be taken from them. In order effectually to carry out this step, house
-to house visitation was to be made, and the Jews were to be compelled,
-if necessary by torture, to surrender their books. Ortuinus Gratius had
-a hand in the drawing up of this pamphlet, too.
-
-These venomous writings in German and Latin were but means and
-preliminaries to a plan which was to realize the hopes of the
-Dominicans of Cologne, the public burning of the theological books
-of the Jews, or their conversion into a source of profit. They urged
-Emperor Maximilian, who did not easily lend himself to the commission
-of a deed of violence, to deliver the Jews, together with their books
-and purses, to their tender mercies. For this purpose they called in
-the aid of the bigotry of an unfortunate princess.
-
-Kunigunde, the beautiful sister of Maximilian and favorite daughter of
-Emperor Frederick, in her youth had been the cause of much affliction
-to her aged sire. Without her father's knowledge she had married his
-declared enemy, the Bavarian duke, Albert of Munich. For a long time
-her deeply offended father would not allow her name to be mentioned.
-When her husband died in the prime of manhood (1508), his widow,
-perhaps repenting her youthful error, entered a Franciscan convent at
-Munich. She became abbess of the nuns of Sancta Clara, and castigated
-her body. The Dominicans hoped to turn to good purpose the gloomy
-character of this princess. They furnished Pfefferkorn with letters
-of introduction to her. With poisoned words he was to detail to her
-the shameful doings of the Jews, their blasphemies against Jesus,
-Mary, the apostles and the church in general, and to demonstrate to
-her that the Jewish books which contained all these abominations
-deserved to be destroyed. A woman, moreover a superstitious one, whose
-mind has been dulled in convent walls, is easily persuaded. Kunigunde
-readily believed the calumnies against the Jews and their religious
-literature, especially as they were uttered by a former Jew, who could
-not but be acquainted with their habits and wickedness, and who assured
-her that after the destruction of the Jewish books all Hebrews would
-gradually be converted to Christianity. Pfefferkorn easily obtained
-from the bigoted nun what he wanted. She gave him a pressing letter to
-her imperial brother, conjuring him to put a stop to Jewish blasphemies
-against Christianity, and to issue a decree that all their writings,
-except the Bible, be taken from the Jews and burnt, lest the sins of
-blasphemy daily committed by them fall on his crowned head. Furnished
-with this missive, Pfefferkorn straightway went to Italy, to the camp
-of the emperor.
-
-The fanatical letter of Kunigunde and the calumnies of Pfefferkorn
-succeeded in extorting from Maximilian a mandate, dated August 19th,
-1509, giving the baptized miscreant full power over Jews. He was
-authorized to examine Hebrew writings anywhere in the German empire,
-and to destroy all whose contents were hostile to the Bible and the
-Christian faith. The Jews were enjoined, under heavy penalties to
-person and property, to offer no resistance, but to submit their
-books to Pfefferkorn's examination. Pfefferkorn, with the emperor's
-authority, returned triumphantly to Germany, to open his campaign
-against Jewish books or Jewish purses. He began his business, which
-promised profit, with the community at Frankfort, then the most
-important of Germany, where many Talmud scholars, consequently many
-copies of that work, besides many rich Jews, were to be found. On
-Pfefferkorn's demand, the senate assembled all the Jews in the
-synagogue, and communicated to them the emperor's order to surrender
-their books.
-
-In the presence of clergymen and members of the senate, all
-prayer-books found in the synagogue were confiscated. It happened to
-be the eve of the Feast of Tabernacles (Friday, September 28th).
-By his own authority, or pretending to hold it from the emperor,
-Pfefferkorn forbade the Jews to attend the synagogue on the day of
-the feast; he intended to hold a house to house visitation on that
-day, for he was very anxious to get hold of copies of the Talmud. The
-clergymen present, however, were not so inconsiderate as to turn the
-feast of the Jews into mourning, but deferred the search for books
-till the following Monday. How did the Jews act? That they dared
-protest against this arbitrary proceeding proves that a new order of
-things had arisen. No longer as formerly in Germany did they submit,
-with the dumb submission of lambs, to spoliation and death. They
-appealed to the charters of various popes and emperors, granting them
-religious liberty, which included possession of their prayer-books
-and text-books. They demanded a delay of the confiscation in order
-to appeal to the emperor and the supreme court of judicature. The
-directors of the community of Frankfort immediately sent a deputy to
-the elector and archbishop of Mayence, Uriel von Gemmingen, in whose
-diocese Frankfort was situate, to induce him to forbid the clergy to
-co-operate in this injustice. When Pfefferkorn began his house to
-house visitation, the Jews protested so energetically that it had to
-be deferred until the senate decided whether or not their objection
-was to be allowed. The decision of the sapient senate was unfavorable;
-but when the confiscation was about to be commenced, a letter from the
-archbishop arrived, prohibiting the clergy from lending Pfefferkorn
-any assistance. This frustrated the scheme; for the senators also
-withdrew from the transaction as soon as they knew that the highest
-ecclesiastical dignitary in Germany sided with the Jews. The latter
-were not idle. For, though they did not know that the powerful
-Dominicans stood behind Pfefferkorn, they suspected that persons,
-hostile to the Jews, used this spiteful wretch to stir up persecution
-against them. They at once dispatched a defender of their cause to
-the emperor, and another to the German communities, far and near, to
-appoint a general synod, to be summoned for the succeeding month, to
-consider what steps should be taken, and to raise funds.
-
-Temporarily this unpleasant business seemed to take a turn favorable to
-the Jews. The senate of Frankfort remained passive, except in laying
-an embargo on the packets of books belonging to Jewish booksellers,
-and forbidding their sale. The conduct of the archbishop was what
-benefited them most. Either from a sense of justice--he was generally
-fair in his dealings--from a kindly feeling for the Jews, from a
-dislike of Dominican heretic-hunting, or, finally, from jealousy of
-the emperor's interference with his functions, in giving so miserable
-a wretch as Pfefferkorn spiritual jurisdiction in his diocese, Uriel
-von Gemmingen took the part of the Jews. He addressed a letter to the
-emperor (October 5th), wherein he gently insinuated that he was to
-blame for having given full powers to so ignorant a man as Pfefferkorn,
-and asserted that to his knowledge no blasphemous or anti-Christian
-writings were in the possession of the Jews of his diocese, and
-hinted that if the emperor absolutely insisted on the examination and
-confiscation of Hebrew literature, he must employ an expert. He was so
-zealous on behalf of the Jews as to write to Von Hutten, his agent at
-the imperial court, to assist the Jews in laying their case before the
-emperor. In the meantime, not to betray his partisanship, he invited
-Pfefferkorn to Aschaffenburg, and informed him that his mandate from
-the emperor was faulty in form, whereby it became ineffectual, for the
-Jews would dispute its validity.
-
-At this interview the name of Reuchlin was mentioned for the first
-time, whether by the archbishop or by Pfefferkorn is uncertain. It was
-suggested to request the emperor to appoint Reuchlin and Victor von
-Karben Pfefferkorn's coadjutors in the examination of Jewish books.
-Pfefferkorn, or the Dominican friars themselves, thought it necessary
-to secure the co-operation of a man whose learning, character and high
-position would render their proceedings more effective. Reuchlin, the
-pride of Germany, was to be made their associate, so as to disarm
-possible opponents. It was part of their scheme, too, to throw
-discredit, in one way or another, on the man whom obscurantists looked
-upon with disfavor, and who, to their vexation, first stimulated German
-and then European Christians in general to study the Hebrew language.
-But by these very artifices Pfefferkorn and his patrons not only spoilt
-their game, but raised a storm, which in less than a decade shook the
-whole edifice of the Catholic Church. It was justly said afterwards
-that the semi-Jewish Christian had done more injury to Christianity
-than all the blasphemous writings of the Jews could have done. John
-Reuchlin assisted in making the transition from the Middle Ages to
-modern times, and, therefore, his name is famous in the annals of the
-sixteenth century; but in Jewish history also he deserves honorable
-mention.
-
-John Reuchlin, of Pforzheim (born 1455, died 1522), or Capnion, as
-his admirers, the students of the _humaniora_, called him, with his
-younger contemporary, Erasmus of Rotterdam, delivered Germany from
-the reproach of barbarism. By their example and incitement they
-proved that, with regard to knowledge of ancient Greek and Latin, a
-pure style and humanistic culture in general, Germans could not only
-rival, but surpass Italians. Besides his astonishing learning in
-classical literature and his elegant diction, Reuchlin had a pure,
-upright character, nobility of mind, integrity which was proof against
-temptation, admirable love of truth, and a soft heart. More versatile
-than Erasmus, his younger colleague, in preparing for and spreading
-humanistic and esthetic culture in Germany, Reuchlin also devoted
-himself to the study of Hebrew to acquire mastery of the language
-blessed by God, and thus emulate his pattern, the Church Father Jerome.
-His love for Hebrew grew into enthusiasm, when on his second journey to
-Rome he became acquainted at Florence with the learned youth, Pico di
-Mirandola, Italy's prodigy, and learned from him what deep, marvelous
-secrets lay hidden in the Hebrew sources of the Kabbala. After that
-Reuchlin thirsted for Hebrew literature, but could not quench his
-thirst. He could not even obtain a printed copy of the Hebrew Bible.
-Only in his mature age he found opportunities of acquiring a more
-profound knowledge of Hebrew. During his stay at Linz, at the court
-of the aged emperor, Frederick III, he made the acquaintance of the
-imperial physician and Jewish knight, Jacob Loans; and this Jewish
-scholar became his teacher of Hebrew language and literature.
-
-Reuchlin devoted every hour that he could snatch from his avocations
-at court to this study, and mastered it so thoroughly that he was soon
-able to do without a teacher. His genius for languages stood him in
-good stead, and enabled him to overcome difficulties. He endeavored to
-turn to speedy account the Hebrew learning acquired with such zeal.
-He wrote a small work, "The Wonderful Word," a spirited panegyric
-of the Hebrew language, its simplicity, depth and divine character.
-"The language of the Hebrews is simple, uncorrupted, holy, terse and
-vigorous; God confers in it direct with men, and men with angels,
-without interpreters, face to face, ... as one friend converses with
-another." A Jew devoted to the antiquities of his race could not
-have spoken more enthusiastically. The work consists of a series
-of discussions between an Epicurean philosopher, a Jewish sage
-(Baruchias), and a Christian (Capnion), and its object is to prove that
-the wisdom of all nations, the symbols of pagan religions and the forms
-of their worship are but misconceptions and travesties of Hebrew truth,
-mysteriously concealed in the words, in the very shapes of the letters
-of the Hebrew tongue.
-
-Reuchlin may have felt that his knowledge of Hebrew still left much
-to be desired; he, therefore, as ambassador of the elector palatine,
-whom he represented at the court of Pope Alexander VI (1498-1500),
-continued his study of Hebrew literature. Obadiah Sforno, of Cesena,
-then residing at Rome, became Reuchlin's second teacher of Hebrew. Thus
-the German humanist, already a famous man, whose Latin discourses were
-the admiration of Italians, sat at the feet of a Jew to perfect himself
-in Hebrew, nor did he disdain to accept instruction from a Jew whenever
-the opportunity offered, so highly did he esteem the Hebrew language.
-
-Being the only Christian in Germany, or we may say in all Europe,
-sufficiently familiar with the sacred language, Reuchlin's numerous
-friends urged him to compile a Hebrew grammar, to enable the studiously
-inclined to instruct themselves. The first Hebrew grammar by a
-Christian, which Reuchlin designated as "a memorial more lasting than
-brass" (finished in March, 1506), was a somewhat poor affair. It gave
-only the essentials of pronunciation and etymology, together with a
-vocabulary, the imperfections of which need not surprise us, as it is
-the work of a beginner. But the grammar produced important results:
-it aroused a taste for Hebrew studies in a large circle of scholars,
-who thenceforth zealously devoted themselves to it; and these studies
-supplied a new factor towards the Lutheran Reformation. A number of
-disciples of Reuchlin, such as Sebastian Muenster and Widmannstadt,
-followed in his footsteps, and raised the Hebrew language to the level
-of Greek.
-
-But though Reuchlin went down into the Jews' lane to carry off a hidden
-treasure, he was at first no less intensely prejudiced against the
-Jewish race than his contemporaries. Forgetful of its former glory,
-and blind to the solid kernel, because enveloped in a repulsive shell,
-Reuchlin looked on the Jewish people as utterly barbarous, devoid of
-all artistic taste, superstitious, mean and depraved. He solemnly
-declared that he was far from favoring the Jews. Like his pattern,
-Jerome, he testified to his thorough-going hatred of them. At the same
-time as his Hebrew grammar he wrote an epistle, in which he traced all
-the misery of the Jews to their blind unbelief, instead of looking for
-its source in Christians' want of charity towards them. Reuchlin, no
-less than Pfefferkorn, charged the Jews with blasphemy against Jesus,
-Mary, the apostles and Christians in general; but a time came when he
-regretted this indiscreet lucubration of his youth. For his heart did
-not share the prejudices of his head. Whenever he met individual Jews,
-he gave them his affection, or at least his esteem; he probably found
-that they were better than Christians represented them to be. His sense
-of justice did not allow him to let wrong be done to them, much less to
-help in doing it.
-
-When Pfefferkorn and the Cologne Dominicans approached Reuchlin, he
-was at the zenith of his life and fame. High and low honored him for
-his rectitude; Emperor Frederick had ennobled him; Emperor Maximilian
-appointed him counselor and judge of the Suabian League; the circle
-of humanists, the order of free spirits within and without Germany,
-loved, worshiped, almost deified him. Though hitherto no shadow of
-heresy had fallen on Reuchlin, who was on the best of terms with the
-Dominicans, yet the friends of darkness instinctively saw in him their
-secret enemy. His cultivation of science and classical literature, his
-anxiety for an elegant Latin style, his enthusiasm for Greek, by which
-all Germany had been infected, and worse than all, his introduction of
-Hebrew, his preference for "Hebrew truth," for the Hebrew text over
-the corrupt Latin Vulgate, which the church held as canonical and
-unassailable, were considered by the obscurantists as crimes, for which
-the Inquisition could not, indeed, directly prosecute him, but which
-secured him a place in their black book.
-
-The order given to Pfefferkorn, the secret agent of the Dominicans
-of Cologne, to implicate Reuchlin in the examination of blasphemous
-Jewish writings, as said above, was a cunningly devised trap. On his
-second journey to the imperial camp, Pfefferkorn waited on Reuchlin at
-his own house, endeavored to make him a confederate in his venomous
-schemes against the Jews, and showed him the imperial mandate. Reuchlin
-declined the proposal somewhat hesitatingly, though he approved of
-destroying Jewish libels on Christianity; but he pointed out that
-the emperor's mandate was faulty in form, and that, therefore, the
-authorities would not willingly enforce it. Reuchlin is said to have
-hinted that, if invited to do so, he would interest himself in the
-matter. Pfefferkorn, in consequence, applied to the emperor for a
-second mandate, correct in form and unassailable. But the Jews had not
-been idle in endeavors to induce the emperor to revoke the mandate and
-restore their books.
-
-The community of Frankfort had appointed Jonathan Levi Zion, a zealous
-member, to advocate their case with the emperor. The community of
-Ratisbon also had sent an agent to the imperial court. Isaac Triest,
-a man greatly beloved by the persons surrounding the emperor, took
-great pains to frustrate Pfefferkorn's plans. The Jewish advocates
-were supported by influential Christians, including the representative
-of the archbishop and the Margrave of Baden. They first adduced the
-charters guaranteeing religious liberty, granted to the Jews by
-emperors and popes, in accordance with which even the emperor had no
-right to interfere with the management of their private affairs, or to
-attack their property in the shape of religious books. They did not
-fail to inform the emperor that their accuser was a worthless person, a
-thief and burglar. The Jewish advocates thought that they had attained
-their end. The emperor had listened to their petition in an audience,
-and promised them a speedy reply. Their friendly reception led them
-to look for an immediate settlement of this painful affair; moreover,
-it was a good omen that Uriel von Gemmingen, their protector, was
-appointed commissary.
-
-But they did not understand Maximilian's vacillating character. As soon
-as Pfefferkorn appeared before him, armed with another autograph letter
-from his sister, wherein the ultra-pious nun conjured him not to injure
-Christianity by the revocation of his mandate, the scales were turned
-against the Jews. The emperor was in reality secretly piqued that the
-despised Jews of Frankfort, in contempt of his mandate, had refused to
-give up the books found in their houses.
-
-He thereupon issued a second mandate (November 10th, 1509), wherein he
-reproached the Jews with having offered resistance, and ordered the
-confiscation to be continued. But he appointed Archbishop Uriel as
-commissioner, and advised him to obtain counsel from the universities
-of Cologne, Mayence, Erfurt and Heidelberg, and to associate with
-himself learned men, such as Reuchlin, Victor von Karben, and the
-inquisitor, Hoogstraten, who was wholly ignorant of Hebrew. With this
-mandate in his pocket, Pfefferkorn hastened back to the scene of his
-activity, the Rhenish provinces. Archbishop Uriel appointed Hermann
-Hess, chancellor of the University of Mayence, his delegate, to direct
-the confiscation of Jewish books. Accompanied by him, Pfefferkorn
-again repaired to Frankfort, and the book-hunt began afresh. Fifteen
-hundred manuscripts, including those already seized, were taken from
-the Frankfort Jews, and deposited in the town hall.
-
-Worse than the emperor's vacillating conduct was the apathy shown by
-the large communities of Germany in the appointment of delegates to a
-conference to discuss and frustrate the malicious plans of Pfefferkorn,
-or rather, of the Dominicans. Smaller communities had contributed
-their share towards the expenses occasioned by this serious matter,
-but the larger and richer communities of Rothenburg on the Tauber,
-Weissenburg and Fuerth, on which the Jews of Frankfort had counted most,
-displayed deplorable indifference. But when, in consequence of the
-second mandate, Jewish books were confiscated not only at Frankfort
-but also in other communities, more active interest was manifested.
-First the Frankfort senate was influenced in their favor. The Jewish
-booksellers were accustomed to bring their bales of books for sale to
-the spring Fair at Frankfort. Pfefferkorn threatened to confiscate
-these also, but the senate of Frankfort refused to assist in the
-measure, being unwilling to break the laws regulating the Fair. The
-Jewish booksellers, moreover, had safe-conducts each from the prince
-of his own country, protecting not only their persons, but also their
-property. The archbishop maintained sullen silence, but was inclined
-to favor the Jews. He did not call together the learned men whom the
-emperor had mentioned to examine the Jewish books, and did no more
-than he could help. Many princes, also, whose eyes had been opened
-to the ultimate results of this strange confiscation, seem to have
-made representations to the emperor. Public opinion was particularly
-severe on Pfefferkorn. But he and the Dominicans were not idle; they
-endeavored to win over the emperor and public opinion, and it is
-remarkable that the enemies of publicity should have opened the mouth
-of that hitherto silent arbitress, and rendered her powerful.
-
-For this purpose there appeared another anti-Jewish pamphlet, with
-Pfefferkorn's name on the title-page, entitled, "In Praise and Honor of
-Emperor Maximilian." It blew clouds of incense into the emperor's face,
-and regretted that the charges against the Jews, from indifference and
-ignorance, were so little noticed in Christian circles. It reasserted
-that the Talmud, the usury of the Jews, and their facilities for
-making money, were the causes of their obstinately refusing to become
-Christians. Thus the Cologne Dominicans--always standing behind
-Pfefferkorn--by means of public opinion again attempted to put moral
-pressure on Maximilian.
-
-But this public opinion must have spoken so strongly in favor of
-the Jews, that Maximilian was induced to take a step unusual for an
-emperor, namely, in a measure revoke his former commands, by directing
-the senate of Frankfort to restore to the Jews their books (May 23d,
-1510), "till the completion of our purpose and the inspection of
-the books." Great was the joy of the Jews. They had escaped a great
-danger: not their religious books only, so dear to their hearts, but
-their position in the Holy Roman Empire had been at stake, since
-the Dominicans, in case of success, would not have stopped at the
-confiscation of books, but would have inflicted new humiliations and
-persecutions.
-
-But the Jews triumphed too soon; the Dominicans and their confederate
-and tool, Pfefferkorn, would not so readily surrender the advantages
-already secured. A regrettable occurrence in the Mark of Brandenburg
-supplied fresh energy to their machinations, and a pretext for
-formulating an accusation. A thief had stolen some sacred emblems from
-a church, and when questioned as to the holy wafer, he confessed having
-sold it to Jews in the Brandenburg district. Of course, the thief
-was believed, and the bishop of Brandenburg entered on the persecution
-of the Jews with fiery fanaticism. The elector of Brandenburg, Joachim
-I, an ardent heretic-hunter, had the accused brought to Berlin. The
-accusation of reviling the host was soon supplemented by the charge of
-infanticide. Joachim had the Jews tortured, and then ordered thirty to
-be burnt. With firmness, songs of praise on their lips, these martyrs
-of Brandenburg met their fiery deaths (July 19th, 1510), except two,
-who, with the fear of the stake upon them, submitted to baptism, and
-suffered the seemingly more honorable fate of being beheaded. This is
-the first mention of Jews in Berlin and Brandenburg. The occurrence
-made a great stir in Germany, and the Cologne Dominicans employed it
-to induce the emperor to issue a new mandate for the confiscation of
-Jewish books, seeing that to the Talmud alone could be attributed
-the alleged hostility of the Jews to Christianity. They sheltered
-themselves behind the same go-between; the bigoted nun, the ducal
-abbess Kunigunde, to whom the diabolical wickedness of the Jews, as
-revealed by the above occurrence, was presented in most glaring colors,
-was again to influence the emperor. The Dominicans suggested to her how
-detrimental to Christianity must be the fact that the host-reviling and
-child-murdering Jews could boast of having had their books restored
-to them by order of the emperor, who thus, to a certain extent,
-approved of the abuse of Christianity which they contained. The abbess
-thereupon fairly assailed her brother, and at their interview at Munich
-besought him on her knees to reconsider the matter of the Jewish books.
-Maximilian was perplexed. He was loath to refuse his dearly beloved
-sister what she had so much at heart; on the other hand, he was not
-highly edified by Pfefferkorn's tissue of lies about the Jews. He found
-an expedient to appear just to both parties. He issued a new mandate,
-the fourth in this affair (July 6th, 1510), addressed to Archbishop
-Uriel, directing him to resume the inquiry, but in another form. The
-indictment was not to be considered as proved, but was to be thoroughly
-investigated. The archbishop of Mayence was to take the opinions of the
-German universities named, and also of Reuchlin, Victor von Karben and
-Hoogstraten, to whom the emperor sent a special summons in official
-form. The final decision as to the character of the Jewish writings
-was to be communicated to him by Pfefferkorn, the originator of the
-inquiry. The Jews had reason to look forward with anxiety to the issue;
-their weal and woe depended on it.
-
-It was fortunate for the Jews that the honest, truthful Reuchlin, so
-enthusiastically prepossessed for Hebrew and Kabbalistic literature,
-was asked to give his opinion of Jewish literature. The Cologne
-Dominicans, who had proposed him, thereby frustrated their own design,
-and as a further effect made him the enemy of their hostile endeavors.
-As soon as Reuchlin received the emperor's command, he set to work to
-answer the question, "Whether it was godly, laudable, and advantageous
-to Christianity to burn the Jewish writings," whereby the Talmud
-especially was meant. His judgment was extremely favorable to the
-writings in question, nor did he miss the chance of bestowing sundry
-side blows on the vile instigator Pfefferkorn. Jewish literature, the
-mistress of his heart, was to be charged as a culprit, and should he
-fail to defend her with all the powers of his mind? Reuchlin's opinion
-is conceived in the pedantic, heavy, juridical style then prevailing,
-but does not lack ability. He started from the correct point of
-view, that, in answering the question, the Jewish writings were not
-to be treated in the aggregate as a homogeneous literature, but
-that, excluding the Bible, they were to be divided into six classes.
-The class of exegetic works, such as those by R. Solomon (Rashi),
-Ibn-Ezra, the Kimchis, Moses Gerundensis and Levi ben Gershon, far from
-being detrimental to Christianity, he declared to be indispensable to
-Christian theology, the most learned Christian commentators of the Old
-Testament having taken the best of their work from the Jews, as from
-fountains whence flow the real truth and understanding of the Holy
-Scriptures. If from the voluminous writings of Nicholas de Lyra, the
-best Christian exegetist, all borrowed from Rashi were to be excised,
-the part left, which he himself had composed, might be comprised in
-a few pages. He, indeed, considered it a disgrace that many doctors
-of divinity, from ignorance of Hebrew and Greek, interpreted the
-Scriptures wrongly. The class of Hebrew writings on philosophy, natural
-sciences and the liberal arts were in no way distinguished from what
-might be found in Greek, Latin, or German works. With regard to the
-Talmud, against which the chief accusation was laid, Reuchlin confessed
-his inability to understand it; but other learned Christians understood
-no more of it than they might learn from its accusers, including
-Pfefferkorn. He was acquainted with many who condemned the Talmud
-without understanding it. But could one write against mathematics
-without having knowledge thereof? He was, therefore, of opinion that
-the Talmud was not to be burnt, even if it were true that it contained
-libels on the founders of Christianity. "If the Talmud were deserving
-of such condemnation, our ancestors of many hundred years ago, whose
-zeal for Christianity was much greater than ours, would have burnt it.
-The baptized Jews, Peter Schwarz and Pfefferkorn, the only persons who
-insist on its being burnt, probably wish it for private reasons."
-
-To defend Kabbalistic writings, and save them from being burnt, was
-easy enough. Reuchlin had but to point to occurrences at the papal
-court, scarcely two decades ago. The learned and eccentric Count Pico
-di Mirandola had aroused enthusiastic admiration for the Kabbala,
-maintaining that it contained the most solid foundation of the chief
-doctrines of Christianity. Sixtus IV had caused some of the Kabbalistic
-writings to be translated into Latin. Reuchlin concluded his opinion
-by advising that their books should not be taken from the Jews, nor
-burnt, but that at every German university two professors of Hebrew be
-appointed for ten years, who might also be asked to teach modern, or
-rabbinical Hebrew; and thus the Jews might be led by gentle means and
-by conviction to embrace Christianity.
-
-Unquestionably, since Jews had been ill-used and persecuted by
-Christians, they had not found so friendly an advocate as Reuchlin,
-who declared himself in their favor in an official document, intended
-for the chancellor of the empire, and the emperor himself. Two points
-on which Reuchlin laid stress were especially important to Jews. The
-first was, that the Jews were citizens of the Holy Roman Empire, and
-were entitled to its full privileges and protection. This was the first
-stammering utterance of that liberating word of perfect equality,
-which required more than three centuries for its perfect enunciation
-and acknowledgment. The mediaeval delusion, that the Jews, by Vespasian
-and Titus' conquest of Jerusalem, had become the bondmen of their
-successors, the Roman and German emperors, was hereby partly dispelled.
-The recognition that Jews also had rights, which the emperor and the
-state, the clergy and the laity must respect, was the first faint,
-trembling ray of light after a long, dark night. The second point,
-which Reuchlin emphasized more positively, was of equal importance:
-that the Jews must not be considered or treated as heretics. Since they
-stood without the church, and were not bound to hold the Christian
-faith, the ideas of heresy and unbelief--those terrifying and lethal
-anathemas of the Middle Ages--did not apply to them.
-
-Of what use this judgment of Reuchlin was to the Jews, we discover
-by the decision of the faculties consulted--faculties to whom the
-Talmud, of course, was a book with seven seals. The Cologne Dominicans
-in a body, the theological faculty, the inquisitor Hoogstraten, and
-the gray-haired convert Victor von Karben, all mouthpieces of one
-mind, did not trouble themselves to prove that the Talmud was hostile
-to Christianity; they assumed it, and, therefore, quickly arrived at
-their decision, that the Talmudic writings, and all others, probably
-of the same stamp, were to be seized and burnt. But they went further;
-Hoogstraten, in particular, had the assurance to say that the Jews
-should be indicted. Experts were to extract and arrange heretical
-passages from the Talmud and other Jewish books; then the Jews were to
-be questioned whether or not they admitted the perniciousness of books
-containing such doctrines. If they admitted it, they could raise no
-objection to have them committed to the flames. If they obstinately
-persevered in treating such passages as portions of their creed, the
-emperor was to surrender them as convicted heretics for punishment to
-the Inquisition.
-
-The faculty of the university of Mayence delivered a similar sentence,
-but went much further. They pronounced not only all Talmudic and
-rabbinical writings to be full of errors and heresy, but that even
-the Scriptures must have been contaminated and corrupted by them,
-especially in articles of faith, wherefore these were to be taken
-from the Jews, examined, and if their expectation was realized, the
-Jewish Bibles were to be thrown into the flames. This was a cunning
-device, because the Hebrew text of the Bible does not agree with the
-Latin Vulgate, the work of bunglers, used by the church. It was like
-arraigning an immaculate mother before her degenerate daughter, and
-telling her that if she did not adopt the vices of the latter, she did
-not deserve to exist. And it was a clever trick on the part of the
-Dominicans to get rid of the inconvenient Hebrew text, the "Hebrew
-truth," majestically shaking its head at the childish trifling of
-clerical interpretations. Had the theologians of Mayence and Cologne
-succeeded in enforcing their views, the Book received on Sinai, the
-words of the Prophets, the Psalms, monuments of a time of grace, would
-have been cast upon a blazing pyre, and a bastard, the corrupt Latin
-Vulgate, substituted for it. The Dominicans appear to have suspected
-that the plain sense of the words of the Bible would bring ruin upon
-them. Fortunately, the Cologne Dominicans themselves defeated their
-cunningly laid plan by an act of villainy.
-
-Reuchlin had sent his opinion on Jewish literature in a sealed packet,
-and by a sworn messenger, to Archbishop Uriel, assuming that, being an
-official secret, it would be opened and read only by the archbishop and
-the emperor. But Pfefferkorn, who believed himself to be on the eve
-of avenging himself on the Jews, had it open in his hand even before
-the emperor had read it. How this occurred has never been cleared up.
-Reuchlin in plain words denounced the Cologne priests as unscrupulous
-seal-breakers. We ought almost to be grateful to them for having
-dragged an affair, originally enveloped in official secrecy, into
-publicity, thereby calling in another tribunal, and turning the peril
-of the Jews into a peril to the church. They had grown desperate over
-Reuchlin's opinion, because his voice had great weight with the emperor
-and his advisers. Therefore, the Dominicans, armed at all points, set
-to work to publish a refutation of Reuchlin's defense of the Jews and
-their books. It was written in German to render the cause popular, and
-incense the multitude so as to render it impossible for the emperor to
-listen to Reuchlin.
-
-This libel, entitled "Handspiegel," spread abroad in thousands of
-copies, on a man so highly placed and honored, a judge of the Suabian
-League, a scholar of eminence, naturally caused a great sensation.
-Since the invention of printing it was the first furious attack on a
-dignitary, and being written in German, every one could understand
-it. Reuchlin's numerous friends were indignant at the insolence of
-a baptized Jew, who pretended to be more sound in faith than a born
-Christian in good standing. The Cologne Dominicans had permitted
-themselves to be guided by their envenomed hatred rather than by
-prudence. Reuchlin was compelled to take steps against such attacks,
-by which his honor was too deeply wounded for silence. He hastened to
-the emperor, and complained of Pfefferkorn, the rancorous calumniator,
-the ostensible author of the "Handspiegel." The emperor, by words and
-gestures, betrayed his indignation, and quieted the excited Reuchlin
-by the promise that the matter should be inquired into by the bishop
-of Augsburg. But amidst the press of business, in the confusion of
-Italian quarrels, the emperor forgot Reuchlin, the mortification he
-had suffered, and the redress promised him. The Frankfort autumn Fair
-was approaching, at which Pfefferkorn intended to offer for sale the
-remainder of the copies, and nothing had been done for or by Reuchlin.
-
-Thus Reuchlin was compelled to make the Talmud a personal question, to
-appeal to public opinion, and thereby render the matter one of almost
-universal interest. He prepared a defensive and offensive reply to
-the "Handspiegel" for the Frankfort Fair. At the end of August, or
-beginning of September, 1511, his controversial pamphlet, entitled
-"Augenspiegel" (or Spectacles, a pair of spectacles being represented
-on the title-page), which has acquired historical celebrity, made its
-appearance. He designed to reveal to the German public the villainy
-of Pfefferkorn and his coadjutors, but unconsciously he revealed the
-defects of the Christianity of his time. It was a pamphlet which, we
-may say without exaggeration, was equivalent to a great action. It was
-directed against Pfefferkorn, and by implication against the Cologne
-Dominicans, the patrons and instigators of his calumnies. It relates
-in plain, honest language the progress of the whole affair: how the
-baptized "Jew" had made every effort to prove the Talmud dangerous,
-desiring to have it burnt, and had meant to turn Reuchlin to account
-in the matter. He publishes the missives of the emperor and of the
-archbishop addressed to him, and also his "Opinion." He reports how
-Pfefferkorn by dishonest means obtained possession of the "Opinion,"
-and misused it to concoct a libel, containing no less than thirty-four
-untruths about him (Reuchlin). The tone of the "Augenspiegel" expresses
-the just indignation of a man of honor against a villain who has set a
-trap for him.
-
-What roused the indignation of Reuchlin most was the charge that he had
-been bribed to write his defense of the Talmud. With honest anger he
-protested that at no time during his whole existence had he received
-from Jews, or on their behalf, a single penny, or any other reward.
-No less hurt was Reuchlin at the contempt expressed for his Hebrew
-scholarship, especially at the accusation that he had not himself
-composed his Hebrew grammar. His defense of the Jews is dignified. The
-scoundrel Pfefferkorn had reproached him with having learnt Hebrew from
-Jews, with whom, then, he must have had intercourse in defiance of
-the canon law. Thereupon Reuchlin says: "The baptized Jew writes that
-Divine law forbids our holding communion with Jews; this is not true.
-Every Christian may go to law with them, buy of or make presents to
-them. Cases may occur where Christians inherit legacies together with
-Jews. It is allowed to converse with and learn from them, as Saint
-Jerome and Nicholas de Lyra did. And lastly, a Christian should love a
-Jew as his neighbor; all this is founded on the law."
-
-It may be imagined what excitement was created by Reuchlin's
-"Augenspiegel," written in German, when it appeared at the Frankfort
-Fair, the meeting-place of hundreds of thousands, at a time when
-there was no public press, and everyone readily lent his ear to a
-scandalous tale. To find that so distinguished a man as Reuchlin would
-set an accuser of the Jews in the pillory as a calumniator and liar,
-was something so new and surprising as to make readers rub their
-eyes, and ask themselves whether they had not hitherto been dozing.
-The Jews greedily bought a book in which for the first time a man
-of honor entered the lists on their behalf, and with powerful voice
-stigmatized the charges against them as calumnies. They rejoiced at
-having found a champion, and thanked God that He had not forsaken them
-in their tribulation. Who would find fault with them for laboring in
-the promulgation of Reuchlin's pamphlet? But by preaching against it
-in their pulpits, and by prohibiting its sale as far as they could,
-bigoted priests of the stamp of the Cologne Dominicans did most to
-disseminate it. From all directions, in learned and unlearned circles,
-congratulations were sent to Reuchlin, with expressions of satisfaction
-that he had so boldly and firmly settled the impudent Pfefferkorn and
-his abettors.
-
-With the publication and circulation of Reuchlin's treatise, and his
-defense of the Talmud, commenced a struggle which every day became more
-serious, and at last assumed far greater proportions than the subject
-justified. For the bigots, still in the full power of their terrorizing
-might, did not hesitate to take up the challenge. Pfefferkorn's cause
-was also theirs. Yet a man had dared step forward boldly, not only to
-disapprove of the condemnation of the Talmud, but also to declare that
-the persecution of the Jews was unchristianlike; and that they ought,
-on the contrary, to be treated with sympathy and love. What audacity!
-It aroused in them such virtuous indignation that they shot beyond
-the mark, and committed such blunders that they damaged their cause
-irreparably.
-
-Pastor Peter Meyer, of Frankfort-on-the-Main, who had not been able
-to obtain the prohibition of the sale of the "Augenspiegel," made
-the second mistake. He announced from the pulpit during service that
-Pfefferkorn would preach on the eve of the next "Feast of our Lady"
-against Reuchlin's Jewish writings, and he exhorted the faithful
-to attend in great numbers. Nothing could be more fatal than this
-error. Pfefferkorn with his disagreeable, repulsive face, distinctly
-Jewish features and coarse, vulgar look, preach before a Christian
-congregation in his Jewish-German jargon! Each word and each movement
-would provoke his hearers to laughter, and drive away even sincere
-devotion. Moreover, was it in accordance with Catholic law that a
-layman, above all a married layman, should officiate in the church?
-Not long before this a simple shepherd had been sentenced to be burned
-on account of unsanctioned preaching. To keep the letter of the law
-Pfefferkorn preached on the appointed day (September 7th, 1511), not
-in the church, but before the entrance, to a great crowd of people.
-It must have been very droll to see how this ill-favored Jew made the
-sign of the cross over believers, and spoke of the Christian faith in
-the Jewish jargon. Pfefferkorn's chief desire was to make the Jews and
-their well-wishers detestable, and to excite the hatred of his hearers
-against them.
-
-Until now the chief mover of the whole scandal, the venomous and
-malicious master heretic-hunter, Jacob Hoogstraten, had kept behind
-the scenes, but had sent his followers to the front one by one: first
-Pfefferkorn, then Ortuinus Gratius and Arnold von Tongern. Henceforth
-he stood in the foreground himself, his insolent demeanor seeming to
-assume that priests and laymen must all bow before him, and sink under
-his frown in the dust, and that he had the right to tread statutes and
-customs under his feet. To save, by violent measures, the weakened
-authority of the order, all Dominicans had to make common cause, and
-apply their energy to carry through the condemnation of Reuchlin and
-the Talmud. The conflict spread over a wider area, and became an affair
-of the whole order.
-
-Authorized by the provincial of his order, Hoogstraten, in his capacity
-as inquisitor, suddenly issued (September 15th, 1513) a summons to
-Reuchlin to appear at Mayence within six days, at eight o'clock in the
-morning, to be examined on the charge of heresy and of favoring the
-Jews. On the appointed day Hoogstraten, with a host of Dominicans,
-appeared in Mayence; they were confederates, chosen to sit as judges in
-the commission. Hoogstraten opened the session, acting at once as judge
-and accuser. He had prepared an unassailable bill of indictment against
-Reuchlin and the Talmud, and taken the precaution to seek allies, so
-that he might not stand alone in this weighty contest. Shortly before,
-he had addressed letters to four universities, begging them to express
-their opinion on Reuchlin's book, "Augenspiegel," in accordance with
-his own views, and all had fulfilled his expectations.
-
-The accusation which he brought forward was, of course, that which
-Pfefferkorn and Arnold von Tongern had already made. It had for its
-basis: Reuchlin favors the Jews too much, treats "the insolent people"
-almost as members of the church, and as men on an equality with
-others, while his writings savor too much of heresy. Hoogstraten,
-therefore, instructed the court to pronounce sentence upon Reuchlin's
-"Augenspiegel": that it was full of heresy and error, too favorable
-to the unbelieving Jews, and insulting to the church, and therefore
-ought to be condemned, suppressed, and destroyed by fire. One must
-not overlook the great difference between a German and a Spanish
-inquisition court. Torquemada or Ximenes would have made short work
-of it, and condemned the book together with the author to the stake.
-Hoogstraten was not too kind-hearted for such a sentence; but he
-dared not venture so far, because he would have had all Germany, the
-ecclesiastical as well as the temporal rulers against him.
-
-General indignation was aroused at the injustice of a trial carried
-on in violation of all rules. The students of the Mayence University,
-not yet tainted by the corruption of theology, their judgment not
-warped by casuistry, and not influenced by foreign considerations,
-loudly proclaimed their displeasure at this shameless proceeding of the
-Inquisition. They carried the doctors of jurisprudence with them, and
-this induced other earnest men to interfere.
-
-To the surprise of the Dominicans, the aged, venerable Reuchlin
-appeared in Mayence, accompanied by two respected counselors of the
-Duke of Wurtemberg. The chapter now took great trouble to effect a
-reconciliation. But Hoogstraten, who wished to see smoke rise from
-the fagots, would agree to nothing, and delayed the negotiations
-till the 12th of October, the time when the final sentence would be
-pronounced. The inquisitor commanded all the ecclesiastics in Mayence
-to announce from the pulpit that everyone, Christian or Jew, if he
-would escape punishment, must give up all copies of the "Augenspiegel"
-to the flames. The people were promised thirty days' indulgence, if
-they assembled on the appointed day at the church square to celebrate
-the auto-da-fe and increase its splendor. On the 12th of October
-the place before the church in Mayence was thronged with spectators
---the curious, the sympathetic, and the seekers after indulgence!
-Decked out like peacocks, the Fathers and Brothers of the Dominican
-order, and the theologians of the universities of Cologne, Louvain,
-and Erfurt, strutted along to the tribunal erected for them, and "the
-earth trembled under their feet." Hoogstraten, till now the accuser,
-again took his place among the judges. They were about to pronounce
-the formula of the curse, and have the fire kindled, when a messenger
-hastily arrived, bringing a letter from Archbishop Uriel, which turned
-them speechless.
-
-Uriel von Gemmingen, like most bishops of his time, was more
-worldly-minded than spiritual, and had no canonical fanaticism against
-Jews. The presumptuousness of the Dominicans of Cologne and their
-unjust proceedings against Reuchlin angered him, too. Therefore, he
-issued a proclamation to the commissioners selected from his chapter,
-ordering that judgment be delayed for one month until a new agreement
-might be arrived at. If they did not consent, this letter deprived
-them of their privileges as judges of the inquisitorial court, and
-every thing hitherto decreed was null and void. Utterly dumbfounded,
-the Dominicans listened to the notary's reading of the document, which
-entirely frustrated their schemes and machinations. Hoogstraten alone
-boldly dared express his anger at the denial of their rights. The other
-confederates slunk away ashamed, followed by the jeers of the street
-boys, and the cry of the men, "O that these Brothers, who wished to
-outrage a just man, might be burnt at the stake."
-
-If it is true, as the Dominicans relate, that the rabbis of Germany
-met in a synod in Worms, and found in the defeat of the Dominicans who
-raged against Reuchlin a sign of the downfall of the Roman (papist)
-hierarchy, they were certainly endowed with prophetic vision. It was
-also said that Reuchlin had secret intercourse with rabbis.
-
-Reuchlin was by no means so situated as to be able to triumph over his
-enemies and those of the Jews. Though subdued for the moment, they were
-certainly not vanquished. He knew their cunning and malignity too well
-to give himself up to inactive enjoyment of his victory. He knew that
-their persecutions would only be redoubled in the future. Therefore,
-he hastened to announce his appeal to the pope, so that silence might
-be imposed from that quarter on his embittered enemies. But Reuchlin
-justly feared that with the vacillation and venality of the Vatican his
-cause would go badly, if the investigation were conducted beyond the
-jurisdiction of the pope by the Dominicans of Cologne. Therefore, he
-sent a Hebrew letter to Bonet de Lates, the Jewish physician of Pope
-Leo X, begging him to plead for the pope's favor in his cause.
-
-Leo, of the celebrated family of the Medici, about whom his father
-had said that he was the wisest of his sons, had succeeded to the
-papal chair only a few months before. He was an aristocrat, more
-interested in politics than in religion, a Roman pagan rather than a
-Catholic priest, looking down with contempt from his Olympian heights
-on theological controversy as child's play. He only considered how
-best to steer between the two warring states or houses of Hapsburg and
-Valois, without endangering the temporal interest of the Roman Catholic
-hierarchy. With candor that would surprise us today, the pope ventured
-to say, "It is well known how useful this fable of Christ has been to
-us and ours!" With him now rested the decision, whether Reuchlin's
-"Augenspiegel" savored of heresy, and whether he duly or unduly favored
-the Jews. Leo, whose pontificate fell in a time when theological
-questions threatened to embroil all Europe, perhaps knew less of
-them than his cook. Much, therefore, depended on the light in which
-the conflict between Reuchlin and the Dominicans was placed before
-him. For this reason Reuchlin begged the physician Bonet de Lates,
-who had access to the pope and care of "the person of his Holiness,"
-to win over Leo X, so that the trial might not take place in Cologne
-or its vicinity, where his cause would be lost. Reuchlin laid all the
-circumstances before him: how Pfefferkorn and the Cologne Dominicans
-had conspired against the Jews and the Talmud, and how only his
-extraordinary efforts had saved the Talmud from destruction. Had the
-Dominicans been able to get hold of and read this letter, they could
-have brought forward incontestable proof of Reuchlin's friendliness
-towards the Jews, for in it he wrote much that he had publicly denied.
-
-It is natural that Bonet de Lates brought all his influence to bear in
-favor of Reuchlin. And it was probably owing to his zeal that Leo so
-soon (November 21st, 1513) issued instructions to the bishops of Speyer
-and Worms on the controversy between Reuchlin and Hoogstraten. Leo
-ordered that they be examined separately or together, by the bishops or
-by judges appointed by them, who, without the intervention of any other
-tribunal, were to pronounce judgment, to be accepted without appeal.
-The bishop of Worms, a Dalburg, with whom Reuchlin was on friendly
-terms, did not care to accept the commission. So the young bishop of
-Speyer, George, elector palatine and duke of Bavaria, appointed two
-judges, who summoned both parties to appear within a month before
-the tribunal in Speyer. Reuchlin came punctually, accompanied by a
-procurator and friends. Hoogstraten, on the other hand, trusting to the
-power of the Dominicans, did not present himself, nor send a competent
-representative. The judges commenced the suit, not with becoming
-energy, but with a certain half-heartedness, perhaps from fear of the
-revenge of the Dominicans. The trial was spun out over three months
-(January to April, 1514).
-
-Only after Reuchlin had written two German papers on the matter in
-dispute and the progress of the proceedings, did the bishop deign to
-notice the evidence and pass judgment, which was wholly in favor of
-Reuchlin. He stated that the "Augenspiegel" contained not an iota
-of heresy or error, that it did not unduly favor the Jews, that,
-therefore, Hoogstraten had slandered the author, and silence should
-be imposed on him in this matter; that the writings might be read and
-printed by everyone, and that Hoogstraten be charged with the costs
-(111 Rhenish gold florins).
-
-The Dominicans of Cologne gnashed their teeth, stormed and raged at
-the issue of the suit, and used every effort to overthrow the judgment
-of the apostolic court. At that time, on account of the disunion in
-Germany, it was very difficult to put into execution a judicial decree,
-and the Dominicans were not inclined to lessen the difficulty when
-the sentence was given against themselves. They laughed at the bishop
-of Speyer, calling him a stupid fellow. The notice of the verdict
-in Cologne was torn down by the bold Pfefferkorn. Hoogstraten had
-unofficially--that is to say, without giving notice to the bishop
-of Speyer, then acting as apostolic judge--appealed to the pope,
-although he had scouted the idea of such an appeal before. His hope of
-winning the suit against Reuchlin and securing the condemnation of the
-"Augenspiegel" was founded on the venality of the Vatican. "Rome will
-do anything for money," he frankly said; "Reuchlin is poor, and the
-Dominicans are rich; justice can be suppressed by money." Hoogstraten
-could also count on the good will of the cardinals, who inveighed
-against free inquiry. At all events, they could be depended upon to
-drag out the suit so long that Reuchlin's means would not suffice
-to meet the costs. Besides this, the Dominicans relied on obtaining
-from the universities, in particular the leading one of Paris, the
-condemnation of the "Augenspiegel," and using it to exert pressure
-upon the pope. All Dominicans, Thomists and obscurantists, both in and
-outside Germany, made common cause to work the downfall of Reuchlin.
-
-This union of the Dominican party had the effect of binding together
-the friends of learning, the enemies of scholasticism, bigotry and
-church doctrine--in one word, the Humanists--and inducing them to
-take concerted action. Virtually a society of Humanists, a Reuchlinist
-party, was formed in western Europe, the members of which silently
-worked for one another and for Reuchlin: "One supported the other, and
-said to his comrade, Be brave." "All we who belong to the ranks of
-learning are devoted to Reuchlin no less than soldiers to the emperor."
-It was a formal alliance, which the supporters of Reuchlin loyally
-adhered to. So, in consequence of Pfefferkorn's bitter hostility to
-the Jews and the Talmud, two parties were formed in Christendom, the
-Reuchlinists and the Arnoldists, who waged fierce conflict with each
-other. It was a struggle of the dark Middle Ages with the dawn of a
-better time.
-
-Young Germany was working with all its might on behalf of Reuchlin
-and against the bigots: besides Hermann von Busche, and Crotus
-Rubianus (Johann Jaeger), there was the fiery Ulrich von Hutten, the
-most energetic and virile character of the time. In fact, Hutten's
-energy first found a worthy aim in the passionate feud between
-Reuchlin and the Dominicans. Formerly his fencing had consisted of
-passes in the empty air; his knightly courage and fiery genius had
-met only phantom adversaries. Now, for the first time, the youth of
-six-and-twenty had a clear perception of the relation of things; he
-saw a real enemy, to meet whom with his knight's sword and the sharper
-weapon of his intellect, in a life and death struggle, would be a
-praiseworthy, glorious undertaking. To destroy the Dominicans, priests
-and bigots, and establish the kingdom of intellect and free thought,
-to deliver Germany from the nightmare of ecclesiastical superstition
-and barbarism, raise it from its abjectness, and make it the arbiter
-of Europe, seemed to him the aim to toil for. As soon as Hutten was
-clearly conscious of this, he worked ceaselessly for his object, the
-first step towards its realization being to help Reuchlin, the leader
-in the struggle for humanism, to gain the victory over his mortal foes.
-A cardinal, Egidio de Viterbo, who delighted in the Hebrew language and
-in the Kabbala, openly sided with Reuchlin. He wrote to him, "The Law
-(Torah) revealed to man in fire was first saved from fire when Abraham
-escaped the burning furnace, and now a second time, when Reuchlin
-saved, from the fire, the writings from which the Law received light,
-for had they been destroyed eternal darkness would again have set
-in. So, exerting ourselves for your cause, we are not defending you,
-but the Law, not the Talmud, but the church." It is remarkable that
-the whole Franciscan order, from hatred of the Dominicans, took up
-Reuchlin's cause.
-
-In almost every town there were Reuchlinists and anti-Reuchlinists,
-whose mutual hatred brought them at times to blows. The motto of one
-was, "Rescue of the 'Augenspiegel' and preservation of the Talmud," and
-of the other, "Damnation and destruction to both." Involuntarily the
-Reuchlinists became friends of the Jews, and sought grounds on which to
-defend them. The adherents of the Dominicans became fiercer enemies to
-the Jews, and sought out obscure books to prove their wickedness.
-
-The report of this contest spread through Europe. At first limited to
-Germany, the controversy soon reached both Rome and Paris. Hoogstraten
-and the Dominicans worked with energy to have the judgment of Speyer
-overthrown, in the latter place by the greatest university, in the
-former by the papal see, and to have Reuchlin's writings sentenced to
-the flames. In both places they had powerful and influential allies,
-who devotedly and zealously worked for their party.
-
-Reuchlin, although his suit had been lawfully won in the apostolic
-court in Speyer, was forced to take steps to counteract the appeal
-instituted by the intrigues of his enemies. And his friends succeeded
-in influencing the pope. Leo X appointed the cardinal and patriarch
-Dominico Grimani as judge of the inquiry. It was well known that this
-ecclesiastical prince cultivated rabbinical literature, and, as patron
-of the Franciscan order, hated the Dominicans, and took Reuchlin's
-side. Without doubt prominent Jews were working in Rome for Reuchlin,
-but, like the German Jews, they had the good sense to keep in the
-background, so as not to imperil the cause by stamping it as Jewish.
-Cardinal Grimani issued (June, 1514) a summons to both parties, but
-in consideration of Reuchlin's advanced years permitted him to send a
-representative, while Hoogstraten had to appear in person. Furnished
-with recommendations and a well-filled purse, the inquisitor appeared
-in Rome with undiminished confidence of obtaining a victory. What could
-not be obtained in Rome for money?
-
-Reuchlin had nothing of the kind to offer; he was poor. He had not the
-magic wand which commands the gold of bigoted women, nor the conjurer's
-formula over father-confessors, who are apt treasure-diggers. But there
-was no lack of recommendations from his friends and well-wishers.
-Emperor Maximilian, who, much to his own regret, had originated all
-this disturbance, by lending ear to Pfefferkorn's stupidities and his
-sister's hysterical piety, often interceded with the pope for Reuchlin.
-The emperor wrote that he believed that the Cologne people wished
-to prolong the controversy illegally and through intrigue, in order
-to crush the excellent, inoffensive, learned and orthodox Reuchlin;
-that what he had written (in favor of the Hebrew Scriptures) had been
-written at the emperor's command, with a good object, and for the
-benefit of Christendom.
-
-But the Dominicans defied public opinion, the commission appointed by
-the pope, and the pope. They spoke of the pope as of a schoolboy under
-their authority. If he did not give a decision in their favor, they
-threatened to withdraw their allegiance, and desert him, even risking
-a rupture with the church. They went so far as to threaten that in
-case Reuchlin proved victorious, they would ally themselves with the
-Hussites in Bohemia against the pope. So blinded was this faction by
-revengeful feelings, that from sheer obstinacy they would undermine
-Catholicism. Nor did they spare the majesty of the emperor; when they
-learned that Maximilian had interceded for Reuchlin with the pope, they
-heaped abuse on him.
-
-The Dominicans built their hopes on the verdict of Paris, the head
-of all European universities. If this important school of divinity
-condemned Reuchlin's writings and the Talmud, then even the pope
-would have to submit. Every influence was, therefore, brought to
-bear to obtain a favorable opinion from Paris. In particular, the
-king of France, Louis XII, was worked on by his confessor, Guillaume
-Haquinet Petit, to influence the school of divinity in favor of the
-Dominicans. The political events which had set the German emperor
-and the French king at variance were also brought into play. Because
-the emperor of Germany was for Reuchlin, the king of France decided
-for the Dominicans and against the Talmud. But this decision was not
-easily obtained, for Reuchlin numbered many warm friends in Paris. The
-consultation was prolonged from May to the beginning of August, 1514.
-
-Many of the voters spoke in favor of Reuchlin and at the same time
-expressed their indignation at the unlawful proceedings; but they
-were cried down by the fanatics. Many French divines were guided by
-the example of Saint Louis, who, at the instigation of the baptized
-Jew, Nicholas Donin, and by command of Pope Gregory IX, had ordered
-the Talmud to be burnt three centuries before. The Parisian doctors,
-therefore, gave sentence that Reuchlin's "Augenspiegel," containing
-heresy, and defending with great zeal the Talmudic writings, deserved
-to be condemned to the flames, and the author to be forced to recant.
-
-Great was the joy of the Dominicans, particularly those of Cologne,
-over this judgment. They believed their game to be won, and that the
-pope himself would be forced to submit. They did not delay in making
-known to the public this concession, so hardly won, by means of another
-libelous pamphlet.
-
-The lawsuit, allowed to lag in Rome, was wilfully delayed still more
-by the Dominicans. The commission appointed had a close translation of
-the "Augenspiegel" prepared by a German in Rome, Martin von Groenigen;
-but the opposition found fault with it. Numerous hindrances blocked the
-progress of the suit, and at this stage cost Reuchlin 400 gold florins.
-The Dominicans had hoped so to impoverish their adversary, the friend
-of the Jews, that he would be incapacitated from obtaining justice.
-The prospect of seeing Reuchlin's cause triumphant at Rome diminished.
-Reuchlin's friends were, therefore, anxious to create another tribunal,
-and appeal from the badly advised or intimidated pope to public
-opinion.
-
-During this tension of minds in small and great circles, whilst high
-and low ecclesiastics, princes and citizens, anxiously awaited news as
-to how the Reuchlin lawsuit had ended, or would end in Rome, a young
-Humanist (most likely Crotus Rubianus, in Leipsic), wrote a series of
-letters, which, for wit, humor and biting satire, had not been equaled
-in all literature. The "Letters of Obscurantists" (_Epistolae Obscurorum
-Virorum_), published in 1515, in a great measure directed against
-the rascally Ortuinus Gratius, laid bare, in the language of the
-unpolished monks, their own baseness and insolence, their astonishing
-ignorance, their lust, their animosity and vileness, their despicable
-Latin, and still more contemptible morality, the absurdity of their
-logic, their foolish chatter--in short, all their intolerable
-vices were made so evident, and described so clearly, that even the
-half-educated could comprehend. All Reuchlin's enemies, Hoogstraten,
-Arnold von Tongern, Ortuinus Gratius, Pfefferkorn, their accomplices,
-and the Paris University, were lashed with whips and scorpions, so
-that no spot on them remained sound. This clever satire, containing
-more than Aristophanian scorn, made the stronger an impression as the
-Dominicans, the Thomists, the Doctors of Divinity, revealed themselves
-in their own persons, in their miserable meanness, placing themselves,
-metaphorically speaking, in the pillory. But it was inevitable that, in
-deriding the bigots and the papacy, the whole tyranny of the hierarchy
-and the church should be laid bare. For, were not the Dominicans, with
-their insolent ignorance and shameless vices, the product and natural
-effect of the Catholic order and institution? So the satire worked like
-a corroding acid, entirely destroying the already rotting body of the
-Catholic Church.
-
-The Jews and the Talmud were the first cause of the Reuchlinist
-quarrel; naturally, they could not be left out of account in the
-letters of the Obscurantists. So it happened that the much despised
-Jews became one of the topics of the day.
-
-A roar of laughter resounded through western Europe at the reading of
-these satirical letters. Everyone in Germany, Italy, France and England
-who understood Latin, was struck with the form and tenor of these
-confessions of Dominicans and scholastics. Their awkward vulgarity,
-dense stupidity, egregious folly, impurity of word and deed, stood so
-glaringly in contrast with their presumed learning and propriety, that
-the most serious men were moved to mirth. It is related that Erasmus,
-who, at the time of reading the letters, suffered from an abscess in
-the throat, laughed so heartily that it broke, and he was cured. The
-merry Comedy of the Fools put Reuchlin entirely in the right, and the
-Dominicans were judged by public opinion, no matter how the pope might
-deal with them. All were curious to know who could be the author. Some
-thought it was Reuchlin himself, others Erasmus, Hutten, or one of
-the Humanist party. Hutten gave the right answer to the question as
-to the author: "God himself." It appeared more and more clearly that
-so slight a cause as the burning of the Talmud had taken a world-wide
-significance, the will of the individual serving only to further
-the interests of all. In Rome and Cologne, far-seeing Reuchlinists
-discerned in it the work of Providence.
-
-Only the German Jews could not indulge in merriment. The Dominicans
-had meantime worked in another way to obtain their object, or at
-least to have revenge on the Jews. Of what avail was it to the Jews
-that some enlightened Christians, having had their attention drawn to
-Judaism, were seized with so great a predilection for it that they
-gave expression to their new convictions in writing? Christendom as a
-whole was irrevocably prejudiced against Jewish teachings and their
-adherents. Erasmus rightly said, "If it is Christian to hate the Jews,
-then we are true Christians." Therefore, it was easy for their enemies
-to injure them. Pfefferkorn had often pointed out that there were in
-Germany only three great Jewish communities, at Ratisbon, Frankfort and
-Worms, and that with their extermination, Judaism in the German kingdom
-would come to an end.
-
-To bring about the expulsion of the Jews from Frankfort and Worms,
-their enemies had discovered effective means. The young Margrave,
-Albert von Brandenburg, hitherto bishop of Magdeburg, who later
-attained melancholy renown in the history of the Reformation, had been
-elected to the archbishopric of Mayence. The enemies of the Jews,
-acting probably on a suggestion from Cologne, induced Archbishop Albert
-to issue an invitation to religious and secular authorities and to
-towns, principally Frankfort and Worms, to attend a diet in Frankfort,
-to discuss how the Jews might be banished and never be permitted to
-return. Obeying the invitation (January 7th, 1516), many deputies
-appeared. The program was to this purport: All the estates were to
-unite and take an oath to relinquish the privileges and advantages
-derived from the Jews, to banish all Jewish subjects and never, under
-any pretext, or for any term, permit them to return. This resolution
-was to be laid before the emperor for his confirmation.
-
-The Jews of these places saw certain danger hanging over their heads.
-If at other times the German princes and rulers were disunited and
-indolent, in the persecution of Jews they were always united and
-energetic. Nothing remained for the Jews but to send a deputation to
-Emperor Maximilian, and implore him to grant them his favor and support
-them against so malevolent a measure. The emperor happily remembered
-that the Jews, even when ruled by various great or petty rulers, were
-in reality the servants of himself and the empire, and that their
-banishment would be an encroachment on his suzerainty. Maximilian
-hastened, therefore, to send a very forcible dispatch to Elector Albert
-and the chapter of Mayence, to the religious and secular authorities,
-and to the towns (January, 1516), expressing his displeasure at their
-conference, and forbidding them to meet again at the appointed time. So
-the Jews were for the moment saved. But the archbishop of Mayence, or
-in his absence the chapter, did not give up the pursuit of the desired
-object. The enemies of the Jews, the friends of the Cologne Dominicans,
-still hoped to turn the emperor against them. But the hope was vain;
-the Jews were not banished for the present.
-
-Reuchlin's lawsuit, although delayed by the struggles of the two
-parties, whose time was taken up in plotting against each other's
-intrigues, made slow but perceptible progress. Hoogstraten, seeing that
-the commission would decide in favor of Reuchlin, vehemently demanded
-a decision by council, inasmuch as it was a question, not of law, but
-of faith. Pope Leo, who did not care to be on bad terms with either
-party, in opposition to his own repeated command had to yield to a
-certain extent. On the one side Emperor Maximilian and many German
-princes insisted upon having Reuchlin declared blameless and silencing
-the Dominicans; on the other side the king of France and young Charles
-(at that time duke of Burgundy), the future emperor of Germany, king
-of Spain and America, used threatening language towards the pope,
-demanding that the matter be taken up seriously, and that Reuchlin's
-book be condemned. Leo, therefore, considered it advisable to escape
-from this critical position. He submitted the matter for final decision
-to a court of inquiry, formed of members of the Lateran Council, then
-in session. Thus the dispute about the Talmud became the concern of a
-general council, and was raised to the dignity of a European question.
-
-The council committee finally declared in favor of Reuchlin. Before Leo
-X could confirm or reject its decision, Hoogstraten and his friends
-influenced him to issue a mandate suspending the suit. This temporizing
-exactly suited Leo's character and his position between the excited
-rival parties. He hated excitement, which he would have brought on
-himself, if he had decided in favor of either party. He did not wish to
-offend the Humanists, nor yet the bigots, nor the German emperor, nor
-the king of France, nor the ruler of Spain. So the suit was suspended,
-and at any favorable opportunity could be taken up again by the
-Dominicans. Hoogstraten had to leave Rome in disgrace and dishonor, but
-he did not give up the hope of winning his cause in the end. He was a
-strong-willed man, who could not be discouraged by humiliations, and so
-unprincipled that falsehood and misrepresentations came easy to him.
-
-If Pope Leo believed that at his dictation the conflict would cease,
-he overestimated the authority of the papacy, and mistook the parties
-as well as the real issue involved. Feeling ran too high to be quieted
-by a word from those in power. Neither party wished for peace, but for
-war, war to the knife. When Hoogstraten returned from Rome, his life
-was in danger. Furious Reuchlinists often conspired against him, and
-sought by polemical leaflets to exasperate public opinion still more
-against the Dominicans. Hutten, since his mature judgment had taken in
-the situation at Rome, was most eager to bring about the downfall of
-ecclesiastical domination in Germany.
-
-The secret could be no longer kept, it was given out from the
-house-tops that there was dissension in the church. Not their foes,
-but the provincial of the Dominican order, Eberhard von Cleve, and
-the whole chapter, represented in an official letter to the pope that
-the controversy had brought them, the Dominicans, into hatred and
-contempt; that they were held up to the mockery of all, and that they
---so very undeservedly!--were decried, both in speech and writing,
-as the enemies of brotherly love, peace and harmony; that their
-preaching was despised, their confessional avoided, and that everything
-they undertook was derided, and declared to be only the result of pride
-and meanness.
-
-Meanwhile the contention between Reuchlin and the Dominicans,
-especially Hoogstraten, developed in another direction, and affected
-Judaism at another point. The Kabbala formed the background of this
-movement. Out of love for this secret doctrine, supposed to offer the
-key to the deepest knowledge of philosophy and Christianity, Reuchlin
-had wished to spare the Talmud, because in his opinion it contained
-mystical elements. The youthful Kabbala became the patroness of the
-old Talmud. Reuchlin understood but little of Kabbalistic doctrines,
-but his eagerness for knowledge and his zeal spurred him on to study.
-Moreover, the attack by his adversaries upon his orthodoxy, honesty and
-erudition, had made it an affair of honor for him to prove convincingly
-that the Kabbala agreed with Christianity. But he was unfortunate in
-the choice of his Hebrew models. For a long time he sought a guide,
-until chance brought him to the most confused source of information:
-the foolish writings of the Kabbalist, Joseph Jikatilla, of Castile,
-which the convert Paul Riccio had lately translated into Latin. As soon
-as Reuchlin heard of this literary treasure of Joseph Jikatilla, he did
-not rest till he had obtained it, and again set about proving that the
-Kabbala was in agreement with Christianity.
-
-Believing that the Kabbala reveals and confirms the highest truths,
-the mysteries of Christianity, Reuchlin composed a work on Kabbalist
-science, and dedicated it to Pope Leo X, giving new emphasis to his
-contention that the Jewish writings, instead of being burnt, should be
-cherished.
-
-Reuchlin must have counted on the approval of the pope, to whom he
-dedicated the work, for having found new support for the tottering
-faith. He hoped that Leo X would at length grant him peace and rest by
-pronouncing judgment in the suit between himself and the Dominicans,
-which, though suppressed, was persistently urged by the latter. The
-Christianlike Kabbala was to be his intercessor at the Vatican. He
-did not stand alone in his foolish fondness for the secret doctrine.
-Not only the cardinals but the pope himself expected to gain much for
-Christianity by proper research into the Kabbala.
-
-As the interest in the Reuchlin controversy began to flag, another
-movement started in Germany, continuing, as the other had begun, to
-shake the firm pillars of the papacy and the Catholic Church, and
-prepare the regeneration of Europe. The discussion aroused by the
-Talmud created an intellectual medium favorable to the germination and
-growth of Luther's reform movement. Destined soon to become a force in
-the world's history, even the Reformation arose from small beginnings,
-and needed most powerful protection not to be nipped in the bud. Martin
-Luther was a strong, straightforward, obstinate and passionately
-excitable character, holding with tenacity to his convictions and
-errors. By the opposition which he met, Luther finally came to the
-conclusion that each individual pope, consequently the papacy, was not
-infallible, and that the basis of faith was not the pope's will, but
-the Scriptural word.
-
-The death of the old emperor, Maximilian, who had been unequal to
-the task of grappling with the theological perplexities called forth
-by himself, and the election of a new emperor, spun out for half a
-year, drew politics into the arena, and gave rise to a confusion in
-which the friends and foes of free religious thought and of gloomy
-orthodox faith were not distinguishable. Hutten and the Humanists
-favored Charles V, in whose own country, Spain, the Dominicans still
-had the upper hand, and where the flames from the stake were still
-unextinguished; but he was opposed by the pope. The Reuchlinist and the
-Lutheran cause, as it were, the Talmud and the Reformation, were merged
-into each other. So great a change had taken place that the electors
-assembled to elect an emperor declared against the obscurantists of
-Cologne and in favor of Reuchlin.
-
-Instead of condemning the Talmud, Pope Leo X encouraged the printing
-of the work. Thus, through a movement incomprehensible to all its
-contemporaries, the unexpected took place: Reuchlin was justified, and
-the Talmud was justified, and in a measure favored by the pope. Indeed,
-Daniel Bomberg, a rich Christian publisher in Antwerp, in the same year
-brought out a complete edition of the Babylonian Talmud in twelve folio
-volumes, the model of all later editions.
-
-A clever pantomime, which first appeared in Latin or French, and was
-soon translated into German, portrays Reuchlin as the originator of the
-great and growing movement. It represents a doctor, on whose back may
-be read the name of Capnion (Reuchlin), throwing a bundle of straight
-and crooked sticks on the stage, and then going away. Another figure
-(Erasmus), having in vain endeavored to put the bundle in order, shakes
-his head over the chaos, and disappears. Hutten also comes in. Luther
-appears in monk's dress, and with a firebrand kindles the crooked
-twigs. Another figure, in imperial robes, strikes with its sword the
-spreading fire, only giving it wider play. At length comes the pope,
-who, wishing to extinguish the fire, seizes a vessel, and pours the oil
-in it upon the flames, then clasps his hands on his head, while the
-bright flames shoot up never again to be stifled. Pfefferkorn and the
-Talmud should not have been missing in this dumb show, for they were
-the fuse that started the conflagration.
-
-The situation was such that the slightest breath made the flames
-leap up. Luther had gained firmness and courage at the imperial diet
-of Worms, and by his speech, revealing fearlessness, completed the
-rupture with the papacy. Although urged by his own bigotry, besieged
-by obscurantists and exhorted by princes, Emperor Charles was disposed
-to condemn the reformer to the stake as a heretic, yet partly from
-consideration for Frederick, elector of Saxony, partly from policy,
-hoping thereby to hold the pope in check, he only declared him an
-exile a month later. Meanwhile Luther was already on his Patmos, the
-Wartburg, hidden and protected. Whilst in solitude he worked at a
-German translation of the Bible, ultra-reformers overthrew church
-regulations, altered the church services, did away with masses and
-priestly decoration, abolished the vows of monks, and introduced
-the marriage of priests--that is to say, the priests publicly
-acknowledged their former secret mistresses as their wives. The time
-was ripe for the Reformation, and it took firm hold of North Germany,
-Denmark and Sweden, extending to Prussia, Poland, and, on the other
-hand, to France and even Spain, the country of darkest and most bigoted
-ecclesiasticism and the home of persecution. Zwingli, the reformer of
-Switzerland, after much wavering, declared himself against the papacy;
-so, in that country, too, where there was more freedom of action than
-in submissive Germany, the new church service was introduced, the
-marriage of priests permitted, pictures and crucifixes destroyed,
-and monasteries done away with. A new order of things had set in;
-all-powerful Rome stood impotent before the new spirit. The enthusiasm
-of the Anabaptists began to arouse public feeling and transform all
-relations of life.
-
-At first, Luther's Reformation affected the Jews but slightly.
-Catholics and innovators in every town, especially in Germany, were so
-occupied with fighting each other, that they had no leisure for the
-persecution of Jews; so there came a pause. Luther, whose voice even
-then was more powerful than that of the princes, at first defended them
-from numerous accusations. In his plain-spoken and fervent way, he said:
-
- "This rage (against the Jews) is still defended by some silly
- theologians, and advocated by them; they declare insolently
- that the Jews are the servants of the Christians, and subject
- to the emperor. I beg you to tell me who will join our
- religion, be he the most amiable and patient of men, when he
- sees that they are treated so cruelly and inimically, and not
- only in an unchristian way, but even brutally. Most of the
- Passion preachers (in Holy Week) do nothing but make the sin
- committed by Jews against Christ heavier and greater, and
- embitter the hearts of believers against them."
-
-In one of his works, the title of which, calculated to startle their
-antagonists, ran, "Jesus was born a Jew," Luther expressed himself
-against the indelible hatred of the Jews still more sharply:
-
- "Those fools, the papists, bishops, sophists and monks, have
- hitherto so dealt with Jews, that every good Christian would
- rather have been a Jew. And if I had been a Jew, and seen such
- stupidity and such blockheads reign in the Christian Church,
- I would rather have been a pig than a Christian. They have
- treated the Jews as if they were dogs, not men; they have done
- nothing but revile them. They are blood-relations of our Lord;
- therefore, if it were proper to boast of flesh and blood, the
- Jews belong to Christ more than we. I beg, therefore, my dear
- papists, if you become tired of abusing me as a heretic, that
- you begin to revile me as a Jew."
-
- "Therefore, it is my advice," continued Luther, "that we treat
- them kindly. Now that we drive them by force, treating them
- deceitfully and ignominiously, saying that they must have
- Christian blood to wash away the Jewish stain, and I know not
- what more nonsense,--prohibiting them from working amongst
- us, from living and having social intercourse with us, forcing
- them to be usurers, how can we expect them to come to us? If we
- would help them, so must we exercise, not the law of the pope,
- but that of Christian love--show them a friendly spirit,
- permit them to live and to work, so that they may have cause
- and means to be with us and amongst us."
-
-These were words which the Jews had not heard for a thousand years.
-They show unmistakable traces of Reuchlin's mild intercession in their
-favor. Many hot-headed Jews saw in Luther's opposition to the papacy
-the extinction of Christianity and the triumph of Judaism. Three
-learned Jews went to Luther, and tried to convert him. Enthusiastic
-feelings were aroused among the Jews at this unexpected revulsion,
-especially at the blow dealt the papacy and the idolatrous worship of
-images and relics; the boldest hopes were entertained of the speedy
-downfall of Rome, and the approaching redemption by the Messiah.
-
-But the Jewish religion gained much more by the Reformation than the
-Jewish race. Despised before, it became fashionable, so to say, in the
-early days of the Reformation. Reuchlin had expressed the modest wish
-that at the few German universities a professor of the Hebrew language
-might be appointed. Through his zeal for Hebrew (he had published,
-shortly before his death, a work on Hebrew accents and prosody), and
-through the increasing conviction that without this knowledge the Bible
-must remain a sealed book, princes and universities sought teachers,
-and instituted Hebrew professorships not only in Germany and Italy, but
-also in France and Poland. The light, graceful, classic muse, which had
-withdrawn many hearts from the church, was more and more neglected, and
-the serious Hebrew mother was sought out instead. Young and old did not
-hesitate to seek Jews from whom to learn Hebrew. A friendly connection
-was formed between Jewish masters and Christian pupils, to the intense
-vexation of bigots on both sides; and many prejudices died out by these
-means. The principal teacher of the Christians was a grammarian of
-German descent, Elias Levita (born 1468, died 1549). This poor man,
-who had to struggle for his daily bread, laid the foundation of the
-knowledge of the Hebrew language. The plundering of Padua--where,
-perhaps, he was born--brought him, by way of Venice, to Rome, where
-Cardinal Egidio de Viterbo, wishing to advance in his grammatical and
-Kabbalistic studies, took him into his house, supporting him and his
-family for more than ten years. Not only this church dignitary, but
-many other Christians of high position sat at Levita's feet. One was
-George de Selve, bishop of Lavour, the French ambassador, as learned
-as he was statesmanlike. Against the reproach of some bigoted rabbis,
-Levita defended himself by the remark that his Christian pupils all
-were friends of the Jews, and tried to promote their welfare. On the
-inducement of his patron, Egidio, he worked at a Hebrew grammar in the
-Hebrew language, the greater part of which was translated into Latin
-by Reuchlin's pupil, Sebastian Muenster. Elias Levita had not a mind of
-great depth, nor did he propound a new theory on the structure of the
-Hebrew language. He rigorously adhered to the grammatical system of the
-Kimchis, because he did not know their predecessors. His usefulness
-consisted in his command over the whole Scriptural vocabulary, his
-pedagogic skill, and his gift of vivid presentation. Beyond the
-elements he did not go, but they perfectly satisfied the wants of
-the time. Only one deviation did Levita make from the beaten track.
-Against the firm belief of the time that the accents and the vowel
-signs in the Hebrew Bible were of ancient origin, having been revealed
-on Mount Sinai, or, at all events, introduced by Ezra, he maintained
-that they had not been known even at the time of the Talmud, because
-they had been superfluous when Hebrew was a living language. It can
-easily be imagined what a storm this opinion raised. It at once upset
-all preconceived notions. The bigots raised a cry against him as though
-he had by his assertion disowned Judaism. Elias Levita was, therefore,
-little liked by his brother Jews, and associated more with learned
-Christians, which brought much blame from the over-pious, and produced
-evil consequences for his descendants.
-
-He was not the only teacher of the Hebrew language and literature
-to Christians. As before him, Obadiah Sforno had given Reuchlin
-instruction in Hebrew, so at the same time as Levita, Jacob Mantino and
-Abraham de Balmes were engaged in instructing Christians.
-
-Throughout Christendom there was a desire to know the Hebrew language.
-The printers reckoned on such good sales that in several places in
-Italy and Germany, even where there were no Jews, new and old Hebrew
-grammatical writings were published. Everyone wished to know Hebrew and
-to understand the Hebrew language and literature. Some years before the
-representatives of the church had considered the knowledge of Hebrew
-superfluous, or even a pernicious evil touching on heresy; but through
-the Reformation it became a necessary branch of divinity. Luther
-himself learnt Hebrew to be able to penetrate the meaning of the Bible.
-
-The change of mind was most evident in France. The Paris university,
-the leader of thought, had by a majority condemned Reuchlin's
-"Augenspiegel" in favor of the Talmud and Hebrew studies; scarcely six
-years later there was a professorship and a printing press for Hebrew,
-and the confessor of King Louis, William Haquinet Petit, though a
-Dominican, the one whose slander had brought about the condemnation of
-Reuchlin's work, appeared as a patron of Hebrew literature.
-
-At his advice King Francis I invited the bishop of Corsica, Augustin
-Justiniani, a man well read in Hebrew literature, to come to France.
-This young king felt, or at least showed, interest in learning and also
-in the study of Hebrew. He invited Elias Levita to come to France, and
-fill the professorship of Hebrew there, probably at the instigation
-of his admirer, De Selve. One must take into consideration what this
-signified at that time. In France proper, for more than a century,
-no Jew had been permitted to dwell, nor even to make a passing stay,
-and now a Jew was invited, not merely to reside there, but to accept
-an honorable post and instruct Christians. What heresy! Elias Levita,
-however, declined this flattering proposal; he would not have felt at
-ease there as the only Jew, and to urge the admission of Jews into
-France was not in conformity with his character. Justiniani undertook
-the task of introducing the study of Hebrew into France.
-
-At the University of Rheims the French students made attempts to
-speak Hebrew. As there were not sufficient grammars, Justiniani
-had the wretched Hebrew grammar of Moses Kimchi printed. Yet more
-remarkable is it that in Paris, where three hundred years previously
-the Jewish orthodox party, with the help of the Dominicans, had burnt
-Maimuni's religious philosophical work, "Guide of the Perplexed," the
-Dominican Justiniani now caused a Latin translation of the same to
-be published (1520). Naturally, the Christian teachers of the Hebrew
-language remained dependent on their Jewish masters; they could not
-take a single step without them. Paulus Fagius, a reforming priest
-and disciple of Reuchlin, wishing to establish a Hebrew press in
-Isny, called upon Elias Levita to go there. This offer was accepted,
-for Levita was in difficulties, and could find no publisher for his
-Chaldean and Rabbinical dictionaries. Paulus Fagius was particularly
-pleased with these works, because they appeared to him to offer the key
-to the Kabbala, so much sought for by Christian scholars.
-
-Through the agitation by Reuchlin and Luther the neglected science of
-the Bible was to a certain extent cultivated. Judaism and Christianity
-are both founded on the Sacred Writings, yet they were quite strange
-to the followers of both religions. The glorious memorial of a
-much favored time was so shrouded and surrounded with a network of
-senseless explanations, so disfigured by these accessories, that its
-full value was completely unknown. Because everything was looked for
-in, and imported into, the Holy Scriptures, the true meaning was not
-discovered. To the Christian laity the Bible had been inaccessible for
-a long time, because the papacy, with instinctive fear, had forbidden
-its translation into the vernacular. So the faithful knew only
-fragments or isolated texts, and, owing to distorted interpretations,
-these not always correctly. Even the clergy were not familiar
-therewith, for they were acquainted only with the Roman Catholic
-Latin version, and in this the fundamental truths of the Bible were
-confused by perversions and errors. It was, therefore, a work of great
-importance that occupied Luther in his solitude on the Wartburg--the
-translation of the Bible, the Old and New Testaments, into German.
-For this purpose Luther had to learn Hebrew, and seek information
-from Jews. To his contemporaries it seemed as if God's Word had for
-the first time been revealed; this clear voice they had never before
-heard. A breath of fresh air was wafted on men, when the ramparts were
-broken down that had so long held its spirit imprisoned. Classical
-antiquity had improved the taste of a small circle. Hebrew antiquity
-rejuvenated the whole generation, once more infusing love of simplicity
-and naturalness. The Bible was soon translated into all European
-languages; the Catholics themselves were obliged to disregard the papal
-command, and render it into intelligible language for the people's use.
-The Jews also felt the want of the Holy Scripture in the vernacular. A
-translation into Spanish was made in Ferrara, by a Marrano, Duarte de
-Pinel, who had escaped from Portugal, and called himself Abraham Usque
-as a Jew.
-
-The demand for Hebrew Bibles was so great that Daniel Bomberg
-undertook the great work of publishing the Old Testament, with the
-commentaries of Rashi, Ibn-Ezra, Kimchi, Gersonides, and others. The
-sale of this rabbinical Bible was so rapid that new editions were
-continually appearing.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-THE KABBALA AND MESSIANIC FANATICISM. THE MARRANOS AND THE INQUISITION.
-
- Internal Condition of Judaism--Division in the Communities--
- The Lack of Interest in Poetry--Historical Studies--Leon
- Medigo's "Dialogues of Love"--Supremacy of the Kabbala--
- Messianic Hopes--The Marranos and the Inquisition--Henrique
- Nunes--The Traveler David Reubeni in Rome--Solomon Molcho
- --His Relations with David Reubeni--Joseph Karo and his
- "Maggid"--Clement VII--Molcho in Ancona and Rome--His Favor
- with the Cardinals--Death of Molcho--The Enthusiastic Regard in
- which he was held--Duarte de Paz--Paul III--Charles V and the
- Jews--Emanuel da Costa.
-
-1500-1538 C.E.
-
-
-It is astonishing, yet not astonishing, that the surging movement,
-the convulsive heaving that shook the Christian world from pole to
-pole in the first quarter of the sixteenth century scarcely touched
-the inner life of the Jews. Whilst among Christians a radical change
-took place, in thought, customs, studies, and even in language;
-whilst their ancient customs and usages were rejected or put aside in
-some places, and in others freshened up; in a word, whilst a new era
-started, everything remained unchanged with the Jews. Having had no
-"Middle Ages," they needed no new epoch. They needed no regeneration,
-they had no immoral course of life to redress, no cankering corruption
-to cure, no dam to raise against the insolence and rapacity of their
-spiritual guides. They had not so much rubbish to clear away. It must
-not be imagined, however, that within the pale of Judaism all was
-bright. The refining and civilizing thoughts of Judaism had not yet
-gained the upper hand. The people were wanting in spirituality, their
-guides in clearness of mind. Reliance on justification by works and
-scholastic sophistry were prevalent also among Jews. In the synagogue
-service spirituality was missing, and honesty in the world of business.
-The ritual retained all received from olden times, and became filled
-with unintelligible elements, so that, on the whole, it acquired an
-unattractive character. Sermons were unknown in German congregations
-and their offshoots; at best, Talmudical discourses, utterly
-unintelligible to the people, especially to women, and, therefore,
-leaving them cold and uninterested, were delivered. The Spanish and
-Portuguese preachers spoke in the beautiful language of their country,
-but their sermons were so full of pedantry that they were no more
-easily understood by the laity.
-
-The breaking up of Jewish congregations into national groups was also a
-misfortune. The persecution of the Jews had thrown into the large towns
-of Italy and Turkey fugitives from the Pyrenees and from Germany, who
-failed to unite themselves with the existing congregations, yet did
-not amalgamate with each other. There were, therefore, in many towns,
-not only Italian, Romanic (Greek), Spanish, Portuguese, German, and,
-now and again, Moorish (African) congregations, but of each almost as
-many as there were provinces and towns in each country. For example,
-in Constantinople, Adrianople, Salonica, Arta (Larta) in Greece, and
-many other towns, there was a large variety of congregations, each of
-which had its own directors, ritual, rabbi, academy, charities, its
-own prejudices and jealousies. In the face of such division, nothing
-for the public benefit or general good could be accomplished. The
-spiritual leaders, although generally moral, and, as a rule, sincerely
-and fervently religious, humbled themselves before the rich members of
-their congregation, witnessing insolence and misconduct without daring
-to reprove them.
-
-Worse than this splitting up into tiny congregations was the
-faintness, the narrow-mindedness, the self-abasement, not merely of
-German Jews, but of the Sephardic exiles. Only when it was necessary
-to die for the faith of their fathers did they show themselves heroic
-and full of courage; at other times their activity was expended on
-petty concerns. No new course was taken, not even at sight of the daily
-changes of the Christian world. The few who maintained themselves on
-the heights of science kept to the beaten track, served but to level
-it still more. The ruling idea was to elucidate old thoughts and old
-thinkers, and to write commentaries, yea, even super-commentaries.
-The Talmudists explained the Talmud, and the philosophical inquirers
-Maimuni's "Guide." Higher flight of fancy and greater spiritual insight
-were not possible. No sound of real poetry came from the lips of those
-nourished on it, not even a thrilling song of lamentation, putting
-their grief into words. The only circumstance testifying to change of
-position and times was interest in historical research, and that was
-almost entirely confined to the Jews of Pyrenean descent. The endless
-suffering which they had endured, they wished to preserve for future
-generations. Present misery brought before them the sorrows of early
-ages, and showed them that the history of the Jewish race was one long
-course of painful martyrdom.
-
-Otherwise there was nothing new at this period. Freedom of
-philosophical inquiry was not favored. Isaac Abrabanel, the transmitter
-of the old Spanish Hebrew spirit, found in Maimuni's philosophical
-writings many heresies opposed to Judaism, and he condemned the
-free-thinking commentators who went beyond tradition. A Portuguese
-fugitive, Joseph Jaabez, laid on philosophy the blame for the expulsion
-of the Jews from Spain and Portugal. Free-thinking was the sin which
-had led Israel astray; thereon must the greatest restriction be laid.
-
-A fresh spirit breathes in the philosophical work of the talented
-Leon Abrabanel, or Medigo. Its title, "Dialogues of Love" (Dialoghi
-d'amore), tells the reader that it is not tainted with the insipidity
-of commonplace philosophy. No one can better show the elasticity of the
-Jewish mind than this scion of the ancient noble family of Abrabanel.
-Torn from a comfortable home, thrown into a strange land, leading an
-unsettled life in Italy, his heart tortured by gnawing pain for the
-living death of his first-born, who had been snatched from him, Leon
-Medigo had enough intellectual strength to immerse himself in the
-Italian language and literature, and reduce his scattered philosophical
-ideas to perfect order. Hardly ten years after his flight from Spain
-he might have passed for a learned Italian, rivaling in style the
-polished writers of the Medici era, and even excelling them in extent
-of learning. With the same pen with which he wrote Hebrew verses to
-his son, who was being educated in sham Christianity in Portugal,
-admonishing him, "Remain continually mindful of Judaism, cherish the
-Hebrew language and literature, and keep ever before thee the grief
-of thy father, the pain of thy mother," he wrote his "Dialogues of
-Love," the outpourings of Philo's deep love for Sophia. This ostensible
-romance is the keynote of Leon Medigo's philosophical system, which
-sounds more like a philosophical idyll than a logical system. There
-is more imagination than reality, and his reflections are suggestive
-rather than true. Possibly Leon Medigo put his deeper thoughts into
-a work, now lost, entitled the "Harmony of Heaven." His "Dialogues
-of Love" throughout was far removed from Judaism. Leon Medigo paid
-high honor to "Hebrew truth," and endeavored to uphold the scriptural
-doctrine of creation out of chaos, in opposition to the principles
-of Greek philosophy, but he did not penetrate to the true spirit of
-Judaism. Therefore his work was valued by Christians more than by
-Jews. The Italians were proud to see--it was the first time--
-philosophical thought laid down in their own enthusiastically beloved
-language. The work became the favorite reading of the educated class,
-and in the space of twenty years went through five editions.
-
-The Kabbala with its futilities soon took possession of minds no longer
-accustomed to strict logical discipline, and in a measure it filled the
-void. In the sixteenth century it first began to have sway over men's
-minds. Its adversaries were dead, or indisposed to place themselves
-in opposition to the ideas of the age, only too strongly inclined to
-mysteries, paradoxes and irrational fancies. Sephardic fugitives,
-Judah Chayyat, Baruch of Benevento, Abraham Levi, Meir ben Gabbai,
-Ibn-Abi Zimra, had brought the Kabbala to Italy and Turkey, and with
-extraordinary energy won zealous adherents for it. Also, the enthusiasm
-felt for the Kabbala by Christian scholars, such as Egidio de Viterbo,
-Reuchlin, Galatino, and others, reacted upon the Jews. The doctrine,
-they reasoned, must have some deep truth in it, if it is so sought for
-by noble Christians. Preacher-Kabbalists expounded the doctrine from
-the pulpit, which had not been done before. On questions of ritual
-the Kabbalist writings were consulted, often as final authorities.
-No wonder that typical elements of the Zohar crept into the liturgy,
-conferring upon it a mystical character. With bold presumption the
-Kabbalists asserted that they alone were in possession of the Mosaic
-tradition, and that the Talmud and the rabbis must give place to them.
-In this way the secret doctrine with its tricks and fancies, which had
-hitherto unsettled only some few adepts, became known amongst all the
-Jews, and affected the sober minds of the people. The opposition of
-the rabbis to this interference in the ritual and religious life was
-rather weak, as they themselves were convinced of the sanctity of the
-Kabbala, and objected to the innovations only in a faint-hearted way.
-
-The empty Kabbala could not fail to arouse enthusiasm in empty heads.
-With the Zoharist mystics, as with the Essenes, the expectation of the
-Messiah was the center of their system. To further the kingdom of the
-Messiah, or the kingdom of Heaven, or the kingdom of morality, and to
-predict, by means of letters and numbers, the exact time of its advent,
-was the labor in which they delighted. Isaac Abrabanel, although he did
-not favor the Kabbala, gave this Messianic enthusiasm his countenance.
-The accumulated sufferings of the few remaining Spanish and Portuguese
-Jews had broken the spirit of many, and robbed them of their hope of
-better times. The hopelessness and despair of his people, which, if
-they spread, would further the plans of the church, pained the faithful
-Isaac Abrabanel, and in order to counteract this dangerous tendency,
-he prepared three works, based upon the Bible (principally the Book of
-Daniel) and Agadic sayings, which, he believed, proved incontrovertibly
-that Israel would have a glorious future, and that a Messiah would
-unfailingly come. According to his reckoning, the advent of the Messiah
-must of necessity be in the year 1503, 5263 years after the creation
-of the world, and the end would come with the fall of Rome, about
-twenty-eight years later.
-
-The support given to Messianic calculations by so thoughtful and
-respected a man as Isaac Abrabanel, together with Kabbalistic fancies,
-seems to have encouraged an enthusiast to predict the immediate
-realization of Messianic ideals. A German, Asher Laemmlein (or Laemmlin),
-appeared in Istria, near Venice, proclaiming himself a forerunner of
-the Messiah (1502). He announced that if the Jews would show great
-repentance, mortification, contrition and charity, the Messiah would
-not fail to come in six months. The people's minds, prepared by
-suffering and the Kabbalist craze, were susceptible to such convulsive
-expectations. Asher Laemmlein gained a troop of adherents, who spread
-his prophecies. In Italy and Germany he met with sympathy and belief.
-There was much fasting, much praying, much distribution of alms. It
-was called the "year of penitence." Everyone prepared himself for the
-beginning of the miracle. They counted so surely on redemption and
-return to Jerusalem that existing institutions were wilfully destroyed.
-The sober and thoughtful did not dare check this wild fanaticism. Even
-Christians are said to have believed in Asher Laemmlein's Messianic
-prophecy. But the prophet died, or suddenly disappeared, and with him
-the extravagant hopes came to an end.
-
-But with the termination of the Laemmlein "year of penitence," the Jews
-by no means lost their hope in the Messiah; it was necessary to support
-them in their misery. The Kabbalists did not cease arousing this hope,
-ever and anon promising them its wonderful realization. Thirty years
-later a more important Messianic movement commenced, which, by reason
-of its extent and the persons implicated in it, was most interesting.
-The Marranos in Spain and Portugal played the principal part in it.
-
-These most unfortunate of all unfortunates, who renounced the faith
-of their people, who in a measure estranged themselves from their own
-hearts, who were compelled to observe church rites most punctiliously,
-though they hated them in the depth of their souls, yet despite all
-this were repelled by the Inquisition and the hatred of Christians--
-these converts suffered, without exaggeration, the tortures of hell.
-The greater portion of them, in spite of all their struggles, could not
-bring themselves to love Christianity. How could they feel love for a
-creed whose followers daily required the sacrifice of human life, and
-on the slightest pretext sought victims among new-Christians? Under
-Deza, the second Spanish chief inquisitor, almost greater horrors were
-perpetrated than under Torquemada. He and his tools, in particular
-Diego Rodriguez Lucero, a pious hangman in Cordova, had committed so
-many infamies that a good monk, Peter Martyr, pictured the Inquisition
-thirty years after its origin in glaring colors: "The archbishop of
-Seville (Deza), Lucero, and Juan de la Fuente have dishonored this
-province. Their people acknowledge neither God nor justice. They kill,
-steal, and violate women and maidens, to the disgrace of religion.
-The injury and unhappiness which these servants of the Inquisition
-have caused in my land are so great and widespread that everyone must
-grieve." Lucero (the luminous), called by his confederates, on account
-of his horrible deeds, Tenebrero (the dark one), brought destruction on
-thousands: he was insatiable for the blood of Hebrew martyrs. "Give me
-Jews to burn," is said to have been his constant cry. His fanaticism
-degenerated into cannibalistic fury.
-
-The officers of the Inquisition had their hands full in consequence
-of his cruelty, and an ominous disturbance was growing in Cordova.
-The principal people of the place complained of the proceedings
-of the inquisitor Lucero, and applied to the chief inquisitor to
-have him removed from office. But Deza was at one with him, and so
-the discontented knights, nobles, donnas, priests and nuns, were
-all accused of favoring Jewish heresy. The third chief inquisitor,
-Ximenes de Cisneros, was forbearing towards old Christians suspected
-of Judaizing, but condemned not a few converts of Jewish and Moorish
-descent to be burned. It was he who used threatening language against
-Charles V, when he proposed granting the Spanish Marranos freedom of
-belief for a fee of 800,000 gold crowns. He forbade his royal pupil
-to tolerate the Jews, as Torquemada had forbidden it to Charles'
-ancestors. His successors were not less orthodox, that is to say, not
-less inhuman. Under them the victims were not Jews alone; Christians
-suffered with them. The reform movement in Germany was felt also in
-Spain. Luther's and Calvin's onslaught on the papacy, on priestcraft
-and ceremonies was brought over the Pyrenees through the connection of
-Spain and Germany, and owing to the nationality of Emperor Charles V.
-The emperor, so troubled with the Reformation in Germany, empowered
-the Holy Office to proceed against Lutheran doctrines in Spain, a most
-welcome task to the bloodthirsty monster. Henceforth, Jews, Mahometans
-and Lutheran Christians enjoyed equality; at every auto-da-fe martyrs
-of the three different religions perished together.
-
-The Marranos in Portugal were differently placed from those in Spain.
-King Manoel, who had by force dragged the Jews to the baptismal font,
-in order not to drive them to despair had pledged his word that
-for twenty (or twenty-nine) years, their faith should not suffer
-molestation at the hands of the Inquisition. Relying on this promise
-the Portuguese Marranos followed Jewish observances with less secrecy
-than those of Spain. In Lisbon, where they mostly resided, they had
-a synagogue, in which they assembled, the more regularly as they
-outwardly complied with the Roman Catholic rites, and, therefore, in
-their own place of worship, with much contrition, implored forgiveness
-of God for their idolatry. The old instructed the young in the Bible
-and the Talmud, and impressed upon them the truths of Judaism, so
-as to guard them against the temptation of unreserved acceptance
-of Christianity. The Portuguese Marranos also had more freedom to
-emigrate, and left singly or in numbers for Barbary or Italy, and
-thence went on to Turkey. To check the emigration of the Marranos
-Manoel had issued an order that a Christian could conclude an exchange
-or barter with a convert only under pain of forfeiting his possessions,
-and could buy real estate from him only by royal permission; moreover,
-that no Marrano, with wife, children and servants, should leave the
-land without a special license from the king. But orders of this
-description were made only to be evaded. Spanish Marranos had every
-reason to envy their fellows in Portugal, and spared no trouble to
-escape beyond the frontier of the land where the stake was ready, and
-the fagots lighted for them. Very naturally the vindictive Spanish
-government opposed them, and induced Manoel to pass a law that no
-Spaniard could step on Portuguese soil unless he brought a certificate
-that he was not guilty of heresy.
-
-The Portuguese Marranos, then, would have had a tolerable existence
-if popular hatred of them had not been so fierce. This unfriendliness
-after their baptism shows that they were hated less as followers
-of Judaism than as a different race, and an active, industrious,
-superior class. The Christians' dislike of them increased when the
-converts obtained the right of pursuing a trade, of collecting church
-tithes, of taking office, or even accepting ecclesiastical dignities
-preparatory to entering one of the orders. At first they showed their
-hatred by calling them insulting names, "cursed convert of a Jew"
-(_Judaeo Marrano, converso_), till Manoel stopped this by law. Bad
-harvests, which for many years had brought famine into Portugal, now
-resulted in a plague, and this added fuel to popular animosity. It was
-commonly said, "The baptized Jews are grain speculators; they make the
-necessaries of life dear, and export grain to foreign countries." The
-person most hated was a Marrano upstart, John Rodrigo Mascarenhas, the
-farmer of taxes, and through him all the Marranos incurred hatred.
-
-This feeling was employed by the crafty Dominicans to gain the
-expulsion of the favorites of King Manoel. They not only preached about
-the godlessness of the converts, but invented a miracle outright
-to excite the fanaticism of the people. The moment was opportune.
-The plague raged in Portugal, and swept away thousands daily, while
-continued drought threatened another bad harvest. Of these troubles,
-the Marranos alone were the cause, at least so everybody said. The
-Dominicans loudly proclaimed that, in one of their churches, in a
-mirror attached to a cross, the Virgin Mary had appeared in a glow of
-fire, and other astonishing miracles had been seen in it. They were
-practiced in such deceit. Many people flocked to the church to behold
-the marvel. On a Sunday after Easter (April 19th, 1506), the church was
-filled with devotional gazers, among them Marranos, who were compelled
-to attend.
-
-A Dominican, in a passionate sermon, charged the people collected in
-the church to murder the accursed converts, because the king favored
-them; and two others, John Mocho and Fratre Bernardo, walked through
-the street, bearing crosses, and, crying "Heresy, heresy!" The scum of
-the populace in the turbulent capital was aroused, and, together with
-German, Dutch and French sailors, took this opportunity to plunder.
-Thus nearly 10,000 people went through the town, and killed Marranos,
-men, women and children, wherever they found them, in the streets, in
-the houses, or in hiding.
-
-This, however, by no means ended the massacre; it continued two days
-longer. A German, who was in Lisbon, reported: "On Monday I saw things
-dreadful to say or write if one has not seen them." Women with child
-were flung from the windows and caught on spears by those standing
-underneath, and their offspring hurled away. The peasantry followed the
-example of the townspeople. Many women and girls were violated in this
-fanatical chase. The number of new-Christians slain is estimated at
-between 2,000 and 4,000.
-
-By this slaughter the fate of the Portuguese Marranos was decided. The
-people were the more embittered against them because they had gained
-the favor of the king, and they longed for their extermination. Their
-lives hung on the chance of the continuance of the king's favor. Manoel
-declared by proclamation (March, 1507) that converts were to be treated
-as Christians, and that they should be permitted to emigrate; and by
-another order, that for sixteen years more they should not be liable
-to be arraigned before a tribunal for their religious conduct. The
-Christian population remained hostile to the converts, from racial
-antipathy and from envy of their industrial success, and Manoel himself
-was compelled to modify his attitude towards them.
-
-The condition of the Portuguese Marranos changed under Manoel's
-successor Joao III (1522-1557), the blockhead who brought about the
-ruin of his country. As Infante he had been the declared enemy of the
-new-Christians. At first he respected his father's edict to place
-converted Jews on a par with Christians, and to allow no trial to
-take place regarding their religious belief within the prescribed
-time (1522-1524). For this indulgence the Marranos had to thank
-the old counselors of Manoel, who remembered the violent mode of
-their conversion, and on the other hand appreciated how much they
-had increased the prosperity of the little state. For the Marranos
-were a most useful class on account of their energy, their wholesale
-business, their public banks, and their skill as armorers and cannon
-founders. They were the only ones, too, possessed of a knowledge of
-medicine and physical science and all pertaining to it. There were in
-Portugal hardly any but Jewish, that is to say, Marrano physicians.
-When, however, other influences were brought to bear on Joao, and he
-gradually freed himself from these wise counselors, his fanatical
-detestation of the converts gained the upper hand. Queen Catherine,
-a Spanish Infanta, filled with admiration of the religious tribunal
-of her country, and the bloodthirsty Dominicans, envious of the power
-of their order in Spain, besieged the king with complaints of the
-disgraceful and wicked conduct of the Marranos towards the Christian
-faith, and urged him to put a stop to the proceedings of the Marranos
-by instituting an Inquisition. Joao III thereupon commissioned George
-Themudo to inquire into the life of the Marranos in Lisbon, their
-headquarters, and to report to him upon it. Themudo was probably not
-far from the truth when he informed the king (July, 1524) that some
-Marranos observed the Sabbath and the Passover, that, on the other
-hand, they joined in Christian rites and ceremonies as little as
-possible, were not present at mass and divine service, did not go to
-confession, did not ask that extreme unction be administered to the
-dying, were buried in unconsecrated ground, not in a churchyard, that
-they had no masses said for their departed relatives, and committed
-other offenses of a similar character.
-
-But Joao was not satisfied with Themudo's report; the Marranos were
-put under an espionage system. A convert, an emigrant from Spain,
-named Henrique Nunes, who afterwards received from the church the
-honorary title Firme-Fe, was chosen by the king to spy upon them. In
-the school of the bloodthirsty Lucero he had acquired a fierce hatred
-of the Marranos, and it was his ardent wish to see the fagots kindled
-in Portugal. To him the king gave secret instructions to insinuate
-himself into the families of the converts, to associate with them as
-a brother and companion in adversity, to observe them and report upon
-all the information he could gain. Blinded by fanaticism and hatred
-of his own race, Nunes did not consider how contemptible a role, that
-of a common spy, was allotted to him. He undertook the work only too
-willingly, learned all the secrets of the unhappy Marranos in Lisbon,
-Evora and other places, and communicated all that he saw and heard
-in letters to the king. He betrayed with a brother's kiss those who
-showed him the hidden corners of their hearts. He informed the king not
-only that he found no Catholic prayer-books in their houses, that they
-had no holy images among their ornaments or on their plate, that they
-did not care for rosaries and other things of that kind, but he gave
-the names of the Jewish Marranos, making hateful accusations against
-them. As soon as Joao received the desired intelligence, he resolved
-to introduce the Inquisition on the Spanish model into his country,
-and secretly sent the trusty Nunes to Charles V in Spain to learn
-something more about it. The Marranos had got wind of this, and were
-so furious with the treacherous spy, that two of them followed him to
-punish his perfidy with death. These were Diego Vaz, of Olivenca, and
-Andre Dias, of Vianna, who were Franciscans, or disguised themselves in
-monks' dress. They reached him not far from the Spanish frontier, near
-Badajoz, and killed him with sword and spear. They found letters on him
-about the installation of the Inquisition. The avengers, or murderers,
-as the orthodox Christians called them, were discovered, brought to
-trial, stretched on the rack to betray their accomplices, and finally
-condemned to the gallows. But the traitor Nunes was regarded as a
-martyr, almost canonized, and given the honorary title of "Firme-Fe"
-(Firm Believer).
-
-One would have expected the fanatical king after this occurrence to
-pursue with greater zeal his object of establishing an Inquisition,
-so as to proceed against the Jewish Marranos whose names he had
-obtained from Nunes. The king did, indeed, institute a strict inquiry
-to discover the accomplices of the two Marrano monks. Contrary to
-expectation Joao issued no restrictions against the Marranos. Also
-the inquiry about the conspirators for Nunes' death seems to have
-been intentionally protracted as much as possible. Documents plainly
-say that the king gave up the plan of establishing the Inquisition. A
-chance, the boldness of an adventurer, appears in the first instance to
-have brought about this favorable alteration in the mind of the weak,
-vacillating king.
-
-Coming from the far East, and emerging from obscurity, appeared a man
-of whom it is hard to say whether he was an impostor or a foolish
-fanatic, and whether he intended to play the role of a Messianic or
-of a political adventurer, but he caused a great stir among Jews,
-affecting the Marranos in the extreme West. David, an Oriental by
-descent, long resident in Arabia and Nubia, suddenly appeared in Europe
-in a peculiar character, and by means of both fiction and truth started
-the wildest hopes. He declared himself a descendant of the old Hebrew
-tribe of Reuben, which, he alleged, still flourished in Arabia in
-independence, and he claimed to be a prince, the brother of a reigning
-Jewish king. He, therefore, called himself David Reubeni.
-
-Loving travel and adventure, he journeyed much in Arabia, Nubia and
-Egypt, and came finally to Italy. The report was that he had been
-sent by his brother, who commanded 300,000 chosen warriors, and by
-the seventy elders of the land of Chaibar, to the European princes,
-especially to the pope, to obtain firearms and cannon with which to
-fight the Mahometan people, who hindered the union of the Jewish race
-on both sides of the Red Sea, and to assist the brave Jewish army to
-drive the Turks out of the Holy Land.
-
-David Reubeni's appearance and manner were such as to inspire
-confidence. In both, there was something strange, mysterious and
-eccentric. He was of dark complexion and dwarfish in stature, and
-so excessively thin that continuous fasts reduced him almost to a
-skeleton. Possessed of courage and intrepidity, he had at the same time
-a harsh manner that admitted of no familiarity. He only spoke Hebrew,
-and that in so corrupt a jargon that neither Asiatic Jews nor those of
-southern Europe understood him. He came to Rome (February, 1524), and
-accompanied by a servant and an interpreter, rode on a white horse to
-the Vatican, and requested an interview with Cardinal Giulio, in the
-presence of other cardinals. Pope Clement also gave him audience, and
-accepted his credentials.
-
-Clement VII (1523-1534), one of the most excellent popes, an
-illegitimate scion of the Florentine Medicis, was sensible and kind,
-and earnestly desired to see Italy freed from the barbarians, that is,
-the Germans. But he reigned at a time when Europe had lost its balance.
-On the one side Luther and his Reformation, which gained ground daily,
-threatened to undermine the papacy; and on the other, Charles V's
-powerful realm, Spain and Germany with Burgundy and a part of America,
-almost crushed Italy into servile dependence. If Clement quarreled
-with the emperor, the latter favored the Reformation, and set about
-restraining the papal power. If the pope became reconciled to him, the
-liberty of Italy was menaced. Thus, notwithstanding his firm character,
-he was continually wavering, and like most of his contemporaries had
-recourse to astrology, in order to learn from the stars what was beyond
-the wisdom of men.
-
-To Pope Clement VII, David Reubeni seems to have handed letters of
-introduction from Portuguese captains or business agents, whom he may
-have met in Arabia or Nubia. These credentials the pope sent to the
-Portuguese court, and when they were there declared trustworthy, David
-was treated with the greatest distinction, and received all the honors
-due an ambassador. He rode through Rome on a mule, accompanied by
-ten Jews and more than two hundred Christians. The plan of a crusade
-against Turkey, by which the most dangerous enemy of Christianity would
-be driven out of the Holy Land by an Israelitish army, attracted the
-pope, because it promised to restore to him the control of military
-affairs, but its execution was thwarted by the complexities of his
-position. Even the most incredulous of the Jews could not conceal from
-themselves the astonishing fact that a Jew was treated with respect
-and politeness by the Vatican, and were convinced that there must be
-at least a grain of truth in David's report. Roman and foreign Jews
-pressed round him who seemed to open a hopeful future to them. Senora
-Benvenida Abrabanela, wife of the rich Samuel Abrabanel, sent him great
-sums of money from Naples, a costly silk banner embroidered with the
-Ten Commandments, and many rich garments. He, however, played his part
-in a masterly manner, keeping the Jews at a respectful distance.
-
-At length a formal invitation came from the king of Portugal, summoning
-David Reubeni to his court. The latter left Rome, traveling by sea with
-a Jewish flag on his ship. In Almeirin, the residence of king Joao
-III near Santarem, where David arrived, like a wealthy prince, with a
-numerous retinue bearing beautifully embroidered banners, he was also
-treated with the greatest honor, and a scheme was discussed with him
-as to how the weapons and cannons could be transported from Portugal
-for the Israelite army in Arabia and Nubia. David's appearance in
-Portugal seems to have changed the feeling towards the Marranos, and
-Joao was persuaded to give up the intended persecution of them. For so
-great an undertaking Joao would need their support, their money and
-their advice. If he wished for an alliance with the Hebrew king and
-people, he must not persecute the half-Jews in his own country. So
-his zeal for the establishment of the Inquisition in Portugal suddenly
-cooled. One can imagine the astonishment and joy of the Marranos in
-Portugal, when they understood that not only might a Jew be admitted
-into Portugal, but that he was received at court, and treated with
-respect. Thus, then, had come the hour of deliverance of which they
-had so long dreamed. Unexpected help had come to them, freedom and
-deliverance from their anguish; they breathed again. Whether or not
-David Reubeni had declared himself the forerunner of the Messiah, did
-not matter to the Marranos; they believed it, and counted the days to
-the time when he would make them behold the new Jerusalem in all its
-splendor. They pressed round him, kissed his hands, and treated him as
-if he were their king. From Portugal the supposed message of salvation
-passed to Spain to the still more unfortunate Marranos there, who
-received it with ecstasies of joy. These poor people had fallen into a
-morbid, eccentric, irresponsible state of mind. Daily and hourly they
-suffered torments of soul, through having to join in religious customs
-which they abhorred with their whole heart. It was no wonder that
-many of them lost their mental balance, and became quite mad. In the
-vicinity of Herrara, a Marrano maiden proclaimed herself a prophetess;
-fell into trances and had visions; declared that she had seen Moses
-and the angels, and promised to lead her suffering companions into the
-Holy Land. She found many believers among the Marranos, and when this
-was discovered, she was burned together with thirty-eight adherents.
-Messianic expectation, that is, redemption through a miracle, made the
-atmosphere in which the Marranos breathed and lived. At the news of
-the arrival of an ambassador from a Jewish kingdom at the Portuguese
-court, a crowd of Spanish converts fled to Portugal to be near their
-supposed redeemer. David, who enjoyed the privilege of traveling
-about in Portugal, appears to have behaved very circumspectly: he gave
-them no promises, and did not encourage them openly to acknowledge
-Judaism. He knew well that he was walking on the edge of a precipice,
-and that one expression, one act of his directed towards bringing
-back new-Christians to Judaism might cost him his life. Nevertheless,
-all eyes were fastened on him; all were aroused and excited by the
-wonderful events which would certainly come to pass.
-
-David Reubeni's appearance and the hopes it awakened took strongest
-hold upon one noble, talented, handsome youth; indeed, the whole
-course of his existence was changed. Diogo Pires (born about 1501,
-died a martyr, 1532), whose glowing, poetic imagination under more
-favorable circumstances might have accomplished much in the domain
-of the beautiful, became a tool in the hands of the self-proclaimed
-envoy from Chaibar. Pires, who was born a new-Christian, had acquired
-a good education; he understood and could speak Latin, the universal
-language of the time. He had risen to be royal secretary at a high
-court of justice, and was a great favorite at court. With Hebrew and
-rabbinic literature he must have been familiar from his earliest
-youth, and he had been initiated into the Kabbala, probably by one of
-the Marrano teachers. At the time when David and his chimerical plans
-made so much stir in Portugal, Diogo Pires was completely possessed by
-wild dreams and visions, all of which had a Messianic background. He
-hastened, therefore, to David, to ascertain whether his mission was
-in accordance with these visionary revelations. David Reubeni appears
-to have treated him with coldness, and to have told him plainly that
-his military embassy had nothing to do with Messianic mysticism. But
-Diogo Pires fancied the coldness of the alleged envoy to be owing to
-the circumstance that he had not accepted the sign of the covenant,
-and he forthwith proceeded to undergo the dangerous operation of
-circumcision. The consequent loss of blood laid him on a sick bed.
-David was highly incensed when Pires told him of this, as both of them
-would be in danger, if it came to the king's ears that a Marrano had
-so emphatically and openly declared himself a Jew; for it would be
-asserted that David had persuaded him to take this course.
-
-After circumcision Pires (who took the name of Solomon Molcho) had yet
-more terrible visions, owing presumably to his bodily weakness. Their
-import always had reference to the Marranos and their redemption by
-the Messiah. According to his own account a strange being (Maggid),
-who communed with him from Heaven in a dream, charged him to leave
-Portugal and set out for Turkey. David Reubeni also had advised that
-he should leave Portugal with all speed, as the act of circumcision
-might involve also David in danger, and frustrate his schemes. Leaving
-Portugal cannot, then, have been difficult for Marranos. Diogo Pires
-(or Solomon Molcho) reached Turkey, and hoped for a Messianic mission
-and a martyr's death.
-
-A great sensation was made there by this enthusiastic, handsome young
-Kabbalist, the new Jewish recruit. At first he gave himself out as a
-delegate from David Reubeni, of whose good reception at the papal and
-Portuguese courts rumors were current even in the East, and had not
-failed to inflame people's imagination. In Salonica, Joseph Taytasak's
-Kabbalistic circle took possession of him, and greedily listened to
-his dreams and visions. At Adrianople Molcho converted to the Kabbala
-the sober-minded Joseph Karo, who had left Spain when a boy, and had
-hitherto busied himself entirely with Talmudic learning. Enthusiasm is
-infectious. Karo fell into the same Kabbalistic enthusiasm as Molcho.
-He also had his dream-prompter (Maggid), who taught him inelegant,
-mystical interpretations of Scriptural passages, and revealed the
-future. He was so faithful an imitator that, like Molcho, he lived
-in the most certain expectation of being burnt at the stake as a
-"burnt-sacrifice of a sweet savour unto the Lord." Molcho inoculated
-his followers with a longing for martyrdom. His captivating person,
-pure enthusiasm, romantic disposition, past career, astonishing
-knowledge of the Kabbala (though born a Christian), everything
-connected with him, raised up a host of adherents, who greedily
-listened to his mystic utterances, and believingly accepted them.
-He often preached, and words flowed like a torrent from his lips.
-Gray-headed men went with questions to the youth, seeking explanations
-of obscure verses of Scripture, or revelations of the future. At the
-urgent request of his friends in Salonica he published a brief abstract
-of his Kabbalistic sermons, the substance of which was: The advent of
-the Messiah is at hand; his reign will begin at the end of the year
-5300 dating from the creation (1540). The sack and havoc of Rome (May
-5th, 1527), confirmed the Messianic hopes of Kabbalistic zealots. Rome,
-the iniquitous Catholic Babylon, filled with the spoils of the whole
-earth, was taken by storm by German soldiers, mostly Lutherans, and
-was treated almost as a hostile city by order of the Catholic emperor,
-Charles V. The fall of Rome, according to Messianic and apocalyptic
-principles, had been predicted as a sign of the Messiah's advent. Now
-Rome had fallen. In Asia, Turkey, Hungary, Poland, and Germany, hopes
-of the coming of the Messiah were stirring in Jewish hearts, and were
-associated with the name of Solomon Molcho, who was to bring about
-their realization.
-
-In Spain and Portugal the Marranos held yet more firmly to their
-visions of Messianic redemption, and to David Reubeni, whom, with or
-without his consent, they took for a forerunner of the Messiah. Their
-illusion was so complete that they boldly inaugurated enterprises which
-could only end in death for themselves. Several Spanish Marranos,
-condemned to the stake, had curiously enough found a place of refuge
-in Portugal (in Campo-Mayor), where they were suffered to remain
-unmolested. A company of young people from among them ventured to
-attack Badajoz, whence they had fled, for the purpose of rescuing some
-Marrano women languishing in the Inquisition dungeons. Their irruption
-greatly alarmed the inhabitants, but they succeeded in rescuing the
-unfortunate victims. The incident made a great stir in both countries,
-and led to most prejudicial results for the pseudo-Christians. This
-occurrence, as well as the denunciation of several Marranos for
-disrespect to an image of the Virgin Mary, again induced the king to
-consider the scheme of establishing a court of Inquisition. David
-Reubeni's favor with the king of Portugal was of brief duration. He
-was at first received by Joao III with extraordinary friendliness,
-and often admitted to audience (when conversation was carried on
-by means of an Arab and Portuguese interpreter), and received the
-distinct promise that eight ships and 4,000 firearms should be placed
-at his disposal to enable his brother, the alleged king of Chaibar,
-to make war upon the Turks and Arabs, but the king gradually cooled
-down. Miguel de Silva, Portuguese ambassador at the papal court while
-David was at Rome, had held the alleged Jewish prince of Chaibar
-to be an adventurer. He was recalled to Portugal, and opposing the
-other councilors, who were deluded by David's daring character, made
-strenuous efforts to deprive him of the king's favor. Moreover, the
-homage so remarkably and openly offered to him by the Marranos had
-roused suspicion concerning him. Miguel de Silva, intrusted with the
-commission to establish the Inquisition in Portugal, pointed out
-that the king himself, by favoring the alleged Jewish prince, plainly
-fortified the Marranos in their unbelief, or adherence to the Jewish
-cause. Then came the circumcision and flight of the royal secretary,
-Diogo Pires (Solomon Molcho). This occurrence gave great offense at the
-Portuguese court, and it was insinuated to the king that David had been
-his abettor.
-
-Thus it came to pass that David Reubeni suddenly received orders
-to quit Portugal after he had tarried there and been treated with
-distinction for nearly a twelvemonth. Only two months' grace before
-embarkation was granted him. The ship that carried him and his retinue
-was cast away on the Spanish coast, and David was taken prisoner in
-Spain, where he was forced to appear before the Inquisition. However,
-before that could take place, Emperor Charles set him free, and David
-Reubeni betook himself to Avignon, under papal jurisdiction. As soon
-as King Joao broke with David Reubeni, every reason for sparing the
-Marranos vanished. The vacillating king was hard-pressed by the queen,
-the Dominicans, and some of the nobles, to decide on introducing the
-Inquisition. The bishop of Ceuta, Henrique, formerly a Franciscan monk
-and a fanatical priest, brought about the decision. In his diocese of
-Olivenca five new-Christians were suspected of Jewish practices. He
-made short work of them. Without greatly troubling as to whether the
-tribunal of the Inquisition was or was not sanctioned by the pope, and
-legally established by the king, he prepared stakes and fagots, and
-burnt the victims to death, having condemned them without regular trial
-(about 1530). The people jubilantly applauded him, and celebrated the
-murder of these Jewish-Christians with bull-fights. Far from wishing to
-hide his deed, Henrique boasted of it, and pressed the king to commence
-in earnest the chastisement of the heretical and sinful new-Christians.
-Joao decided to address himself to Pope Clement respecting the
-organization of commissions of inquiry in Portugal.
-
-But there were still some priests left from the previous reign who
-loudly raised their voices against this violent treatment of the
-Marranos. Two especially deserve to have their names made known to
-posterity--Ferdinand Coutinho, bishop of Algarve, and Diogo Pinheiro,
-bishop of Funchal. They had been witnesses of the inhuman cruelties
-with which, under Manoel, the Jews were driven to baptism, and in no
-way could recognize them as Christians, neither when there was question
-of punishing them for relapsing into heresy, nor of intrusting them
-with judicial power or spiritual benefice. Coutinho, untiring in
-ridicule of the mistaken zeal of the younger priests, reminded the
-king that Pope Clement VII himself had not long before allowed several
-Marranos to acknowledge Judaism openly in the very city of Rome.
-This pope, convinced of the injustice shown to new-Christians, with
-the consent of the college of cardinals had given them an asylum at
-Ancona, permitting them freely to confess themselves Jews. In Florence
-and Venice also they could live without molestation. Nay, the papal
-consistory itself had given out that the Portuguese Marranos were to
-be regarded as Jews. He considered, so Coutinho expressed himself
-in his friendly consideration of the question, that instead of the
-new-Christians, accused of outraging what Christians hold sacred,
-the witnesses ought to be punished for bearing false testimony. The
-new-Christians should be won to the true faith only by gentle means. At
-length the king decided to submit the question to the pope, who, should
-he sanction the establishment of the Inquisition, would at the same
-time absolve him from the promises made to the Marranos. The Portuguese
-ambassador at Rome, Bras Neto, received orders to obtain a bull to
-that effect from the pope. But what so easily, by a stroke of the pen,
-had been conceded to Spain, cost the king of Portugal many efforts and
-a struggle, and he was never able fully to enjoy his Inquisition.
-
-Now the weak hand of the amiable Kabbalist Solomon Molcho seized the
-spokes of this revolving wheel. From the East he had gone to Italy
-to fulfill the Messianic mission with which he was inspired, or with
-which he was credited. He wished to speak fearlessly before princes, in
-the capital of Christendom, of the approaching redemption. At Ancona,
-where he arrived with followers towards the end of 1529, certain
-malevolent persons, according to his own story, persecuted him. They
-were in fact prudent men, who were informed of his life in the East,
-and feared that, as a result of his impetuous striving for martyrdom,
-evil consequences would ensue for Jews all over the world, or at least
-for the Marranos in Italy, Portugal and Spain. Molcho, when cited,
-is understood to have confessed fearlessly that he preferred Judaism
-because it taught the truth. The bishop of Ancona discharged him as
-one of the Portuguese Marranos to whom freedom of religious confession
-had been allowed by the pope and the cardinals, but forbade him to
-preach against Christianity. Molcho remained some time at Ancona,
-where his preaching became very popular, even priests and Christians
-of the higher classes coming to the synagogue. However, he seems to
-have compromised himself, and in consequence repaired to Pesaro with
-the duke of Urbino, Francesco Maria della Rovere I, who thought a
-settlement of Marranos in his little state would be advantageous. But
-there was no rest for Molcho; he burnt with impatience to be at Rome
-to prepare the way for the coming of the Messiah, though without any
-clear conception of what to do. He waited for some prompting from on
-high, which, he believed, could not fail him. In obedience to a vision
-he abandoned his retinue at Pesaro, and set out alone on horseback
-for Rome. At the first sight of the Eternal City his feelings overcame
-him, for Molcho, like Luther, held Rome to be the seat of anti-Christ;
-he sank into fervent prayer, imploring redemption and forgiveness of
-sin for Israel. A voice broke in upon his prayer, predicting in verses
-of the Bible, "Edom (Rome) shall be the heritage of Israel, his foot
-shall be unsteady, but Israel will gain the victory." In this mood he
-entered Rome, and took up his abode at an inn kept by Christians. He
-put on a tattered suit, blackened his face, wrapped dirty rags around
-his feet, and leaving his horse and clothes at the inn, he took his
-stand among the tribe of beggars on the bridge over the Tiber, opposite
-the pope's palace. This equipment was in accordance with Messianic
-tradition, which had it that the Messiah would tarry amongst the lepers
-and ragged beggars of Rome, to be summoned thence to triumph. For
-thirty consecutive days the Portuguese enthusiast led this miserable
-existence, neither eating meat nor drinking wine, but contenting
-himself with the scantiest and poorest fare, and waiting for the
-prophetic ecstasy.
-
-In this condition of bodily tension and mental exaltation, Molcho fell
-into a deep sleep, and had a confused dream, noteworthy because part
-of it was afterwards fulfilled to the very letter. It was predicted
-in this vision that a devastating flood would break over Rome and
-a northern country, and his native land be panic-stricken by an
-earthquake, that when he himself reached his thirtieth year he would
-be raised to a higher degree, and clad in Byssus, because of his own
-free will he had devoted himself to death. He would return to Rome, but
-leave it again before the flood took place. Then the Holy Spirit, the
-spirit of wisdom and understanding, would rest on the Messianic king,
-the dead would rise from the dust, and God give His people glory.
-
-Next morning, enfeebled by his long mortification and his troubled
-sleep, Molcho dragged himself back to his inn, and rested. He laid
-aside his disguise, and went out to hold converse with Jews (February,
-1530). Being still a complete stranger in Rome, and in order to avoid
-the denunciation of his opponents, he gave himself out as a messenger
-from Solomon Molcho. In spite of this he was recognized, and denounced
-to the Inquisition as a seditious Marrano. He had some time previously
-entered into intercourse with the pope and some of the cardinals, to
-whom he predicted the flood. Clement VII, who for several years had
-been drinking of the cup of sorrow, and experiencing humiliations such
-as had fallen to the lot of few popes before him, who had been forced
-to crown at Bologna his deadly enemy, Charles V, as king of Italy and
-emperor of Rome (February 22d-24th, 1530), was but too readily inclined
-to listen to dreams and visions. Other unknown relations may have
-existed between the pope and Molcho, in consequence of which the latter
-was regarded with surprising favor by the pope. Molcho had friends also
-among the cardinals. Lorenzo Pucci, for example, grand penitentiary of
-the papal see, who had taken Reuchlin's part against the Dominicans,
-was attached to him. Hence, while the papal police were lying in wait
-for Molcho, at the gates of Rome, he escaped over the walls, and
-hastened to the pope, from whom he obtained a pontifical passport that
-guaranteed him against harm.
-
-Furnished with this, Molcho came back secretly to Rome, and one
-Saturday suddenly appeared in the chief synagogue, where, to the
-astonishment of all present, he preached on a text taken from the
-prophetical portion. His adherents in Rome increased so largely that he
-preached in the synagogue every Sabbath until autumn, without meeting
-with opposition. He inspired his hearers, yet seemed powerless to
-disarm his opponents. Molcho was the Jewish Savonarola. He spoke with
-unshakable certainty of his visions, and even announced to the king
-of Portugal (through the ambassador, Bras Neto) the earthquake which
-threatened Lisbon, so that precautionary measures might be taken.
-Molcho was himself so firmly convinced that the flood would come to
-pass that, when the predicted time approached, he went to Venice.
-Molcho and David Reubeni, who meanwhile had returned from Avignon to
-Italy, again met face to face. They looked at each other coldly and
-with amazement; each expected miracles from the other. Each desired the
-other to acknowledge his sublime mission. They were both embarrassed.
-Molcho's eyes were opened on this occasion to the true character of his
-once-admired master. He no longer believed in Reubeni's ignorance, but
-felt convinced that, Talmudic and Kabbalistic learning not being in
-keeping with his character as an Arabian prince, it was assumed by him
-in order to deceive people. Molcho even recanted his declaration that
-he was David's emissary. "Before the God of heaven and earth I proclaim
-the truth, that my circumcision and the abandonment of my country were
-not counseled by flesh and blood (David), but took place at the express
-command of God." Molcho was a deluded enthusiast, whereas David was
-an adventurer intentionally deceiving others. After his unsuccessful
-attempt to win over the king of Portugal and Charles V to his schemes,
-David went to Venice with the purpose of influencing the president of
-that republic, which had close relations with the East. Remarkably
-enough he found sympathy there; the Venetian senate sent a man well
-acquainted with the country to question him respecting his plan and
-means of conquest in the East (1530).
-
-Both Molcho and David were harassed by the more temperate Jews, who
-apprehended danger for themselves and their religion. While at Venice
-Molcho was poisoned by Jewish hands, and fell into a dangerous illness.
-
-Meanwhile the inundation of Rome predicted really took place,
-transforming the city into a stormy lake, and causing great havoc
-(October 8th, 1530). At the same time a brilliant comet appeared,
-shooting out rays of light till the heavens seemed about to open. In
-Portugal the earth shook thrice, and the earthquake destroyed a number
-of houses in Lisbon, many persons being buried beneath the ruins
-(January 26th, 1531).
-
-After the inundation of Rome, Molcho again appeared in that city,
-where he was honored as a prophet. The pope, to whom he had predicted
-the calamity, seems to have lavished his affections upon him, and he
-bestowed public marks of honor upon him. The Portuguese ambassador,
-Bras Neto, told him that if the king of Portugal had known how favored
-a man in God's sight was Molcho, and how well able to read the future,
-he would have permitted him to dwell in his dominions. And this was the
-moment when the ambassador received the mandate from his sovereign to
-work secretly for a bull from the papal see introducing the Inquisition
-against the Marranos! A more unfavorable time could not have been
-chosen. The affair was laid for decision before the grand penitentiary,
-Cardinal Lorenzo Pucci. But the latter, as well as Pope Clement,
-influenced by Solomon Molcho, strongly opposed the proposal from the
-beginning. Pucci straightforwardly said to the Portuguese ambassador,
-"The king of Portugal, like the king of Spain, is more attracted by the
-Marranos' wealth than concerned about the orthodoxy of their creed;
-let him rather leave them free to live according to their own law, and
-punish only those who, after voluntarily embracing Catholicism, relapse
-to the Jewish faith." For the moment Bras Neto was powerless. He even
-feared Molcho's influence with the pope, and kept his doings secret,
-lest anything come to the ears of the Marranos in Portugal, and they
-supply Molcho with money wherewith to bribe the pope's retainers to
-work against the establishment of the Inquisition.
-
-All this time Molcho was untiringly persecuted by his fellow-believers,
-more especially by his enemy, Jacob Mantin, the learned but
-unscrupulous physician and philologist. This revengeful man came from
-Venice to Rome for no other purpose than to cause the ruin of him whom
-he gratuitously hated. He took the Portuguese ambassador fairly to
-task for allowing a former Portuguese Christian, who preached against
-Christianity, to remain at liberty in Rome. As the ambassador would
-not listen to him, Mantin carried his complaint to the Inquisition.
-He procured witnesses from Portugal who testified that Solomon Molcho
-had lived as a Christian in Portugal, and managed to have him cited
-before the congregation. Hereupon Molcho exhibited his passport from
-the pope, trusting with such support to remain unmolested; but the
-Inquisitors tore it from his hands, and betook themselves to the pope,
-to whom they represented how indecent it was that he should protect a
-scoffer at Christianity. Clement replied that he needed Molcho for a
-secret purpose, and requested that he be left undisturbed. When the
-Inquisition showed itself inclined to disregard his denunciation,
-Mantin raised new points against Molcho. He contrived to get possession
-of the letter which some years before Molcho had written from Monastir
-to Joseph Taytasak, respecting his past life and his return to Judaism,
-translated it into Latin, and laid it before the tribunal. As the
-letter undoubtedly contained abuse against Edom, _i.e._, against
-Rome and Christianity, the Inquisition was forced to take notice of
-it, and Clement also no longer dared set his face against Mantin's
-denunciation. The congregation now proceeded with the case, and
-sentenced Molcho to be burnt to death. A funeral pile was built up,
-and the fagots kindled. People came in crowds to the place to witness
-the attractive sight. A wretched victim brought thither in penitential
-shroud was thrown without ceremony into the fire. One of the judges
-informed the pope that the act of faith had been completed by the
-offender's death. The judge and the witnesses of the execution are
-said to have felt no small astonishment when Solomon Molcho alive was
-encountered in the pope's apartments.
-
-It seems that Clement, to save his favorite's life, foisted in some one
-else, who ascended the scaffold, whilst Solomon Molcho was kept hidden
-in the pope's chambers.
-
-The pope himself communicated this fact to the perplexed judge,
-enjoining silence in order that Jews and Christians might not have
-fresh fuel to feed their excitement. Solomon Molcho was saved, but he
-dared no longer remain in Rome; that was plain even to him, and he
-begged the pope to let him go. Escorted by a few faithful servants of
-the pope, Solomon Molcho rode out of Rome at night (February or March,
-1531).
-
-After Molcho's departure from Rome, especially after the death of
-Cardinal Lorenzo Pucci (August, 1531), a different feeling towards
-the Marranos sprang up. A Portuguese agent obtained from the pope,
-who was urged thereto by Emperor Charles and the grand penitentiary,
-Antonio Pucci, the successor to his uncle, the bull establishing
-the Inquisition, so long prayed for (December 17th, 1531), although
-Cardinals Egidio de Viterbo, Elias Levita's disciple, and Geronimo
-de Ghinucci, had declared against it. As though this mild-tempered
-pope were ashamed of allowing his former _proteges_ to be persecuted,
-he bracketed the Lutherans with them. He was careful, too, not to
-permit the fanatical Dominicans to acquire power over the Marranos.
-The king's confessor, a Franciscan, the gentle-minded Diogo de Silva,
-was appointed inquisitor general of Portugal. Three tribunals were
-established, at Lisbon, Evora, and Coimbra, with the "Constitutions"
-of the Spanish courts introduced by Torquemada, and improved, that is,
-made severer, by his successors. After the king and the grandees had
-withdrawn their protection, the Portuguese Marranos were in a far worse
-plight than their Spanish brethren. The populace had long so hated them
-that even otherwise upright Christians turned informers, whereas in
-Spain spies had to be specially hired for the purpose.
-
-When the Inquisition began its execrable work many of the Marranos
-naturally contemplated leaving the country. But flight was not easy;
-it was with them as with their forefathers when they came out of Egypt
---the foe behind, the sea, with all its dangers and terrors, in
-front. A law was made (June 14th, 1532) strictly forbidding emigration
-to Africa, not even excepting the Portuguese colonies. Captains
-were warned, under penalty of death, not to carry Marranos, and all
-Christians were prohibited from buying real estate of new-Christians;
-these were not permitted to send their goods away to foreign countries,
-nor effect exchanges at home. Nevertheless, many of them prepared for
-emigration, in order "to flee from the land touched by the poisonous
-serpent" (the Inquisition); but before they could even set foot on
-board ship, they and their wives and children were seized, and hurried
-away to gloomy dungeons, whence they were dragged to the stake. Others
-perished in the waves of the sea before they could reach the vessel
-which was to bring them to a place of safety. Many were drawn forth
-from the most hidden retreats, and burnt to death. Those who escaped
-from the claws of this bloodthirsty monster found no relief in strange
-lands--they were imprisoned in Flanders, arrested in France, unkindly
-received in England. In addition to such torments many lost their
-fortunes, and, in consequence, their lives. Those who reached Germany
-succumbed in extreme misery on the Alps, leaving wives about to become
-mothers, who, on cold and deserted roads, brought forth children, and
-endured a new form of misfortune.
-
-Nevertheless, the Marranos did not intermit their attempts to escape,
-but prosecuted them with increased caution. No other way out of their
-troubles was left. Appeals to justice and humanity, and the urging of
-their chartered rights and privileges, found none but deaf ears in the
-cabinet.
-
-Marranos who escaped to Rome made bitter complaints to Pope Clement
-of the inhumanity with which the Inquisition persecuted them and
-their brethren, and urged that the king had obtained the bull by
-fraud, inasmuch as the facts of the case had not been set before the
-papal consistory in a proper light. They especially complained that
-emigration was prohibited, in direct opposition to the legal equality
-which had been granted. Clement VII, who regretted that he had
-issued the bull, to which he had been forced, sympathized with their
-grievances. He may have felt, too, that the fires of the Inquisition,
-employed against those who were neither Catholics nor willing converts,
-branded the Catholic Church, and gave the Lutherans more material to
-continue their hostile assaults, to depict it as bloodthirsty and a
-just object of hatred. Moreover, he was well aware that the Inquisition
-had been introduced into Portugal only because Spain and his arch-foe,
-Emperor Charles, desired it, with the object of placing Portugal in an
-unequivocally dependent condition. Hence Clement revolved a plan to
-revoke the bull. At this time Solomon Molcho and David Reubeni resumed
-their mystical activity, and conceived the daring scheme of going to
-the emperor at Ratisbon, where the Reichstag was then assembled. With
-a floating banner, embroidered with the letters "Machbi" (initials of
-the Hebrew words of the verse, "Who is like unto thee among the gods,
-O Lord"), they traveled from Bologna, by way of Ferrara and Mantua, to
-Ratisbon. Emperor Charles gave them audience, and they probably pleaded
-the cause of the Jews earnestly. An unwarranted and improbable report
-affirms that they attempted to convert the emperor to the Jewish faith.
-But they were not so heedless as to make this attempt. They simply
-petitioned the emperor to permit the Marranos to arm themselves, and,
-joining the Jewish tribes, attack the Turks. Joslin of Rosheim, who
-was also in Ratisbon, vainly warned them not to make this request. The
-end was that Charles put them both in chains (June-September, 1532),
-and carried them fettered to Mantua. The banner was left at Ratisbon.
-An inquisition, at the emperor's wish, was set on foot at Mantua, and
-Molcho was condemned to be burnt to death for relapse and heresy. While
-the emperor was diverting himself by triumphal processions, festivals,
-hunting, plays, and all imaginable merry-makings, the funeral pile
-of the Lisbon Marrano was built up, and set on fire. They led him to
-the place of execution with a gag in his mouth, for his eloquence
-was so powerful and persuasive that emperor and tribunal feared its
-effect on the crowd. He was, therefore, forced to keep silence. But
-when the executioners were ready to throw him into the blazing fire,
-a courier from the emperor arrived, removed the gag, and asked him
-in the emperor's name, whether he repented of his transgressions and
-was willing to return to the bosom of the church; if so, he should
-be pardoned. As might have been expected, Molcho replied that he had
-longed to die a martyr, "a burnt-sacrifice, of a sweet savour unto the
-Lord," that he repented him of only one thing--that he had been a
-Christian in his youth. Come life, come death, he commended his soul
-unto God. Then he was thrown into the midst of the flames, and died
-with unshaken constancy.
-
-Molcho was the victim of a phantasmagoria, a delusion, into which, at
-feud with reality, he allowed himself to fall. The rich gifts bestowed
-on him by nature--a handsome person, glowing imagination, quick
-perception, ready enthusiasm--which would have been steps on the
-ladder of fortune for any character less fantastical, only served to
-ruin him, because, swept into the vortex of the Kabbala, he fondly
-hoped to accomplish the work of redemption. David Reubeni had not even
-the martyr's crown. Charles carried him to Spain, and cast him into a
-dungeon of the Inquisition, in which he was still living three years
-afterwards. It appears that he was at length put to death by poison. As
-a Jew, the Inquisition had no power over him. But many of the Spanish
-Marranos who had had intercourse with him, and whose names he probably
-betrayed on the rack, were burnt to death.
-
-Enthusiasm for Molcho was so great that a mistaken faith was pinned
-to him, and various fictions respecting him were invented. In Italy
-and Turkey numbers believed that he had on this occasion, as once
-before, escaped death. Some said that they had seen him a week after
-his auto-da-fe; others gave out that he had visited his bride at
-Safet. Joseph Karo, whose name was soon to be widely known, longed for
-martyrdom like Molcho's. Even the circumspect Joseph Cohen of Genoa, a
-careful historian, averse to belief in miracles, was dazed, and knew
-not what to think of the affair. An Italian Kabbalist, Joseph of Arli,
-would not abandon the hope that the time of the Messiah, as announced
-and prepared by Molcho, would soon dawn on the Jewish world. Molcho's
-death, according to him, would soon find avengers. By a childish
-transposing of the letters of two verses in Isaiah (Notaricon), he
-predicted the downfall of the religion of Jesus from various causes:
-Luther's agitation, the many new sects springing up among Christians,
-the recent sack of Rome, and the mutually inimical attitude of the pope
-and the emperor.
-
-The Kabbalist of Arli was ill-disposed towards the pope, though
-unreasonably so, for he was certainly not guilty of Molcho's death; on
-the contrary, the pope had to look on while the emperor, to gain his
-own ends, executed one, and imprisoned the other, of his favorites.
-However, Clement seems to have made a countermove. He strove to bring
-about the revocation of the fatal bull authorizing the institution
-of the Inquisition in Portugal, or at least to make it less drastic
-in its effects. The Marranos knew this, and made every effort to
-win the papal curia to their side. As soon as they understood that
-Solomon Molcho, their most successful advocate, was no longer to
-be reckoned upon, they sent another envoy to Rome, to bring their
-grievances before the pope and defend their cause. This new advocate
-of the Marranos, Duarte de Paz, was the very opposite in character
-to Molcho: cool-headed, far removed from any extravagance, cunning,
-calculating, bold, and eloquent, initiated into all the trickery of
-diplomacy, possessing profound knowledge of human nature, and able to
-make use of men's foibles for his own ends. Duarte de Paz for nearly
-eight years looked after the interests of Portuguese new-Christians.
-He was himself of Marrano descent, and as a reward for his services
-to the Portuguese court in Africa had obtained an important post and
-the confidence of King Joao III. Chosen by the king to perform a
-secret mission, and made a knight of the order of Christ (styled also
-Commendatore) on the day of his departure, he set out, not for the
-appointed place, but for Rome, to work for the Marranos. Duarte de Paz
-entwined the threads of his intrigues so intricately that to this day
-it is impossible to ascertain exactly whom he deceived, whether the
-king or the Marranos. His clients, the Marranos, kept him well supplied
-with money, which, for good or evil, was almighty at the pope's court.
-Duarte de Paz obtained substantial successes in return for his pains
-and his presents. Clement was convinced anew that most atrocious
-injustice was done the new-Christians in demanding Catholic orthodoxy
-from those who had been dragged with brutal force to be baptized, and
-in denying them liberty to journey beyond the confines of Portugal.
-The pope issued an apostolical brief (October 17th, 1532) stopping
-the proceedings of the Inquisition until further notice. Duarte de
-Paz continued his efforts in order to procure a general pardon for
-all Marranos denounced or imprisoned. It appears that intrigues were
-set on foot in favor of the Marranos even at the court of Joao III.
-The party in favor of the Inquisition worked for Spanish interests,
-and, in view of the probability of the king's remaining without issue,
-was eagerly bent on making the Portuguese crown one with the Spanish.
-On the other side, the national party, which sought to preserve the
-independence of Portugal, seems to have been against the Inquisition.
-Hence plotting and counter-plotting continued for several years to
-such an extent, that the inquisitor general, Diogo de Silva (appointed
-by the pope himself), declared that he would not undertake so great
-a responsibility, and resigned his office. Duarte de Paz obtained a
-second extraordinarily important brief from Pope Clement. The pope
-recognized as fair and legitimate the reasons urged by new-Christians
-to justify their lack of attachment to the church.
-
- "Since they were dragged by force to be baptized, they cannot
- be considered members of the church, and to punish them for
- heresy and relapse were to violate the principles of justice
- and equity. With sons and daughters of the first Marranos the
- case is different, they belong to the church as voluntary
- members. But, as they have been brought up by their relatives
- in the midst of Judaism, and have had their example continually
- before their eyes, it would be cruel to punish them according
- to the canonical law for falling into Jewish ways and beliefs;
- they must be kept in the bosom of the church through gentle
- treatment."
-
-By this brief Clement VII abrogated the power of the Portuguese
-Inquisition, ordered that denunciation of Marranos should be carried
-before his own tribunal, and granted to all a thorough absolution or
-amnesty for past defection from the church. Those languishing in the
-dungeons of the Inquisition were to be set free, the banished allowed
-to return, and those robbed of their goods to have them restored.
-Clement declared, with the peculiar untruthfulness of the papacy,
-from which even the best popes were unable to free themselves, that
-he had issued this brief of his own accord, without the suggestion of
-the Marranos, although the whole world knew the contrary, and counted
-up how many scudi the see had received for the letter. Clement also
-declared all who should resist this brief, clergy as well as laity, to
-be under the ban, and urgently pressed his envoy, Marco della Ruvere,
-to make it known throughout Portugal. To do Pope Clement VII justice,
-it must be said that he steadfastly defended the cause of humanity
-towards the unhappy Marranos against the bloodthirsty spirit of the
-Christianity of his time, though it must be admitted that other and not
-quite pure motives may have conduced to his action--viz., hatred of
-Charles V, who upheld the proposal for a Portuguese Inquisition, and
-greed for the sums of money paid him and his retainers. The thought of
-delivering the Marranos to the tender mercies of those bloody-minded
-wretches in Portugal was not to be lightly endured. Although the
-question had been thoroughly discussed, Clement appointed a commission,
-consisting of the two neutral cardinals, De Cesis and Campeggio, to
-consider the matter once more. The grand penitentiary, Antonio Pucci,
-Cardinal de Santiquatro, could not be excluded, although a partisan
-of the Portuguese court. Nevertheless, this commission officially
-attested the perpetration of devilish atrocities by the Inquisition
-against pseudo-Christians. In consequence of their report, Clement VII
-(July 26th, 1534), feeling that his end was near, issued a brief to the
-nuncio at the Portuguese court to press the release and absolution of
-imprisoned Marranos. There were about twelve hundred of them, and it
-may be doubted whether this brief effected their deliverance. Clement's
-death (September 25th, 1534) brought to naught his good intentions and
-the Marranos' hopes.
-
-Intrigues concerning the Inquisition were woven anew under his
-successor, Paul III Farnese (1534-1549), at first to the prejudice
-of the Marranos, though this pope belonged to the old school of
-worldly-minded, diplomatic, by no means bigoted princes of the church.
-He was a subtle schemer, and paid more attention to earthly than to
-heavenly powers. Paul III was specially well-disposed to Jews. If a
-description by a narrow-minded bishop (Sadolet of Carpentras) is true
-only to a small extent, it still proves that this friendliness must
-have been remarkable. "No pope has ever bestowed on Christians so many
-honors, such privileges and concessions as Paul III has given to the
-Jews. They are not only assisted, but positively armed with benefits
-and prerogatives." Paul III had a Jewish physician in ordinary, Jacob
-Mantin, who dedicated some of his works to him.
-
-As soon as Paul III had ascended the papal chair, the king of Portugal
-deemed it most important to procure a revocation of Clement's bulls
-and briefs in favor of the Marranos, and opposed to the Inquisition.
-But Duarte de Paz, the Marranos' advocate, who had been given an aid
-in Diogo Rodrigues Pinto, spared no effort to oppose the contemplated
-change of policy. Gold also was not wanting. Duarte de Paz, although
-apparently engaged in a traitorous correspondence with the king, Don
-Joao, offered Cardinal Santiquatro, the partisan of Portugal, a yearly
-pension of 800 crusados, if he would give his support to the Marranos.
-The pope, diplomatically cautious as he was, and disinclined to bind
-himself, decided at first (November 3d, 1534), that Clement's brief
-should not be promulgated. But when he learned that it had already
-taken effect, he ordered the case to be again considered, and for
-that purpose named two cardinals, Ghinucci and Simoneta, of whom the
-first decidedly favored the Marranos, having published a work in
-their defense. The result of their investigation was that Paul III
-emphatically admonished the Portuguese court to obey Clement VII's
-bull of absolution. He was decidedly opposed to the imprisonment of
-Marranos in inaccessible dungeons and against the confiscation of
-their property. But the Catholic kings of that day showed obedience
-to the papal see only as long as it suited them and their interest;
-so Joao III paid but small heed to the pope's admonition. His envoy
-even advised him, in order to carry on the Inquisition, to cut himself
-adrift from the Romish Church as England had done. A complete web of
-intrigues was spun over this affair in Rome and Portugal. In Portugal
-the court was on the one side, and the Marrano leaders, Thome Sarrao
-and Manuel Mendes, with the papal legate on the other--at Rome,
-Duarte de Paz and Pinto, against or with the Portuguese ambassador and
-against Cardinal Santiquatro.
-
-Disgusted and wearied, Paul III, who did not readily give up an
-intention once formed, issued a new, decisive bull (October 2d, 1535),
-giving absolution to the Marranos, and protecting them against all
-clerical and civil penalties for relapse and heresy, provided that they
-would not be guilty of similar offenses in future. The Inquisition in
-Portugal, which for the sake of appearance could not proceed without
-the authorization of the pope, was once again arrested. The nuncio set
-to work energetically, made the bull known throughout Portugal, and
-carried matters so far, that even the inimically disposed Infante Don
-Alfonso opened the prison doors to free those whose release was so
-pressingly recommended by Rome. Altogether there were eighteen hundred
-Marranos liberated (December, 1535).
-
-At first dazed as by a sudden blow, the Portuguese court later on set
-every lever in motion once more to obtain sovereign power over the
-Marranos and their property. It did not shrink from assassination to
-gain its ends. One day Duarte de Paz was attacked on the high road by
-assassins, and left lying there for dead, covered with fourteen wounds
-(January, 1536). All Rome believed the murderers to be hirelings of the
-Portuguese court. The pope was greatly provoked at this crime, and sent
-physicians to pay every attention to the procurator, who eventually
-recovered. Nevertheless, with respect to the Inquisition, the pope
-had to comply with the wishes of the Portuguese court, which had at
-last found out the right way to reach its goal. It had recourse to the
-victorious Charles V, urgently requesting him to manage the affair.
-Just at that time the emperor had fought a hard battle near Tunis with
-the Mahometan Barbarossa, who, supported by Turkey, had disquieted all
-Christendom. After many struggles, the numerous host of Christians, led
-by Charles himself, gained the day, and Barbarossa was defeated.
-
-When Charles arrived in Rome after a triumphal progress through Italy,
-he asked the pope, as a reward of his victory for Christianity, to
-authorize the Inquisition in Portugal. Paul III did not yield without
-a struggle. He always returned to the contention that the Portuguese
-Marranos were originally dragged by force to be baptized, and that,
-therefore, the sacrament had no hold upon them.
-
-Unfortunately for the Marranos, their means for satisfying the
-greed of the papal court for gold were exhausted. Their advocate,
-Duarte de Paz, had promised exorbitant sums for the frustration of
-the Inquisition, and had misappropriated to his own use part of the
-money intrusted to him. The pseudo-Christians thus found themselves
-obliged, when pressed for payment by the papal nuncio, to declare
-that they were not in a position to redeem the exaggerated promises
-of Duarte de Paz. Moreover, this commerce between the nuncio and
-Marranos was betrayed, and the latter had to exercise yet greater
-caution. Hence interest in the Marranos gradually cooled down at the
-pope's court. As the emperor put increasing pressure on Paul III to
-authorize the Inquisition in Portugal, the pope at last sanctioned
-the tribunal for the Portuguese dominions (May 23d, 1536). The pope,
-friend of the Jews as he was, granted his sanction with a heavy heart,
-forced thereto by pressure from the emperor. He added all sorts of
-restrictions, that for the first three years the method of procedure
-in current civil courts must be adhered to, _i.e._, open confrontment
-with witnesses--at least as regarded that class of Marranos which
-was not greatly esteemed--and that the confiscation of condemned
-Marranos' goods should take place only after the expiration of ten
-years. Personally, the pope recommended gentle measures in dealing
-with pseudo-Christians. Don Joao's joy at the ultimate fulfillment of
-his heart's desire was so great that he accepted the conditions. But
-the concession was only a pretense; in reality, the same rigor was
-employed against the Portuguese Marranos as against the Spanish. The
-admonition published by the Inquisition, that it was everyone's duty,
-under penalty of excommunication or a yet more severe punishment, to
-denounce any Jewish observances or expressions of the new-Christians,
-differed in no respect from that published by the first bloodthirsty
-Spanish inquisitor, Torquemada. In November of the same year, after the
-expiration of the thirty so-called days of grace, the bloody tribunal
-began its revolting and abominable activity, once again outraging and
-dishonoring human nature. The Portuguese Inquisition was conducted
-with almost more cruelty than the Spanish, because, on the one hand,
-its introduction had cost so much trouble, and the public mind was
-thereby embittered; on the other, because the Portuguese Marranos were
-more steadfast than their Spanish brethren, and finally, because the
-common people supported the Inquisition, and took part against the
-new-Christians. Joao III even made them wear a distinguishing mark to
-separate them visibly from other Christians.
-
-They did not, however, accept their defeat inactively, but rather
-set to work with all imaginable energy to bring about a revocation
-of the bull. The most subtle intrigues were again commenced at the
-papal court. Duarte de Paz once more displayed his diplomatic skill.
-The Marranos raised complaints of the cruel dealings of the judges,
-who neglected to obey the pope's instructions. More especially they
-complained that liberty to emigrate and dispose of their real estate
-was still denied them.
-
-In a memorial to the pope they ventured on almost threatening language:
-
- "If your Holiness despises the prayers and tears of the Hebrew
- race, or despite our hopes, refuses to redress our grievances,
- as would beseem the vicar of Christ, then we protest before
- God, and with tears and cries that shall be heard afar off
- will we protest in the face of the universe, that our lives,
- our honor, our children, who are our blood, our very salvation
- made the butt of persecution, we will nevertheless try to hold
- ourselves aloof from the Jewish faith; but if tyranny ceases
- not, we will do what no one of us would else think of, _i. e._,
- return to the religion of Moses, and abjure Christianity, which
- we are made to accept by main force. We solemnly cry aloud that
- we are victims, by the right which that fact gives us--a
- right which your Holiness recognizes. Leaving our native land,
- we will seek protection among less cruel peoples."
-
-The nuncio who had returned from Portugal, knowing by long years of
-experience the position of men and affairs, managed to convince the
-pope that his sanction of the Inquisition was a mistake, and as Paul
-III had only given way to momentary pressure, a change of sentiment
-soon followed, and he repented the step he had taken. He went so far
-as again to submit his bull to a committee which was to examine its
-legality. To this commission the Marranos' friend, Cardinal Ghinucci,
-was elected along with another of like mind, Jacobacio. They contrived
-to prejudice the third member, the honest but narrow-minded Cardinal
-Simoneta, against the Inquisition, so that he begged the pope to
-right matters by the revocation of his former bull. Another nuncio
-was sent to Portugal, with authority within certain limits to nullify
-the proceedings of the Inquisition against the Marranos, to protect
-the latter, and particularly to render easier their emigration from
-Portugal. The pope sent a brief (dated August, 1537) after the nuncio,
-empowering and, to some extent, encouraging all to give protection and
-assistance to the accused Marranos--in fact, to do exactly what in
-Portugal was held to be conniving at and participating in heresy. The
-king must have been considerably puzzled. Here he was at length in
-possession of a bull, a tribunal, a grand inquisitor and his colleagues
---the whole apparatus of a slaughter-house for the glory of God--and
-he might just as well have had nothing at all.
-
-An incident again turned the chances of the game in favor of the king
-and the fanatics. One day (February, 1539) a placard was discovered
-fastened on the door of the Lisbon Cathedral: "The Messiah has not yet
-appeared--Jesus was not the Messiah, and Christianity is a lie." All
-Portugal was indignant at such blasphemy, and a strict investigation
-was set on foot to find out the offender. The king offered a reward
-of 10,000 crusados (ducats). The nuncio also offered 5,000 crusados,
-as he, with many others, was of opinion that this was a blow from
-some enemy of the Marranos, designed to excite the king's fanaticism
-to a higher degree, and to get the nuncio into trouble. To turn aside
-suspicion the new-Christians posted a notice on the same place--"I,
-the author, am neither a Spaniard nor a Portuguese, but an Englishman,
-and though you raise your reward to 20,000 crusados, you will not find
-me out." After all, the writer turned out to be a Marrano, one Emanuel
-da Costa. He confessed everything when cited before the Inquisition.
-The civil court then took him in hand, and put him on the rack to
-make him name his accomplices. Finally, after both hands had been cut
-off, he was burnt to death. The Marranos foresaw evil consequences
-for themselves, and took to flight. The king made the best of this
-opportunity to enforce the rules of the Inquisition with increased
-severity and bloodthirstiness, and to thwart the nuncio's efforts.
-The maddest fanatics were at once elected inquisitors, to the great
-anger of the pope and his nuncio. Joao Soares, whom the pope himself
-once described as "not a learned, but a most daring and ambitious,
-monk, with opinions and ideas of the very worst kind, who takes pride
-in his enmity to the apostolic see," was now given unbounded power
-over the lives of the new-Christians, and his colleague was Mallo, an
-arch-foe of the new-Christians. For the Marranos the state of affairs
-grew worse every day. On three points the pope showed immovable
-firmness: the Infante Don Henrique must not remain grand inquisitor;
-Marranos accused of heresy should have the witnesses' (that is, their
-accusers') names announced to them; finally, after sentence is passed
-they should be allowed recourse to the papal court of appeals. Indeed,
-Paul III caused a new bull to be drawn up (October 12th, 1539)--a
-supplement of that issued three years before--which throughout was of
-a favorable tenor to new-Christians, and would completely have crippled
-the Inquisition. But this likewise remained a dead letter. After this,
-fires for the obstinate heretics were kindled more frequently than
-ever, and more victims were sacrificed (from ten to forty a year)
-without permitting them to appeal to the pope. The denounced and
-suspected Marranos filled the prisons.
-
-A contemporary poet, Samuel Usque, gives a dreadful picture of
-the tortures of the Portuguese Inquisition, which he himself had
-experienced in his youth:
-
- "Its institution deprived the Jews of peace of mind, filled
- their souls with pain and grief, and drew them forth from the
- comforts of home into gloomy dungeons, where they dwelt amid
- torment and sighs of anguish. It (the Inquisition) flings
- the halter round their necks, and drags them to the flames;
- through its decrees they must see their sons murdered, husbands
- burnt to death, and brothers robbed of life; must see their
- children made orphans, the number of widows increased, the rich
- made poor, the mighty brought low, the nobly born transformed
- into highway robbers, chaste, modest women housed in lewd,
- ignominious dwellings, through the poverty and desertion in its
- wake. It has burnt numbers to death, not one by one, but by
- thirties, by fifties at a time. Not content with mere burning
- and destroying, it leads Christians to boast of such deeds, to
- rejoice when their eyes behold the members of my body (the sons
- of Jacob) burning to death in the flames, kindled with fagots
- dragged from afar on men's shoulders. Those baptized against
- their will, steal about overpowered with fear of this savage
- monster (the Inquisition); they turn their eyes on every side
- lest it seize them. With ill-assured hearts they pass to and
- fro, trembling like a leaf, terror strikes them suddenly, and
- they stay their steps lest it take them captive. When they sit
- down together to eat, every morsel is lifted to their mouths in
- anguish. The hour that brings repose to all other beings only
- increases their anxiety and exhaustion. At times of marriage
- and the birth of children, joy and feasting are turned into
- mourning and disquietude of soul. In fine, there is no moment
- not paid for by a thousand deadly fears. For it suffices not
- that they make themselves known as Christians by outward signs.
- Fire rages in their hearts, their tortures are innumerable."
-
-Is this an exaggerated description? Did the poet's imagination
-transform petty sufferings into the pains of martyrdom? Every word of
-it is corroborated by an assembly of cardinals, officially gathered to
-investigate the proceedings of the Portuguese Inquisition against the
-Marranos.
-
- "When a pseudo-Christian is denounced--often by false
- witnesses--the inquisitors drag him away to a dismal retreat
- where he is allowed no sight of heaven or earth, and least
- of all to speak with his friends, who might succor him. They
- accuse him on obscure testimony, and inform him neither of the
- time nor the place where he committed the offense for which he
- is denounced. Later on he is allowed an advocate, who often,
- instead of defending his cause, helps him on the road to the
- stake. Let an unfortunate creature acknowledge himself a true
- believing Christian, and firmly deny the transgressions laid
- to his charge, they condemn him to the flames, and confiscate
- his goods. Let him plead guilty to such and such a deed, though
- unintentionally committed, they treat him in a similar manner
- under the pretense that he obstinately denies his wicked
- intentions. Let him freely and fully admit what he is accused
- of, he is reduced to extremest necessity, and condemned to the
- dungeon's never-lifting gloom. And this they call treating the
- accused with mercy and compassion and Christian charity! Even
- he who succeeds in clearly proving his innocence is condemned
- to pay a fine, so that it may not be said that he was arrested
- without cause. The accused who are held prisoners are racked by
- every instrument of torture to admit the accusations against
- them. Many die in prison, and those who are set free, with all
- their relatives bear a brand of eternal infamy."
-
-As the Inquisition grew more and more severe and bloodthirsty, the
-Portuguese new-Christians clung with increasing tenacity to the last
-anchor of hope left--to the pope and their other protectors. They
-had found a new advocate and mediator, who gave promise of being more
-honest and energetically active on their behalf. The battle between
-the Portuguese court and the papal see blazed up afresh. It was war to
-the death, not for those immediately concerned, but for the miserable
-beings who, in spite of self-repression, could not become reconciled
-to Christianity, yet were not courageous enough to suffer for Judaism
---who would give up neither convictions, wealth, nor position. To
-influence the pope, or at least those about his person against the
-Marranos, the Infante and grand inquisitor Henrique had a list of
-the delinquencies of the new-Christians made out and sent to Rome
-(February, 1542). The Marranos, also, to wrest the weapons from their
-opponents' hands, in Rome and elsewhere, and for all times to refute
-the lying reports and statements of the Portuguese court, drew up a
-bulky memorial (1544), detailing their troubled lot, from the time of
-King Joao II and Manoel, who forced them to accept Christianity, until
-the most recent times, and verifying their statements by documentary
-evidence--a monument of everlasting disgrace to that age.
-
-Yet these reciprocal indictments led to no settlement. At length,
-when they saw that nothing would stop the execrable activity of the
-Inquisition now it had once been called into existence, the pope and
-the Marranos felt how extremely important it was for them to secure at
-least two concessions. First, free right of emigration from Portugal
-for new-Christians; second, a general absolution (Perdao) for those
-already denounced or imprisoned, provided they would promise to give up
-their Jewish creed and remain good Christians in the future. But these
-were the very points on which the king and the Dominicans would not
-yield. As though in defiance of the pope, the king issued an ordinance
-(July 15th, 1547), that for three years longer no new-Christian might
-leave Portugal without express permission or payment of a large sum of
-money.
-
-Paul III felt himself crippled. He might shudder at the cruelties of
-the Portuguese Inquisition--the vast sums which the Marranos spent on
-him and his sycophants might be ever so much needed to aid in carrying
-out his policy in Italy and in prosecuting war against the Protestants,
-yet he dared not show too stern a determination to thwart the court at
-Lisbon. He, too, was in the power of Catholic fanatics. To fight the
-Protestant heretics and reinstate the papal dignity, he had authorized
-the institution of the order of Jesuits (1540), who inscribed their
-banner with the watchword of the church militant. He had agreed to
-the proposition of the fanatical Pietro Caraffa for an Inquisition at
-Rome (1542). Loyola and Caraffa now lorded it over Rome, and the pope
-was only their tool. Moreover, the council of Trent was to be convened
-to settle the standard of faith, whereby the Protestants were to be
-humbled, and their influence crushed. Paul III needed ardent fanatical
-helpers to keep the lukewarm up to the mark. Such men only Spain
-and Portugal could furnish. In Portugal the most friendly reception
-had been accorded the Jesuits. Thus the pope could offer only mild
-opposition to the Portuguese court, and proffer requests where he
-should have given orders.
-
-At the council, Bishop Balthasar Limpo was a worthy representative of
-the fanatical king of Portugal, and dared use language against the
-pope which should have shown him clearly that he was no longer master
-in his own house. The bishop vehemently asked Paul III to sanction the
-Inquisition against relapsed new-Christians irrevocably, and censured
-his sympathy with them. He justly remarked:
-
- "As Christians, and under Christian names, they leave Portugal
- by stealth, and take with them their children, whom they
- themselves have carried to be baptized. As soon as they reach
- Italy they give themselves out for Jews, live according to
- Jewish ordinances, and circumcise their children. This takes
- place under the eye of the pope and the papal see, within
- the walls of Rome and Bologna, and it happens because his
- Holiness has granted to heretics the privilege that in Ancona
- no one may molest them on account of their belief. Under these
- circumstances it is impossible for the king to grant them the
- right of free departure from the land. Perhaps his Holiness
- asks it in order that they may settle in his states as Jews,
- and the papal see derive advantage in that way. Instead of
- hindering the establishment of the Inquisition in Portugal, it
- should have been his Holiness' duty to have introduced it long
- since into his own dominions."
-
-The pope could have given answer to such an harangue, had he possessed
-a clear conscience, and in very deed and truth preached Christianity as
-a religion of gentleness and humanity. But since he had need of blind
-fanaticism to keep up obstinate warfare with Protestantism, and on
-the outbreak of the war against the latter had issued the murderous
-bull ("Of the cross"), wherein Catholics, in the name of the vicar of
-Christ, were called upon to "smite the Protestants to death," he could
-make no reply when Limpo spoke. He was caught in his own trap. Yet, he
-tried to save one thing, the Marranos' free right of emigration from
-Portugal; on this condition he would give way to the Portuguese court.
-But new-Christians wishing to depart from the land would be required to
-give security that they would not emigrate to infidel countries, such
-as Turkey or Africa. To this also Bishop Limpo gave a convincing reply:
-
- "Does it, then, make any difference whether these heretics
- take refuge under infidel governments, or come to Italy? At
- Ancona, Ferrara, or Venice, they are circumcised, and then
- go on to Turkey. They have papal privileges, forsooth, so
- that nobody dare ask them if peradventure they are Jews! They
- wear no distinguishing marks, and can go undisguised and free
- whithersoever they like, can observe their ceremonies, and
- attend their synagogues. Oh, how many attend these who were
- baptized in their youth in Portugal, or were condemned to
- death, or burnt in effigy! Give them free right of emigration,
- let them set foot in the land of the infidel, and they can
- openly confess themselves as Jews. The king will never allow,
- no theologian--do I say theologian?--no simple Christian
- could advise such a thing. Instead of his Holiness' exerting
- himself to insure the safety of the secret Jews, let him
- increase the number of Inquisitions in his own states, and
- punish not alone Lutheran heretics, but Jewish heretics also,
- who seek refuge and protection in Italy."
-
-Yet another circumstance compelled Paul III to show a yielding
-disposition. Charles V, inspired thereto by his victory over the
-Protestants (April, 1547), sought to set himself above the papacy,
-and would have liked to see a new ritual established, agreeable to
-Protestants as well as to Catholics. This was tantamount to declaring
-war against the pope. The latter was, therefore, forced to break
-with the emperor, and that he might not stand unsupported against so
-powerful a foe, Portugal and the central Catholic states had to be won
-over to his side. To conciliate Portugal he sent thither a special
-commissary provided with bulls and briefs, wherein he partially
-sanctioned the Inquisition, though requesting that it be used with
-mildness. Above all, however, new-Christians accused of heresy and
-so-called relapse were not to be sentenced, for the present, but to
-be made answerable for their conduct in the future. Even then, for
-the first ten years, the property of relapsed heretics was not to be
-touched, but to descend to their heirs. He consented to the restriction
-of Marrano emigration, so strenuously insisted upon by the Portuguese
-court.
-
-Prisons of the Inquisition at Lisbon, Evora, and other cities were
-thrown open in obedience to the pope's general absolution for
-new-Christians, and eighteen hundred set at liberty (July, 1548).
-Soon after this all the Marranos were called together, and forced to
-abjure their Judaizing tendencies. From that moment only were they
-recognized as complete Christians, and liable to be punished in case
-of heretical transgression. The pope, in a brief, desired the king to
-see that the tribunals deal mercifully even with the heretics, since
-they fulfilled Jewish observances only from habit. Thus, throughout his
-life, Pope Paul III took the part of the Marranos. Nevertheless, they
-fell victims to their tragic fate. It was cruel injustice to demand an
-open confession of Catholicism from them, when they protested against
-it with all their hearts, and then to punish them when detected in
-the performance of Jewish rites or ceremonies. On the other hand, the
-state could never allow a whole class of the population outwardly
-belonging to the church to be left in a certain sense free to hold
-the church in derision. Justice certainly demanded that the Marranos
-should have liberty of choice either to emigrate or confess themselves
-genuine members of the church. But, as the court acknowledged, their
-loss meant ruin to the state, for the Marranos of Jewish descent formed
-the most profitable class of the city population. Their capital and
-far-reaching business transactions increased the revenue, caused a
-general circulation of money, and made raw materials imported from
-the Indian and African colonies available. Without them the wealth
-of the whole country would be capital idly and unprofitably stored.
-Marranos were also the only artisans, and on them depended industrial
-prosperity. Plainly, the state could not afford to lose them, and,
-therefore, the king tried to turn them into good Christians by the
-terrors of the Inquisition, so as to keep a certain hold on the profit
-and utility of their presence. He labored in vain. Every year fresh
-victims perished at the stake; yet the survivors did not become more
-faithful believers. The Portuguese court, unlike the Spanish, never
-derived enjoyment from the Inquisition. Portuguese new-Christians,
-in spite of their confession, were not yet true Christians, on whom
-the penalty of heresy could legally, according to canonical laws, be
-inflicted by the Inquisition. After Paul's death, (November, 1549),
-Julius III was petitioned to give absolution to the Marranos. Even the
-succeeding popes, who favored reaction and persecution, allowed the
-Portuguese Inquisition to continue more as an accomplished fact than
-as a legal institution. Half a century later, a pope (Clement VIII)
-condemned the judicial murders of the Inquisition, and once more issued
-a general amnesty for condemned Marranos.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-STRIVINGS OF EASTERN JEWS FOR UNITY. SUFFERING IN THE WEST.
-
- Efforts towards Unity--Jacob Berab proposes the Re-introduction
- of Rabbinical Ordination into Palestine--Successful
- Opposition of Levi ben Chabib--Joseph Karo--His Connection
- with Solomon Molcho and his Messianic Visions--Karo's
- Religious Code--Converts to Judaism at the Era of the
- Reformation--Expulsion of the Jews from Naples and Prague--
- Their Return to the latter Town--Dr. Eck--Martin Luther and
- the Jews--Moses Hamon--Jewish Histories by Joseph Cohen,
- the Ibn-Vergas, and Samuel Usque--Elegy of Samuel Usque--
- Reaction in the Catholic Church: Loyola establishes the
- Order of Jesuits--The Censorship of Books--Eliano Romano and
- Vittorio Eliano--Fresh Attacks on the Talmud--Paul IV and
- his anti-Jewish Bulls--Persecution of the Marranos by the
- Inquisition in Ancona--Joseph Nassi--The Levantine Jews--
- Expulsion of the Jews from Austria and Bohemia--Relations of
- Popes Pius IV and V to the Jews.
-
-1538-1566 C.E.
-
-
-Every fresh column of smoke rising from the fires of the Inquisition
-in Spain and Portugal drove Marranos, singly or in groups, far away
-to the East, to Turkey, beyond the shadow of the cross. They no
-longer felt safe even in Italy, since the popes, against their own
-higher convictions, allowed themselves to be overborne concerning
-the Inquisition. In Turkey a little Jewish world was thus by degrees
-formed, on which even the sultan's despotic rule did not encroach,
-however much individuals might be exposed to arbitrary treatment. Here,
-as in Palestine, where numbers and prosperity had raised them in their
-own estimation, they could indulge in dreams of obtaining some degree
-of independence, might strive for national and religious unity, and
-hope to realize their wild Messianic fancies. The career of the Mantuan
-martyr, Solomon Molcho, did not fail to leave an impression; his words
-echoed in the ears of his brethren. At Safet, the largest congregation
-in Palestine, where he had made a long stay, forming intimate
-relations and awakening hopes, the fulfillment of his Messianic
-predictions was looked for even after his death. The completion of
-the round number 5300 from the creation of the world (1540) seemed to
-be a suitable year for the coming of the Messiah. But the Messianic
-period, according to then prevailing ideas, would not come suddenly;
-the Israelites had to do their part in preparing the way. Maimuni,
-the highest authority, had taught that the Messianic time would or
-must be preceded by the establishment of a universally recognized
-Jewish court of justice, or Synhedrion. Hence the necessity was felt
-of having authorized and duly appointed judges, such as existed at the
-time of the Temple and the Talmud in Palestine, of re-introducing, in
-fact, the long-disused ordination (Semichah). There was no hindrance
-to be feared from the Turkish state. As it was, the rabbis had their
-own civil and even criminal jurisdiction; but these rabbis (who were
-also judges), being appointed by the community, had not the warrant of
-authority required by Talmudic rules. Obedience was given them, but
-they also met with opposition. Authority was conventional, not built
-on the foundation of Talmudic Judaism. No unity of legislation and
-exposition of the Law was possible while every rabbi was absolute in
-his own congregation, not subject to some higher authority. It was,
-therefore, a need of the times to create a sort of religious supreme
-court, and where should that be done but in Palestine? The sacred
-memories connected with that country could alone lend the dignity of
-a Synhedrion to a college of rabbis. Teaching that was to meet with
-universal acceptance could proceed from Zion alone, and the word of God
-only from Jerusalem.
-
-How excellent and necessary it was to re-introduce the ordination of
-rabbis by a higher authority had been discussed by many, but only
-one, the acute-minded but obstinate and daring Jacob Berab, had the
-energy to set about doing the thing. After much journeying from Egypt
-to Jerusalem, and thence to Damascus, Berab, in his old age, settled
-at Safet. He was in good circumstances, and, owing to his wealth and
-intellect, enjoyed marked respect and consideration. He determined
-to give a definite direction to the aimless ideas floating in men's
-minds with regard to the coming of the Messiah. This was certainly a
-praiseworthy aim, but some little ambition was undoubtedly mixed up in
-his plan: to be himself the highest authority, perhaps the chief of
-the Synhedrion in Palestine, and consequently revered throughout the
-East, and even by the whole Jewish race. The first step was difficult.
-Ordination could be lawfully given only by those who themselves had
-been ordained, and there had been no such for a very long time. An
-utterance of Maimuni happily offered ground for a new departure, viz.,
-when wise men gathered together in Palestine shall agree to ordain one
-of their number, they have the right to do so, and the ordained rabbi
-can also ordain others. At that time no community in Palestine, in
-point of numbers, could compare with Safet, which had grown through
-frequent immigrations till it contained more than 1,000 Jewish
-families. Safet, or rather the Talmudists of that city, therefore,
-had it in their own hands, if they could only agree, to re-establish
-the dignity of the Synhedrion, even in the face of opposition from
-other congregations, because the Safet party was in the majority. The
-officiating and non-officiating rabbis of Safet, men without name
-or fame, had far too high a respect for Berab's intellectual power,
-Talmudic learning, and wealth, to gainsay his proposition, or put
-any obstacle in his path. A hint from him sufficed to bring together
-five and twenty men ready to confer on him the dignity of an ordained
-judge and rabbi. Thus ordination was re-established (1538), and the
-focus for a new Synhedrion determined. It rested with Jacob Berab to
-ordain as many colleagues as he pleased. From principles laid down
-in the Talmud he demonstrated in a lecture the legality of the step,
-and confuted every possible objection. One after another, Talmudists
-in other congregations in Palestine announced their assent to this
-innovation. By this step Berab and his followers thought that they
-had reached the first stage of preparation for the Messianic age.
-In fact, this renewal of ordination, if not able to bring about the
-Messianic times, might very well have been the nucleus of Jewish unity.
-A re-established Synhedrion in the Holy Land would have had a grand
-sound in Europe, might have exercised special attraction, and brought
-still more immigrants to Palestine. Persecutions of Jews in Italy
-and Germany, the war of extermination against Marranos in Spain and
-Portugal, a thirst for what was eccentric and out of the common in an
-age distinguished by strongly excited longing for the Messiah, all this
-would have been sufficient inducement to allure rich, educated Jews
-from western lands to the East. With the help of their capital, and
-founded on the authority of a Synhedrion, a Jewish community having the
-character of a state might have been organized, and Berab was the right
-person to carry out so great a scheme with perseverance--not to say
-stubbornness.
-
-But difficulties immediately arose. It was to be expected that if the
-congregation at Jerusalem and its representatives were not consulted
-with regard to an act so pregnant with consequences, there would be
-danger that the whole arrangement would be declared null and void, for
-the Holy City should have the first vote in a matter of such weight for
-the Holy Land. Jacob Berab saw this perfectly well, and proposed, as
-the first exercise of his newly-acquired dignity, to ordain the head of
-the Jerusalem college of rabbis. Levi ben Jacob Chabib, who held that
-position, was born in Zamora, and was of about the same age as Berab.
-As a youth, in the times of forced baptism, under King Manoel, he had
-become a pseudo-Christian, received a baptismal name, made the sign
-of the cross, and performed other ceremonies of the Catholic Church
-with a heart full of despair. At the first favorable opportunity he
-fled from Portugal, cast off his assumed garb of Christianity, sought
-safety in Turkey, and finally betook himself to Jerusalem. There, by
-virtue of the wide range of his Talmudic learning, more extensive than
-profound, he became as rabbi the first person in the community. He
-deserved its gratitude by caring for the physical and spiritual welfare
-of his congregation, especially for piloting it through the disturbed
-state into which it was in danger of falling afresh through the new
-arrivals from various countries, who were disinclined to submit to law
-and order. Levi ben Chabib had also some knowledge of mathematics,
-astronomy, and the calculation of the calendar. Between himself and
-Jacob Berab, with whom he had lived for some time in Jerusalem, there
-was no friendly relationship. On several occasions they had come into
-collision, though Levi ben Chabib had always behaved in a friendly,
-unassuming manner, and avoided whatever might wound his opponent. Their
-relations of late years had been more intimate, but Levi ben Chabib
-could not forget how slightingly Jacob Berab had treated him.
-
-And now, as chief rabbi of Jerusalem, he was invited to recognize the
-election of Jacob Berab as the first lawfully ordained rabbi-judge,
-member of the Synhedrion, and by his consent to approve of the same.
-Jerusalem was thereby subordinated to Safet, and he himself to Jacob
-Berab. This was a real offense, for Berab had not thought it worth
-while to ask the consent of the Jerusalem college beforehand, but
-had haughtily made his innovation known through a decree, in which,
-by virtue of the dignity conferred upon him, he designated Levi ben
-Chabib an ordained judge. At the same time he had made it evident that
-disapproval from Jerusalem would disturb him but little, since it could
-only be regarded as the opposition of a minority to the majority at
-Safet. The moment for taking an important step towards Jewish unity
-had come, and it found Levi ben Chabib, whose vote at all events was
-of importance, wanting in magnanimity. Resentment gained the upper
-hand; he forgot that in earlier days it had been also his desire to
-re-establish the ordination of rabbis. As soon as a notification of
-the act at Safet reached him, he immediately and emphatically declared
-himself against the election. His antagonism seems, however, to
-have found no response in Jerusalem, for only one of his rabbinical
-colleagues, Moses de Castro, adopted his view, the remainder acquiesced
-in Berab's action. In Talmudical and rabbinical law arguments could
-not fail to be discoverable against the revival of ordination and the
-Synhedrion. Such a confused host of opinions exists therein, that
-arguments may be found for or against almost anything. Berab and the
-electors obedient to his nod themselves furnished their opponents with
-an objection. Rabbinical Judaism is so thoroughly practical that it
-offers no foothold for romantic enthusiasm and sentimentality. The
-Jews of Safet dared not give utterance to their underlying hope that
-through ordination the Messianic time would be brought nearer. Though
-the rabbis might be filled with Messianic hopes, such a motive for
-the re-introduction of ordination would have sounded too fantastic
-and ridiculous in their own ears. Other plausible grounds were not
-just then to be found. The calendar of festivals, which had formerly
-been prepared by ordained members of the college, had been fixed for a
-thousand years, and could not now be meddled with. Other cases where
-the Talmud required an ordained judge were of too rare occurrence
-to permit that the necessity of ordination be proved on that head.
-The people of Safet, therefore, made the most of a reason meant to
-appear practical and suited to the times, which was nevertheless very
-far-fetched. Many Marranos were to be found in Palestine who had been
-forced during their outward assumption of Christianity to commit what
-according to the Talmud were deadly sins. With contrite hearts they
-repented of their transgressions, and longed for forgiveness and
-atonement--they had not given up the Catholic doctrine of outward
-penance when they cast off the mask of Christianity. Such forgiveness
-of sins, however (Berab made it appear), could be theirs only when the
-scourging prescribed by the Law (39 stripes) was inflicted; again,
-this punishment could be decreed only by a lawfully ordained college.
-Therein lay the necessity for ordination.
-
-If Levi ben Chabib was disposed to extend his antipathy from the
-originator to the execution of his work, there would be no difficulty
-in proving this reason for the scheme invalid. Not content with this,
-he brought forward a host of sophistries. Jacob Berab had not expected
-such antagonism at Jerusalem from Levi ben Chabib and his colleague,
-Moses de Castro, because he credited them either with less courage
-or more self-denial, and it embittered him extremely. It was all the
-more painful to him since their opposition was calculated to wreck
-his whole undertaking. How could he hope to prove it acceptable to
-Asiatic, European, and African Jews, when Jerusalem, the Holy City,
-would have none of it? And without such acceptance, how could he
-make it the central point of a re-organization? Besides, his life
-was in danger at Safet, probably through denunciation to the Turkish
-authorities, who were willing to grasp at any opportunity to get
-hold of his property. Berab had to leave Palestine for a time. He
-consecrated four Talmudists, as Judah ben Baba had done in Hadrian's
-time, so that the practice of ordination might not immediately fall to
-the ground. These four were chosen not from the elder, but from the
-younger rabbis, among them Joseph Karo, the enthusiastic adherent of
-Solomon Molcho and his Kabbalistic Messiahship, who entered heart and
-soul into the ordination scheme. Such preference, shown to younger and
-more pliable, if more gifted men, stirred up still more ill-will in
-Jerusalem. The two rabbis of Palestine in the epistles exchanged on
-the subject (written with a view to publication) grew more and more
-bitter against each other, so offensive indeed that the most passionate
-excitement cannot excuse their language. In reply to Levi ben Chabib's
-censorious remark: "One who is consecrated and ordained should have
-not only learning, but holiness also," Jacob Berab made a spiteful
-reference to Levi's compulsory adoption of Christianity: "I have never
-changed my name; in the midst of distress and despair I kept always in
-the way of the Lord." He upbraided Levi ben Chabib with still having
-somewhat of Christian dogma sticking to him. This thrust reached his
-opponent's heart. The latter confessed that in the day of forced
-baptisms in Portugal his name had been changed, that he had been made
-a Christian, and that he had not been able to die for the religion of
-his fathers. But he brought forward his youth as an excuse; he had not
-been twenty years old, had remained a pseudo-Christian scarcely a year,
-and he hoped that the flood of tears which he had shed since then, and
-which he still shed, would wipe out his sin before God. After this
-humiliation Levi ben Chabib's violence against Berab knew no bounds.
-He flung the grossest insults at him, and declared that he hoped never
-more to meet him face to face. Through this intemperate violence of the
-chief rabbi of Jerusalem and Berab's death, which followed immediately
-after (January, 1541), the system of ordination fell to the ground.
-
-Joseph Karo alone, one of the ordained, refused to give in. This
-remarkable man, who later on had so deep an influence on Jewish history
-(born 1488, died 1575), when a child, was driven from Spain with his
-parents. He early learned the bitter lessons of suffering, and after
-long traveling about, came to Nicopolis in European Turkey. He studied
-the text of the Mishnah so assiduously that he knew it by heart. Later
-on Karo left Nicopolis to settle at Adrianople, where, on account
-of his extraordinary Talmudical learning, he was looked up to with
-respect, and found disciples. In his thirtieth year he undertook the
-gigantic work of furnishing Jacob Asheri's Code with a commentary,
-authorities, and corrections, to which he devoted twenty years of his
-life (1522-1542). Twelve years more were spent in a further revision
-(1542-1554). His imagination, kept in entire inactivity by such a
-dry task, was fired by the appearance of Solomon Molcho. That young
-enthusiast from Portugal made so overpowering an impression upon him,
-that Karo allowed himself to be initiated into the tortuous mazes
-of the Kabbala and to share Molcho's Messianic dreams. After this
-time his mind was divided between dry rabbinical scholarship and the
-fantastic ideas of the Kabbala. He kept up a correspondence with Molcho
-during the latter's stay in Palestine, and formed plans for going
-thither himself. Like Molcho, he prepared for a martyr's death, "as
-a burnt-sacrifice, an offering made by fire, of a sweet savour unto
-the Lord," and like Molcho, he had strange visions, which, according
-to his belief, were inspired by some superior being. This superior
-being (Maggid) was not an angel, or an imaginary voice, but--oddly
-enough--the Mishnah personified, who descended to him, and generally
-at night whispered revelations, because he had devoted himself to its
-service. Joseph Karo had these visions (which he for the most part
-committed to paper), not for a short period of time, but at intervals,
-to the end of his life, for nearly forty years. Part of them were
-afterwards published, and it is melancholy to see what havoc the
-Kabbala played with the intellect of that day. The superior being (or
-the Mishnah) laid the heaviest penances on Karo, forbade him to indulge
-in meat and wine, and went to the extent of prohibiting much drinking
-of water. If he was guilty of any fault, sleeping too long, being late
-at prayers, or slightly neglecting his study of the Mishnah, the mother
-Mishnah appeared, and made the most tender remonstrances. She certainly
-made astonishing revelations to him. These predictions were far from
-being mere deceptions, but were the promptings of a tumultuous epoch,
-or an excited imagination, such as is found in the warm, luxurious East
-oftener than in the cold, sober North.
-
-Joseph Karo was so full of the thought that he was called to play a
-part in Palestine, and die as a martyr, during the time of preparation
-for the Messiah as begun by Solomon Molcho, that he left Adrianople. He
-stayed for some time at Salonica, a place swarming with Kabbalists. At
-length, he arrived in Safet, that nest of Kabbalists, with a companion
-of like mind, Solomon Alkabez, a dull, spiritless writer, whose song
-of welcome for the Sabbath bride (Lecha Dodi) has become more famous
-than its author. At Safet, Joseph Karo experienced the joy of seeing
-part of his fantastic dreams fulfilled; he was ordained by Berab
-as a member of the Synhedrion. After Berab's death Karo dreamed of
-nothing but his future greatness; he was to bring about ordination,
-and to be recognized by the sages of Palestine and foreign countries
-as a patriarch and leader of the Jews in Palestine. He would educate
-the best Talmudists, so that disciples of his school only would be
-accepted. Everyone would do him reverence as the holy likeness (Diokna
-Kadisha), and he would work miracles. Like Molcho, he was to die a
-martyr's death, that the name of God might be hallowed; but his
-resurrection would soon afterwards follow, and he would enter into the
-Messianic kingdom.
-
-All these advantages and prerogatives were to be won by a single
-achievement, which of itself would make the Jews into one great people,
-and gain him universal admiration. When his thorough commentary
-on Jacob Asheri's Code was completed, printed, published, and in
-circulation, when he had elaborated a comprehensive code of religious
-law grounded on that work, he would surely be acknowledged as
-patriarch and lawgiver in all Israel. His guardian angel had whispered
-to him that he would be made worthy to train many disciples and to
-see his writings printed and circulated throughout Israel. Even the
-supernatural worlds would ask, "Who is the man with whom the King of
-kings is well pleased, the patriarch of Palestine, the great writer
-of the Holy Land?" He would be enabled to publish his commentary,
-elucidations, and decisions without fault or error.
-
-Devoted piety, fantastical imagination, and some degree of ambition
-inspired the author, who elaborated, for the whole Jewish race, the
-final code of religious law, destined to end all wavering, uncertainty,
-and antagonism of opinion. Kabbalistic enthusiasm combined with
-the Messianic hopes excited by Solomon Molcho, and the ceremony of
-ordination administered by Berab, gave Karo no rest, until by means of
-a comprehensive written work he had accomplished these hopes, at least
-so far as religious unity was concerned. Yet several decades were to
-elapse before the Jewish world received this gift, a colossal work
-which required years for its completion. Joseph Karo's astounding,
-incessant industry had to eke out lack of genius. Such a work could be
-accomplished only by religious devotion and inspiration united with a
-fantastic imagination. Of all his lofty dreams one only was actually
-realized, that he would be chief rabbi of Safet after Jacob Berab's
-death, and would be acknowledged as a rabbinical authority, the latter
-coming about only gradually. But his authority was not absolute; he had
-a rival in Berab's best disciple, Moses de Trani.
-
-While the Jews of the East were rejoicing in a measure of peace and
-independence, and were able to indulge in Messianic speculations, and
-endeavoring, although by mistaken means, to bring about an ideal state
-of things, the Jews of the West were subjected to fresh persecutions
-instituted against them. The old accusations of their harmful influence
-upon mankind, their child-murder, their hostile attitude towards
-Christianity, which had ceased for a time during the excitement of
-the Reformation, were again heard. The bigoted ecclesiastical policy,
-espoused by those who sought to maintain their position against the
-ever-increasing strength of Lutheranism, reacted upon the Jews, and
-brought fresh sufferings upon them, principally in Catholic countries.
-To the old accusations was added a new one, which prejudiced also
-Lutherans against them. The Lutheran and Calvinistic Reformation,
-which had extended into England and Poland, had opened the eyes of
-many concerning religion and Christianity, and led them to find much
-that even the Reformers considered essentials of Christianity to be
-false, mistaken, and blasphemous. The Bible translated into most
-European languages gave thoughtful readers an opportunity of forming
-a religious system for themselves differing wholly from the dogmas of
-Rome, Wittenberg, or Geneva. In reading the Bible the Old Testament
-came before the New, and in the transition from one to the other many
-perceived that much in the two was irreconcilable; that the doctrine
-of the unity of God in the prophets was in direct contradiction to the
-doctrine of the Trinity propounded by the Church Fathers. Besides
-this, the Reformation had had in view not only religious freedom, but
-also political deliverance from the iron yoke of the princes, in whose
-eyes the people were nothing, of importance only for the payment of
-taxes and the forced service of bondmen. Now it struck not a few that
-the Hebrew Scriptures make the people the source of all power, and
-condemn the despotism of kings, whilst evangelical Christianity does
-not recognize a people, but only humble believers, whom it exhorts
-to bow the neck to the yoke of tyrants. The contrast between the Old
-and the New Testament, the one teaching active virtue together with a
-God-fearing life, the other glorifying passive virtue together with
-blind faith, could not be overlooked by eyes sharpened through deep
-research into the Bible.
-
-Among the host of religious sects which the Reformation called forth in
-the first decades, there arose some which nearly approached Judaism,
-and whose adherents were stigmatized by the ruling party as half-Jews
-or Judaizers (Judaizantes, Semijudaei). These found the doctrine of the
-Trinity a stumbling-block, and maintained that God must be conceived as
-an absolute Unity. Michael Servetus, an Aragonese, perhaps instructed
-by Marranos in Spain, wrote a pamphlet on the "Errors of the Doctrine
-of the Trinity," which created a great sensation, and brought him
-some faithful adherents; but he was burnt at the stake by Calvin at
-Geneva. The Reformers had retained the fanatical intolerance of the
-Catholic Church! Notwithstanding this, a sect of believers in the Unity
-(Unitarians, Anti-trinitarians) arose which rejected the identification
-of Jesus with God. In England, where Catholicism had been overthrown
-only by the whim of a tyrant, Henry VIII, to gratify his sensual
-desires, a religious-political party began to be formed, which proposed
-to take the Old Testament system of government and adapt it to English
-circumstances. It appeared to recognize only Old Testament types, and
-not to take any account of the praying brethren and sisters of the New
-Testament. Many kept the Sabbath as the day of rest appointed by God,
-but with their windows closed. Some eccentric Christians conceived a
-predilection for the Jews as the successors of the patriarchs, as the
-remnant of that people whom God had once favored with the fullness of
-His grace, as the direct descendants of the great prophets, on this
-account deserving the highest respect.
-
-Among the innumerable pamphlets appeared one, a dialogue between a Jew
-and a Christian, in which the grounds of the Christian dogmas were
-overthrown by texts out of the Old Testament. Publications of this sort
-helped to make the Jews obnoxious to the Reformers, too. The adherents
-of the new faith in a measure simulated hatred of Jews in order to
-avert from themselves the suspicion that they wished to undermine
-Christianity, and set up Judaism in its place. The Jews, therefore,
-had enemies on both sides, and were soon compelled to relinquish the
-illusion that Catholicism was overthrown, and that the new religion was
-in sympathy with them.
-
-When the peasants of South Germany, Alsatia, Franconia, and elsewhere,
-trusting too readily in the evangelical freedom proclaimed by Luther,
-attempted to throw off the yoke of their oppressors, the few Jews
-in Germany found themselves between two fires. On the one hand they
-were accused by the nobility and the upper classes of supporting the
-rebellious peasants and citizens with their money, and egging them on;
-and, on the other, the peasants attacked them as the confederates and
-abettors of the rich and the nobility. The fanatical priest, Balthasar
-Hubmaier, who had agitated the expulsion of the Jews from Ratisbon,
-was the adviser of the peasants of the Black Forest, and probably the
-author of the twelve written demands (articles) which the peasants
-had proposed. Instead of becoming milder and more humane by his
-apostasy from the Roman Catholic, he became still more fanatical as
-an adherent of the Anabaptist faith. He had no doubt excited the rage
-of the townspeople, who wished to free themselves from their debts to
-their Jewish creditors, and that of the peasants who desired to enrich
-themselves with the property of the Jews. The province of the Rheingau
-among other things demanded that no Jew should be allowed to remain in
-the district. The annals of the age of the Reformation thus continue
-to present year after year accounts of banishments, tortures, and
-restrictions. But, after all, times had improved. There were no longer
-sudden attacks, massacres, wholesale murders--simply expulsions, mere
-exile into poverty. Only events of deep and far-reaching effect can
-find a place here.
-
-In Naples, where the Spaniards ruled, the ultra-Catholic party had
-long tried to introduce the Inquisition against the Marranos who
-resided there. When Charles V returned from his victorious expedition
-in Africa, this party tried to induce him to banish the Jews from
-Naples, because the Marranos were but strengthened in their unbelief by
-intercourse with them. But Donna Benvenida, the noble wife of Samuel
-Abrabanel, who was held in high respect by the Spaniards, so ardently
-entreated the emperor to revoke the decree of banishment, and her young
-friend, the daughter of the viceroy, so warmly supported her request,
-that he could not refuse them. It is also possible that Abrabanel's
-money may have had something to do with it. But a few years afterwards,
-Charles ordered the Neapolitan Jews to wear the badge of shame on
-their dress, and in case of transgression to suffer punishment in
-their person and property, or leave the country. They chose the latter
-alternative, probably by the advice of Samuel Abrabanel. They probably
-realized that persecution would not end there, but that it would form
-the prelude to harsher treatment. But this voluntary exile was turned
-into banishment, and every Jew who should venture to show himself again
-in Naples, was threatened with severe punishment (1540-1541). Many
-turned their steps towards Turkey, a few went to Ancona, under papal
-protection, or to Ferrara, under the rule of Duke Hercules II, who
-passed for a friend of the Jews. Those who emigrated by sea suffered
-much hardship, and many of them were taken by pirates, and carried to
-Marseilles. The Marranos who were living there did much for them, and
-King Henry II also treated them humanely. As he could not keep them in
-his country, he sent them in his ships to Turkey. Samuel Abrabanel also
-left Naples, although he was offered the exceptional license to remain
-there; but he refused to separate himself from the lot of his unhappy
-co-religionists. He settled in Ferrara, and lived there for about ten
-years. His noble wife, highly respected by Leonora, the daughter of the
-viceroy of Naples, now the Duchess of Tuscany, survived him.
-
-A year later, the Jews of Bohemia experienced a milder, so to speak,
-more decent form of hatred. There had been many fires in the towns,
-especially in Prague. The Jews and shepherds were accused of having
-hired incendiaries. The Jews were also charged with having betrayed
-to the sultan the secret preparations for war against the Turks. The
-Bohemian diet therefore resolved to banish all Jews from Bohemia,
-and King Ferdinand, brother of Charles V, gave his assent. They were
-compelled to start on their exile with all their belongings (Adar,
-1542), for of the numerous Jews of Prague only ten persons or families
-received permission to remain there. Many of them found their way
-into Poland and Turkey, then the two most tolerant countries. The
-innocence of those who had suffered death, and of the banished Jews,
-was established in the course of the same year. A few of the notables
-interceded for their recall, for they were more indispensable than
-trade jealousy, fanaticism, and the hatred of race would confess. Thus
-those who had settled near the Bohemian frontier were able to return to
-their home. But for this favor they were obliged to pay a tax of 300
-schock groschen, and were ordered to wear a badge of yellow cloth as a
-mark by which they might be distinguished.
-
-At the same time two persons of exalted rank and great influence,
-the one on the Catholic, the other on the Protestant side, attacked
-the Jews so mercilessly, that it is a marvel that they were not
-exterminated to a man. The cause of provocation in one instance was
-as follows:--About Easter, a peasant boy, four years old, from the
-duchy of Neuburg in Bavaria, was missed, and suspicions arose that he
-was with the Jews. After Easter the boy was discovered by means of a
-dog, and enemies of the Jews pretended to see signs of Jewish torture
-on his body. Upon this the bishop of Eichstaedt caused certain Jews to
-be seized and dragged to his residence that they might be tried, and
-sent a request to the neighboring princes to seize the Jews in their
-domains. But the inquiry did not prove the guilt of the Jews. On this
-occasion Duke Otto Henry of Neuburg warmly espoused the cause of the
-Jews, and exerted his influence to oppose the bishop of Eichstaedt.
-The latter moved heaven and earth to have them banished at least. A
-courageous writer, probably at the suggestion of the duke, boldly
-defended the Jews against the prejudice of Christians in a pamphlet.
-This publication, "Little Book about the Jews," the author of which was
-a Lutheran pastor (perhaps Hosiander), for the first time placed the
-whole falsehood and malice of the accusation of the murder of Christian
-children in a clear light. The author, who professed to have had much
-intercourse with Jews, and to have become thoroughly acquainted
-with their language, laws, and customs, declared emphatically that a
-shameful injustice was done to Jews by these perpetual accusations
-of child-murder. The wealth and the pure faith of the Jews were the
-reasons. On the one hand, avaricious and cruel princes, or impoverished
-nobles or citizens, who owed money to Jews, invented such tales in
-order to be able to use violence against them; and on the other, such
-fables were invented by monks and the secular clergy in order to make
-new saints and fresh shrines for the encouragement of pilgrimages. In
-the long period since the dispersion of the Jews among Christians,
-no one had asserted, till within the last 300 years, that they had
-murdered Christian children. These idle tales had become current only
-since monks and priests practiced so much deception with pilgrimages
-and miraculous healings. For the priests feared no one more than Jews,
-because the latter disregarded human invention, and understood the
-Scripture better than the priests, who, therefore, persecuted the Jews
-to the utmost, slandered them, and caused them to be hated. They even
-wished to burn their sacred books. Therefore, it was fair to assume
-that priests had invented the story of the murder of the child in the
-province of Neuburg. The author further points out that till the third
-century the Christians were accounted child-murderers and shedders of
-blood in the heathen world. The confessions of Jews themselves, which
-were quoted in confirmation of the accusations, had been made under
-torture, and could not be received as evidence.
-
-Fanatical Catholic priests, especially the bishop of Eichstaedt, saw
-with indignation that Jews, instead of being abhorred and persecuted,
-were glorified in this book, and hastened to efface the impression.
-Dr. John Eck, so notorious in the history of the Reformation, a
-favorite of the bishop of Eichstaedt, was commissioned to write an
-answer, to prove the crime of bloodguiltiness, and to defame the Jews.
-This lawyer-theologian, with the broad shoulders of a butcher, the
-voice of a seditionist, and the disputativeness of a sophist, who had
-brought the Catholic Church, which he intended to defend against the
-Lutherans, into discredit by his vanity and his intemperate habits,
-this unprincipled disputant gladly undertook to belabor the Jews. In
-1541 he wrote a hostile reply to the above-mentioned pamphlet, in
-which he set himself to prove "the evil and wickedness brought about
-by Jews in all the German territories and other kingdoms." He revived
-the old accusations against baptized Jews, patched together old wives'
-tales about the cruel nature of the Jews, raked up the false stories
-about Trent and Ratisbon uttered by Jews when undergoing torture, and
-added his own experiences to them. Eck was so shameless as to bring
-proofs of the cruelty of the Jewish character from the Old Testament.
-To cast infamy upon them he even slandered the Old Testament heroes
-held sacred by the church. In verbose language and with a false
-show of learning he maintained that Jews mutilated the children of
-Christians, and used their blood in the consecration of their priests,
-to assist their wives in child-birth, and to heal sickness; and that
-they desecrated the host. He exclaimed indignantly: "It is a great
-mistake that we Christians leave the Jews so much freedom, and grant
-them protection and security." Probably on the petition of Jews against
-these accusations, the emperor, Charles V, renewed their privileges,
-and declared them innocent of shedding the blood of Christians.
-
-It is not edifying to find that Luther, the champion against obsolete
-prejudices, the founder of a new faith, agreed completely on the
-subject of Jews with his mortal enemy, Dr. Eck, who, with the same
-effrontery, had employed similar falsehood against himself. These
-two passionate opponents were of one heart and soul in their hatred
-of Jews. Luther had become greatly embittered with advancing age. He
-had lost much among his own followers by his obstinacy and persistent
-caviling, had disturbed the unanimity of those of the same way of
-thinking, and in his own camp created a breach which caused infinite
-harm to the Reformation for several centuries. His hard disposition
-had steadily gained the mastery over his gentle religion and humility,
-and his monkish narrowness could not at all comprehend Judaism with
-its laws, which brought forth and developed not the faith, but the
-morality and elevation, of man. He became enraged when his colleagues,
-Karlstadt, Muenzer, etc., referred for example to the year of Jubilee,
-and the enfranchisement of the slaves and serfs. A pamphlet, in the
-form of a dialogue, in which Judaism was involved in a contest with
-Christianity, probably written by a Christian, was now sent to him;
-this was too much for him. Could Judaism be so bold as to think of
-measuring itself against Christianity! Luther at once set about writing
-a passionate, stinging pamphlet, "Concerning the Jews and their Lies"
-(1542), which, in spitefulness, exceeded the writings of Pfefferkorn
-and Eck.
-
-Luther began by saying that he had made up his mind not to write
-anything further about Jews, nor against them, but because he had
-learnt that "this miserable, wicked people" dared entice Christians to
-join them, he wished to warn weak-minded men not to allow themselves
-to be befooled. Luther's principal argument, in proof of the truth
-of Christianity against the denial of the Messiahship of Jesus by
-the Jews, is written in very monkish style. Because the Christians,
-for more than a thousand years, had robbed them of all the rights of
-man, had treated them as evil beasts, had trodden them under foot,
-lacerated, and slain them: in a word, because they had fallen into
-distress through the harshness of Christians, therefore, they must be
-rejected, and the Saviour of the world must have appeared!
-
-This is mediaeval logic. But it exceeds the limits of indulgence
-towards the peculiarities of a strong character, when Luther, in his
-uncharitableness towards Jews, employs language such as was usual with
-those who burnt Jews at the stake. "Why should the Jews complain of
-hard captivity among us?" he says. "We Christians suffered persecution
-and martyrdom at their hands for nearly 300 years, so that we might
-well complain that they took us captive and killed us. And to this very
-day we know not what devil brought them into our land" (as if Jews had
-not dwelt in some districts of what is now Germany long before Germans
-were there). "We did not bring them from Jerusalem; besides that, no
-one keeps them: the country and the roads are open to them, let them
-return to their own land. We will gladly give them presents, if we can
-but be rid of them, for they are a heavy burden upon us, a plague, a
-pestilence, a sore trial." Luther, like Pfefferkorn and Eck, stated
-with malicious delight how the Jews were often driven out by violence
-"from France and recently from Spain by our beloved Emperor Charles
-(an historical blunder); this year also from the entire dominion of
-Bohemia, although one of their securest nests was in Prague; also from
-Ratisbon, Magdeburg, and many other places in my time."
-
-Without appreciation of the heroic patience displayed by Jews in the
-midst of hostility, and untaught by history, Luther did nothing but
-repeat the lying accusations of the vindictive Pfefferkorn, whose
-falsehood and villainy had been palpably proved by the Humanists. In
-imitation of this arch-enemy of the Jews he wrote that the Talmud
-and the rabbis taught that it was no sin to kill the Goyim, that is,
-heathens and Christians, break an oath to them, or rob and plunder
-them, and that the one and only aim of Jews was to weaken the Christian
-religion. It is incomprehensible that Luther, who had taken the part
-of the Jews so strongly in the heat of the Reformation, could repeat
-all the false tales about the poisoning of the springs, the murder of
-Christian children, and the use of human blood. He also maintained,
-in agreement with Eck, from whom in other respects he was so widely
-divided, that the Jews were too prosperous in Germany, and in
-consequence had become insolent.
-
-What is to be done with this wicked, accursed race, which can no longer
-be tolerated? asked Luther, and he gave an answer to the question which
-shows equal want of charity and wisdom. First of all the reformer of
-Wittenberg recommended that the synagogues be reduced to ashes, "to the
-honor of God and of Christianity." Next, Christians were to destroy the
-houses of the Jews, and drive them all under one roof, or into a stable
-like gypsies. All prayer-books and copies of the Talmud and the Old
-Testament were to be taken from them by force (as Luther's opponents,
-the Dominicans, had advised), and even praying and the use of God's
-name were to be forbidden under penalty of death. Their rabbis were to
-be forbidden to teach. The authorities were to prohibit the Jews from
-traveling, and to bar the roads against them, so that they must stay
-at home. Luther advised that their money be taken from them, and that
-this confiscated wealth be employed to establish a fund to maintain
-those Jews who should embrace Christianity. The authorities were to
-compel able-bodied Jews and Jewesses to forced labor, and to keep them
-strictly employed with the flail, the axe, the spade, the distaff and
-spindle, so that they might earn their bread in the sweat of their
-brow, and not live in idleness, feasting, and splendor. Christians
-were not to show any tender mercy to Jews. Luther urged the emperor
-and the princes to expel them from the country without delay, and
-drive them back into their own land. But anticipating that the princes
-would not consent to such folly, he exhorted the clergy and teachers
-of the people to fill the minds of their hearers with hatred of Jews.
-He observed that if he had power over Jews, he would assemble the
-best and most learned among them, and, under penalty of having their
-tongues cut out, force them to accept the Christian teaching, that
-there is not _one_ God, but that there are _three_ Gods. Luther even
-stirred up the robber-nobles against them. He had heard that a rich Jew
-was traveling through Germany with twelve horses. This Jew was known
-as the wealthy Michael, of Frankfort, the protege of the Margrave of
-Brandenburg; if the princes did not close the road against him and
-his fellow-believers, Luther urged the robber-knights to do so, for
-Christians might learn from his pamphlet how depraved was the Jewish
-nation. These absurd charges Luther ascribed to a worthless convert,
-Anton Margaritha, the son of a rabbi of Ratisbon. He had become a
-Catholic, and being punished on account of calumnies, had turned
-Lutheran, and written a foolish book against the Jews, and from this
-book Luther had taken his unjust attacks upon them.
-
-Shortly before his death he exhorted his hearers in a sermon to drive
-out the Jews:
-
- "Besides all this you still have the Jews, who do great evil
- in the land. If they could kill us all, they would gladly do
- so, aye, and often do it, especially those who profess to be
- physicians--they know all that is known about medicine in
- Germany; they can give poison to a man of which he will die in
- an hour, or in ten or twenty years; they thoroughly understand
- this art. I say to you lastly, as a countryman, if the Jews
- refuse to be converted, we ought not to suffer them, or bear
- with them any longer."
-
-In the reformer and regenerator of Germany, then, the Jews had almost a
-worse enemy than in the Pfefferkorns, Hoogstratens, and Ecks, certainly
-worse than in the popes till the middle of the century. But few
-heeded the words of those wretches, known to be sophists and liars,
-while Luther's uncharitable utterances were respected as oracles by
-the Christians of the new faith, and but too well followed out. As
-Jerome had infected the Catholic world with his openly avowed hatred
-of Jews, so Luther poisoned the Protestant world for a long time to
-come with his Jew-hating testament. Protestants became even more bitter
-against Jews than Catholics had been. The leaders of Catholicism
-demanded absolute submission to canonical law, but on this condition
-granted them permission to remain in Catholic countries; Luther, on
-the other hand, required their absolute expulsion. The popes often
-issued exhortations to spare the synagogues; but the founder of the
-Reformation insisted upon their desecration and destruction. It was
-reserved for him to place Jews on a level with gypsies. This difference
-arose from the fact that the popes occupied the highest rank in life,
-and dwelt in Rome, the metropolis of the world, the center of affairs
-in the four quarters of the globe; thus they had no eye for petty
-events, and usually left the Jews unnoticed because of their small
-importance. Luther, on the other hand, who lived in a petty country
-town and amidst narrow surroundings, listened to all the gossip against
-Jews, judged them by the measure of a country bumpkin, and reckoned up
-every farthing that they earned against them. He, therefore, was the
-cause of their being expelled by Protestant princes. In Roman Catholic
-states the Dominicans alone were their deadly enemies.
-
-This hatred followed the Jews even into Turkey. If there were neither
-Roman Catholics nor Protestants, there were Greek Catholic Christians.
-Turks and Greeks lived together in the towns of both Greece and Asia
-Minor. The latter, who would not give up their arrogance, but dared not
-display it towards the ruling Turks, persecuted the Jews with silent
-hatred, and took advantage of every opportunity to draw upon them the
-persecution of the government. On one occasion some of them gave rise
-to a persecution in the town of Amazia in Asia Minor. They caused a
-poor Greek, who was in the habit of associating with Jews, and had been
-supported by them, to disappear, and then accused some Jews of having
-murdered him. Hereupon the Turkish cadis seized the accused, put them
-to the torture, and forced them to acknowledge the murder. They were
-hanged, and a respected Jewish physician, Jacob Abi-Ayub, was burnt
-(about 1545). A few days afterwards a Jew recognized the Greek supposed
-to have been murdered, induced him to tell how he had been made to
-disappear, and brought him before the cadi. The latter, justly incensed
-against the malicious Greek accusers, had them executed. A similar
-accusation, the falseness of which was brought to light, was lodged
-against a Jew of the town of Tokat at about the same time.
-
-These cruel occurrences suggested to Moses Hamon, Sultan Solyman's
-Jewish physician, to obtain a decree from the sultan that an accusation
-against Jews in Turkey of having murdered a Christian, and other
-malicious calumnies, should not be brought before the ordinary judges,
-but before the sultan himself.
-
-Hatred against Jews, restrained in Turkey, raged the more openly in
-Christian countries. The republic of Genoa for a long time had not
-suffered a Jew to remain more than three days within its boundaries.
-Notwithstanding this, fugitives from Spain or Provence from time to
-time were received in the town of Novi, near Genoa; they went in
-and out of the capital itself, and were suffered to remain there.
-In the party differences between the patrician families, the little
-community, repulsed by the one side, was taken up by the other. Most
-of them were intelligent artisans, capitalists, or physicians. But
-again the Dominicans stirred up the people against them, and roused
-the professional jealousy of Christian physicians. Contrary to the
-wishes of Doge Doria, the Jews were driven out of Genoa (April, 1550),
-and, heralded by the sound of trumpets, a proclamation was made that
-henceforth no Jews should be suffered. This expulsion from Genoa is of
-importance, because a clever Jewish historian was included in it, whose
-fate represents in miniature the painful lot experienced by the Jewish
-race on a large scale.
-
-The vicissitudes in the life of the nations, as well as the changes in
-the life of the Jewish people, especially since their cruel expulsion
-from Spain and Portugal, and the heartless persecution of the Marranos,
-at length brought some clear-seeing Jews to the conviction that
-history is not ruled by chance, but that a higher hand guides it,
-bringing to pass destined events by bloodshed and tears. Since the
-time of the crusades, no century had been richer in changeful, almost
-dramatic, events than the sixteenth, when not only fresh continents
-were discovered, but when a new spirit began to prevail among mankind,
-striving after new creations, but always kept down by the leaden weight
-of existing systems. This wealth of occurrences taught a few thoughtful
-Jews, mostly of Sephardic origin, to trace the work of Providence
-in the apparently whimsical and irregular course of universal and
-Jewish history. They considered history a comfort to that portion of
-mankind which had been overthrown, overridden, and downtrodden by
-the tumultuous course of events. And what race stood in more need of
-consolation than the Jewish, a martyr people apparently born only for
-sorrow, always eating its bread in tears? Almost at one and the same
-time, three enlightened Jews undertook the task of studying history,
-and placing before the Jewish reading world its brazen tables. These
-were the physician, Joseph Cohen, the learned Talmudist, Joseph
-Ibn-Verga, and the poet, Samuel Usque. All three began with the same
-fundamental idea. The spirit of the prophets, which recognized in the
-course of historical events the fittest means for instruction and
-improvement, had come upon them, incontestably showing that Jews even
-in their degradation are not like the gypsy rabble, neither having
-nor knowing a history; that, in fact, they stood higher than those
-who wielded the scepter and the sword, the rack and the club, for the
-subjugation of mankind.
-
-The greatest of these historians was Joseph ben Joshua Cohen (born at
-Avignon, 1496, died 1575). His ancestors had come from Spain at the
-great expulsion, his father Joshua emigrating to Avignon, and thence
-moving to Novi, in Genoese territory. For a while he lived in Genoa,
-and was expelled thence. Joseph Cohen had studied medicine, devoting
-himself both to the theory and the practice. He appears to have been
-family physician to the doge, Andrea Doria. His heart beat warmly for
-his Jewish brethren, and he was zealous in his endeavors to lighten
-their unhappy lot. He once exerted himself to obtain the release
-of a father and son, cast into prison by the heartless Giannettino
-Doria, nephew and presumptive heir to the doge. But he succeeded in
-delivering only the father, the son did not escape till the stormy
-night of Fiesco's conspiracy. At the last expulsion from Genoa (1550),
-the inhabitants of the little town of Voltaggio begged him to settle
-amongst them as a physician, and he lived there for eighteen years. But
-history attracted him more than the practice of medicine, and he began
-to search for chronicles in order to write a sort of universal history
-in the form of annals. He began with the period of the decline of the
-Roman empire and the formation of the modern states, and represented
-the course of the world's history as a struggle between Asia and
-Europe, between the Crescent and the Cross; the former represented by
-the then powerful dominion of Turkey; the latter, by France, which
-had set up Charlemagne, the first emperor of a Christian realm. He
-connected the whole of European history with these two groups of
-nations. He included all the events and wars of Christendom, and of
-the Mahometan countries in "The Annals of the Kings of France and of
-the House of Othman," the title of his historical work. In the history
-of his own times, which he either witnessed himself, or obtained
-from the experience of contemporaries, he is an impartial narrator,
-and, therefore, his work is a trustworthy source of information. The
-Hebrew historical style, borrowed from the best books of the Bible,
-renders his account most forcible. The Biblical language and dramatic
-style give a charm to the work, and raise it above the level of a dry
-chronicle.
-
-Joseph Cohen introduced the history of the various persecutions of the
-Jews at the different periods when they occurred. His chief aim was
-to point out the justice of God in the course of history, showing how
-violence and cunning met with their desert, and were cast down from the
-height attained. He sympathized with the sorrows which he described;
-therefore, he often wrote with intense bitterness.
-
-Very different is another historical work of the same period,
-upon which three generations, father, son, and grandson, were
-employed. Judah Ibn-Verga, Kabbalist and astronomer, a member of the
-distinguished Ibn-Verga family, related to the Abrabanels, had noted
-down in a book some of the persecutions which Jews had undergone in
-different countries and at various times. Solomon Ibn-Verga, who had
-witnessed the expulsion of the Jews from Spain and Portugal, and who
-for a time had pretended to be a Christian, and then emigrated to
-Turkey as a Marrano, added several narratives to his father's notes.
-He understood the Latin language, and so borrowed and added fresh
-material from various Latin documents. His son, Joseph Ibn-Verga, who
-belonged to the college of rabbis at Adrianople, completed the work
-by adding some of the events of his own times and the age immediately
-preceding, and then published the whole under the title of "Judah's
-Rod of Correction" (Shebet Jehuda). Joseph Ibn-Verga was also learned
-in Latin, and incorporated many narratives from Latin documents. This
-martyrology of the Ibn-Vergas, then, is not a unit, but a medley
-without plan or order, destitute even of chronological sequence.
-Imaginary conversations between Jews and Spanish or Portuguese kings
-are given as having actually taken place. But the Hebrew style is
-brilliant and graceful, without possessing biblical coloring like that
-of the historical works of Elias Kapsali and Joseph Cohen. Ibn-Verga
-sought (towards the end of the first part) to show the reason why the
-Jewish race, above all the Spanish Jews, were visited with so many
-intolerable trials, and found it in the preference once shown for the
-Jewish nation: "Whom God loves most He chasteneth most." But the chief
-sources of persecution were to be found in the division between Jews
-and Christians in the matter of food and drink, in the revenge taken
-by Christians for the crucifixion of Jesus Christ, in the offenses of
-Spanish Jews against Christian women, in the envy of their riches, and
-in the false oaths of which they were guilty. Ibn-Verga did not conceal
-the faults of his race; perhaps he exaggerated them. Joseph Ibn-Verga
-added a heartfelt prayer about the numerous sufferings which Israel had
-undergone, and was still enduring, the last causing the first to be
-forgotten. All the nations of the world were united in hatred to this
-race; all creatures in heaven and on earth allied in enmity against it;
-before a Jewish child began to prattle it was pursued by hatred and
-scorn. "We are despised like the lowest worms; may God soon fulfill His
-promises to His people."
-
-The most original of the three historians, as well as of the three
-Usques, probably belonging to the same family, was Samuel, who had no
-doubt fled from the fire of the Inquisition in Portugal. He settled
-with his relations in Ferrara. Like Solomon Usque, known under his
-Spanish name of Duarte Gomez, he was a poet, but his muse did not
-occupy herself with foreign material, with imitations and adaptations,
-but created something original and peculiar. The brilliant and tragical
-history of the Israelite people had great attraction for him; it did
-not exist merely as a lifeless mass of learning in his memory, but
-lived in his heart as a fresh bubbling spring from which he drew
-comfort and inspiration. Biblical history with its heroes, kings,
-and men of God, the history subsequent to the Captivity, with its
-alternations of splendid victory and unhappy overthrow, the history
-since the destruction of the Jewish rule by the Romans, all the events
-and changes of these three periods were present to Samuel Usque's mind.
-The material gathered from many sources he transformed by the breath
-of poetry into a long, most touching lament and consolation in the
-Portuguese language, not in verse, but in elevated prose, more charming
-than a poetic garb. It is a conversation of three shepherds, Icabo,
-Numeo, and Zicareo, the first of whom laments with bitter tears the
-tragical fate of Israel since its appearance on the scene of history;
-the other two pour the balm of comfort into the broken heart of the
-unhappy shepherd, and show him that these sufferings are the necessary
-steps to the attainment of a glorious goal. Samuel Usque named this
-historical dialogue, "Consolation for the Sorrows of Israel." By his
-vivid picture of the Jewish past, he intended to give to the Portuguese
-fugitives in Ferrara and elsewhere, who had again attached themselves
-to Judaism, comfort in their great sorrow and suffering, and lead them
-to look forward to a happy future.
-
-He represented the Israelite nation now as a mourning widow, wringing
-her hands in lamentation, and weeping day and night over the sufferings
-of her sons during thousands of years; now as a prophetess inspired by
-God, clothed in a radiant robe, whose eye pierces the darkness, and
-sees a glorious future, and whose lips utter wisdom, and pour balm on
-burning wounds. Though he was not a regular historian, yet no one has
-represented the principal features of Jewish history from the earliest
-times down to his own with so much light and life as Samuel Usque.
-
-The external form of this historico-poetical dialogue is as follows:
-the shepherd, Icabo (or Jacob, the representative of the Jewish
-nation), laments in a lonely spot the misery of his flock, dispersed
-throughout all parts of the world, humiliated, and torn in pieces. "To
-what quarter of the globe shall I turn and find healing for my wounds,
-oblivion of my sorrows, and comfort in this grievous, heavy torment?
-The whole earth is full of my misery and my distress. I am like a
-poor, heavy-laden pilgrim in the midst of all the riches and delight
-of favored Asia. Amid the wealth of the gold of sun-burnt Africa, I am
-an unhappy, starving, fainting exile. And Europe, Europe! my hell upon
-earth! what shall I say of thee, thou who hast adorned thy greatest
-triumphs with the limbs of my flock? How can I praise thee, Italy,
-thou blasphemous and warlike land! Thou who hast fed upon the flesh of
-my lambs like a ravenous lion! Ye accursed pastures of France, which
-did furnish poisoned grass for my flocks to feed on! Thou proud, rough
-mountain-land of Germany, which hast taken my young, and dashed them
-in pieces from the tops of thy wild Alps! And you sweet, fresh streams
-of England, from you my flocks have drunk only bitter, brackish
-waters! Hypocritical, cruel, bloodthirsty Spain, in you voracious and
-ravening wolves have devoured, and still devour, my fleecy flocks!"
-The two shepherds, Numeo and Zicareo, attracted by the heartrending
-lamentations of Icabo, induce him by much persuasion to tell them his
-sorrow, and thus obtain relief for his burdened heart. But not without
-a struggle does he bring himself to do this. He then describes to his
-two friends the former splendor of his flock, and thus brings before
-their eyes the prosperous days of Israel. Then he passes to the trials
-which God's flock has had to endure. Icabo is at length induced by
-gentle persuasion to relate the history of his unhappy race in detail,
-first its adverse fortunes, and its exile during the existence of the
-first Temple; then, in a second dialogue, the bitterness endured, and
-the exile till the second destruction of the Temple by the Romans;
-and in a third dialogue, the sufferings of his people during the long
-exile; the first forced baptism which Sisebut, king of the Visigoths,
-imposed upon the Jews of Spain; the expulsion of the Jews from England
-and France, Spain and Portugal; the horrors of the Inquisition, which
-Usque had himself beheld; and lastly, the desecration of a synagogue at
-Pesaro (1552). In this manner does Icabo (or Samuel Usque) go through
-the long range of Jewish history. He concludes this summary of sorrows
-thus:
-
- "Scarcely hadst thou ceased to drink of the poisoned cup of
- the Babylonians, which had well-nigh proved fatal to thee, O
- Israel, when thou wast revived to endure the torments inflicted
- by the Romans; and when this double misfortune, which so
- cruelly tore thee in pieces, was at an end, thou wert indeed
- still living, but fast bound to suffering and misery, tortured
- by fresh pangs. It is the fate of all created beings to
- experience change; only not thine, for thy unhappy lot is not
- changed, and has no ending."
-
-The friends offer comfort and consolation to Icabo. They say:
-
- "Sorrows, be they never so great and intense, have an
- object. They have been partly incurred by a sinful life and
- by backsliding from God and are intended to serve for the
- correction and purification of Israel. It is also a blessing
- that thy people is scattered abroad among all the nations of
- earth, that the wicked may not succeed in utterly destroying
- them. When the Spaniards drove thee out, and burnt thy people,
- God ordained that thou shouldst find a country ready to receive
- thee, where thou couldst dwell in freedom, namely, Italy."
-
-The enemies who treated Israel so unmercifully were said to have
-received their punishment. The poet said of the Spaniards that Italy
-had become their grave; of France, that Spain had been its rod of
-correction; of Germany, that the Turks were its executioners, who made
-of it a wall against which to direct their cannon; and of England,
-that wild and savage Scotland was a perpetual thorn in its side. One
-great comfort was that all these sufferings, sorrows, and trials which
-came upon the Jewish race were literally announced and precisely
-foretold by the prophets. They had only served to elevate Israel, and
-as the prophecies of evil were verified, so they might trust that the
-prophecies of good would not remain unfulfilled.
-
-The dialogues end with comforting prophecies in the feeling words of
-Isaiah. This edifying description served doubtless to sustain the
-Marranos in their newly-recovered creed, and to endure sufferings of
-every kind for it, even death itself.
-
-Samuel Usque was of opinion that the sufferings of the Jewish people
-were soon to decrease, and that the long looked-for morning would soon
-follow the darkness of night. But the church showed him that this
-anticipation was ill-founded. He lived to see fresh tribulations arise
-in his immediate neighborhood, and a whole system of fresh persecutions
-put into practice, which the Jewish historian, Joseph Cohen, was able
-to record in his annals of Jewish martyrdom. These fresh troubles
-had their origin in the reaction which the Roman Catholic Church was
-ardently desirous to institute against the ever-growing Reformation.
-Two men strove at almost the same time, quite independently of each
-other, to re-establish declining Catholicism, and thereby laid snares
-in the way of the progress of the human race. A Neapolitan, Pietro
-Caraffa, and a Spaniard, Ignatius Loyola, both men of zeal, and ready
-to take the initiative, began with self-castigation, and ended by
-reducing the minds and bodies of others to bondage. The worm-eaten
-papacy, supposed to be crumbling away beneath the laughter and derision
-of its opponents, for which its very friends had nothing but a shrug of
-the shoulders, was raised by these two men to a height greater almost
-than in the time of Innocent III and his immediate successors, because
-it rested, not on the tottering foundations of dreamy belief, but on
-the firm ground of powerful conviction and reckless determination.
-Caraffa, afterwards Pope Paul IV, and Loyola, the founder of the order
-of Jesuits, so powerful to this day, were very much in earnest in
-impressing the minds of the faithful with the belief in the supremacy
-of the papacy and the pope's power to bind and to loose, both in
-heaven and on earth, they themselves being firmly convinced thereof.
-Caraffa re-established the discipline of the church which had grown
-lax, increased its severity, and placed a rod of iron in her hand. He
-introduced into the Catholic world at large the means which Torquemada,
-Deza, and Ximenes de Cisneros had employed in Spain to force Jews and
-Moors to become members of the church, namely, the stake. All who held
-a belief differing by so much as a hair's breadth from the papacy were
-to abjure it, or be burnt. Merciless force, which does not think, and
-destroys all independent thought, was to restore credit to the defamed
-church.
-
-To regain possession of the minds which had striven to emancipate
-themselves, and to keep them in bondage, the Inquisition thought it
-in the highest degree necessary to watch the press. The press had
-brought mischief and schism into the church (so thought Caraffa
-and his associates); the press, then, must be gagged. Only what was
-approved by the pope and his followers was to be printed. Censorship
-of the press had been introduced by previous popes, but as anything
-had hitherto been obtainable by bribery, publishers had been able to
-print and disseminate seditious works against the existing church
-system, either with or without the knowledge of the clergy appointed
-to control such publications. The seditious controversial pamphlets
-in the Reuchlin quarrel, the famous "Letters," Von Hutten's shafts at
-the papacy, Luther's first pamphlets against the Romish Babylonian
-harlot, inflammable materials which, appearing in rapid succession,
-on all sides kindled the tow of which the church tent was woven,
-were the result of negligent censorship. This was now to be changed.
-The censorship was henceforth intrusted only to priests faithful
-to the papacy, and, either from conviction or from instincts of
-self-preservation, they exercised their office without leniency.
-
-The Jews soon felt the effect of this fierce Catholic reaction, for
-they had no sort of protection, and owed their miserable existence
-only to neglect in the enforcement of the canonical laws against them.
-As soon as the church began seriously to put these hostile decrees
-into execution, the existence, or at least the peace, of the Jews was
-endangered. First of all the question of the Talmud was again raised,
-but not with the lukewarmness of forty years before. At that time
-Pfefferkorn and the Dominicans of Cologne could not hope to obtain a
-hearing before the papal chair for their proposal to burn the Talmud,
-but were obliged to have recourse to all sorts of ruses in order to
-gain over the emperor to their policy. Now a totally different spirit
-prevailed. The universal harm caused by the Talmud needed only to be
-hinted at by malicious converts for a decree to be at once issued
-against it. By such the fresh outcry against it was raised.
-
-Elias Levita, the Hebrew grammarian, who had lived for a long time
-in the house of Cardinal Egidio de Viterbo, and had instructed many
-Christians in the Hebrew language, both personally and by his writings,
-and had also imparted to some a superficial knowledge of the Kabbala,
-left two grandsons, the children of his daughter, who were received in
-Christian circles. One of them, Eliano, had learnt Hebrew thoroughly,
-and was a proof reader and copyist in several towns of Italy; his
-brother, Solomon Romano, had traveled much in Germany, Turkey,
-Palestine, and Egypt, and understood many languages: Hebrew, Latin,
-Spanish, Arabic, and Turkish. Eliano, the elder, had become a Christian
-under the name of Victor Eliano, and was a priest, later even a canon.
-Solomon Romano was so indignant at this that he hastened to Venice to
-persuade his brother to return to the bosom of Judaism. But instead of
-converting, he himself became converted. A Venetian patrician, much
-attached to the church, set about bringing him over to Christianity,
-and what he began, a Jesuit finished. Solomon Romano was baptized
-(1551), and assumed the name of John Baptista, to the great grief of
-his mother, who was still living. He became a Jesuit and afterwards an
-ecclesiastical writer, wrote upon the mysteries of the Christian faith,
-a Hebrew and Arabic catechism, and other similar works. This grandson
-of the grammarian Elias Levita, with two other converts, Joseph Moro
-and Ananel di Foligno, not content with having forsworn their religion,
-appeared before the pope, like Nicholas Donin, to denounce the Talmud,
-and repeated the same slanders, namely, that the books of the Talmud
-contained abuse of Jesus, the church, the whole of Christendom, and
-that they hindered the conversion of the Jews in a body. Julius III was
-by no means bigoted, least of all was he inimical to Jews. But it no
-longer lay with the pope to decide upon the Talmud; this task devolved
-on the court of the Inquisition, that is to say, on the fanatical
-Caraffa, and Julius III was obliged to approve and sign the decree laid
-before him by the inquisitor general (August 12th, 1553)--another
-proof of the emptiness of the boasted infallibility of the papacy. Leo
-X had encouraged the printing of the Talmud, and the third pope after
-him decreed its destruction. The officers of the Inquisition invaded
-the houses of the Roman Jews, confiscated the copies of the Talmud and
-compilations made from it, and burnt them with special malice on the
-Jewish New Year's Day (September 9th), so that the Jews might feel the
-grief at the destruction of their sacred books the more keenly. The
-inquisitors did not wage war against the Talmud in Rome only. Copies
-were burnt by hundreds of thousands throughout the whole Romagna, in
-Ferrara, Mantua, Venice, Padua, and in the island of Candia, which
-belonged to Venice. The officers of the Inquisition in their fury no
-longer distinguished between the Talmud and other Hebrew writings.
-Everything that fell into their hands became a prey to the flames; they
-even seized copies of the Holy Scriptures. The Jews of all Catholic
-countries were in despair; they were robbed by this confiscation of the
-rabbinical books which contain the precepts of a religious life, and
-in which there is no word referring to Christianity. They, therefore,
-appealed to the pope to revoke the decree, or at least to permit them
-the use of these harmless rabbinical writings. Julius III agreed to
-this latter request, and issued a bull (May 29th, 1554) that the Jews
-be compelled, under pain of corporal punishment, to give up all copies
-of the Talmud, but that the bailiffs be not allowed to seize other
-Hebrew works, or vex the Jews. Transgressors of this decree were to
-be visited with severe ecclesiastical punishment. Henceforward all
-Hebrew books were subjected to inspection before they were published,
-lest they contain a shadow of reproach against Christianity or Rome.
-The censors were mostly baptized Jews, who thus had the opportunity of
-tormenting their former brethren in faith.
-
-Matters became worse for the Jews after the death of Julius III, as the
-college of cardinals insisted that all henceforth elected to the papacy
-should belong to the strictest church party, if possible, be monks.
-Cultivated dignitaries, interested in humanistic studies, who loved the
-arts and sciences, if such there still were, had fallen into disfavor.
-
-Marcellus II, the first of the reactionary popes, was succeeded in
-the papal chair by the bigoted and fanatical Caraffa, under the name
-of Paul IV (May, 1555-August, 1559). He retained in old age all the
-violence and passion of his youth, and framed his policy accordingly.
-He hated not only Protestants and Jews, but also the Spaniards, the
-most useful tools of ecclesiastical fanaticism; he termed them and the
-bigoted king, Philip II, "worthless seed of the Jews and Moors." Soon
-after his accession to the papal chair he issued a bull, by which every
-synagogue throughout the Papal States was ordered to contribute ten
-ducats for the maintenance of the house of catechumens in which Jews
-were educated in the Christian faith. Still more severe was his second
-bull against the Jews (July 12th, 1555), which enforced the canonical
-laws against them with great harshness. They were to remain shut up
-in Ghettos, and were to possess only one synagogue; the rest were to
-be destroyed. They were not allowed to employ Christian servants, not
-even wet-nurses, and were forbidden to have intercourse with Christians
-in general. Every Jew was commanded to wear a green cap, and every
-Jewess a green veil, even outside the precincts of the city. They were
-not to be addressed as "Sir" by the Christian population. They were
-forbidden to own real estate, and those who had any were ordered to
-sell it within six months; thus they were compelled to part with their
-lands, worth more than 500,000 gold crowns, for a fifth of their value.
-But the severest blow was that Jewish physicians were prohibited from
-attendance on Christians, though so many popes owed their health to
-them. Heavy penalties were attached to the infringement of this edict.
-These cruel measures were carried out with extreme severity, and
-confiscation of copies of the Talmud was not interrupted. Thereupon,
-many Jews forsook Rome, which had become so malicious towards them, and
-betook themselves to more tolerant states, but they were maltreated on
-the way by fanatical mobs. Those who remained in Rome were treated in
-a most undignified manner by the pope. First it was said that they had
-only made a feint of selling their lands, and had executed sham deeds
-of sale, and for this they were imprisoned; next the pope announced
-that those Jews who were not working for the common good should
-leave Rome within a given time. When the terrified Jews asked for an
-explanation of what was meant by "working for the general good," they
-received the Pharaoh-like reply, "You shall know at the proper time."
-
-Paul IV compelled them to do forced labor in repairing the walls of
-Rome, which he desired to fortify against the Spaniards, of whom he
-had wilfully made enemies. Once he, whom the Jews not unjustly called
-Haman, impelled by his fierce enmity against them, commanded his nephew
-to set fire to all their dwellings under the veil of the darkness of
-night. The latter was about to carry out the order, though unwillingly,
-when he met the sensible cardinal, Alexander Farnese, who advised him
-to delay the execution of the inhuman deed that the pope might have
-time to consider. The order was revoked on the following day.
-
-The fanatical Pope Paul IV thus ill-treated the Jews, but he raged
-with even greater fury against the Marranos in his dominions. Many,
-compelled to become Christians in Portugal, had found an asylum in
-Ancona, and received an indemnity from Pope Clement VII guaranteeing
-that they should not be molested by the Inquisition, but might confess
-Judaism. The next two moderate popes, Paul III and Julius III, had
-confirmed this privilege to the Marranos, convinced as they were that
-baptism, enforced by violence, could have no sacramental significance.
-The more violently the Inquisition now introduced into Portugal
-proceeded against the Marranos, like that in Spain, the more fugitives
-took refuge in Italy. They settled, with the property rescued, in
-Ferrara and Ancona, trusting in the privileges assured to them by the
-head of Catholic Christendom. But what did the vindictive Pope Paul
-IV care for an assurance of safety granted by his predecessors, and
-for a time tacitly recognized by himself, if it was in opposition to
-his notion of orthodoxy? His perverse spirit could not suffer those
-to live as Jews who had been sprinkled with baptismal water. Paul,
-therefore, issued a secret order that all the Marranos in Ancona,
-already numbering several hundreds, should be thrown into the dungeons
-of the Inquisition, a trial of their orthodoxy instituted, and their
-property sequestered (Elul--August, 1555). This was a severe blow
-to the Marranos, some of whom had been there for half a century, and
-had lulled themselves into a dream of security. Even those Marranos
-who were Turkish subjects, and were dwelling only for a short time in
-the flourishing seaport because of their trade with the Levant, were
-included in the accusation of Judaizing, and imprisoned, and their
-goods confiscated, as a matter of course. The furious pope thus cut off
-a considerable source of his revenue at the moment when he was about to
-plunge into a costly war with Spain.
-
-But very few Marranos succeeded in escaping from the bailiffs of the
-Inquisition. They were all received by Duke Guido Ubaldo, of Urbino,
-and quartered in Pesaro, because he was then at enmity with the pope,
-and thought to transfer the trade of the Levant from Ancona to Pesaro
-by means of the connection of the Marranos with Turkey. Duke Hercules
-II, of Ferrara, also offered the Portuguese and Spanish Jews, from
-whatever country they might have fled, an asylum in his dominions,
-and formally invited them thither (December, 1555). Among those who
-escaped to Pesaro was a man then held in high repute, the celebrated
-physician Amatus (Chabib) Lusitanus (born 1511, died 1568), a sensible
-and intelligent man, a skillful physician, a noted scholar, and a man
-of equal conscientiousness and amiability. As a pretended Christian
-he had borne the name of Joao Rodrigo de Castel-Branco. He appears to
-have been driven from his home by the introduction of the Inquisition
-into Portugal. He had been for some time in Antwerp, then the most
-important city of Flanders, afterwards visited both Ferrara and Rome,
-but had permanently established himself at Ancona (about 1549), where
-he had openly assumed his family name of Chabib, and Latinized it under
-the form of Amatus Lusitanus. Although he openly professed himself a
-Jew, he was frequently summoned to the court of Pope Julius III to
-attend him in sickness. Sufferers came to him from far and near. The
-art of healing was to him a sacred office, which he fulfilled with his
-whole soul in the endeavor to prolong human life. Amatus was able to
-take a solemn oath--by God and His holy commandments--that he had
-always labored purely for the welfare of mankind, had never concerned
-himself about compensation, had never accepted valuable presents, had
-treated the poor without fee, and made no difference between Jews,
-and Christians, and Turks. Nothing ever hindered him in his devoted
-calling, neither family considerations, nor long distances. Amatus
-had many disciples of his art who were attached to him, and whom he
-regarded as his children. In his young days he had written medical
-works so highly esteemed that they were often printed during his
-lifetime. The greatest interest was excited by his seven "Centuries"
-(each dealing with a hundred cases of illness), in which he minutely
-described his remedies and their effect, and gave the characteristics
-of his patients. These "Cures" procured for him very extensive fame
-during his lifetime; they were frequently printed in Italy, France,
-Germany, and even in Spain, and were used by other physicians as
-text-books. Amatus received an invitation from the king of Poland
-to come to his court in the capacity of his private physician, an
-invitation which he did not accept.
-
-This benefactor of mankind, the ornament of his time, was obliged to
-flee like a criminal from Ancona to Pesaro, and afterwards to journey
-even further, because he refused to make a ridiculous confession of
-faith before the bloodthirsty Inquisition of Paul IV, and did not
-wish to expose himself to the risk of death at the stake. More than
-a hundred Portuguese Marranos, unable to flee, had to pine in the
-dungeons of the Inquisition until their sentence was announced to them.
-This was to the effect that those who penitently made confession of
-the Catholic faith should be set at liberty, but be carried to the
-island of Malta, and forfeit all honors and dignities. Sixty Marranos
-agreed to this hypocrisy, but twenty-four of them, among them an aged
-woman, Donna Maiora, remained firm in the faith of their fathers, "The
-Lord our God is one God," and were burnt at the stake (May, 1556).
-Most of those to be transported to Malta escaped, and took refuge in
-Turkey. A cry of horror was heard from all Jews when the news of this
-shocking catastrophe was spread abroad. The sentence was as illegal
-as cruel, because, as has already been said, the religious freedom of
-the Marranos in Ancona had been solemnly confirmed by three popes in
-succession. The Portuguese Marranos in Turkey were completely stunned
-by this blow administered to their fellow-sufferers. They bethought
-themselves of means by which to be revenged on the insanely cruel pope.
-The peculiar position of the Jews in this century made it possible for
-them to entertain the idea of a struggle with their malicious enemy
-in the chair of St. Peter. A union of all the Jews of the East might
-furnish the means.
-
-There lived at this time a noble Jewish lady, an ornament to her
-sex and her people by her grace, her intelligence, her character,
-and greatness of mind, one of those beings whom Providence seems to
-place in the world from time to time that the likeness of man to the
-Divine Image may not be quite forgotten. Donna Gracia Mendesia was a
-name which her Jewish contemporaries pronounced only with admiration
-and love. Blessed with ample means, which she expended wisely, and
-only for the benefit of others and for the elevation of mankind,
-she commanded an influence equal to that of a princess, and reigned
-over the willing hearts of hundreds of thousands. She was called the
-Esther of her time. But what anguish of mind she was obliged to endure
-before she dared openly to call herself Gracia (Hannah)! The waves of
-meanness and wickedness surged around her, but could not sully the
-purity of her soul. Born in Portugal (about 1510, died about 1568),
-of a Marrano family named Benveniste, she was married under the
-Christian name of Beatrice to a rich participator in the same unhappy
-fate, one of the house of Nassi, who had taken the baptismal name
-of Francisco Mendes. He had founded an extensive banking business,
-branches of which extended through Flanders and France. The German
-emperor and ruler of two continents, Charles V, the king of France, and
-many princes besides, were debtors to the house of Mendes. A younger
-brother, Diogo Mendes, was head of the branch bank at Antwerp. When the
-husband of Beatrice died (before 1535), leaving her with one daughter
-named Reyna, and the terrible Inquisition, introduced into Portugal,
-threatened danger to her property and the lives of herself and her
-child, she betook herself to her brother-in-law at Antwerp, accompanied
-by a younger sister and several young nephews. She furnished poor
-Marranos with the means to flee from the fires of the Inquisition.
-The sums which pseudo-Christians paid to the emissaries and creatures
-of the pope to frustrate the Inquisition, went through her hands and
-her brother-in-law's. The Mendes family acquired a high position in
-Antwerp, where there were many Marranos. Mendesia's young, handsome and
-clever nephew, Joao Miques, associated with the first people in the
-city, and was much beloved by Maria, ruler of the Netherlands, formerly
-queen of Hungary, sister to Charles V.
-
-Beatrice was by no means at ease in Antwerp. Affection for the
-religion in which she had been born, and which she was compelled to
-deny, and horror of the Catholic faith forced upon her, made Flanders
-just as hateful to her as Portugal. She longed for a country where
-she could freely follow the impulses of her heart, glowing with love
-to Judaism. She, therefore, importuned her brother-in-law, the head
-of the banking business, who had married her sister, either to go
-to Germany, or elsewhere, with her, or pay over her share of the
-property. Diogo Mendes fixed a time for this removal, but died before
-it arrived (1540-1546); he also left a widow and a daughter, Gracia
-the younger. This was the beginning of sorrowful days for Mendesia.
-She was recognized by her brother-in-law's will as the head of the
-widely-extended business, but could not settle the affairs of the house
-quickly enough to enable her to follow the wish of her heart, and
-betake herself to some tolerant land, where she could openly confess
-herself a Jewess. Besides, Charles V, in his covetousness, cast an
-eye upon the large property of the house of Mendes. An accusation was
-made by the imperial attorney-general that the deceased Diogo Mendes
-had secretly practiced Judaism. It may also have become known that he
-had supported the antagonists of the Inquisition by word and deed. It
-was, therefore, decreed that the whole of his property, being that of
-a heretic, should be forfeited to the exchequer. The order was issued
-that the goods and account-books of the house of Mendesia be seized
-and sealed. But the widow Mendesia succeeded in satisfying the avarice
-of the officials for the moment by bribes and the advance of a large
-loan. But it was impossible for her to leave Antwerp without exciting
-suspicion against herself and endangering her property still more. Thus
-she was obliged to remain there in great distress of mind for more than
-two years, until the loan was repaid by the emperor.
-
-At length the hour of deliverance seemed to be at hand, when she might
-leave Antwerp, and proceed to Venice. A story circulated that her
-nephew, Joao Miques, had fled to Venice with her daughter Reyna, for
-whose hand several Christian noblemen had sued. Perhaps this was a
-story sedulously spread by the Mendes family so as to afford a pretext
-for their journey to Venice, and that no hindrance might be interposed.
-But this precaution was not successful. After her departure, Charles
-V again gave orders that her property, so far as it lay within his
-dominions, should be seized, because the sisters were secret Jewesses,
-and Mendesia the elder (as she was called) was compelled to pay large
-sums to avert this fresh calamity.
-
-But misfortune, greater than any that she had yet experienced, was
-in store for her at Venice, from a quarter whence she least expected
-it, namely, from her younger sister. The latter, as reckless and
-scatter-brained as the elder was prudent and sedate, demanded her share
-of the property and her daughter's, to do with as she pleased.
-
-But Donna Mendesia neither could nor would agree to this, she having
-been made sole manager of the property, and also guardian of her niece,
-still under age. Chafing at this guardianship, and probably guided
-by evil counselors, the younger sister took a step which turned out
-to her own disadvantage. She informed the Venetian government that
-her sister was about to emigrate to Turkey, and take with her all her
-wealth, there to resume her adherence to Judaism, while she herself and
-her daughter desired to remain Christians; and she asked the Venetian
-authorities to assist her in obtaining possession of her property, in
-order that she might use it as a good Christian in Venice. The rulers
-of Venice, seeing the prospect of a rich prize, did not hesitate to
-take up the accusation, cited the accused to appear before the legal
-authorities, and arrested her to prevent her flight. Her ill-advised
-or worthless sister also sent an avaricious, Jew-hating messenger to
-France, to take possession of the property there belonging to the
-Mendes family. This envoy, thinking himself insufficiently paid for
-his errand, denounced the younger sister also as a secret Jewess, and
-the French court confiscated the Mendes property in France. King Henry
-II also held himself exempt from repaying his debt to the family. The
-unfortunate Mendesia was meantime endeavoring to divert these blows
-aimed at herself and her property. Her nephew, Joao Miques, gave
-liberal assistance to prevent losses and to set his noble relative
-free. Either he or his aunt found a way to induce Sultan Solyman to
-embrace their cause. Such immense riches were about to be brought
-into his dominions, and the Venetian Republic, which existed only by
-his forbearance, dared deprive him of them? That roused his fury. His
-private physician, Moses Hamon, a Jew who hoped to win the hand of the
-rich heiress Reyna for his son, had disposed the sultan in favor of the
-Mendes family. A special messenger of state (Tshaus) was sent by the
-Porte to Venice, with instructions that the imprisoned Marrano was at
-once to be set free and allowed to depart unhindered for Turkey with
-all her property. In consequence of this a difference arose between
-the court of Turkey and the Republic of Venice, which afterwards led
-to animosities. An important part was thus thrust upon this poor lady
-against her will.
-
-In the meantime she succeeded--no one knows how--in finding a
-place of refuge in Ferrara under the protection of the liberal-minded
-Duke Hercules of Este, where she resided for several years (about
-1549 to 1553) under her Jewish name, a blessing and a comfort to her
-fellow-sufferers for their faith. Here she was able for the first
-time to exercise openly and freely her sublime virtue, her lively
-sympathies, her generosity, her genuine piety--in a word, all the
-nobility of her heart. Her wisdom and prudence were of great service
-to the Marranos in Italy. The poet Samuel Usque, who dedicated his
-beautiful work to her, spoke of her with enthusiasm and deep respect.
-He makes his Numeo, who plays the part of consoler in the dialogues,
-utter among other grounds of consolation for the sufferings of the
-Israelites, that they had met with unexpected help from this good woman:
-
- "Who has not seen Divine Mercy reveal itself in human form,
- as it has shown, and still shows itself to thee a shield
- and defense against thy wretchedness? Who has not seen the
- heartfelt compassion of Miriam over again in the sacrifice
- of her own life to save that of her brethren? Or the great
- wisdom of Deborah in ruling her fellow-men? Or the infinite
- virtue and holiness of Esther in protecting the defenseless?
- Or the memorable exertions of the chaste widow Judith in order
- to deliver the besieged from terror? The Lord hath sent her
- down in our days from the midst of His holy angels, and united
- every virtue in one person, and for thy happiness it is that He
- hath placed this soul in the lovely form of the blessed Jewess
- Nassi. She it was who, at the beginning of the dispersion (of
- the Marranos), gave strength and hope to thy perishing sons,
- made hopeless by their want of means to escape the fire, and
- encouraged them to go forth on their pilgrimage. With bountiful
- hand did she succor those who had already set out on their
- wanderings in Flanders and other parts, and who, weakened by
- poverty and overcome by the perils of the sea passage, were in
- danger of getting no further, and strengthened them in their
- need. She did not withhold her favor even from her enemies.
- With her pure hand and her heavenly will has she freed most of
- this nation (of Marranos) from the depths of endless misery,
- poverty, and sin, led them into safe places, and gathered them
- together into obedience to the precepts of the true God. Thus
- did she become thy strength in thy weakness."
-
-The two editors of the Ferrara Spanish Bible, Abraham Usque and Athias,
-who dedicated it to "Her Highness the Senora Donna Gracia," described
-her invaluable services in a few words:
-
- "We desire to dedicate the translation to your Grace, as the
- person whose deserts among our people will always occupy the
- foremost place. May you be pleased to accept it, to favor and
- protect it with the spirit which has always favored those who
- have asked help of you."
-
-As she protected all three of the Usques, this eulogy may sound partial
-from their lips; but all, even the most conscientious rabbis of the
-time, were full of her praise, and wrote with equal enthusiasm, if not
-elegance, of her virtues:
-
- "The noble princess, the glory of Israel, the wise woman who
- builds her house in holiness and purity, with her hand sustains
- the poor and needy, in order to make them happy in this world,
- and blessed in the world to come. Many are they whom she has
- rescued from death, and lifted up from the abasement of a
- worthless life, when they were languishing in a dungeon, and
- were given over to death. She hath founded houses wherein all
- may learn the law of God. She has given to many the means
- whereby they may not only live, but live in plenty."
-
-After Donna Gracia Nassi had become reconciled to her sister, who
-probably saw that she endangered herself by assuming an antagonistic
-attitude towards Gracia, after she had seen her sister's child,
-the beautiful young Gracia, betrothed to her nephew Samuel Nassi in
-Ferrara, and after she had provided like a mother for all the members
-of her family, she carried out her long-cherished intention, and
-betook herself to the Turkish capital to escape the many annoyances
-to which she was subject in Christian territory. Her gifted nephew,
-Joao Miques, who was betrothed to her daughter Reyna, and who had
-undertaken long journeys to Lyons, Marseilles, Rome, and Sicily on
-business affairs, had by his adroitness prepared a good reception for
-her in Constantinople. With skillful diplomacy, acquired by intercourse
-with Christian statesmen, he obtained a hearty recommendation to
-Constantinople from M. de Lansac, the ambassador at the French court,
-with whom the Mendes-Nassi family had been at enmity, and so met with
-a favorable reception there. In Constantinople, Joao Miques made open
-avowal of Judaism, assuming the name of Joseph Nassi, and marrying his
-wealthy cousin Reyna. He did not go thither alone, but took with him
-a great following of 500 persons, Spanish, Portuguese, and Italian
-Jews. He made his appearance there as a prince; his tact, his knowledge
-of European affairs, and his wealth, procured him an entrance into
-the court circle, and secured the favor of Solyman. But his noble
-mother-in-law remained the principal manager of the large property of
-the family.
-
-The Jewish inhabitants of Constantinople soon felt the beneficent
-hand of Donna Gracia and her son-in-law. They assisted the poor,
-established houses of prayer and schools, and made endowments for
-teachers of the Talmud. But their benevolence was not limited to
-Spaniards and Portuguese, it extended to Germans and beyond the city of
-Constantinople.
-
-When the news came that Pope Paul IV had imprisoned the Marranos of
-Ancona with the intention of burning them sooner or later, the heart
-of Donna Gracia felt a terrible pang, as a mother when her children are
-in misfortune, for she had taken them all into her heart as her sons
-and brothers. She did not give herself up to useless lamentation, but
-at once joined with her son-in-law in taking active steps for their
-relief. She first addressed herself to Sultan Solyman, entreating
-him to demand that at least Marrano Jews from Turkey, in Ancona on
-business, be surrendered to him, and had the happiness of seeing this
-request fulfilled. Sultan Solyman addressed a letter to the pope
-(March 9th, 1556) in the haughty tone which Turkish rulers, in the
-consciousness of their power, assumed towards the Christian princes,
-weakened by disunion. He complained that his Jewish subjects had been
-unjustly imprisoned, whereby his treasury had suffered the loss of
-fully 4,000 ducats, besides a still greater diminution of revenues
-on account of injuries to Turkish Jews. The sultan insisted that the
-pope should at once set at liberty all Turkish Marranos in Ancona,
-and hinted that, in case his representation meet with an unfavorable
-reception, reprisals would be made upon Christians dwelling in his
-dominions. Paul IV was most unwillingly compelled to submit, set free
-the Turkish Jews, and allow them to depart uninjured. The remainder,
-who had no powerful partisan, were, as has been said, burnt. The Jews
-resolved to be revenged on the pope, and hoped for the active aid of
-Donna Gracia and her son-in-law in accomplishing this purpose.
-
-Duke Guido Ubaldo, of Urbino, had received the Marranos from Ancona in
-Pesaro, only because he thought by this means to bring the Levantine
-trade of the Jews to his own port. The community of Pesaro, therefore,
-sent a dispatch to all the Turkish communities which had commercial
-relations with Italy, requesting that they no longer send their goods
-to Ancona, but to Pesaro. The commerce of the Turkish Jews was very
-considerable; everything passed through their hands, they competed
-with the Venetians, and sent out their own ships and galleys. The
-Jewish Levantine merchants had hitherto made Ancona the staple port
-for the wares shipped from Turkey to Europe, in order to lessen the
-pre-eminence of Venice. In the first ebullition of indignation at the
-shameful deed of Pope Paul IV, many of the Levantine Jews agreed to the
-proposal of the Jews of Pesaro (Elul--August, 1556), and resolved to
-punish him severely by entirely cutting off the important source of
-revenue arising from the commerce of the Levant. But as this measure
-was practicable only if all Jews trading with Italy were privy to it,
-the participators in the arrangement at first only agreed not to carry
-on trade with Ancona for eight months (till March, 1557).
-
-The Jews of Pesaro and the Marranos formerly in the Turkish dominions,
-of course, made every effort to effect a general movement to place the
-pope and his seaport under ban. But the resident Jews of Ancona, not
-Marranos, were afraid that their interests would suffer injury by the
-removal of the trade of the Levant to Pesaro, and they lost no time
-in sending letters to the Jewish communities in Turkey, entreating
-them not to make any binding agreement, because they would incur great
-danger, owing to the passionate disposition of the pope, who would
-certainly drive them into misery if he learnt that the Jews intended to
-be revenged on him.
-
-All eyes were, therefore, directed towards Constantinople, for thither
-the representatives of the commercial towns of Salonica, Adrianople,
-Broussa, Ancona, and the Morea had sent letters requesting that the
-matter be well weighed, and their interests regarded. Donna Gracia
-and Joseph Nassi, of course, had the principal voice, and they were
-resolved from the beginning to punish the inhuman pope severely.
-They had instructed their agents to send the goods belonging to their
-house to Pesaro. The Portuguese and some of the Spanish communities in
-Turkey agreed to make a decided stand and prohibit trade with Ancona
-under threat of exclusion from Jewish commercial circles. But some
-opposition was made in Constantinople itself, many of the merchants
-fearing that their interests would be endangered by the preference
-given to Pesaro. The matter was, therefore, in the hands of the rabbis
-of Constantinople. If they unanimously considered that the port of
-Ancona was to be avoided out of regard for the danger which threatened
-the Marranos of Pesaro, their authority would fall into the balance,
-and settle the question. Gracia and Joseph, therefore, influenced the
-rabbis, so that they decided to pronounce against the pope.
-
-Two rabbis, however, were opposed to this decision. As no unanimous
-decision was made in the chief community of Constantinople, the Jewish
-merchants of the other Turkish communities were spared the imposition
-of restrictions upon their trade with Ancona. In vain Donna Gracia,
-who regarded the question as of the deepest interest, demanded an
-opinion from the rabbis of the community of Safet, which enjoyed the
-highest authority among the Jews of the East, in the persons of its
-two representatives, Joseph Karo and Moses di Trani. The ban of the
-rabbis against Pope Paul IV was not put into action. Whilst the rabbis
-were still consulting, that which Donna Gracia and her adherents had
-been fearing to their great grief came to pass. Duke Guido Ubaldo,
-disappointed in his expectation of seeing his port of Pesaro become
-the center of the Jewish Levantine commerce, and attacked by the pope
-for his favor towards Jews, ordered the Marranos to depart from Pesaro
-(March, 1558). It must be accounted a great merit in him that he did
-not surrender them to the officers of the Inquisition. Most of the
-exiles sailed eastward in hired ships; but the pope's naval police lay
-in wait for them, and they escaped with difficulty. Some were taken
-prisoners, and treated as slaves. The skillful and humane physician,
-Amatus Lusitanus, a Marrano, who had resided for a short time in
-Pesaro, and then in Ragusa, restoring many Christians to life and
-health, was also obliged to quit Christian territory and take refuge
-in the town of Salonica, almost entirely peopled by Jews (1558-1559).
-This same year seems to have brought misfortune also to the Marranos
-of Ferrara, and the duke withdrew his protection from them, for the
-printing press of Abraham Usque was closed, and Joseph Nassi's brother,
-Don Samuel Nassi, was so badly treated by the duke, that he was obliged
-to call in the intercession of the Turkish court to enable him to
-remove to Constantinople in peace. One threatening glance from the
-infidel sultan had more effect upon Christian princes than the voice of
-justice and humanity.
-
-The nearer Paul IV approached the grave, the more did he become
-incensed against the Jews. Two baptized Jews, named Sixtus Senensis,
-and Philip or Joseph Moro, at his command traveled through the Jewish
-communities situated in the Papal States and annoyed the Jews with
-their seditious sermons. The latter once forced his way into the
-synagogue at Recanate on the Day of Atonement (1558) with a crucifix,
-which the Jews regarded as an idolatrous image, and with violence
-placed it in the ark where the sacred Torah was kept. When the Jews
-turned him out for this insult to their sanctuary, he collected the
-furious mob round the house of God, and two Jews who had laid hands
-on him were seized and scourged by order of the chief magistrate.
-Pope Paul IV was most enraged against the Marranos and the Talmud. He
-tried to drive the former out of their most secret hiding-places Many
-pseudo-Christians of Spain and Portugal, unable to save themselves by
-flight, entered the orders, and, so to speak, howled with the wolves to
-escape being attacked by them. Paul IV, to whom complaints were made
-that Jewish Christians had joined the orders of monks, forbade them to
-receive Jews as members.
-
-He went yet more thoroughly to work with the Talmud, of which not
-a copy was left in the Papal States or throughout the greater part
-of Italy, owners thereof being exposed to the heaviest penalty. The
-schools, for the most part, were closed. Had this condition of things
-become universal, great ignorance and stagnation would have spread
-among Italian Jews, and facilitated the great object of the pope--
-their conversion. But at this time a large school and an asylum for
-the persecuted Talmud arose in Cremona, a town of northern Italy,
-belonging to Milan. A Talmudist, Joseph Ottolenghi, from Germany,
-opened a school under the protection of the governor of Milan, teaching
-the Talmud and having rabbinical works printed. Every owner of a copy
-of the Talmud sent it secretly to Cremona, and thus very many were
-collected there, and thence exported to Germany, Poland, and the
-East. This scanty religious freedom the Jews retained also under the
-Spaniards, who were compelled to carry on war with Paul IV. After the
-pope had been obliged to submit to a disgraceful peace, he planned to
-have the Jewish writings in Cremona burnt. The Dominicans, who acted
-as the papal police, influenced the people, so as to be able to exert
-pressure upon the governor. Inflammatory papers were distributed in
-Cremona calling upon the people to kill the Jews (April 8th, 1559). A
-few days afterwards the governor was urged by two Dominicans, one of
-whom was Sixtus Senensis, a baptized Jew, to erect a pyre on which to
-burn copies of the Talmud, because it was said to contain nothing but
-blasphemies of Jesus. The governor did not choose to give credence to
-the accusations against the Jews without further confirmation, so two
-witnesses stood up against the Talmud (April 17th), a baptized Jew,
-Vittorio Eliano, grandson, by a daughter, of the Jewish grammarian
-Elias Levita, and a worthless German Jew, Joshua dei Cantori. By them
-the Spanish governor of Milan was convinced of the injuriousness of the
-Talmud, and gave orders to his soldiery to make a house to house search
-among the Jews of Cremona and in the printing offices, to collect all
-the copies they could find, and make a great fire of them. Ten or
-twelve thousand books were burnt on this occasion.
-
-Vittorio Eliano, the malicious proselyte, very nearly came to grief by
-this burning of the Talmud, for the Spanish soldiery, having received
-orders to wage war upon the writings of Jews, troubled themselves but
-little whether the contents were Talmudical, or otherwise, and they
-very nearly burnt the Zohar, the Kabbalistic text-book, the especial
-favorite of the papacy. Since the enthusiasm of Pico di Mirandola,
-still more of Reuchlin, Cardinal Egidio de Viterbo, and the Franciscan
-Galatino, for mysticism, the most orthodox of the Fathers and Princes
-of the church believed firmly that the Kabbala contained the mysteries
-of Christianity. The order of extinction issued against the Talmud,
-then, did not touch the Zohar. In fact, it was precisely under Pope
-Paul IV that it was first printed, with the consent of the Inquisition,
-in Mantua. The Kabbala was to rise out of the ruins of the Talmud. Thus
-the printing of the book which caused more permanent injury to Judaism
-than any blow hitherto aimed at it was aided. From envy of the Mantuan
-publishers, a Christian publisher, named Vincent Conti, of Cremona,
-printed the Zohar at the same time, because the sale promised very
-large profits in Italy and the East, and he even offered to furnish
-a larger book in order to cast suspicion upon the Mantuan edition.
-The baptized grandson of Elias Levita, the venomous canon Vittorio
-Eliano, had charge of this Cremona Zohar, and he did not hesitate to
-write a boastful Hebrew preface to attract buyers, and to have his own
-name mentioned in connection with it. Whilst it was being printed,
-the Spanish soldiers were searching for Jewish writings in Cremona,
-and found two thousand copies of the Zohar, which they were about to
-cast into the burning pile. Vittorio Eliano and his partners very
-nearly lost their outlay and their profits, but another convert, the
-above-named Sixtus of Siena, commissioned by the papal Inquisition to
-help in destroying the Talmud in Cremona, restrained the fury of the
-Spanish soldiery, and rescued the Zohar. Thus the Talmud was burnt,
-and the Zohar spared for the time being. It was a wise instinct of the
-enemies of the Jews which led them to spare this poisonous spring in
-the hope that adherents of the Zohar would the sooner renounce Judaism.
-
-Spread abroad by the press, the Zohar came to be considered a canonical
-book, and for some time was as much quoted as verses from the Bible,
-and treated on an equality with the Holy Scriptures in all Hebrew works
-not strictly Talmudical. But the love of the papacy for the Kabbala did
-not last long. A few years later the Kabbalistic writings were included
-in the catalogue of books to be burnt (Index expurgatorius).
-
-Paul IV's hatred of Jews and their writings was not confined to Italy,
-but, nourished by the fanatical spirit aroused by him, extended far
-and wide. Baptized Jews were always the tools employed in these
-persecutions. One named Asher, from Udine, brought accusations against
-Jewish works in Prague, and the authorities confiscated them one and
-all, even prayer-books, and sent them to Vienna (1559). The Jewish
-ministers were obliged to repeat the prayers in the synagogue by
-heart. A fire which broke out at about this time in the Jews' quarter
-of Prague, and by which a great number of their houses were reduced to
-ashes, displayed the fanatical hatred of Christians towards them still
-more clearly. Instead of hastening to the assistance of the unfortunate
-people, and joining in their rescue, they threw helpless women and
-children into the flames, and plundered the goods of the Jews. And as
-if the measure of misfortune were not full enough, Ferdinand I, chosen
-emperor about a year before, commenced the expulsion of the Jews from
-Bohemia and Prague in real earnest.
-
-Emperor Ferdinand was, in reality, a mild prince, who sincerely
-desired to maintain peace between Catholics and Protestants, but he
-had an invincible dislike to Jews. It was he who first introduced the
-tickets of notification, or permits, for the Jews of Austria. He made a
-regulation by which every Jew resident in Austria who went on business
-to Vienna, should at once on his arrival announce himself to the
-marshal of the district, and state what was his business, and how long
-he intended to remain in the place. To this restriction Ferdinand added
-others, and at length commanded the expulsion of the Jews with their
-wives and children, their servants and all their goods and chattels,
-from Lower Austria. This decree of banishment was delayed for two
-years, but they were finally compelled to withdraw from the country.
-
-Emperor Ferdinand destined the ancient community of Prague to the same
-fate. What may have been the reason is either easy or difficult for
-us to conceive, according to our way of thinking. The congregation
-of Prague was in very evil repute among other Jewish communities,
-being considered low, unprincipled, violent, and quarrelsome. Such
-fierce disputes arose regularly about the appointment of rabbis and
-the choice of the president, that the chief rabbis of Germany and
-Italy, at the instigation of the emperor, were obliged to arrange a
-system of election for the community of Prague. The reason of this sad
-state of things was no doubt that, on the recall of the Jews after
-the expulsion of twenty years previously, only the worst, none of the
-well-disposed, members had returned. Christians were, no doubt, very
-much overreached by this rabble, but Christians of the lower class were
-probably not better nor more conscientious. Christians treated their
-own brethren with the greatest leniency, but required the practice of
-the strictest virtue and uprightness from Jews. Discussions about the
-second expulsion of Jews from Prague were long carried on, for even
-the archdukes then in the land were opposed to it; yet the banishment
-took place (1561). The exiles were attacked, and plundered by robber
-knights. But it was clear then, as after the first expulsion, that the
-Christians of Prague, or at all events the nobility, longed for the
-Jews. Scarcely were they driven out when steps were taken to recall
-them, and this policy was favored by the princes.
-
-But Emperor Ferdinand refused the request to allow the Jews to return,
-on the ground, genuine or assumed, that he had sworn to expel the Jews
-from Prague, and could not break his oath. Thereupon a noble Jew of
-Prague undertook a journey to Rome to procure from the new pope, Pius
-IV (the Jew-hating Paul IV was dead), the absolution of the emperor
-from his oath.
-
-This noble man was Mordecai Zemach ben Gershon, one of the noted
-Soncin family of printers, whose ancestor, Gershon, or Girolamo,
-Soncino, founded not only beautiful Hebrew, but also Latin, type, and
-published both rabbinical works and Petrarch's poems. Members of this
-family with great success carried on Jewish printing establishments in
-several towns of Lombardy, in Constantinople, and in Prague. Although
-Mordecai Zemach had borne gross insults to his honor from the people of
-Prague, and his married daughter, a second Susannah, had been accused
-of adultery by false witnesses, and sentenced by cowardly rabbis,
-he yet showed himself ready to make the greatest sacrifices for the
-good of the people of Prague. He undertook the journey to Rome amidst
-many dangers and difficulties for the purpose above stated, and his
-exertions were crowned with success. The pope, at that time invested
-with the power to bind and to loose, relieved the emperor of his oath,
-and the latter felt his conscience lightened. His son Maximilian
-(afterwards emperor) took the Jews of Prague under his special
-protection, and thus the decree of banishment was recalled. Jews were
-again allowed to reside in Prague and a few other Bohemian towns, and
-were also re-admitted to Austria. But they had a troubled existence
-even under the best of the emperors, such as Maximilian II and Rudolph,
-for the official hand of the Catholic Church was heavy upon them.
-
-The first consistent representative of the fanatical and persecuting
-Catholic Church, Pope Paul IV, was dead (1559), and the people of Rome
-cursed his memory and his system. The people flocked to the Capitol as
-in the old times of the Roman Republic, traversed the eternal city, set
-fire to the buildings of the Inquisition, maltreated the Dominicans
-and the bailiffs of that tribunal, tore down the arms of the pope,
-destroyed his statue, and rolled its head through the streets. With
-derisive laughter the Romans looked on while a Jew placed the cap that
-he and his brethren were compelled to wear on the statue of the very
-pope who had issued the order concerning it. But of what avail was this
-childish rage against the dead? The system survived its supporter for
-centuries. The Jesuits and the strict church party had got the upper
-hand in the Catholic Church, and each pope, willingly or unwillingly,
-was obliged to submit to them. It was under Pope Pius IV, one of the
-best high priests of Rome, that the principles of the council of Trent
-were turned into decrees which enslave the minds of Catholics to this
-very day.
-
-A deputation of the Jews of Rome waited upon the newly-chosen pope to
-do homage to him, and described in touching words the sorrows which his
-predecessors had brought upon them. Pius IV promised them relief, and
-issued a bull for the Jews of the Papal States (February 27th, 1562),
-which was certainly to their advantage, but the milder regulations
-only made the restrictions still remaining appear the harsher. The
-introduction to the bull is interesting, because it brings to light the
-hypocrisy of the papal curia:
-
- "The precepts for your conduct issued by my highly venerated
- predecessor, out of his zeal for religion, have (as we are
- told) served some who coveted your goods as a pretext for false
- accusations against you, and have been interpreted contrary to
- the intention of my predecessor, thus causing you to be vexed
- and disquieted. Therefore, we decree, in consideration that
- Holy Mother Church grants and concedes much to Jews in order
- that the remnant of them may be saved, and in accordance with
- the example of our predecessors," etc.
-
-All that the new pope conceded, however, was that Jews of the Roman
-dominions beyond the city be allowed to doff their distinguishing
-mark, the yellow cap, acquire land to the value of 1,500 ducats,
-trade in other things besides old clothes, and hold intercourse with
-Christians, but not to keep Christian servants. This was about all
-that one of the best popes granted, or dared grant. More important to
-the Jews of Rome was the point that the accusations of transgressing
-the harsh laws of Paul IV were not heard, as well as the charge of
-misdemeanor against those who had not given up their copies of the
-Talmud. The Italian Jews also made an effort to obtain from the pope
-the remission of the interdict against the Talmud. But this question
-was in the hands of the cardinals and bishops sitting in the council
-of Trent, and to carry out their object the Italian communities chose
-two deputies (October, 1563). As the council only approved the list of
-forbidden books previously made out in the papal office, the opinion
-of the pope and those who surrounded him served as a guide in the
-treatment of Jewish writings. The decision of this point was left to
-the pope, who afterwards issued a bull to the effect that the Talmud
-was indeed accursed--like all humanistic literature, including
-Reuchlin's "Augenspiegel and Kabbalistic writings"--but that it would
-be allowed to appear if the name Talmud were omitted, and if before its
-publication the passages inimical to Christianity were excised, that is
-to say, if it were submitted to censorship (March 24th, 1564). Strange,
-indeed, that the pope should have allowed the thing, and forbidden its
-name! He was afraid of public opinion, which would have considered
-the contradiction too great between one pope, who had sought out and
-burnt the Talmud, and the next, who was allowing it to go untouched.
-At all events, there was now a prospect that this written memorial,
-so indispensable to all Jews, would once more be permitted to see the
-light, although in a maimed condition. The printing of the Talmud was
-in fact undertaken a few years later at Basle.
-
-But even this slight concession was withdrawn from the Jews of the
-Papal States when Pius IV was succeeded by a pope who held gloomy,
-monkish, intolerant institutions in higher esteem than human happiness
-and human life, and who carried the ecclesiastical aims of Caraffa and
-his colleagues to their extreme consequence. Pius V (1566-1572) outdid
-his pattern, Paul IV, in love of persecution and cruelty. This pope
-hated Jews no less than he hated Swiss Calvinists and French Huguenots.
-They soon felt the severity of the new ecclesiasticism. Three months
-after his enthronement (April 19th, 1566), Pius V confirmed in every
-respect the restrictions which Paul IV had imposed on Jews; he even
-increased their severity, and disregarded the ameliorations of his
-predecessor as if they had never been granted. The former regulations,
-then, were enforced: exclusion from intercourse with Christians,
-prohibition to own lands, or to carry on any business except the trade
-in old clothes, compulsion to wear the distinctive Jew badge, and
-the refusal to permit more than one synagogue. But these edicts were
-not issued against the Jews in the Papal States only; they extended
-throughout the whole Catholic world. For at that day, in a period of
-spiteful reaction against Protestantism, the decrees of the pope made
-a far different impression from what they had produced previously, and
-found willing executors. Thus days of sorrow were again beginning for
-the Jews of Catholic countries.
-
-Once more Joseph Cohen had to enter trials in his "Annals of
-Persecution," once more to collect the tears of his people in his "Vale
-of Weeping" (Emek ha-Bacha). The ecclesiastical tyrant, Pius V, often
-gave the opportunity. Under the pretext that the Jews of the Papal
-States had infringed his canonical laws, he caused a number of them to
-be thrown into prison, and their books to be collected and burnt. The
-prosperous community of Bologna was visited with especial severity,
-the blow being aimed at their property. In order to have a legal
-reason for robbery, confusing questions upon Christianity were put at
-a formal hearing before the tribunal of the Inquisition; for example,
-whether the Jews regarded Catholics as idolaters; whether the forms
-of imprecation against the Minaeans, and the "Kingdom of Sin" in the
-prayers referred to Christians and the papacy, and especially whether
-the story, in a work but little read, about a "Bastard, the Son of an
-Outcast," was intended to refer to Jesus.
-
-A baptized Jew, named Alexander, had drawn up the points of accusation,
-and the prisoners were questioned upon them, under application of
-torture. Some of them succumbed to the pain, and confessed everything
-that the bloody tribunal asked them. Only the rabbi of Bologna, Ishmael
-Chanina, had the courage to declare even under torture, that if he
-should confess anything during the unconsciousness which might ensue
-from his sufferings, such confession would be null and void. As others,
-however, had confessed to slanders uttered by Jews against Christians,
-the papal curia had an excuse for its robberies. The rich and the
-upper classes were forbidden under the severest penalties to leave
-the town. But this foolish prohibition awakened in the minds of the
-Jews of Bologna the idea of leaving the place entirely and forever. By
-bribing the gatekeeper, they succeeded in escaping, with their wives
-and children, from the net spread for them, and fled to Ferrara. Pope
-Pius V was so incensed against the Jews for this act, that he informed
-the college of cardinals that all Jews were to be expelled from the
-Papal States. In vain some of the church dignitaries protested, showing
-how the Jews had been protected by the chair of St. Peter from time
-immemorial, that it had indeed pledged itself to shield the remainder
-of the Jews, in the hope that they might be saved. In vain did the
-commercial world of Ancona entreat the pope not to ruin by his own
-deed the commercial prosperity of the Papal States; his hatred of
-Jews stifled the voice of common sense, of justice, and of interest.
-The bull was issued (February 26th, 1569), that all Jews in the Papal
-States, except those of Rome and Ancona, should depart within three
-months; those who remained were to be reduced to slavery, and undergo
-even severer punishment.
-
-There were at that time about 1,000 Jewish families and 72 synagogues
-in the Papal States, excluding Rome, Ancona, and Bologna. In spite of
-the misery which threatened them, almost all included in this decree
-decided upon emigration, and only very few became Christians. The
-exiles also suffered loss of property, because they had not time to
-sell their estates, and collect the debts owing to them. The historian
-Gedalya Ibn-Yachya alone lost over 10,000 ducats by his debtors in
-Ravenna. The exiles dispersed, and sought protection in the neighboring
-little states of Pesaro, Urbino, Ferrara, Mantua, and Milan. The Jews
-of Avignon and Venaissin, the only communities remaining on French
-territory since the expulsion of the Jews from France two hundred
-years previously, were also ordered to leave. The reactionary princes
-of the church had long cast malicious glances upon them, for they had
-been particularly favored by the officials of the Papal States under
-the humanistic popes, Leo X, Clement VII, and especially Paul III.
-The curia received its only income from this district through their
-commerce. The Jews of Avignon, Carpentras, and other towns, owned great
-wealth and property of all kinds, and held lands.
-
-Most of the Jews of the Italian and French ecclesiastical territories,
-like all expelled from Christian countries, went to Turkey, and
-there met with the kindest reception, if they were able to get so
-far without being attacked and maltreated by the robber-knights of
-the Order of Malta. It seemed almost as if there were to be an end
-of Jews in Christian Europe. Hatred, persecution, and banishment
-reigned everywhere. In Catholic dominions the fanaticism of the papacy
-prevailed, and in Protestant countries the narrowness of Lutheranism,
-sunk from its former height to the level of a child's quarrel.
-
-Both seemed to desire the enforcement of the oft expressed thought of
-the arch-enemies of the Jews, that Jews have no right to dwell in the
-West.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-
-THE JEWS IN TURKEY. DON JOSEPH NASSI.
-
- Joseph Nassi's Favor with Sultan Solyman--His Friendship
- for Prince Selim--Hostility of Venice and France to Nassi--
- Joseph Nassi restores Tiberias, and is created Duke of Naxos
- --The Vizir Mahomet Sokolli--The Turks, at the Instigation
- of Nassi, conquer Cyprus--Rebellion against Philip II in the
- Netherlands--Solomon Ashkenazi--Election of Henry of Anjou
- as King of Poland--Ashkenazi negotiates a Peace between
- Venice and Turkey--Gedalya Ibn-Yachya and Jewish Literature
- in Turkey--Joseph Karo compiles the "Shulchan Aruch"--Azarya
- del Rossi--Isaac Lurya--The Jewish "Dark Age"--Spread of the
- Kabbala--Lurya's Disciple, Chayim Vital Calabrese--Death of
- Joseph Nassi--Esther Kiera and the Influence of Jewish Women
- in Turkey.
-
-1566-1600 C.E.
-
-
-Again, as often before, the threads in the web of universal history
-were so involved that it was impossible to annihilate the Jews of
-Christendom even by systematic persecution. The sun, obscured on the
-Jewish horizon by gloomy clouds in the West, again rose bright in the
-East. Through a favorable turn of affairs a time was beginning in
-Turkey which, to the superficial observer, may seem a brilliant epoch.
-A Jew, who would have been burnt at the stake without ceremony in the
-countries of the cross, occupied a very influential position in the
-land of the crescent, rose to the rank of duke, and ruled over many
-Christians. All the Jews in Turkey, amounting to millions in number,
-rose with and by him to a free and honorable station, the envy of their
-despised and less numerous brethren in Christian Europe. With rage
-the Jew-hating Christian potentates saw their plans here and there
-frustrated by Jewish hands, and their internal complications rendered
-more and more involved and entangled. The down-trodden worm might yet
-become an annoyance to its tormentors. Joseph Nassi, or Joao Miques,
-the outlawed Marrano of Portugal, caused anxious hours to many a
-Christian ruler and diplomatist, who were obliged to flatter him in an
-abject manner, though they would have struck him dead like a dog if he
-had been in their power. The illustrious republic of Venice, the mighty
-kingdom of Spain, the conceited government of France, and even the
-haughty papacy, all saw themselves endangered by him.
-
-Joao Miques, or Don Joseph Nassi, who had been well recommended to
-the Turkish court by French statesmen when first he entered Turkey,
-had become yet more popular by his agreeable presence, his inventive
-genius, his experience, and his knowledge of the Christian countries of
-Europe and their political situation. Sultan Solyman, who understood
-men well, soon took him into favor. He formed extensive plans for
-beginning a war with Spain and aiding the Mahometans on the coast of
-Africa against those who fed the stake. Joseph Nassi, through his
-riches, and through the attachment of his fellow-believers in Christian
-countries, was kept well informed as to what was going on in Christian
-courts, and could tell the sultan the state of political and military
-affairs, relieving the latter of the necessity of employing spies, or
-of permitting himself to be deceived by the Christian ambassadors at
-his court. Don Joseph could assist him with wise counsel, and thus as
-a Frankish bey soon became a very important person in Constantinople
-and was able to render material service to those of his own religion.
-His importance increased still more by a fortunate chance. Hatred and
-jealousy prevailed among the sons of Solyman, and the father preferred
-the younger on account of his military inclinations. The courtiers
-kept themselves aloof from the disregarded prince, Selim, and did not
-intercede with his father on his behalf. Only Joseph Nassi pressed
-Selim's claims warmly on his father, and when the latter wished to show
-his favor to his son by making him a handsome present of 50,000 ducats
-in cash, and 30,000 in valuables, he chose his Jewish favorite as the
-bearer of the gift to Selim's residence in Asia Minor. The prince,
-overjoyed both at the gift and at this proof of favor, from that moment
-became very friendly towards the messenger, and assured him of his
-life-long gratitude. He made a favorite and confidant of the Jewish
-bey, and appointed him a member of the life-guard (Mutafarrica), an
-honor to which even the sons of Christian princes eagerly aspired, and
-to which a large salary was attached.
-
-The ambassadors from Christian courts saw with vexation the growing
-influence of a Jewish favorite, acquainted with all their plots, upon
-the future sultan, and promulgated the falsest rumors about him. They
-reported to their courts that Joseph Nassi was leading the prince into
-all kinds of orgies and excesses, and was ruining him. The ambassadors
-of Venice and of France were most hostile, because he saw through their
-artful designs against the Turkish court, and was able to frustrate
-them, and especially because he had private quarrels with them. The
-government of Venice had imprisoned his mother-in-law, deprived her
-of some of her property, and also had treated him scornfully; the
-French court owed an immense sum (150,000 ducats) to the house of
-Mendes-Nassi, and did not think of repaying it. The French ambassador
-was, therefore, very eager for Joseph's ruin; he wrote to Henry II,
-that he should inform Sultan Solyman that Joseph Nassi made it his
-business to acquaint the enemies of France with all the negotiations
-carried on at the Turkish court, and that being a Spaniard he did this
-in the interest of Spain. But so far from punishing him, Prince Selim
-and the reigning sultan took up Joseph's cause, and urgently insisted
-that the court of France pay the debt owing their Jewish favorite.
-Henry II and his successor raised an objection to Joseph's well-founded
-demand, characteristic of the--shall we say, Christian?--morality
-of the time. They averred that both law and religion forbade the king
-to repay the debt to his Jewish creditor, because it was altogether
-prohibited for Jews to have business dealings in France, and that all
-their goods could be confiscated by the king. The sultan and his son
-did not, of course, recognize this code of morals, and insisted with a
-half-threat that Joseph Nassi should be satisfied. Joseph Nassi rose
-so high in favor with Sultan Solyman, that the latter gave him a tract
-of land in Palestine, on the Sea of Tiberias, to restore the city of
-Tiberias under his own rule, with the express privilege that only Jews
-should dwell therein. The deed of gift was signed by the reigning
-sultan, by Selim, the heir to the throne, and by his son Murad, so as
-to render it valid in the future, and not liable to dispute. Selim
-proposed to his father to reward Joseph's services still further, and
-to make him sovereign lord over Naxos and some other islands. But the
-vizir, Mahomet Sokolli, a Christian renegade, who watched the growing
-power of the Jewish favorite with jealous eyes, seems to have worked
-against this and to have upset the plan.
-
-After Solyman's death, when Selim II entered his capital to receive
-the homage of his subjects (1566), and Joseph also presented himself
-to swear allegiance to the new sovereign, he created him on the spot
-Duke of Naxos, and of the Cyclades, Andro, Paro, Antiparo, Milo, twelve
-islands in all, which he gave him one after the other, and for which he
-had to pay but a small tribute. He also granted him the collection of
-the duties paid in the Black Sea on imported wines.
-
-Thus a Jew was able to issue his commands in the following grandiose
-style: "We, Duke of the AEgean Sea, Lord of Andro." Joseph did not
-reside in the capital of his duchy, where he would have been too
-far away from the center of affairs, but remained in his handsome
-palace Belvedere near Constantinople, and deputed the government of
-the islands to a Spanish nobleman, a Christian named Coronello, whose
-father had been governor of Segovia. Jealously as the Christian princes
-regarded this Jewish duke, placed upon an equality with them, European
-affairs were in such a condition that they were forced not only to
-recognize, but even to flatter him. If they wished to gain anything
-at the Turkish court, they dared not ignore him, knowing how high he
-stood in Selim's favor, and of how much weight his opinion was in the
-divan. When an Austrian embassy from Emperor Ferdinand I arrived in
-Constantinople (after fresh victories gained by the Turks in Hungary)
-to sue for peace, and win the great dignitaries by gifts and annual
-subsidies, it was charged to make terms also with Joseph of Naxos.
-His bitterest enemies were obliged to dissemble their hatred. The two
-states which set themselves most to oppose him, namely, France and
-Venice, felt the power of the Jewish duke severely.
-
-The king of France declined to pay the debt contracted with the Marrano
-house of Mendes and transferred to Joseph. The latter easily procured
-a firman from the sultan, by virtue of which he was allowed to seize
-all ships carrying the French flag which entered any Turkish harbor.
-Joseph of Naxos sent privateers as far as Algiers to make a raid upon
-French merchant vessels. At last he succeeded in getting possession of
-several vessels in the port of Alexandria, captured all the merchandise
-on board, and sold it to pay the debt owing to him (1569). The court
-of France raised a clamor, protested, stormed, but all in vain;
-Selim protected his favorite. A coolness arose in consequence in the
-diplomatic relations of the two countries, which was more injurious to
-France than to Turkey.
-
-The French ambassador at the Porte was, therefore, very desirous to
-bring about the overthrow of Joseph of Naxos. Not only was his own
-honor concerned, but that of the French crown also. The French had
-often boasted in the European cabinets that their word had the greatest
-weight and influence at the Turkish court, and that they were in a
-position to lead the divan to determine upon war or peace at will. And
-now it was proved that a gross insult had been shown to the French
-flag by this very court, and that France was not even in a position
-to demand satisfaction from a Jew, the originator of the insult. The
-French ambassador, therefore, directed his efforts to turning this
-overthrow into triumph by compassing the fall of the influential Jew.
-An opportunity soon presented itself in the discontent of one of
-Joseph's agents. A Jewish physician, named David or Daud, one of the
-physicians in ordinary at the Turkish court, and also in the service
-of the duke, considered himself slighted and wronged by his superior,
-and a quarrel arose between them. As soon as the French ambassador got
-wind of this, he tried to fan the flame of dissension, promised Daud
-a sum of money and a place as interpreter at the French embassy with
-a yearly salary, and then entered into relations with him in order to
-obtain secret information about Joseph of Naxos. In his irritation
-Daud allowed himself to be led into hasty expressions. He promised to
-furnish the French ambassador with full proofs that Joseph of Naxos had
-carried on a correspondence traitorous to the Porte. He undertook to
-produce documents to prove that Joseph sent daily information to the
-pope, the king of Spain, the duke of Florence, the Genoese republic, in
-short, to all the enemies of the sultan, and kept them acquainted with
-every thing that went on at the Porte. Delighted at the opportunity of
-overthrowing the Jewish duke, he informed the king of France and the
-crafty queen-mother, Catherine de Medici, in cipher, that he would
-soon be in a position to bring the powerful enemy of French influence
-at the Turkish court to the scaffold (October, 1569).
-
-The Jewish duke was placed in a position of the greatest danger, and
-with him probably all the Jews in the Turkish empire. If Daud had
-been able to push his hatred to the point of an open accusation, if
-French money could have supported the intrigue, and if the grand
-vizir, Mahomet Sokolli, the deadly enemy of Joseph, could have taken
-the matter in hand, the latter would have been lost. But the French
-ambassador thought it wise to treat the matter as a secret for a time.
-
-In spite of this secrecy, the intrigues of Daud and the French
-ambassador were betrayed to Joseph of Naxos, and he was able to be
-beforehand with them. It was not difficult for him to convince Sultan
-Selim that he had always served him faithfully, and that of all his
-courtiers, he had been most sincerely attached to him. He obtained a
-decree from the sultan by which the traitor Daud was banished for life
-to Rhodes, the criminal colony of the Turkish empire. Either at the
-instigation of Don Joseph, or by their own impulse, all the rabbis
-and communities of Constantinople pronounced the severest form of
-excommunication upon Daud and two of his accomplices. The rabbinical
-colleges of the largest Turkish communities, Joseph Karo at their
-head, in servile flattery joined them, without first having convinced
-themselves of Daud's innocence or guilt. The extraordinary efforts of
-the French ambassador and court to procure the overthrow of Joseph were
-thus a complete failure, and left in the mind of the latter a feeling
-of only too justifiable bitterness, which induced him to strive the
-more to hinder and frustrate the diplomatic schemes of France.
-
-Joseph of Naxos dealt even more severely with the state of Venice.
-Secret enmity prevailed between the Jewish duke and the republic,
-which both tried in vain to conceal by compliments. Independently of
-the ill-treatment which his mother-in-law had undergone at the hands
-of the Venetian government, it had refused Joseph's request for a safe
-conduct through its dominions for himself and his brother. Selim, not
-very well disposed towards the Venetians, was often urged by his Jewish
-favorite to put an end to the long-existing peace between them, and
-to set about the conquest of the Venetian island of Cyprus. In spite
-of the disinclination of Mahomet Sokolli, the first vizir, who was
-favorable to the Venetians, the war was undertaken.
-
-The sultan is said to have promised Joseph that he should become king
-of Cyprus, if the enterprise proved successful, and the duke of Naxos
-is said to have kept a banner ready in his house, with the inscription,
-"Joseph, King of Cyprus." His European alliances made this undertaking
-easy. Whilst Mahomet Sokolli was still raising difficulties about
-consenting to a naval war of this character, Joseph received the news
-that the arsenal in Venice had been destroyed by an explosion. Joseph
-and the party in the divan which he had gained over for war took
-advantage of the embarrassment thus caused to the Republic of Venice,
-and persuaded the sultan to allow the attacking fleet to sail at once.
-Nicosia, one of the chief towns of Cyprus, fell at the first assault,
-and the other, Famagusta, was closely besieged.
-
-In this instance, as often before, all Jews were made answerable for
-the action of one. That the Venetian government, at the outbreak of the
-war, imprisoned all the Levantine merchants in Venice, for the most
-part Jews, and seized their goods, was only natural in the barbarous
-state of intercourse between one state and another. But that the
-senate, at the instigation of the hostile doge, Luis Mocenigo, came
-to the resolve (December, 1571) to expel all Jews from Venice, as
-fellow-conspirators of Joseph Nassi and of the Turkish empire, was a
-result of the race-hatred encouraged by Christianity. Happily, things
-did not go so far. Notwithstanding the endeavors of the fanatical pope,
-Pius V, to bring about a league of the Christian states against Turkey,
-to organize a crusade against the so-called unbelievers, and to drive
-the Turkish fleet from the waters of Cyprus, the town of Famagusta was
-obliged to yield to the Turkish commander, and so the whole island
-fell into the hands of Turkey. The Venetians were compelled to sue
-for peace, and they placed their whole hope of obtaining it upon an
-influential Jew, who was to negotiate it. In spite of the solemn
-determination of the Venetian senate that no one should venture to say
-a word in favor of Jews, they had to be tolerated, because it dared not
-quite break with the Jews in Turkey.
-
-The power of the latter was, indeed, so great that they, generally the
-suppliants, were entreated for aid by Christians. A serious rebellion
-had arisen in the Netherlands against Spain and the morose king, Philip
-II, who wished to introduce the bloody tribunal of the Inquisition.
-The barbarous Alva was trying to suppress apostasy and to lead back
-the erring into the bosom of the Catholic church by hecatombs of human
-beings. The block was to support the cross. In this extremity, the
-rebels turned to Joseph of Naxos, who had dealings with some of the
-nobility of Flanders from the time of his residence there. Prince
-William of Orange, the moving spirit of the rebellion, sent a private
-messenger to Joseph of Naxos, entreating him to persuade the sultan
-to declare war against Spain, which would necessitate the withdrawal
-of the Spanish troops from the Netherlands. The Austrian emperor,
-Ferdinand, also condescended to address an autograph letter to the
-Jewish duke in order to obtain the favor of the Porte, increasing the
-grand vizir's envy. Sigismund Augustus, king of Poland, who was hoping
-for an important service from the Porte, also addressed him, gave him
-the title of "Serene Highness," and, what was of greater importance,
-promised favorable conditions to the Jews in his country, to ensure
-Joseph's approval of his plans.
-
-We may almost say that the divan, or Turkish council of state, under
-Sultan Selim consisted of two parties trying to checkmate each other:
-the Christian party, represented by the first vizir, and the Jewish,
-headed by Joseph of Naxos. Through and besides him there were other
-Jews who, though only in subordinate positions, exercised influence--
-the men on the holders of office, the women on the ladies of the harem.
-Sultan Selim's goodwill towards Jews was so evident that a story became
-current that by birth he was a Jew, foisted into the harem as a prince,
-when he was a child. Even the grand vizir, Mahomet Sokolli, although an
-enemy of Joseph of Naxos and of Jewish influence, was forced to employ
-a Jewish negotiator and to intrust him with important commissions.
-The Venetian envoy, ordered to work secretly against the Jews at the
-Turkish court, himself assisted such a man in obtaining influence.
-
-Solomon ben Nathan Ashkenazi, who conducted the diplomatic affairs
-of Turkey with Christian courts for nearly thirty years, and who
-supplanted Nassi, was an unknown personage in Constantinople at the
-period when the duke of Naxos had a powerful voice in the divan.
-Descended from a German family of Udine, he began to travel early
-in life, and went to Poland, where he rose to be first physician to
-the king. On his removal to the Turkish capital, he placed himself
-as a subject of the Venetian republic under the protection of the
-diplomatic agents of Venice. Solomon Ashkenazi understood the Talmud,
-and was called rabbi, but displayed greatest intelligence and skill
-in the niceties of diplomatic technicalities, the disentanglement of
-knotty questions, in negotiations, settlements, and compromises. For
-these qualities he had been esteemed by successive Venetian agents in
-Constantinople. The first minister of the Turkish court recognized his
-diplomatic skill, attached him to his service, and trusted him to the
-end of his life with such commissions as required tact, wisdom, and
-discernment in their fulfillment. Whilst the Turkish arms were raised
-against the Venetians, Solomon Ashkenazi was beginning to weave the web
-for the future treaty of peace.
-
-Christian cabinets did not suspect that the course of events which
-compelled them to side with one party or the other was set in motion
-by a Jewish hand. This was especially the case at the election of the
-Polish king. The death (July, 1572) of the last Polish king of the
-Jagellon family, Sigismund Augustus, who left no heir, necessitated a
-genuine election from an indefinite number of candidates, and this put
-the whole of Europe, at all events the cabinets and diplomatic circles,
-into the utmost excitement. The German emperor, Maximilian II, and the
-Russian ruler, Ivan the Cruel, were most intimately concerned in the
-election, as neighbors of Poland. The former did everything that he
-could to insure the choice of his own son, and the latter boasted that
-he or his son would be chosen king. The pope plotted for a Catholic
-prince to be placed on the throne of Poland; otherwise it was to be
-feared that the choice of a king in favor of the Reformation, already
-on the increase among the nobles and the townspeople of Poland, would
-strengthen the movement, and that the country would free itself from
-the papacy. On the other hand, the Protestant countries of Germany and
-England, and, above all, the adherents of the various sects of the
-new church in Poland itself, felt the greatest interest in securing
-the election of a sovereign of their own faith, or at least of one
-not an aggressive Catholic. To this was added the personal ambition
-of a powerful French queen, who interfered with a deft hand. The
-widowed queen, Catherine de Medici, as clever as false, who believed
-in astrology, and to whom it had been announced that each of her
-sons should wear a crown, wished to procure a foreign throne for her
-son, Henry of Anjou, so that the astrological prophecy might not be
-fulfilled by the death of her reigning son, Charles IX. She and her
-son, the king of France, therefore, set every lever in motion to place
-Anjou on the throne of Poland. Turkey also had important interests
-and a powerful voice in the election of the king of Poland. A tangle
-of cabals and intrigues was developed by the election. Each candidate
-sought to gain a strong party among the higher and lesser nobility of
-Poland, and also to gain the favor of the Porte. Henry of Anjou seemed
-at first to have some prospect of success, but this was imperiled by
-the bloody massacre of St. Bartholomew, in France, in which, at a hint
-from the king and the queen-mother, a hundred thousand Huguenots,
-great and small--men, women and children--were attacked, and
-murdered (August 26th, 1572). Such barbarity, planned and carried
-out in cold blood, had been unheard of in European history since the
-murderous attack made on the Albigenses in the thirteenth century by
-papal command. The Lutherans and other adherents of the Reformation in
-every country were completely stunned by this blow. The candidates for
-the throne of Poland sought to make capital out of it against Anjou.
-So much the more the French candidate, his mother, and his brother,
-were compelled to endeavor to gain over the Porte to their side. An
-ambassador extraordinary was dispatched to Constantinople with this
-object. So the choice of a king of Poland rested with a Jew who was
-in the background, for Solomon Ashkenazi governed the grand vizir
-completely, and ruled his will, and he managed foreign affairs in the
-sultan's name. Solomon decided in favor of Henry of Anjou, and won over
-the grand vizir to his side. When Henry of Anjou, by a combination of
-favorable circumstances, was at last chosen almost unanimously (May,
-1573), the French ambassador boasted that he had not been one of the
-last in bringing about this election. But Solomon Ashkenazi ventured to
-write as follows to the king of Poland, afterwards king of France under
-the name of Henry III: "I have rendered your majesty most important
-service in securing your election; I have effected all that was done
-here" (at the Porte).
-
-Great sensation was aroused throughout Christian Europe when this
-Jewish physician and diplomatist was appointed by the Porte to conclude
-the peace which he had for several years been trying to bring about
-with Venice, and thus to stand forth as a person of the highest
-official importance. The Jewish ambassador was not accepted without
-opposition by the illustrious republic. The subject was eagerly
-discussed in the senate, and the members of the government were against
-him. But, on the one hand, the grand vizir, Mahomet Sokolli, was
-resolved upon it, because Solomon enjoyed his unreserved confidence,
-and he wished through him to establish diplomatic relations for other
-purposes. On the other hand, the words of the Venetian consul, Mark
-Antonio Barbaro, who repeatedly assured his state that the Jewish
-diplomatist cherished the warmest sympathy with Venice, made a great
-impression. Under these circumstances, "Rabbi Solomon Ashkenazi," as he
-was termed, went to Venice in the capacity of envoy extraordinary from
-Turkey. When once he was acknowledged, the dignitaries of the republic,
-the doge, and the senators, paid him the greatest honor and attention,
-because the Turkish court was very sensitive on this point, and would
-have regarded want of due respect to its representative as an insult.
-Solomon was, therefore, received in state audience at the doge's
-palace, and there the act of peace between Turkey and Venice was signed
-by him on behalf of the former. The signoria showed him the most polite
-attentions during his stay in Venice (May to July, 1574), and all the
-European ambassadors in Venice paid him court.
-
-Solomon was an angel of deliverance to his fellow-believers in Venice.
-Their joy at the honor shown by the authorities to one of their race
-was mingled with anxiety and sorrow on account of threatened expulsion.
-The doge Mocenigo had insisted upon the fulfillment of the decree of
-banishment previously issued against the Jews. Many Jewish families had
-already departed without waiting for the term to expire. Solomon had
-arranged with Jacopo Soranzo, the Venetian agent in Constantinople, to
-receive these unfortunates. On his return to Venice, Soranzo at once
-brought the question of the Jews to the consideration of the council
-of the doge and the Ten. He made them understand the injury to the
-republic which would arise by the expulsion of the Jews. Those driven
-out of Spain and Portugal had manufactured guns and other arms for the
-Turks, and it would be a serious matter to make enemies of a people
-who constituted a power in Turkey. To maintain friendship with this
-country would be the surest guarantee of peace, as neither the pope nor
-Spain could be trusted. This earnest appeal of Soranzo in favor of the
-Jews effected a change in the disposition of the doge and the Dieci
-(ten) towards them. The decree of banishment was revoked (July 19th,
-1573), and Solomon's presence in Venice served to increase the joy of
-his fellow-believers, as he obtained for them the promise that they
-should never again be threatened with expulsion. Loaded with honors
-and enriched by a gift of ten pounds (weight) of gold, Solomon returned
-to Constantinople, where his position became more assured and his
-importance greater than ever. His son, who was residing in Venice for
-his education, was treated by the doge with the greatest consideration.
-
-In consequence of the influence of Joseph of Naxos over Sultan Selim
-and of Solomon Ashkenazi over the prime minister, Mahomet Sokolli,
-the foreign Christian courts strove yet more earnestly to obtain the
-favor of the Turkish Jews in Stambul. If one of them wished to effect
-any object with the Porte, it first of all sought a Jewish negotiator,
-because without this aid there was no prospect of success. Even the
-morose Philip II of Spain, that incarnate hater of Jews and heretics,
-was obliged to turn to Jewish mediators in order to obtain peace
-with the Turks. The position of the Jews in Turkey, and above all in
-the capital, under the very eyes of their powerful protectors, was,
-therefore, extraordinarily favorable. They were able to put forth all
-their powers freely, and thus earned the wealth which then meant power,
-as it does now. The wholesale trade and customs dues were mostly in
-their hands; they also carried on wholesale shipping, and emulated the
-Venetians. They owned the largest and best houses, with gardens and
-kiosks, in Constantinople, equal to those of the grand vizir.
-
-This prosperity, freedom, and security of the Turkish Jews could not
-fail to produce an exalted frame of mind, to open a prospect beyond
-the actual present, and to stir up their minds to activity. The mental
-fertility of the Spanish Jews, which brought so much that is beautiful
-and true to the light of day, was not exhausted or extinct in Turkey.
-The taste for history and events outside the Jewish world was not
-yet lost to them. Moses Almosnino, a favorite preacher at Salonica,
-while on a visit to Constantinople to procure privileges for the
-community of Salonica, described life in the Turkish capital, with its
-contrasts of glowing heat and benumbing cold, its astonishing wealth
-and terrible poverty, its enervating luxury and severe privations,
-its extravagant generosity and heartless greed, exaggerated piety and
-callous indifference, which followed one another abruptly, without any
-gradual transition. In his Spanish work on the "Contrasts and Greatness
-of Constantinople," Almosnino described the power and development of
-the Turkish empire with the pen of a master. He had a taste for the
-sciences and philosophy, and worked out his sermons as well as his
-expositions of the Scriptures in a scientific shape.
-
-The physician, Samuel Shulam, likewise a Spaniard by birth, also had
-a great taste for history. He led a life of adventure until he was
-taken up by a Jewish woman in Constantinople, named Esther Kiera, in
-high favor with the sultana. He published Zacuto's poor but useful
-chronicle at her expense (1566-1567). This favorite of the court-Jewess
-also translated from the Latin the interesting work of the old Jewish
-historian Josephus against the attacks of Apion, the Alexandrine enemy
-of the Jews, being the first Jewish writer to make use of it. The dark
-side of Jewish history, the thousand years' martyrdom of the Jewish
-race, was at the same time described by a more competent historian, the
-now venerable Joseph Cohen, of Spanish descent. His "Vale of Weeping"
-presents a long series of mournful scenes, tortures, death, and
-distress in every form, but he was enabled to conclude his history with
-the joyful tidings that the Venetians were eager, if only from policy,
-to pay honor to and distinguish a Jew, the Turkish ambassador Solomon
-Ashkenazi.
-
-Even Hebrew poetry bore some blossoms at this period in Turkey, and
-although but autumn flowers, showing traces of damp mists and a pale
-sun, they form an agreeable contrast to the joyless wintry waste of
-other regions and times. But we are more interested in the originator
-of these efforts than in the productions themselves. He was a certain
-Ibn-Yachya of the Turkish branch of this widespread family. This
-family preserved nobility of heart and mind throughout a long line
-of generations. The great-grandfather Jacob Tam, the grandfather
-Gedalya Ibn-Yachya, the grandson Moses, and the great-grandson Gedalya
-Ibn-Yachya II, with all collateral branches, were without exception
-friends of learning, and shared their property with the poor. Moses
-Ibn-Yachya not only spent thousands of ducats on sufferers at the time
-of the plague, but even exposed himself to the risk of death in his
-attendance upon the sick. His son Gedalya, a wise man and an agreeable
-orator, imitated his father in all his virtues, and by his love for
-poetry excelled him in gifts of the mind. He formed a sort of school or
-circle of poetry, that is to say, he assembled from time to time, at
-his own expense, all those interested in neo-Hebrew poetry, to recite
-their poems, and urged those at a distance to send him the fruit of
-their muse in order to encourage their zeal for this beautiful but
-neglected art. Two poets distinguished themselves in this numerous
-circle, Jehuda Zarko and Saadio Longo. To them we may add Israel
-Najara, the prolific versifier, living in Damascus. It is true that
-the verses of these writers do not contain much real poetry, and that
-the authors deserve the name of poet only on account of the smoothness
-and euphony of their style. As a matter of course this group of poets
-extolled Gedalya Ibn-Yachya, their patron and protector, in their
-verses.
-
-The Jews of Turkey also wrote Latin verses in the security and comfort
-of their present life. The writers were, of course, immigrant Marranos,
-who had learnt the language of their oppressors in the dungeons of
-Spain and Portugal. When the conscientious physician, Amatus Lusitanus,
-whose aid had been sought alike by kings and beggars, and who, on
-account of the intolerance of the reactionary policy, emigrated from
-Italy to Salonica, and there acquired new friends and admirers, fell
-a sacrifice to his devoted energy, and died of the plague, one of his
-friends, the Marrano Flavio Jacopo de Evora, composed a memorial to him
-in beautiful Latin verses to the following effect:
-
- He who so often recalled the breath well-nigh gone from the
- dying, and was, therefore, beloved by kings and peoples, lies
- far from the land of his birth, beneath the dust of Macedonia.
-
-The exaltation of the Turkish Jews and their contentment with their
-present condition imbued them with thoughts of independence. Whilst
-the Jews of Christendom had no such thought, and from time immemorial
-considered themselves in a condition of subjugation to their masters,
-the Turkish Jews became familiar with the idea of regarding themselves
-as independent men.
-
-Joseph of Naxos long cherished the thought of founding a Jewish state.
-The Jew and the statesman in him yearned for this, and the enormous
-wealth of his mother-in-law, over which he had control, was to serve
-him as the means for its execution. Even when a fugitive Marrano he
-had seriously put before the Republic of Venice the request that it
-give him one of its numerous islands, so that he might people it
-with Jewish inhabitants. But this was refused either on account of
-the narrow-mindedness of the Christians or the fear of mercantile
-competition. When later on Joseph stood high in favor with Prince
-Selim, and also with Sultan Solyman, he obtained from them, besides
-seven villages, the ruins of the city of Tiberias, for a small Jewish
-state to be peopled only with Jews. He sent one of his agents to
-superintend the re-building of Tiberias. The Turkish prince gave the
-pasha of Egypt strict orders to assist the building in every way. The
-Arab occupants of the neighboring villages were compelled to render
-forced labor, and the new and beautiful houses and streets of the city
-of Tiberias were completed in a year. Joseph of Naxos wished to make it
-a manufacturing town to compete with Venice. He planted mulberry-trees
-for the cultivation of silk-worms, and introduced looms for the
-manufacture of silks; he also imported wool from Spain for the making
-of fine cloth.
-
-Joseph does not seem to have directed his full energy to the little
-Jewish state; his plans were far more extensive, and thus New Tiberias
-never became an important place. He next endeavored to obtain the
-island of Naxos as a dukedom, together with the adjacent islands of the
-AEgean Sea, and when he was fortunate enough to be appointed duke by
-Sultan Selim, he thought no more about peopling his little island state
-with Jews; perhaps it was not practicable. His mind was next set on
-becoming king of Cyprus. It is possible that he might have transformed
-this island of the goddess of beauty into a Jewish state had he
-obtained possession of it, but his enemy, the grand vizir, Mahomet
-Sokolli, prevented this. Thus his dreams of founding an independent
-Jewish state were dispelled. In reality, Joseph of Naxos did nothing
-of lasting importance for Judaism. He made various attempts, and then
-relaxed in his endeavors, or misspent his means.
-
-The fact that Jews occupied an exceedingly favored position in Turkey
-for so long a period did not result in correspondingly enduring
-progress. They did not produce a single great genius who originated
-ideas to stimulate future ages, nor mark out a new line of thought for
-men of average intelligence. Not one of the leaders of the different
-congregations was above the level of mediocrity. The rabbis and
-preachers were deeply learned in their particular subjects, but kept
-to the beaten track, without making a new discovery or bequeathing an
-original contribution, even in their own department. Only one rabbi
-left to posterity an epoch-making work, which even yet possesses
-significance, disputed though it be; but even this work contained
-nothing new or original. Joseph Karo, chief rabbi of the city of
-Safet, in Palestine, completed, after many years of toil, a new book
-of religious ordinances, the "Shulchan Aruch." Religious impulses,
-mystical fanaticism, and ambition, had equal shares in the making of
-this book. For Joseph Karo was still subject to strange visions: he
-still believed that he would be recognized everywhere as the highest
-authority by the compilation of his religious code, a norm for Jewish
-religious life; and that, by this means, he would accomplish the
-revival of rabbinical ordination, in which Jacob Berab had failed;
-restore, in fact, the unity of Judaism, and thereby hasten the coming
-of the Messiah. He spent the whole of his life in collecting the
-vast material, in weighing the pros and cons of arguments, drawing
-conclusions and arranging them in their proper places. By doing this he
-supplied a serious want. There was no manual that embraced the whole
-field of religious observance. As the Talmud and the later religious
-codes to an even greater extent favored differences of opinion upon
-nearly every single point in matters of religion, ritual, law and the
-marriage state, disputes constantly occurred which led to altercation
-and divisions in the communities, for it rarely happened that two
-rabbis agreed upon any question that came up for discussion. Each was
-able to adduce reasons for or against any argument from the vast mass
-of rabbinical literature.
-
-It was this confusion and divergence of opinion that Joseph Karo wished
-to check by means of his new religious Code. He embraced the whole
-of the vast field of Talmudic and rabbinical literature, although his
-intellect could not master it. By birth a Spaniard, he involuntarily
-preferred the views of Spanish authorities to those of French and
-German writers. Hence he allowed partiality to creep into his
-compilation. As a matter of course, too, Karo admitted various elements
-of mysticism, though only sparingly, as if unwilling to place the
-Zohar upon a level with the Talmud in matters of practical religious
-observance. He has embodied in his Code excellent precepts in regard to
-sanctity, chastity, brotherly love, morality, and honesty in business,
-drawn from the Talmud and the rabbinical writings; but they disappear
-in a sea of casuistical details and mere externals, in a patchwork of
-divisions and subdivisions, of "ifs" and "buts." In this work there
-appears an altogether different kind of Judaism from that revealed
-on Sinai, announced by the prophets, or even taught by Maimuni. But
-this Judaism thoroughly suited the ideas of the Jews of that period,
-and therefore Karo's Code was immediately hailed with delight,
-disseminated, and received as the infallible standard authority in
-Turkey, throughout the East, in Italy, and even in Poland.
-
-Thus religious life received a certain finality and unity, but at the
-expense of spirituality and freedom of thought. From Karo Judaism
-received the form maintained up to the present time. His dream was
-partially fulfilled. His rabbinical writings became the common property
-of Judaism, and gave it religious unity. But he himself did not become
-the leader and head, as the "Spirit of the Mishna" had repeatedly
-promised him: he was only honored as one authority among many others.
-Still less did he restore the ordination of rabbi-judges as members of
-a Synhedrion, or hasten in any way the coming of the Messiah.
-
-At that time there was a man in Italy, who not only surpassed all his
-Jewish contemporaries in his spirit of inquiry and desire for truth,
-but who would have been able to purify Judaism from the dross of
-centuries of hardship, if the tendency of the age had not run counter
-to this endeavor, or if he had had greater courage in opposing it.
-Azarya ben Moses dei Rossi (born at Mantua about 1514, died in 1578),
-descended from an old Italian family, had buried himself so deeply in
-books, that his body bore traces of severe suffering from over-study.
-Feeble, yellow, withered, and afflicted with fever, he crept about
-like a dying man. Yet in this living corpse a powerful and healthy
-mind worked with great activity. He had thoroughly mastered the whole
-of Jewish literature, besides being well read in Latin historical
-works, and he had also practiced medicine. At the same time he led a
-wandering life. He dwelt for some time at Ferrara, then in Bologna,
-had to leave that city in consequence of the persecution and expulsion
-of the Jews under Pius V, and finally settled again permanently in
-Ferrara. He held intercourse with the greatest Jews, Christians, and
-Marranos of his age, and was regarded by all with astonishment as a
-marvel of learning. He did not allow the treasures of his knowledge to
-lie dead within him, but let them grow and spread luxuriantly. Ancient
-history possessed special attraction for him. But even more admirable
-than his vast reading was the use he made of it. He was the first to
-bring into contact and connection with one another two provinces of
-literature which were far apart--the Talmud and its offshoots, with
-Philo, Josephus, and the works of the Church Fathers, proving the
-truth of historical narratives from the mouths of many witnesses. Dei
-Rossi, too, was the only one not satisfied with the data of tradition;
-he accepted nothing as truth till he had subjected it to a searching
-examination.
-
-Chance brought to light the mental treasures of Dei Rossi. Ferrara,
-where, after leaving Bologna, he had settled shortly before, had
-been visited by a terrible earthquake (November 18th, 1570), and the
-inhabitants were compelled to leave their ruined and crumbling houses
-and seek places of refuge outside the city. In one of the villages
-Dei Rossi happened to meet a learned Christian, who was trying to
-overcome the gloomy thoughts caused by the earthquake by reading a
-Greek book of Jewish antiquity. In conversation Dei Rossi became aware
-that his co-religionists, even those possessed of some culture, owing
-to their one-sided absorption in the Talmud or obsolete philosophical
-writings, knew nothing of their own brilliant literature of the period
-of the Second Temple, whilst Christians resorted to it to dispel
-melancholy thoughts. Encouraged by his Christian friend, he determined
-to translate into Hebrew the "Letter of Aristas," supposed to be the
-discourse of a Greek king about the wisdom of the Jews, in order to
-make it accessible to his fellow-believers. He completed this task
-in twenty days. This was the first-fruit of his learning, and it led
-him on to further undertakings. His principal work, "Light of the
-Eyes," consists chiefly of parallel passages from Talmudic and profane
-sources upon the same subjects. Dei Rossi's distinction rests upon
-the fact that he did not adhere to tradition, but applied the methods
-of scientific inquiry to what the multitude regarded as unassailable
-truths, and that he used profane sources in elucidating them. The
-actual results of this historical investigation, for the most part,
-have proved unsound. Strong as Dei Rossi was in removing obstructive
-rubbish, his power of reconstruction was small.
-
-The value of his efforts appears in its proper light only if we
-compare them with the circumstances of his time, or with the works of
-contemporary writers on the same subject, as, for example, those of
-Gedalya Ibn-Yachya; to these they form a complete contrast.
-
-A descendant of the Italian branch of the noble Ibn-Yachya family,
-Gedalya inherited taste for knowledge. He was born in 1515, and died
-in 1587. His wealth enabled him to satisfy his taste by collecting
-a magnificent library. In his voluntary and compulsory journeys in
-northern Italy--for he was a preacher, and owing to the intolerance
-of the popes had to lead an unsettled life--he had seen and read
-much, both in sacred and profane literature, but without independent
-judgment, without discrimination, and without appreciation of the
-essence of truth. Ibn-Yachya's abbreviated "History of the Jews,"
-together with a chronicle of the world, called "The Chain of
-Tradition," at which he worked for nearly forty years, is a confused
-medley of authentic historical narratives and mere fables. But in
-spite, or perhaps because, of its legendary contents, his book has
-found more acceptance among Jews than the researches of Dei Rossi.
-When the first edition of the latter's "Light of the Eyes" found its
-way to Safet, the orthodox of that town declared its contents to be
-heretical. Joseph Karo commissioned Elisha Gallaico, one of the members
-of his rabbinical college, to draw up an indictment, to be distributed
-amongst all Jews, ordering Dei Rossi's work to be burned. The people
-of Safet likewise had an inquisition. But Joseph Karo died (in Nisan,
-_i.e._, April, 1575) before he had signed the indictment. The Italian
-Jews were not so fanatical as to condemn Dei Rossi, for they knew him
-to be a pious and pure Jew. But the rabbis of Mantua employed the
-procedure of Ben Adret concerning the study of profane literature, that
-is, they forbade the reading of Dei Rossi's works by young people under
-twenty-five years of age. In consequence of this semi-official sentence
-of heresy, the book exercised but little influence upon the Jewish
-world of that day, or the generation immediately succeeding it, and
-has been appreciated only in quite recent times, when it created a new,
-enlightened view of history in Jewish circles. But in the Christian
-world Dei Rossi's work was noticed much sooner, and was annotated, and
-translated into Latin.
-
-How, indeed, could a sober, critical method of inquiry have found favor
-in an age when the mystic, dazing Kabbala was the first authority,
-bidding men esteem blind credulity as the highest virtue, and exciting
-visionary enthusiasm to the highest pitch of fanatical intoxication?
-The visions of Solomon Molcho and Joseph Karo and their fond enthusiasm
-about the Messiah were sober compared with the excitement which reigned
-after their death, and celebrated a veritable witches' Sabbath. During
-the last three decades of the sixteenth century the Kabbala gained
-sole mastery in Palestine, conjured up apparitions, and encouraged
-orgies of mysticism. It spread thence over the whole of Turkey, Poland,
-Germany, and Italy, darkening and confusing men's minds, having an
-evil influence even upon their hearts, allowing no healthy thought to
-appear, or branding such thought as heretical and sinful. Once again,
-as in the early days of Christianity, Galilee, especially the district
-of Safet, became the scene of a host of evil spirits, of people
-possessed with devils, which challenged mystic exorcism, and revealed
-profound mysteries; and it is impossible to say whether the possessed
-appeared in consequence of the exorcisers, or the latter of the former.
-It was a period of Kabbalistic mania, coincident with profligacy and
-moral degradation, and its victims despised not only the sciences, but
-even the Talmud with its exhortations to sobriety. Then for the first
-time the Jewish world entered on a "dark age" of its own, with all the
-appropriate credulity, while only the last traces of such darkness
-were visible in Europe generally. This tendency was exaggerated by
-two men, who by their fanaticism and visionary extravagance infected a
-continually widening circle. These were Isaac Lurya and his disciple
-Chayim Vital Calabrese.
-
-Isaac Lurya Levi (born in Jerusalem in 1534, and died 1572) was
-descended from a German family. Left an orphan at an early age by the
-death of his father, young Isaac came to Egypt, to the house of a rich
-uncle, Mardochai Francis, a tax-farmer, and began to study the Talmud.
-The dry study of the Talmud, which filled the mind with voluminous
-learning, unfruitful hairsplitting, and mere formulas, yet failed to
-satisfy the wants of the heart, seems to have become repugnant to
-Lurya, and to have driven him to fantastic mysticism. He preferred
-the awful loneliness of the Nile country to the noise of the school;
-abstraction in worlds of mysticism and devout praying to working out
-intellectual problems. He was greatly attracted by the Zohar, which
-had then been printed for the first time, and, widely spread abroad,
-had become accessible to everybody. The more familiar he became with
-the Kabbala through his absorption in the sounding emptiness of the
-Zohar, the more did he seek solitude, and the less intercourse had he
-with men. He even neglected his young wife, only visited his house
-from Sabbath to Sabbath, and spoke little, that little being only in
-Hebrew. Lurya is said to have spent several years in solitude in this
-manner, and the result was that like all whose reason is weaker than
-their imagination, he became a confirmed visionary. The mystic book,
-the Zohar, his constant companion in this seclusion, aided in exciting
-his imagination. Firmly convinced of its authenticity as the work of
-Simon bar Yochai, and also of the divine character of all the fantasies
-and follies therein revealed, Lurya persisted in seeing in it high
-allusions and profound wisdom. In his heated imagination he even saw
-Elijah, the teacher of mysteries, face to face.
-
-But what did the prophet Elijah, or the Zohar, or rather his own
-heated imagination, reveal to him? First he took the trouble to put
-system, unity, and logical order into the confusion and intricacies
-of the Zohar, as if connected thought could be expected in the idle
-chatter of a half imbecile. The hermit of Cairo sought to deduce
-from it how God had created and ordered the world by means of the
-mystic numbers (Sefiroth), or how the Godhead revealed itself in the
-forms of substances, or how it concentrated itself within itself in
-order to project the finite nature of created things from its own
-infinitude. Thus he evolved an extraordinarily complicated system
-of powers and opposing powers, forces and counterforces, forms and
-degrees (Parsophin), in the four spheres of Separation, Creation,
-Formation, and Transformation; and he clothed these empty abstractions
-with such wondrous names, that he afterwards complained, with reason,
-that no one could understand his mystic system. Yet Lurya looked upon
-this intricate and complex theory of the creation as only a kind of
-introduction to what seemed to him a much more important and practical
-part of the Kabbala, whereby the divine order of the world (Olam
-ha-Tikkun) could be brought about. This practical Kabbala of Lurya
-rests upon a not less marvelous doctrine of souls, also based upon the
-visions of the Zohar.
-
-Our souls, he says, reflect the close connection between the finite
-and the infinite, and, therefore, have a manifold character. The whole
-of the soul material to appear in temporal life was created with Adam,
-but each soul, according to its higher or lower degree, was fashioned
-in, from, or with the first man, out of high or low organs and forms.
-Accordingly, there are souls of the brain, the eyes, the hands, and
-the feet. Each of these must be regarded as an effluence, or spark
-(Nizuz), from Adam. By the first sin of the first man--for the
-Kabbala finds original sin necessary for its fanciful creations--the
-higher and the lower, the superior and the inferior souls, good and
-evil, became confused and mingled together. Even the purest beings
-thereby received an admixture of evil and the devilish element of the
-"husk" (Kelifa). But the moral order of the world, or the purification
-of the first man, cannot be brought about till the consequences of
-original sin, the confusion of good and evil, are obliterated and
-removed. From the most evil part of the soul material emanates the
-heathen world; the people of Israel, on the other hand, come from the
-good part. But the former are not quite without an admixture of the
-original good, while the latter are not free from an admixture of the
-corrupt and demoniac. This imperfection gives the continual impulse
-towards sin, and hinders the chosen fragment of the human race from
-following the law of God, the Torah. The Messianic period will put an
-end to the disturbance of divine order arising from the first sin, or
-abolish the disorder which has since crept in, and will introduce,
-or see introduced, the divinity of the world. Therefore, a complete
-separation of good from evil must take place, and this can only happen
-through Israel, if it or each of its members will lose or cast away
-the admixture of evil. For this purpose, men's souls (especially
-those of the Israelites) have to wander through the bodies of men and
-animals, even through rivers, wood, and stones. The doctrine of the
-transmigration of souls forms the center and basis of Lurya's Kabbala,
-but he has a peculiar development of the idea. According to this theory
-even the souls of the pious must suffer transmigration, since not even
-they are free from the taint of evil; there is none righteous upon
-earth, who does only good, and sins not. In this way, Lurya solved the
-difficulty, which former Kabbalist writers could not overcome.
-
-But this separation of the good and evil elements in the world's soul
-material, the expiation and obliteration of original sin, or the
-restoration of the divine order in Adam, would require a long series
-of ages, owing to the impulse towards sin continually present. There
-are, however, means of hastening this process, and this was the really
-original doctrine that Lurya enunciated. Besides the transmigration
-of our souls, sinful and subject to demoniac forces as they are,
-there is another mode of expiation, the elevation or impregnation of
-the soul (Ibbur, _superfoetatio_). If a purified soul has neglected
-various religious duties here on earth, or has had no opportunity of
-fulfilling them, it must return to the earthly life, attach itself to
-the soul of a living human being, and unite and coalesce with it in
-order to retrieve this neglect. Or again, the departed spirits of men
-freed from sin appear again on earth to support the weak and wavering
-souls which cannot attain to good by their own efforts, strengthen
-them and lead them to the final goal. These pure spirits combine with
-weaker souls still struggling, and form a union with them, provided
-that they have some affinity with one another, _i. e._, if they
-originate from the same spark or organ of Adam, since as a rule only
-similar (homogeneous) souls attract each other, while on the other hand
-dissimilar (heterogeneous) souls repel each other. According to this
-theory the banishment and dispersion of Israel have for their purpose
-the salvation of the world or of men's souls. The purified spirits of
-pious Israelites unite with the souls of men of other nationalities in
-order to free them from the demoniacal impurities that possess them.
-
-Isaac Lurya imagined a complete system of the transmigration and
-combination of souls. It also seemed to him important to know the
-sex of a soul, for feminine souls are found in masculine bodies, and
-_vice versa_, according to the transmigration and attraction in each
-case. It is especially important in contracting a marriage to know
-whether the souls of man and wife harmonize with each other in respect
-of origin and degree. By means of this secret the visionary of Cairo
-expected to solve the other mystery, namely, how good spirits may be
-conjured down from heaven, and in a measure compelled to enter the
-bodies of living men, and thus made to divulge revelations of the
-world beyond. Hereby he believed that he held the key to the kingdom
-of the Messiah and the regeneration of the world. Lurya also believed
-that he possessed the soul of the Messiah of the branch of Joseph,
-and that he had a Messianic mission. He saw spirits everywhere, and
-heard their whispers in the rushing of the waters, the movements of
-the trees and grass, in the song or twittering of birds, even in the
-flickering of flames. He saw how at death the souls were set free from
-the body, how they hovered in the air, or rose out of their graves. He
-held intimate intercourse with the saints of the Bible, the Talmud, and
-with the rabbis, in particular with Simon bar Yochai. In short, Lurya
-was a ghost-seer and raiser of the dead, a second Abraham Abulafia,
-or Solomon Molcho, arousing hopes of the coming of the Messiah by
-Kabbalistic jugglery, but with all this fanaticism he was sober and
-sophistical. He introduced the casuistry of the Talmud into the Kabbala.
-
-In Egypt, Isaac Lurya found little or no favor with his labyrinth of
-higher worlds and his theories of creation and redemption. To realize
-his scheme of redemption he migrated with his wife and child to Safet,
-the Jerusalem of mysticism, where the mystic doctrine flourished, and
-the Zohar, the spurious work of Moses de Leon, was exalted to the same
-level as the Law of Moses ben Amram. Almost the whole college of rabbis
-and the chief leaders of Safet were Kabbalists. This place was at the
-time a flourishing city inhabited only by Jews. The members of the
-community knew little of oppression or the cares of life, and so the
-Kabbalists could spin mystical theories to their hearts' content. They
-felt as safe under the favor that the Jewish Duke of Naxos found with
-the sultan, as if in a state of their own, politically independent. The
-Kabbalists had gone so far in their imitation of Catholicism that they
-had adopted auricular confession and the adoration of martyrs. And this
-was the stage on which Lurya, the creator of the new Kabbala, was to
-originate new aberrations.
-
-At first (about 1569), he appears to have received little attention in
-the city of Kabbalists. Only through his acquaintance and connection
-with a still greater visionary, perhaps not quite so honest as himself,
-did he become a person of consequence, and infect everyone with his
-waking dreams. This man was the Italian Chayim Vital Calabrese (born
-1543, died 1620), whose father, a copyist of the scrolls of the Law,
-had traveled to Palestine from Italy. Vital had learned nothing
-thoroughly in his younger days; he had only gained a smattering of the
-Talmud and mystic lore. He possessed a wild, extravagant imagination,
-and a decided inclination for adventure and sensation. For two years
-and a half Vital had occupied his time with alchemy and the art of
-making gold. From this mystic art he turned to Lurya's Kabbala. It is
-not known which of these two men first sought the other, but it is
-certain that each, without wishing it, deceived the other. Together
-they visited desolate places and graves, particularly the grave of
-Simon bar Yochai, the feigned author of the Zohar, in Meiron. This was
-Lurya's favorite spot, because there he fancied he could draw down
-upon himself the spirit of this supposed chief of the mystics. Now and
-again Lurya sent forth his disciple to conjure up spirits, and for this
-purpose delivered to him certain formulas made up of the transposed
-letters of the name of the Deity. Of course, evil spirits fled before
-Vital's gaze, whilst good spirits attached themselves to him, and
-communicated their secrets.
-
-It was Vital who spread sensational reports concerning the
-extraordinary, almost divine gifts of his master, and of his power
-over departed and living souls; doing so, it appears, with an artful
-calculation of effect and publicity. Lurya, once so isolated, now
-found himself surrounded by crowds of visitors; Kabbalists, young and
-old, came to listen to the new revelation. Several disciples attached
-themselves to him, and he communicated to them his confused thoughts,
-assigned to each the original Adamite soul that dwelt in him, the
-transmigrations which it had undergone before its present corporeal
-existence, and its functions on earth. It never occurred to these
-people, already enmeshed in the Kabbalistic net, to doubt the truth
-of these communications. The disciples that gathered round him Lurya
-formed into two classes: the "initiated" and the "novices."
-
-Mystical conversations and notes, the interviewing and summoning of
-spirits, formed the occupation of Lurya and his followers. In short,
-Lurya was on the eve of founding a new Jewish sect. On the Sabbath he
-dressed in white, and wore a fourfold garment to symbolize the four
-letters of the name of God. The underlying fact of all his revelations
-and exertions was that he was the Messiah of the race of Joseph, the
-forerunner of the Messiah of David's line. This, however, he only
-furtively hinted to his disciples. His delusion was that the Messianic
-period would commence at the beginning of the second half of the second
-period of a thousand years since the destruction of the Temple, _i.
-e._, in 1568.
-
-The sudden death of the mystic, at the age of thirty-eight, conduced
-still more to his glorification. Death is wont to transfigure natures
-like his, and veneration for them increases as years roll on. With
-Eastern exaggeration, his disciples regarded him as even more than a
-worker of wonders; they called him the "Holy and Divine," and sought,
-for their own glory, to win adherents for him and his visionary
-extravagances. They declared that, if Lurya could only have lived five
-years longer, he would have improved the world so effectually, that the
-Messianic period would certainly have begun. Abraham Abulafia, who had
-evolved a Kabbalistic medley from his own consciousness, was declared a
-heretic, and persecuted. Isaac Lurya, who had done the same thing with
-the Zohar as a foundation, was almost deified.
-
-After Lurya's death, Vital Calabrese came to the fore. He immediately
-usurped a kind of authority over his fellow-disciples, pretended that
-Lurya on his deathbed had appointed him his successor, and, in feigned
-obedience to a dying request of his master, took away from them the
-written notes given them by Lurya. Vital let it be understood that he
-was the Messiah of the race of Joseph. However, some disciples did not
-pay any attention to this, and forthwith taught in various countries
-what they had received from Lurya himself. This was especially done by
-Israel Saruk in Italy, whither he had traveled.
-
-The harm that the Kabbalistic doctrines of Lurya caused in Jewish
-circles is inexpressible. Judaism became surrounded with so thick a
-husk of mysticism, that it has not even yet succeeded in entirely
-freeing itself, and showing its true kernel. Through Lurya's influence
-there was formed, side by side with the Judaism of the Talmud and the
-rabbis, a Judaism of the Zohar and the Kabbala. For it was due to him
-that the spurious Zohar was placed upon a level with, indeed higher
-than, the Holy Scriptures and the Talmud.
-
-The mysticism of Lurya laid stress upon an idea which has been
-strangely neglected in Jewish circles, viz., devotion in prayer, but
-even this devotion degenerated into Kabbalistic trifling. Every word
-and every syllable of the ordained prayers was to be meditated on
-devoutly, so that one might reflect upon the worlds of the Sefiroth,
-the number of the names of God hidden therein, and many other things.
-Lurya's Kabbala certainly inculcated the preservation of an unruffled
-disposition, and interdicted dejection, or outbreaks of anger and
-ill-humor. But this serenity, from its mystical setting, received
-a touch of constraint and unpleasantness, like the laughter of a
-madman. The Sabbath, with its prayers and meals, forms the central
-point of Lurya's mystic teaching. He looked upon it as the visible
-representation of the world of the Sefiroth, as the embodiment of the
-Divinity (Shechinah) in temporal life, and all actions done or left
-undone on that day had an influence upon the higher world. Lurya's
-followers welcomed the Sabbath, "the mystic bride," with chanting,
-and for this purpose Lurya composed Chaldaic songs full of obscure
-and meaningless formulas. His Kabbala also introduced a second Day
-of Atonement. The "Day of Hosannas," the seventh day of the Feast of
-Tabernacles, was formerly observed as a day of festivity. Even Joseph
-Karo did not venture in his code to attribute a higher, mystical,
-religious function to this day. Lurya's school first raised it, on
-the authority of the Zohar, to the rank of a minor day of expiation,
-introduced the practice of holding a mystic vigil the previous
-night, and perceived in every leaf of the willow branches, and in
-the seven-fold processions round the scrolls of the Law, a higher,
-mystical meaning. In relation to morality, too, the mysticism of Lurya
-had a corrupting influence. It demanded a "harmony of souls" as a
-condition of marriage, and, therefore, whenever disagreement showed
-itself in married life, it was said that the marriage was not a union
-foreordained by the harmony of the Sefiroth. Kabbalists, therefore,
-separated from their wives in consequence of the smallest dissension
-in married life, to seek out the harmonious soul predestined for them.
-Thus divorce became frequent in Kabbalistic circles. Kabbalists often
-left their wives and children in the West, and, migrating to the East,
-contracted a new marriage, or several new marriages, and the children
-of the different marriages knew nothing of one another.
-
-These corrupting mystic doctrines did not remain a dead letter,
-but were forthwith put into practice by their adherents. Thus, the
-brilliance shed by the Jewish Duke of Naxos and other influential Jews
-at the Turkish court over their fellow-believers in the East, came to
-resemble the light of the will-o'-the-wisps that make the waters of a
-stagnant marsh gleam with a flickering light. The religious stagnation
-at the time was glaring indeed; there was a complete relapse into
-heathenism; and what was worse, there sounded no warning voice which
-recognized the mischief, or stigmatized, though ever so feebly, the
-corruption as it really was. Perhaps the feeling of complete security
-in which the Jews in Turkey reposed under mighty protectors of their
-own race had encouraged this religious disorder. In any case, it
-did not decrease as this protection gradually disappeared, when the
-influence of Joseph of Naxos ceased on the death of Sultan Selim in
-1574. His successor, Sultan Murad III (1574-1595), left the Jewish
-duke in possession of his rank and offices according to his father's
-dying request. But he no longer had direct influence over the divan;
-he was supplanted by his adversary, the grand vizir, Mahomet Sokolli,
-and his rival, Solomon Ashkenazi, and could accomplish nothing without
-intrigues through the agency of the harem. Joseph Nassi did not long
-survive his partial disgrace; he died of calculus, on August 2d, 1579,
-sincerely lamented by the Jews. His accumulated treasures melted away
-even as his ambitious designs. The avaricious sultan, Murad, who slept
-upon heaps of gold in order that they might not be stolen from him, by
-the advice of Mahomet Sokolli confiscated all his property, ostensibly
-to cover his debts. The widowed duchess, Reyna Nassi, with difficulty
-retained her dowry of 90,000 ducats out of her husband's estate. This
-noble woman, although she certainly did not possess the spirit either
-of her mother, Donna Gracia, or of her husband, determined like these
-to spend her wealth in the interests of Jewish knowledge. She set up a
-Hebrew printing press in her palace of Belvedere, and afterwards in a
-village called Kuru-Gismu, on the European side near Constantinople.
-But she was misled by Joseph Askaloni, a business manager devoid of all
-taste, to whom she had intrusted the direction of her press, so that
-only writings of no importance, which had far better have remained in
-obscurity, were published in her establishment (1579-1598). And so this
-noble family of two men and two women, renowned in their own time, left
-no worthy or lasting memorial; and their deeds, prompted by the noblest
-intentions, have perished in the stream of the ages.
-
-Duke Joseph having disappeared from the scene, the prestige of the
-Hebrew statesman, Solomon Ashkenazi, the peacemaker between Turkey and
-Venice, increased. But, much as he was able to accomplish by means
-of his diplomatic arts, he did not, like Joseph of Naxos, stand in
-the forefront of events as a Turkish dignitary, but rather remained
-in the background as a wise and silent mediator. Solomon Ashkenazi
-had no access to the sultan himself, but only held secret intercourse
-with the successive grand vizirs, whose right hand man he was. The
-negotiations between Turkey and Spain to procure a peace, or at
-least a _modus vivendi_, desired as it was by both sides, owing to
-pride on both sides, were delayed, broken off, and renewed. These
-diplomatic discussions were conducted by Solomon, who possessed greater
-qualifications for that purpose than anyone else, and the matters
-in dispute were partially brought to a conclusion by him. He was
-particularly careful to maintain a good understanding between the Porte
-and Venice, and was on this account rewarded by the doge, his sons
-being allowed to live in Venice at the expense of the state.
-
-Also Jewish women of wisdom and good sense, having skill in medicine,
-gained great influence by means of the harem under the sultans Murad
-III, Mahomet IV, and Achmed I. Among these women, Esther Kiera, widow
-of one Elias Chendali, specially distinguished herself. She was a
-great favorite with the sultana Baffa, herself the favorite wife of
-Murad, who influenced politics under her husband and afterwards during
-the reign of her son. If a Christian state wished to gain any object
-at the Porte, it had first to win over the Jewish go-between, Kiera.
-The Venetians particularly knew how to turn this fact to account. All
-ambitious persons who aimed at attaining high office paid respect
-to Kiera, and addressed her with flattery. Naturally, she enriched
-herself by her secret power, as did everyone in Turkey who, however
-strong or weak he might be, formed one of the spokes in the wheel of
-the state. She showed great interest in her race, supported the poor
-and suffering, fed the hungry, and comforted the sorrowful. Jewish
-science was helped by her generous hand. Zacuto's history, as mentioned
-before, was published at her expense. Naturally her position excited
-envy. Esther Kiera imprudently allowed herself to be implicated in the
-appointment of cavalry officers, first promising one man a high post
-and then bestowing it on another. The Turkish Spahis, the proudest
-class of soldiers, took this treatment very ill, plotted together, and
-demanded her head. The deputy grand vizir Chalil wished to save her
-and her sons, and allowed them to take refuge in his palace. But on the
-very steps Esther Kiera and her three sons were seized by the Spahis,
-torn to pieces, and their limbs hung upon the doors of the favored
-magnates who had received their posts through her influence.
-
-Under Sultan Achmed I, another Hebrew woman, the widow of the statesman
-Solomon Ashkenazi, gained great consideration. She was so fortunate
-as to cure the young sultan of the smallpox, which shortly after his
-accession threatened his life, and for which the Turkish physicians
-knew no remedy. She was richly rewarded for nursing him back to
-health. But such signs of favor towards Jews became continually rarer
-in Turkey, and at last ceased altogether, as the empire sank into
-enervation, and each sultan became a Sardanapalus; while the harem, on
-the one hand, and the Spahis and Janissaries, on the other, held the
-reins of power. The glory of the Turkish Jews was extinguished like a
-meteor, and plunged into utter darkness, from time to time illuminated
-by fanciful visions. Extortion, robbery, and open deeds of violence, on
-the part of the pashas towards Jews, began to occur daily, since they
-were now deprived of a powerful protector at the Sultan's side. The
-center of Judaism was shifted to another stage.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-THE JEWS IN POLAND.
-
- Condition of Poland--Favorable Situation of the Jews in
- that Country--Anti-Jewish Party in Poland--The Jewish
- Communities--Judaizing Poles--Studies of the Jews--The Talmud
- in Poland--Solomon Lurya--Moses Isserles--The Historian, David
- Gans--"Zemach David"--Supremacy of the Polish Authorities
- in Rabbinical Matters--The Jewish Seminaries in Poland--The
- Disputations at the Fairs--Chiddushim and Chillukim--Stephen
- Bathori--His Kindness towards his Jewish Subjects--Sigismund
- III--Restriction on the Erection of Synagogues--Jewish
- Synods--Vaad Arba Arazoth--Mordecai Jafa--Christian Sects in
- Poland--The Socinians or Unitarians--Simon Budny--The Reformers
- and the Jews--Isaac Troki--"The Strengthening of Faith."
-
-1566-1600 C.E.
-
-
-Poland, which in this century had become a great power by reason of
-its union with Lithuania under the sons of Casimir IV, like Turkey,
-was the refuge of the outlawed or persecuted. Canonical Christianity,
-with its love of persecution, had not yet struck firm roots there;
-and monarchical despotism, encouraged by priests in its obstinate
-determination to realize all its ends regardless of consequences, could
-not prevail against the independent spirit of the Polish nobility.
-The Starosts ruled unchecked in their provinces, like the English
-and Scottish lords and clans, and could ward off the encroachments
-of royalty. The reformed faith, that is to say Calvin's teaching,
-was readily received by the nobility and the middle classes. Poland,
-therefore, in this century, too, was a second Babylonia for the Jews,
-in which on the whole they were protected from bloody persecutions,
-where some of them could attain to respectable positions, and where
-they were allowed to develop their individuality without restraint.
-When the Jews were expelled from Bohemia, and turned their steps to
-Poland, they were kindly received. Indeed, so highly appreciated were
-they, that it was thought that the people could not do without them.
-When, attracted by the favored position of their brethren in Turkey,
-many prepared to migrate thither, the king made every exertion to
-retain them in his land either by persuasion or compulsion. It mattered
-very little what were the king's relations to them; for whether he
-was kindly or evilly disposed, the nobles protected those who dwelt
-on their estates from all attacks, in as far as their own interests
-were not injured thereby. Under some kings, the Jews received favors,
-under others, suffered restrictions, according as hostile or friendly
-influences preponderated.
-
-But there was a party in Poland hostile to the Jews. It regarded
-with dissatisfied eyes their more favored position in that country
-as compared with the rest of Christendom, and endeavored to abrogate
-the statute of Casimir IV, still in force, giving protection against
-unduly severe persecution. It consisted, on the one hand, of the
-Catholic clergy which regretted the absence in the Polish legislation
-of canonical restrictions regarding Jews; on the other, of the German
-merchant and artisan class which feared Jewish competition.
-
-There exists no estimate of the number of Jews in Poland at this time.
-It is said that there were 200,000 adults. The community at Posen
-numbered 3,000 members, and there were about as many in Cracow, or
-rather in the suburb Kazimierz, to which they had on a former occasion
-been banished. The third community in point of size was at Lublin. The
-Jews had many taxes to pay under different heads. For this purpose,
-indeed, they were received, and on this account tolerated in the
-country, and protected by the kings and the nobility, being almost
-the only ones in that impecunious land who possessed money. For this
-reason, also, the kings encouraged their commercial enterprises.
-When Sigismund Augustus, soon after his accession, negotiated for a
-prolongation of the peace with the Russian Czar, Ivan IV, called "the
-Terrible," he inserted the condition that the Jews of Lithuania be
-allowed, as formerly, to freely carry on trade with Russia. But Ivan
-absolutely refused this condition; he did not wish to see any Jews in
-his realm. "We do not want these men," he said, "who have brought us
-poison for our bodies and souls; they have sold deadly herbs among us,
-and blasphemed our Lord and Saviour." A Judaizing sect had been founded
-some seventy years before by a Jew called Zacharias, to which sect
-even some of the priests, and a metropolitan named Zosina belonged.
-This proselytizing sect continued to exist till the beginning of the
-sixteenth century, but its adherents were severely persecuted when
-discovered. On this account Jews were not allowed in Russia.
-
-In consequence of the Reformation, which had made its way into Poland,
-a purer taste and a love of science and literature had developed
-there. Polish nobles fond of traveling brought back from Germany an
-interest in these matters, and sent their sons to study at the reformed
-universities of Wittenberg and Geneva. Schools arose in Poland where
-Jewish boys and youths were instructed together with Christians. The
-Polish Jews, it is true, did not devote themselves to science to a
-marked degree, but they were by no means so devoid of it as their
-German brethren.
-
-Aristotle, that philosophical authority so familiar to the Hebrew
-world and so closely akin to the Hebrew spirit, found admirers also
-among Polish Jews. Even Maimuni's philosophic and religious writings
-found a few readers. Astronomy and medicine, two favorite sciences
-of the Jews from time immemorial, were studied also by Polish Jews.
-Generally speaking, they did not share the intellectual degradation
-of the Jewish inhabitants of Germany. Among them the study of the
-Talmud received an impetus greater almost than in France in the
-times of the Tossafist schools. Of all the Jews in Europe and Asia
-those in Poland were the last to become familiar with the Talmud; as
-though desirous of making up for lost time, they cherished it with
-extravagant affection. It appeared as if the deep secrets of the
-Talmud were to be rightly understood and completely unraveled and
-appreciated only in Poland. Comprehensive erudition and marvelous
-insight were united in a surprising manner in the Polish students of
-this book, and everyone whom nature had not deprived of all talent
-devoted himself to its study. The dead letter received new life from
-the eager inspiration of the Jewish sons of Poland; in this land it
-exerted an influence of great force, striking sparks of intellectual
-fire, and creating a ceaseless flow of thought. The Talmudical schools
-in Poland henceforward became the most celebrated throughout the whole
-of European Judaism. All who sought sound learning betook themselves
-thither. To have been educated in a college of the Polish Jews was of
-itself a sufficient recommendation; and all who did not possess this
-advantage were considered inferiors.
-
-The fame of the rabbinical schools of Poland was due to three men:
-Shalom Shachna, Solomon Lurya, and Moses Isserles. Solomon Lurya (born
-in Posen about 1510, died about 1573) came from a family of German
-immigrants. Had he been born in a better, a more intellectual epoch, he
-would have been one of the makers of Judaism, perhaps another Maimuni.
-But being the son of an age of decadence, he became only a profound
-and thorough Talmud scholar, in the higher sense of the word, not
-remaining satisfied with traditional data, but examining every single
-point and weighing it in the golden balance of critical exactitude.
-To the thorough and critical investigation of the great field of the
-Talmud his whole mental activity was devoted, and he possessed the
-greatest natural qualifications for such critical work. With his bold
-spirit of inquiry, ruthlessly subjecting everything to the severest
-examination, Lurya in any other age would have gone beyond the Talmud,
-if its contradictions had made themselves glaringly apparent to him.
-But by this son of an age of faith the whole book was regarded as an
-actual continuation of the revelation made at Sinai, an unassailable
-authority, which only needed to be properly understood, or which
-wanted perhaps a little rectification here and there, but as a whole
-contained the truth. Lurya was a strongly marked character, having all
-the acerbity and angularity commonly associated therewith. Injustice,
-venality, and hypocrisy, were so hateful to him, that he broke out
-into what was sometimes imprudent excess of zealous indignation. By
-reason of his distinct individuality and firmness, which he wished to
-assert everywhere, Solomon Lurya offended and hurt the vanity of not a
-few. He lashed in bitter terms those Talmudical scholars whose actions
-did not correspond to their teaching, and devoted themselves to the
-study of rabbinical literature only for the sake of discussion, or to
-gain a reputation. Hence he made many enemies, and in his own time was
-more feared than loved. In polemical discussion he was reckless and
-unsparing, and very naturally brought upon himself retaliation which
-only embittered him the more. Then he complained of persecution, and
-even of the ingratitude of his disciples, who, he said, had turned
-against him, and looked at everything in a gloomy light. He attacked
-the students of the Talmud, because, he said, the ignorant were so
-many and the possessors of knowledge so few, while their arrogance
-continually increased, and no one was content to take the position
-that properly belonged to him. No sooner was one of them ordained
-than he assumed the airs of a master, collected a troop of disciples
-around him for money, as people of rank hire a body-guard. "There are,"
-he complained, "gray-headed rabbis with very little knowledge of the
-Talmud, who behave imperiously to congregations and to people of real
-knowledge, excommunicate and re-admit members, ordain disciples--all
-for their own selfish purposes." Solomon Lurya extended the sarcastic
-bitterness of his scorn to German experts in the Talmud, "who, in the
-case of people of wealth and authority, show indulgence towards the
-transgression of rabbinical precepts, while they spread evil reports
-about men of moderate means and strangers who are guilty of slight
-irregularities, such as going about with uncovered head."
-
-However, things were not so bad in Jewish society as depicted by
-Lurya's bitter humor; and this is proved in the most conclusive manner
-by the recognition that this morose faultfinder himself received.
-Talmudical students, both young and old, even in his lifetime, were
-full of admiration for his achievements. While still betwixt youth and
-middle age, he undertook his principal work of elucidating and sifting
-Talmudic discussions with a view to establishing religious practice,
-and he continued this work up to the end of his life without completing
-it. Solomon Lurya performed this task with more thoroughness,
-clearness, and depth than his contemporaries and predecessors. But
-if he hoped, as it appears he did, to put an end to all variety and
-confusion of opinion, he made the same mistake as Maimuni and others.
-He only contributed to further entanglement of the knot. His numerous
-other writings bear the same impress of thoroughness and critical
-insight, but he could not reach the seat of the trouble any more than
-others who had made the attempt; it lay too deep.
-
-By reason of his critical faculty, Lurya laid stress upon what his
-Polish and German fellow-students neglected as too trifling--
-namely, on grammatical correctness and precision in the distinction
-of the forms of speech. On the other hand, he was a declared enemy of
-scholastic philosophy. It appeared to him to be dangerous and fatal to
-faith.
-
-Another leading rabbi in Poland was Moses ben Israel Isserles, of
-Cracow (born in 1520, died Iyar, 1572). The son of a greatly respected
-father, who had held the office of president of the community, he
-distinguished himself more by his precocity and comprehensive learning
-than by striking mental individuality. Inheriting so much property from
-his family that he dedicated one of his houses as a synagogue, Isserles
-was able to follow the bent of his genius with ease and comfort, devote
-himself to the Talmud, and make himself familiar with its mazes. He
-soon gained such a reputation that, while still almost a youth, he was
-nominated rabbi-judge in Cracow. At thirty years of age he had embraced
-the whole field of Talmudic and rabbinical literature as thoroughly as
-Joseph Karo, a man double his age.
-
-Isserles also felt the need of collecting and giving finality to the
-widely scattered materials of rabbinical Judaism. But since Joseph Karo
-had forestalled him by the compilation of his Code, it only remained
-for him to rectify it, and comment upon it. For he regretted the
-omission of several elements in that work, especially the neglect of
-German rabbinical authorities and customs. This continuation of Karo's
-Code, or "Table," he called the "Mappa" or "Table-cloth." As the Jews
-in Germany had always been more scrupulous in their observances than
-those elsewhere, the additions and supplementations made by Isserles
-turned out to be burdensome. His decisions immediately received
-recognition, and to the present day form the religious standard, the
-official Judaism, of the German and Polish communities and those
-allied to them. It cannot quite be said that he contributed to its
-ossification, for he did not invent and introduce these burdens, but
-only noted and codified them; he followed the universal tendency. If
-Isserles had not arranged them into a religious code, some one else
-would have done so.
-
-Isserles had taste also for other subjects besides the Talmud,
-especially for astronomy. He produced a commentary to Frohbach's
-astronomical work, "Theorica." He likewise had an inclination for
-philosophy, and pursued the subject rather deeply, though only through
-the medium of Hebrew works. Maimuni's "Guide" was his guide, too. On
-this account he had to submit to a sharp reproof from the proud Solomon
-Lurya. Isserles also had some taste for history, which led him to
-induce one of his disciples to occupy himself seriously with it. David
-Gans (born in Westphalia in 1541, died in Prague in 1613) had come to
-Cracow when a youth in order to study in the rabbinical academy there;
-but his natural taste for scientific subjects, history, geography,
-mathematics, and astronomy, was involuntarily aroused by Isserles,
-who brought him up, and guided his studies. Gans devoted himself to
-these subjects, and made the acquaintance of two great leaders in
-mathematics and astronomy, Kepler and Tycho de Brahe. He wrote several
-works on these subjects, of course in Hebrew. His chronicle (Zemach
-David), consisting of annals of Jewish and general history, has become
-celebrated. It was a very great thing for a German Jew to have devoted
-himself to studies outside of the ordinary track. But one cannot call
-David's historical work great. He introduced among Jews the dry, bare
-form of historical narrative formerly employed by monks, which at
-that time had already given place to a more artistic method. However,
-unimportant as David's chronicle is, it possesses some merit, because
-it reminded those wrapped up in the study of the Talmud that they were
-the last links of a long historical chain. The want of appreciation of
-history displayed by German Jews is indicated by the brief inscription
-placed on Gans' tomb, while there were no limits to the eulogies
-glorifying the memory of some obscure rabbinical dignitary. The study
-of the Talmud, prosecuted merely as an effort of memory, won greater
-fame for its votaries than devotion to any branch of science, however
-profoundly grasped.
-
-The three great rabbinical lights, first both in rank and in priority
-of time, Shachna, Solomon Lurya, and Isserles, laid the foundation
-of the extraordinary erudition of the Polish Jews. Any complicated
-or generally interesting question, arising in Germany, Moravia,
-Bohemia, even in Italy and Turkey, was submitted to them, especially
-to Isserles, for final decision. The revoltingly vulgar actions of
-the community at Prague, against which the local college of rabbis
-was powerless, were brought before the rabbis of Poland, and attacked
-vigorously by them. Passionate disputes in Frankfort-on-the-Main, which
-threatened to produce persecution or expulsion, were settled, and a
-reconciliation effected from Poland. Thus this rabbinical triumvirate
-founded a kind of supremacy of Poland over the Jews of Europe,
-acknowledged on all sides, and the Polish rabbis maintained their
-position as leaders up to the end of the eighteenth century.
-
-The triumvirate, whose numerous disciples rivaled each other in the
-study of the Talmud, gradually caused nearly all Polish Jews to become
-familiar with that book, and eligible for the rabbinical office. Even
-in small communities of only fifty members there were at least twenty
-Talmudical scholars, who in turn instructed at least thirty pupils.
-Everywhere there arose schools with rabbis at their head as teachers,
-whose chief duty was to deliver lectures, everything else being of
-secondary importance. Young men crowded to these establishments, where
-they could live free from care, their maintenance being defrayed out
-of the treasury of the community, or by wealthy private individuals.
-Children were put to the study of the Talmud at a tender age, certainly
-to the detriment of the natural development of their minds. It was the
-highest honor to conduct a rabbinical school, and their ambition was
-encouraged to strive for this object. Supervisors were nominated to
-watch over the industry of the students (Bachurim) and the children.
-Gradually a kind of syllabus with alternating themes, in use up to
-recent times, was introduced for the lectures on the Talmud in the
-summer and the winter term.
-
-At the end of the term, the teachers and their numerous pupils went to
-the great Polish fairs, in summer to Zaslaw and Jaroslaw, in winter
-to Lemberg and Lublin. Thus several thousand students of the Talmud
-met, and there ensued a lively interchange of remarks and subtle
-disputations upon the subject-matter of rabbinical and Talmudic study.
-Public disputations were held, in which anyone might take part. The
-keener intellects received wealthy brides as a reward for their mental
-exertions. Rich parents took pride in having sons-in-law educated in
-Talmudic schools, and sought for them at the fairs. The Polish Jews,
-by reason of this fervent zeal, acquired a Talmudic deportment, so to
-speak, which showed itself in every movement and every utterance, by
-ungraceful shrugging of the shoulders and a peculiar movement of the
-thumbs. Every conversation, whether of a perfectly indifferent nature
-or even upon matters of business, resembled a disputation upon the
-Talmud. Talmudical words, designations, phrases, and allusions, passed
-into popular speech, and were understood even by women and children.
-
-But this excessive study of the Talmud in Poland was of no real
-advantage to Judaism. It was not carried on in order to gain a proper
-understanding of the book, but merely to find something unique, rare,
-witty, striking, something to tickle the intellectual palate. In these
-meetings of thousands of students of the Talmud, masters and disciples,
-teachers and pupils, at the great fairs, every individual exerted
-himself to discover something new, startling, and casuistical, bringing
-it forward only to surpass all others, without caring whether it stood
-the test of proof, or was only relatively true, but merely to gain a
-reputation for sharp-wittedness. The chief endeavor of the Talmudical
-students of Poland was directed to bringing to light something new in
-Talmudic criticism, or in inventing something (Chiddush). The lectures
-of the heads of schools, and of all rabbis, had only this object in
-view--to set up something hitherto unsurpassed, to weave a net of
-sophistical Talmudical propositions, and to go still further in the
-process of incomprehensible hair-splitting (Chillukim). Hence the
-whole trend of Jewish thought in Poland was in a wrong direction.
-The language of the Jews in particular suffered from this cause,
-degenerating into a ridiculous jargon, a mixture of German, Polish,
-and Talmudical elements, an unpleasant stammering, rendered still more
-repulsive by forced attempts at wit. This corrupt speech, despising
-all forms, could be understood only by Jews, natives of the country.
-Together with their language the Polish Jews lost that which really
-constitutes a man, and were thus exposed to the scorn and contempt of
-non-Jewish society. The Bible had fallen gradually into the background
-in the course of development since the time of Maimuni; now in Poland
-knowledge of it was utterly lost. If anyone occupied himself with it,
-it was merely to derive the materials for wit, or false wit, from its
-pages.
-
-The circumstances of the time were such that the Jews of Poland were
-able, to a certain extent, to form an independent state within the
-Polish state. Several kings in succession were favorable to them,
-according them extensive protective privileges, and seeing, as far as
-their power went, that these rights were respected. After the death of
-the last king of the Jagellon dynasty, Sigismund Augustus (1572), the
-Jews of Poland profited by the elective monarchy. Each newly-elected
-king above all needed money, which could be supplied only by Jews; or,
-he needed a party among the nobles, and this order, in general devoted
-to the Jews, obtained a preponderating influence as compared with the
-narrow-minded German middle class, hostile to Jews.
-
-After a thirteen months' interregnum, occupied by election negotiations
-and intrigues, the sagacious prince of Transylvania, Stephen Bathori,
-gained the Polish throne, not without the co-operation of the Jewish
-agent, Solomon Ashkenazi, for Turkey had supported his election. Not
-long after his accession, he sent kind messages to the Jews, protected
-those in Lithuania against false and calumnious accusation of the
-murder of Christian children, and uttered his conviction that the Jews
-conscientiously obeyed the Hebrew law of not shedding human blood.
-His reign of nearly twelve years (1575-1586) forms a happy episode
-in the history of the Jews in Poland. Stephen Bathori, moreover, did
-not allow the privileges to remain a dead letter, but preserved them
-in full force. He allowed Jews (in 1576) to carry on all kinds of
-trade without restriction, even to buy and sell on Christian holidays,
-desired that the murder of a Jew, like the murder of a Christian, be
-punished by death, and made the city magistracies responsible for riots
-and injuries caused by Christian mobs in synagogues, cemeteries, and at
-Jewish funerals. The promoters of tumultuous attacks upon Jews, which
-occurred chiefly in the half-German city of Posen, were to be fined ten
-thousand Polish marks, and the magistrate who had not done his duty
-in protecting Jews was to be fined a similar sum. Bathori's reign was
-not, however, free from libelous attacks on the Jews. Where was there
-at that time in Christian Europe a single country in which the enemies
-of the Jews did not assail them? A Polish poet, Klonowicz, poured forth
-his scorn of their trade, usury, and arrogance, in Latin verses; the
-rulers, he said, robbed the Jews, only to be robbed by them in turn.
-
-In the long reign of Sigismund III (1587-1632), the Swedish prince
-whose election gave a pretext for internal dissensions and civil wars,
-the Polish Jews fared better than might have been expected from a pupil
-of the Jesuits and a zealous Catholic. Although he caused dissenting
-Poles to be severely persecuted, the Jews under his government were by
-no means unhappy. At the diet in Warsaw (1592) he confirmed the ancient
-privileges of Casimir, considered to be in their favor. However,
-Sigismund III introduced one law, very disadvantageous to Jews, and
-disclosing the ecclesiastical bent of his mind. He ordained that the
-permission of the clergy had to be gained to build new synagogues,
-a regulation which, of course, rendered the practice of the Jewish
-religion dependent on a church eager for persecution.
-
-Under this king the Jews in Poland introduced (1586-1592) an
-institution which had not existed in that particular form in Jewish
-history. It gave the Polish communities extraordinary unity, firmness,
-and strength, and hence secured respect both from their members and
-outsiders. Hitherto it had naturally come about that, at the meeting
-of rabbis and heads of schools with their followers at the great
-fairs, important questions were discussed, law cases were settled, and
-general consultations took place. The utility of such meetings may
-have become clearly apparent, and given rise to the idea of arranging
-regular conferences of the heads of communities, to draw up final,
-binding decisions. Both leaders and communities must have been actuated
-by a healthy spirit in agreeing to common action. The communities
-of the chief provinces, Little Poland, Greater Poland, and Russia,
-were the first to unite in instituting conferences (Vaad) at regular
-intervals, to take place at the great fairs of Lublin and Jaroslaw. The
-communities sent delegates, learned men of proved excellence, who had a
-seat and a vote in the synod. They chose a president, who directed the
-discussion of questions, and drew up a report of the session. Disputes
-in the communities, questions of taxation, religious and social
-regulations, the averting of threatened dangers, and help to brethren
-in distress, were the main points treated by the synods, and settled
-finally. The synods also exercised a literary censorship by granting
-permission for certain books to be printed and sold, and refusing
-it in the case of others which seemed to them harmful. Probably the
-Lithuanian Jews were represented at a later period, and the synods were
-called the Synods of the Four Countries (Vaad Arba Arazoth). These
-conferences had a very beneficial effect: they prevented long-standing
-dissensions, averted or punished acts of injustice, kept alive a
-feeling of union amongst the communities, directing them towards common
-action, thereby counteracting the narrowness and selfishness of merely
-local interests, which so greatly encouraged the dismemberment and
-isolation of communities, as, for example, in Germany. On this account
-the synod of Polish Jews was respected even abroad; and distant German
-communities or private individuals who had any complaint to make,
-applied to these supreme assemblies, certain to obtain relief. It is to
-the glory of the men who, for nearly two hundred years, presided over
-the synods, that their names, worthy of the remembrance of posterity,
-remained in obscurity, as though they had consciously suppressed their
-individuality in favor of the community at large. Still less is known
-of the originators of this institution, who succeeded in the difficult
-task of overcoming the anarchic tendency of the people, as Jews and
-as Poles, and of inducing them to subordinate themselves to one great
-end. It is conjectured that Mordecai Jafa, a rabbi from Bohemia (born
-about 1532, died 1612), who made many journeys, and suffered much
-sorrow, was the organizer of these regular conferences. He had been
-compelled, in his youth, to assume the wanderer's staff. In this way
-he came to Venice; here he occupied himself in drawing up a religious
-code more convenient than that of Joseph Karo. Apparently the search
-made by the Inquisition for copies of the Talmud rendered his stay in
-Venice unpleasant, and he again betook himself to Poland. There finally
-he officiated as a rabbi, first in Grodno, afterwards in Lublin, from
-about 1575 till the spring of 1592. In Lublin, one of the great fair
-towns, many thousands of Jews used to meet, and there were always
-undecided law-suits and disputes to be settled. Mordecai Jafa may very
-possibly have gained from this the idea of transforming these chance
-synods into regular conferences and of drawing up rules for them. His
-authority was sufficient to gain acceptance for his proposals, which
-satisfied an urgent need. When he left Lublin in his old age to take
-up the office of rabbi at Prague, the presidency of the synod seems
-to have been occupied by Joshua Falk Cohen, the head of a school at
-Lemberg (1592-1616), whose great academy was maintained by his rich
-and respected father-in-law. The frequent meetings of the Reformers in
-Poland, the Lutherans and Unitarians, with their respective sects, seem
-to have served as a model for the Jewish assemblies. Only the latter
-did not discuss hair-splitting dogmas, like the others, but decided
-practical questions of daily life.
-
-Poland and Lithuania, superficially considered, presented the spectacle
-of a land honeycombed with religious divisions, from which a new form
-of Christianity was to arise. While in Germany the reforming movement
-and the opposition to it was subsiding, while the Titans who stormed
-the gates of heaven were settling down into ordinary parsons; while the
-new church in its turn was entering upon a process of ossification,
-and, after a short season of youthful ardor, was falling into the
-feebleness of old age; the waves of religious and sectarian separation
-were only now rising in Polish countries, and threatening a general
-inundation. The German colonies in Poland had transplanted the
-Reformation with them, and the Polish nobility thought it an imperative
-fashion to pay homage to this anti-papal innovation. Christianity in
-Poland and Lithuania, be it the new or the old church, was too young to
-be firmly rooted; and so the Reformation, finding little opposition,
-gained rapid admittance among the nobles and the bourgeoisie almost to
-its own discomfiture. Sigismund Augustus had allowed the movement free
-play; indeed, under the influence of the Radziwills of Lithuania, who
-stood close to his throne, he almost renounced the papacy altogether.
-Thus Poland became a free state in the widest sense, and an arena
-for the new teaching of the Augustine monk of Wittenberg. Even those
-thinkers or enthusiasts in Italy, Switzerland, or Germany, who wished
-to push the religious movement, but were persecuted either by the
-Catholics or the Reformers, found kindly welcome and protection under
-the Polish nobility, who were quite independent in their own districts.
-
-Thus arose a sect in Poland which, logically developed, might have
-given a fatal blow to Christianity in general. The ashes of Servetus
-of Aragon, burned at the stake in Geneva, the author of a treatise,
-"On the Errors of the Trinity," seem to have been the seed for
-fresh dissensions in the church. A number of his disciples, Socinus,
-Blandrata, and Paruta, Italians of bold intellect, who undermined
-the foundations of Christianity, and were outlawed by Catholics and
-Reformers alike, passed over the Polish frontier, and were allowed
-not only to live there free, but also to speak freely. The attacks
-of the Socinians or Pinczovinians (as this sect, which flourished
-in Poland, was called) were directed mainly against the Trinity as
-a form of polytheism. Hence they received the name of Unitarians or
-anti-Trinitarians. There arose a swarm of sects who met at synodic
-conventions to find grounds of union, but separated with still further
-divisions and dissensions.
-
-Among the Unitarians, or disbelievers in the Trinity, were some who
-partially approached Judaism, rejecting the veneration of Jesus as
-a divine person. They were scoffed at by their various opponents as
-"Half-Jews" (semi-judaizantes). To the strictest sect of Unitarians
-in Poland belonged Simon Budny, of Masovia, a Calvinist priest, who
-founded a sect of his own, the Budnians. He died after 1584. He
-possessed more learning than the other founders of sects, and also
-had a slight knowledge of Hebrew, which he had probably learned from
-Jews. Simon Budny made himself famous by his simple translation of the
-Old and the New Testament into Polish (published at Zaslaw, 1572).
-His intercourse with Jews is shown by his respect for the universally
-despised Talmud.
-
-Although the movement of religious reform in Poland, in spite of
-the frequent synods, disputations, and protests, did not penetrate
-very deep, it was not without effect upon the Jews. They were fond
-of entering into discussions with the leaders or adherents of the
-various sects, if not to convert them to Judaism, yet to show their
-own superiority in biblical knowledge. Conversations upon religion
-between Jews and "Dissenters" (as all Poles who had seceded from Roman
-Catholicism were called) were of frequent occurrence. A Unitarian,
-Martin Czechowic (born about 1530, died 1613), from Greater Poland, a
-man of confused intellect, who had passed through all the phases of the
-religious movements of the day, and who finally became a schismatic,
-rejected the baptism of infants, and maintained that a Christian could
-not undertake any office of state. This Martin Czechowic had written a
-work to refute the objections of the Jews to the Messianic claims of
-Jesus, and had fought against the continued obligatoriness of Judaism
-with old and rusty weapons. A Rabbanite Jew, Jacob of Belzyce, in
-Lublin (1581), wrote a refutation, so effective that Czechowic found
-himself compelled to justify his thesis in a rejoinder.
-
-Isaac ben Abraham Troki, of Troki, near Wilna (born 1533, died 1594),
-a Karaite, engaged still more actively than Jacob of Belzyce in
-disputations with the adherents of Polish and Lithuanian sects. He had
-access to nobles, princes of the church, and other Christian circles,
-was deeply acquainted with the Bible, well read in the New Testament,
-and in the different polemical, religious writings of his day, and
-thus able to produce thoroughly accurate statements. Shortly before
-his death (1593) Isaac Troki collected the results of his religious
-conversations in a work that was subsequently to serve as the arsenal
-for destructive weapons against Christianity. He entitled his work "The
-Strengthening of Faith." He not merely answered the numerous attacks
-made upon Judaism by Christians, but carried the war into the camp of
-Christianity. With great skill and thorough knowledge of his subject,
-he brought into prominence the contradictions and untenable assertions
-in the Gospels and other original Christian documents. It is the only
-book by a Karaite author worth reading. It certainly does not contain
-anything specially new; all brought forward in defense of Judaism and
-against Christianity had been far better said by Spanish authors of a
-previous period, especially by the talented Profiat Duran. Yet Troki's
-work had more success, for books have a fate of their own. This book
-was translated into Spanish, Latin, German, and French, and gained
-still greater fame from the attacks upon it by Christians. One of the
-dukes of Orleans undertook to refute the onslaught of this Polish Jew
-upon Christianity. And when Reason, awakened and strengthened, applied
-the lever to shake the foundations of Christianity and demolish the
-whole superstructure, it was to this store-chamber that she turned for
-her implements.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-SETTLEMENT OF JEWS IN HOLLAND.--FEEBLE ATTEMPTS AT ENFRANCHISEMENT.
-
- Revival of Catholicism--Decay in European Culture--
- Ill-treatment of Jews in Berlin--Emperor Rudolph II of
- Austria--Diminution in the Numbers of Italian Jews--Pope
- Gregory XIII--Confiscation of Copies of the Talmud--Vigorous
- Attempts at the Conversion of Jews--Pope Sixtus V--The Jewish
- Physician, David de Pomis--Renewal of Persecution by Clement
- VIII--Expulsion from Various Italian States--The Censors
- and the Talmud--The Jews of Ferrara--Settlement of Jews in
- Holland--Samuel Pallache--Jacob Tirado and the Marranos in
- Amsterdam--Tolerant Treatment--The Poet, David Jesurun--Moses
- Uri--Hebrew Printing in Amsterdam.
-
-1593-1618 C.E.
-
-
-The free spirit of the nations of Europe, which at the beginning of
-the century had taken so bold a flight, had broken the ancient bonds
-in which the church had long held minds captive, and cast the blight
-of doubt on the hitherto sacred authority of the wearer of the Roman
-purple--this spirit, which promised to bring the regeneration of
-civilized humanity and political freedom, seemed in the second half
-of the century to be utterly cast down. The papacy, or Catholicism,
-had recovered from its first feeling of terror, and collected itself.
-Extraordinarily strengthened by the council of Trent, it forged new
-chains to which the nations that had remained faithful, willingly
-submitted. The order of the Jesuits, restless and indefatigable
-champions, who not only disarmed their opponents, but even drew them
-over to their own ranks, had already reconquered much lost ground
-by their widespread plots, and had conceived new measures in order
-to win back with double interest what they had lost. Italy, a great
-part of southern Germany and the Austrian provinces, France--after
-long civil wars and convulsions, after the blood-stained eve of St.
-Bartholomew, and the murder of two kings--as also to a great extent
-Poland and Lithuania, had once more become Catholic, as fanatically
-Catholic, too, as Spain and Portugal, the blazing hells of the
-Inquisition. In Lutheran and reformed Germany another papacy had
-gained the mastery, a papacy of dry formulas of belief, and slavery
-to the letter of the law. The Byzantine quarrel about shadowy dogmas
-and meaningless words divided the evangelical communities into as many
-sects and subsidiary sects as there were points of discussion, and had
-a harmful influence upon political development. Classical philology, at
-first liberalizing and suggestive, was neglected, owing to excessive
-belief in the Bible by the one party and the sway of authority
-over the other, and had degenerated into fanciful dilettanteism or
-learned lumber. The study of the Hebrew language, which for a time
-had kindled great enthusiasm, was similarly debased, or only carried
-on superficially for the purposes of ecclesiastical wrangling. The
-knowledge of Hebrew had always been considered, at any rate was now
-thought, in orthodox Catholic society, to be actual heresy. And the
-same was still truer of rabbinical literature. The learned Spanish
-theologian, Arias Montano, published the first complete polyglot Bible
-in Antwerp, at the expense of Philip II. He also compiled grammars and
-dictionaries of the Hebrew and cognate languages, in which regard was
-had to the older Jewish expositors. He, the favorite of Philip II, who
-had himself drawn up a list of heretical books, was accused by the
-Jesuits and the Inquisition of favoring heresy, suspected of secret
-conversion to Judaism, and stigmatized as a rabbi. Thus, Europe seemed
-to be actually making a retrograde movement, only with this distinction
---what had formerly been cheery, naive credulity now became sinister,
-aggressive fanaticism.
-
-Refined ecclesiasticism, resulting in the tension which subsequently
-relieved itself in the general destructiveness of the Thirty Years'
-War, made the sojourn of Jews, both in Catholic and Protestant
-countries, a continual torture. Luther's followers in Germany forgot
-what Luther had so earnestly uttered in their favor, only remembering
-the hateful things of which, in his bitterness, he had accused them.
-The Jews of Berlin and the province of Brandenburg, for instance, had
-the sad alternative put before them of being baptized or expelled. A
-Jewish financier, the physician Lippold, favorite of Elector Joachim
-II, and his right hand in his corrupt, financial schemes, examined and
-tortured on the rack by Joachim's successor, John George, admitted,
-though afterwards recanting, that he had poisoned his benefactor. The
-Jews were driven also out of Brunswick by Duke Henry Julius. Catholic
-nations and princes had no cause to reproach their Protestant opponents
-with toleration or humanity in regard to Jews.
-
-It was, in some respects, fortunate for the Jews of Germany and
-Austria, that the reigning emperor, Rudolph II, although a pupil of
-the Jesuits, educated in a country where the fires of the stake were
-always smoking, and a deadly enemy of the Protestants, was not greatly
-prejudiced against Jews. Weak and vacillating, he was not able to
-check the persecutions directed against them, but at least he did not
-encourage them. He issued an edict to one bishop (of Wuerzburg) that the
-Jews should not be deprived of their privileges, and to another (of
-Passau) that they should not be tortured on the rack. But, in order not
-to be decried by his contemporaries or by posterity as a benefactor of
-Jews, he not only maintained the heavy taxation of Jews in his crown
-land, Bohemia, but from time to time increased it. He also ordered the
-Jews to be expelled from the archduchy of Austria within six months.
-
-In this position, robbed by Catholics and Lutherans alike, trampled
-down or driven into misery, barely protected by the emperor, but
-taxed under the pretense of enjoying this protection, the ruin and
-degradation of German Jews reached ever lower depths. They were so
-sorely troubled by the cares of the moment, that they neglected the
-study of the Talmud, once their spiritual food.
-
-The Jews of Italy fared even worse at this time, and they, too, sank
-into misery and decay. Italy was the principal seat of the malicious
-and inexorable, ecclesiastical reaction, animated with the thought to
-annihilate the opponents of Catholicism from the face of the earth. The
-torch of civil war was hurled from the Vatican into Germany, France,
-and the Netherlands. And as the Jews, from the time of Paul IV and Pius
-V, had been upon the list of heretics, or foes of the church, their
-lot was not to be envied. With the loss of their independence, their
-numbers also decreased. There were no Jews living in southern Italy.
-In northern Italy, the largest communities, those of Venice and Rome,
-numbered only between 1,000 and 2,000 souls; the community in Mantua
-had only 1,844; and in the whole of the district of Cremona, Lodi,
-Pavia, Alessandria, and Casalmaggiore, there dwelt only 889 Jews. Pius
-V, by nature a sinister ecclesiastic delighting in persecution, who
-treated Jews as the cursed children of Ham, was succeeded by Gregory
-XIII (1572-1585), who had been skillfully trained to fanaticism by
-the Jesuits and the Theatine monks. As regards Jews, Gregory was a
-most consistent follower of the cruelty of his predecessor. In spite
-of repeated warnings, there were still many Christians in Italy, who,
-in their blindness, preferred Jewish physicians of proved excellence,
-such as David de Pomis, or Elias Montalto, to Christian charlatans.
-Gregory was desirous of prohibiting their employment. He renewed the
-old canonical law that Christian patients were not to be treated
-by Jewish physicians; not only visiting Christians who transgressed
-this command with severe penalties, but also punishing the Jewish
-physicians if they ventured to prolong the life of a Christian patient,
-or even alleviate his sufferings. His severity succeeded. Another of
-Gregory's edicts referred not to one profession, but to the Jewish race
-in general. He placed them under the Argus eye of the Inquisition.
-If any of them maintained or taught what was heretical, _i.e._,
-obnoxious to the church; if he held intercourse with a heretic or an
-apostate, helped him or showed him sympathy, he was to be summoned by
-the Inquisition, and according to its verdict was to be condemned to
-confiscation of his property, the punishment of the galleys, or even
-sentenced to death. If, then, a refugee Marrano from Spain or Portugal
-was caught in Italy, and it was proved that a brother Jew had given him
-food or shelter, both might expect to be seized by the inexorable arm
-of the Inquisition of Italy. The anger of Pope Gregory XIII was poured
-forth also against the Talmud. The Jews were once more admonished to
-deliver up the Talmud and other works suspected of being hostile to the
-church. The Inquisitors and other spiritual authorities were appointed
-to institute search for these books everywhere. Anyone subsequently
-found in possession of them, even after declaring that the offending
-passages had been expunged, was rendered liable to severe punishment.
-Pope Gregory XIII's most zealous effort was directed to the conversion
-of Jews. This pope, who most heartily encouraged the Jesuits and their
-proselytizing school of thought, endowed a propagandist seminary of all
-nations--the curriculum included twenty-five languages--called the
-"Collegium Germanicum," issued a decree that on Sabbaths and holy days
-Christian preachers should deliver discourses upon Christian doctrine
-in the synagogues, if possible in Hebrew, and that Jews of both
-sexes, over twelve years of age, at least a third of the community,
-must attend these sermons. The Catholic princes were exhorted to
-support this vigorous attempt at conversion. Thus an ordinance of
-a half-mad, schismatic pope, Benedict XIII, issued in a moment of
-passionate excitement, was sanctioned, and even exaggerated in cold
-blood by the head of the united Catholic church, thereby exercising
-religious compulsion not very different from the act of Antiochus
-Epiphanes in dedicating the Temple of the one true God to Jupiter. It
-is characteristic of the views then prevailing, that the Jews were to
-provide salaries for the preachers, in return for the violence done
-their consciences! Like his predecessor, Pius V, Gregory spared no
-means to win over the Jews. Many allowed themselves to be converted
-either from fear or for their advantage; for Gregory's edicts did not
-remain a dead letter, but were carried out with all strictness and
-severity. The consequence was that many Jews left Rome.
-
-The condition of the Jews in Rome was apparently altered under
-Gregory's successor, Sixtus V (1585-1590), who rose from the position
-of a swine-herd to the office of the shepherd of Catholic Christendom,
-and whose dauntless energy in the government of the Papal States
-stamped him as an original type of character. He allowed Jews to be
-around him, and harbored Lopez, a Jewish refugee from Portugal, who
-made various suggestions as to the improvement of the finances. He went
-still further; he issued a bull (October 22d, 1586), which did away
-with almost all the restrictions made by his predecessors. Sixtus not
-merely granted Jews permission to dwell in all the cities of the Papal
-States, but also allowed them to have intercourse with Christians and
-employ them as assistants in business. He protected their religious
-freedom by special provisions, and extended to them an amnesty for
-past offenses, _i.e._, for condemnations on account of the possession
-of religious books. Moreover, he forbade the Knights of Malta to make
-slaves of Jews traveling by sea from Europe to the Levant, or _vice
-versa_, a practice to which these consecrated champions of God had
-hitherto been addicted. Pope Sixtus knew how to secure obedience to
-his command when it became law, and the Jews previously expelled now
-returned to the papal dominions. Under him the Jewish community at
-Rome numbered two hundred members. Finally he removed the prohibition
-which prevented Jewish physicians from attending Christian patients.
-The compulsory services instituted by his predecessor were the only
-ordinances that Sixtus V allowed to remain.
-
-The permission, so important at that time, for Jewish physicians to
-have access to Christian patients, was probably gained for himself
-and his colleagues, by the then celebrated physician, David de Pomis
-(born 1525, died 1588). With medical knowledge he combined linguistic
-acquirements, and familiarity with Hebrew and classical literature,
-writing both Hebrew and Latin with elegance. In the course of his
-life he felt keenly the changes in the papal policy. He lost all his
-property through the hostile decrees of Paul IV, was kindly treated by
-Pius IV, and allowed by way of exception to practice among Christians
-in consequence of a splendid Latin discourse delivered before the pope
-and the college of cardinals. But he was again subjected to irritating
-restrictions by Pius V, and had to employ his skill in the service
-of petty, capricious nobles. To dispel the unconquerable prejudices
-against Jews, particularly against Jewish physicians, De Pomis wrote a
-Latin work, entitled "The Hebrew Physician," which affords favorable
-testimony to his noble mind and extensive culture. With considerable
-eloquence De Pomis maintained that the Jew was bound by his religion
-to love the Christian as his brother, and that a Jewish physician, far
-from wishing to do harm to his Christian patient, was wont to treat
-him with the utmost care and solicitude. He enumerated various Hebrew
-physicians who had attended princes of the church, cardinals and popes,
-had restored them to health, and had received distinctions from them
-and from cities. In conclusion, De Pomis adduced some proverbs from
-the Talmud in a Latin translation, to show that this much-calumniated
-book was not so harmful and corrupt as enemies of the Jews asserted.
-This apology for Judaism and Jewish physicians, dedicated to Prince
-Francesco Maria of Urbino, the elegant Latin style of which was highly
-praised by an experienced critic of the time, appears to have made an
-impression upon Pope Sixtus. De Pomis must certainly have been intimate
-with him, as he was allowed to dedicate to him his second important
-literary work, a dictionary of the Talmud in three languages.
-
-The pope severely punished a Christian Shylock, because he claimed
-a pound of flesh from a Roman Jew as the result of a wager. This
-Christian, named Seche, had wagered with a Jew, named Ceneda, that
-St. Domingo would be conquered, and on winning his bet he claimed
-the penalty. On hearing of this, Sixtus condemned him to death, but
-afterwards mitigated the punishment to banishment, and allotted
-the same fate to Ceneda for wagering his body, the property of his
-sovereign.
-
-The favorable attitude of Sixtus towards Jews encouraged them in the
-hope--to them a matter of conscience, of life itself--that the
-prohibition directed against the Talmud and the Hebrew Scriptures would
-be removed forever. Under the last two popes no copies of the Talmud
-had been allowed to appear without causing the possessor to incur the
-dangers of the watchful Inquisition. Nor was the possession of other
-perfectly harmless Hebrew works without risk, for as the Inquisitors
-and clerical authorities did not in the least understand them, they
-condemned all without exception as inimical to the church, a category
-which afforded ample room for denunciation. Whether the possessor of
-a Hebrew book should be condemned to lose his property, or be sent
-to the galleys, depended, in the last instance, upon the decision of
-baptized Jews acquainted with rabbinical literature. To escape these
-annoyances the communities of Mantua, Ferrara, and Milan addressed a
-request to Sixtus V to allow the Jews to possess copies of the Talmud
-and other books, provided these works were previously expurgated of the
-passages objectionable to Christianity. They referred to the decision
-of Pope Pius IV that the Talmud could not be entirely condemned, but
-that it contained passages worthy of censure, which were to be struck
-out by the censor's marks. A Jewish delegate, Bezalel Masserano, had
-gone to Rome, provided with 2,000 scudi, in order to lay the request
-of the Jews at the feet of his Holiness. It was granted in the bull
-of October 22d, 1586. Sixtus allowed the reprinting of the Talmud and
-other writings, though only after censorship. For this purpose two
-commissions were appointed, in which baptized Jews were naturally
-included as experts. The Italian Jews began to rejoice at being allowed
-to possess even a mutilated Talmud. But scarcely had the commission
-arranged the conditions of the censorship (August 7th, 1590), when the
-wise pope died, and the undertaking, just begun, of reprinting the
-mutilated Talmud was at once discontinued.
-
-The regard paid Jews by Sixtus V arose not from any sentiment of
-justice, but from his passionate desire to amass treasure. "This pope
-bled Christians from the throat," says his biographer, "but he drew
-the blood of Jews from all their limbs." They often found themselves
-compelled to pay immense sums into the papal treasury.
-
-With Clement VIII, however (1592-1605), the system of intolerance,
-practiced by Paul IV, Pius V, and Gregory XIII, once more came into
-vogue. He repeated the edict of expulsion against the Jews in the Papal
-States (February 25th, 1593), and allowed them to dwell only in Rome,
-Ancona, and Avignon. If a Jew were caught in any other papal city, he
-was to expiate his offense by the loss of his property and the penalty
-of the galleys. Clement re-imposed the old restrictions upon the Jews
-in the three cities mentioned, forbidding them either to read or
-possess the Talmud and other rabbinical writings. The Jews, expelled
-from the Papal States, seem to have been received by Ferdinand, Duke of
-Tuscany, who assigned Pisa to them as a dwelling-place (July, 1593).
-He allowed them to possess books of every kind and of all languages,
-including the Talmud, but the copies first had to be expurgated
-according to the regulations of the commission instituted by Sixtus V.
-So great was the fanaticism of the apostolic throne that even noble
-princes, like Ferdinand de Medici, of Tuscany, and Vicenzo Gonzago,
-of Mantua, did not venture to relax it. Even in places where, as a
-favor, the Jews were allowed to possess expurgated books, they were
-exposed to all kinds of annoyances and extortions. They had to pay the
-censors, mostly baptized Jews, for the mutilation of these writings,
-nor were they assured that even then their books would not again be
-confiscated, and the owners punished, merely because some obnoxious
-word or other had remained unobliterated. Woe to those who rubbed out
-one of the censors' marks! To avoid being exposed to vexation, Jews
-themselves laid hands upon their sacred literature, and expunged not
-only everything that referred to idolatry, but also everything that
-glorified the Jewish race, or made mention of the Messiah and his
-future advent. As Italy, at that time, was the chief market for printed
-Hebrew works, the Jews in other countries received only mutilated
-copies, from which open or covert protests against Rome were completely
-obliterated.
-
-Expulsion of the Jews from all Italian cities was the order of the day
-in the reign of this pope. Thus the Jews were expelled (in the spring
-of 1597) from the Milan district, _i.e._, from the cities of Cremona,
-Pavia, Lodi, and others, to the number of about a thousand. They were
-forced to beg for shelter in Mantua, Modena, Reggio, Verona, and Padua.
-During their migrations, they were robbed by heartless Christians.
-The sword of the church hovered for a time also over the Jews in
-Ferrara, a town that had always been a safe refuge for them, and even
-for the new-Christians from Spain. The ducal race of De Este, whose
-representatives vied with the Medici in magnanimity and culture, had
-died out. The Jews of Ferrara felt themselves so identified with the
-fortunes of this princely house, that they offered public prayers in
-the synagogue on the occasion of the severe illness of the thoughtful
-Princess Leonore, whom two great poets have immortalized by placing her
-in the glorified heaven of poetry. She herself was a benefactress of
-Jews, and frequently protected them. But now the last representative
-of the race, Alfonso II, had died without heirs (1597), and, in
-opposition to his last wishes, Ferrara was incorporated into the Papal
-States by Clement VIII. The Jewish community, consisting chiefly of
-Marrano refugees, was prepared to endure banishment, as it could expect
-no mercy from this pope. They only asked Aldobrandini, the pope's
-relative, who had taken possession of Ferrara, to grant them a respite
-that they might make preparations for departure. As Aldobrandini saw
-that a great portion of the trade of the town was in the hands of
-Jews, he had sufficient consideration not to injure it, granted them
-permission to remain for five years, and had this decree carried out in
-spite of the fanatical wishes of Clement VIII, who had hoped to banish
-them. No fugitive new-Christian, however, could now stop in Ferrara
-without falling into the clutches of the bloody Inquisition. Thus the
-last refuge in Italy for this class of Jews was destroyed, and there
-was no longer any place of safety for them in all Christendom.
-
-It seems providential that the Jewish race, which, at the end of the
-sixteenth century, had no longer a footing, properly speaking, in
-Europe or Asia, under Christianity or Islam, should have taken firm
-root in the empire of their obstinate foe, Philip II, of Spain, and
-should have been able from that vantage ground to gain a position
-of equality. Indeed, in the chain of causation it was the bloody
-Inquisition itself which helped gain them freedom. Holland, a land
-wrung from the sea, became for the hunted victims of a horrible,
-refined fanaticism, a resting-place where they could settle down,
-and develop their national characteristics. But what changes and
-vicissitudes they had to undergo before this almost undreamed of
-possibility could become reality! The northwest corner of Europe had
-hitherto been inhabited by only a few Jews. They suffered, as did
-their brethren, under the extravagances of excited fanaticism, were
-hunted down, and massacred at the time of the crusades and the Black
-Death, bearing all in silent obscurity and patience. When the country,
-under the name of the Netherlands, beneath the far-reaching scepter of
-Charles V, was united to Spain, the Spanish principle of hostility to
-Jews was transferred to it. The emperor issued command after command
-that the Jews in the cities of the Netherlands, small though their
-numbers were, should be expelled. Every citizen was required to make
-known to the royal officers the presence of Jews contrary to law. In
-consequence of the introduction of the Inquisition into Portugal,
-several Jewish families had betaken themselves, with all their wealth,
-industry, and skill, to the flourishing cities of the Netherlands,
-Brussels, Antwerp, and Ghent, in order to lead a religious life secure
-from danger. The severe edict of Charles V, and his repeated command
-not to allow their presence, extended to them. The magistrates duly
-fulfilled the commands of their ruler in this matter, because they
-feared that the presence of new-Christians would cause the Inquisition
-to be introduced--an evil which seemed to their anxious hearts to
-forebode great danger for themselves.
-
-The people of the Netherlands could not escape the Inquisition.
-Although an appendage of Spain, were they not surrounded by Lutheran
-heretics, and did not these dwell in their very midst? So this
-institution was to be introduced among them also. This was one
-of the main causes of the revolt of the Netherlands, and of that
-long-continued war, so small in its beginnings, and so great in its
-results, that rendered powerless the might of Spain, and raised the
-tiny land of Holland to a power of almost the first rank. It seemed as
-if from every head that Alva struck off in the Netherlands, hundreds
-of others sprang, as from the Hydra of old. It was a matter of course
-that in this sanguinary struggle which transformed the whole land into
-an arena of battle, there was no place for Jews. Upon the advice of
-Arnheim and Zuetphen, Alva had issued an edict that if Jews were found
-there, they were to be kept in custody until such time as he should
-pass judgment upon them. It was well known what this meant from his
-mouth.
-
-The Portuguese Marranos, or new-Christians, who, even in the third
-generation, could not forget, and would not repudiate, their Jewish
-descent, turned their eyes towards the Netherlands, now wrestling for
-freedom, the more as the Inquisition was raging more furiously than
-ever, and dragging them to the dungeon or the stake. Since the first
-symptom of the decline of Spain's fortunes, since the collapse of the
-invincible Armada, by means of which Philip II had thought to carry
-the chains of actual and spiritual bondage not only to England, but,
-if possible, to the ends of the earth, there had arisen in the hearts
-of the pseudo-Christians, under the iron rule of this tyrant, an eager
-desire for freedom. As Italy was closed to them by the persecuting
-policy of the reactionary popes, their only hope of refuge was in the
-Netherlands.
-
-An eminent Jew, Samuel Pallache, sent by the king of Morocco as
-consul to the Netherlands (about 1591), proposed to the magistrate
-of Middelburg, in the province of Zealand, to receive the Portuguese
-Marranos, and allow them religious freedom. In return, they would
-develop the city into a flourishing, commercial center by means of
-their wealth. The wise city fathers would willingly have agreed to
-this plan, but the war for religion and freedom, so passionately waged
-against the two-fold despotism of Spain, had made even the reformed
-preachers fanatical and intolerant. They were opposed to the admission
-of Jews into Zealand.
-
-But the Portuguese new-Christians did not abandon the idea of seeking
-security in the provinces of the Netherlands already freed from the
-Spanish yoke. They felt themselves drawn towards this republic by
-mighty bonds; they shared its fierce hatred against Spain with its
-thirst for human sacrifices, and against its fanatical king, Philip II.
-The great Protector, William of Orange, the soul of the struggle for
-independence, had uttered the idea of mutual toleration and friendly
-intercourse between different religious parties, creeds, and sects.
-Although this first germ of genuine humanity at first fell to the
-ground, the Marranos clung to it as affording hope of release from
-their daily torments. A courageous Marrano woman, Mayor Rodrigues,
-appears to have formed the plan of seeking a refuge for her family
-in Holland. She, her husband, Gaspar Lopes Homem, her two sons and
-two daughters, and several other members of this rich and respected
-family, were devotedly attached to Judaism, and weary of the pretense
-of following Christian customs, a pretense, after all, powerless to
-protect them from the horrors of the Inquisition. When a ship sailed
-from Portugal with a load of fugitive Marranos, under the leadership
-of one Jacob Tirado, Mayor Rodrigues intrusted to this vessel her
-charming and beautiful daughter, Maria Nunes, and also her son. The
-mother appears to have relied upon the magic of her daughter's charms;
-the extraordinary beauty of Maria Nunes was to serve as an aegis to
-these wanderers, surrounded by dangers on all sides, and secure to
-them a place of refuge. As a matter of fact, her beauty was successful
-in averting the first danger that threatened the party of refugees,
-consisting of ten persons, men, women and children. They were captured
-by an English ship making raids upon vessels sailing under the
-Spanish-Portuguese flag, and were taken to England. Maria Nunes so
-bewitched the captain, an English duke, that he offered her his hand,
-thinking that she belonged to the rank of the Portuguese grandees;
-but she refused this honorable offer, because she wished to live as
-a Jewess. The beauty of the fair Portuguese prisoner made so great a
-sensation in London, that the virgin queen, Elizabeth, was curious to
-make the acquaintance of this celebrated beauty, inaccessible even to
-the love of a duke. She invited her to an audience, and drove with her
-in an open carriage through the streets of the capital. Probably owing
-to the mediation of Maria Nunes, the fugitive Jews were allowed to
-leave England unharmed, and set sail for Holland. After enduring a most
-stormy voyage, they were able to make for the harbor of Emden, where,
-as in the rest of East Friesland, some few German Jews lived.
-
-As soon as the Marranos became aware, by Hebrew letters and other
-signs, of the presence of brethren in this city, Jacob Tirado, the most
-eminent among them repaired to Moses Uri Halevi, who had the reputation
-of being a learned man, and on whose house Hebrew characters had been
-noticed. He discovered to him his own and his companions' intention to
-give up pseudo-Christianity, and to be received fully and, if possible,
-immediately into Judaism. But Moses Uri had scruples about taking such
-a decisive course, the apparent conversion of Christians to Judaism, in
-a small town, where nothing could long remain hidden. He, therefore,
-advised the fugitives to betake themselves to Amsterdam, where greater
-toleration was enjoyed, and promised to come to them with his whole
-family, to remain with them, and instruct them in Jewish doctrines.
-Accordingly, the Marranos, led by Tirado, arrived at Amsterdam (April
-22d, 1593), sought an abode which would allow of their remaining
-together, and were received back into Judaism as soon as Moses Uri and
-his family came to them.
-
-Moses Uri and his son arranged a house of prayer for the Marranos, and
-officiated as conductors of the services. Great zeal was shown, not
-only by Jacob Tirado, but also by Samuel Pallache, the consul, and a
-Marrano poet, Jacob Israel Belmonte, come thither from Madeira, who
-depicted the tortures of the Inquisition in verse, giving his poem the
-appropriate title of "Job." The youthful community was strengthened in
-numbers and in standing by fresh arrivals. An English fleet, which,
-under the Earl of Essex, surprised the fortress of Cadiz, and inflicted
-serious injuries upon the Spaniards (in the summer of 1596), conveyed
-several Marranos to Holland, amongst them a man of great originality,
-not without importance for posterity. Alonso de Herrera was descended
-from Jewish and ancient Spanish families. His ancestor was the great
-Gonsalvo de Cordova, the conqueror of Naples for Spain. He himself was
-the Spanish resident in Cadiz, and on the capture of this city was
-taken prisoner by the English. On being liberated he went to Amsterdam,
-became a Jew, and adopted the name of Abraham de Herrera (wrongly
-called Irira).
-
-The Marranos in Amsterdam did not find the practice of their religion
-altogether easy. When this first Portuguese community was secretly
-celebrating its fourth Fast of Atonement (October, 1596), their
-Christian neighbors were surprised at the secret meeting of disguised
-figures in one house; they suspected treacherous assemblies of Catholic
-conspirators, and denounced them to the magistrates. Whilst the Jews
-were engaged in prayer, armed men suddenly rushed into the house,
-and spread terror amongst the assembled worshipers. As most of them,
-mindful of the cruelties of the Inquisition, and fearing a similar
-fate in Amsterdam, tried to save themselves by flight, the suspicions
-of the Amsterdam officials were increased. The latter searched for
-crucifixes and wafers, and led Moses Uri and his son, the leaders of
-the service, to prison. However, Jacob Tirado, who was able to make
-himself understood in the Latin language, succeeded in convincing the
-authorities that the assembly was not one of papists, but of Jews who
-had fled from the Moloch of the Inquisition. Moreover, that they had
-brought much wealth with them, and finally that they would induce many
-co-religionists to come from Spain and Portugal with their riches, and
-thus give an impulse to the trade of Amsterdam. Tirado's speech made
-a great impression. The prisoners were released, and the terrified
-Portuguese Jews were able to conclude the service of the Fast of
-Atonement. Now that their religion was made known, they ventured
-upon the step of petitioning the magistrate to allow them to build
-a synagogue in which to hold their religious services. After much
-consideration the request was granted. Jacob Tirado bought a site,
-and in 1598 built the first Jewish temple in the north of Europe,
-called the "House of Jacob" (Beth Jacob). It was consecrated amid the
-enthusiasm of the little community.
-
-The favorable news about the Marrano colonists, carried secretly to
-Spain and Portugal, afforded additional inducement to emigration.
-Mayor Rodrigues Homem, the first promoter of this course, also found
-an opportunity of escaping from Portugal and joining her beautiful
-daughter, Maria Nunes (about 1598). She brought her younger son and
-daughter with her; her husband had probably died before this time.
-Simultaneously, barely escaping the Inquisition, another eminent family
-arrived from Portugal, that of Franco Mendes, including the parents
-and two sons, Francisco Mendes Medeiros, a cultured literary man, who
-took the Hebrew name of Isaac, and Christoval Mendes Franco, rich and
-benevolent, who called himself Mordecai. Both played important parts in
-the Amsterdam community, but subsequently caused a division.
-
-Philip II lived to see the two races whom he had most savagely hated
-and persecuted, the Netherlanders and the Jews, in a measure join
-hands to destroy what he had created, for Holland derived advantage
-from the Jewish settlers from Portugal. Previously it had been one of
-the poorest states, and the bitter, destructive wars had made the land
-still poorer. The capital brought by the Marranos to Amsterdam was very
-acceptable, and benefited the whole country. The Dutch were now enabled
-to lay the foundations of their prosperity by taking the Indian trade
-out of the hands of the Portuguese, who had been connected with Spain
-in an unprofitable alliance. The capital of the fugitive Jews made
-it possible to found great transmarine companies and fit out trading
-expeditions, in which they participated. The connections, too, of the
-Portuguese Jews with their secret co-religionists in the Portuguese
-possessions in the Indies assisted the undertakings of Dutch merchants.
-
-Philip II died in September, 1598, a terrible warning to obstinate,
-unscrupulous despots. His body was covered with abscesses and
-vermin, which made him such an object of horror that his trembling
-servants approached him only with disgust. The great empire which he
-bequeathed to his feeble son, Philip III, was likewise diseased. It
-was succumbing to its infirmities, and no longer possessed influence
-in the councils of Europe. The reins of government were loosened, and
-thus the new-Christians found it still easier to escape the clutches of
-the Inquisition. They now had a goal to which to direct their steps.
-An extraordinary occurrence in Lisbon had excited the most lukewarm
-apostate Jews to return to Judaism. A Franciscan monk, Diogo de la
-Asumcao, of an ancient Christian family, had become convinced of
-the truth of Judaism and the falsity of Christianity by reading the
-Bible--Bible reading has its dangers--and had openly expressed
-his convictions to the other monks of his order. For what purpose had
-the Inquisition been instituted, if it were to let such crimes go
-unpunished? Diogo was thrown into a dungeon; but it was not necessary
-to extort confession, for he openly and without reservation admitted
-his offense, love for Judaism. The tribunal needed to put him to
-the rack only to induce him to denounce his accomplices, he having
-asserted that several of his fellow-monks shared his convictions.
-Certain learned theologians were charged to dissuade the apostate
-Franciscan from his belief, and remove so dark a stain from the order
-and Christendom in general; but in vain. Diogo remained true to his
-belief in the truth of Judaism. After he had spent about two years in
-the dungeons of the Inquisition, he was finally burnt alive at a solemn
-auto-da-fe in Lisbon, in the presence of the regent (August, 1603).
-
-The fact that a Christian by birth, a monk to boot, had suffered for
-the sake of Judaism, and had died steadfast in faith, made a powerful
-impression upon apostate Portuguese Jews, and impelled them to return
-publicly to the faith of their fathers. The Inquisition lost its
-terrors for them. They reverted to Judaism, without heeding whether
-or not they were rushing upon death. David Jesurun, a young poet, a
-favorite of the Muses since his childhood, on this account called
-"the little poet" by his acquaintances, celebrated the burning of the
-martyr, Diogo de la Asumcao, in a fiery Portuguese sonnet:
-
- "Thou wast the gold, buried in the dark vaults of the tribunal
- of blood;
- And even as gold is purified from dross by flames,
- So, too, by flames would'st thou be purified.
- Thou wast as the phoenix, renewing his life,
- Disdaining to remain the slave of death.
- Thou wast consumed in the fire.
- Only to rise again from thine ashes,
- A burnt-offering
- Brought to God in the flames.
- In heaven dost thou laugh at those who tortured thee;
- And no more art called Brother Diogo,
- But Golden Phoenix, Angel, Sacrifice."
-
-This eager young poet was fortunate enough to escape the Inquisition,
-and hastened to Amsterdam. He composed a powerful poem in Spanish on
-seeing this city, which seemed to him a new Jerusalem. Another young
-Marrano poet also reverted to Judaism through the tragic death of
-Diogo, the Franciscan. Paul de Pina, a man of some poetic talent, was
-inclined to religious enthusiasm, and was on the point of becoming
-a monk. This step caused great sorrow to his relative, Diego Gomez
-Lobato, at heart faithful to Judaism, and he wished to hinder him
-from apostasy. When he was about to make a journey to Italy, Diego,
-therefore, gave him a letter, addressed to the celebrated Jewish
-physician, Elias Montalto, known as Felix Montalto when professing
-Christianity. The letter was as follows: "Our cousin, Paul de Pina,
-is going to Rome to become a monk. Your Grace will do me the favor to
-dissuade him."
-
-If this letter had fallen into the hands of the Roman or Portuguese
-Inquisition, it would have cost both the writer and his correspondent
-their lives. Elias Montalto endeavored to dissuade young De Pina from
-his purpose and win him back to the religion of his fathers. He seems
-to have succeeded only in so far that De Pina abandoned his journey to
-Rome, went off to Brazil, and then returned to Lisbon. The martyrdom
-of Diogo de la Asumcao appears to have finally decided him against
-Christianity. He hastened to Amsterdam with the sad news (1604),
-became an eager convert to Judaism, and adopted the Hebrew name of
-Rohel Jesurun. He became a most enthusiastic Jew, an ornament to the
-Amsterdam community.
-
-The loyalty to Judaism manifested by the Portuguese Marranos regardless
-of consequences naturally swelled the numbers of the victims of the
-Inquisition. Not long afterwards, one hundred and fifty of them were
-thrown into gloomy dungeons, tortured, and forced to confess. Even
-the regent of Portugal hesitated to burn so large a number. Moreover,
-the new-Christian capitalists had a certain amount of power over the
-Spanish court, to which, since the union of the two kingdoms, Portugal
-now belonged. The court owed them large sums which it could not pay in
-consequence of the increasing poverty of both countries. The Marranos
-offered to release Philip III from this debt, and give in addition a
-present of 1,200,000 crusados (L120,000), if the imprisoned Jews were
-pardoned. They also spent 150,000 crusados to persuade the councilors
-to make the king grant this favor. Hence the court manifested an
-inclination to mercy, and applied to Pope Clement VIII to empower the
-Inquisition to deal mildly with the sinners on this occasion. The
-pope remembered, or was reminded, that his predecessors, Clement VII
-and Paul III, had granted absolution to Portuguese Marranos. He did
-the same, and issued a bull pardoning the imprisoned Jews (August
-23d, 1604). The Inquisition contented itself with the hypocritical
-repentance of its prisoners. Several hundred of them, clad in the garb
-of penitents, were led to the auto-da-fe at Lisbon (January 10th,
-1605), not, however, to mount the stake, but to make public confession
-of their guilt, and be condemned to deprivation of all civic rights.
-All, or a large proportion, of those set free, repaired to their new
-place of refuge. Among them was Joseph ben Israel, who had thrice
-suffered torture, and escaped with shattered health and the loss of his
-property. He took with him his son Manasseh--or whatever his name may
-have been as a pseudo-Christian--then a child, subsequently destined
-to fill a distinguished role in Jewish history.
-
-Moses Uri (born 1544, died 1620) at different times received into
-the Hebrew faith two hundred and forty-eight men, so greatly did the
-numbers of the community at Amsterdam increase. They sent to Salonica
-for a rabbi of Sephardic descent, by name Joseph Pardo, who well
-understood the character of the semi-Catholic members of the community.
-He put into their hands a book written in Spanish, Christian rather
-than Jewish in tone. The synagogue Beth Jacob, built by Tirado, no
-longer sufficed for the accommodation of its worshipers, and a new one
-had to be built in 1608, called "Neve Shalom." It was founded by Isaac
-Francisco Mendes Medeiros and his relatives. As the discoverers of a
-new country regard every step they take in it, every new path into
-which they strike out, and every person prominent in the enterprise, as
-important and worthy of remembrance, so the young Amsterdam community
-joyfully recorded everything that occurred in their midst at the
-commencement of their career.
-
-The arrival of Isaac Uziel (died in 1620) was a piece of good fortune
-for this unique community. Apparently of a family of refugees, this
-rabbi could thoroughly sympathize with his companions in misfortune at
-Amsterdam. He was a poet, grammarian, and mathematician, but, above
-all, a preacher of rare power and influence, the first who dared
-arouse, with his mighty voice, the consciences of his hearers, lulled
-to sleep by the practice of Catholic customs, and warn them not to
-believe that they had purchased indulgence or remission for their sins,
-follies, and vices, by religious observances thoughtlessly practiced.
-Isaac Uziel did not spare even the most respected and powerful in the
-community, although he thereby drew upon himself their hatred, which
-went so far as to cause a split; on the other hand, he gained devoted
-followers, who celebrated him in spirited verse.
-
-In this manner religious union was encouraged and faith strengthened
-among the Portuguese fugitives, who had so degenerated in religious
-matters. But as yet no arrangements had been made for the proper burial
-of their dead. They were compelled to bury them far away from the city,
-at Groede, in northern Holland. By the endeavors of the leading members
-of the community, they succeeded in obtaining a burial-ground, not too
-far from Amsterdam, in Ouderkerk, near Muiderberg (in April, 1614), at
-which they rejoiced greatly. The first person buried there was Manuel
-Pimentel, or, by his Jewish name, Isaac Abenacar, called "king of
-players" by the French king, Henry IV, who was in the habit of playing
-with him. Two years later, the body of an eminent and noble man,
-Elias Felice Montalto, was brought from far off to be buried in this
-peaceful spot. He had formerly professed Christianity, but afterwards
-became a faithful Jew, was a clever physician and elegant author, and
-lived in Livorno, Venice, and finally in Paris as private physician to
-Queen Maria de Medici. He died in Tours while on a journey with the
-French court, on February 16th, 1616. The queen caused his body to be
-embalmed, and taken to the cemetery at Ouderkerk, accompanied by his
-son, his uncle, and his disciple, Saul Morteira.
-
-The Jews of Amsterdam were long compelled to pay a tax, for every
-corpse, to the churches past which the body was carried. On the whole,
-they were at first not tolerated officially, their presence was only
-connived at. They were distrusted as Catholic spies in the service of
-Spain, plotting treason disguised as Jews. Even when the authorities
-and the population in general had become convinced of their genuine
-hatred of Spain and Portugal, they were still far from being recognized
-and tolerated as an independent, religious body. For a short time
-the synagogues were closed, and public worship prohibited. Jewish
-refugees from the Spanish peninsula, on arriving in Havre, were thrown
-into prison. This intolerance in the country destined to be the first
-where religious freedom was to raise its temple, was chiefly caused
-by the passionate conflict between two parties of Reformers--the
-Remonstrants and Contra-Remonstrants. The former were more gentle in
-their exposition and practical application of Christianity than their
-opponents, the gloomy Calvinists, Dutch Independents. In Amsterdam the
-latter party predominated and persecuted their opponents, considered
-secret, treacherous adherents of Spain. Although the Remonstrants had
-cause to try to effect toleration for all sects, it was they who came
-forward as the accusers of the Jews. They complained to the chief
-magistrate of Amsterdam that all kinds of sects, even Jews, were
-tolerated in the capital of Holland, they being the sole exception.
-
-The governor, Prince Maurice of Orange, was certainly favorable to
-Jews, but he could do nothing against the spirit of intolerance, and
-the independence of the cities and states. Consequently, even in
-Holland the Jewish question came up for discussion, and a commission
-was appointed for its settlement. Finally it was decided (March 17th,
-1615) that every city, as in the case of Amsterdam, could issue a
-special regulation about Jews, either to tolerate them, or to expel
-them; but in those cities where they were admitted, they were not
-to be forced to wear a badge. Upon the repeated complaints of the
-Remonstrants, the burgomaster, Reinier Pauw, laid before the council
-(October 15th, 1619) the question as to what was to be done in the case
-of the numerous fugitive Portuguese Jews who had intermarried with the
-daughters of the land, thereby causing great scandal and annoyance.
-Hereupon it was decided (November 8th), that intercourse between Jews
-and Christian women, even prostitutes, was to be strictly forbidden. On
-the other hand, permission was granted to Jews freely to acknowledge
-their religion.
-
-As Amsterdam was not so wealthy as it afterwards became, it could not
-do without Jews, who had transferred to it their riches and their
-knowledge of affairs. The old-established prejudices against them
-disappeared more and more upon closer acquaintance. The Jews from
-Portugal betrayed neither by their cultured language, their demeanor,
-nor their manners, that they belonged to a despised caste; on the
-contrary, their carriage was that of people of rank, with whom it was
-an honor for many a Christian burgher to be acquainted. They were,
-therefore, treated with a certain amount of consideration. Their number
-soon increased to four hundred families, with three hundred houses
-in the city, and before long, a Hebrew printing press was set up in
-Amsterdam, without fear of the Argus eye of the censor.
-
-The prosperity of Amsterdam, caused by the influx of Portuguese Jews,
-excited the envy of many Christian princes, and they invited the Jews
-into their dominions. Christian IV, king of Denmark, addressed a letter
-to the Jewish Council of Amsterdam (November 25th, 1622), asking them
-to encourage some of their members to settle in his state. He promised
-them freedom of worship, and other favorable privileges. The Duke of
-Savoy invited Portuguese Jews to come to Nice, and the Duke of Modena
-offered them the right of residence in Reggio, both granting them
-extensive privileges. Thus, in the midst of the gloomy persecution
-of Christendom, whose two religious factions were drawing the sword
-against each other in the Thirty Years' War, the Jews found pleasant
-little oases, as it were, from which they could recover their lost
-liberty, and gradually raise themselves from their heavy bondage.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX.
-
-THE DUTCH JERUSALEM AND THE THIRTY YEARS' WAR.
-
- The Amsterdam Jewish Community--Its Wealth, Culture, and
- Honored Position--Zacuto Lusitano--Internal Dissensions--The
- Talmud Torah School--Saul Morteira, Isaac Aboab, and Manasseh
- ben Israel--The Portuguese Congregation in Hamburg--The First
- Synagogue--Lutheran Intolerance--John Miller--Jewish Colony
- in Brazil--The Chief Communities in Germany--Persecution in
- Frankfort--Dr. Chemnitz--The Vienna Congregation--Lipmann
- Heller--Ferdinand II's Zeal for the Conversion of Jews--
- Influence of the Thirty Years' War on the Fortunes of the Jews.
-
-1618-1648 C.E.
-
-
-The Jewish race during its dispersion of nearly two thousand years
-may fitly be compared to a polyp. Though it was often wounded and cut
-to pieces, the parts severed from the whole did not die, but began
-an independent existence, developed organically, and formed a new
-rootstock. Driven from their original Palestinian home, the scattered
-members of this peculiar national organism assembled on the banks of
-the Euphrates and Tigris and in the palm district of Arabia. Doomed to
-ruin there, they emigrated to Spain with the Arabs, the most cultured
-people of the Middle Ages, and became the teachers of Europe, then
-plunged in barbarism. Expelled thence, weakened in heart and numbers,
-they proceeded eastwards, and, as again they found no resting-place,
-they settled in the north, always following advancing civilization.
-The admission of Jews to Holland was the first quivering dawn of a
-bright day after dense gloom. Amsterdam, the northern Venice, in the
-beginning of the seventeenth century, had become a new center for
-Jews; they rightly named it their new, great Jerusalem. In time this
-city became an ark of refuge for the Jewish race in the new deluge.
-With every trial conducted by the Inquisition in Spain and Portugal on
-account of the Judaizing practices of the Marranos, with every burning
-pile set ablaze for convicted or suspected persons, the numbers of the
-Amsterdam community increased, as if the fanatics aimed at depopulating
-and impoverishing the Catholic countries to render the heretical states
-of the Netherlands populous and wealthy. The Amsterdam Portuguese
-community, consisting of more than four hundred members, already
-possessed three hundred stately houses and palaces in this city, raised
-by them to a flourishing seat of commerce. Their capital enabled them
-to carry on trade, for the most part on a large scale, and they were
-interested in the East and West India Companies, or conducted banking
-houses. But to usury, which made the Jews of other countries so hated,
-they were sworn foes. The synagogue dues imposed upon themselves give
-an approximate idea of the extent of their capital and trade. For every
-pound of goods exported or imported by them they were accustomed to
-pay a doit, and these taxes, exclusive of those on the receipts of
-merchants interested in trading companies, amounted to 12,000 francs
-annually.
-
-Not on account of their wealth alone did they occupy a distinguished
-position in the new Batavian seat of commerce. The immigrant Marranos
-belonged for the most part to the educated class; in Spain or Portugal,
-their unnatural mother country, they had occupied positions as
-physicians, lawyers, government officials, officers, or clergymen,
-and were familiar with the Latin language and literature no less than
-with _belles-lettres_, and were accustomed to the usages of society.
-In the Netherlands, then the most civilized part of Europe, humanistic
-culture was in itself a recommendation. Hence, in Holland, cultivated
-Jews had intercourse with educated Christians on terms of equality,
-and obliterated the prejudices against the Jewish race. Some of them
-obtained a European reputation, and were connected with personages
-of high rank. Abraham Zacuto Lusitano (born 1576, died 1642),
-great-grandson of Zacuto, the historian and astronomer, was one of the
-most celebrated physicians of his time. He corresponded with Frederick,
-prince of the Palatinate, and his learned wife, the unfortunate couple
-that occupied the throne of Bohemia for a brief space, and was the
-cause of the Thirty Years' War. Zacuto's praise was sounded in poetry
-and prose by Christian as well as Jewish professional brethren. The
-Stadtholders of the Netherlands, princes of the house of Orange-Nassau,
-Maurice, Henry, and William II, like the founder of their race, William
-I, were well disposed towards Jews, and treated them as citizens with
-full rights. Even the Spanish and Portuguese kings, the persecutors of
-the Marranos in their own countries, condescended to show respect to
-the descendants of their hunted victims, to confer appointments upon
-them, and to intrust them with consular functions for their states.
-
-The attachment of the Amsterdam Jews to their re-adopted religion,
-purchased with so many dangers, was deep, and was renewed at every
-accession of fresh fugitives, and every report of the martyrdom of
-their brethren on the burning pile of the Inquisition. This devotedness
-was reflected in their conduct, and embodied in verses composed in the
-language of their persecutors.
-
-Paul de Pina, or Reuel Jesurun, the poet, who had once been on the
-point of becoming a monk, composed for a sacred festival part songs
-in Portuguese, performed by seven youths to do honor to the first
-synagogue (Beth-Jacob) in 1624. The mountains of the Holy Land, Sinai,
-Hor, Nebo, Gerisim, Carmel, and Zethim (Mount of Olives), in melodious
-verses celebrated the excellence of the Jewish religion, the Jewish
-Law, and the Jewish people. They praised the thousand merciful ways in
-which God had led His people from the earliest times to the present.
-The unity of God, the holiness of the Law, and the expectations of the
-Messianic age of grace, the more deeply felt by the Sephardic Marranos
-because they were newly acquired and dearly gained convictions--these
-were the inexhaustible themes of their poetry. But in the background
-of the splendid picture there always lowered the dreadful dungeon, the
-priests of Moloch, and the blazing flames of the Inquisition.
-
-In this mood, exalted by the recollection of sufferings and torture
-endured, the members of the Amsterdam community, with full heart and
-bountiful hand, founded benevolent institutions of every description,
-orphan asylums, benevolent societies (brotherhoods), and hospitals,
-such as were not in existence in any of the older communities. They
-had the means and the disposition. Their piety was shown in charity
-and generosity. But, exalted though their mood was, they were men with
-passions, and dissensions arose in the young community. Many members,
-born and brought up in Catholicism, brought with them and retained
-their Catholic views and customs; they thought that they could combine
-them with Judaism. "Can one carry coals in his bosom without singeing
-his clothes?" From childhood the Marranos had heard and seen that
-one is allowed to sin, if from time to time he is reconciled with
-the church. Catholic priests of all ranks were at hand to effect the
-reconciliation, and by ecclesiastical means ward off future punishment
-from the sinner. In the eyes of most Marranos, the rites and ceremonies
-of Judaism took the place of the Catholic sacraments, and the rabbis
-of father-confessors. They believed that he who conscientiously
-observes Jewish rites, and in addition does a few other things, may
-yield to his desires without forfeiting his soul's welfare. At any
-rate, the rabbis could give him absolution. Hence the Marranos led a
-life far from perfect, especially in point of chastity. The first two
-rabbis of the Amsterdam community, Joseph Pardo and Judah Vega, in
-consideration of the circumstances were indulgent to these weaknesses
-and shortcomings. But the third, Isaac Uziel, did not restrain himself;
-with inexorable rigor he scourged the evil habits of semi-Jews and
-semi-Catholics from the pulpit. This severity wounded the attacked,
-but, instead of mending their ways, they were angry with the preacher,
-and several left the community and the synagogue, and combined to found
-a new one (the third) in 1618. At the head of the seceders was David
-Osorio; possibly he felt most deeply wounded by Uziel's severe sermons.
-For the new synagogue (Beth Israel) which the seceders erected, they
-chose David Pardo, the son of Joseph Pardo, as rabbi and preacher. He
-defended the acceptance of this office in the new body, founded to some
-extent in defiance of Isaac Uziel, by alleging that he wished to lessen
-dissension. However, the tension lasted for twenty years (1618-1639).
-
-Meanwhile German Jews, whom the ravages of the Thirty Years' War had
-driven out of their Ghettos, sought the asylum of Amsterdam, and were
-admitted to its shelter. If the Amsterdam Council had at first merely
-connived at the immigration and settlement of Jews, at a later period
-it decidedly furthered their admission, because it perceived the
-important advantage which they brought the state. The immigrant German
-Jews naturally could not unite closely with the Portuguese community,
-because they differed, not only in language, but also in demeanor and
-manners. A wide chasm divided the Portuguese and the Germans of the
-same race and religion from each other. The former haughtily looked
-down upon the latter as semi-barbarians, and the latter did not
-regard the former as genuine Jews. As soon as a sufficient number
-had assembled, the German Jews formed a synagogue, with a rabbi of
-their own. Their first chief was Moses Weil. The breach within the
-Portuguese community was painfully felt. Jacob Curiel, a distinguished
-man, afterwards resident of the Portuguese court in Hamburg, by the
-greatest exertions brought about a reconciliation, and not till the
-union of the three synagogues in one single corporate body, in April,
-1639, did the Portuguese community, by the harmonious co-operation of
-its powers, stand forth in all its splendor, and surpass all its elder
-sisters in the three divisions of the globe. The Amsterdam community
-in some points resembled the ancient Alexandrian Jewish congregation.
-Like the latter, it possessed great wealth, cultivation, and a certain
-distinction of character; but, like it, suffered from insufficient
-knowledge of Jewish religious and scientific literature. Nearly all
-Marrano members had to commence to learn Hebrew in advanced age!
-
-On uniting the three communities, for which statutes were passed,
-the representatives took pains to obviate this ignorance of Hebrew.
-They founded an institute (Talmud Torah) in which children and youths
-might have instruction in the useful branches of Jewish theology. It
-was, perhaps, the first graded institution of the kind among Jews. It
-consisted, at first, of seven classes. Students could be conducted
-from the lowest step, the Hebrew alphabet, to the highest rung of the
-Talmud. It was at once an elementary school and a college for higher
-studies. Thorough Hebrew philology, elocution, and modern Hebrew
-poetry were also taught there, which was not usual in other Jewish
-schools. In the highest departments, the first rabbis, or Chachamim,
-at that time Saul Morteira and Isaac Aboab, gave instruction. These
-two men, with Manasseh ben Israel and David Pardo, formed the first
-rabbinical college. This richly endowed institute became a nursery for
-the training of rabbis for the Amsterdam community and its daughters
-in Europe and America. From it pupils went forth who labored in wider
-spheres; among whom may be mentioned, for the sake of contrast, the
-confused Kabbalist Moses Zacuto and the clear-headed Baruch Spinoza.
-
-It was a misfortune for the Amsterdam community that its first
-spiritual guides, who exercised remarkable influence, were possessed
-of only mediocre talents, in some degree lacked mental poise. With the
-vast resources which this first Dutch community had at command, with
-the fund of culture characterizing its members, and their devotion
-to Judaism, its leaders might have brought about remarkable results,
-if they had possessed more independence, profounder intellect, and
-greater genius. The first Amsterdam rabbinical college had nothing of
-all this. David Pardo appears to have been of very little importance.
-Saul Levi Morteira (born about 1596, died 1660) was not even a
-distinguished preacher; his colleagues, Aboab and Manasseh ben Israel,
-far outshone him. His sermons, the only printed productions of his
-literary activity, have a philosophical complexion, but no depth of
-thought. Morteira followed the broad, beaten paths, repeating what had
-been thought and pointed out before him. Even in rabbinical learning
-he had no mastery, and was not considered an authority by contemporary
-Talmudists. His colleague, Isaac Aboab de Fonseca (born 1606, died
-1693), was even less distinguished. He, also, was a Portuguese by
-descent, and, it seems, came to Amsterdam as a child with his mother,
-who was fifty years old at his birth. He was trained under Isaac Uziel,
-and acquired from him pulpit eloquence, if that can be learnt. Aboab
-became an excellent and beloved preacher. His style of speaking has
-been very well described by Antonio Vieira of Lisbon, a wise Jesuit,
-possessed of goodwill towards Jews. When once in Amsterdam, he heard
-Aboab and Manasseh ben Israel preach, and when asked how he liked
-them, he replied: "The one (Manasseh) says what he knows, and the
-other knows what he says." But a well-arranged, impressive, attractive
-sermon is not always the fruit of solid knowledge and clear conviction.
-At any rate, it was not with Aboab. In character he was vacillating,
-submissive to the influence of others, open to flattery, hence not
-independent. To this man was given the control of the Amsterdam
-community for nearly seventy years. Aboab was superstitious like the
-multitude, and, instead of leading, was led.
-
-Far more distinguished was Manasseh ben Israel (born 1604, died 1657),
-a child of the Amsterdam community, to which his father had come
-broken down by the torture of the Inquisition, and robbed of all his
-property. Young Manasseh, eager for learning, was trained under Isaac
-Uziel, and while his knowledge of the Bible and the Talmud did not
-attain to perfect mastery, it was extensive and ready. Directed by
-his personal circumstances to the study of ten languages--including
-Portuguese as his mother tongue, and Latin as the literary language
---Manasseh learnt to express himself in speech and writing with more
-or less perfection in all these languages and in an elevated style. A
-ready speaker by nature, he educated himself as a preacher, displaying
-all the lights and shadows of his profession. He became a prolific
-writer, and, though he died young, performed incomparably more than his
-colleagues. In the case of this amiable man, who rendered essential
-service to Judaism, we should not take the part of severe critics, nor
-inquire how large a share enthusiasm and a certain vanity had in his
-work. But history is a stern judge. What his contemporaries admired
-in Manasseh was not his profound intellect, nor his overpowering,
-far-reaching greatness, but his quiet, yielding, modest behavior, and
-his simple nature. He correctly and briefly described himself without
-under- or over-estimation: "I rejoice in the modest though happy talent
-of being able to describe, with a certain degree of order, the objects
-that the will presents to the mind." He brought no great and fruitful
-thoughts into the world, but fostered the intellectual offspring of
-others, treating them as his own. He knew rather than thought much.
-Although familiar with profane literature and Christian theology,
-he clung firmly not only to traditional Judaism, as represented by
-the rabbinical system, but also to the Kabbala, and, like his less
-educated colleagues, regarded every word in the Talmud and the Zohar
-as a profound truth. Like others, Manasseh ben Israel was subject to
-superstitions, which had a strong influence over him, and spurred on
-his will.
-
-Such was the character of the men called to guide and instruct the
-young, ignorant, catholicizing, and tractable Amsterdam community.
-Great power was in their hand. Important affairs were discussed
-and decided at the public sittings of the rabbis (Maamad) with the
-trustees elected by the members. In religious matters the Chachamim
-alone decided, because the laity did not trust their own judgment.
-The decisions of the rabbis were binding on the members. Nobody might
-oppose them, because the government had a despotic character. The
-authorities allowed the board of trustees and the college of rabbis
-full liberty to inflict spiritual penalties on disobedient members.
-Of this liberty and this power the leaders made only too extensive a
-use. They had brought from Spain mischievous zeal in maintaining the
-faith pure and uprooting heresy. The Amsterdam rabbis introduced the
-innovation of bringing religious opinions and convictions before their
-judgment-seat, of constituting themselves a sort of inquisitional
-tribunal, and instituting autos-da-fe, which, even if bloodless, were
-not less painful to the sufferers. The character and organization of
-the largest Portuguese community in Europe had a powerful influence on
-the course of Jewish history. Branch communities were formed, which
-took for their model not only the organization, dignity, devoted piety,
-and benevolence, but also the follies and perversities, of their
-mother. The second community on Dutch soil was gradually formed at
-Rotterdam. Two brothers, as pious as wealthy, Abraham and David Pinto,
-laid the foundation of this community, and elected as Chacham and
-principal of the institute which they founded (Jesiba de los Pintos),
-a young man, Josiah Pardo, son of David Pardo, and son-in-law of
-Morteira, who, however, did not distinguish himself.
-
-In Haarlem, also, the Jews were on the point of obtaining permission to
-settle. The Humanists and favorers of toleration, like Joseph Scaliger,
-the prince of philologists, were already rejoicing; but, in the end,
-intolerance prevailed, and nothing came of the movement. Instead,
-Portuguese communities arose in North Germany beyond the sea, and
-gradually in other cities of the Netherlands.
-
-In Hamburg an important colony of the Amsterdam community was next
-formed. But there were difficulties in overcoming German prejudices and
-German pedantry. Against the advantages arising from the settlement of
-wealthy and intelligent Jews, which the Amsterdam people had quickly
-comprehended, the Hamburg citizens struggled hand and foot. For the
-fierce Lutherans it was an abomination to have Jews in their midst.
-A Jewish jeweler named Isaac, from Salzuflen, in Lippe, with twelve
-of his co-religionists, who were compelled to go in search of a new
-home, made an attempt to settle in Hamburg. He presented a petition
-to the senate to receive them for twelve years, offering the sum of
-9,000 marks and a yearly tax of 400 marks. The negotiator, Isaac,
-exhaustively set forth all possible reasons for the reception of Jews,
-and declared that they were willing to submit to any conditions. He
-adduced that Jews were tolerated not only in Catholic, but also in
-evangelical countries, both in the West, at Frankfort and Worms, and in
-northern Germany, in Hanover, Minden, Hildesheim, Goettingen, Norden,
-Dortmund, Hamm, Lippe, and Emden. All was in vain. Hamburg, then
-delighting in popish quarreling about orthodoxy and heresy, refused a
-home to Jews.
-
-It is curious that Hamburg, at the very time when it so strongly
-opposed the temporary admission of Jews, harbored some in its midst
-without being aware of it. With these, under the mask of Portuguese
-papists, orthodox Christians had daily intercourse. Marrano fugitives
-had escaped from the Inquisition, settled in the North German free
-Hanse town, and passed as Portuguese "traders." Hearing that their
-brethren in Amsterdam, with whom they were in communication, openly
-professed Judaism, and were tolerated, they also lifted their mask, and
-wished to be recognized as Jews, but continued to have their children
-baptized. The strict Lutheran citizens raised a loud outcry, and
-demanded of the senate that the wealthy Jews who had been driven from
-Portugal and other places should be got rid of, and not be tolerated.
-But to this the senate did not like to accede; they felt shame at
-treating these Portuguese of noble demeanor and intelligent character
-as vagrants or Jews. To the secret Jews of Hamburg there belonged at
-that time the beloved and much-sought physician, Rodrigo de Castro
-(born about 1560 at Lisbon, died 1627 or 1628), who, in the violence of
-the pestilence, hastened with self-sacrifice to the bedsides of those
-stricken by the plague, and saved the lives of many. De Castro was also
-a skillful physician for women, and won the favor of the weaker sex,
-strong in sympathy and antipathy. Able physicians were not numerous,
-especially not in North Germany. Other "Portuguese," as the disguised
-Marranos in Hamburg called themselves, and were called, possessed
-capital, or, as agents, conducted important business for Spanish or
-Portuguese houses. In short, it did not seem practicable to send these
-Portuguese away. The senate, therefore, at first put off the citizens
-with an official denial that there were Jews among them; and afterwards
-admitted the presence of a smaller number than was correct--about
-seven Portuguese Jews "who have fire and smoke here," i.e., households.
-But the Lutheran clergy in Hamburg behaved most intolerantly, excited
-people against the Portuguese Jews, and charged the senate with neglect
-of duty. That body, which guarded only the commercial interests, did
-not care to dispense with the Jews, but being unwilling to burden its
-conscience, or rather to incur the reproach of unchristian feeling,
-turned from the Hamburg clergy--the ministry--to a higher court,
-the theological faculties of Frankfort-on-the-Oder and Jena. The
-theological grounds of which the senate availed itself for the
-toleration of Jews are very ridiculous, and prove the ossification
-of Lutheranism at that time. The judgment of the Frankfort faculty
-proceeds upon these grounds, and indulges the hope that the Portuguese
-Jews--who for the sake of their convictions had given up honors,
-fortune, and a beloved home--would be converted to Christianity in
-Hamburg. The decision of the Jena faculty looks as if a professor of
-Dominican theology of a century before, in the time of Hoogstraten, had
-written it, and as if the index on the dial of history had stood still.
-Like the intolerant papists, the Lutheran theological faculty wished
-to compel Jews to listen to Christian preaching.
-
-The senate, sufficiently protected on the ecclesiastical side by these
-two judgments, in February, 1612, with restrictions growing out of the
-German spirit or the German narrow-mindedness of that time, granted the
-Portuguese Jews free residence in Hamburg, avoiding a consideration
-of the consequences on both sides with pedantic scrupulousness. They
-really became protected Jews (_Schutz-juden_), who had to pay an annual
-charge or protection fee of 1,000 marks. They were not allowed to have
-synagogues, or private religious service according to Jewish customs,
-or to practice circumcision, but they might bury their dead in a
-cemetery of their own at Altona. There were then in Hamburg 125 adults
-of Marrano descent, among whom were ten capitalists, two physicians,
-and three artisans. It was an important article in the agreement that
-new-comers might obtain admission, "if the high and wise council
-found their qualifications of such a nature that it had no objection
-to take them under its protection." Thus the young, semi-tolerated
-Hamburg community grew from year to year, and within a decade several
-capitalists were added. The increase of the community through the
-accession of such settlers, admitted openly as Jews, no longer
-disguised as Portuguese, in 1617 rendered necessary a fresh agreement
-with the senate, enlarging their privileges in commercial respects, but
-diminishing them in point of citizenship. They could not possess houses
-or land, and had to dispose of any they might own. Exception was made
-in favor of the physician, Rodrigo de Castro, in consideration of his
-faithful services of many years, but even he could not bequeath his
-house to an heir.
-
-The more the Portuguese Jews, by their capital and business
-connections, gained weight with commercial men in the senate,
-the more they broke through the boundaries drawn by narrow-minded
-legislation. When the bank at Hamburg, to which this city owed its
-commercial prosperity, was founded (1619-1623), no less than twelve
-Jewish capitalists supported it with their funds and efforts, as the
-Amsterdam Portuguese had done at the formation of the Dutch companies
-trading beyond the sea. The Portuguese Jewish settlers alone founded
-the important trade of Hamburg with Spain and Portugal. Hence they
-might assume that the senate, which held the reins of government, would
-connive at violations of the articles. They were especially anxious
-to be permitted to assemble for public worship, and this was directly
-forbidden. Relying on their indispensability, they quietly erected a
-synagogue in about 1626. It was Elihu Aboab Cardozo who risked this
-venture. They named it Talmud Torah, and appointed as Chacham, Isaac
-Athias, of Amsterdam, a disciple of Isaac Uziel.
-
-This probably simple synagogue, consisting of two large rooms, caused
-wide dissension, and produced much bitterness. Emperor Ferdinand
-II, the terror of the Protestants, indignant that the arch-Lutheran
-city on the Elbe would not allow Catholics to build a church, sent a
-threatening letter to the senate, July 28th, 1627, because for the
-sake of trade a synagogue was openly permitted to Jews, while Roman
-Catholics were forbidden the exercise of their religion. Nothing more
-was needed to excite the Lutheran fanatics. If free exercise of their
-religion was granted to Jews, it must also be granted to Catholics,
-and even to Calvinists, they said. A frightful consequence indeed!
-When the ministry, or spiritual assembly, which had great power in
-Hamburg, reproached the senate on account of the violation of articles
-in the agreement with the Jews, and that body in turn arraigned the
-Jews, the latter declared that they had no synagogue, merely a place
-of meeting to read the Law of Moses, the Psalms, the Prophets, and
-other books of the Old Testament; if they prayed there, it was only for
-the welfare of the city and the government. The senate proceeded no
-further, because the Jews threatened that, in case they were denied the
-worship of God, they would leave Hamburg in a body, and transfer their
-capital and business connections to a neighboring place. That argument
-prevailed. But the clergy demanded nothing less than that a Christian
-rabbi be appointed to preach Christianity to Jews in the synagogue, or
-elsewhere. The physicians also viewed with indignation the popularity
-of their Jewish colleagues, and sought to bring not only them, but Jews
-generally, under suspicion, and stirred up the people against them.
-
-But the community grew in prosperity from year to year, and the senate
-gladly received those who came with capital and business connections.
-Even if the descriptions by John Miller, the arch-foe of the Jews,
-appear exaggerated, yet an idea may be gathered from them of the wealth
-of the Portuguese Jews of Hamburg. "They strut along adorned with gold
-and silver, costly pearls, and precious stones. At their weddings
-they eat and drink from silver ware, and drive in such carriages as
-become only persons of exalted rank, and, moreover, have outriders
-and a large following." The extremely rich Texeira family, settled in
-Hamburg, lived in princely luxury. The founder of this banking house,
-Diego Texeira de Mattos, was called in Hamburg, like Joseph of Naxos
-in Constantinople, "the rich Jew." He was of Portuguese descent, bore
-a title of high nobility, and had previously been Spanish resident
-in Flanders. Over seventy years of age, he underwent the operation
-of circumcision in order to become a Jew in reality. By means of his
-wealth, and his connections with both the nobility and capitalists,
-Diego Texeira could play the aristocrat. He drove in a carriage lined
-with satin, and had liveried servants.
-
-The Portuguese Jews already had three synagogues, the second built by
-Abraham Aboab Falero, the third by David de Lima. A German community,
-also, had gradually assembled at Hamburg, and built a house of prayer.
-And were the faithful followers of Luther to behold it calmly, although
-almost on his death-bed he had ordered the Jews to be treated as
-gypsies, and the tongues of the rabbis to be cut out? The Hamburg
-pastors could not endure it, they pressed the senate, and stirred
-up the citizens to withdraw even this small amount of religious
-toleration. Among them stood forth an arch-bigot, John Miller, senior
-at St. Peter's church, a Protestant inquisitor and chief persecutor,
-an abusive man given to scandal, who cast aspersions upon his reverend
-brethren from the pulpit and in libelous writings. With this virulent
-pastor, who considered himself a pillar of Lutheran orthodoxy, it was
-a matter of conscience thoroughly to hate and humiliate the Jews.
-In writing and in talking, in the pulpit and in the circle of his
-disciples, in private conversation and in official addresses, his
-favorite theme was the Jews and their humiliation. Everything in the
-Jews vexed him: their joy and feasting on Purim, their mourning on
-the anniversary of the destruction of the Temple, their dress, their
-friendship with Christians, and their funerals. The bigot was not
-wrong on some points, as, for instance, his censure of the hereditary
-failing of the Portuguese Marranos, as illustrated in their misconduct
-with Christian women, and of the way in which some of them challenged
-Christianity. A Jewish author (Jacob Jehuda Leon?) had composed a work
-entitled "Colloquium Middelburgense," a Latin dialogue between a rabbi
-and a Christian on the value or worthlessness of Christian doctrines,
-the gospels, and the ecclesiastical writings, in which the weak points
-of Christianity were laid bare. Miller composed a defense, or rather
-a libel, entitled, _Judaism, or the Jewish Doctrine_, a full account
-of the Jewish people's unbelief, blindness, and obduracy (1644). This
-was dictated neither by the Holy Ghost nor by Christian love. Luther's
-virulent language against Jews seemed an undeniable revelation to the
-pastor. Out of it spoke Lutheranism, pure and unadulterated, which
-had as little heart as the popery attacked by it, and the essence of
-which consisted of dry formulas of belief. Miller's absurdity and
-uncharitableness are not his own; they are part and parcel of the
-corrupt Lutheran church of the time. Three theological faculties,
-the arch-Lutheran faculty of Wittenberg, and those of Strasburg and
-Rostock, in reply to Miller's inquiry, decided that Jewish physicians
-should never be admitted to Christian patients. Thus, in the face
-of the seventeenth century, when the Thirty Years' War was teaching
-toleration with an iron rod, the leaders of Lutheranism were issuing
-a new edition of the decrees of the Visigothic councils against Jews.
-But, after all, times had changed. Christian IV, king of Denmark,
-Schleswig and Holstein, next to Gustavus Adolphus the champion of the
-Protestants, to whom Miller dedicated his book, had appointed Benjamin
-Musaphia, a Jewish physician, his medical attendant.
-
-Even in Hamburg Miller's fanatical zeal did not meet with great
-success. The citizens gradually got accustomed to Jews, and learnt to
-respect them. Some of them were appointed business agents or residents
-even by high Catholic potentates. The king of Portugal first appointed
-Duarte Nunes da Costa, and then Jacob Curiel, as his agents, and his
-Catholic majesty, Philip IV, elevated Immanuel Rosales, a Jewish author
-of Portuguese descent, to the dignity of count palatine. The Portuguese
-Jews, in general more favorably situated than their German brethren,
-felt so happy at Hamburg, that they called it their "little Jerusalem."
-
-A colony of the Amsterdam mother-community was formed in Brazil, South
-America, discovered and peopled by Portuguese, and a number settled in
-the town of Pernambuco. Thither the Portuguese government had often
-transported Jewish offenders, _i.e._, Marranos, whom it did not wish
-to deliver to the burning-pile, together with prostitutes, and other
-rabble. These disgraced Marranos assisted the Dutch in conquering
-Brazil, which became a Dutch colony, with a Stadtholder of its own,
-the intelligent John Maurice, of Nassau (1624-1636). Connections
-were immediately established between the Amsterdam and the Brazilian
-community, which threw off the mask of Christianity, and was almost
-spoilt by the favor of the Dutch. The Jews at Recife, near Pernambuco,
-called themselves "the holy community" (Kahal Kados), and had a
-governing body consisting of David Senior Coronel, Abraham de Moncado,
-Jacob Mucate, and Isaac Cathunho. Several hundred Amsterdam Portuguese,
-either by invitation, or of their own accord, sailed to Brazil to form
-business connections with the colony, and took with them the Chacham
-Isaac Aboab. He was the first Brazilian rabbi, settling probably
-at Recife. At Tamarica a community was formed, which had its own
-Chacham, Jacob Lagarto, the first Talmudical author in South America.
-Of course, the Brazilian Jews enjoyed perfect equality of rights
-with other citizens, for they rendered the Dutch essential services
-as advisers and warriors. When the native Portuguese, who bore the
-yoke of the Dutch impatiently, formed a conspiracy to get rid of the
-Dutch authorities at a banquet in the capital, and attack the colony
-bereft of government, a Jew gave warning, and saved the colony from
-certain destruction. Later, in 1646, when open war broke out between
-the Portuguese and the Dutch, and the garrison of Recife, exhausted
-by famine, was on the point of surrendering unconditionally, the Jews
-encouraged the governor to brave resistance.
-
-A fanatical war of race and religion between the Portuguese and the
-Dutch devastated fair Brazil, and a famine ensued. The Jews vied with
-the Dutch in suffering and bravery. Isaac Aboab, the Chacham of the
-Brazil community, paints the sufferings of the war, which he himself
-endured, in lurid colors:
-
- Volumes would not suffice to relate our miseries. The enemy
- spread over field and wood, seeking here for booty and there
- for life. Many of us died, sword in hand, others from want;
- they now rest in cold earth. We survivors were exposed to death
- in every form; those accustomed to luxuries were glad to seize
- mouldy bread to stay their hunger.
-
-At last, the States-General were compelled by European wars to
-surrender the colony to the Portuguese. The devoted zeal of the
-Jews for the political welfare of the Dutch was a firm bond, never
-afterwards dissolved, between them and the republic. The toleration and
-equal position of Jews in the Netherlands were ensured for ever.
-
-Whilst the first ray of a better time glimmered in Holland, the rest of
-Europe was still full of darkness for Jews. In Germany especially, the
-Jew even in the seventeenth century continued to be an outcast for whom
-there was no sympathy. He was pelted with mud, his beard was singed,
-and he was treated almost worse than a dog. There were only three or
-four important communities in Germany: Frankfort-on-the-Main, with
-over 4,000 souls; Worms, with 1,400; Prague, with 10,000 at most; and
-Vienna, with 3,000: the rest did not number many. Hamburg was still a
-young community. In the West German free cities of Frankfort and Worms,
-almost stronger antipathy to Jews prevailed than in Hamburg, having
-its root in the narrow-mindedness of the Philistine citizens and the
-guilds rather than in religious antipathy. Both cities treated the
-Jews within their walls as their "servi camerae," and appealed in all
-seriousness to a deed of Emperor Charles IV, declaring that they had
-been sold to them in person and property. When Portuguese Marranos,
-wishing to remove from the Netherlands to Frankfort, and raise it to
-a commercial center of the first rank, like Amsterdam and Hamburg,
-asked permission to build a house of prayer there, the council roundly
-refused. The Jewish capitalists then addressed themselves to the lord
-of Hanau, and obtained very favorable terms.
-
-The bitterness of the people of Frankfort against their Jewish
-neighbors was crystallized in a most revolting and absurd
-legislative enactment, entitled "the permissive residence of Jews"
-(Judenstaettigkeit), and defining under what conditions or restrictions
-Jews might breathe the Frankfort air, or rather the pestilential
-atmosphere of the Jewish quarter. The city, chiefly Protestant,
-retained all the canonical restrictions introduced by the papacy for
-the purpose of branding Jews, such as, prohibiting them from having
-Christian servants or nurses, and requiring them to wear an opprobrious
-badge. They were treated exactly like criminals. Jews might not go
-outside their quarter except for necessary business, and two might not
-walk together, certainly not in the neighborhood of the town-hall, and
-especially not during Christian festivals or weddings, or if princes
-were staying in the city. They were also required to observe silence
-in their Ghetto, avoid offending Christian ears with any shrill sound,
-and see that strange Jews visiting them went to bed in good time. In
-fact, they might not harbor any strangers without the knowledge of the
-magistracy, nor even admit a patient into their hospital. They might
-not purchase food in the market at the same time as Christians. Though
-their business was jealously restricted, they were forced to pay more
-taxes than the Christian inhabitants. As they were obliged to wear
-special badges on their clothes, so they were required to have on their
-houses shields, with strange figures and names, such as "the garlic,"
-"the ass," "the green or white shield," "red shield," "black shield."
-After these shield figures the inhabitants were named, "The Jew N of
-the ass," "the Jew N of the dragon." On the admission of a Jew, he
-was obliged to promise on oath to obey these stupid and heartless
-directions. Even this wretched existence depended on the favor of the
-magistrate, for in one paragraph the council reserved the power of
-depriving a Jew at any time of the right of residence. In such case the
-individual or family had to leave the city within a fixed space of time.
-
-As the magistrate was empowered to deprive a single Jew of the right
-of residence, he could banish all from the city. This was inferred and
-demanded by the citizens or the guilds at variance with the council.
-They aimed at enlarging their liberties by limiting the aristocratic
-power of patricians in the magistracy, and they began with the Jews.
-The reason was that the councilors, in return for the substantial
-gratitude of the Jews, were indulgent in the administration of the
-laws issued against them; else they would not have been able to exist
-under the pressure of opprobrium and the "permissive residence." But
-this indulgence of the magistracy towards Jews was doubly hateful to
-the guilds. Hence they strove by all possible means to bring about the
-expulsion of the Jews from Frankfort. The Jews had obtained assurance
-of their safety as a community by charter from the emperor, but the
-decrees and threats of the emperor were little heeded at that time.
-At the head of the discontented guild-members stood the pastry-cook,
-Vincent Fettmilch, who, with his workpeople, belonged to the Reformers,
-a sect excluded from civic honors, and who sought to sate his fury
-against the Lutheran authorities by taking vengeance on the Jews. He
-was a daring man, who kept the councilors in awe, and openly called
-himself "the new Haman of the Jews." He was chosen by the citizens as
-their spokesman and ringleader, and deserved this leadership, for he
-executed his plans with much circumspection.
-
-On an appointed day (27 Ellul == September, 1614, new style), while
-the community was assembled in the house of prayer, blow followed
-upon blow and thrust upon thrust, mingled with furious shouting, on
-the door of the Jewish quarter. Thereupon followed cries of anguish
-on the part of the Jews, who rushed hither and thither in despair and
-distracted flight. Bold youths and men seized weapons to ward off
-assaults or die manfully. On both sides fell the wounded and dead,
-until the superiority of numbers and the daring of the Fettmilch party
-decided the victory. Then all through the night until the next day
-followed plundering, desecration, and destruction of sacred places with
-brutal fury. The imperial commissioners could do nothing to check the
-riot; they were even compelled to put up a notice that the murderous
-band was not liable to punishment. Most of the Jews not sheltered by
-philanthropic citizens awaited death in trembling at the burial-ground,
-crouching together, many of them in shrouds. The rabble purposely left
-them in uncertainty as to the fate to which they were destined--life,
-death, or banishment--so that the Jews regarded it as a mercy from
-God when the fisherman's gate was opened in the afternoon of August
-24th (new style), and they were allowed to depart, 1,380 in number, but
-without property of any kind. The advance of humanity, compared with
-earlier ages, is seen in the circumstance that compassionate Christians
-gave bread and other provisions to those who departed utterly
-destitute, and the smaller towns and villages sheltered them, though
-Fettmilch and the foes of the Jews had warned them against receiving
-the exiles.
-
-It was long before the Frankfort Jews obtained satisfaction for
-these atrocious injuries. The magistracy and Emperor Matthias were
-equally impotent. Fettmilch's rabble for a whole year so tyrannized
-over the council that it could do nothing for the Jews. Some of the
-law faculties defended the robbers, by issuing an opinion that their
-attacks on the property of the Jews could not be regarded as theft,
-since they had occurred in the daytime or by torchlight. It was only
-by similar events at Worms that the end of the Frankfort troubles was
-hastened.
-
-There the bitterness against one of the oldest German-Jewish
-communities, arising out of hatred of Jews and trade jealousy, took a
-different course. Not the guilds, but some members of the magistracy
-urged the banishment of the Jews, and the chief enemy of the Jews,
-instead of being a brutal but straightforward workman, was a crafty
-advocate and perverter of the law. Here, as in Frankfort, the chief
-motive was opposition to the magistracy, but the guild-members acted
-with more resolution and unanimity. The leader, adviser, and director
-of the committee of citizens was a learned lawyer, Dr. Chemnitz
-(Chemnitius), who thought that by lawyers' tricks he would be able to
-effect the banishment of the Jews with less danger than the Frankfort
-people had incurred by brutal violence. At first chicanery and insults
-of every sort were employed. The committee did not care to use
-violence, but strove to wear them out. It closed the outlets of the
-city against them, hindered them from purchasing food, drove their
-cattle from the meadows, and would not permit milk for Jewish children
-to be brought to the Jewish quarter.
-
-After various movements, the Worms guilds, by Chemnitz's advice,
-assembled unarmed in the market place to take counsel, and sent a
-deputation to the Jews, ordering them "to retire from the city with bag
-and baggage" within an hour. The deputation reproached them with having
-caused the citizens to be suspected by the emperor, with having excited
-his hatred against them, and deprived them of every means of obtaining
-justice. The magistrates protested, but without effect, and so nothing
-remained for the Jews but to depart on the last day but one of the
-Passover (April 20th, 1615, new style). Fanaticism could not refrain
-from venting its fury on the holy places of the Jews, from devastating
-the synagogue which had stood for a thousand years, desecrating the
-burial-ground, and breaking to pieces several hundred tombstones, some
-of which gave evidence of the high antiquity of the community. The
-archbishop of Mayence and Count Louis of Darmstadt granted residence to
-the exiles in small towns and villages, and thus some of the exiles met
-their suffering brethren of Frankfort.
-
-But the rejoicing of the foes of the Jews in Worms did not last
-long. The council, humiliated by the committee of citizens, secretly
-negotiated with Frederick, elector palatine, and, about ten days after
-the expulsion of the Jews, he moved infantry, cavalry, and cannon into
-the town, under the unavailing protest of the committee, and this
-soon brought the disorder to an end. Still it was nearly nine months
-before the Worms Jews were re-admitted by order of the elector palatine
-and the bishop of Speyer (January 19th, 1616, new style). Two months
-afterwards, the Jews of Frankfort were led back, as in triumph, with
-the sound of trumpets, and blowing of horns, by the commissioners of
-the electorate of Mayence and Darmstadt (Adar 20th == March 10th). Here
-the rioters were more severely punished than at Worms, because they
-had caused destruction, plundering, and bloodshed. Vincent Fettmilch,
-the pastry-cook, the Frankfort Haman, was hanged, and quartered, his
-house razed to the ground, and his family banished. The city was fined
-175,919 florins by the emperor as compensation for the depredations
-committed on Jewish property. In memory of this extraordinary
-deliverance and honorable restoration, not an every-day occurrence in
-the German Empire, the Frankfort community appointed the day of their
-return (Adar 20th) to be observed as a feast-day, named Purim-Vincent,
-the day before being kept as a fast in memory of their sufferings.
-
-The old "permissive residence" of the Jews in Worms and Frankfort was
-abolished by Matthias, who introduced a new regulation, recommended by
-the commissioners in 1617. This new arrangement still bore the impress
-of the Middle Ages. The old restrictions of the Jews, as to dress,
-occupation and movement, were retained, and, if possible, made more
-severe in some respects. The Jews were still considered outcasts, even
-by the emperor of the Holy Roman Empire and his councilors. "As they
-are privileged by the emperor, the council is to protect them, and no
-longer has the power to banish those who have obtained 'permissive
-residence.'" The Frankfort Jews, re-admitted at that time, did not
-need to renew their right of residence every three years as before,
-and transmitted it to their descendants. On the other hand, the number
-of Jews was fixed at 500. Not more than six new families a year could
-be granted "permissive residence," and only twelve couples a year
-could get married. A further restriction was that the Jews should not
-be called citizens of Frankfort; they were only hereditary protected
-dependents of the council. In addition to the old protection fee, there
-was a marriage and an inheritance tax. The restrictions in the new
-Jewish ordinance for Worms proved, if possible, still more oppressive.
-
-The banishment of the Jews from two cities of western Germany, and
-their restoration had a favorable result for the German Jews. It
-was an advantage to all German communities that the emperor had
-emphatically insisted on, and by force of arms confirmed, the safety
-of the Jews. Emperor Ferdinand II, though a pupil of the Jesuits and
-a destroyer of Protestants, confirmed the inviolability of the Jews
-throughout the whole empire, especially in Frankfort and Worms, when
-the citizens of these places again thought of persecuting them. Hence
-it came about, that the destructive, cruel Thirty Years' War did not
-affect the Jews in Germany so severely as might have been expected.
-Of course, they did not fail to share the sufferings of the German
-nation, which, divided into two camps, drew the sword against its own
-breast, and made havoc of its own land. The Jews, like the rest of
-the population, had to submit to the plunderings and ravagings which
-leaders of armies, such as Mansfeld, Tilly, and Wallenstein, one after
-the other, brought upon flourishing cities.
-
-Many a Jewish community was destroyed by the fury of war. But at
-least the Jews had nothing to fear from the internal foe, and, in the
-seclusion of their Ghettos, were perfectly secure from all attacks. The
-Catholic generals had orders from the emperor to spare the life and
-property of Jews, so that many a Protestant could lodge, and save his
-property, in the Jewish quarter. Before Wallenstein made the discovery
-that war is supported by war, and that a large army can obtain means
-for itself, the war carried on by Ferdinand II against the Protestant
-half of Germany required much money, and the imperial treasury had
-always been poor. But ready money was chiefly in the iron chests of
-Jewish capitalists. Hence, the financial springs, the Jews, had to be
-protected, if the war was to be carried on successfully. Consequently,
-the emperor, acting with careful consideration, impressed upon his
-generals to spare the Jews from all the hardships of war, including
-the quartering of troops. How dearly this tender treatment cost the
-communities is not known. The Bohemian Jews paid a considerable sum,
-and bound themselves to contribute 40,000 florins a year towards
-defraying the expenses of the war.
-
-The court of Vienna invented another means of making Jews contribute to
-the war. It appointed Jewish capitalists as court Jews, granted them
-most extensive freedom of trade, freed them from the restrictions to
-which other Jews were subjected, even from wearing the yellow badge,
-in a word, afforded them and their families an exceptionally favored
-position.
-
-The Jewish community of Vienna enjoyed great consideration during,
-or perhaps on account of, this war. Through the indifference of
-Spain, the center of Catholicism was transferred at that time from
-the Manzanares to the Danube, from Madrid to Vienna. The Jews, who by
-degrees re-assembled in Vienna, in spite of repeated banishment by the
-emperors, came into close relations with important European affairs.
-Court Jews and Jewish physicians repaired to Vienna with their retinue,
-_i.e._, persons depending, or pretending to be dependent, upon them.
-The Viennese Jews at that time were considered to be exceedingly rich.
-As they lived scattered in various quarters of the city, they felt the
-necessity of assembling and having a common place for prayer. They
-applied to the emperor, and he granted them a site in what is now
-Leopoldstadt, released them from the jurisdiction of the municipal
-authorities, and even excused them from wearing the badge. At the very
-time when Protestant Hamburg citizens were jealously on the watch that
-no synagogue be granted to the Portuguese Jews, the arch-Catholic
-emperor allowed them to build in his capital a new synagogue with all
-its appurtenances (December, 1624). His "liberated," _i.e._, privileged
-Jews were not required to quarter troops, or to contribute to the
-expenses of the war. The magistrates, of course, raised objections to
-the favor shown to Jews, and wished to turn the whole "swarm of Jews"
-out of the city. The court councilors, who desired to extort money,
-gave the citizens to understand that, for 20,000 florins, they might
-enjoy the satisfaction of seeing the Jews banished; but at the same
-time, they whispered to the Jews, that if they anticipated the payment
-of this sum, they might remain in Vienna. Probably the Jews prevailed.
-
-The united and prosperous community looked about for a rabbinical
-leader, and, in February, 1625, made happy choice of Lipmann Heller,
-an amiable and learned man, at that time rabbi of Nikolsburg. He was
-no brilliant personage, but his talents stand out conspicuously from
-the dark background of the time. He forms an exception to the rabbis of
-that age, at least to those in Germany and Poland. He not only occupied
-himself with Talmudic learning, but was acquainted with branches of
-knowledge outside the rabbinical field. For instance, Heller had
-studied other than Jewish literature, and understood mathematics well.
-In the Talmudical department he could not compare with contemporary
-Poles of distinction, with Samuel Edles at Ostrog, Joshua Falk at
-Lemberg, Joel Serkes at Cracow, and many others. But if he was inferior
-to them in acuteness, more properly, subtlety, he surpassed them in
-profundity and lucidity.
-
-Heller (born 1579, died 1654) possessed a mild nature, an attractive
-presence, and skill in speech, and could, therefore, frequent Christian
-circles. Far from the conceit which brooks no contradiction--a
-failing of most representatives of rabbinical learning in Poland--
-he prepossessed every one in his favor, and won all hearts by his
-modesty. He is one of those whom we involuntarily pity for having lived
-in such barbarous times. In a better age they might have labored with
-more success for Judaism. In his thirtieth year, at the same age as
-Maimuni, he completed a gigantic work, a comprehensive commentary on
-the Mishna (Tossafoth Yom-Tob, 1614-1617). This involved a much greater
-amount of work than his great predecessor, or Obadiah di Bertinoro,
-had been forced to devote to it, if we take into account how much the
-materials to be considered, examined, and tested, had increased in the
-interval.
-
-Having been summoned to Vienna to the post of rabbi, he labored
-usefully for this young community. He drew up its constitution, and for
-the short time of his official career there was esteemed and beloved.
-With his peaceful disposition he should have remained at Vienna instead
-of allowing himself to be attracted by the seemingly superior qualities
-of the Prague community, where vulgarity and baseness, envy and malice,
-still prevailed. For this circle Heller was most unfit, but he was
-attracted to the Bohemian capital, where there was incomparably more
-study of the Talmud, and where he could hope to enjoy interchange of
-thought. Only too soon he had occasion to regret his acceptance of
-this office. As acting rabbi, Heller was president of the commission
-which had the thankless task of distributing the large yearly war tax
-of 40,000 thalers among the members of the Prague community and those
-of the country communities. With Heller's upright and pure character
-it may be assumed that he acted with the utmost conscientiousness,
-and that he did not knowingly overburden anyone. Nevertheless,
-some members complained of improper allotment, raised a quarrel in
-the community, and collected a large following, who threatened the
-commission with accusations. In vain did Heller raise his warning
-voice against the prevailing dissension, speaking from the pulpit,
-now in mild, now in severe terms. Contumacy combined with envy, and
-the discontented party accused him and the elders of the commission
-before the civil authorities of having with partiality spared the
-rich, and laid the burden of the tax on the shoulders of those with
-less means, compelling payment of the share imposed by threats of
-excommunication, imprisonment, and other punishments. The accusations
-against Heller must have been of a still more hateful nature. The drift
-was that in one of his works he had used offensive expressions against
-Christianity. To give emphasis to their calumny, they reported to a
-person close to the emperor, who prided himself much on his theological
-knowledge, that Heller had boasted in the hearing of the Stadtholder
-of Prague that he had beaten him in a disputation. At the same time
-the slanderers hinted that the accused rabbi was in possession of much
-property, which would fall to the imperial treasury in case he was
-found guilty. To gratify their revenge or their malicious spirit, the
-informers quite overlooked the fact that by this means they might bring
-on a persecution, not only of Prague Jews, but of all German Jews.
-
-Their slander met with only too ready a hearing. A formal command from
-the emperor reached the Stadtholder of Prague to have Rabbi Lipmann
-Heller sent in chains to Vienna. In view of the military severity
-customary during the Thirty Years' War even the innocent had the worst
-to fear. However, Heller was so highly esteemed even by Christian
-officials, that the head of police, who was charged with his custody,
-behaved with extraordinary indulgence towards him, and he was allowed
-to travel to Vienna merely on bail. On arriving he waited on the
-chancellor, in order to learn particulars with regard to the accusation
-brought against him. The chancellor sternly alleged what led Heller to
-fear the worst--that he had written against the Christian religion.
-Thereupon Heller was put into prison, confined with criminal offenders,
-and a commission of clergy appointed to establish his guilt as a
-blasphemer. The sentence was that Heller properly deserved death, but
-that the emperor was willing to exercise mercy and allow the punishment
-of death to be commuted to a fine of 12,000 thalers, to be paid
-immediately, and that the incriminated writings were to be destroyed.
-The Prague slanderers who were not pleased with the sentence, did not
-rest till the emperor deprived Heller of the office of rabbi at Prague,
-and declared him unworthy to fill the rabbinical office wherever the
-emperor's scepter held sway. At last, after a confinement of forty
-days, he was liberated, with the loss of his office and his property,
-and without any prospect of an appointment elsewhere. The maligning
-of Lipmann Heller was not altogether without consequences to the
-Jews. The bigoted emperor and many of the clergy who had been led to
-notice the bearing of Jews towards Christianity conceived the idea of
-introducing in Vienna Pope Gregory XIII's plan of preaching sermons
-for the conversion of Jews. The emperor issued a decree in February,
-1630, that Jews be compelled to listen to conversion sermons every
-Saturday morning between eight and nine, at least 200 members of both
-sexes in equal numbers to be present, among them forty young Jews, of
-from fifteen to twenty years of age. Every one summoned to hear the
-preachers was to be fined a thaler in case of absence, and a higher sum
-if the offense was repeated. Sleeping and talking during the sermon
-were punished. The fines were to be used in support of converted Jews.
-The conversion of Jews was a matter that the emperor had at heart,
-and he hoped much from these compulsory measures. However, this plan
-was not easily carried out. The court councilors, to whom the emperor
-committed the matter, were not proof against bribery, and followed the
-Jesuits, who laid less stress on catching Jewish souls than on the
-oppression of Protestants and the increasing of their own power.
-
-The annals of the Thirty Years' War contain no record of special
-sufferings of the Jewish race. It seems almost as if Jews were better
-treated than Christians. At least, in Mayence, the Swedes, who resided
-there more than four years, from the end of 1631 to 1636, behaved more
-kindly to them than to others. They were not greatly impoverished,
-for they were able, three years after the departure of the Swedes, to
-build a synagogue at Mayence, and thus extend their community, a favor
-which it had not been in their power to enjoy for more than 150 years.
-The Thirty Years' War ended, as is well known, at Prague, on the very
-stage where it had begun. The Swedish general besieged the city on
-the Moldau, and had already captured one quarter. But the inhabitants
-resisted bravely, and the Jews were not behind the others, if not
-with arms, yet with labor, in the trenches, and with extinguishing
-apparatus. It was a Jew who brought intelligence to the emperor from
-the besieged city in order to obtain relieving forces. On account of
-their attachment to the imperial family, the Bohemian Jews obtained
-from Ferdinand III an extension of their rights, which consisted in
-the privilege of residing in all royal cities and domains, and in
-not being expelled without the knowledge of the emperor. It may be
-assumed that the Jews did not lose very much by the devastating war.
-While the Christian population was thoroughly impoverished, and had to
-contend with want--the chief circumstance which induced the rulers to
-conclude the Peace of Westphalia--the Jews had saved something. The
-booty of many cities went through their hands, and, even if they were
-exorbitantly taxed, and forced to pay heavy sums, they still derived
-some gain. Hence it came about that directly after the close of the
-Thirty Years' War, when great numbers of their fugitive brethren came
-from Poland through Germany, they could be supported in a brotherly way
-by the German communities; for the Jews of Poland, for the first time,
-were visited with a long-continued, bloody persecution. The cup of
-suffering was not to pass them by.
-
-
-END OF VOL. IV.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX.
-
-
- Aaron (I) ben Joseph, the Elder, fixes the Karaite prayer-book, 71.
-
- Aaron (II) ben Elia Nicomedi, Karaite philosopher, 95.
-
- Abadia, de, Juan, plots against Arbues, 329-331.
-
- Abba-Mari ben Moses (Astruc En-Duran), leader of obscurantists,
- 27-32, 36-42, 50.
- and the Tibbonides, 39-42.
-
- Abenacar, Isaac (Manuel Pimentel), Marrano in Holland, 672.
-
- Abenhuacar. See Ibn-Wakar, Samuel.
-
- Abi-Ayub, Jacob, physician, 553.
-
- Abner of Burgos. See Alfonso Burgensis.
-
- Aboab, Isaac, rabbi at Toledo, 341.
- death, 366.
- intercedes for Spanish exiles, 352, 365.
-
- Aboab, Isaac, de Fonseca, rabbi at Amsterdam, 681, 682-683.
- in Brazil, 693.
- quoted, 694.
-
- Aboget, supposed manufacturer of Black Death poison, 102.
-
- Abrabanel, Isaac ben Judah, 409.
- and the edict of banishment, 348.
- and Yechiel of Pisa, 287.
- as commentator, 341-343.
- countenances Messianic speculations, 482.
- in Castile, 336-337, 341, 343-344.
- in Corfu and Sicily, 384.
- in Naples, 359-360.
- in Portugal, 337-339, 341.
- in Venice, 385, 386.
- opposes free thought, 479.
- protects the Jews, 339-340.
- quoted, 338, 388-389.
-
- Abrabanel, Isaac, son of the preceding, physician, 340, 385.
-
- Abrabanel, Judah Leon (Medigo), son of Isaac Abrabanel I, 340, 341,
- 409.
- and Gonsalvo de Cordova, 384-385.
- as author, 480-481.
- flees to Naples, 360-361.
-
- Abrabanel, Samuel (Juan de Seville), 337.
- accepts baptism, 169.
- ambassador to Martin V, 219.
- appointed to a state office, 138.
- efforts for the culture of Castilian Jews, 139-140.
- intercedes for the Spanish Marranos, 322-323.
-
- Abrabanel, Samuel, son of Isaac Abrabanel I, 340, 385, 543.
- at Ferrara, 544.
- at Naples, 409.
- promotes Jewish learning, 410.
-
- Abrabanela, Benvenida, wife of the preceding, 409-410.
- honors David Reubeni, 493.
- saves the Neapolitan Jews from the Inquisition, 543-544.
-
- Abraham, copyist, 74.
-
- Abraham, son of Manessier de Vesoul, 150.
-
- Abraham ben Chiya, astronomer, 120.
-
- Abraham of Granada, Kabbalist, 196-197.
-
- Abudiel, Moses, officer at the Castilian court, 84, 85, 86.
-
- Abulafia, agent of Ferdinand and Isabella, 313, 317.
-
- Abulafia, Abraham ben Samuel, Kabbalist, 4-8, 10, 11, 14, 19, 622,
- 625.
- his school accepts the Zohar, 20.
-
- Abulafia, Joseph, Kabbalist, 2.
-
- Abulafia, Levi, Kabbalist, 2.
-
- Abulafia, Meir, Maimuni's adversary, alluded to, 2.
-
- Abulafia-Halevi, prominent family of Toledo, 113, 116.
-
- Abulafia-Halevi, Samuel ben Meir, (Allavi), privado of Pedro the
- Cruel, 116-121, 354.
- builds synagogues, 119-120.
- charged with peculation, 121.
-
- Abulafia-Halevi, Todros ben Joseph, Kabbalist, 1-3, 52.
-
- Abulhassan, of Morocco, makes war upon Castile, 84.
-
- Abumelik, Moorish general, 85.
-
- Accusation of child-murder, 223, 261-262, 276-279, 298-307, 343-344,
- 372, 440, 544-546, 642.
- against Christians, 546.
- by Eck, 547.
- forbidden in Portugal, 372.
- See also Blood-accusation.
-
- Accusation of host desecration, 164-165, 223, 261, 277, 306, 439-440.
-
- Accusation of well-poisoning, 57-58, 101-106.
-
- Achmed I, sultan, alluded to, 629, 630.
-
- Achmed Shaitan, viceroy of Egypt, conspires, 395-396.
-
- Adolph of Nassau, emperor, 35, 36.
-
- Adrianople, Karaites settle in, 269.
- Spanish exiles settle in, 405.
-
- Afia, Aaron, scholar, 405.
-
- Africa, a refuge for Jewish exiles, 197, 318, 352, 389-392.
-
- Agada, not authoritative, 214.
- quoted, 242.
-
- Agen, Jews of, massacred, 56.
-
- Aguilar, Jews of, annihilated, 125.
-
- Aix, Jews of, side with Abba-Mari, 33.
-
- Akrish, Isaac ben Abraham, Spanish exile, 386.
-
- Alami, Solomon, quoted, 154-155, 204.
-
- Alagon, de, Blasco, plots against Arbues, 329.
-
- Alashkar, Moses ben Isaac, Talmudist, 391-392, 393.
-
- Albalag, Isaac, philosopher, alluded to, 24, 342.
-
- Albassi, Jacob, translator of Maimuni, 60.
-
- Albert II, emperor, 263.
- imprisons Jews, 223-224, 249.
-
- Albert, duke of Bavaria, hostile to Jews, 258.
-
- Albert, of Brandenburg, influenced against the Jews, 463-464.
-
- Albert, of Munich, alluded to, 428.
-
- Albi, Jews of, annihilated, 57.
-
- Albo, Joseph, philosopher, 239, 243.
- at the Tortosa disputation, 208, 214, 215.
- author of controversial works, 233.
- his work, 239-243.
-
- Alboacin. See Abulhassan.
-
- Albrecht, emperor, 35, 37.
- and the Jews, 36.
- asserts authority over the French Jews, 47.
-
- Alcala, academy at, 145.
- Jews of, mocked at, 181.
-
- Alcaldes appointed by the Jews of Castile, 116.
-
- Alcaniz, Jews of, converted, 214.
-
- Alcantara, Order of, 85-86.
-
- Alcolea, Jews of, converted, 214.
-
- Aldobrandini protects the Jews of Ferrara, 660-661.
-
- Aleman, Jochanan, Kabbalist, 291.
-
- Alenu, prayer, maligned, 178.
-
- Alexander, convert, accuses the Jews of blasphemy, 591.
-
- Alexander, of Poland, hostile to Jews, 419.
-
- Alexander VI, pope, 434.
- and Bonet de Lates, 407.
- censures the Roman Jews, 363.
- favorable to Portuguese Marranos, 378-379.
- opposes the Spanish Inquisition, 319.
-
- Alfarda, strangers' tax, 344.
-
- Alfonsine Tables, author of, 367.
-
- Alfonso Burgensis (Abner-Alfonso, Alfonso of Valladolid), apostate,
- 81-83, 213, 342.
-
- Alfonso de Cartagena, counselor of Eugenius IV, 249-250.
-
- Alfonso, Infante of Portugal, releases Marranos, 517.
-
- Alfonso, of Aragon, archbishop, protects Marranos, 330.
-
- Alfonso X, of Castile (the Wise), anti-Jewish laws of, 194-195.
-
- Alfonso XI, of Castile, and Alfonso Burgensis, 83.
- death, 113.
- favorable to Jews, 75-76, 85, 86.
- guardians, 52.
- Jewish favorites, 79-81.
- law of, renewed, 193.
- war with Abulhassan, 84-85.
-
- Alfonso XII, of Castile, brother of Henry IV, 278, 279.
-
- Alfonso II, of Ferrara, alluded to, 660.
-
- Alfonso II, of Naples, employs Isaac Abrabanel, 360, 383-384.
-
- Alfonso V, of Portugal, alluded to, 340.
- employs Jews, 337-339.
-
- Alfonso of Valladolid. See Alfonso Burgensis.
-
- Algiers, Jews in, 390-391.
- Jews settle in, 197-199.
- Spanish exiles flee to, 361.
-
- Alguades, Meir, physician and rabbi, 185, 190.
- executed, 195-196.
- translator of Aristotle's Ethics, 193.
-
- Alkabez, Solomon, Kabbalist, 538.
-
- Allatif. See Ibn-Latif, Isaac.
-
- Allavi. See Abulafia-Halevi, Samuel ben Meir.
-
- Allegorizing of the Scriptures, 23-24.
-
- Allorqui. See Joshua ben Joseph Ibn-Vives.
-
- Almosnino, Moses, historian, 405, 607-608.
-
- Almoxarif, minister of finance, 75, 79, 138, 160.
-
- Alsace, Jews of, outlawed or burnt, 107.
-
- Altona, Jewish cemetery at, 688.
-
- Alva imprisons Jews, 662.
- in the Netherlands, 601.
-
- Alvalensi, Samuel, favorite in Morocco, 390, 392.
-
- Alvarez, Alfonso, de Villasandino, satirist, 181.
-
- Amadeus, of Savoy, imprisons Jews, 103.
-
- Amazia, Jews of, persecuted, 553.
-
- Amos, prophet, quoted, 177.
-
- Amshel of Ratisbon, opponent of Israel Bruna, 302.
-
- Amsterdam, German Jews settle in, 680-681.
- Hebrew education, 681-682.
- Hebrew printing-press, 675.
- Jews in, 665-685.
- Jews under restrictions, 673-674.
- morality of Jews, 679-680.
- Portuguese Marranos settle in, 665-666.
- powers of rabbis, 684-685.
- synagogues, 667, 671, 680.
- wealth and culture of Jews, 677-678.
-
- Anatoli, Jacob, Maimunist, 32.
- defended, 41.
- his sermons read and proscribed, 39, 40.
-
- Ancona, a refuge for Jews and Marranos, 408, 544.
-
- Ancona, Marranos of, imprisoned, 568.
- persecuted, 570-571.
-
- Angiel, Kabbalistic term, 17.
-
- "Annals of Persecution," by Joseph Cohen, 590.
-
- "Annals of the Kings of France and of the House of Othman, The," by
- Joseph Cohen, 556.
-
- Antiochus Epiphanes, alluded to, 655.
-
- Anti-Trinitarians, 541-542, 647-648.
-
- Anusim, converts to Christianity, 179-180.
- See Marranos, and Conversions to Christianity.
-
- Antwerp, Jews settle in, 662.
-
- Aquet, charged with the manufacture of poison, 104.
-
- Aquinas, Thomas, alluded to, 183.
-
- Aragon and the Inquisition, 319, 328-329.
-
- Aragon, Jews of, buy protection, 172.
- enjoy peace, 274-275.
- loyal to their faith, 215.
- persecuted, 77, 102-103, 170.
- suffer through Ferrer, 206.
-
- Aragon, Marranos of, 309.
-
- Arama, Isaac, quoted, 332.
-
- Aranda, counts of, oppose the Inquisition, 329.
-
- Aranda, de, bishop, expelled, 333.
-
- Arbues, Pedro, inquisitor, 326.
- plot against, 329-331.
-
- Argentiere, Jews of, side with Abba-Mari, 33.
-
- Arias, Juan, bishop, instigates a persecution, 279.
-
- Aristotle, 66, 82, 93, 146, 232, 243, 290.
- Ethics of, in Hebrew, 146.
- studied by Polish Jews, 633.
-
- Arles, Jews of, protected, 177.
-
- Armleder, persecutors of the Jews, 97-98.
-
- Arnheim, counselor of Alva, 62.
-
- Arnoldists, party of Jew-haters, 456.
-
- Ar-Rabbi Mor, chief rabbi of Portuguese Jews, 158-159, 380.
-
- Arta, Jewish exiles in, 406.
-
- Arzilla, Jewish slaves made at, 286, 339, 381.
-
- Ascalona, Jews of, annihilated, 170.
-
- Asher ben Yechiel (Asheri), rabbi of Toledo, 34-35, 37, 53, 86.
- author of a Talmudic code, 51.
- his descendants victims of persecution, 169-170.
- his family visited by the Black Death, 113.
- partisan of Abba-Mari, 37-38, 50.
- relaxes Talmudic laws, 37.
- sons of. See Jacob ben Asheri, and Jehuda Asheri.
-
- Asher, of Udine, convert, denounces Jewish works, 584-585.
-
- Asheri. See Asher ben Yechiel, Jacob ben Asher, and Jehuda Asheri.
-
- Ashkenazi, Solomon ben Nathan, statesman, 602-607, 627-629.
- agent of Mahomet Sokolli, 602-603.
- and the Polish election, 604-605, 642.
- and Venice, 605-606, 608.
- rescues the Venetian Jews, 606-607.
- supplants Joseph Nassi, 627.
- widow of, 630.
-
- Asia Minor, Spanish exiles in, 405-406.
-
- Askaloni, Joseph, Hebrew publisher, 628.
-
- Astorga, Jews of, baptized, 205.
-
- Astruc En-Duran. See Abba-Mari ben Moses.
-
- Athias, editor of the Spanish Bible translation, 576.
-
- Athias, Isaac, rabbi at Hamburg, 689.
-
- Aubriot, Hugues, prevot of Paris, protects the Jews, 151.
-
- Auditeurs des Juifs, superintendents over French Jews, 54.
-
- "Augenspiegel," work by Reuchlin, 446-448, 450, 457.
- approved, 455.
- condemned by the University of Paris, 460.
-
- Augsburg, bishop of, desires to possess Jews, 127-128.
-
- Augsburg, Jews of, escape the Rindfleisch persecution, 36.
- exiled, 249.
- imprisoned, 163.
- persecuted, 110.
-
- Austria, Jews of, accused as poisoners, 110.
- expelled, 585-586, 652.
- persecuted, 36, 98, 223-224.
-
- Auto-da-fe, the first in Spain, 317.
-
- Averroes, alluded to, 82, 93, 94, 232, 290.
-
- Avignon, Jews of, expelled, 592.
- protected, 177.
- side with Abba-Mari, 33.
-
- Avila, Jews of, baptized, 205.
- Kabbalistic center, 8-10.
- law of, 229.
- religious discussion at, 140-141.
-
- Avila, de, bishop, expelled, 333.
-
- Avis, Grand Master of, 160, 161.
-
- Ayllon, home of a Kabbalist, 8.
-
- Azael, Kabbalistic term, 17.
-
- Azriel, Kabbalist, 14.
-
-
- Baal ha-Turim. See Jacob ben Asheri.
-
- Badajoz attacked by Spanish Marranos, 498.
-
- Baffa, sultana, favors Esther Kiera, 629.
-
- Bajazet (Bajasid) II, sultan, and Jews, 356, 364, 400.
-
- Balmes, de, Abraham, physician and author, 411.
- instructs Christians, 473.
-
- Bamberg, council of, decrees Jew badges, 555.
-
- Ban against science, 39, 40.
-
- Bandito, tortured on the charge of poisoning, 104.
-
- Baptista, John (Solomon Romano), denounces the Talmud, 564.
-
- Barbaro, Mark Antonio, Venetian consul, 605.
-
- Barbastro, conversions in, 214.
-
- Barcelona, ban against science in, 40.
- Jews of, persecuted, 103, 171-172.
- opposes the Inquisition, 332.
-
- Barfat. See Isaac ben Sheshet Barfat, and Crescas Barfat.
-
- Barfat, Zarak, poet, 140.
-
- Baruch, Kabbalist, 481.
-
- Bashyasi, Menachem and Moses, Karaites, 269.
-
- Basle, authorities of, defend the Jews, 105-107.
-
- Basle, council of, 248, 249, 250, 251.
- laws of the, and Casimir IV, 264.
- proscribes the Jews, 245-246.
-
- Basle, Jews of, burnt, 107.
-
- "Bastard, A, the Son of an Outcast," anti-Christian work, 590.
-
- Bathori, Stephen, of Poland, friendly to Jews, 642.
-
- "Battles of the Lord, The," work by Gersonides, 92-93.
-
- Bavaria, Jews of, accused of child-murder, 545-546.
- persecuted, 36, 98-99, 110, 225, 253-254.
-
- Beatrice (Brites), Infanta of Portugal, and the succession in
- Castile, 158.
-
- Beatrice, of Castile, and David Negro, 161.
-
- Bechinath ha-Dath, work by Elias del Medigo, 293.
-
- Bechinath Olam, poem by Yedaya Bedaresi, 49.
-
- Bedaresi, Abraham, poet, 42.
-
- Bedaresi, Yedaya En-Bonet ben Abraham (Penini), poet, 26, 42-45, 49.
- espouses the Tibbonide cause, 42-44.
- works by, 43, 49.
-
- Behaim, Martin, astronomer, 367.
-
- Bekashoth ha-Memin, poem by Yedaya Bedaresi, 43.
-
- Belgium, Jews of, persecuted, 112.
-
- Bellieta, tortured on the charge of poisoning, 104.
-
- Belmonte, Jacob Israel, Marrano poet, 665.
-
- Belvedere, the Nassi palace, 597.
- printing-press at, 628.
-
- Ben Adret. See Solomon ben Abraham ben Adret.
-
- Benavente, Jews of, baptized, 205.
-
- Benedict XII, pope, friendly to Jews, 99.
-
- Benedict XIII (Pedro de Luna), anti-pope, 200, 228, 239, 655.
- at Peniscola, 217.
- at the Tortosa disputation, 210-213.
- favors Paul Burgensis, 184, 190.
- issues a bull against the Jews, 215-216.
- plans the conversion of the Jews, 207.
-
- Benevento, Inquisition at, 385.
-
- Benfelden, council of, declares Jews outlaws, 107.
-
- Benjamin, friend of Immanuel Romi, 68.
-
- Benjamin, of Tudela, alluded to, 127.
-
- Benveniste, Abraham, Senior (Coronel), tithe-collector, accepts
- Christianity, 351.
- convenes a synod, 229.
- friend of Isaac Abrabanel, 341.
- holds office in Castile, 228.
- negotiates a royal marriage, 280.
-
- Benveniste, Judah, center of the Salonica community, 405.
-
- Benveniste, family of Gracia Mendesia, 571.
-
- Berab, Jacob, rabbi in northern Africa, 390, 393, 418.
- revives ordination, 531-536.
-
- Berber princes, tolerance of, 197.
-
- Berlin, Jews of, persecuted, 652.
-
- Bernaldez, Andreas, quoted, 349.
-
- Bernard, of Siena, master of John of Capistrano, 257.
-
- Bernardinus, of Feltre, hostile to Jews, 295-299.
-
- Bernardo instigates Lisbon against Marranos, 487.
-
- Berne, Jews of, tortured, 104-105.
-
- Berthold, bishop, hostile to Jews, 107.
-
- Beth Israel, third synagogue in Amsterdam, 680.
-
- Beth Jacob, first synagogue in Amsterdam, 667, 671.
-
- Beya, de, Abraham, Portuguese traveler, 368.
-
- Beziers, Jews of, expelled, 48.
-
- Bibago, Abraham, employed by John II, of Aragon, 275.
-
- Bible, the, allegorized, 23.
- Christian doctrines in, 141-142.
- commentary on, 70.
- concordance of, 234-235.
- Karaite interpretation of, 269.
- polyglot, 651.
- slandered, 547.
- studied by Portuguese Marranos, 485.
- studied in Spain, 91, 231.
- study of, cultivated, 474-476.
- translations of, 475, 576, 647.
- translations not authoritative, 237.
-
- Black Death, the, alluded to, 111, 112, 113, 127, 133, 135, 172.
- attributed to the Jews, 100-106.
-
- Black Prince, the, and the civil war in Castile, 124, 125.
-
- Blanis, de, Judah (Laudadeus), physician at Perugia, 411.
-
- Blanche de Bourbon, wife of Pedro the Cruel, 116-117, 121, 122.
-
- Blandrata, religious reformer, 647.
-
- Blood-accusation, 223, 227, 261-262, 298, 642.
- by Eck, 547.
- forbidden in Poland, 264-265.
- See also Accusation of child-murder.
-
- Boabdil, last king of Granada, 345.
-
- Bohemia, Jews of, banished, 544-545.
- pay a war-tax, 703.
- persecuted, 98, 165-166.
- privileges of, extended, 707.
-
- Boleslav Pius, duke of Kalish, friendly to Jews, 111, 263.
-
- Bologna, Jewish printing-house in, 289.
- Jews of, tried, 590-591.
- synod held at, 218, 219.
-
- Bomberg, Daniel, of Antwerp, publishes the Babylonian Talmud, 468.
- the Old Testament, 476.
-
- Bonafoux, Vidal, partisan of Abba-Mari, 28.
-
- Bonastruc, Isaac, and Jewish immigrants in Algiers, 199.
-
- Bonfed. See Solomon ben Reuben Bonfed.
-
- Boniface VIII, pope, alluded to, 144.
-
- Boniface IX, pope, forbids forcible conversions, 173.
-
- Bordeaux, Jews of, perish, 56.
-
- Borgia, cardinal. See Alexander VI.
-
- Botarel, Moses, Messianic pretensions of, 197.
-
- "Bow and Buckler," controversial work, 238.
-
- Brahe, de, Tycho, alluded to, 638.
-
- Brandenburg, Jews of, accused, 439-440.
- persecuted, 652.
-
- Brazil, Jews settle in, 693.
-
- Breslau, Jews of, accused of child-murder, 261-263.
- annihilated, 109.
-
- Broussa, Spanish exiles in, 405.
-
- Bruna, Israel, rabbi of Ratisbon, 300, 302-304.
-
- Brunetta, of Trent, 297, 298.
-
- Bruenn, Jews of, banished, 263.
-
- Brunswick, Jews of, expelled, 652.
-
- Brussels, Jews of, killed, 112.
- Jews settle in, 662.
-
- Budny, Simon, founder of a Christian sect, 647.
-
- Buen-Giorno, David Bonet, and Profiat Duran, 188-190.
-
- Bugia, Spanish exiles flee to, 361.
-
- Buja, Jews settle in, 197.
-
- Bull (papal) against Jewish emigration to Palestine, 274.
- based on Innocent IV's, 165.
- by Benedict XIII, 215-216.
- by Clement VI, 173.
- by Clement VII, 507-508, 515, 516.
- by Clement VIII, 671.
- by Eugenius IV, 250-252.
- by Gregory XIII, 654.
- by Julius III, 565.
- by Martin V, 219-220, 226-227.
- by Nicholas V, 253, 254, 287.
- by Paul III, 516, 520, 526.
- by Paul V, 566.
- by Pius IV, 588, 589.
- by Pius V, 591-592.
- by Sixtus IV, 311, 319, 321, 322, 323.
- by Sixtus V, 655-656, 658.
-
- Burgos, cortes of, hostile to Jews, 52, 124, 229.
-
- Burgos, Jews of, and Pedro the Cruel, 123, 124.
- baptized, 205.
- persecuted, 170.
-
- Burgos, religious disputation at, 140.
-
- Busche, von, Hermann, alluded to, 456.
-
- Byron, quoted, 127.
-
- Byzantine Empire, rottenness of, 267.
- toleration of, 285.
-
-
- Caballeria, de, Alfonso, opposes the Inquisition, 329.
-
- Cabrera, governor of the Alcazar of Segovia, 283.
-
- Cadiz, Marrano victims of the Inquisition in, 317.
- Marranos take refuge in, 313.
- siege of, 665.
-
- Cairo, Jews of, attacked, 396.
- Karaite stronghold, 71.
-
- Calabrese, Chayim Vital, Kabbalist, 618, 623.
- Messianic claims of, 625.
-
- Calatayud, conversions in, 214.
-
- Calatrava, Grand Master of, executed, 118.
-
- Calixtus, pope, alluded to, 275.
-
- "Calumniator, The," sobriquet of Geronimo de Santa Fe, 217.
-
- Campanton, Isaac ben Jacob, Talmudist, 230.
-
- Campeggio, cardinal, opposes the Portuguese Inquisition, 514-515.
-
- Candia, Spanish exiles in, 363-364, 406.
-
- Cantori, dei, Joshua, hostile to the Talmud, 583.
-
- Capistrano. See John of Capistrano.
-
- Capnion. See Reuchlin, John.
-
- Capron, Ruy, alluded to, 278.
-
- Caraffa, Pietro. See Paul IV.
-
- Carca, Samuel, quoted, 137.
- writes a commentary, 144.
-
- Cardozo, Elihu Aboab, erects a synagogue at Hamburg, 689.
-
- Caro, Isaac ben Joseph, victim of Portuguese persecution, 378.
-
- Carpentras, Jews of, protected, 177.
-
- Carrion, Jews of, persecuted, 170.
-
- Casimir III, of Poland (the Great), favors the Jews, 111-112, 263.
-
- Casimir IV, of Poland, bestows privileges upon the Jews, 263-265, 419.
- revokes the privileges of the Jews, 266.
-
- Caspe, Jews of, converted, 214.
-
- Castel-Branco, de, Joao Rodrigo. See Lusitanus, Amatus.
-
- Castile, center of Jewish culture, 75.
- civil war in, 118-119, 123-126.
- cortes of, hostile to Jews, 229.
- deficient in Jewish scholars, 86, 139-140.
-
- Castile, Jews of, accused of proselytizing, 157.
- admitted to public employment, 228-229.
- appoint their own alcaldes, 116.
- attached to Pedro the Cruel, 114, 123, 124, 125, 137.
- baptized, 137, 205.
- deprived of criminal jurisdiction, 157.
- enjoy peace, 53, 113, 274-275.
- hated, 138-139.
- invested with criminal jurisdiction, 155.
- partisans of Maria de Padilla, 117.
- prominent at court, 51-53, 75-76, 84, 115-116, 138.
- suffer during the civil war, 125, 136-137.
- take part in debates, 140.
- threatened, 84-86.
- under Alfonso XI, 75-76.
- under Henry III, 193.
- under Juan II, 194, 251-253.
- under Maria de Molina, 52.
- under restrictions, 52, 139, 158, 203-204, 250, 278.
- usurers, 80.
- See also Spain.
-
- Castile, Marranos of, 309.
-
- Castro, de, Abraham, master of the Egyptian mint, 393, 395.
-
- Castro, de, Moses, rabbi at Jerusalem, 534, 535.
-
- Castro, de, Rodrigo, Marrano physician, 686-687, 688.
-
- Catalina, of Castile, 217, 228, 275.
- lays restrictions upon the Jews, 203-204.
- relaxes the anti-Jewish laws, 205.
-
- Catalina, of Lancaster, regent for Juan II, of Castile, 193-194.
-
- Catalonia, Jews of, invested with criminal jurisdiction, 155.
- loyal to their faith, 215.
- persecuted, 102-103, 112-113, 172.
-
- "Catalonian grandees," 153.
-
- Catechumens maintained by Jews, 566.
-
- Catherine de Medici, and the Polish election, 604.
- alluded to, 598.
-
- Catherine, of Portugal, hostile to Marranos, 489.
-
- Catholic reaction, the, 650-651.
-
- Cathunho, Isaac, Jewish official at Recife, 693.
-
- Censorship of the press, 562-563.
-
- Censorship of the Talmud, 658, 659-660.
-
- Cervera, Jews of, attacked, 94, 103.
-
- Cesis, cardinal, opposes the Portuguese Inquisition, 514-515.
-
- Chabib, Levi ben Jacob, rabbi of Jerusalem, 378, 532-536.
- and Jacob Berab, 533-536.
-
- Chacon, of Vitoria, employed by Henry IV of Castile, 275.
-
- "Chain of Tradition, The," by Gedalya Ibn-Yachya, 616.
-
- Chaldee, language of the Zohar, 12.
-
- Chambery, center for the supposed Black Death poisoners, 102.
-
- Chanceller, assistant of Ar-Rabbi Mor, 159.
-
- Chanina, Ishmael, rabbi of Bologna, 591.
-
- Charisi, as a character in Immanuel Romi's works, 67.
- translator of Maimuni, 61.
-
- Charles IV, emperor, 164, 695.
- and the Jews of Nuremberg, 110.
- and the Jews of Worms, 108.
- grants "servi camerae" to electors, 128.
- protects Jews, 106.
- punishes murderers of Jews, 109.
-
- Charles V, emperor, and Clement VII, 492.
- and Luther, 469.
- and the Jews of Naples, 543-544.
- and the Jews of the Netherlands, 661-662.
- and the Portuguese Inquisition, 507, 509, 517-518.
- crowned emperor of Rome, 503.
- favored by Humanists, 468.
- has Molcho burnt, 510-511.
- hostile to Marranos, 484.
- in debt to the Mendes family, 572.
- opposes Paul III, 526.
- opposes Reuchlin, 464.
- renews the privileges of the Jews, 547.
-
- Charles IV, of France, alluded to, 77.
-
- Charles V, of France, 150.
- and the Jews, 129, 131, 132, 133.
-
- Charles VI, of France, and the Jews, 174, 176.
-
- Charles VII, of France, 373.
- protects the Jews, 152.
-
- Charles VIII, of France, alluded to, 360.
-
- Charles IX, of France, alluded to, 604.
-
- Charles III, of Navarre, alluded to, 184.
-
- Chasdai ben Abraham Crescas, philosopher, 145-147, 149, 172, 208,
- 230, 239, 342.
- appealed to, 150, 153.
- articles of faith by, 193.
- attacked by Paul Burgensis, 185.
- describes the persecution of 1391, 172.
- his view of life, 240.
- imprisoned, 150, 155.
- independence of, 146, 192.
- philosophical work of, translated, 235.
- philosophy of, 191-193.
- treats of Christian doctrines, 187-188.
-
- Chasdai ben Solomon, 162.
- denounces Chayim ben Gallipapa, 149.
-
- Chastelard, Jews of, tortured, 104.
-
- Chatel, Jews of, imprisoned, 103-104.
-
- Chayim ben Gallipapa, rabbi, 148-150.
-
- Chayim, of Landshut, appoints Judenmeister, 227.
-
- Chayyat, Judah ben Jacob, Kabbalist, 481.
- describes the sufferings of the Portuguese exiles, 369-370.
-
- Chemnitz, Dr., and the Jews of Worms, 698-699.
-
- Chendali, Elias, husband of Esther Kiera, 629.
-
- Chesheb-Efod, history by Profiat Duran, 191.
-
- Chiddush, Talmudic term, 641.
-
- Chillon, Jews of, imprisoned, 103-104.
- confessions of, 108.
-
- Chilluk, Talmudic term, 641.
-
- Chinon, college of, dispersed, 48.
- Jews of, persecuted, 57-58.
-
- Christian IV, of Denmark, and the Jews, 675, 692.
-
- Chronologies used by Jews, 394-395.
-
- Clement VI, pope, and Gersonides, 94, 103.
- forbids forcible conversions, 173.
- protects the Jews, 103, 105.
-
- Clement VII, pope, 407.
- and Molcho, 503, 507.
- and the Portuguese Inquisition, 507-509, 513-514.
- death, 515.
- permits Marranos at Ancona, 500.
- quoted, 513-514.
- receives David Reubeni, 492-493.
-
- Clement VIII, pope, and Portuguese Marranos, 528, 671.
- expels the Jews, 659.
-
- Clemente, Philip, opposes the Inquisition, 329.
-
- Cleve, von, Eberhard, in the Reuchlin quarrel, 465-466.
-
- Closener, of Strasburg, historian, quoted, 106.
-
- Cohen, Aaron, describes the sufferings of French exiles, 49.
-
- Cohen, Daniel, scholar, 405.
-
- Cohen, Gershon (Soncinus), printer at Prague, 418.
-
- Cohen, Joseph ben Joshua, of Genoa, historian, 555-557, 608.
- his chronicle, 555, 556, 557, 561.
- on Molcho, 511.
-
- Cohen, Joshua Falk, president of the Polish synod, 645, 703.
-
- Cohen, Moses, de Tordesillas, controversialist, 141-142.
-
- Cohen, Perachyah, physician, 405.
-
- Cohen, Saul (Ashkenasi), disciple of Elias del Medigo, 293, 386.
- Hebrew style of, 389.
-
- Cohen, Saul Astruc, physician, 198, 199.
-
- Coimbra, Inquisition at, 508.
-
- Colleges, Jewish, in France, 48. See also Educational institutions.
-
- "Collegium Germanicum," propagandist seminary, 654.
-
- "Colloquium Middelburgense," controversial work, 691.
-
- Colmar, Jews of, banished, 416.
-
- Cologne, authorities of, defend the Jews, 105-106, 108.
- Jews of, expelled, 227, 413.
- seat of Dominicans, 424.
- See Chapter XIV.
-
- Columbus, alluded to, 368.
-
- "Concerning the Jews and their Lies," pamphlet by Luther, 548-549.
-
- Confiscation of Hebrew books, 437-438, 439, 441, 444.
- advised by Luther, 550.
- by Pfefferkorn, 429-431.
- in Cremona, 582-583.
- in Prague, 584-585.
- in the Papal States, 565, 567.
- under Gregory XIII, 654.
- under Sixtus V, 657-658.
-
- "Conflict of Duties," controversial work, 238.
-
- Conrad of Wintertur, defends the Jews, 106, 108.
-
- Conservateur, protector of the French Jews, 130.
-
- "Consolation for the Sorrows of Israel," by Samuel Usque, 558-561.
-
- Constance, Jews of, persecuted, 105.
-
- Constance, council of, 215, 218, 248.
- condemns Vincent Ferrer, 217.
- deposes Benedict XIII, 216.
- elects Martin V pope, 219.
- sentences Huss, 221.
-
- Constantine, Jews settle in, 197.
-
- Constantine, emperor, alluded to, 267.
-
- Constantine Dragosses, alluded to, 267.
-
- Constantinople, fall of, 267.
- Jews of, 402-404.
- Jews permitted in, 268.
- Karaites settle in, 269.
- Karaite stronghold, 69.
- rabbis of, issue a ban against Paul IV, 580.
-
- "Constitutions," Inquisition code, 326, 328.
- in Portugal, 508.
-
- Conti, Vincent, publisher, 583-584.
-
- Contra-Remonstrants, religious sect in Holland, 673-674.
-
- "Contrasts and Greatness of Constantinople," by Moses Almosnino, 608.
-
- Controversial literature, 231-238.
-
- Conversions to Christianity, 48, 56, 107, 111, 126, 137, 150, 169,
- 171, 172, 175, 177, 179, 191, 205, 206, 214, 215, 224,
- 232-233, 245-246, 247, 254, 262, 288, 298, 301, 334-335, 361,
- 375-378, 380, 440, 570, 706.
-
- Conversions, forcible, forbidden by popes, 165, 173.
-
- Cordova, Inquisition at, 325.
- Jews of, persecuted, 169.
- Marranos in, 484.
- Marranos massacred in, 281-282.
-
- Corfu, Spanish exiles in, 363, 364, 384.
-
- Coronel. See Benveniste, Abraham.
-
- Coronel, David, Senior, official at Recife, 693.
-
- Costa, da, Emanuel, Marrano, 520-521.
-
- "Correction of the False Teacher," controversial work, 234.
-
- Costnitz. See Constance.
-
- "Counsels and Lessons," poem by Santob de Carrion, 115.
-
- Court Jews at Vienna, 702.
-
- Coutinho, Ferdinand, bishop, defends Marranos, 500.
- opposes forced conversions, 375.
- quoted, 376.
-
- Cracow, Jews of, massacred, 111.
- second Jewish community in Poland, 632.
-
- Creation, Kabbalistic term, 619.
-
- Cremona, Jews of, expelled, 660.
- Talmudic center, 582.
-
- Crescas Barfat, imprisoned, 150.
-
- Crescas, Chasdai. See Chasdai ben Abraham Crescas.
-
- Crescas Vidal, partisan of Abba-Mari, 28-29.
-
- Cretensis, Elias. See Del Medigo, Elias.
-
- "Crown of Israel," Toledo, 136.
-
- Curiel, Jacob, Portuguese agent, 681, 692.
-
- Cusa, de, Nicholas, cardinal, hostile to Jews, 255.
-
- Cyprus, conquest of, 600-601.
-
- Czechowic, Martin, Unitarian, 648.
-
-
- Dafiera, Solomon, poet, 230.
-
- Dalburg, bishop, alluded to, 454.
-
- Damascus, exiles settle in, 399-400.
-
- Daniel, book of, commented, 482.
- interpretation of, 120.
- prophecies of, 149.
-
- Daniel, friend of Immanuel Romi, 66.
-
- Dante compared with Immanuel Romi, 65, 66, 67.
- quoted, 325.
-
- Daroca, conversions in, 206, 214.
-
- Daud (David), physician, hostile to Joseph Nassi, 598-599.
-
- Dauphine, Jews protected in, 177.
-
- David, king, as a character in Immanuel Romi's work, 67.
-
- David, an immigrant, urges Jews to go to Turkey, 271.
-
- "Day of Hosannas" in Lurya's system, 626.
-
- Deckendorf (Deggendorf), Jews of, massacred, 98-99.
-
- Del Barco, Juan Lopez, Spanish inquisitor, 312.
-
- Del Medigo, Elias, classical scholar, 290-293, 386, 406.
- relation to Judah Menz, 295.
-
- Delmedigo, Judah, rabbi, 406.
-
- Della Rovere, Francesco Maria, duke of Urbino, 501, 657.
-
- Della Ruvere, Marco, nuncio, 514.
-
- Desfar, Juan, governor of Palma, 246.
-
- Desmaestre, Bonastruc, delegate at the Tortosa disputation, 208.
-
- Deutz, Cologne Jews settle at, 227.
-
- Deza, second inquisitor-general of Spain, 356, 483-484.
-
- Dias, Andre, assassin of Henrique Nunes, 490.
-
- "Dialogues of Love," work by Judah Abrabanel, 480-481.
-
- Diego de Valencia, convert, 181.
-
- Diokna Kadisha, holy likeness, 538.
-
- Divorces among Kabbalists, 626-627.
-
- Dominicans denounce Jews and Hussites, 222, 226.
- in the Reuchlin-Pfefferkorn quarrel. See Chapter XIV.
- plot to expel the Marranos from Portugal, 486-488.
-
- Doria, Andrea, doge, 555.
- protects the Jews of Genoa, 554.
-
- Doria, Giannettino, alluded to, 555.
-
- "Doubts of the Religion of Jesus," controversial work, 235.
-
- Duran. See Profiat Duran, Simon ben Zemach Duran, Solomon Duran, and
- Simon Duran II.
-
- Du Guesclin, Bertrand, captain of the "white company," 123, 124, 126,
- 137.
-
-
- "Eben Bochan," controversial work, 142, 143.
-
- Ecija, Jews of, persecuted, 170.
-
- Eck, Dr. John, and the Jews, 546-547.
-
- Edict of Banishment from Spain, 347-348.
-
- Edict of Grace, 315.
-
- Edles, Samuel, Talmudist, 703.
-
- Edom, Christendom, 18, 506.
-
- Educational institutions (Hebrew), 48, 133, 145, 410, 681, 685.
-
- Efodi (Ephodaeus). See Profiat Duran.
-
- Efrati, Amram, alluded to, 162.
-
- Egidio de Viterbo, cardinal, 564, 583.
- and the Kabbala, 481.
- disciple of Elias Levita, 472.
- opposes the Portuguese Inquisition, 507.
- quoted, 457.
-
- Egypt, Jews in, 392-396.
-
- Eisenach, Jews of, slaughtered, 109.
-
- Eleazar ben Joseph, martyr, 49.
-
- Eliano Vittorio, grandson of Elias Levita, convert, 564.
- editor of the Cremona Zohar, 584.
- hostile to the Talmud, 583.
-
- Elias Levita, Hebrew grammarian, 471, 473.
- grandsons of, 564.
- invited into France, 473-474.
-
- Elizabeth, of England, alluded to, 664.
-
- Emden, Marranos in, 665.
-
- Emek ha-Bacha, work by Joseph Cohen, 590, 608.
-
- "Emunoth," Kabbalistic work, 197.
-
- En-Sof, Kabbalistic term, 14.
-
- En-Zag Vidal de Tolosa, rabbi, 155.
-
- "Enemy of the Jews, The," second pamphlet by Pfefferkorn, 427.
-
- England at war with Castile, 142.
-
- Enns, Jews of, charged with host-desecration, 223.
-
- Enoch, book of, source for the Kabbala, 17.
-
- "Epistolae Obscurorum Virorum," a satire, 461-462.
-
- Erasmus, humanist, 432, 433.
- quoted, 462-463.
-
- Erfurt, Jews of, perish, 109.
-
- Eschenloer, quoted, 262.
-
- Escrivao, assistant of Ar-Rabbi Mor, 159.
-
- Eski-Crim, Karaite stronghold, 71.
-
- Esperaindo, de, Juan, assassin of Arbues, 330.
-
- Estella, Jews of, persecuted, 77-78.
-
- Esther (Esterka), wife of Casimir the Great, 112.
-
- Esther, book of, Spanish translation of, 148.
-
- Etampes, d', Count, protector of the French Jews, 130, 132.
-
- Eugenius IV, pope, 253, 275.
- approves of John of Capistrano, 257-258.
- confirms the privileges of the Jews, 249.
- hostile to Jews, 229, 249, 250-252.
-
- Evora, Inquisition at, 508.
-
- Ezekiel, prophet, as a character in Immanuel Romi's work, 67.
-
- "Ezer ha-Emuna," controversial work, 141.
-
-
- Fagius, Paulus, establishes a Hebrew press, 474.
-
- Falaquera, Shem-Tob, philosopher, 24.
-
- Falcos, Jews of, persecuted, 78.
-
- Falero, Abraham Aboab, builds a synagogue at Hamburg, 691.
-
- Farnese, Alexander, cardinal, protects the Jews, 567.
-
- Faro, count of, friend of Isaac Abrabanel, 338.
-
- Farissol, Abraham, geographer, and controversialist, 411-413.
-
- Father, Kabbalistic term, 19.
-
- Ferdinand and Isabella, of Spain,
- and Isaac Abrabanel, 343.
- appoint an inquisitor-general, 324.
- blamed for expulsion of the Jews, 356.
- censured by Sixtus IV, 318-319.
- decree the expulsion of the Jews, 346-348.
- protect and employ Jews, 336.
- treaty with Boabdil, 345.
- See also Ferdinand II of Aragon, and Isabella, of Castile.
-
- Ferdinand I, emperor, and Joseph Nassi, 597, 601.
- banishes Jews from Bohemia, 544-545.
- expels Jews from Austria and Bohemia, 585-586.
-
- Ferdinand II, emperor, and the Hamburg Jews, 689.
- introduces conversion sermons, 706.
- levies a war-tax upon Jews, 701-702.
-
- Ferdinand III, emperor, extends the privileges of the Bohemian Jews,
- 707.
-
- Ferdinand I, of Aragon (Infante of Castile), regent of Castile, 194.
- authorizes a disputation, 207.
- lays restrictions upon the Jews of Castile, 203-204.
- made king of Aragon, 205, 206.
-
- Ferdinand II, of Aragon, V, of Castile (the Catholic), 284, 309, 384,
- 385.
- approves of the Inquisition, 310-311.
- his greed, 325-326.
- his marriage, 280.
- obtains the Inquisition for Aragon, 319.
- threatens Navarre, 357.
- See also Ferdinand and Isabella, and Isabella, of Castile, 340-341.
-
- Ferdinand, of Braganza, friend of Isaac Abrabanel, 338, 340-341.
-
- Ferdinand IV, of Castile, advised by Jews, 51.
-
- Ferdinand I, of Naples, 287, 383.
- receives Jewish exiles, 358-360.
-
- Ferdinand, of Portugal, Jews under, 158-159.
-
- Ferdinand, of Tuscany, receives exiled Jews, 659.
-
- Ferrara, Jewish printing houses in, 289.
- Jews of, endangered, 660-661.
- Jews settle in, 544.
- Marranos of, unfortunate, 581.
-
- Ferrer. See Ibn-Labi, Vidal ben Benveniste.
-
- Ferrer, Vincent, 233, 239, 246, 296.
- converts Jews, 214-215.
- his character, 200-202.
- in Aragon, 205-206.
- opposed by Joao I, of Portugal, 218.
- preaches against Benedict XIII, 216-217.
- preaches Christianity in synagogues, 204-205.
-
- Ferrus, Pero, convert, ridicules Jews, 181.
-
- Fettmilch, Vincent, and the Jews of Frankfort, 696-700.
-
- Fez, Jews in, 390.
- Marranos emigrate to, 179.
- Spanish exiles settle in, 361.
-
- Firme-Fe. See Nunes, Henrique.
-
- Fiesco's conspiracy, alluded to, 555.
-
- Flagellants persecute Jews, 111, 112.
-
- Florence, commerce of, 285.
- Jews of, protected, 297.
-
- Foligno, di, Ananel, convert, denounces the Talmud, 564.
-
- Forli, synod held at, 218, 219.
-
- Formation, Kabbalistic term, 619.
-
- "Fortalitium Fidei," work by Alfonso de Spina, 277, 415.
-
- "Fortress, The," controversial work, 234.
-
- Fraga, conversions in, 214.
-
- France and Joseph Nassi, 597-599.
-
- France, Jews of, and lepers, 57.
- and the ban against science, 40.
- banished, 46, 48, 175-177.
- claimed as "servi camerae," 47.
- fix the conditions of their return, 53-54, 129-131.
- hardships of the, 48-50.
- impoverished, 128-129.
- massacred by the Shepherds, 55-57.
- persecuted, 57-58, 151-152.
- privileges extended, 54, 131-132, 150.
- protest against Meir Halevi, 152-153.
- Talmudical studies, 133.
- usurers, 174.
- wear badges, 131.
-
- France, southern (Provence), clergy of, hostile to Jews, 132.
- Jews of, persecuted, 53, 102-103, 173.
- philosophers in, 87.
- See also Provence.
-
- Francis I, of France, patron of Hebrew learning, 473-474.
-
- Franco, Christoval (Mordecai) Mendes, Portuguese Marrano in Holland,
- 667.
-
- Franco, Nicolo, papal nuncio, 310.
-
- Franconia, Jews of, expelled, 259-260.
- seat of the Rindfleisch persecution, 35-36.
-
- Frankfort-on-the-Main, confiscation of Hebrew books at, 429-431,
- 437-438, 439.
-
- Frankfort-on-the-Main, Jews of, burn themselves, 109.
- expelled, 698.
- in the seventeenth century, 694-695.
- mocked at, 299.
- persecuted, 696-699.
- threatened, 417, 463-464.
- under restrictions, 700.
-
- Frederick, elector of Saxony, protector of Luther, 469.
-
- Frederick, elector palatine, alluded to, 678.
-
- Frederick III, emperor, 249, 416.
- and the Jews of Ratisbon, 303-306.
- Jewish favorite of, 224.
- Jews under, 293, 294.
- protects Jews, 413-414.
-
- Frederick, the Valiant, archduke of Austria, friendly to Jews, 111.
-
- Freiburg, Jews of, 105-107.
-
- Frohbach, alluded to, 638.
-
- Funes, Jews of, persecuted, 78.
-
- Furin al-Mizrayim, Cairo Purim, 396.
-
-
- Galatino, and the Kabbala, 481, 583.
-
- Galilee, Kabbalistic center, 617.
-
- Gallaico, Elisha, indicts Azarya dei Rossi, 616.
-
- Gama, da, Vasco, alluded to, 367.
-
- Gans, David, historian, 638-639.
-
- Gaon of Castile, 230.
-
- Garcilaso, Spanish ambassador, 379.
-
- Gardien, protector of the French Jews, 130.
-
- Gascogne, Jews of, perish, 56.
-
- Gematria, Kabbalistic term, 5.
-
- Gemmingen, von, Uriel, elector and archbishop, addresses Maximilian I,
- 431.
- appointed to examine Hebrew books, 441.
- imperial commissioner, 437.
- interferes in the Reuchlin trial, 452.
- opposes Pfefferkorn, 430, 431.
- See Chapter XIV.
-
- Geneva (lake), scene of a Jewish persecution, 103-104, 105.
-
- Genoa, commerce of, 285.
- Jews of, banished, 554.
- Spanish exiles in, 362-363.
-
- German language cultivated by Polish Jews, 421.
-
- Germans in the Middle Ages, 422-423.
-
- Germany, cities of, re-admit Jews, 127-128.
-
- Germany, Jews of, and the ban against science, 40.
- and the confiscation of Hebrew books, 438.
- in the seventeenth century, 694-702.
- intellectual decay among the, 96, 133-135, 227.
- observe a fast day, 225-226.
- oppose Pfefferkorn, 427.
- persecuted, 96, 97, 98, 218.
- poll-tax imposed on, 96-97, 166.
- privileges confirmed, 219.
- protected by emperors, 36, 98.
- speak a jargon, 388-389.
- under Emperor Frederick III, 293-294.
- See also cities of Germany.
-
- Germany, North, Jews of, few in number, 111.
-
- Germany, southern, Jews of,
- charged with the blood-accusation, 227.
- treated with hostility, 258.
-
- George, elector of Bavaria, and Reuchlin, 454-455.
-
- Gerlach, archbishop, obtains "servi camerae," 128.
-
- Gerona, seat of the Kabbala, 1.
- Jews of, massacred, 172.
-
- Geronimo de Santa Fe (Joshua Lorqui), convert, 200, 231, 232, 234,
- 238, 256.
- and the Tortosa disputation, 207, 208-209.
- as the censor of the Talmud, 213.
- called "The Calumniator," 217.
- employed as a conversionist, 206, 207.
-
- Gersonides. See Levi ben Gerson.
-
- Gerundensis, Moses, alluded to, 442.
-
- Gerundi. See Nissim Gerundi ben Reuben.
-
- Gerundi, En-Vidal Ephraim, alluded to, 162, 171.
-
- Gesereth ha-Roim, massacre of the Shepherds, 55-57.
-
- Gesereth Mezoraim, the leper persecutions, 57-58.
-
- Ghent, Jews settle in, 662.
-
- Ghinucci, de, Geronimo, cardinal, opposes the Inquisition, 507, 520.
-
- Gibraltar demanded by Marranos as a refuge, 282-283.
-
- Gil-Nunjoz, bishop, imprisons Jews of Palma, 246.
-
- Glogau, Jews of, massacred, 111.
-
- God-flesh (Dios-Carne), Francisco (Astruc Raimuch), conversionist,
- 182.
-
- Godfrey, of Wuerzburg, bishop, expels Jews, 259-260.
-
- "Golden Bull" promulgated at Nuremberg, 128.
-
- Gomez, archbishop, presides over a religious discussion, 140.
-
- Gomez, Duarte (Solomon Usque), poet, alluded to, 558.
-
- Gonsalvo de Cordova, 666.
- favorable to Jews, 384-385.
-
- Gonzaga, Ludovico, duke of Mantua, alluded to, 287.
-
- Gonzago, Vicenzo, duke of Mantua, enforces regulations against the
- Talmud, 659.
-
- Gonzalez, Luis, secretary in Aragon, and the Inquisition, 329.
-
- Gonzalo de Santa Maria, son of Solomon Levi, 216, 217.
-
- Gospels, Four, in Hebrew, 143.
-
- Gotha, Jews of, slaughtered, 109.
-
- Gracian, Solomon, partisan of Ben Adret, 45.
-
- Granada, a refuge for Spanish Marranos, 318.
- ally of Pedro the Cruel, 125.
- Jews of, Arabic scholars, 60.
- makes Jews prisoners, 126.
- Marranos emigrate to, 179.
- negotiates with Martinez, 86.
- war in, 344-346.
-
- Graes, de, Ortuin (Ortuinus Gratius), Jew hater, 424-425, 450.
-
- Gratino, Ezra, author of a commentary, 144.
-
- Gratius, Ortuinus (Ortuin de Graes), Jew hater, 424-425, 450.
-
- "Great Defender," Jacob ben Yechiel Loans, 414.
-
- Gregory XIII, pope, attempts to convert Jews, 654-655.
- prohibits the employment of Jewish physicians, 653-654.
-
- Grimani, Dominico, cardinal, summons Hoogstraten, 458.
-
- Groede, first Jewish burial place in Holland, 672.
-
- Groenigen, von, Martin, translates the "Augenspiegel," 460.
-
- "Guide of the Perplexed," 479.
- and the Roman Jews, 60.
- attacked by Aaron ben Elia, 95.
- Latin translation of, 474.
- neglected, 143.
- studied by Moses Isserles, 638.
-
- Guido Ubaldo, duke of Urbino, and the Marranos, 569, 578-582.
-
- Guienne, lepers in, poison the water, 57.
-
- Guilds opposed to Jews, 696-699.
-
- Gunther, of Schwarzburg, and Emperor Charles IV, 109, 110.
-
- Gustavus Adolphus, alluded to, 692.
-
- Guttenstein, count, alluded to, 424.
-
-
- Halevi, Elias, influences Karaites to Rabbinism, 270.
-
- Halevi, Moses Uri, adviser of Portuguese Marranos in the Netherlands,
- 665, 666, 671.
-
- Halevi, Samuel, ambassador to Pope Martin V, 219.
-
- Halevi, Serachya, delegate at the Tortosa disputation, 208, 212.
-
- Hamburg, 686-693.
- clergy of, opposes Jews, 687-688, 689-690.
- first synagogue in, 689.
- German Jews settle in, 691.
- Portuguese Jews granted residence in, 688.
-
- Hamon, Isaac, physician in Granada, 344.
-
- Hamon, Joseph, physician to Sultan Selim I, 401.
-
- Hamon, Moses, physician to Sultan Solyman I, 401, 402.
- intercedes for Gracia Mendesia, 575.
- protects Turkish Jews, 553.
-
- Hanau, Portuguese Marranos in, 695.
-
- "Handspiegel," work by Pfefferkorn, 446.
-
- Hanover, Jews of, persecuted by the flagellants, 111.
-
- Haquinet, son of Manessier de Vesoul, 150.
-
- "Harmony of Heaven," work by Judah Abrabanel, 480.
-
- Hartmann von Deggenburg, persecutor of the Jews, 98.
-
- Hebrew at the universities, 471, 473, 474.
-
- "Hebrew Physician, The," work by David de Pomis, 656-657.
-
- Hebrew studies among Christians, 433-434, 471, 473, 651.
-
- Hebron, occupations of inhabitants of, 75.
-
- "Hell of the Jews," Spain, 308.
-
- Heller, Lipmann, rabbi at Vienna and Prague, 703-706.
-
- Henrique, bishop, burns Portuguese Marranos, 499.
-
- Henrique, Infante of Portugal, grand inquisitor, 521, 523.
-
- Henry, bishop of Ratisbon, hostile to Jews, 301-302, 303, 304.
-
- Henry II, of Castile de Trastamare, son of Alfonso XI, 114, 120, 169.
- and the Jews, 124, 125, 137, 139, 140.
- appoints Jews to offices, 138, 156.
- his war with Pedro the Cruel, 122-126.
-
- Henry II, of Castile, and Paul Burgensis, 185, 194, 196.
- favorable to Jews, 190, 193.
-
- Henry IV, of Castile, and the Jews, 274, 275-276, 279-281.
- deposed, 278.
- opposed to the Inquisition, 310.
- plot against, 283.
-
- Henry II, of France, 411.
- and Joseph Nassi, 595-596, 597-599.
- friendly to Jews, 544.
- repudiates his debt to the Mendes family, 574.
-
- Henry III, of France (Henry of Anjou), candidate for the Polish
- throne, 604-605.
-
- Henry IV, of France, alluded to, 672.
-
- Henry, of Orange, favorable to Jews, 678.
-
- Henry Julius, of Brunswick, expels the Jews, 652.
-
- Hercules d'Este I, of Ferrara, patron of Abraham Farissol, 412-413.
-
- Hercules d'Este II, of Ferrara,
- friendly to Jews, 544.
- protects Gracia Mendesia, 575.
-
- Hermandad, the, proscribes Jews, 251.
-
- Herrera, Marrano martyr, 494.
-
- Herrera, de, Alonso (Abraham), Spanish resident in Cadiz, 665-666.
-
- Herrera, de, Pedio, Marrano, 282-283.
-
- Hess, Hermann, appointed to direct the confiscation of Hebrew books,
- 437-438.
-
- Hillel of Verona introduces a scientific method among Italian Jews,
- 59.
-
- Hinderbach, bishop, hostile to Jews, 298-299.
-
- Historical studies promoted by persecution, 554-555.
-
- "History of the Jews" by Gedalya Ibn-Yachya, 616.
-
- Hochmeister, rabbis in Franconia, 259.
-
- Hochstraten. See Hoogstraten, Jacob.
-
- Holland, Jews plan to emigrate to, 283.
- See also the Netherlands.
-
- Holy Land. See Palestine.
-
- Holy Roman Empire. See Germany.
-
- Holy Sepulcher, Church of the, alluded to, 272, 274.
-
- Homem, Gaspar Lopes, Portuguese Marrano, 664.
-
- Homem, Mayor Rodrigues, Portuguese Marrano, emigrates to Holland, 667.
- sends her family to Holland, 664-665.
-
- Hoogstraten, Jacob, Dominican general, 424.
- appeals to Leo X, 455-456.
- appointed to examine into Hebrew books, 441, 444.
- summoned to Rome, 458.
- summons Reuchlin as a heretic, 450-452.
- See Chapter XIV.
-
- Hosiander, supposed author of "Little Book about the Jews," 545.
-
- "House of Jacob," first synagogue in Amsterdam, 667, 671.
-
- Hubmaier, Balthasar, enemy of the Jews, 542-543.
-
- Huete, Jews of, persecuted, 170.
-
- Hungary, Jews of, emigrate, 111.
- threatened by Turks, 268.
-
- Huss, John, 221-222.
-
- Hussite war against Catholicism, 222, 224-226.
-
- Hussites aided by Jews, 222.
- and the Jews of Ratisbon, 301.
-
- Hutten, von, Ulrich, 468.
- ally of Reuchlin, 456-457.
- and the Dominicans, 465.
- Jewish advocate at the imperial court, 431.
- quoted, 462.
-
-
- Ibbur, Kabbalistic term, 620.
-
- Ibn-Abi Zimra, David, Kabbalist, 481.
- rabbi of Cairo, 393, 394-395.
-
- Ibn-Albilla, David, philosopher, 91.
-
- Ibn-Alfual, Joseph, translator of Maimuni, 60.
-
- Ibn-Almali, Nathaniel, translator of Maimuni, 60.
-
- Ibn-Askara, Chananel, Kabbalist, 74.
-
- Ibn-Benveniste Halevi, Joseph ben Abraham. See Joseph of Ecija.
-
- Ibn-Chabib, Jacob, Talmudist, 405.
-
- Ibn-Ezra, Abraham, 442, 476.
- commented upon by Profiat Duran, 191.
- studied by Jews of Spain, 143-144.
-
- Ibn-Ezra, Moses, poems of, in the Karaite prayer-book, 71.
-
- Ibn-Gaon, Shem Tob ben Abraham, Kabbalist, 74.
-
- Ibn-Gebirol, Solomon, 67, 230.
- hymns of, in the Karaite prayer-book, 71.
-
- Ibn-Labi, Vidal ben Benveniste (Ferrer), neo-Hebraic poet, 230.
- at Tortosa, 207-208, 211, 214, 215.
- translator of Aristotle, 193.
- work by, 233-234.
-
- Ibn-Latif, Isaac, Kabbalist, 3-4, 10.
-
- Ibn-Musa, Chayim, controversial writer, 235-237.
-
- Ibn-Nagrela, Samuel, alluded to, 337.
-
- Ibn-Nunez, Jacob, physician of Henry IV of Castile, 275.
-
- Ibn-Said, Isaac (Zag), publishes the Alfonsine Tables, 367.
-
- Ibn-Shaprut, Chasdai, alluded to, 119.
-
- Ibn-Shem Tob, Joseph ben Shem Tob, controversial writer, 235.
- holds office in Castile, 228-229.
- philosopher, 243-244.
-
- Ibn-Shem Tob, Shem Tob ben Joseph, father of the preceding, Kabbalist,
- 196, 197, 239.
-
- Ibn-Shoshan, Abraham, rabbi in Egypt, 393.
-
- Ibn-Shoshan family visited by Black Death, 113.
-
- Ibn-Sid, Samuel, scholar, 392.
-
- Ibn-Tibbon, Samuel, translator of Maimuni's works, 32, 60.
-
- Ibn-Verga, Joseph, historian, 557.
-
- Ibn-Verga, Judah, Kabbalist and historian, 335, 336, 556.
-
- Ibn-Verga, Solomon, Marrano historian, 556-557.
-
- Ibn-Wakar, Jehuda ben Isaac, treasurer under Juan Emanuel, 52-53.
-
- Ibn-Wakar, Samuel (Abenhuacar), physician of Alfonso XI, 76, 79, 80,
- 84.
- offices of, 80, 81.
-
- Ibn-Yachya, David, rabbi of Naples, Talmudist, 410.
-
- Ibn-Yachya family, 159, 609.
-
- Ibn-Yachya, Gedalya, patron of learning, 609.
-
- Ibn-Yachya, Gedalya, grandson of the preceding, historian, 592, 609,
- 615-617.
-
- Ibn-Yachya, Joseph, delegate at Tortosa, 208.
-
- Ibn-Yachya, Joseph, intercedes for the Spanish exiles in Portugal,
- 366.
-
- Ibn-Yachya, Moses, philanthropist, 609.
-
- Ibn-Yachya Negro, favorites of Alfonso V, of Portugal, 339.
-
- Ibn-Yachya Negro, Judah, counselor of Joao I, of Portugal, 218.
-
- Ibn-Yaish, officer at the court of Castile, 84.
-
- Ibn-Zachin, martyr, 576.
-
- Ibn-Zarzal, Abraham, physician of Pedro the Cruel, 116, 121.
-
- Icabo, character in Samuel Usque's work, 558, 559.
-
- Ikkarim, work by Joseph Albo, 239.
-
- Ilhas perdidas, Jewish children at the, 371.
-
- Immanuel ben Solomon Romi, poet, 63-69, 230, 289.
- a representative of the Roman congregation, 60.
- compared with Dante, 65, 66, 67.
- language and style, 63-64, 67, 68.
-
- "In Praise and Honor of Emperor Maximilian," pamphlet by Pfefferkorn,
- 430.
-
- Index expurgatorius includes the Zohar, 584.
-
- Innocent III, pope, alluded to, 244, 562.
-
- Innocent IV, pope, deprecates forcible baptism, 165.
-
- Innocent VII, pope, 368.
- opposed to the expulsion of Jews from Spain, 346.
-
- Inquisition, the, in Aragon, 319, 328-329.
- in the Netherlands, 662.
- resisted in Navarre, 357.
- under Pope Paul IV, 568-571.
-
- Inquisition, the Portuguese, 499-500, 505, 513-528.
- described, 522-523.
- sanctioned, 518-519, 526-527.
-
- Inquisition, the Spanish, and the Marranos, 483-485.
- at Benevento, 385.
- at Seville, 312-314.
- code, 326-328.
- desired, 310.
- first germs of, 256.
- first Marrano victims of, 316-318.
- judge of appeals appointed, 320.
- statute ratified, 312.
- tribunals multiplied, 325.
- unpopular, 313.
-
- "Investigation of Religion, The," work by Elias del Medigo, 293.
-
- Isaac ben Jacob Campanton, Talmudist, Gaon of Castile, 230.
-
- Isaac ben Kalonymos (Isaac Nathan), controversial writer, and author
- of a Bible concordance, 234-235.
-
- Isaac ben Moses. See Profiat Duran.
-
- Isaac ben Sheshet Barfat (Ribash), philosopher, 145-146, 147-150.
- appealed to, 150, 153.
- attacked by Simon Duran, 199.
- imprisoned, 150, 155.
- quarrel with Chayim ben Gallipapa, 148.
- rabbi of northern Africa, 198-199.
-
- Isaac ben Todros, Kabbalist, 74.
-
- Isaac de Leon, last Toledan rabbi, 392.
-
- Isaac of Accho, Kabbalist, 20.
-
- Isaac of Salzuflen attempts to settle in Holland, 685-686.
-
- Isaac the Blind, supposed originator of the Kabbala, 21.
-
- Isaac Tyrnau compiles Jewish customs, 134-135.
- his rigidity, 227.
-
- Isabella, of Castile, 309.
- favors Marranas, 311.
- influenced by Torquemada, 310.
- marriage, 280.
- party of, 279.
- piety, 310.
- queen of Spain, 284.
- See also Ferdinand and Isabella, and Ferdinand II of Aragon.
-
- Isabella of Castile, wife of Manoel, of Portugal, 374, 381.
- cruelty, 376, 379-380.
- unfriendly to Jews, 373-374.
-
- Isaiah, prophet, as a character in Immanuel Romi's work, 67.
- prophecies of, 149.
- quoted, 211.
-
- Isaiah ben Abba-Mari, 162.
- appoints his relatives to rabbinates, 153.
- invested with authority over French Jews, 152.
-
- Ishmael, the Mahometan world, 18.
-
- Isny, Hebrew press at, 474.
-
- Israeli II, Isaac ben Joseph, astronomer, 51.
-
- Isserlein, Israel, partisan of Israel Bruna, 302, 303.
-
- Isserles, Moses, ben Israel, Talmudist, 634, 637-638.
-
- Israel of Enns accused of host desecration, 223.
-
- Italy, refuge for Marranos, 318.
-
- Italy, Jews of, culture of, 288-289.
- hold synods, 218.
- number of, 653.
- petition Pope Martin V, 219.
- under restrictions, 251, 253.
-
- Italy, Jews settle in, 352, 407-413.
- toleration of, 285-286.
-
- Ivan IV, of Russia (the Cruel), and the Polish election, 603.
- hostile to Jews, 633.
-
-
- Jaabez, Joseph, opponent of free thought, 343, 479.
-
- Jacob ben Asheri, son of Asher ben Yechiel, Talmudist, 87-90.
- his code commented upon by Karo, 537.
-
- Jacob ben Moses Moelin Halevi (Maharil), rabbi, 227.
- arranges the ritual, 225.
- compiles Jewish customs, 135.
-
- Jacob ben Machir Tibbon (Profatius), scientist, 30-31, 48.
- and the ban against science, 42.
- his ban against the proscribers of science, 40-41.
-
- Jacob, of Belzyce, controversialist, 648.
-
- Jacob, of Navarre, executed, 357-358.
-
- Jacob, of Segovia, Kabbalist, 2.
-
- Jacob Tam, alluded to, 609.
-
- Jacopo, Flavio, poet, quoted, 610.
-
- Jaen, Inquisition at, 325.
- Jews of, imprisoned, 126.
-
- Jafa, Mordecai, president of the Polish synods, 645.
-
- Jaeger, Johann (Crotus Rubianus), author of the "Epistolae Obscurorum
- Virorum," 456, 461.
-
- Jargon, 388-389.
-
- Jaroslaw, meeting-place of Talmudists, 640.
- of the Polish synods, 644.
-
- Jehuda ben Asheri, son of Asher ben Yechiel, Talmudist, rabbi of
- Toledo, 87-88, 90, 144.
-
- Jehuda ben Asher II, heroism of, 170.
-
- Jehuda ben Moses ben Daniel, (Leone Romano), scholar, 60, 68-69, 289.
-
- Jehuda Halevi, 67.
- poems of, in the Karaite prayer-book, 71.
-
- Jerome, Church Father, alluded to, 83, 342, 433, 435, 552.
-
- Jerusalem, growth of, 396-397.
- Jews of, build a synagogue, 273-274.
- of the Occident, 136.
- occupations of inhabitants of, 74.
- pilgrims visit, 73.
- Spanish exiles settle in, 396-398.
-
- Jesiba de los Pintos, Hebrew institute at Rotterdam, 685.
-
- Jesuits, order of, 524-525.
-
- Jesurun, Reuel, (Rohel Jesurun, Paul de Pina), poet, 669-670, 678-679.
-
- Jesurun, David, poet, quoted, 669.
-
- Jesus in the Old Testament, 141, 212, 256.
-
- Jew badges, abolished by Pius IV, 588.
- decreed by popes, 216, 250, 566, 590.
- enforced, 54, 131, 138-139, 150, 255, 258, 266, 278, 519, 543, 545,
- 696, 702.
-
- Jewish colleges in France dispersed, 48.
-
- Jewish congregations autonomous, 40.
-
- Jew quarters decreed by popes, 250, 566, 590.
- in Spain, 203, 335-336.
- in Venice, 408.
-
- Jews aid Hussites, 222.
- and Marranos, 334-335.
- and the Black Death, 101-114.
- and the Dutch in Brazil, 693-694.
- and the Reformation, 470.
- as artisans, 74-75.
- as physicians, 275, 287, 407-408, 411, 653-654, 692.
- as printers, 289, 581.
- declared outlaws, 107.
- divided into national groups, 478.
- emigrate to Turkey, 273.
- granted to electors, 128.
- hated by Luther, 547-552.
- in the fourteenth century, 127.
- in the Peasant War, 542-543.
- in the Thirty Years' War, 701-702, 707-708.
- indispensable to Christians, 127, 137, 263, 353.
- maintain catechumens, 566.
- persecuted by the clergy, 163-164.
- proscribed by the Council of Basle, 245-246.
- protected by Charles IV, 106.
- scientific inquiry among, 479.
- spiritual condition of, in the Middle Ages, 477-479.
- under Emperor Sigismund, 248.
- wanderings of, 676.
- See also the various countries, etc.
-
- Jikatilla, Joseph ben Abraham, Kabbalist, 3, 6, 10, 466.
-
- Joachim I, elector of Brandenburg, persecutes the Jews, 440.
-
- Joachim II, elector of Brandenburg, alluded to, 652.
-
- Joao, Infante of Portugal, and Leonora, 160.
-
- Joao I, of Portugal, protects new-Christians, 217-218.
-
- Joao II, of Portugal, 340, 373.
- and Isaac Abrabanel, 341.
- and Judah Abrabanel, 361.
- and the Spanish exiles, 352, 365-366, 370-371.
- lays restrictions upon Marranos, 368.
- summons an astronomical congress, 367.
- transports Jewish children, 371.
-
- Joao III, of Portugal, and David Reubeni, 493.
- institutes a Jew badge, 519.
- plans the Inquisition, 488-491, 499-500.
-
- Joanna, of Castile, alluded to, 373.
-
- Joanna, of Naples, hostile to Jews, 258.
-
- Job, book of, paraphrased, 140.
- poem by Belmonte, 665.
-
- Jochanan, son of Matathiah Provenci, rabbi, 152, 153, 162.
-
- John II, duke of Brabant, and the Jews, 112.
-
- John II, of Aragon, Jews under, 274, 275.
-
- John Albert, of Poland, hostile to Jews, 419.
-
- John George, elector of Brandenburg, alluded to, 652.
-
- John Maurice, of Nassau, stadtholder of Brazil, 693.
-
- John of Capistrano, 249, 257-268, 276, 277, 296, 418, 419.
- arouses hatred against Jews, 258-263, 266-268.
- employed by Nicholas V, 253.
- in Poland, 265.
- in Silesia, 260-263.
- in southern Germany, 258-260.
-
- John, of France, permits Jews to return to France, 128-129, 133.
-
- John XXII, pope, exiles Jews, 61.
- opposed to a crusade, 55.
-
- John XXIII, pope, character of, 201.
-
- John of Valladolid, apostate, 140-141, 209.
-
- Jonah, rabbi of Vienna, 110.
-
- Joshua ben Joseph Ibn-Vives (Joshua Allorqui), opponent of Paul
- Burgensis, 186-187.
-
- Joshua, father of Narboni, 94.
-
- Jose ben Jose, Hebrew poet, 67.
-
- Joseph, son of Manessier de Vesoul, convert, 150.
-
- Joseph ben Abraham Ibn-Benveniste Halevi. See Joseph of Ecija.
-
- Joseph ben Abraham Jikatilla, Kabbalist, 3, 6, 10, 466.
-
- Joseph ben Israel, father of Manasseh ben Israel, 671.
-
- Joseph de Avila discovers the spuriousness of the Zohar, 20.
-
- Joseph, duke of Mantua, banishes rabbis, 295.
-
- Joseph, Karaite, 269.
-
- Joseph of Arli, Kabbalist, 511-512.
-
- Joseph of Ecija (Joseph ben Abraham Ibn-Benveniste Halevi), treasurer
- of Alfonso XI, 76, 79, 80, 81, 83, 84.
-
- Josephus, 614.
- work of, translated, 608.
-
- Joslin of Rosheim. See Loans, Joseph ben Gershon.
-
- Juan Alfonso de Albuquerque, minister of Pedro the Cruel, 115, 117.
-
- Juan de Espana (Juan the Old), convert, 233.
-
- Juan de Lucena, executes the edict of banishment, 348-349, 355.
-
- Juan de Seville. See Abrabanel, Samuel (I).
-
- Juan Emanuel, regent of Castile, favors Jews, 52-53.
-
- Juan I, of Aragon, character of, 170.
-
- Juan I, of Castile, and the Jews, 157, 158.
- and the regent of Portugal, 160.
- crowned, 156.
- regent of Portugal, 161-162.
-
- Juan II, of Castile, 193, 275, 277.
- and the Jews, 228-229, 251, 252.
- complains of the Marranos, 256.
- permits a synod to be held, 229.
- restrictions laid upon Jews under, 203-204.
-
- Judah, treasurer of Ferdinand of Portugal, 159, 160, 161, 162.
-
- Judah ben Baba, alluded to, 536.
-
- Judah ben Moses Tibbon, opponent of Abba Mari, 32.
-
- Judah ben Yechiel (Messer Leon), rabbi in Mantua, 289-290.
- attainments and works, 289.
- feud with Joseph Kolon, 295.
- hostility to, 293.
-
- Judah, Siciliano, poet, 60, 68.
-
- "Judah's Rod of Correction," history by the Ibn-Vergas, 557-558.
-
- Judaism and the Reformation, 471-476.
-
- "Judaism, or the Jewish Doctrine," by John Miller, 692.
-
- Judenmeister, three rabbis in Germany, 227.
-
- "Judenstaettigkeit" residence of Jews in Frankfort and Worms, 695-696.
- abolished, 700.
-
- Juderia, Jew quarter, 169.
-
- Juglar, Gaspar, inquisitor, 326.
-
- Julian, the Apostate alluded to, 267.
-
- Julius II, pope, alluded to, 407, 408.
-
- Julius III, pope, and the Portuguese Marranos, 528.
- and the Talmud, 565.
-
- Justiniani, Augustin, Hebrew scholar, 473-474.
-
-
- Kabbala, the, 1-23, 91, 196.
- and Pope Sixtus IV, 292.
- and Reuchlin, 466-467, 481.
- Christian dogmas in, 291-292.
- compared with the Talmud, 19.
- Elias del Medigo on, 292.
- in the East, 617-627.
- studied by Pico di Mirandola, 291-292, 443.
-
- Kabbalistic centers, 1, 2, 399, 405, 538.
-
- Kabbalistic customs, 5-6.
-
- Kabbalistic terms, 4, 5, 6, 13, 14, 17, 18, 22, 572, 619, 620.
-
- Kabbalistic works, 6, 10, 196, 197.
- the Zohar, 11-24.
- translated, 443.
-
- Kabbalists, 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 14, 20, 21, 74, 196, 197, 291, 335,
- 369, 381, 399, 405, 466, 481, 511, 538, 556, 618, 623, 625.
-
- Kahal Kados, the Recife Jewish community, 693.
-
- Kahiya, advocate of Turkish Jews, 404.
-
- Kalish, Jews of, massacred, 111.
-
- Kalonymos ben Kalonymos, satirist, 61-63, 68.
-
- Kalonymos ben Todros, partisan of Abba-Mari, 34, 38, 39.
-
- Kalmann, of Ratisbon, convert, 288.
-
- Kalmann, an immigrant, urges Jews to go to Turkey, 271.
-
- Kapsali, Elias ben Elkanah, historian, 406-407, 557.
-
- Kapsali, Eliezer, influences Karaites to Rabbinism, 270.
-
- Kapsali, Elkanah, aids Spanish exiles in Candia, 364.
-
- Kapsali, Moses, chief rabbi of Turkey, 268-269, 402.
- aids Spanish exiles, 364.
- and Karaites, 270, 271.
-
- Karaism and Shemarya Ikriti, 69.
-
- Karaites, calendar, 70, 270.
- converted to Rabbinism, 72.
- dissensions among, 269-270.
- establish pilgrim prayers, 73-74.
- feud with Elias Mizrachi, 403-404.
- instructed by Rabbanites, 269-271.
- marriage laws, 70.
-
- Karben, von, Victor, convert, 424-425.
- appointed to examine into Hebrew books, 441, 444.
-
- Kara, Avigedor, friend of Emperor Wenceslaus, 166.
-
- Karo, Joseph, 580, 599, 637.
- and Molcho, 511, 537.
- converted to Kabbalism, 496-497, 537.
- his code, 539, 612, 613.
- his Maggid, 497, 537-539.
- opposes Dei Rossi, 616.
- ordained, 536, 537.
-
- Kartiel, Kabbalistic term, 17.
-
- Kaspi, Joseph, philosopher, 87, 91.
-
- Kelifa (Kelifoth), Kabbalistic term, 17, 620.
-
- Kepler, alluded to, 638.
-
- Khataib, Spanish synagogue at Damascus, 400.
-
- Kiera, Esther, Turkish court Jewess, 629-630.
- patroness of Jewish learning, 608, 630.
-
- Kimchi, David, alluded to, 476.
-
- Kimchi, Moses, grammarian, 474.
-
- Kimchis, the, alluded to, 442.
-
- King, Kabbalistic term, 18.
-
- Klausner, Abraham, compiles Jewish customs, 134.
-
- Klonowicz, Polish poet, 643.
-
- Kodesh ha-Kodashim, work by Ibn-Labi Ferrer, 234.
-
- Kolon, Joseph ben Solomon, rabbi of Mantua, 294-295.
-
- Koenigsberg, Jews of, burnt, 110-111.
-
- Krems, Jews of, commit suicide, 110.
-
- Kunigunde, influences Emperor Maximilian against the Jews, 428-429,
- 437, 440.
-
-
- La Asumcao, de, Diogo, convert to Judaism, 668-669, 670.
-
- La Caballeria, de, Pedro, apostate, 231.
-
- Ladislaus, of Bohemia, and the Ratisbon Jews, 303.
-
- Ladislaus, of Hungary, and the Jews of Bohemia, 417.
- and the Jews of Breslau, 262-263.
-
- La Fuente, de, Juan, inquisitor, 484.
-
- Lagarto, Jacob, first American Talmudical author, 693.
-
- La Guardia, Jews of, accused of child-murder, 343.
-
- Laemmlein, Asher, forerunner of the Messiah, 482-483.
-
- Languedoc, Jews of, and the ban against science, 40.
- protected by the governor, 132.
-
- Lansac, de, French ambassador, 577.
-
- Larta, Jewish exiles in, 406.
-
- Lateran Council (Fourth) and the Reuchlin quarrel, 464.
-
- Lates, de, Bonet, physician to popes, 407-408.
- aids Reuchlin, 453-454.
-
- Leather-arms. See Armleder.
-
- Lecha Dodi, Sabbath song, 538.
-
- Lemberg, meeting-place of Talmudists, 640.
-
- Leo X, pope, 407, 408, 592.
- and Reuchlin, 452-453, 465.
- encourages the printing of the Talmud, 468, 565.
-
- Leo of Crema, alluded to, 287.
-
- Leo Medigo. See Abrabanel, Judah Leon.
-
- Leo the Hebrew. See Levi ben Gerson.
-
- Leon de Bagnols. See Levi ben Gerson.
-
- Leon, Jacob Jehuda, controversial author, 691.
-
- Leon, Jews of, baptized, 205.
-
- Leon, (Messer). See Judah ben Yechiel.
-
- Leonora d'Este, and Jews, 660.
-
- Leonora de Guzman, mistress of Alfonso XI, saves the Jews, 85, 113.
-
- Leonora, of Portugal, regent, plots against Juan I of Castile, 161.
- removes Jews from office, 160.
-
- Lenoora, of Tuscany, and Benvenida Abrabanela, 410, 544.
-
- Lepers accuse Jews, 57.
-
- Lerida, Jews of, converted, 214.
- massacred, 172.
-
- Lerida opposes the Inquisition, 332.
-
- "Letter of Aristas" translated by Dei Rossi, 615.
-
- "Letter of Warning," by Solomon Alami, 154.
-
- "Letters of Obscurantists," a satire, 461-462.
-
- Levi, Abraham, Kabbalist, 481.
-
- Levi, Astruc, delegate at the Tortosa disputation, 208, 214, 215.
-
- Levi ben Abraham ben Chayim, chief of the allegorists, 24-25, 91.
- takes refuge with Sulami, 28-29.
-
- Levi ben Gerson (Gersonides, Leo the Hebrew, Leon de Bagnols),
- philosopher, 87, 91-94, 146, 147, 197, 342, 442, 476.
- and Pope Clement VI, 94, 103.
- astronomer, and physician, 91-92.
- author of a methodology of the Mishna, 92.
- predicts the Messianic redemption, 120.
-
- Levi ben Shem Tob, convert, 375.
-
- Levi of Villefranche. See Levi ben Abraham ben Chayim.
-
- Levi, Solomon, (Paul Burgensis, Paul de Santa Maria), convert,
- 182-190, 231, 256, 342.
- favored by Pope Benedict XIII, 184, 190.
- lays restrictions upon the Jews of Castile, 203-204.
- revives anti-Jewish laws, 194-195.
- work by, 233.
-
- Levita, Elias. See Elias Levita.
-
- "Light of the Eyes," work by Dei Rossi, 615, 616.
-
- Lima, de, David, builds the third Hamburg synagogue, 691.
-
- Limpo, Balthasar, bishop, and Pope Paul III, 525-526.
-
- Lindau, Jews of, charged with the blood-accusation, 227.
- persecuted, 105.
-
- Lipmann of Muehlhausen (Tab-Yomi), scholar, 178.
-
- Lippold, physician, tortured, 652.
-
- Lisbon, port for exiles, 374, 376.
- council of, hostile to the Jews, 160.
- Inquisition at, 508.
- Marranos massacred in, 487.
-
- Lithuania, Jews of, enjoy peace, 418, 420.
- the Reformation in, 646-648.
-
- "Little Book about the Jews," pamphlet, 545-546, 547.
-
- Liturgy Kabbalistic, 481.
-
- Loans, Jacob ben Yechiel, physician to Frederick III, 413-414.
- teacher of Reuchlin, 433.
-
- Loans, Joseph ben Gershon, and Molcho, 510.
- representative of Jews, 414.
-
- Lodi, Jews of, expelled, 660.
-
- Logrono, Jews of, persecuted, 170.
-
- Longo, Saadio, Hebrew poet, 609.
-
- Lopes de Almeida, Portuguese ambassador to Rome, 340.
-
- Lopez, Pedro, poet and chronicler, quoted, 121, 122.
-
- Lorqui, Joseph. See Geronimo de Santa Fe.
-
- Lost Islands, Jewish children at the, 371.
- Louis, duke of Bavaria, and the Jews of Ratisbon, 301-302, 303.
-
- Louis, duke of Landshut (the Rich), persecutes Jews, 253-254.
-
- Louis, emperor (the Bavarian), and the Jews, 96, 98.
- sons of, favor the persecution of the Jews, 110.
-
- Louis, of Brandenburg, orders the persecution of Jews, 110-111.
-
- Louis, of Darmstadt, protects Jews, 699.
-
- Louis X, of France, recalls the Jews, 53, 54.
-
- Louis XII, of France, and Reuchlin, 459.
-
- Louis, of Hungary, and the Jews, 111.
-
- Louis, regent of France, extends the privileges of Jews, 150.
-
- Loyola, Ignatius, 525, 562.
-
- Lublin, meeting-place of Talmudists, 640.
- of the Polish synods, 644.
-
- Lublin, third Jewish community in Poland, 632.
-
- Lucero, Diego Rodriguez, hangman in Cordova, 484, 489.
-
- Luna, de, Alvaro, minister of Juan II, of Castile, 228, 251, 256.
-
- Luna, de, Pedro. See Benedict XIII.
-
- Luenel, Jews of, accused of desecrating Christian symbols, 55.
- expelled, 48.
- side with Abba-Mari, 33.
-
- Lusitano, Abraham Zacuto, physician, 678.
-
- Lusitanus, Amatus (Joao Rodrigo de Castel-Branco), physician of Pope
- Julius III, 569-570.
- death, 610.
- leaves Pesaro, 581.
-
- Luther, Martin, reformer, 467.
- advises confiscation of Hebrew books, 550.
- and the Jews, 547-552.
- at Worms, 469.
- maligns the Talmud, 549-550.
- quoted, 470.
-
- Lutherans and the Spanish Inquisition, 485.
-
- Lurya, Isaac, Kabbalist, 618, 623-627.
- and Chayim Vital Calabrese, 623-624.
- effect of his teaching, 625-627.
- his Messianic claims, 622, 624.
- his system, 617-622.
-
- Lurya, Solomon, Talmudist, 634-637.
- criticism of Jewish society, 635-636.
-
- Luzk, Karaites of, well treated by Casimir IV, 265.
-
- Lyra, de, Nicholas, 232, 342, 442.
- admires Rashi, 185.
- refuted, 237.
-
-
- Maamad, rabbinical councils at Amsterdam, 684.
-
- "Maase Efod," Hebrew grammar by Profiat Duran, 191.
-
- Maccabees, the, and the biblical prophecies, 149.
-
- Machault, Denys, convert, 175.
-
- Madrid, cortes of, and usurers, 80.
-
- Maella, Jews of, converted, 214.
-
- Magdeburg, Jews of, banished, 416.
- persecuted, 111.
-
- Maggid, dream-prompter, 496, 537-538.
-
- Maharil. See Jacob ben Moses Moelin Halevi.
-
- Mahomet II, sultan, and the Jews, 267-269.
-
- Mahomet IV, sultan, alluded to, 629.
-
- Maillotins, rising of the, 152.
-
- Maimi, Simon, martyr, 380-381.
-
- Maimonides. See Maimuni, Moses.
-
- Maimuni, Abraham II, and the Karaites, 72.
-
- Maimuni, David, Nagid, 72.
-
- Maimuni, Moses, 67, 93, 94, 146, 147, 192, 197, 239, 243, 290.
- articles of faith by, 193, 240.
- attacked by Aaron II, 95.
- code of, 86, 88, 89.
- defended, 41, 42, 43, 44, 392.
- on Ordination, 530-531.
- rationalizes the Scriptures, 23.
- studied by Polish Jews, 633.
-
- Maimuni's works and the Roman Jews, 60.
- commented, 191.
- neglected, 143.
- proscribed, 40.
-
- Maiora, martyr, 570.
-
- Majorca, French exiles settle on, 49, 50.
- Inquisition on, 332.
-
- Majorca, Jews of, persecuted, 171, 246-247.
- seek refuge in Africa, 197.
-
- Mallo, inquisitor, 521.
-
- Malmed, Jacob Anatoli's sermons, 32, 39, 40.
-
- Malta, Order of, hostile to Jews, 592, 656.
- Mamson, tortured on the charge of poisoning, 104.
-
- Manasseh ben Israel, rabbi at Amsterdam, 682-684.
-
- Manessier de Vesoul, receiver general, 130, 132.
- and the Jews of France, 129, 131-132.
- sons of, 150, 151, 152.
-
- Manoel, the Great, of Portugal, and the Marranos, 485, 486, 488.
- converts Jews by force, 375-377.
- friendly to Jews, 372-374.
- issues an amnesty, 379.
-
- Manrique, Inigo, inquisition judge of appeals, 320.
-
- Mansfield, general, alluded to, 701.
-
- Mantin, Jacob, physician and philosopher, 411, 515.
- denounces Molcho, 506-507.
- instructs Christians, 473.
-
- "Mappa," by Moses Isserles, 637.
-
- "Mar Mar Jesu," anti-Christian work, 215.
-
- Marcellus II, pope, alluded to, 566.
-
- Margaritha, Anton, convert, maligns Jews, 551.
-
- Maria de Medici, alluded to, 673.
-
- Maria de Molina, regent of Castile, 2, 52, 53.
-
- Maria de Padilla, wife of Pedro the Cruel, 116, 117, 122-123.
-
- Maria of the Netherlands, alluded to, 572.
-
- Maroli, Menachem, Karaite, 269.
-
- Marranos, (new-Christians, Anusim) forced converts, 179-181.
- and David Reubeni, 494-495.
- and Jews, 334-335.
- and the Inquisition, 310-313.
- attacked in Castile, 280-283.
- catechism of, 311.
- conspire against Arbues, 329-331.
- excluded from church offices, 321, 582.
- flee to Navarre, 357-358.
- help the Spanish exiles, 354-355.
- injure Judaism, 181.
- of Ancona, 408, 500.
- of Ferrara, 581.
- of Pesaro, 578-582.
- petition Alexander VI, 378-380.
- protected by Joao I, 218.
- signs of, 315-316.
- sufferings of, 483-490.
- troublesome to the church, 255-257.
- under Henry IV, of Castile, 276.
- victims of the Inquisition, 314, 316-318, 323-325, 350, 351.
-
- Marranos, Portuguese, and Clement VII, 509.
- and Paul III, 516-517, 519-520.
- and Paul IV, 568.
- as physicians, 488.
- burnt, 499.
- culture of, 674.
- emigrate, 485-486.
- forbidden to emigrate, 508-509.
- imprisoned, 670-671.
- in Hamburg, 686-693.
- in the Netherlands, 662-675.
- informed against, 489-490.
- keep an agent at Rome, 512-513.
- massacred in Lisbon, 487.
- persecuted, 521-522.
- refused by Frankfort, 695.
- settle in Italy, 568-571.
- sufferings of, 528.
- under restrictions, 368.
- useful citizens, 527-528.
-
- Marseilles, Jews of, protected, 177.
-
- Martin V, pope, 229, 249, 253.
- and the Jews, 219-220, 226-227.
-
- Martinez (Martin), Fernan, and Joseph Pichon, 156-157, 193, 335.
-
- Martinez, Gonzalo, favorite of Alfonso XI, 83-86.
-
- Mascarenhas, John Rodrigo, Marrano tax farmer, 486.
-
- Masserano, Bezalel, pleads for the Talmud, 658.
-
- Matathiah ben Joseph Provenci, chief rabbi, 133, 152.
-
- Matronita, Kabbalistic term, 18, 19.
-
- Matthias, emperor, abolishes Judenstaettigkeit, 700.
-
- Maurice, of Orange, favorable to Jews, 674, 678.
-
- Maximilian I, emperor, and Jews, 414-415, 423-429.
- and the German Jews, 463-464.
- and the Nuremberg Jews, 415-416.
- and the Pfefferkorn-Reuchlin case, 429, 437, 441, 458-459.
-
- Maximilian II, emperor, 587.
- and the Polish election, 603.
-
- Mayence, decisions of, 135.
- exiles from, 294, 295.
-
- Mayence, Jews of, banished, 413.
- massacred, 109.
-
- Medeiros, Francisco (Isaac) Mendes, Marrano, 667, 671.
-
- Medici, family of, alluded to, 289, 291.
-
- Medicine, study of, allowed, 40.
-
- Medigo, Leon. See Abrabanel, Judah Leon.
-
- Medina del Campo, cortes of, and the Inquisition, 310, 313.
- Jews of, burnt, 278.
-
- Medina-Sidonia, Marranos take refuge in, 313.
-
- Medina-Sidonia, duke of, and Marranos, 282, 283.
-
- Megadef, sobriquet of Geronimo de Santa Fe, 217.
-
- Meil Zedek. See Menachem of Merseburg.
-
- Meir ben Baruch Halevi, rabbi, and the French Jews, 152-153.
- compiles Jewish customs, 134.
-
- Meir ben Gabbai, Kabbalist, 481.
-
- Meir of Rothenburg, 34, 37, 74.
-
- Meir, son-in-law of Abraham Benveniste, 351.
-
- Meiri, rabbi of Perpignan, 26-27.
-
- Meiron, Simon bar Yochai buried in, 623.
-
- Meles, Moses Iskafat, partisan of Ben Adret, 44.
-
- Meliza, poetical prose, 65.
-
- Menachem ben Aaron ben Zerach, rabbi of Toledo, 77, 144-145.
-
- Menachem of Merseburg, Talmudist, 227-228.
-
- Mendes, Diogo, banker at Antwerp, 572, 573.
-
- Mendes, Francisco, husband of Gracia Mendesia, 571, 572.
-
- Mendes, Manuel, Marrano, 516.
-
- Mendes, Portuguese family in Holland, 667.
-
- Mendesia, Gracia (Beatrice), Marrano philanthropist, 571, 578.
- at Antwerp, 572-573.
- at Constantinople, 577.
- at Ferrara, 575-577.
- at Venice, 574-575.
- eulogized by Samuel Usque, 575-576.
- protects the Ancona Marranos, 578, 579-580.
-
- Mendeza, archbishop, prepares a catechism for Marranos, 311.
-
- Menz, Abraham, head of the Padua college, 410.
-
- Menz, Judah, Talmudist, 294, 406, 410.
- and Elias del Medigo, 295.
-
- Menz, Moses, Talmudist, in Posen, 294.
-
- Merlo, de, Diego, member of the Inquisition commission, 312.
-
- Messianic pretenders, 7, 197, 482-483.
-
- Messianic prophets, 8-10.
-
- Messianic speculations, 7, 8-10, 18-19, 120, 141, 471, 482-483,
- 494-495, 497, 530, 534, 622, 624, 625.
-
- Meshullam ben Jacob, patron of learning, 30.
-
- Meshullam, of Rome, 346-347.
-
- Meyer, of Breslau, accused of host-desecration, 261.
-
- Meyer, Peter, partisan of Pfefferkorn, 449.
-
- Michael, of Frankfort, and Luther, 551.
-
- Michael, the Old, Karaite, 269.
-
- Middelburg refuses Portuguese Marranos, 663.
-
- Midrash of Simon bar Yochai, the Zohar, 19.
-
- Milan, Jews of, expelled, 660.
-
- Milchamoth Adonai, work by Gersonides, 92, 93.
-
- Miliana, Jews settle in, 197.
-
- Miller, John, and the Hamburg Jews, 691-692.
- quoted, 690.
-
- Minim imprecated in Jewish prayers, 83.
-
- Minyan Yavanim, Seleucidan chronology, 394-395.
-
- Miques, Joao. See Nassi, Joseph.
-
- "Mirror for Admonition," work by Ortuinus Gratius, 425.
-
- "Mirror of Morals," work by Solomon Alami, 154.
-
- Mistress, Kabbalistic term, 19.
-
- Mizrachi, Elias, chief rabbi of Constantinople, 402-404.
-
- Mocenigo, Luis, doge, hostile to Jews, 600-601, 606.
-
- Mocenigo, Pietro, doge, protects the Jews of Padua, 299.
-
- Mocho, John, arouses Lisbon against the Marranos, 487.
-
- Modena, duke of, invites Jews, 675.
-
- Molcho, Solomon (Diogo Pires), Marrano, 529-530, 622.
- and David Reubeni, 495-496, 504.
- burnt, 510-511.
- denounced, 503, 506-507.
- in Italy, 501-507.
- predicts the Messiah, 497.
- saved by Clement VII, 507.
-
- Moelin, Jacob. See Jacob ben Moses Moelin Halevi.
-
- Moncado de, Abraham, official at Recife, 693.
-
- Moncilla, Jews of, persecuted, 78.
-
- Montpellier, Jews of, and free inquiry, 29-30, 31, 38-39, 41, 50.
- compelled to wear a badge, 54.
- expelled, 48.
-
- Montano, Arias, publisher of a polyglot Bible, 651.
-
- Montalto, Elias (Felix), physician, 653, 670, 673.
-
- Montemar, marquis of, friend of Isaac Abrabanel, 338.
-
- Montiel, battle at, 126, 136.
-
- Moravia, Jews of, persecuted, 98.
-
- Mordecai ben Hillel, martyr, 36.
-
- Morenu, ordination of rabbis, 134.
-
- Morillo, Miguel, inquisitor, 312, 323.
- censured, 318-319.
- issues the Edict of Grace, 314-315.
-
- Moro, Joseph (Philip), denounces the Talmud, 564.
- proselytizer, 581.
-
- Morocco, war with Castile, 84-85.
- Jews in, 389-390.
- Marranos emigrate to, 179.
-
- Morteira, Saul Levi, rabbi at Amsterdam, 673, 681, 682, 685.
-
- Moses ben Isaac (Gajo) da Rieti, neo-Hebraic poet, 230-231.
-
- Moses ben Joshua Narboni. See Narboni.
-
- Moses ben Nachman. See Nachmani.
-
- Moses ben Shem Tob (Moses de Leon), Kabbalist, 3, 622.
- author of the Zohar, 10-12.
- forgery of, revealed, 20-21.
-
- Moses, of Trent, tortured, 298.
-
- Moses, rabbi of Trent, 298.
-
- Moses, treasurer under Maria de Molina, 52.
-
- Mostarabi, Egyptian Jews, 395.
-
- Mucate, Jacob, official at Recife, 693.
-
- Muley Abu-Abdallah (Boabdil), last king of Granada, 345.
-
- Munich, Jews of, persecuted, 110.
-
- Muenster, Sebastian, disciple of Reuchlin, 434, 472.
-
- Murad III, sultan, and Joseph Nassi, 627-628, 629.
-
- Murviedro, Jews of, protected, 170.
-
- Musaphia, Benjamin, physician to Christian IV, 692.
-
- Mutafarrica, life-guard, 595.
-
-
- Nachmani (Moses ben Nachman), 28, 71, 75, 208, 238, 242.
- predicts the Messianic redemption, 120.
- reputed discoverer of the Zohar, 20.
-
- Nagid, chief of Egyptian Jews, 392.
-
- Najara, Israel, Hebrew poet, 609.
-
- Naples, Jewish printing house in, 289.
- Jews of, banished, 543-544.
- Jews settle in, 358-359.
-
- Narboni, Moses ben Joshua (Maestro Vidal), philosopher, 87, 93-95,
- 342.
-
- Nassi, Gracia. See Mendesia, Gracia.
-
- Nassi, Gracia, the younger, 572, 577.
-
- Nassi, Joseph (Joao Miques), duke of Naxos, 596-597, 611.
- accused of treason, 598, 599.
- aids Gracia Mendesia, 574.
- as a statesman, 595-602.
- at Antwerp, 572-573.
- end of his power, 627.
- favorite of sultans, 577, 593-595.
- in Turkey. See Chapter XVII.
- protects Marranos, 579-580.
- receives Tiberias, 596-597, 611.
-
- Nassi, Reyna, daughter of Gracia Mendesia, 572-573, 577.
- patroness of Jewish learning, 628.
-
- Nassi, Samuel, brother of Joseph, 577, 581.
-
- Nassir Mahomet, Jews under, 73.
-
- Nathan, Isaac. See Isaac ben Kalonymos.
-
- Navarre, Jews of, persecuted, 77-78.
- Jews settle in, 352.
- Spanish exiles in, 357-358.
-
- Navarro, Moses, rabbi of Portugal, 173.
-
- Naxos, duke of. See Nassi, Joseph.
-
- Nazarenes (Minim) imprecated in Jewish prayers, 83.
-
- Negro, David, Almoxarif, 160, 162.
- rabbi of Castile, 161.
-
- Negroponte, Spanish exiles in, 406.
-
- Neo-Hebrew poetry, 67, 608, 609.
- in Spain and Italy, 230-231.
-
- Netherlands, the, a refuge for the persecuted, 661-662.
- Inquisition in, 662.
- Portuguese Marranos in, 662, 675.
- stadtholders of, favorable to Jews, 678.
- See also Holland, and Amsterdam.
-
- Neto, Bras, Portuguese ambassador at Rome, 500-501, 505-506.
-
- "Neve Shalom", second synagogue at Amsterdam, 671.
-
- New-Christians. See Marranos.
-
- Nicholas V, pope, 275, 287.
- appoints inquisitors, 256.
- approves of Capistrano, 257-258.
- denounced, 267-268.
- issues anti-Jewish bulls, 253, 254.
-
- Nicholas-Donin, alluded to, 213.
-
- Nicopolis, exiles settle in, 405.
-
- Niemerz, son of Casimir the Great, 112.
-
- Nissim Gerundi ben Reuben, 144, 146, 149.
- imprisoned, 150, 155.
- preaches against Messianic speculations, 120.
-
- Nizuz, Kabbalistic term, 620.
-
- Nofeth Zufim, work by Messer Leon, 289.
-
- Noerdlingen, Jews of, banished, 416.
- murdered, 163.
-
- Notaricon, Kabbalistic term, 5, 512.
-
- Novak, Peter, bishop, and Capistrano, 260.
-
- Novi, Jews settle in, 553-554.
-
- Numeo, a character in Samuel Usque's "Consolation," 558.
-
- Nunes, Duarte, da Costa, Portuguese agent at Hamburg, 692.
-
- Nunes, Henrique (Firme-Fe) informs against Marranos, 489-491.
-
- Nunes, Maria, Marrano captured by the English, 664-665.
-
- Nunez, Alvar, officer of Alfonso XI, 79.
-
- Nuremberg, diet at, promulgates the "Golden Bull," 128.
-
- Nuremberg, Jews of, expelled, 415-416.
- persecuted, 35-36, 110.
-
- Nuremberg, synod at, 305.
-
-
- Obadiah di Bertinoro, rabbi at Jerusalem, 279, 397-398, 399, 704.
-
- Ocana, cortes of, discuss the Jewish question, 279.
- Jews of, persecuted, 170.
-
- "Of the Cross," bull, 526.
-
- Ojeda, de, Alfonso, and the Spanish Inquisition, 310, 312, 317.
-
- Olam ha-Tikkun, Kabbalistic term, 619.
-
- Old Testament. See Bible, the.
-
- Olesnicki, Zbigniev, cardinal, and the Jews, 265, 266.
-
- Olligoyen, Pedro, instigates a persecution of the Jews, 77, 78.
-
- Olmuetz, Jews of, banished, 263.
-
- "On the Errors of the Trinity," work by Servetus, 646-647.
-
- Oporto, a port for Jewish exiles, 374.
-
- Oppenheim, Jews of, commit suicide, 109.
-
- Orabuena, Joseph, rabbi and physician in Navarre, 184.
-
- Oran, Jews settle in, 197.
- Spanish exiles flee to, 361.
-
- Ordenacoens, Portuguese code, 338-339.
-
- Ordination revived, 530-535.
-
- Orleans, college of, dispersed, 48.
-
- Osorio, David, founder of the third synagogue in Amsterdam, 680.
-
- Osorius, bishop, quoted, 372.
-
- Otto Henry, of Neuburg, protects the Jews, 545.
-
- Ottolenghi, Joseph, Talmudist, 582.
-
- Ouderkerk, burial place of the Amsterdam Jews, 672, 673.
-
- Ouvidores, provincial rabbis or judges in Portugal, 159.
-
-
- Pablo Christiani, alluded to, 208, 246.
-
- Pacheco, marquis of Villana, and the Marranos of Segovia, 283.
- arranges an anti-Jewish code, 278.
-
- Padua, Jews of, 299, 408.
- quarrel at the University of, 291.
- Talmudic center, 410.
-
- Palermo, Jews of, and Abraham Abulafia, 7.
-
- Palestine, conquered, 393.
- culture in, 75.
- emigration to, 74, 273, 274.
- French exiles settle in, 49, 72.
- Karaites of, converted to Rabbinism, 72.
- Spanish exiles settle in, 396-399.
- under Egyptian rule, 73.
- See also Jerusalem.
-
- Pallache, Samuel, consul in the Netherlands, 663.
-
- Palma, Jews of, accused, 246-247.
- persecuted, 171.
-
- Palma, Marranos take refuge in, 282, 283.
- See also Majorca.
-
- Paloma, Jewish martyr, 362.
-
- Pamier, Jews of, protected, 176.
-
- Pampeluna, Jews of, escape persecution, 78.
- religious discussion at, 142.
-
- Pantomime on the Reuchlin quarrel, 468-469.
-
- Papal States, Jews of, expelled, 591-592, 659.
- under restrictions, 566-567.
-
- Parchi, Estori, describes the sufferings of the French Jews, 48-49,
- 72.
-
- Pardes, work by Bedaresi, 43.
- Pardo, David, rabbi at Amsterdam, 680, 682, 685.
-
- Pardo, Joseph, rabbi at Amsterdam, 671, 680.
-
- Pardo, Josiah, rabbi at Rotterdam, 685.
-
- Paris, college of, dispersed, 48.
- re-established, 133.
-
- Paris, Jews of, persecuted, 51-152.
- University of, against Reuchlin, 459-460.
-
- Parsophin, Kabbalistic term, 619.
-
- Paruta, religious reformer, 647.
-
- Passau, Jews of, executed, 306.
-
- Pascate, Jacob, messenger bearing the Black Death poison, 102.
-
- Pastoureaux, Shepherds, massacre the Jews, 55-57.
-
- Patras, Spanish exiles in, 406.
-
- Paul III Farnese, pope, 592.
- and the Portuguese Inquisition, 516, 518, 519, 521-522, 526-527.
- protects Portuguese Marranos, 516-517, 520, 527.
- well-disposed to Jews, 515.
-
- Paul IV Caraffa, pope, and Marranos, 568, 582.
- and the Jews, 566, 567, 581-582.
- and the Talmud, 582-583.
- ban against, 580.
- death, 586, 587-588.
- employs converts, 581, 584.
- establishes the Inquisition at Rome, 525.
- re-establishes church discipline, 562.
- re-introduces censorship of press, 563.
- sets free Turkish Jews, 577-578.
-
- Paul Burgensis. See Levi, Solomon.
-
- Paul de Santa Maria. See Levi, Solomon.
-
- Pauw, Reinier, burgomaster of Amsterdam, 674.
-
- Pavia, tolerance in, 288.
- Jews of, expelled, 660.
-
- Paz, de, Duarte, advocate of Portuguese Marranos at Rome, 512-513,
- 515, 519.
-
- Peasant War, the, and the Jews, 542-543.
-
- Pedro IV, of Aragon, imprisons Jews, 150.
- petitioned by the Jews, 112-113.
- revolt against, 102.
-
- Pedro, the Cruel, of Castile, 113-126, 173.
- and Blanche de Bourbon, 116, 122.
- and Samuel Abulafia, 116, 118-121.
- civil wars under, 118-119, 123-126.
- counseled by Santob de Carrion, 115.
- employs Jews, 115-116.
- favors the Jews, 113-114, 116, 121-122.
- supported by Jews, 123, 124, 125.
-
- Pedro de Toledo, viceroy of Naples, 409-410.
-
- Pelka, son of Casimir the Great, 112.
-
- Penini, pseudonym of Yedaya En-Bonet Bedaresi, 42.
-
- Pentateuch translated into Persian, 401. See also Bible, the.
-
- Pernambuco, Jews settle in, 693.
-
- Perpignan, center of enlightenment, 25, 33-34.
-
- Pesaro, Marranos in, 501, 569-570, 578-582.
-
- Pessach (Peter), convert, accuses the Jews, 177-178.
-
- Pestilence, the, in Fez, 361.
- in Naples, 359-360.
- in Portugal, 368, 487.
-
- Peter Martyr, quoted, 484.
-
- Petit, Guillaume Haquinet, opponent of the Jews, 459.
- patron of Hebrew studies, 473.
-
- Peyret, supposed manufacturer of the Black Death poison, 102.
-
- Pfefferkorn, Joseph, convert, 423-424, 425-432, 435-442.
- at Frankfort, 428-430.
- pamphlets by, 425, 427, 439.
- preaches, 449.
- visits Emperor Maximilian, 428.
- See Chapter XIV.
-
- Philip IV, le Bel, of France, 2, 44, 47, 50, 77, 176.
- decrees the expulsion of the Jews, 46-49.
-
- Philip V, of France, and the Jews, 54, 57, 58.
- inspires a crusade, 55.
-
- Philip VI, of France, alluded to, 77.
-
- Philip III, of Navarre, and the Jews, 78.
-
- Philip II, of Spain, 566, 651, 661, 663, 667, 668.
- and the Turkish Jews, 607.
- introduces the Inquisition into the Netherlands, 601.
-
- Philip III, of Spain, and the Marranos, 670-671.
-
- Philip IV, of Spain, creates a Jewish count palatine, 692.
-
- Philo, alluded to, 614.
-
- Phineas, rabbi of Breslau, 262.
-
- Phylacteries, Kabbalistic use of, 5.
-
- Picho, Solomon, rabbi, 278.
-
- Pichon, Joseph, Almoxarif, 138, 156, 157.
-
- Pico di Mirandola, 433, 583.
- and the Kabbala, 291-292, 443.
- taught by Del Medigo, 290-291.
-
- Piedmont, French exiles in, 177.
-
- Pieva di Sacco, Jewish printing house in, 289.
-
- Pilgrims, Karaite prayers for, 73-74.
-
- Pilpul, a method of Talmud study, 418.
-
- Pimentel, Manuel (Isaac Abenacar), Marrano in Holland, 672.
-
- Pina, de, Paul (Rohel Jesurun), 669-670.
-
- Pinczovinians, anti-Trinitarians, 647.
-
- Pinel, de, Duarte. See Usque, Abraham.
-
- Pinheiro, Diogo, bishop, protects Marranos, 500.
-
- Pinto, Abraham and David, found the Rotterdam community, 685.
-
- Pinto, Diogo Rodrigues, Marrano advocate at Rome, 515, 516.
-
- Pires, Diogo. See Molcho, Solomon.
-
- Pirkheimer, Willibald, humanist, 416.
-
- Pisa, council of, deposes Benedict XIII, 206-207.
- commerce of, 285.
-
- Pius IV, pope, and the Bohemian Jews, 586-587.
- and the Jews, 588.
-
- Pius V, pope, 653.
- hostile to Jews, 589-590.
-
- Plato, alluded to, 66, 232.
-
- Polak, Jacob, and the Pilpul, 418.
-
- Poland, a refuge for Jews, 263, 420, 631-632, 641-643.
- election in, 603-605.
- Jewish synods in, 643-645.
-
- Poland, Jews of, culture of, 633-634.
- enjoy peace, 418-421.
-
- Poland, Reformation in, 646-648.
-
- Pomis, de, David, physician, 653, 656-657.
-
- Portaleone, di, Guglielmo, physician, 287.
-
- Porteiro jurado, assistant of Ar-Rabbi Mor, 159.
-
- Portugal, a refuge for Marranos, 318.
- asylum for Jews, 173.
- Jews leave, 369.
-
- Portugal, Jews of, under Alfonso V, 338-339.
- under Ferdinand, 158-159.
-
- Portugal, Spanish exiles in, 365-369.
-
- Posen, conflagration of, 263.
- first Jewish community in Poland, 632.
- Jews of, attacked, 642.
-
- Prague, confiscation of Hebrew books in, 584-585.
-
- Prague, Jews of, expelled, 585-587.
- persecuted, 164-165, 178.
- threatened with expulsion, 417-418.
- See also Bohemia.
-
- Prester John, alluded to, 368.
-
- Printing houses, Jewish, 289, 414, 418, 474, 581, 628.
-
- Privado, confidential counselor, 79, 116.
-
- Procureur, collector of Jew taxes, 130, 132.
-
- Profatius. See Jacob ben Machir Tibbon.
-
- Profiat Duran, a Marrano scholar, 188-190, 191, 238.
- commentaries, history, and grammar by, 190, 191.
- his satire on converts, 188-195, 235.
- quoted, 190.
-
- Protestant hatred of Jews, 552.
-
- Provence, a refuge for French exiles, 49.
- and Spanish Marranos, 318.
-
- Provence, Jews of, devotees of profane culture, 37.
- persecuted, 102, 112.
- protected, 177.
- See also France, southern.
-
- Prud'hommes, superintendents over the Jews of France, 54.
-
- Pucci, Antonio, cardinal, and the Inquisition, 507, 514-515.
-
- Pucci, Lorenzo, and Molcho, 503, 507.
- and the Inquisition, 505.
-
- Pulgar, Isaac, philosopher, 91.
- satirizes Alfonso Burgensis, 82.
-
- Purim, Cairo, 396.
- celebration of, ridiculed, 185.
- in Saragossa, 148.
- Vincent, at Frankfort, 700.
-
-
- Quemadero, place of burning, 314, 317.
-
- Quinon, Denis, receiver general of Languedoc, 132.
-
-
- Rabbanites, feud with Karaites, 403-404.
- in Jerusalem, 74.
- instruct Karaites, 269-271.
-
- Rabbinism, and Talmudical Judaism, 89.
- conversions to, 72.
- criticised by Shemarya Ikriti, 69.
-
- Radziwill, promoter of the Reformation in Poland, 646.
-
- Rafan, David, discovers the spuriousness of the Zohar, 20.
-
- Rahab, as a character in Immanuel Romi's work, 67.
-
- Raimuch, Astruc (Francisco God-flesh), conversionist, 182.
-
- Rashi, 442, 476,
- admired by Christian writers, 185.
- college of, dispersed, 48.
-
- Ratisbon, diet at, denounces Nicholas V, 267.
- hostile to Jews, 258.
-
- Ratisbon, Jews of, appeal to Ladislaus of Bohemia, 303.
- escape the Rindfleish persecution, 36.
- exposed to a mob, 110.
- persecuted, 300-307.
- protected, 99, 305-306.
- threatened, 254, 463-464.
- under restrictions, 416-417.
-
- Ravenna asks for Jews, 286.
-
- Ravensburg, Jews of, charged with the blood-accusation, 227.
-
- Raymond de Penyaforte, Dominican general, 77, 208, 245.
-
- Receswinth, decrees of, 326.
-
- Receveur-general, collector of Jew taxes, 130, 132, 150.
-
- Recife, Jews of, 693.
-
- Reformation, the, 467-470.
- and Judaism, 471-476.
- and the Jews, 470.
- effects, 540-541.
- in Poland and Lithuania, 646-648.
-
- Reggio, Jewish printing house in, 289.
-
- Reis, chief of Egyptian Jews, 392.
-
- Remonstrants, religious sect hostile to Jews, 673-674.
-
- Rendeiros, tax-farmers, 339.
-
- Reubeni, David, and Charles V, 509-511.
- and Molcho, 495-496, 504.
- at Avignon, 499.
- at Rome, 492-493.
- at Venice, 504.
- his mission, 491-492.
- in Portugal, 493-500.
-
- Reuchlin, John, humanist, 431-432.
- and the Kabbala, 481, 466-467, 583.
- appeals to Leo X, 453-454.
- appointed to examine into Hebrew books, 441-443.
- at Speyer, 454, 455.
- Hebrew scholar, 433-434, 471.
- his anti-Jewish prejudices, 435.
- honors bestowed on, 435, 436.
- quoted, 447-448.
- refutes Dominican charges, 446-447.
- trial at Mayence, 450, 452.
- See Chapter XIV.
-
- Reuchlinists, defenders of the Jews, 456, 457.
-
- Rheims, Hebrew studies at, 474.
-
- Rheingau, the, Jews of, expelled, 543.
-
- Rhine, the, island in, scene of a persecution, 107.
- Jewish communities on, massacred, 225.
-
- Rhineland, the, Jews of, persecuted, 97, 107.
-
- Ribash. See Isaac ben Sheshet Barfat.
-
- Riccio, Paul, convert, 466.
-
- Rieti, da, Gajo. See Moses ben Isaac da Rieti.
-
- Rindfleisch, persecutor of the Jews, 35-36.
-
- Robert of Anjou, king of Naples, and Kalonymos ben Kalonymos, 61, 63.
- and Shemarya Ikriti, 69, 70.
- patron of learning, 59.
- taught by Leo Romano, 68.
-
- Roim, shepherds, 55-57.
-
- Romano, Leone. See Jehuda ben Moses ben Daniel.
-
- Romano, Solomon (John Baptista), denounces the Talmud, 564.
-
- Rome, the oldest European Jewish community, 61.
- exiles at, 363, 408.
- inundated, 505.
-
- Rome, Jews of, culture of, 58-60.
- threatened, 61.
- See also Italy.
-
- Romi. See Immanuel ben Solomon Romi.
-
- Rosales, Immanuel, author, 692.
-
- Rossi, dei, Azarya ben Moses, critic, 613-615.
- opposition to, 616-617.
-
- Rouelle, French Jew-badge, 131.
-
- Roussillon, French exiles in, 49.
- Jews of, devoted to science, 25.
-
- Rotterdam, Jews settle in, 685.
-
- Roettingen, Jews of, persecuted, 35.
-
- Rubianus, Crotus (Johann Jaeger), author of the "Letters of
- Obscurantists," 456, 461.
-
- Rudolph II, emperor, and the Jews, 652.
-
- Ruez, Juan, Spanish inquisitor, 312.
-
-
- Saatz, imperial army at, 226.
-
- Saba, Abraham, Kabbalist, 381.
-
- Sabbation, a mythical river, 4.
-
- Sadolet, bishop, quoted, 515.
-
- Safet, Kabbalistic center, 74, 399, 405, 622-623.
- ordination revived in, 531-532.
- Spanish exiles in, 399.
-
- Safi, Jews in, 389.
-
- Sancta Anastasia, de, cardinal, favorable to Marranos, 379.
-
- St. Bartholomew, massacre, 604.
-
- St. Gall, Jews of, persecuted, 105.
-
- Salamanca, Jews of, baptized, 205.
-
- Salonica, Kabbalistic center, 405.
- Spanish exiles in, 404-405.
-
- Salzring, place of execution in Breslau, 262.
-
- Samael, Kabbalistic term, 17.
-
- Sambation, a mythical river, 4.
-
- Samiel, Kabbalistic term, 17.
-
- Samson ben Meir, partisan of Abba-Mari, 38.
-
- Samson of Sens denounces the Karaites, 72.
-
- Samuel, Kabbalist, 6.
-
- Samuel, prophet, pilgrimages to grave of, 398.
-
- Samuel, treasurer under Ferdinand IV, of Castile, 51.
-
- San Benito, a garment, 317, 327.
-
- San Martin, de, Juan, Spanish inquisitor, 312, 318-319, 323.
-
- San Thomas, islands of, Jewish children at the, 371.
-
- Sanchez, Juan Perez, opposes the Inquisition, 329.
-
- Sancho IV, of Castile, employs Todros Abulafia, 2.
-
- Sangisa, sister of Pope John XXII, hostile to Jews, 61.
-
- Santa Cruz, de, Gaspard, conspirator against Arbues, 331-332.
-
- Santa Fe, de, Francisco, conspirator against Arbues, 331.
-
- Santillano, de, Diego and Francisco, plead for the Inquisition, 311.
-
- Santob (Shem Tob) de Carrion, troubadour, 87, 114-115.
-
- Saporta, Enoch, influences Karaites to Rabbinism, 270.
-
- Saragossa, celebration of Purim in, 148.
- conversions in, 206, 214.
- Inquisition at, 326, 329.
- rising against the Marranos of, 330.
-
- Saragossi, Joseph, Kabbalist, 393.
-
- Sariel, Kabbalistic term, 17.
-
- Sarrao Thome, Marrano leader, 516.
-
- Saruk, Israel, Kabbalist, 625.
-
- Savoy, duke of, invites Jews, 675.
- expelled, 294.
-
- Savoy, Jews of, persecuted, 104, 218.
- privileges, of, confirmed, 219.
-
- Scaliger, Joseph, humanist, 685.
-
- Schaffhausen, Jews of, persecuted, 105.
-
- Schutz-juden, protected Jews, 688.
-
- Schwarz, Peter, convert, maligns the Jews, 302, 442.
-
- Schweidnitz, Jewish community of Silesia, 260, 261.
-
- Scotus, Duns, alluded to, 277.
-
- "Scourge of the Jews," sobriquet of John of Capistrano, 260.
-
- Scriptures, the Holy. See Bible, the.
-
- Scrutinium Scriptuarum (Searching the Scriptures), work by Solomon
- Levi, 233.
-
- Sebastian, of Portugal, in Africa, 381.
-
- Sechel ha-Poel, in the Kabbala, 4.
-
- "Sefer Yochasin," chronicle, 391.
-
- Sefiroth, Kabbalistic term, 6, 13, 14, 17, 22, 619, 626.
-
- Segovia, Jews of, baptized, 205.
- prepare for exile, 352.
- Marranos of, massacred, 283.
- synagogue of, turned into a church, 196.
-
- Seleucidan chronology, 394-395.
-
- Selim I, sultan, and the Jews, 393-394, 400, 401, 402.
-
- Selim II, sultan, and Joseph Nassi, 594-595.
- Jews under, 602.
-
- Selve, de, George, disciple of Elias Levita, 472, 474.
-
- Semichah, ordination, 530.
-
- Sen Escalita. See Sulami.
-
- Senensis, Sixtus, proselytizer, 581.
- and the Talmud, 582.
- rescues the Zohar, 584.
-
- Senior, Abraham. See Benveniste, Abraham.
-
- Sens, college of, dispersed, 48.
-
- Separation, Kabbalistic term, 619.
-
- Sephardic Jews. See Jews of Spain, Africa, Italy, and the East.
-
- Septuagint, not authoritative, 237.
-
- Sepulveda, Jews of, persecuted, 278, 279.
-
- Serachya ben Shaltiel, promoter of culture among Italian Jews, 59.
-
- Serkes, Joel, Talmudist, 703.
-
- Servetus, Michael, anti-Trinitarian, 541, 646.
-
- "Servi camerae," coveted by petty rulers, 128.
- Jews of France claimed as, 47.
- protected by Charles of Luxemburg, 106.
- under Louis the Bavarian, 96.
-
- Setubal, a port for Jewish exiles, 374.
-
- Seville, Inquisition organized in, 312-314.
-
- Seville, Jews of, cause the Spanish persecutions, 155, 157-158.
- persecuted, 167-169.
-
- Seville, Marrano victims of the Inquisition in, 317.
- Marranos of, attacked, 282-283.
-
- Seville, mayor of, opposed to the Inquisition, 313.
- synagogues of, turned into churches, 169.
-
- Seven Planets, Tables of the, by Zacuto, 367.
-
- Sezira, John, friend of Isaac Abrabanel, 338, 340.
-
- Sforno, Obadiah (Servadeus), physician, 411.
- Reuchlin's teacher, 434, 473.
-
- Sforza, Galeazzo, and Jews, 287, 296-297.
-
- Shachna, Shalom, Talmudist, 634, 639.
-
- Shalal, Isaac Cohen, Nagid, 392, 398.
-
- Shalom, of Austria, compiles Jewish customs, 134.
-
- Shaprut, Shem-Tob ben Isaac, controversialist, 142-143, 144.
-
- Shaltiel, Jewish advocate in Turkey, 494.
-
- "Shebet Jehuda," a history by the Ibn-Vergas, 557-558.
-
- Shemarya Ikriti, and the Karaites, 69-70, 71.
-
- "Shield and Sword," controversial work, 237.
-
- Shulam, Samuel, historian, 608.
-
- "Shulchan Aruch," code of Joseph Karo, 539, 612-613.
-
- Sibili, Astruc, denounces the Jews of Palma, 246-247.
-
- Siciliano, Judah, poet, 60, 68.
-
- Sicily, opposition to the Inquisition in, 319-320.
-
- Siddur Tefila, Karaite prayer-book, 71.
-
- Sidillo (Sid), Samuel, scholar, 392.
-
- Sigismund, emperor, 216, 218, 227.
- and the Jews, 219, 248.
- appoints rabbis, 227.
- in the Hussite war, 225.
-
- Sigismund III, of Poland, friendly to Jews, 643.
-
- Sigismund Augustus, of Poland and Joseph Nassi, 602.
- and the Reformation, 646.
- protects Jewish trade, 633.
-
- Silesia, Jews of, persecuted, 260-263.
-
- Silva, de, Diogo, inquisitor-general of Portugal, 508, 513.
-
- Silva, de, Miguel, opposes David Reubeni, 498-499.
-
- Simon bar Yochai, pretended author of the Zohar, 12-14, 15, 16, 18,
- 20, 21, 618, 623.
-
- Simon ben Zemach Duran, rabbi of Algiers, 199-200.
- at Palma, 247.
- controversial writer, 238.
-
- Simon Duran II, rabbi of Algiers, aids Spanish exiles, 390, 391.
-
- Simon of Trent, a supposed victim of the Jews, 298-299, 414.
-
- Simoneta, cardinal, opposes the Portuguese Inquisition, 520.
-
- Sixtus IV, pope, 340.
- and Simon of Trent, 299.
- and the Inquisition in Aragon, 319.
- and the Spanish Inquisition, 311, 312, 318-119, 322-323.
- friendly to Marranos, 320.
- opposes Jewish church officers, 321.
- votary of the Kabbala, 292, 443.
-
- Sixtus V, permits the printing of the Talmud, 658.
- removes Jewish restrictions, 655-659.
-
- Soares, Joao, inquisitor, 521.
-
- Socinians, anti-Trinitarians, 647.
-
- Socinus, religious reformer, 647.
-
- Sokolli, Mahomet, vizir of Selim II, and Joseph Nassi, 596, 599, 611,
- 627-628.
- employs a Jewish negotiator, 602.
- partisan of Venice, 600.
-
- Solis, de, Pedro, member of the Inquisition commission, 312.
-
- Solomon, king, as a character in Immanuel Romi's work, 67.
- quoted, 33.
-
- Solomon, son of Manessier de Vesoul, 150.
-
- Solomon ben Abraham ben Adret, rabbi of Barcelona, 7, 26, 49, 51, 74,
- 75, 91, 147.
- attacked by Bedaresi, 42-44.
- partisan of the obscurantists, 28-30, 33, 34, 39, 42, 50.
- pronounces a ban against the Montpellier freethinkers, 38.
- signs ban against science, 40.
-
- Solomon ben Jacob, translator of Maimuni, 60.
-
- Solomon ben Reuben Bonfed attacks Christian dogmas, 182.
- neo-Hebraic poet, 230.
-
- Solomon Duran, rabbi of Algiers, controversial writer, 238, 390.
-
- Solomon of Montpellier, proscriber of Maimuni, 27.
-
- Solyman I, sultan, and Joseph Nassi, 594.
- conspired against, 395.
- favorable to Jews, 400, 402, 404.
- intercedes for Turkish Jews in Ancona, 578.
- protects Gracia Mendesia, 574-575.
-
- Soncino, Jewish printing house in, 289.
-
- Soncino, Gershon, printer, 586.
-
- Soranzo, Jacopo, Venetian agent in Constantinople, 606.
-
- Soria, cortes of, deprive the Jews of criminal jurisdiction, 157.
-
- Spain, exiles from, 357-364, 389-392.
- first auto-da-fe in, 317.
- Inquisition established in, 312.
- See Inquisition.
-
- Spain, Jews of, banished, 81, 347-348.
- controversial literature of, 231-238.
- culture of, 37, 75, 387-389.
- degeneracy of, 60, 86, 87, 91, 143-144, 153-155, 228.
- employed by Ferdinand and Isabella, 336.
- enjoy peace, 274-276.
- humbled by the civil war, 126.
- in Africa, 197.
- influenced by Asheri, 51.
- invited to adopt the ban against science, 40.
- persecuted in 1391, 166-173.
- plan to emigrate, 283.
- prepare for exile, 349-352.
- send an embassy to Martin V, 219.
- supposed to have caused the Black Death, 101.
- wealth of, 383.
-
- Spain misses the Jews, 353-354.
- See also Castile, Aragon, etc.
-
- Spain, northern, Jews of, persecuted, 53.
- threatened, 103.
-
- Spain, southern, Jews of, enjoy peace, 53.
-
- Spanish language cultivated by the exiles, 387-388.
-
- Speyer, decisions of, 135.
- Jews of, persecuted, 107-108.
-
- Spina, de, Alfonso, preacher, hostile to Jews, 276-277.
-
- Spinoza, Baruch, alluded to, 93, 682.
-
- Sprinz, David, partisan of Israel Bruna, 302.
-
- Stein, inhabitants of, attack the Jews of Krems, 110.
-
- Strasburg, authorities of, defend the Jews, 105-108.
- Jews of, imprisoned, 108.
-
- "Strengthening of the Faith, The," by Isaac Troki, 648-649.
-
- Sturm, Gosse, defends the Jews, 106, 108.
-
- Suabia, Jews of, banished, 307, 413.
- persecuted, 97, 110, 163.
-
- Sulami, Samuel, patron of Levi of Villefranche, 25-26, 29.
-
- Sulchat, Karaite stronghold, 71.
-
- Suson, de, Diego, victim of the Spanish Inquisition, 317.
-
- Swaber, Peter, defends the Jews, 106, 108.
-
- Swedes, the, and Jews, 707.
-
- Switzerland, Jews of, persecuted, 104.
-
- Synhedrion, Maimuni's teachings on, 530.
- value of a, 532.
-
- Synods of the Four Countries, 643-645.
-
- Syria conquered by Selim I, 393.
-
-
- Tab Yomi. See Lipmann of Muehlhausen.
-
- "Table-cloth," work by Moses Isserles, 637.
-
- Talith, Kabbalistic use of, 5.
-
- Talmud, the, and the Kabbala, 19.
- burnt, 50, 55, 582-583.
- confiscated, 565-566.
- declared hostile to Christianity, 444-445.
- defended, 234, 238, 442-443, 657.
- denounced, 213, 425-426, 439, 549-550, 563-564.
- interdicted by popes, 215-216, 251, 565-566, 659.
- permitted by Sixtus V, 658.
- permitted to appear under another name, 589.
- printed, 468, 589.
- threatened, 141, 427-428.
- used by controversialists, 142.
-
- Talmud, study of the, by Karaites, 269.
- by Portuguese Marranos, 485.
- in France, 133.
- in Germany, 96, 134, 227.
- in Jerusalem, 74.
- in Padua, 410.
- in Poland, 420, 634-641.
- in Prague, 418.
- in Safet, 399.
- in Spain, 86, 144, 229-230.
- neglected, 653.
- spread by Asheri, 87, 88.
-
- Talmud Torah, Hebrew institute in Amsterdam, 681-682.
-
- Talmud Torah, Jewish synagogue at Hamburg, 689.
-
- Tam, college of, dispersed, 48.
-
- Tam, Jacob, alluded to, 609.
-
- Tamar as a character in Immanuel Romi's work, 67.
-
- Tamarica, Jews of, 693.
-
- Tamarite, Jews of, converted, 214.
-
- Tangier taken by Alfonso V, 286.
-
- Targum, the, not authoritative, 237.
-
- Tavs (Tus), Jacob, translator of the Pentateuch into Persian, 401.
-
- Taytasak, Jacob, scholar, 496.
-
- Taytasak, Joseph, Kabbalist and Talmudist, 405, 506.
-
- Tekanoth Shum, decisions of Speyer, Worms and Mayence, 135.
-
- Ten tribes, supposed home of, 4.
-
- Teneo, Jews settle in, 197.
-
- Teruel opposes the Inquisition, 328.
-
- Terza rima introduced into Hebrew poetry, 65.
-
- Testaments, Old and New, contrasted, 540-541. See also Bible, the.
-
- Teutonic knights defeat Casimir IV, 266.
-
- Texeira, Diego, de Mattos, prominent in Hamburg, 690-691.
-
- Thebes, Spanish exiles in, 406.
-
- Themudo, George, spies upon the Portuguese Marranos, 489.
-
- "Theorica," work by Frohbach, 638.
-
- Thirty Years' War, the, and the Jews, 701-702, 707.
-
- Thuringia, Jews of, slaughtered, 109, 225.
-
- Tibbon. See Jacob ben Machir, and Judah ben Moses.
-
- Tibbonides, party opposed to Abba-Mari, 32-33, 50.
- defend Maimuni, 41, 42.
- issue a ban, 40-41.
-
- Tiberias given to Joseph Nassi, 596, 610-611.
-
- Tiberinus, Matthias, and Simon of Trent, 298.
-
- Tilly, general, alluded to, 701.
-
- Tirado, Jacob, and Marrano fugitives, 664-665, 666, 667.
-
- Tlemcen, Jews in, 390.
- Jews settle in, 197.
-
- Tob-Elem, Joseph, author of a commentary, 144.
-
- Tobias, a physician of Trent, 297.
-
- Todros, of Beaucaire, ally of Abba-Mari, 31.
-
- Tokat, Jews of, charged with murder, 553.
- Spanish exiles in, 405.
-
- Toledo, autos-da-fe at, 332.
- Black Death in, 113.
- Inquisition at, 325.
-
- Toledo, Jews of, Arabic scholars, 60.
- faithful to Pedro the Cruel, 124.
- persecuted, 118, 169.
- suffer during the civil war, 126, 136-137.
- uncultured, 140, 142.
-
- Toledo, Kabbalistic center, 1.
- rabbis of, asked to betray Marranos, 335-336.
- supposed center of poisoners, 101, 102.
- synagogue at, 119-120, 354.
-
- Tongern, Arnold of, theologian, 424, 450.
-
- Toro, fortress in Castile, 118.
- cortes of, hostile to Jews, 138-139.
- Jews of, baptized, 205.
-
- Torquemada, de, Thomas, inquisitor-general of Spain, 324, 336, 343,
- 346, 353, 355.
- appointed inquisitor, 319.
- expels Jewish bishops, 333.
- fears of, 356.
- forbids Christians to help exiled Jews, 350.
- influences Isabella of Castile, 310.
- institutes Inquisition tribunals, 325.
- publishes an Inquisition code, 326-328.
- quoted, 348.
- separates Jews and Marranos, 335-336.
-
- Tostosa, Jews of, converted, 206.
- religious disputation at, 207-216.
-
- Tossafists, Talmud commentators, 133.
-
- Tossafoth Yom-Tob, work by Lipmann Heller, 704.
-
- "Touchstone," satire by Kalonymos ben Kalonymos, 62-63.
-
- Toulouse, Jews of, converted, 48, 56.
- massacred by the Shepherds, 56.
- protected, 176.
-
- Transformation, Kabbalistic term, 619.
-
- Transmigration of souls by Lurya, 619-622.
-
- Trani, di, Moses, rabbi at Safet, 540, 580.
-
- "Treatises of the Righteous Brethren," an Arabic cyclopedia, 62.
-
- "Tree of Life, The," Karaite philosophic work, 95.
-
- Trent, council of, and the Talmud, 589.
- Jews of, charged with the blood-accusation, 297-299.
-
- Tria, Spanish exiles in, 405.
-
- "Trial of the World," poem by Yedaya Bedaresi, 49.
-
- Triana, the Inquisition in, 314.
-
- Triest, Isaac, Jewish advocate at the imperial court, 436-437.
-
- Tripoli, Jews in, 389.
-
- Troki, Isaac ben Abraham, controversialist, 648-649.
-
- Troki, Karaites of, well treated by Casimir IV, 265.
-
- Troyes, college of, dispersed, 48.
-
- Tsiruf, Kabbalistic term, 5.
-
- Tudela, Jews of, baptized, 358.
- persecuted, 78.
-
- Tudela refuses to give up Marranos, 357.
-
- Tunis, Marranos emigrate to, 179.
-
- Turim (Tur), code of Jacob ben Asheri, 88-90.
-
- Turkey, a refuge for Jews, 271-273.
- Jews in, 529.
-
- Turkey, Jews of, commerce, 579.
- culture, 607-610.
- judicial autonomy, 330.
- prosperity, 400-402, 593, 607.
- spiritual condition, 627.
-
- Turkey, Jews settle in, 352, 544.
- Spanish exiles in, 364, 400-405.
-
- Tuscany, Jews of, protected, 297.
- Jews received in, 659.
-
- Tyrol, the, Jews of, persecuted, 297-299.
-
-
- Ueberlingen, Jews of, charged with the blood-accusation, 227.
- persecuted, 105.
-
- Ulm, conference at, 166.
- Jews of, banished, 416.
-
- Unitarians, 541-542, 647-648.
-
- Universities, and the Reuchlin-Pfefferkorn case, 459-460.
- and the confiscation of Hebrew books, 437, 441, 444-445.
-
- Uranso, de, Vidal, assassin of Arbues, 330.
-
- Urban V, pope, quoted, 126.
-
- Usque, Abraham, and Gracia Mendesia, 576.
- press of, closed, 581.
- translates the Bible, 475.
-
- Usque, Samuel, historian, work of, 558-561.
- quoted, 324-325, 380, 405, 409, 522, 575-576.
-
- Usque, Solomon (Duarte Gomez), poet, 558.
-
- Usury countenanced in Italy, 286.
- encouraged by Alfonso XI, 80.
- in France, 174.
- legislated against in Castile, 139.
-
- Uziel, Isaac, rabbi at Amsterdam, 672, 680, 682, 683, 689.
-
-
- Vaad Arba Arazoth, Synods of the Four Countries, 643-645.
-
- Valavigny, tortured on the charge of poisoning, 104.
-
- "Vale of Weeping," by Joseph Cohen, 590, 608.
-
- Valencia, count of, arranges an anti-Jewish code, 278.
-
- Valencia, Jews of, accused of child-murder, 344.
- converted, 171, 205, 206.
- invested with criminal jurisdiction, 155.
- persecuted, 170-171.
-
- Valencia, revolts against the Inquisition, 328.
-
- Valladolid, cortes of, petition against Jews, 116.
- against usurers, 80.
-
- Valladolid, Jews of, baptized, 205.
- dispute with Alfonso Burgensis, 83.
- plundered, 125.
-
- Valladolid, Marranos attacked in, 280.
-
- Vayol, Hans, convert, maligns Israel Bruna, 302, 303.
-
- Vaz, Diego, assassin of Henrique Nunes, 490.
-
- Vecinho, Joseph, physician to Joao II, of Portugal, 367.
-
- Vega, Judah, rabbi at Amsterdam, 680.
-
- Velasquez de Tordesillas, bishop, arrests Jews, 195.
-
- Venaissin, Jews of, expelled, 592.
- protected, 177.
-
- Venice, and Jewish emigrants, 274.
- and Joseph Nassi, 599-601.
- and Solomon Ashkenazi, 605-607.
- commerce of, 285.
- Jews of, in the Ghetto, 408.
- protects the Jews, 297, 299.
-
- Verdun, refuge for Jews, 56.
-
- Viana, Jews of, persecuted, 78.
-
- Vidal (Maestro). See Narboni.
-
- Vidal ben Benveniste Ibn-Labi. See Ibn-Labi, Vidal ben Benveniste.
-
- Vidal Menachem ben Solomon Meiri, rabbi, 26-27.
-
- Vieira, Antonio, quoted, 683.
-
- Vienna, Jews of, blood-accusation against, 223.
- commit suicide, 110.
- during the Thirty Years' War, 702-703.
- protected, 99.
-
- Villadiego, Jews of, annihilated, 125.
-
- Villareal, Inquisition at, 325.
-
- Villaris, treasurer of Ferdinand and Isabella, 344.
-
- Viseu, de, Jose, physician, 367.
-
- Vitoria, Jews of, prepare for exile, 352.
- lacks physicians, 353.
-
-
- Waldenses, alluded to, 222.
-
- Weil, Jacob, partisan of Israel Bruna, 302, 303.
-
- Weil, Moses, German rabbi at Amsterdam, 681.
-
- Weissenfels, delegates to synod of, attacked, 163-164.
-
- Wenceslaus, emperor, and the Jews, 164-166.
-
- "White Company," enlisted by Henry of Trastamare, 122, 123.
-
- Widmannstadt, disciple of Reuchlin, 434.
-
- William I, of Orange, and Joseph Nassi, 601.
- friendly to Jews, 663, 678.
-
- William II, of Orange, friendly to Jews, 678.
-
- Witold, duke of Lithuania, friendly to Karaites, 265.
-
- Wolfkan, of Ratisbon, and Simon of Trent, 298, 304.
-
- "Wonderful Word, The," work by Reuchlin, 433.
-
- Worms, decisions of, 135.
-
- Worms, Jews of, commit suicide, 108-109.
- in the seventeenth century, 694-695.
- persecuted, 698-700.
- threatened, 463-464.
-
- Worms, synod at, 452-453.
-
- Wuerzburg, Jews of, persecuted, 35, 110.
-
- Wycliffe, alluded to, 202, 221.
-
-
- Ximenes de Cisneros, inquisitor general, 484.
-
-
- "Year of Penitence," preparation for the Messiah, 483.
-
- Yechiel of Pisa, banker, 286-287, 297, 340.
- sons of, help Jewish exiles, 360.
-
- Yedaya En-Bonet. See Bedaresi, Yedaya En-Bonet ben Abraham.
-
-
- Zacharias, founder of a sect, 633.
-
- Zacuto. See Lusitano, Abraham Zacuto.
-
- Zacuto, Abraham, astronomer, 367, 407, 678.
- astrologer to Manoel, of Portugal, 372, 378.
- at Tunis, 391, 392.
- chronicle by, 391, 608, 609.
- pronounces the funeral oration over Isaac Aboab, 366.
-
- Zacuto, Moses, Kabbalist, 682.
-
- Zacuto, Samuel, son of Abraham Zacuto, 378.
-
- Zaehringen, council of, and the poison made by Jews, 108.
-
- Zamora, council of, hostile to Jews, 52.
- Jews of, baptized, 205.
-
- Zapateiro, Joseph, Portuguese traveler, 368.
-
- Zarfati, Isaac, quoted, 271-273.
-
- Zarfati, Simon, physician, 408.
-
- Zarfati, Solomon ben Abraham, Talmudist, 144, 162, 171.
-
- Zarko, Jehuda, Hebrew poet, 609.
-
- Zarzel, Moses, poem by, 190.
-
- Zaslaw, meeting-place of Talmudists, 640.
-
- Zealand refuses Marranos, 663.
-
- "Zeda la-Derech," work by Menachem ben Zerach, 145.
-
- Zemach ben Gershon, Mordecai, intercedes for the Jews of Prague,
- 586-587.
-
- Zemach David, chronicle by David Gans, 638.
-
- Zicareo, character in Samuel Usque's "Consolation," 558.
-
- Zion, Jonathan Levi, Jewish advocate at the imperial court, 436-437.
-
- Zisca, Hussite hero, 225, 226.
-
- Zofingen, Jews of, persecuted, 105.
-
- Zohar, the, Kabbalistic book, 11-24, 196, 622.
- and Lurya's system, 618-619.
- author, 12-14.
- Christian doctrines in, 23.
- doctrines of, 14-18.
- Messianic speculations, 18-19.
- on the Index expurgatorius, 584.
- printed in Mantua, 583.
- spuriousness, 20-21, 292.
-
- Zosina, adherent of a Judaizing sect, 633.
-
- Zurich, Jews of, accused of poisoning the wells, 105.
-
- Zuetphen, counselor of Alva, 662.
-
- Zwingli and the Reformation, 469.
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's Notes:
-
-
-Punctuation, hyphenation, and spelling were made consistent when a
-predominant preference was found in this book; otherwise they were not
-changed.
-
-Simple typographical errors were corrected.
-
-Ambiguous hyphens at the ends of lines were retained.
-
-Inconsistent use of small-caps and Proper caps in names unchanged.
-
-Inconsistent use of periods after Regnal numbers not changed.
-
-Due to light or faded printing, some page references in the Index
-appeared to be separated by a space, rather than by a comma or a dash.
-The transcribers attempted to remedy these, usually with dashes, by
-examining the referenced text.
-
-The Index was not checked for correct page references.
-
-Text spells the twelfth Hebrew month as "Elul" and as "Ellul".
-
-Page 77: "It is not known in how far" was printed that way.
-
-Page 173: "If hundred Jews were assembled" probably should begin with
-"If a hundred".
-
-Page 175: "kept in goal" possibly should be "gaol".
-
-Page 205: "wordly-minded" changed to "worldly-minded"; the latter
-occurs elsewhere in this text.
-
-Page 331: "Francisco de Santa Fe" was printed as "Sante-Fe", but was
-changed to be consistent with all similar constructs in this book.
-
-Page 419: "For though, constrained" was punctuated that way.
-
-Page 718: "Esther (Esterka), wife of Casimir the Great" was referenced
-to page 122; the correct page is 112, and has been changed here.
-
-Page 710: The index references "Albassi, Jacob", but the name is
-spelled "Abbassi" on the referenced page (60). Neither has been changed
-here.
-
-Page 721: "Gonzaga, Ludovico," was printed as "Gonzago" but has been
-changed here to match the spelling on page 287. The next entry,
-"Gonzago, Vicenzo" has not been changed, as it is spelled "Gonzago" on
-page 659. In modern references, both names are spelled "Gonzaga".
-
-Page 721: "Gratino" is spelled "Gatino" on the page it references;
-neither has been changed here. The Index contains similar
-discrepancies, most of which are not mentioned in these notes.
-
-Page 723: "Ibn-Gebirol" was spelled "Ibn-Gebriol" in the original, but
-has been changed to match the spelling on the three pages this entry
-references.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of History of the Jews, Vol. IV (of VI), by
-Heinrich Graetz
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