Fact-checked by Grok 2 weeks ago
References
-
[1]
[PDF] The Alhambra Decree-- Edict of the Expulsion of the Jews of Spain ...And concerning this we command this our charter to be given, by which we order all Jews and Jewesses of whatever age they may be, who live, reside, and exist in.
-
[2]
The Expulsion from Spain, 1492 CEThe real motive was the religious zeal of the Church, the Queen, and the masses. The official reason given for driving out the Jews was that they encouraged the ...
-
[3]
The Spanish Expulsion (1492) - Jewish Virtual LibraryThe Jews' expulsion had been the pet project of the Spanish Inquisition, headed by Father Tomas de Torquemada. Torquemada believed that as long as the Jews ...
-
[4]
Antisemitism: A History | Counter Extremism ProjectHistorians estimate that the actual number of Jews expelled from Spain was between 40,000 and 100,000, while Abravanel estimated 300,000. Jews who left ...
-
[5]
The Spanish Expulsion - Chabad.orgHistorians estimate that anywhere from 100,000-300,000 Jews departed. The last Jews left Spain on Thursday, August 2, 1492, Tisha B'Av. Christopher Columbus ( ...
-
[6]
Oldest Jewish archaeological evidence on the Iberian PeninsulaMay 25, 2012 · The earliest archaeological evidence of Jewish inhabitants in the region of modern-day Portugal has so far also been a tomb slab with a Latin ...
-
[7]
Hebrew Inscription Provides Oldest Archaeological Evidence of ...May 25, 2012 · The recent discovery of a marble plate bearing the Hebrew inscription “Yehiel” in Portugal serves as the oldest archaeological evidence of Jews in Iberia.
-
[8]
THE JEWS IN ROMAN AND VISIGOTHIC HISPANIA - Sevillaxm2.comThe first Jewish communities settled in the Peninsula during the 1st and 2nd centuries, specifically after the destruction of Jerusalem in 70.
-
[9]
Study suggests 4th-century prayer site may be one of Spain's ...Aug 6, 2025 · Study suggests 4th-century prayer site may be one of Spain's earliest synagogues. Oil lamps decorated with menorahs and architectural evidence ...
-
[10]
“Ornament of the World” and the Jews of SpainDec 17, 2019 · On August 2, the Jews of Spain were either converted to Christianity or forced into exile. The Muslims of Spain were forcibly converted to ...
-
[11]
The Jews in Spain Under the Visigoths. - Jewish-History.comAt all events, the Jews were in Spain together with the Romans before 409; and about a century later, when there was but one Visigothic kingdom in Spain, the ...
-
[12]
Spain. Visigoths and Jews.Very little is known of the life of the Jews in the early years of Visigothic rule in Spain, but it seems that they were tolerated. The Visigoths had enough on ...
-
[13]
A Reassessment of Visigothic Jewish Policy, 589-711 - jstorTHE SUFFERING OF THE JEWS in Visigothic Spain during the seventh century has traditionally occupied an important place in the history of the persecu-.
-
[14]
[PDF] Some Overlooked Realities of Jewish Life under Islamic Rule in ...Apr 1, 2013 · As the Maliki school of medieval Islamic law prescribed, Jews were forced to pay the Muslim rulers of al-Andalus the jizya, a yearly poll tax ...
-
[15]
[PDF] The “Golden Age” of Jewish-Muslim Relations: Myth and RealityIn the nineteenth century there was nearly universal consensus that Jews in the Islamic Middle Ages—taking al-Andalus , or Muslim Spain , as the model—lived in ...
-
[16]
The Jews of Muslim Spain (Chapter 5) - The Cambridge History of ...Jewish residential patterns in the centers of Muslim rule, including in Andalusia, were not significantly altered from their ancient mold. Jews continued to ...
-
[17]
The Almohads | My Jewish LearningIbn 'Aknin viewed the Almohads as waging a true “religious persecution” in which Jews were required to sacrifice themselves in order to sanctify God's name, and ...
- [18]
-
[19]
[PDF] Convivencia: Christians, Jews, and Muslims in Medieval SpainThis surge in development of the new Muslim state began to fade in 909 when a breakaway group of Shiites, who saw themselves as descendants of the prophet.Missing: primary | Show results with:primary
-
[20]
[PDF] Jews, Christians, and Muslims in Medieval IberiaIn the fourth century Christianity became the official religion of the Roman Empire and there are indications that Jewish status within Iberian society was ...
-
[21]
The Troubled Jewish Life in Christian Spain - MorasháThe Jews of Sepharad lived under the rule of Christian kings from the 10th century until they were expelled in 1492.
-
[22]
History of the Jews in Spain.14th-Century. - Spain Then and NowSurrounded by a sea of Christians, the Jews were always subject to discrimination despite the protection of the crown and nobles. Conversion to Christianity was ...
-
[23]
The Golden Age in Spain: How golden was it? | jewishideas.orgDr. Fernandez-Morera notes that the famed Umayyad dynasty were followers of the Maliki school of Islam which had little love for non-Muslims. The early Muslim ...
-
[24]
[PDF] Jews, Visigoths, and the Muslim Conquest of - eScholarshipSpain. Larry J. Simon. One of the most persistent myths of modern historiography asserts that the Jewish communities of the Visigothic Kingdom collaborated.
-
[25]
The reconquista and the Jews: 1212 from the perspective of Jewish ...Under Christian rule, Jewish settlers quickly re-established themselves in the important roles they had played in al-Andalus, including those of economic and ...
-
[26]
JEWISH PRESENCE IN THE CHRISTIAN KINGDOMSFrom a legal point of view, Jews were considered royal property in all Christian kingdoms and were theoretically protected by kings and lords.
-
[27]
[PDF] The 1492 Jewish Expulsion from Spain: How Identity Politics and ...Apr 17, 2018 · ABSTRACT. In 1492, after Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand defeated the last Muslim stronghold on the. Iberian Peninsula, they presented the ...
-
[28]
[PDF] the jewish courtiers of aragon - and castile - 1250Apr 18, 2025 · Jews under the kings of Aragon and Castile, the ambivalence of Pope ... In Aragon these court Jews had nearly as many privileges as their.
-
[29]
The Iberian Peninsula (Chapter 6) - The Cambridge History of JudaismWhen the Reconquista achieved its greatest victories over Muslim Spain in the thirteenth century ... anti-Jewish violence. To grasp the peculiarly destructive ...
-
[30]
Ferran Martínez - PredMedJun 1, 2016 · Although he is known as a instigator of the anti-jewish riots in Sevilla in 1391, that later spread to the rest of Castilia and Aragon, ...Missing: Seville | Show results with:Seville
-
[31]
Prologue - Anti-Jewish Riots in the Crown of Aragon and the Royal ...For this chronicler, the riots that erupted on June 6 were a separate uprising, which followed upon this first revolt. Read recreations of the events in Seville ...
-
[32]
The Massacres of 5151 - Chabad.orgRosh Chodesh Tammuz in the year 5151 (June 6, 1391) marked a tragic turn in the history of Spanish Jewry in Christian Spain. On that day a wave of massacres ...Missing: facts | Show results with:facts
-
[33]
Full text of "The Complete List Of The 1030 Jewish Expulsions In ...il/history, php) 1390-1391 A.D. - The Palatinate, Germany Jews Expelled ... 1391 A.D. - Seville, Spain Jews Expelled after pogroms killing 4,000; the ...
-
[34]
1391: Anti-Jewish Rioting Begins in Seville - HaaretzMar 15, 2013 · On March 15, 1391, anti-Jewish rioting broke out in Seville, Spain, initiating a cycle of violence and open hatred toward the Jews of Castile.Missing: timeline | Show results with:timeline<|control11|><|separator|>
-
[35]
Jewish conversion in the Crown of Aragon, c.1378–1391 - jstorTwo hundred and thirty Jews were killed during the riots of 1391 in Valencia, for example, while 200 escaped either conversion or death, out of an estimated ...
-
[36]
Nirenberg Conversion Sex and Segregation... Jews and Christians after the Massacres of 1391. David Nirenberg, Department of History, The Johns Hopkins University. In 1391, Christian rioters attacked ...
-
[37]
[PDF] Conversos and the Spanish Inquisition | PBSIn 1391 there were terrible riots sweeping across southern Spain. People were offered the choice of converting or being killed. Some 20,000 converted under ...
-
[38]
Chronology of Jewish History - Part 1 - Rescue in the HolocaustBy the end of the pogroms, at least 10,000 Jews are murdered and thousands more are forcibly converted. 1391. Pogrom against the Jews of Toledo on the ...Missing: toll | Show results with:toll
-
[39]
Introduction - Anti-Jewish Riots in the Crown of Aragon and the ...The riots of 1391–1392 were the most recent, though decidedly horrific, example of their historical vulnerability.Missing: timeline | Show results with:timeline
-
[40]
The Beginning of the End - Chabad.orgIt was a blow from which Spanish Jewry would never recover. Mass Conversion. During the riots, Jews were offered the option of conversion to Christianity or ...
- [41]
-
[42]
Alexander Bevilacqua · Who is a Jew? Converso IdentitiesJul 10, 2025 · The events of 1391 remain the largest massacre of Jews in Iberian history. Over the following two decades, more than half the Jews of Aragon ...
-
[43]
The hidden history of Iberia's New Christians | King's College LondonMay 2, 2024 · The elite of bankers, financiers and merchants from the fifteenth to the eighteenth centuries had a crucial role of this minority in global ...
-
[44]
History of the Jews and Conversos in Spain. 15th CenturyThe result is that in the 15th century we have a complicated social picture: First there were Christians of old stock, Cristianos viejos (the majority), joined ...
- [45]
-
[46]
Defining “Conversos” in Fifteenth-Century CastileJun 23, 2022 · “the baptized Jews who stayed [after the massacres of 1391] were called conversos; this was the origin of the name 'converso,' which means ...
-
[47]
Divided by blood: Race and religion in early-modern IberiaApr 28, 2024 · This article argues that the mass religious conversions that took place in early-modern Iberia from the end of the fourteenth century had enormous consequences.<|separator|>
-
[48]
A Timeline of the Inquisitions - University of Notre Dame1231: Pope Gregory IX authorizes Dominicans to examine Cathar and other Christian heretics in southern France and Italy, the so-called "medieval inquisitions.".
-
[49]
[PDF] Queen Isabella and the Spanish Inquisition: 1478-1505 - ucf starsThis Spanish tribunal was established in 1478, blessed by Pope Sixtus IV, and would eventually become infamously known as the Black Legend or the Spanish ...
-
[50]
The Spanish Inquisition (1478-1614): An Anthology of Sources. Lou ...... Inquisition's First Targets: Judaizing Conversos ... When the Castilian Inquisition was established in 1478, it ... in Spanish Inquisition history" in Castile. The ...<|control11|><|separator|>
- [51]
-
[52]
CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Tomas de Torquemada - New AdventFirst Grand Inquisitor of Spain, born at Valladolid in 1420; died at Avila, 16 September, 1498. He was a nephew of the celebrated theologian and cardinal, Juan ...
-
[53]
500 Years of the Spanish Inquisition | History TodayOn February 6th, 1481, the first public ceremony or auto de fe of the Spanish Inquisition was held in Seville: six accused were burnt alive at the stake and ...
-
[54]
The last 100 years of Jews in Spain - MorasháThe first occurred on January 2, 1412, when, in the Kingdom of Castile, a list of restrictions was imposed by the Courts of Valladolid that became regulate ...
-
[55]
History of the Jews in Spain. Early 15th-Century.With access to the highest ranks, Pablo de Santa María was instrumental, with Vicente Ferrer, in the passage of the infamous Laws of Valladolid of 1412 that ...
-
[56]
How Racism Was First Officially Codified in 15th-Century SpainDec 22, 2016 · Racism was first officially codified in 15th-century Spain. In 1449, a Toledo edict made racial discrimination legal.
-
[57]
"Sentencia-Estatuto de Toledo, 1449" by Kenneth Baxter WolfJan 1, 2008 · This text, from Toledo in 1449, is the earliest known reference to Jewish blood, as opposed to Jewish beliefs and rituals (judaizing), ...
-
[58]
The Jews of Spain and the Expulsion of 1492 - jstorto the Jews) and to Fernando, convinced them to enact a series of anti-Jewish laws at the capital city of Valladolid. Although not en forced, these laws.
-
[59]
The Spanish Inquisition - Chabad.orgTortures. Punishments. Torquemada. The holy child of La Guardia. The myth today.
-
[60]
History Crash Course #48: The Inquisition - Aish.comAccording to the legend, Torquemada – who had an enormous amount of influence over the Queen Isabella, being her confessor – walked in while Abravanel was ...
-
[61]
Expelled from Spain: July 31, 1492 | Exploring Hate - PBSJul 26, 2022 · In 1492, and during the years that followed, tens of thousands of Jews fled Spain (estimates range from 40,000 to over 150,000). Describing the ...
-
[62]
(PDF) A Crime without a corpse The Holy Child of La Guardia... Holy Child of La Guardia twenty years later in order to eliminate the Jews from Spain for. ever. In the sixteenth century, when there was no longer any Jewish ...
-
[63]
Tomas de Torquemada | Catholic Answers EncyclopediaOn this account Torquemada urged the sovereigns to compel all the Jews either to become Christians or to leave Spain.
-
[64]
The Alhambra Decree of 1492: Exploring the Forced Exodus in ...Jan 17, 2024 · In 1492, Isabella and Ferdinand issued the Alhambra Decree, an edict requiring the exile or conversion of all Jews from Spain.Missing: genesis primary sources
-
[65]
Spain announces it will expel all Jews | March 31, 1492 - History.comNov 12, 2019 · Pogroms, individual acts of violence against Jews and anti-Semitic laws had been features of Catholic Spain for over a century before the ...
-
[66]
Jews Are Expelled from Spain | Research Starters - EBSCOThe expulsion of Jews from Spain, formalized by the Alhambra Decree on March 31, 1492, marked a significant and tragic event in Jewish history.
-
[67]
[PDF] Seville, the Jews of Castile, and the Road to the Riots of 1391May 10, 2010 · Finally, it will address the most enduring impact of the massacres: the conversion of thousands of Jews to Christianity and the problems it ...
-
[68]
Spain-history | Jewish Heritage AllianceThe presence of Jews in Segovia dates back to the 11th century. They engaged primarily in commerce, tanning and textile manufacture, and the community was ...
- [69]
-
[70]
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY OF JEWS IN THE MIDDLE AGESJews were not restricted from charging high interest by church rules against usury. Moneylenders sometimes charged interest rates as high as 40 percent a year.
-
[71]
[PDF] Economic Exchanges between Muslims, Jews, and Christians in ...Çag was not the only tax farmer. Amador de los Ríos provides a detailed description of the large number of Jews engaged in some financial role in thir-.
- [72]
- [73]
-
[74]
Benzion Netanyahu's History - Tablet MagazineApr 30, 2012 · Benzion shows that the conversos were tortured, killed, and their property seized not for their secret Judaism, for which there is scant ...
-
[75]
Chalmers v. Benzion Netanyahu and the Spanish Converso QuestionAs Chalmers is quick to point out, Netanyahu's attempt to draw a direct parallel between the racial ethnic hatred he cites as the primary cause of the Spanish ...
-
[76]
A 1492 Letter Regarding Jewish Property in Spain | mjhnyc.orgMar 29, 2022 · In 1492, King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella issued the Alhambra Decree, ordering the expulsion of all Jews from their kingdoms.
-
[77]
How Spain and Portugal Expelled Their Jews | My Jewish LearningThey were given four months to wind up their affairs, and were not permitted to take any gold, silver, or precious metal with them. Recognizing that they could ...
-
[78]
Monument paying homage to the Spanish Jews expelled in 1492 ...Apr 4, 2022 · The location chosen for this piece is due to the fact that, of the routes established for the expulsion of the Jews, the port of Cartagena was ...<|separator|>
-
[79]
Community in Spain - World Jewish CongressThe “Alhambra Decree” was formally rescinded in 1968, 476 years after Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand ordered the Jews expelled from Spain. In 1992, King Juan ...Missing: deadline | Show results with:deadline
-
[80]
At War with Itself | American Enterprise Institute - AEITo begin with, Kamen drastically revises downward the actual number of Jews expelled from Spain after 1492–not more than 50,000, which is barely a third or a ...
-
[81]
Expulsion of Jews from Spain - WikipediaAs a result of the Alhambra decree and the prior persecution, over 200,000 Jews converted to Catholicism, and between 40,000 and 100,000 were expelled. An ...The genesis of the expulsion... · Reasons for the expulsion · Consequences
-
[82]
The Jewish Expulsion From Spain and the Sephardic DiasporaThe expulsion of Jews from Spain in 1492 was a seminal event in Jewish history. The Alhambra Decree put an end to 1,500 glorious years of Jewish community ...
-
[83]
History of Sephardic JewsThe defining turning point in Sephardic Jews history came with the Alhambra Decree of 1492, which expelled all Jews from Spain who refused baptism. Roughly ...
-
[84]
The History of the Jews of Turkey - Aish.comRoughly 100,000 Jews fled Spain under the Alhambra Decree, and most chose to go to the Ottoman Empire, with 60,000 Jews arriving in 1492 alone. The Sultan ...
-
[85]
Jews and the Ottoman Empire in the Sixteenth CenturyJan 20, 2024 · Discussion of teaching the Sephardic migration to the Ottoman Empire in the sixteenth century.<|control11|><|separator|>
-
[86]
Economic Role of Iberian Jewry in the Sixteenth Century Ottoman ...Iberian Jews in the Ottoman Empire engaged in trading, banking, tax farming, customs collection, and coinage minting, forming a commercial network.
-
[87]
Joseph Nasi | Ottoman Empire, Diplomat, Financier - BritannicaAug 25, 2025 · Joseph Nasi was a Jewish statesman and financier who rose to a position of power in the Ottoman Empire under the sultans Süleyman the ...
-
[88]
Joseph Nasi - Jewish Virtual LibraryIn 1569 Nasi threw his powerful influence on the side of the war party in Constantinople, and was considered to be mainly responsible for the Turkish war ...
-
[89]
Community in Netherlands - World Jewish CongressThe flux of Sephardic Jews played an important role in Amsterdam's growing status as a world leader in trade. Many Jews supported the House of Orange and were, ...
-
[90]
The history and contributions of Sephardic Jews in AmsterdamMar 20, 2023 · Sephardic Jews, with their trading connections in many ports, became indispensable merchants and helped to bring goods and wealth to Amsterdam.
-
[91]
The Contribution of Hebrew Printing Houses and Printers in Istanbul ...Dec 31, 2011 · Abstract. Sephardi printers were pioneers of moveable type in the Islamic world, establishing a Hebrew printing house in Istanbul in 1493.Missing: diaspora philosophy
- [92]
-
[93]
The Sephardic Diaspora After 1492 - My Jewish LearningAfter 1492, Spanish Jews were exiled, and Portuguese Jews converted. Many moved to Western Europe, some to Amsterdam, and some to the New World.Missing: medicine | Show results with:medicine
-
[94]
Chapter 2. A short history of the Conversos - OpenEdition BooksFor more on this issue, see Henry Kamen, “The Mediterranean and the Expulsion of Spanish Jews in 1492,” Past and Present, 119 (1988): 30–55. The majority of ...
- [95]
-
[96]
V The Converted Jews: From Persecution to AssimilationIn Valencia city, the pogrom began on July 9 when a group of young men forced their way into the Jewish quarter. When the Jews, now thoroughly alarmed, shut the ...Missing: toll | Show results with:toll
- [97]
-
[98]
The secret Jews of Spain and Portugal and their storiesEditor's Note: The amazing persistence of secret Jews in Spain and Portugal is one of the most humanly compelling Jewish stories of the 20th century.
-
[99]
Synagogues in Spain - Richard McBeeNov 10, 2009 · There are only three medieval synagogues that survive in Spain. Two in Toledo and one in Cordoba. There were hundreds before 1492.
-
[100]
Remains of Medieval Synagogue found in Spain | The Jerusalem PostFeb 10, 2023 · This is one of very few Jewish structures still in existence after Spain's expulsion of the Jews.
-
[101]
Christopher Columbus: Navigating Empire, Religion, and Identity ...Oct 16, 2024 · ... Expulsion of Jews under the Alhambra Decree. As Spain sought to consolidate religious unity through the forced expulsion or conversion of Jews ...
-
[102]
A history of the Jews in Christian Spain : Baer, Yitzhak, 1888Dec 12, 2011 · A history of the Jews in Christian Spain may be regarded as a translation of the second [Hebrew] edition. Here and there the text has been slightly abridged.
-
[103]
The Secret of the Inquisition | Henry KamenFeb 1, 1996 · Conversos could not be denounced by their enemies as Christians, for that was of course no crime; they were therefore denounced as “Jews.” In ...
-
[104]
Origins of Inquisition in 15th Century Spain 0679410651Copyright © 1995 by Benzion Netanyahu ... o popular outbreaks against the Jews in the Middle Ages caused the Jewish people such staggering losses as the Spanish ...
-
[105]
Economy as Empire: Dutch Disease and the Decline of Imperial SpainJul 9, 2019 · This paper seeks to fill that gap by examining the role of the large influx of American gold and silver into the Spanish economy.
-
[106]
Tracing Spain's Financial Collapse to the Beginning of its New ...May 7, 2020 · In the century following the discovery of America, Spain struggled with a population decline sourced in the American imperialism that was ...
-
[107]
Joseph Pérez | History of a Tragedy - University of Illinois PressIn this concise survey of the expulsion of the Sephardic Jews, Joseph Pérez studies the evolution of the Jewish community in Spain.Missing: decline | Show results with:decline
-
[108]
The Spanish Mystery - Berkeley Economic ReviewFeb 27, 2020 · In the latter half of the seventeenth century, Spain was a second-rate nation. Serially bankrupt, war-torn, and agriculturally barren.
-
[109]
The ups and downs of Spain's centuries-long economic developmentMoving on to the late 16th and early 17th centuries, another probable explanation for Spain's decline was its efforts to maintain its costly European empire ...
-
[110]
Decline of Spain in the 17th Century | History, Issues & EffectsThe decline of Spain was precipitated by hyperinflation, rebellions at home, and an over-extension of costly military engagements.<|separator|>
-
[111]
Joseph Pérez. History of a Tragedy: The Expulsion of the Jews from ...Its central thesis is that Castile and Aragon expelled their Jewish populations in 1492 because that year finalized the transformation of Spain into a ...<|separator|>
-
[112]
The effects of the Spanish Inquisition linger to this dayDec 23, 2021 · The locations in which the inquisition was strong have markedly lower levels of economic activity, trust and educational attainment than those in which it was ...
-
[113]
The Genetic Legacy of Religious Diversity and Intolerance - NIHDec 4, 2008 · The genetic legacy of religious diversity and intolerance: paternal lineages of Christians, Jews, and Muslims in the Iberian Peninsula.Missing: post- | Show results with:post-
-
[114]
One fifth of Spaniards have Jewish ancestry, study revealsDec 5, 2008 · Nearly 20 per cent of the present population of the Iberian peninsula has Sephardic Jewish ancestry, and 11 per cent bear Moorish DNA signatures.
-
[115]
Portuguese crypto-Jews: the genetic heritage of a complex historyFeb 1, 2015 · The purpose of this review is to summarize and critically revise the existing genetic data concerning the Portuguese Sephardic Jewish population.
-
[116]
The Genetic Legacy of the Spanish Inquisition - The AtlanticDec 21, 2018 · A new study examining the DNA of thousands of Latin Americans reveals the extent of their likely Sephardic Jewish ancestry.