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B.C.E.C1300-1200: EXODUS TRADITION AND ENTRY INTO THE LAND OF CANAAN (ISRAEL) If the exodus tradition in the Torah and the conquest tradition in the Bible are accurate, the events appear to have taken place in the late thirteenth century b.c.e. and perhaps the beginning of the twelfth century. There are those historians who believe that the story of the entrance into the land of Canaan as it appears in the Bible is a compression of a whole series of events which reflect a number of waves of entry into the Land. According to this idea all of these waves took place in the thirteenth century. C1200: THE PHILISTINES SETTLE ON THE CANAANITE COAST The Philistines who came from the area of the Agaean sea and the Greek islands, were part of a group of Sea Peoples that left that area and sought new lands in the eastern Mediterranean. The particular group that we call the Philistines took over the southern area of the coast of Canaan at around this time and created a state based on towns like Ashdod, Ashkelon and Gaza, that would in the future prove to be a major threat to the Israelite tribe C1200-1050: THE PERIOD OF THE JUDGES This refers to a new group of charismatic leaders who rose to the leadership of the Israelite tribes in this period principally because of their military ability. The tribes were embroiled in local military problems and needed a new leadership group to enable them to survive. C1050: THE PHILISTINES DEFEAT THE ISRAELITE TRIBES IN BATTLE AND PUT THEM UNDER OCCUPATION The clash between the two growing and dynamic forces in Canaan, the Philistines and the Israelites, occured when the Philistines started to move eastwards in the mid-11th century. The Philistines won a decisive battle and the Ark of the Covenant, the holiest object of th Israelites, was taken captive. There followed a period of occupation in which the dominant figure from the Israelite point of view was Samuel whose untiring work appears to have kept the Israelite confederation from going under and disappearing. C1020: SAUL BECOMES FIRST ISRAELITE KING After a period of approximately thirty years of occupation, it was felt necessary to change the system of government into a monarchy. The tribal elders supported the move while Samuel resisted it, but in the end it was accepted and Saul of Benjamin was chosen as the first king. C1000: DAVID BECOMES KING At around the turn of the millenium, the kingship changed hands. Saul died in battle and David, the young Judean warrior who was first nominated as king by his own tribe, was accepted as the national leader by all of the tribes who then saw him crowned in Hebron. C990: DAVID CONQUERS JERUSALEM David, realising the need for a new capital that would not be in his own tribal area, something which could open him up to the charge of favouring his own tribe of Judah, decided to conquer a city that belonged to no tribe and to turn it into his new capital. He chose Jerusalem, then under the control of a group called the Jebusites and took the city with his own soldiers, thus rendering it the personal property of the king. He then transformed it into his capital and the Ark of the Covenant into the town, bringing to the new capital the aura of the great and holy traditions associated for generations with the Ark. C960: SOLOMON BECOMES KING After David's death his son Solomon took over the reigns of government after an intense leadership struggle with one of his own brothers. C950: SOLOMON BUILDS THE TEMPLE After some ten years of office, Solomon built the Temple as part of the great building operations that he carried out in Jerusalem, to glorify his capital and his reign. In the new Temple was housed the Ark of the Covenant which his father had brought to Jerusalem a generation previously. 928: NORTHERN TRIBES SECEDE. THE NORTHERN KINGDOM OF ISRAEL IS FORMED At Solomon's death, his son Reheboam took over as king and proved unable to still the unrest that had grown up in the north of the country over Solomon's harsh taxation and social policies. As a result all the northern and central tribes seceded. Now there were two Jewish kingdoms, Judah in the south and Israel in the north. 722: THE NORTHERN KINGDOM FALLS TO ASSYRIA After two centuries of precarous existence partly due to to inter tribal rivalry within the kingdom, the northern kingdom finally fell to the powerful Assyrian empire based in northern Iraq of today. 715: JUDAH EXPERIENCES REFORM UNDER HEZEKIAH As part of an attempt to strengthen his small kingdom against Assyrian aggression, King Hezekiah of Judah introduces major religious reforms, cleansing the kingdom of pagan influences and increasing the centralisation of the religious ritual of Judah. 704: HEZEKIAH REVOLTS AGAINST ASSYRIA Despite the advice of the Prophet Isaiah, Hezekiah joined a revolt against Assyria. 701: ASSYRIAN INVASION. PART OF JUDAH LAID WASTE The Assyrians under their emperor, Sennacherib, devastated the northern area of Judah, destroying many of the towns such as Lachish. Finally having extracted a huge ransom, Sennacherib withdraws during a seige of the capital, Jerusalem. C630-620: JUDAH EXPERIENCES FURTHER RELIGIOUS REFORM UNDER JOSIAH Almost a century after Hezekiah's reform program, Judah experienced a more extensive and far reaching reform under King Josiah. Once again pagan aspects of religion which had become popular were outlawed and a strong program of religous centralisation and reform took place. 604: JUDAH SUBMITS TO BABYLONIAN CONTROL The new eastern power Babylon (centred in today's central Iraq), having defeated Assyria for control of the east, campaigns in the region and among other things gains effective control over Judah, who now becomes a tribute paying vassal of Babylon. 601: JUDAH REVOLTS AGAINST BABYLON After the Babylonians are held to a tie in battle with Egypt and return to Babylon, the king of Judah, Jehoiakim, decides to withhold tribute and in effect, to rebel against Babylon. |
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597: REBELLION PUT DOWN. FIRST BABYLONIAN EXILE. An army having been sent from Babylon to put down the rebellion succeeds in its task. Several thousand people from the Judean leadership classes are taken prisoner and are exiled to Babylon. They include the king and parts of the royal family. The king's uncle is appointed by the Babylonians as the new king and he is warned of future reprisals should Judah once again prove itself disloyal. 589: ANOTHER REBELLION AGAINST BABYLON. Despite the warnings of the prophet Jeremiah, King Zedekiah decides to revolt once again against Babylon, on the advice of his own aristocracy. 588: BABYLONIAN ARMY ARRIVES TO PUT DOWN REBELLION. It succeeds in destroying many Judean towns and laying seige to Jerusalem. 587/6: JERUSALEM FALLS. FIRST TEMPLE DESTROYED. MORE EXILES. In the summer of this year, the Babylonians succeed in breaking through the walls of Jerusalem, and setting fire to the Temple of Solomon. Many are killed, thousands more are taken to Babylon as exiles, and more or less the entire land is laid waste. 586: GOVERNOR GEDALIAH ASSASINATED. The next act of the revolt occurred when Gedaliah, the governor set up by the Babylonians to govern the remnant, is himself assassinated by Judean nationalist elements, opposed to Babylon. The prophet Jeremiah is taken to Egypt, where he witnesses pagan cults well rooted among the Israelite population living there. 582: THE THIRD BABYLONIAN EXILE. After Gedaliah's death, the Babylonian army now returns and exiles a third wave of several thousand Judeans to join their brothers in Babylon. 539: DEFEAT OF BABYLONIANS BY PERSIANS. After some fifty years of the Babylonian exile, a change occurred in the fortunes of the Jewish community there when totally unexpectedly, the Babylonian army was defeated by the Persians under their king Cyrus. The defeat seemingly threw the small exile community into consternation since both of the great armies had gone out to seek victory in the name of their gods and this appears to have caused much confusion and questioning among the Jews. 538: JUDEAN EXILES PERMITTED TO RETURN TO JUDAH. As part of a more liberal imperial policy introduced by Cyrus of Persia he announced that he would allow the Judean exiles to return to their own land and rebuild their temple as long as they swore loyalty to Persia. Some decide to take the offer and to return. |
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After years of hardship provoked in large part by the jealousy and
suspicion of their neighbours who do whatever they can to hinder the
efforts of the returnees, the new temple, the Second Temple, is finally
built.
C445. NEHEMIAH COMES TO JERUSALEM TO SET THE COMMUNITY
ON ITS FEET.
In the mid fifth century, Nehemiah, a high Jewish official at the
court of Persia, hears that the Jewish community in Judea is in a very
difficult situation and requests leave of absence in order to help the
community organise itself. He is given permission and also authority
over the community and upon arriving in Jerusalem, he initially proceeds
to rebuild the walls of Jerusalem. Having done that, he proceeds to
initiate reforms in the community in order to strengthen and unify the
Jews.
C420? EZRA COMES TO JERUSALEM TO INTRODUCE RELIGIOUS
REFORMS.
Ezra is a Jewish religious leader who works together with Nehemiah
to strengthen the community. In this case the strengthening is effected
by the introduction of a number of innovations including the regular
reading of portions of the Torah which appears to have been forgotten
or not to have been known at all among the Jewish community in and around
Jerusalem. There is a major problem in dating Ezra as there is a tradition
that he precedes Nehemiah, although the story itself reads a lot more
logically in his direction, leading many historians to suggest a dating
in the 420's for Ezra.
330-332. ALEXANDER THE GREAT OF MACEDONIA TAKES OVER
THE PERSIAN EMPIRE INCLUDING JUDEA AND SAMARIA.
The defeat of the Persian empire by Alexander ranks as one of the
more important events in human history. By defeating Persia and taking
over the empire, Alexander inaugurated an era of Greek influence over
the lands of the east. This brings in the period of Hellenism which
affected especially most of the cosmopolitan centres of the ex-Persian
lands. The influence would be felt among many of the upper class of
the Jews including the Priests.
323-322. AFTER DEATH OF ALEXANDER,
JUDEA PASSES UNDER CONTROL OF LOCAL SUCCESSOR, PTOLEMY.
Alexander died in Babylon. His empire was torn apart by his generals
who each sought to succeed him. Judea passed under the control of Ptolemy,
the general who set up an empire based in Egypt.
C200. ANTIOCHUS THE THIRD OF SYRIA TAKES CONTROL
OF JUDEA.
War was waged over the future of the coastal strip which included
Judea, between Ptolemy's Egyptian based empire and between the Emperors
of another ex-Alexandrian empire, the Seleucid kings of Syria. Finally
after a century of intermittent war, the land passed to the Seleucid
king, Antiochus. He confirmed all the rights that the Jews had enjoyed
under their previous masters, the Persians, Alexander and the Ptolemy
kings.
C175. ANTIOCHUS THE FOURTH STRONGLY ENCOURAGES HELLENISATION
AMONG HIS SUBJECTS. MANY JEWS RESPOND.
Through a series of incentives, Antiochus the fourth tries to encourage
more and more of his subjects to take on a Greek lifestyle in order
to help unify his troubled kingdom. Many Jews respond to his offers
initiating a period of strong Hellenisation among large parts of the
population, especially the upper classes of Jerusalem.
C170-165. PERIOD OF FORCED HELLENISATION LEADS TO
MACCABEE REBELLION.
Finally the campaign for Hellenisation loses its voluntary character.
The Jews of Judea find that the practice of Judaism has been outlawed.
In response to this a rebellion breaks out led by the priestly family
of the Hasmoneans under Mattathias and his sons. The rebellion is both
against the occupying force of Seleucid Greeks and among the radical
Hellenisers among the Jewish People.
152. JONATHAN, BROTHER OF JUDAH MACCABEE, PROCLAIMS
HIMSELF HIGH PRIEST.
At first the Maccabee (Hasmonean) leaders give themselves a title
akin to governor. But soon they take the title of high priest. This
is a very controversial decision because although they come from a priestly
family it is not the family that traditionally provides the high priests.
Despite the fact that the high priestly office has undergone considerable
abuse, primarily at the hands of the Seleucids in previous years, it
hoped by many that the office would revert permanently to the traditional
high priestly family. Many historians see in this event the beginning
of a number of splits within the Jewish community that would ultimately
lead to the development of many rival groups among the Jews.
104. MACCABEES PROCLAIM THEMSELVES AS KINGS OF JUDEA.
As the Maccabees became more and more powerful they behaved increasingly
like any other line of small oriental leaders. One of the classic external
signs of this process was the arrogation of the title of king to add
to their previous title of high priest. By this time the Maccabees have
conquered considerable areas and are on the way to creating a local
territorial empire. Among other things, they forcibly convert some of
the newly subject populations to Judaism.
67-63. CIVIL WAR BETWEEN TWO MACCABEE BROTHERS. THEY
TURN FOR HELP TO ROME. ROME ENTERS.
The degeneration of the Maccabee line into a quarrelling group of
oriental princes was brought to a climax by the civil war that breaks
out between two princes for the throne of Judea. They both turned to
the local power broker, Rome, to settle the dispute and Rome under its
local general Pompey, exploits the opportunity to bring its own troops
into Judea and effectively to seize control.
40. HEROD APPOINTED KING OF JUDEA BY THE ROMANS.
Herod, a brilliant opportunist who had gained access to power through
his father's role as a central politician in the early Roman period
in Judea, is appointed king of Judea by the Senate of Rome. He will
soon prove himself to be a brilliant, if totally ruthless and unpopular
leader and will remain king till his death some thirty five years later.
He will also become famous for his building programmes which will include
the complete rebuilding of Second Temple, the fortification of the desert
fortress, Massada, and the building of the new port of Caesarea.
4. DEATH OF HEROD.
Herod dies after transferring the kingdom with Roman permision to
his sons among whom his kingdom is divided up. On his death a rebellion
breaks out which will ultimately be put down with Roman support.
6. JUDEA BECOMES ROMAN PROVINCE. ROMANS START PERIOD
OF DIRECT RULE. BEGIINING OF ZEALOT REVOLTS.
Herod's principal heir, Archelaus, was found by the Romans to be unsatisfactory
and a decision is made to send him into exile and to put the area over
which he has ruled, Judea, under the direct control of Roman governors.
One of the first steps of the new administration is a new census and
this provokes a rebellion which is seen as the beginning of the Zealot
movement, the extreme nationalist-religious movement which will ultimately
provoke the great revolt against the Romans some sixty years later.
C20-40. SMALL JEWISH STATE FOUNDED IN PART OF BABYLON.
It was founded by two outlaw brothers, Jews from the Babylonian community
of Nehardea, Anilai and Asinai. Starting off as not much more than a
"protection racket" run by a Jewish gang over the local population,
it would gain official status when the Persian king would see in the
two brothers an effective tool for keeping his own subjects in the area
in check. He granted them official rule over the area that they controlled
de facto and for some fifteen years they maintained an ordered rule.
Ultimately, after the brothers fell out with each other, the state was
annihilated. The policies of the brothers caused considerable anti Jewish
feeling which led to great reprisals after the brothers' death.
C30. DEATH OF JESUS OF NAZARETH.
The Jewish preacher, Jesus, was put to death by the Romans, seemingly
because of the threat of the messianic movement that had developed around
his person. From the time of his death we get the development of the
group of Jewish-Christians, Jews who practiced Judaism and identified
Jesus as the messianic figure who would return again.
C40. PAUL OF TARSUS BEGINS HIS MISSION TO THE GENTILES.
Some ten years after Jesus' death, a new follower of the sect, Saul,
apparently despairing of the ability to make much headway for the group's
beliefs among the Jews, starts to preach the idea of Jesus' messianism
to a non-Jewish audience. From now on there will be two groupings of
believers in Jesus' messianic mission, Jews and non-Jews.
66. OUTBREAK OF JEWISH REVOLT AGAINST THE ROMANS.
A local anti-Jewish incident in Ceasarea, coming against a background
of increasingly explosive tension between the Jews and the non-Jewish
inhabitants of the Province on the one hand, and between the Jews and
the Romans on the other, causes an outbreak of revolution. A Roman garrison
of troops is massacred in Jerusalem by Zealot forces and the situation
explodes.
67. ROME POURS IN TROOPS TO SUPPRESS REBELLION.
Under General Vespasian, tens of thousands of troops are brought in
and start to put down the rebellion in the Galilee. Many Jews join the
rebellion but large numbers choose to stay with Rome. For example, Sepphoris
(Tsippori) the large Galilean town does not join the rebellion. With
the fall of the Galilee, the struggle started to focus around Jerusalem.
C68-69. ESCAPE OF YOCHANAN BEN ZAKKAI FROM JERUSALEM
TO YAVNEH.
At some point prior to the final destruction of Jerusalem, we have
the story of Rabban Yochanan ben Zakkai, a great teacher in Jerusalem
who according to tradition, had himself smuggled out of Jerusalem the
besieged city (see next note) and set up an academy in the coastal town
of Yavneh, preparing for the possibility of Jerusalem's and the Temple's
destruction.
70. FALL OF JERUSALEM AFTER A SIEGE.
Titus, Vespasian's son, lays siege to Jerusalem during the spring
of this year and a few months later, manages to take the city. The Temple
is burnt and destroyed on the ninth of Av and a month later the upper
city of Jerusalem is destroyed. Many tens and perhaps hundreds of thousands
of Jews will die or be killed in the events surrounding the siege of
Jerusalem and the Temple's destruction. Jerusalem will be totally destroyed
apart from a few towers, left for use of Roman troops. Jews will not
live in Jerusalem for centuries.
70. SETTING UP OF SANHEDRIN AT YAVNEH.
With the news of the destruction of the Temple, Rabban Yochanan ben
Zakkai appears to have set up an alternative centre of authority so
that the Jews would not be without a centre of guidance and authority
in the wake of the Temple's destruction. This institution at Yavneh,
in time came to be called the Sanhedrin (Greek for council) echoing
the institution of the same name that had existed in Jerusalem - in
the grounds of the Temple - and that had served as institution of autonomy
and a focal point of authority in the last generations of the Second
Temple period. Yochanan would be succeeded by Rabban Gamaliel who would
bring the new Sanhedrin to a position of considerable power.
73. SIEGE OF MASSADA.
The last episode of the revolt, Massada, the desert fortress built
up by Herod, becomes the scene of the famous mass suicide of the Zealots
as reported by the Jewish historian Josephus. Not all authorities accept
Josephus'suicide story but it is clear that Massada was the home of
a large group of Zealots and their families during the years of the
great revolt, and that now this desert stronghold was finally taken
by the Romans.
C100. JEWISH CHRISTIANS FORCED TO LEAVE THE JEWISH
FOLD.
At around the turn of the first century, steps appear to have been
taken by the Jewish leadership at Yavneh to make prayer for Jewish Christians
impossible within Jewish communities. This seems to have been done by
certain additions in the prayer service that would have been impossible
for Jews to say if they had belief in the messianic character of Jesus.
Jewish Christians continued to exist as separate groups within the wider
Christian wo for several centuries; they appear to have continued to
have seen themselves as Jews although from this time on, no normative
Jews would continue to see them in this way.
115-117. THE GREAT DIASPORA REVOLT AGAINST THE ROMAN
EMPIRE.
In these years a number of revolts broke out against Rome in different
diaspora communities. All in all, revolts will break out in Mesopotamia,
North Africa, Alexandria in Egypt, and Cyprus. In addition there will
be an attempt at revolt in Eretz Israel. All these revolts will ultimately
be put down very firmly by the generals of Rome.
C130-2. EMPEROR HADRIAN TAKES STEPS THAT WILL CAUSE
JEWISH REBELLION.
Hadrian, initially quite favoured by the Jews, made a number of decisions
that caused a spirit of rebellion to surface among the Jews of Judea.
Circumcision was outlawed as a bodily mutilation and a decision was
taken to rebuild Jerusalem as a pagan city, despite rumours of promises
that he had previously made to allow the rebuilding of the Temple by
the Jews. This treachery, as it was seen, caused intense anger among
the Jews.
132-135. BAR KOCHBA REBELLION.
In the year 132, the revolt breaks out under the Jewish commander
Bar Kochba. The revolt is seen by at leat some, including the great
sage Rabbi Akiva, as a messianic revolt. The revolt wins some important
victories in its initial stages and causes the Romans to bring in troops
from as far away as Britain. Finally the backbone of the revolt is broken,
the Galilee is subdued and the rebels are forced back to their main
fortress of Beitar where they make their final There are Roman estimates
that hundreds of thousands of Jews are killed in the rebellion.
135. SUPRESSION OF THE BAR KOCHBA REBELLION.
In the last stages of the struggle, a number of Jewish sages including
Rabbi Akiva are put to death by the Romans. Jerusalem will indeed be
made into a pagan city by the name of Aelia Capitolina, and Jews will
be strictly excluded. Jewish life will be partly wiped out in the southern
areas of the country and the focus of Jewish life will now move up to
the north of the country, less touched by the rebellion. The Sanhedrin
will no longer meet in Yavneh will emerge a few years later in the Galilee.
C140. BEGINNING OF OFFICE OF EXILARCH IN BABYLON.
The Exilarch or Resh Galuta was the title of the highest Jewish official
in Babylon. By tradition the office belonged to a descendant of King
David. The title-holder was the head of the Jewish community in Babylon,
a community that for considerable periods enjoyed subtantial autonomy.
C195. JUDAH HANASI EXTENDS POWER OF THE SANHEDRIN
IN PALESTINE.
At the end of the second century, the head of the Sanhedrin in Eretz
Israel was Rabbi Judah HaNasi, one of the greatest of all rabbinic authorities.
He is often called simply "Rabbi". It was Rabbi Judah who brought the
Sanhedrin and its head, the Nasi, to an unprecedented authority within
the Jewish community in Eretz Israel. He developed good relations with
the Romans, and used those relations to develop the power and prestige
of t institution.
- top - C200-215. JUDAH
HANASI PRESIDES OVER THE EDITING OF THE MISHNAH.
One of the great achievements of Judah HaNasi was the final editing
of the first great published rabbinic work, the Mishnah, a compilation
of law, outlining the obligations of the Jew in all aspects and spheres
of life as they were understood and defined within the rabbinic world
view. The discussions and debates that defined the ideas set forth in
the Mishnah had started at Yavneh generations before, even though the
work actually in views that precede Yavneh by many years.
212. JEWS SHARE NEWLY GRANTED CITIZENSHIP WITHIN
THE ROMAN EMPIRE.
There is an estimate that the Jews might have formed at their hight
some 10% of the Roman Empire. In this instance, rights offered to others
were extended also to Jews.
C219 FOUNDING OF THE SURA ACADEMY IN BABYLON.
This academy or yeshiva was founded by Rav, a great scholar from a
distinguished Babylonian family who had spent considerable time in Eretz
Israel and had studied under Judah Hanasi. On returning to Babylon he
founded the Sura Academy and placed at the centre of its teaching schedule
the study of the Mishnah. At this period there was another great academy
at Nehardea which had been existing for some time. At this time it was
under the direction of the scholar Samuel. Here too, the Mishnah would
ultimately be brought in as the major focus of study.
259. SACKING OF NEHARDEA; RISE OF PUMBEDITHA ACADEMY.
In this year, the community and academy of Nehardea was destroyed
by the Babylonians and the academy moved to a different location, reopening
in the town of Pumbeditha. Here the yeshiva would flourish under a series
of great scholars and would close its doors only in the eleventh century.
C300. ANTI JEWISH DECISIONS AT THE CHURCH COUNCIL
OF ELVIRA IN SPAIN.
This was the first council of the church to concern itself with the
status of the Jews and it took a number of restrictive anti-Jewish decisions,
including the forbidding of intermarriage between Jews and Christians
and the ability of Jews and Christians to eat together.
C313-315. ROMAN CHURCH INCREASES AGGRESSION TOWARDS
JEWS.
Constantine, the Roman emperor who turned towards Christianity and
ultimately ushered in Christianity as the official religion of the Roman
empire, started in these years to initiate anti-Jewish legislation which
would set the tone for Christian discrimination against Jews in the
medieval period.
C326-335. INTENSIVE CHRISTIAN INVESTMENT IN CHURCHES
IN HOLY LAND.
Constantine and his mother Helena, started in this period a tradition
of building churches in Palestine to mark the places considered holy
to Christianity. Two famous chuches built initially in this period are
the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem and the Church of the
Nativity in Bethlehem. This was the first phase of considerable Christian
investment in their Holy Land over the next centuries.
337. CONSTANTINE'S SON CONTINUES ANTI-JEWISH LEGISLATION.
Constantine's son, Constantius, the head of the Eastern Roman Empire,
brings in additional anti-Jewish legislation forbidding, for example,
female converts to Judaism, intermarriage with Christians and Jewish
ownership of slaves. Jews were called a "pernicious sect" and this now
became the basis of Roman policy towards the Jews.
351. ANOTHER JEWISH REVOLT AGAINST THE ROMANS IN
ERETZ ISRAEL.
This revolt which was started in the large Jewish community of Sepphoris
(Tzippori) is known as the war against Gallus, it being directed against
Gallus, the Roman emperor of the east, whose harsh policies and corrupt
rule brought about the rebellion. Hoping for assistance from the Persians,
the revolt against Roman rule spread to the centre of the country before
it was suppressed and a number of Jewish towns and communities destroyed.
359. CALENDAR CALCULATED RATHER THAN BASED ON EYE
WITNESS SIGHTINGS OF NEW MOON.
Under the leader of the Sanhedrin, the Nasi Hillel the second, the
whole system of reckoning the calendar according to eye witness reports
of the sighting of the new moon, which had been the basis of the calendrical
system for centuries, was changed. From now on the calendar was fixed
according to a standardised system of complex calculations without need
for actual sightings. This is still the system that we use tod
360-363. PROMISE TO JEWS TO REBUILD THE TEMPLE.
In the year 360 a new emperor came to power in the Roman empire. This
was Julian a devout hellenist and anti-Christian, the last of the non
Christian emperors. He showed great favour to the Jews and among other
things, promised them permission to rebuild their temple. Preparatory
work was actually done. Jews started to come in large numbers to Eretz
Israel and settled in Jerusalem, collecting money for the great work
at hand. When Julian died in in 363, the project stopped and Christian
dominance resumed.
C385. RENEWED CAMPAIGN OF ANTI JEWISH ACTIONS AND
LEGISLATION THROUGHOUT THE ROMAN EMPIRE.
This is the beginning of a new period of anti Jewish persecution in
the Roman empire. The persecution takes a number of different forms.
There is virulent anti-Jewish preaching starting from this time, the
extreme tone being set by the Jew hating Church father, John Chrysostom
in Antioch, Syria. There are also cases of synagogue burnings (Callinicum,
Mesopotamia, 388) and expulsions of Jews (Alexandria, 41 forced conversions
on pain of death (Minorca, Spain 418), and new legal restrictions (the
prohibition on building new synagogues in the Roman Empire 415).
C400. THE CLOSING OF THE PALESTINIAN TALMUD.
Some time towards the end of the fourth century, the Palestinian Talmud,
the great commentary of the sages of Eretz Israel to the Mishnah, was
closed. The last events mentioned are the mid-century revolt against
the Romans, (the war against Gallus) and the reign of the Emperor Julian.
The comments and discussions based on the Mishnah, are called the Gemara;
the whole work together with the Mishnah is called the Talmud. The usual
name for this version Talmud is the Jerusalem Talmud, despite the fact
that it was essentially compiled in Tiberias, and reflects a period
when no Jews were allowed to live in Jerusalem.
419-422. ANTI JEWISH RIOTS AND SYNAGOGUE DESTRUCTION
IN PALESTINE.
Jewish communities were attacked and a series of synagogues destroyed
in Palestine by a mob led by a monk, Bar Sauma. These activities were
reflections of many similar attacks on Jews throughout the Roman world
in this period.
C429. CANCELLATION OF THE POSITION OF NASI (PATRIARCH),
THE LEADER OF WORLD JEWRY.
After decades of weakening the position of the Nasi (the Patriarch),
the head of the Jewish community in Palestine and by extension, the
accepted Jewish authority over the majority of the Jewish world, the
position was finally cancelled by the Emperor. The Sanhedrin continued
to exist in attenuated form and in fact seems to have been divided into
two smaller Sanhedria with reduced power. This development was a deci
back, not only for the diminishing Jewish community of Eretz Isrel but
also for many diaspora communities who had looked to the Patriarch,
for generations now based in Tiberias, as their authority.
450-470. PERSECUTIONS OF JEWS IN BABYLON. The
Sassanids, a group that had risen to power in Babylon some two centuries
previously and who espoused the Zoroastrian religion, had earlier this
century begun a concerted effort to oppress other religious groups.
At this period the Jews become a major target for them. Judaism is outlawed,
and Jews are compelled to give their children a Zoroastrian education.
The persecution lasts for decades and many Jews flee to other places
such as Arabia and India. is time the position of Exilarch was abolished
for a short period.
513-520. AUTONOMOUS JEWISH STATE FORMED IN BABYLON.
The Babylonian Exilarch, Mar Zutra the second, whose father had been
killed in the anti-Jewish persecutions of 470, led a revolt against
the oppressive regime and declared a Jewish state in a part of Babylon.
He was enabled to do so with the help of non-Jewish elements hostile
to the regime. The state lasted for seven years at the end of which
the Jews were defeated and Mar Zutra was crucified to death. With his
death, once again the position was abolished.
520-530. RESUMPTION OF JEWISH COMMUNAL INSTITUTIONS
AND TRADITIONS IN BABYLON.
In this decade, Jewish traditional institutions that had been outlawed
in the preceding period were reinstated. The Exilarchate was resumed
as was the tradition of intensive study months (kallah) that had previously
taken place at the major Yeshivot, twice a year, before Rosh HaShana
and Pesach.
576. FORCED CONVERSION OF JEWS IN FRANCE.
Following a Jewish insult to an ex-Jew who had converted to Christianity,
a synagogue was destroyed and a whole French community was given the
option of conversion or exile. Five hundred ultimately converted.
580. RESUMPTION OF PERSECUTIONS IN BABYLON.
As a result of these the great yeshiva of Pumbeditha was forced to
relocate.
581-2. FRANKISH PERSECUTION OF JEWS.
The Franks were a Germanic people who had overrun northern France
and Belgium in the early fifth century and had proceeded to take control
of the rest of France and much of Germany. In 581, their king Chilperic,
forced the Jew Priscus to debate with him the truth of Christianity,
in a forerunner of the great medieval disputations of later centuries.
The next year Chilperic attempted to convert all the Jews in his lands.
C600. POPE GREGORY SETS CHURCH POLICY ON THE JEWS.
Pope Gregory the first was one of the most important of the medieval
popes. In the years of his office he standardised official church policy
towards the Jews. On the one hand he stressed the importance of conversion
of Jews to Christianity, enforcing Church restrictions of Jewish activity
and at the same time offering political and economic inducements to
potential converts. Together with this, he insisted on fair treatment
for the Jews, condem destruction of synagogues and forced conversion.
Both of these trends became part of subsequent official Church policy
towards the Jews.
613. JEWS OF SPAIN GIVEN CHOICE; CONVERT OR LEAVE.
Spain was at this time under the control of a group called the Visigoths,
one of the barbarian tribes from the Germanic lands that had overrun
the Western Roman Empire. Now the Visigoth king, Sisebut, took various
anti-Jewish measures, culminating in the ultimatum to the Jews of his
lands to convert or to leave. Some left; others converted and remained.
614-630. PERSIANS GAIN TEMPORARY CONTROL OF PALESTINE.
JEWS TEMPORARILY RETURN TO JERUSALEM.
For some years now, the Persians had been mounting a campaign from
the east to take land from the Eastern Roman Empire (the Byzantine Empire).
In 614 they take control of Palestine with the active help of the Jewish
population who are rewarded with the chance of returning to Jerusalem
and governing it themselves which they proceed to do. But the Persians
then turn against the Jews demanding that they give up the rights that
they had enjoyed in Jerusalem. When the Jews refuse to comply, the Persians
fight them into submission. Finally the Persians are forced back by
the Byzantines and leave the country leaving the Jews vulnerable to
the charge of helping the enemies of Christianity. The Jews try and
come to an agreement with the returning Christian forces but finally
they are massacred and Jerusalem reverts to the Christians.
622-28. MOHAMMED DRIVES THE JEWISH TRIBES FROM ARABIA.
Mohammed, founder of the new faith of Islam in Arabia, initially hoped
that the Jews would recognise him as their prophet and would accept
his new religious ideas. However, as he saw that the Jews despite some
support for him had not left their own faith, he started to become more
aggressive towards them. After he moved the centre of his new movement
from Mecca to Medina, he took a more active line against the Jews and
pushed some of the tribe Jews out of the Arabian peninsula.
628. DEMAND THAT ALL JEWS IN BYZANTINE EMPIRE CONVERT.
This demand by the Byzantine Emperor Heraclius was one of many such
demands that were made periodically by Emperors and other rulers in
Europe and the East. The very fact that demands such as these appear
time and again in the statute books means that they were more ineffective
than effective. Nevertheless, any such demand would mean difficult times
for many of the Jews that lived in the lands in question.
638. MOSLEM CONQUEST OF JERUSALEM. JEWS ALLOWED TO
RETURN.
The Moslem conquest of the Christian Holy Land was an event of great
significance, not least for the Jews who benefitted greatly from the
fact that their social and legal position under Islam was much better
on the whole than under Christianity. Under Moslem rule in Palestine,
Jews were allowed to return to Jerusalem.
660-691. AL AQSA MOSQUE AND DOME OF THE ROCK BUILT
IN JERUSALEM.
The Moslem Caliph, Abd el Malik builds the Al Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem
in 660 and the Dome of the Rock in 691 over the area where the Temples
had stood. The tradition is that Mohammed arrived there on his famous
night journey.
711. MOSLEM CONQUEST OF SPAIN.
When the Moslems conquer Spain from the Visigoth Christians, there
are many Jews who come into Spain with or in the footsteps of the Moslem
armies. As the Moslems pushed the Christian troops way into the far
north of the peninsula, Jews settled in the areas newly conquered, especially
in the urban areas. They soon found themselves well involved in the
trade and the administration of the new Moslem kingdom.
717. JEWS OPPRESSED IN MOSLEM BABYLON.
Just to show that Moslem attitudes towards the Jews were not unitary,
at this same time when Jews were doing well both in Eretz Israel and
in Spain under the regimes there, they were amomg the minorities in
Babylon who suffered considerable discrimination from the Moslem rulers
there.
C780-800. BIRTH OF THE JEWISH KHAZAR KINGDOM.
The Khazar kingdom between the Black Sea and the Caspian was a powerful
early medieval kingdom. The Khazars themselves were a people who originated
somewhere in Asia. Many Jews had penetrated the area, largely as traders,
and in the late eighth century, the Khazr king, Bulan, converted to
Judaism together with some four thousand of his noblemen. Judaism became
the official religion of the kingdom for a couple of centuries, even
though it seems that t majority of the population was not Jewish. The
kingdom was finally subdued by the Russians in the early eleventh century.
C765. FOUNDING OF THE KARAITE SECT BY ANAN BEN DAVID
IN BABYLON.
Anan ben David, the son of the Exilarch in Babylon, broke away from
the rabbinic traditions of Jewry and started a sect based on the repudiation
of rabbinic tradition and the sole acceptance of the Bible as the basis
for Jewish behaviour. The causes of the break are not clear but appear
to have been a mixture of personal grievance towards the heads of the
community and ideological conviction. The group was originally known
as Ananites but with time came to be called Karaites from the word Œ—˜…€
(to read) emphasising their reliance on the written law. The Karaites
would in time become extremely numerous and in some places they would
seriously challenge the hegemony of Rabbinic Judaism. There are still
some Karaite communities existing today, especially in Israel.
C800. JEWS MOVE INTO THE RHINE AREA, RETURNING TO
NORTHERN EUROPE.
About the turn of the ninth century we start to see Jews reappearing
in Northern Europe. There had been Jews there under the Roman Empire
but with the defeat of the Empire they disappear from view and only
now do we start to find Jews in the area again. The focal points of
the new activity were the trading towns along the Rhine river. In this
area trade and economic life was developing fast, especially because
of the initiatve ta Charlemagne, King of the Franks, who tried hard
to develop his kingdom economically. There were clearly opportunities
for enterprising traders and the Jews were among the first to seize
the opportunities. There are even traditions that tell of Charlemagne
making overtures to the Jews of Southern Europe to attract them to his
new areas.
808. JEWS ADMITTED TO FEZ, MOROCCO.
Idris the second of Egypt allows Jews to settle in the Moroccan town
of Fez, recently founded by his father They are given a separate quarter
of the town in which to live and will soon become a respected sector
of the population. In time Fez will become a major north African scholarly
centre, and produce some very important Jewish scholars.
820-830. AGOBARD, BISHOP OF LYONS, ATTACKS WESTERN
EUROPEAN JEWRY.
In the 820's, there is a new attack on Western European Jewry, from
the pen of Agobard, the Bishop of Lyons, who writes a series of letters
to Emperor Louis, the son of Charlemagne, accusing him of favouring
the Jews. Agobard alleges that the Jews are doing far too well in France
and that this goes against the spirit of Church teachings. His letters
prove ineffective but are an excellent indication that the situation
of the Jews i period in Western Europe was on the whole, good.
839. CONVERSION TO JUDAISM. THE BODO AFFAIR.
Bodo, a high churchman at the court of Emperor Louis, creates a tremendous
storm by converting to Judaism. He changed his name to Eleazar, grew
his hair and beard, circumcised himself and married a Jewish woman.
This caused tremendous consternation in the church, especially because
this sort of thing had been warned against by Bishop Agobard in his
letters to the Emperor in the previous decade.
C940. HIGH COURTIERS AT THE COURT OF THE MOSLEM CALIPH
OF SPAIN.
In Spain, there has developed a very strong Moslem Caliphate. It rises
to immense strength in this period of the mid-tenth century in the reign
of Abd al Rachman the second. He provides a tolerant and very stable
regime where a cultured atmosphere is very much encouraged. At his court
his main adviser is the Jewish physician Hasdai Ibn Shaprut, who becomes
his chief diplomat and aide. Hasdai himself becomes a patron of scholarship
the arts in the Jewish community, encouraging young scholars and developing
a court of Jewish courtiers within the wider framework of Abd al Rachman's
court.
C970. THE FIRST GREAT SPANISH YESHIVA DEVELOPS AT
CORDOVA.
Hasdai ben Shaprut brings the distinguished Italian scholar Moses
ben Hanoch to Cordova (the place of the royal court) and opens a Yeshiva.
This is the beginning of the development of the great Spanish tradition
of Jewish learning which will ultimately create one of the major schools
of diaspora Jewish scholarship. Spain which till now has been dependent
on Babylonian authority for its scholarship will now become increasingly
independent will finally take over the mantle of Babylon.
1013. THE SACK OF CORDOBA HASTENS THE END OF THE
GREAT SPANISH MOSLEM STATE AND PROMOTES THE "GOLDEN AGE OF SPANISH JEWRY".
The dynasty of Abd al Rachman fell in the first part of the eleventh
century and the great state fell apart into a score of smaller provincial
states. The situation of the Jews, which had been good under these Ummayad
Caliphs, now improved even more as the competition for talent between
the different states, increased the demand for skilled and educated
Jews. This in turn contributed to the development of what is often called
the "Golden Age" of the Jews of Spain. The fact is that this period
of Jewish life in the Moslem provincial states would be short lived.
A divided Moslem Spain would open the door up to the beginning of the
Christian reconquest of Spain. Within a few generations most of Spain
(and most of her Jews) would be under Christian rule.
C1020. PERSECUTION OF EGYPTIAN JEWS SCATTERS JEWS
TO NEW LANDS.
The second part of the reign of the Egyptian Caliph Al Hakim was dreadful
for all non-Moslems. Reversing the traditional tolerant attitudes of
his Fatimid dynasty, he embarked on a policy of tremendous humiliation
and persecution of all Christians and Jews. As a result of these many
from both faiths converted to Islam but many others left the country
altogether. Some of the departing Jews turned their faces to Yemen but
large number settled in the lands of the Byzantine (Eastern Roman) empire.
It was felt that the relatively good conditions that prevailed there
offered a viable option for Jews.
C1050. THE BIRTH OF THE YIDDISH LANGUAGE.
Somewhere in the eleventh century we find the origins of the language,
Yiddish, which would become the lingua franca of Ashkenazi Jewry over
the next seven or eight hundred years. It was formed out of the meeting
between old French and old Italian dialects spoken by the local Jewish
communities and medieval German which became dominant in the communities
spread out along the Rhine river. The new language with its admixture
of Hebrew words especially in the spheres of learning and ritual would
soon become dominant in the Jewish communities of west and central Europe.
1066. THE NORMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND. THE FIRST JEWS
ARRIVE IN ENGLAND.
There seem to have been no Jews in England until the conquest by William
of Normandy in 1066. He brought with him a handful of Jewish financiers
from France. In the next generation, the communities grew much stronger
and we find proper communities in several English towns.
C1070. THE GROWTH OF THE SCHOOL OF RASHI IN TROYES,
FRANCE.
Rashi, Shlomo ben Yitzchak, was one of the truly great Jewish scholars.
He studued in the Yeshivot of the Rhine communities but around the 1070's
he returned from there to his hometown of Troyes and established a school
which would fast become well known because of the ability of its head.
However after the first Crusade in effect destroyed the communities
of the Rhine, Rashi's French Yeshiva became all the more valuable since
it maintai link with the now destroyed tradition of learning of the
yeshivot of the Rhine communities.
C1095 GILBERT CRISPIN - A FRIENDLY DISPUTATION.
In England in the mid-1090's there was published a very interesting
booklet. It was written by Gilbert Crispin, the Abbot of Westminster,
a high English churchman, and it was the record of a series of deep
discussions between Crispin himself and a Jew from Mainz on the Rhine
with whom Crispin had a business connection. The book is deemed interesting
for its presentation of the opposing arguments of two thoughtful and
knowledgeable men, Christian and in an amiable atmosphere where differences
are explored openly and honestly.
C1080. ALMORAVIDES INVASION OF SPAIN CAUSES JUDAISM
TO BE OUTLAWED.
As the Christians seized the initiative in Spain and started to reconquer
more and more of the Spanish peninsula, an extreme group of Moslem warriors
from North Africa, the Almoravides, entered the country from the south
and waged war on the border with the Christians. Unlike the previous
Moslem rulers of Spain, these were fanatical in their understanding
of Islamic war and they caused mass destruction of the Jewry still under
Mos rule. Judaism was outlawed. An almost identical story would develop
some sixty years later when another similar group of Moslem fundamentalists,
the Almohades, would come in from the South with similar results.
1095-1096; THE FIRST CRUSADE; MASSACRES OF JEWS THROUGHOUT
EUROPE.
The Crusades were a series of campaigns by Christian princes initiated
and backed by the Church, in order to win control of the Holy Land from
the Moslem infidels. The first of these campaigns was announced in 1095
and the Christians started to turn eastwards towards Palestine in 1096.
On the way, the Christians encountered the many Jewish communities and
the demand to attack the Jews - the infidels close to home - proved
irresis Communities in Northern France and the important Jewish communities
along the Rhine were attacked and largely destroyed. Some 5,000 Jews
are estimated to have been killed in the attacks and this first Crusade
initiated a widespread campaign of terror against Jewish communities
in Wwestern and Ccentral Europe that would last centuries and see the
destruction of hundreds of communities.
1099. CRUSADER MASSACRE OF MOSLEMS AND JEWS IN JERUSALEM.
In May of this year the organised Crusader armies reached the Holy
Land and they soon made for Jerusalem, their major target. Arriving
there in early June, they beseiged the city and finally broke through
the walls in mid-July, at which point they massacred the assembled population
of Moslems, Jews and Karaites, some twenty to thirty thousad in all.
Many of the Jews were herded together with the Karaites into the synagogue
and burnt to dea Those that escaped were sold into slavery.
1144. FIRST BLOOD LIBEL ACCUSATION; IN NORWICH, ENGLAND.
The charge that Jews had killed a Christian child to use the blood
for ritual uses was one of the commonest libels against the medieval
Jew. The charge was first made against a group of Jews in Norwich, England
where the Jews were accused of torturing and killing a local boy, William.
This accusation that led to mob violence against the Jews would be repeated
regularly both in England itself and throughout the lands of Europe
and would be continued right down to the twentieth century. In almost
every case it would cause riots or violence of some kind against the
Jews and it became the most dangerous of the charges against the medieval
Jew.
1147-9. THE SECOND CHRISTIAN CRUSADE. MORE VIOLENCE
AGAINST THE JEWS.
Another Crusade was called by the Pope to take additional areas around
the Holy Land. Once again the journey to the East was accompanied by
violence against the Jewish communities of the Rhineland, although less
than on the previous occasion largely due to the positive influence
of a prominent church leader, Bernard of Clairvaux. However, it should
be mentioned that the Pope called for all debts by potential Crusaders
to the J be cancelled and this was in fact done on this occasion and
at the time of subsequent Crusades, causing great misery to the Jews.
C1150. THE FIRST RABBINICAL SYNOD IN ASHKENAZ.
A rabbinical synod is a convention of Rabbis who come together to
discuss and decide on issues of the day and/or issues of Jewish law.
In the great Jewish centre of Ashkenaz (approximating France and Germany
of our time), the first rabbinical synod appears to have been held at
this time, called by two prominent grandsons of Rashi, Rabbenu Tam and
the Rashbam. Significantly for a community that was in increasing danger
of attack, the major subject tha appear to have talked about was the
danger of informers or of people from the community who went to the
non-Jewish courts to get justice. These categories of people were seen
as particularly dangerous to the beleaguered Jewish community of Ashkenaz.
1148. THE FAMILY OF MAIMONIDES LEAVES SPAIN BECAUSE
OF PERSECUTION.
When Moslem Spain was invaded by the violent and fanatical Almohade
sect from North Africa, who outlawed Judaism, many Jews decided to leave
their homes and find better ones. Among them was the family of the scholar
Maimon together with his family who included the brilliant young thirteen
year old son, Moses. The family wandered in Spain for a number of years
before finally settling down in Fez, Morocco, in about 1160. The young
would there emerge as perhaps the greatest Jewish scholar since the
Talmudic period. We know him as Maimonides.
1163. JEWS IN CHINA.
Jews are given permission to build a synagogue in the city of Kai-feng,
capital of Honan Province. It would stand for more than a century before
being destroyed by floods. After this it would be rebuilt and destroyed
a number of times. The traveller Marco Polo who arrived in China in
the mid-1280's reported meeting Jews in China. It seems that the Jews
of Kai-Feng were essentially a community of traders.
1165. FORCED CONVERSION AND MESSIANIC EXCITEMENT
IN YEMEN.
A radical Shi'ite campaign incited by a recent Jewish convert to Islam
caused a movement for forced conversion of the Jews to Islam and many
indeed converted. At the same time the community there was shaken by
the appearance of a messianic figure who caused considerable enthusiasm
in the oppressed community. One of the leaders of of the Yemenite community
sent to Maimonides asking for advice. The young scholar sent his famous
"Letter to trying to encourage them in their time of trial and to warn
them against false messianic expectation.
C1175-1250. HASIDEI ASHKENAZ; A MOVEMENT FOR INNER
PIETY.
In the late twelfth century, a movement develops in Ashkenaz which
goes by the name of Hasidei Ashkenaz. This movement attempts to inculcate
values of inner piety and morality more firmly in what was already an
extremely pious community. One of its aims was to prepare the members
of that generation for the possibility that they might be called on
to pass the ultimate test, to embrace their Judaism through death rather
than convert. In that place and climate many Jews would indeed be tested
in this way.
1187-1192. JERUSALEM RETAKEN BY MOSLEMS UNDER SALADIN.
When the Crusader state in Palestine was attacked by the Moslems under
their new leader Saladin, among other towns they regained Jerusalem.
Jews were allowed to resettle in Jerusalem for the first time since
the Christians had gained it through massacre in 1099. Saladin appears
to have followed up his conquest with an appeal to Jews to come and
settle in his new territories.
1190. THE MARTYRDOM OF YORK.
At the time of the third Crusade, in which the English joined in for
the first time, religious enthusiasm and anti-Jewish feeling in England
was aroused and much blood flowed. The principal incident took place
in the town of York where the Jews, faced with an angry mob, fled to
a castle, where they decided to take their own lives.
1211. THE ALIYAH OF THE "THREE HUNDRED RABBIS".
Saladin's conquest of Jerusalem and the resettlement of the city with
Jews caused a wave of messianic excitement to pass through many Jewish
communities. One of the first results was the aliyah (immigration) of
a group described as three hundred rabbis who came from Western Europe
and settled in 1211.
1213. FIRST JEWS NOTED IN SWITZERLAND.
Throughout this period we hear of Jews living in new areas. For example
the area called Switzerland today, sees its first Jews at around this
time. We have the first mention of Jews in the town of Basle in 1213.
As the century progresses we hear of communities developing in Berne,
Lucerne, Zurich and several other places.
1215. THE FOURTH LATERAN COUNCIL. HIGHPOINT OF ANTI
JEWISH LEGISLATION IN THE CHURCH.
The Lateran Councils were a series of important church synods held
in Rome in the middle ages. The most important from the Jewish point
of view was unquestionably the fourth in 1215. Here, for example, the
decision was taken that Jews should have to wear a special badge to
mark them out within the general population. Additional decisions included
a ban on Jews being in any position from which they could exerci authority
over Christians, and a strengthening of the usury laws which had made
it very difficult for Jews to lend money on interest, (in many places
in Europe this had become the primary occupation of the Jews because
they had been squeezed out of most areas of the economy). Lateran four,
as it is popularly known, marks the highpoint of Church legislation
against the Jews.
C1220. THE FIRST APPEARANCE OF THE LEGEND OF THE
WANDERING JEW.
The legend of the Jew who struck or insulted Jesus on his way to the
Crucifixion and was condemned for this to wander the world without peace
of mind until Jesus' second coming, is a common theme of western civilisation.
It seems to have appeared for the first time in an Italian chronicle
from this time which mentions that a Jew had been met in Armenia whose
punishment of eternal wandering had finally been alleviated when he
saw the l and converted to Christianity. In 1228, we meet substantially
the same story in the writings of the English chronicler Roger of Wendover.
Since these first appearances the story has been told in hundreds of
different settings and has been put to use in many different ways.
1232. BAN ON MAIMONIDES' "GUIDE TO THE PERPLEXED".
The great philosophical work of Maimonides had been finished in 1190.
Immediately it aroused concern and opposition within the Jewish world
for its idea that understanding of God could only be attained through
the use of reason, and its opposition to many of the more popular ideas
within Judaism that had taken root over the centuries. Whole campaigns
were conducted against the book which was actually banned by a French
Rabbi together with another of Maimonides in 1232. The struggle would
continue for generations.
1236. CHRISTIAN CONDEMNATION OF THE BLOOD LIBEL.
The blood libel had been claiming Jewish lives for close on a hundred
years when it was now investigated by Frederick the Second, the Holy
Roman Emperor (the secular champion of Christianity) who found it baseless.
Various Popes also declared the charge unproved and baseless and tried
to aid the Jews by outlawing use of the charge, but all proved ineffective
against the enormous popularity of the charge among the general population
and the lower lev the Church.
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1239. THE CHRISTIAN KING OF ARAGON GRANTS A CHARTER OF RIGHTS TO THE JEWS.
As the Christian kingdoms gained more and more ground in their reconquest of Spain, they saw the Jews as a valuable element of the population. The Jew was someone they could trust as loyal, as well as someone whose talents were likely to benefit the administation and whose money was likely to benefit the royal treasury. So we see that King James the First of Aragon now issued the Charter of Valencia in which he granted the of Aragon assorted rights and promises of protection. Whenever it was important to attract Jews to an area, the primary way of doing this was by granting them rights and privileges.
1239-40. THE BURNING OF THE TALMUD IN PARIS.
Nicholas Donin, a French Jew who converted to Christianity, acted like many other converts and denounced his old faith to his new one. He charged that the Talmud included all sorts of heretical ideas and this led to a Papal investigation. In 1240 a disputation was held in Paris between Donin and a leading group of French Rabbis, as a result of which it was decided to burn the Talmud publicly. Twenty four cartloads of Hebrew books and manuscripts were b
1243. A NEW ACCUSATION; THE DESECRATION OF THE HOST.
One of the decisions of the Fourth Lateran Council in 1215 was the official recognition of the doctrine of transubstantiation by which the bread and wine of the church service were seen as Christ's flesh and blood. This paved the way for a new libel; that the Jew desecrated the wafers representing Christ's flesh in order to persecute Jesus once again. The first recorded charge of this "desecration of the host" occured now in Germany. It would frequently be repeated and as with the Blood Libel, it would usually end with anti-Jewish violence.
1250. THE FIRST BLOOD LIBEL IN SPAIN. SARAGOSSA.
The blood libel had appeared in many places in Europe over the past century. It had not yet appeared in Christian Spain and the reason is clear. Jews had been very useful to the Christian kings in the process of reconquering Spain from the Moslems. But most of Spain was now conquered and the Jew's use was becoming less pronounced. It is no coincidence that we find the Blood Libel charge appearing now in Spain. The tide was turning for the Jews.
1263. THE BARCELONA DISPUTATION.
The disputation also came to Spain at this period. The Church challenged the great Jewish scholar Nachmanides to a debate on the truth of Christianity. The Rabbi's opponent was Pablo Christiani, a Jew who had converted to Christianity. Disputations always ended to the advantage of the Christians, but the Aragonian king James the First before whom the debate was being held, did something uncharacteristic of such contests and granted free speech to the Jew. Nachman argued brilliantly and called off the debate after a few days when it was clear that he had had the advantage in the debate. If losing a disputation was dangerous for the Jews, winning one could be even worse for the community.
1264. THE RISE OF THE POLISH COMMUNITY. THE FIRST CHARTER OF RIGHTS.
The Polish Jewish community started to all intents and purposes in the second half of the thirteenth century. Poland, largely ruined by hostile invasions in mid-century, tried to attract new settlers from the German lands. Many Jews were among the ones attracted and so the king of Poland, Boleslaw the Pious, did what rulers always did when they wanted to attract a population of Jews; they offered them rights. The first charter rights to the Jews of Poland was in this year. It would be followed by other charters recognising and extending those rights like the famous charter of 1333 offered by Casimir the Wise.
1269. GOOD TIMES FOR MOROCCAN JEWRY.
In this year a new dynasty, the Merinids, conquered southern Morocco from the hostile, extreme Almohades. The new Sultan proved friendly to the Jews who found themselves taken into high positions as counsellors and courtiers. Yet even here the situation could be unpredictable. In 1276, in the Merinid capital of Fez, a massacre of Jews took place after a Jew was accused of improper behaviour towards a Moslem woman.
1288-93. JEWS EXPELLED FROM KINGDOM OF NAPLES IN SOUTHERN ITALY.
By 1293 most of the Jews in this extremely old community had left or had converted, and the communities had been destroyed.
1290. THE EXPULSION OF THE JEWS OF ENGLAND.
The Jews had lived in England for only two hundred years but had become an important element of the population because of the financial services they rendered to the monarchs and to the people. One major reason for the Jews' expulsion was the fact that they had become increasingly superfluous financially, because of the presence of a new, Italian, banker class and the rise of a new native middle class. The Jews had been resented for generations because their financial activities and when the opportunity arose, they were expelled. Of the few thousand Jews who left, most turned to the Germanic lands.
C1295. MESSIANIC FERVOUR IN SPAIN.
As persecution of Jews continued in Spain, one of the results was a new interest in the messianic coming. In the mid-1290's there appeared in the town of Avila in Castile, an illiterate messianic claimant who caused great excitement in the community. On a specific date that he announced for the messianic coming, the community gathered in the synagogue and waited. There is a Christian tradition that crosses suddenly appeared on the garments of the Jews as they waiting and as a result many Jews converted to Christianity.
1298. RINDFLEISCH MASSACRES IN GERMANY.
After a series of blood libel and host desecration accusations, a German knight called Rindfleisch incited the townspeople of Germany to massacre their Jews. Some 146 communities were ruined. The Holy Roman Emperor tried to intervene but his proclamations went unheeded. Many thousands were killed.
1305. THE BAN ON PHILOSOPHY AND ON SCIENCE.
The cultural war between the proponents and the opponents of philosophy had been going on in Jewish Europe for over a hundred years when a very important Spanish Rabbi, Rabbi Shlomo Ben Aderet (the Rashba) was persuaded to issue a ban on the studying of philosophy and science to anyone under the age of twenty five. Aderet himself was by no means anti-rationalist in his thought but he knew well the excesses that had led many rationalists away from the Jew traditions. His ban was actually issued only for his own community of Barcelona but his enormous influence led many others to accept his ban.
1306. EXPULSION OF THE JEWS OF FRANCE.
The fourteenth century was disastrous for the Jews of France. They were expelled several times and then allowed to come back for limited periods of time. The motive for their expulsion was primarily financial, namely to allow the crown to seize their possessions. The motive for the rescinding of the expulsion order was primarily financial, namely to profit from the very high taxes and fines that were demanded of them. In between the expulsions, while they present in France, horrific massacres broke out from time to time. Towards the end of the century, the Jews of most of the areas of France would find themselves permanently removed from the country.
1348-49. THE BLACK DEATH AND THE ATTACKS ON THE JEWS, BLAMED AS WELL POISONERS.
The Black Death a terrible plague which hit Europe at this time and decimated her population, caused large scale attacks on the Jews, especially in the German lands. The Jews were accused of poisoning the wells of Europe, a charge so absurd that the Pope had no hesitation in refuting it immediately. However there were too many groups with an interest in attacking the Jews, not least from motives of economic rivalry an financial indebtedness. Hundreds of communities were attacked. Some 60 large communities and 150 small communities in Germany were wiped out. Many towns also used the Black Death as a reason/excuse to get rid of their Jews. Jews elsewhere in Europe also suffered from violence following the well-poisoning accusation but nowhere was the damage as great as in Germany.
1349-60. THE EXPULSION OF thE JEWS OF HUNGARY.
In the wake of the Black Death, many of the Jews of Hungary were expelled. A general expulsion order attempted to get rid of the rest in 1360. Four years later the order was rescinded. This pattern of expelling the Jews and sometimes allowing their re-entry was repeated in these years for many Jewish communities in Europe. To give just a partial list of the localities which expelled their Jews over the next century and a half, the list includes; Strasbourg (1381), Lucerne (1384), Berne (1408 and again in 1427), Vienna (1421), Linz (1421) Cologne (1424), Fribourg (1428), Zurich (1436), Augsburg (1439), Bavaria (1442 and 1450), Moravia (1421 and 1454), Breslau (1453), Trent (1475), Peruggia (1485), Gubbio (1486), Geneva (1490), Ravenna (1491) and Campo San Pietro (1492).
1391. FORCED CONVERSIONS OF THE JEWS OF SPAIN.
After many years of threatened or small scale violence, the world of Spanish Jewry finally exploded. After particularly incendiary sermons by a high Churchman in Seville developed into a full-scale massacre, the riots spread very fast throughout the towns of Castile and then across the border to Aragon. The power of the riots was so great that there were very few places where they could be prevented. Tens of thousands of Jews died and tens of thousa others appear to have saved their lives by baptism. Thousands more fled. It was these riots that created the legacy of the Conversos or as they are often called, the Marranos, the converts to Christianity some of whom were secret Jews but many of whom now cut themselves off totally from Judaism.
1413-14. THE DISPUTATION OF TORTOSA. LARGE-SCALE VOLUNTARY CONVERSIONS OF JEWS.
After their "success" in 1391, the Church stepped up the pressure on the remainder of Spanish Jewry over the next generation. As part of this process there now came a disputation in the town of Tortosa that lasted for twenty-one months. The proceedings were so dispiriting for the Jews that many decided in its wake to convert voluntarily, reasoning apparently that there was simply no more point in remaining a Jew.
1438. THE CREATION OF THE "MELLAH" IN FEZ.
The situation of the Jews in Morocco under the Merinid dynasty which had ruled Morroco since the late thirteenth century had been good on the whole. However, as the Merinid line drew towards its end the situation rapidly deteriorated. It was now decided to give the Jews a special quarter of their own in Fez and they were given an area known as the mellah, a kind of ghetto for their own protection. However in 1465, when a monarch appointed a Jew as his m advisor, riots and massacres broke out both in Fez and across Morocco.
C1475. FIRST HEBREW PRINTING PRESSES.
In Italy in the 1470's we find two Hebrew printing presses that appear to be the oldest in existence. A few years later the important Soncino family would start their press in Italy. In some countries such as Portugal, Jewish printing presses preceded general printing presses of the rest of the population.
1478. THE START OF THE SPANISH INQUISITION.
The problem of the secret Jews among the Conversos had occupied the Crown and the Church in Spain for decades. Finally the Crown in the persons of the royal couple, Ferdinand of Aragon and Isabella of Castile decided to initiate an inquisition to try and flush out the secret Jews from among the Christian population. After negotiations with the Pope, the first inquisitorial tribunal opened in Seville in 1481 and soon found itself so swamped with work that it was decided to set up a countrywide system of inquisitorial courts and these opened two years later under an Inquisitor-General, the infamous Thomas Torquemada.
1492. THE EXPULSION OF THE JEWS OF SPAIN.
Completely unexpectedly, as soon as the Christian kings had finally conquered the last part of Spain that had been for centuries under Moslem rule - Granada - the monarchs decided to expel all of their country's Jews. The official reason was that the presence of a Jewish community only made it harder to flush out the secret Jews from among the Christian population. The Jews were given some three months to put their affairs in order and to leave Spain. It clear how many Jews now left Spain, but the estimates vary between 100,000 and 300,000 Jews. Many left to Portugal but others left for North Africa, the Ottoman Empire and Italy with a few making their way in secret to North West Europe where officially there were no Jews at all at this time. The Spanish expulsion was by far the biggest expulsion of all.
1495. TEMPORARY EXPULSION OF JEWS FROM LITHUANIA.
Jews had been in Lithuania from the early fourteeth century. By this time there were some ten thousand Jews there and the Grand Duke of Lithuania decided to expel them largely for financial reasons, which suggests that their financial situation was reasonable. They would be allowed to return seven years later and they would continue to increase their numbers.
1497. EXPULSION OF THE JEWS OF PORTUGAL.
The majority of the 1492 refugees from Spain had gone to Portugal which had benefited greatly from their presence. However, in order to cement a marriage union with Spain, the king of Portugal was forced to agree to an expulsion of the Jews. In the end, unwilling to let them go, he used a combination of coercion and trickery to convert all the Jews of his kingdom formally so that he could announce that he had no more Jews. Some Jews fled but tens of thousands of others, now outwardly Christian, practiced their Judaism in secret.
C1500. DEVELOPMENT OF LADINO.
With the flow of the Spanish exiles to different lands we find the early development of the special language, based on old Castilian with an admixture of Hebrew and other elements, that would characterise many of the ex-Spanish communities. This is Ladino and the first book printed in the language was published in Constantinople in 1510.
1500-1502. MESSIANIC MOVEMENT AMONG JEWS OF ITALY AND GERMANY.
Asher Lemlein, a Jew of apparently Ashkenazi origins aroused great excitement among local Jews claiming to be the Messiah. The movement appears to have lapsed with his death.
C1500. APPEARANCE OF CONVERSOS IN THE NEW WORLD.
We start to hear of the presence of secret Jews in the New World close to the start of the sixteenth century. Many converso families arrive in places like Cuba and Mexico to the anger of the local church authorities who try to prevent their arrival. Almost certainly, even at this early date there were already secret Jews among them. The new arrivals were certainly suspected. In 1528 two suspected Judaisers were burnt at the stake despite the fact that only in another forty years would the Inquisition be formally introduced into the New World.
1510-16. TROUBLES IN ITALY; EXPULSION FROM NAPLES, THE GHETTO IN VENICE.
The Jewish situation in Italy was always unstable. In 1510 the Jews were expelled from Naples which had recently come under Spanish control; only a couple of hundred wealthy families were allowed to stay. There would be a more comprehensive expulsion in 1545 after which Jews would not be able to return for some two centuries. In Venice, the situation was different. The community had received great reinforcement from the time of a war with German forces in 1509 that had driven many refugees from German lands into the city. In 1516 it was decided to separate the Jewish population in an area called the Ghetto ("foundry" in Italian after the name of the specific area put aside for their use). One major reason was to limit Jewish social interaction with the Christian population and there were also financial reasons for the act. Within a couple of generations the number of Jews in the Venetian ghetto would rise to some 5,000.
1517. PALESTINE CONQUERED BY THE OTTOMANS. RISE OF SAFED.
This was seen as an extremely inpoprtant event especially by those thousands of Jews of Spanish origin who had found a home in the Ottoman empire. The Ottomans were the only power formally to invite the Spanish Jews into their lands, and their conquest of Eretz Israel was seen by many as a sign of divine intervention giving rise to enormous messianic enthusiasm. Jews would start coming in large numbers to the country and we see the rise of a new Jewish centre in the northern town of Safed.
1524-32. STRANGE STORIES OF LOST TRIBES AND MESSIAHS. DAVID REUVENI AND SHLOMO MOLCHO.
David Reuveni was a Jew who appeared in Venice in 1524 claiming that his brother was the king of the lost tribe of Reuven and that he had come to make a pact with the Christians against the Moslems. His appearance caused great excitement among Jew and non-Jew. One of his followers, the ex-converso, Shlomo Molcho, reverted to Judaism and announced himself as the Messiah. Both ultimately were burnt by the Church, Molcho in 1532, Reuveni in 1535.
1543. MARTIN LUTHER ATTACKS THE JEWS.
Luther, the great German reformer, at first praised the Jews in the hope that they would be attracted to Christianity through his movement, but when his hopes were disappointed he turned sharply against the Jews and published a book of great hatred which many see as one of the forerunners of modern racial anti-semitism.
1551. JEWS CHOOSE OWN CHIEF RABBI IN POLAND-LITHUANIA.
Since the early years of the sixteenth century the Polish crown had nominated Jews to be the Chief Rabbi over Polish Jews. Now, however, as the community got stronger, they gained the right of appointing their own Chief Rabbi. This was not merely a practical change; it was also symbolic of the rising importance of the Jewish community in Poland.
1554. POPE PAUL THE FOURTH STRENGTHENS ANTI-JEWISH LINE IN CHURCH; GHETTOISATION.
Pope Paul was the first of the Popes who represented the movement known as the Counter-Reformation. This was a movement for cleaning up various abuses which had crept in over the centuries which were considered to be one of the major reasons for the Reformation. One of the abuses that the Counter-Reformation was determined to wipe out was the lenient treatment that the Jews had experienced in recent generations from the pacy. Jews were considered too involved in Christian society and as a result one of the first instructions of the new Pope was concerned with the setting up of ghettoes in order to remove the Jews from Christain society.
C1577. BEGINNING OF THE PHENOMENON OF THE COURT JEW.
Mordechai Marcus, a rich financier from Prague is appointed financier of the crown. He will be given special privileges enabling him to accumulate enormous wealth in the service of the crown. He has been called the first Jewish capitalist and there are those who see him as the first Court Jew. The Court Jews were special financial advisers and royal purveyors who worked with the monarchs and nobles of Europe up to the mid-eighteenth century. They played an extremely important role in the development of modern finance and also in the change of status of the Jews on the way to the modern world.
1579. THE ARI - RABBI ISAAC LURIA - COMES TO SAFED.
The extraordinary community in Safed had been developing since the Ottoman conquest of Palestine. For over fifty years a community of exceptional religious intensity and messianic enthusiasm had been developing in Safed. Now there arrived in the town, the figure who would be seen as the most gifted of all the mystics, and who would become truly identified as the leader of the whole Sefad phenomenon, Isaac Luria, known as the holy Ari. Luria wo in Safed for only three years before his sudden death but in those years he put his stamp on the already dynamic community and caused a great advance in the religious and mystical fervour within the community.
1581. COUNCIL OF THE FOUR LANDS FORMED IN POLAND. There now started an institution that represented the high point of Jewish autonomy in the diaspora. This was the Council of the Four Lands representing the Jewish communities in the different parts of the Polish commonwealth. Its reason for official existence as far as the Crown was concerned was financial. Centralising Jewry made tax negotiations and collections easier. Its reasons as far as the Jews were concerned were different. It enabled the Jews to have more control over their own lives. There were two regular committees, one of laymen who dealt with technical and financial subjects of concern to the Polish Jews and one of Rabbis who examined important halachic questions which needed to be decided.
1585. SPANISH OCCUPY ANTWERP. AMSTERDAM EMERGES AS NORTHERN CONVERSO CENTRE.
Antwerp had developed in the sixteenth century as the hubpoint of activity for ex-Spanish and Portuguese Conversos in northern Europe, the emerging new financial centre of Europe. After the city was occupied by the Spanish, the community moved to Amsterdam, initially as a converso community but with time, we see Jewish activity rising more openly to the surface. By the early seventeenth century we will find a strong Jewish community,initially Sephardi but in time also Ashkenazi that will be present in Amsterdam.
1593. DEVELOPMENT OF LEGHORN IN ITALY AS IMPORTANT JEWISH CENTRE.
When the Medici family gained control of the small port of Leghorn in Italy, they sought to develop it into a major economic power. To this end they invited the Jews to settle there, allowing immunity too to Jews who had become Conversos. The community soon started to thrive and within a century it will contain several thousand Jews and become one of the most important centres of Jewish life in western Europe.
C1600. DEVELOPMENT OF PRAGUE COMMUNITY.
Prague, the capital of Bohemia, was fast developing into a serious Jewish community. The Jewish community was rapidly developing in size, attracting Jews from all over including many from eastern Europe where life for the Jews was becoming hard. By the mid-seventeenth century it would be one of the largest and most impressive of all European communities.
C1600-25. JEWISH LIFE DEVELOPING IN NORTHERN EUROPEAN PORTS.
Increasingly we find Jewish life beginning to emerge in the new developing ports of northern Europe. In ports like Hamburg and Altona in Germany and Gluckstadt, then under Danish control, Jewish communities start to appear. In some places like Hamburg, the community started in secret as a group of outwardly Christian merchants who at a certain point revealed their Judaism. In other places they were invited in as merchants. The usual pattern was for Sephardi communities of merchants to settle, bringing in their wake poorer Ashkenazi communities.
1603. ATTEMPT AT CENTRALISING GERMAN JEWRY; COUNCIL OF GERMAN JEWRY IN FRANKFURT.
An effort was now made to imitate the success of the Polish Council of Lands and to centralise Jewish community organisation in Germany. The delegates attempted to overhaul and rationalise the system of tax collection, as well as to improve Jewish life in many different spheres. It represents a serious and systematic attempt to organise German Jewry into a more effective body. Unquestionably it reflects a revival on the part of the German communities. Unfortunately this particular council failed, apparently because it was seen as threatening from the German point of view. Some of the participants were brought to trial on a charge of treason against the state.
1630-54. DEVELOPMENT OF JEWISH SETTLEMENT IN BRAZIL.
The Dutch gained a serious foothold in north-eastern Brazil with their conquest of the area in 1630. Conversos started to be attracted there and began to live openly as Jews. The biggest community was in Recife. However when the Portuguese conquered the area in 1654, the Jews had to leave and seek other destinations. At that point Jewish settlement would develop at different points in the Caribbean and in North America too.
1648. DESTRUCTION OF UKRAINIAN JEWRY; THE CHMELNITSKI POGROMS.
The early seventeenth century had seen intensive Polish colonisation of the Ukraine. Among the settlers were many Jews who rose to positions of economic influence over the local population, especially working on behalf of the usually absent Polish overlords who owned the land. This added to great discontent among the local native population who resented what they saw as the occupation of their land by the Poles. Ultimately in 1648, a revolt broke out led by the local Cossacks and one of their leaders, Chmelnitski, who rebelled against the Polish occupation and marched on Poland to take the Polish Crown. The Jews were the main victims of the revolt and between a hundred and two hundred thousand Jews are thought to have lost their lives. Nevertheless, ironically, within a generation, the Ukraine had filled up with Jews again.
1654. FIRST JEWS IN NORTH AMERICA ARRIVE IN NEW AMSTERDAM (NEW YORK).
With the flight of the Jews from Recife in Brazil, Jewish settlement developed at many different places in the Americas as the Jews looked for new places to settle. Among the new settlements was the recently settled Dutch trading centre of New Amsterdam in North America. Some two dozen Jews from Recife found their way to New Amsterdam and asked for permission to stay. In point of fact they were not the first. About two months their arrival a couple of Jews had arrived from Holland. Peter Stuyvesant, the Dutch governor, was opposed to the Jews staying but his hand was forced by his superiors in Holland and thus the first Jewish settlement in North America was born.
1655. RABBI MENASHE BEN ISRAEL PETITIONS FOR THE READMITTANCE OF JEWS INTO ENGLAND.
Menashe ben Israel was a Rabbi in Amsterdam. Inspired by recent reports of sightings of the Ten Lost Tribes in South America, and knowing that there was a Christian belief that Christ would only return when the Jews were at all corners of the earth, he petitioned the English government to allow the Jews to return. In England, at this time, government was in the hands of an extreme Christian sect, the Puritans, led by Oliver Cromwell, and Menashe had reason to believe that Cromwell would be open to his arguments. And so it proved. Without any official rescinding of the Act of 1290 that outlawed a Jewish presence in England, Cromwell allowed the Jews to stay. Thus, the Jews returned to England after some three and a half centuries.
1656. SPINOZA EXCOMMUNICATED FROM JUDAISM IN AMSTERDAM.
Baruch (Benedict) Spinoza was excommunicated for his unorthodox thought by the community of Amsterdam. The accusation was that he denied the divinity of Torah, the existence of angels and the immortality of the soul. He was by no means the only Jew in the Amsterdam community who had doubts of that nature. In the community there were many Jews whose families had returned to Judaism after a long period of Christianity and it created many hardships for the believers.
1657. JEWS ALLOWED TO SETTLE IN DENMARK.
Economic sense made it increasingly clear to European rulers that Jews could be good and valuable subjects. It was proved now in Denmark. Jewish merchants had thirty years previously been invited to the German town of Gluckstadt, then under Danish control but now the doors of Denmark proper were thrown open to Jews. At first it was only Sephardi Jews who were allowed in since they were felt to be a more worthwhile acquisition from the Danish point of view, but in time other Jews would also be allowed to come.
1665-6. SHABBETAI ZEVI, THE FALSE MESSIAH.
There had been many messianic movements in Jewish history. At certain times it had been felt that the time was right and such was the feeling now. All over Europe and the Middle East, a movement broke out proclaiming that the Messiah had arrived in the form of a young Turkish Jew, Shabbetai Zevi, who was ready to go and confront the Sultan of Ottoman Turkey and demand the handing over of Eretz Israel to the Jews. The Jewish world followed the story with breath but Shabbetai's confrontation with the Sultan ended differently. Faced with a choice between death and conversion to Islam, Shabbetai chose the latter and converted to the horror of the whole Jewish world. Some, thinking that this was a necessary part of the Messianic plan, followed him into Islam and created a separate sect that lasted in Islam right to the twentieth century.
1676-1680. THE TEMPORARY EXPULSION OF THE JEWS OF YEMEN. THE EXILE TO MAWZA.
The Jews of Yemen had gone through ups and downs over recent history (mostly downs). Now, under a new fanatical Imam the situation went down even more. Resolved to rid the country of all non-Moslems, he published a decree of exile for the Jews. The actual exile took place in 1678-9, when they were all exiled to a place called Mawza on the shores of the Red Sea. The exile was extremely traumatic for the community. A y later they were allowed to return and they did so with numbers badly depleted, but they were not allowed to re-enter their former homes which had been taken over by Moslems. Enormous hardship followed.
1700. THE MASS ALIYAH OF JUDAH HASID.
Judah was an Eastern European kabbalist who believing that redemption was near, organised a mass Aliyah to Eretz Israel. About thirteen hundred of his followers started the trip although hundreds died on the way. When the remainder came to Jerusalem, Judah himself was taken ill and died and the leaderless group fell apart, many making their way back to Europe. It seems that Judah himself was a secret believer in the messianic mission of Shabbetai Zevi.
1723. THE SEPHARDI COMMUNITY IN BORDEAUX, FRANCE, IS OFFICIALLY RECOGNISED AS JEWISH.
For generations there had been Conversos living in Bordeaux attracted across the border from Spain and Portugal by economic opportunities. How many of them were secret Jews we have no way of knowing but about 1710 it seems that some of them stopped disguising themselves and professed Judaism more openly. The first time that this was formally recognised was in 1723 when official documents mention them as Jews. H officially it was still illegal for them publicly to profess Judaism.
1730. FIRST SYNAGOGUE IN NORTH AMERICA.
The Shearit Israel congregation in New York dedicates its first synagogue. The congregation like others in North America has been existing for some decades but this is the first time that a building will expressly serve as a synagogue building.
C1740. APPEARANCE OF THE BAAL SHEM TOV, THE "FOUNDER" OF HASSIDUT.
The movement known as Hassidut did not spring out of nowhere. It came from a particular milieu that was soaked through with mystics existing both as groups and as isolated individuals. The BeSht (Ba'al Shem Tov) who is seen as the founder of the movement was one of these individuals but he changed an important direction, the direction of the mystic who withdrew from the world and replaced it the idea of the mystic who embraced the and worked within it. As such he would attract a group of disciples who well after his death would take the new ideas that they had developed on the basis of his initial direction and go out to create the mass-movement that Hassidut would ultimately become. He appears to have started to reveal his ideas to others about this time.
1751. THE EYBESCHUTZ-EMDEN AFFAIR.
Since the conversion of Shabbetai Zevi in 1666, the question of the man's messianic character had officially disappeared from the Jewish world. Some of his followers had embraced Islam; all others, it was assumed, had painfully seen the light. However, the reality was much different. Underneath the surface of the Jewish world, there was a large network of secret supporters of Shabbetai, who waited for his second coming. They included scholars and Rabbis. Ever ten the charge of secret Shabbetianism would come to the surface, usually amid great uproar. Never was this truer than in the 1750's when one of the greatest Talmudic experts of the generation, Rabbi Yonatan Eybeschutz was accused by another great Rabbi, Ya'akov Emden of being a secret Shabbetean who distributed encoded amulets. The affair, with its accusations and counter-accusations lasted many years and was finally unresolved but at its height it threw the Jewish world and parts of the Christian world too into an uproar.
1755. THE FRANKIST AFFAIR. MESSIANISM GONE MAD.
A new Shabbetean movement developed in Podolia, Poland in the mid 1750's when a Jew called Jacob Frank announced himself as the successor to Shabbetai and claimed to be the Messiah. His followers indulged in sexual orgies and other open forms of sin announcing that this was permissible in the messianic time. Excommunicated by the Jews they were finally baptised into Christianity and continued as a sect of their own within the Christian world for at two generations.
1764. THE FIRST CHASSIDIC ALIYAH.
Two Hassidic Rabbis, Menachem-Mendel of Premyshlan and Nahman of Horodenko led a group of Hassidim to Eretz Israel and settled in Tiberias. Thirteen years later, a larger Hassidic Aliyah of some three hundred people would be led by Menachem Mendel of Vitebsk to settle in Safed and Tiberias. These Aliyot made a very big contribution numerically to the Jewish population in Eretz Israel, creating the beginning of an important Ashkenazi centre.
1764. THE ABOLITION OF THE COUNCIL OF THE FOUR LANDS.
The Council of Lands had been active for almost two hundred years but as Polish Jewry had sunk into an increasingly difficult reality of violence, degradation and debt, the Council had been dragged down with it. It was finding it increasingly hard to perform its internal tasks vis a vis the Jews of Poland and it was finding it impossible to fulfil its external tasks vis a vis the crown. Without real authority and without resources it could no function effectively and it was now abolished with the crown preferring to try and collect its taxes from the half bankrupt communities rather than the bankrupt organisation that had once represented them in better times.
1768. THE HAIDAMACK ATTACKS IN EASTERN POLAND.
Gangs of Cossacks and peasants who saw themselves as the heirs of Chmelnitski marauded throughout the eastern provinces of Poland since the 1720's preying on Jews and Poles. Some of the violence had been extreme but the climax was now reached when the mobs attacked the large fortress of Uman where Jews and Poles had sought refuge and murdered them by the tens of thousand. There were thousands of Jews among the victims. The violence was so intense th government was finally moved to supress them.
1772. FIRST PARTITION OF POLAND.
Poland had been falling into anarchy for decades. The central government was weak and the nobles were rapacious. These weaknesses had long been exploited by Poland's neighbours, Austria, Prussia and Russia, who lost no opportunity to advance their own interests by interfering in Poland's internal situation. Now finally they decided to act together and to carve areas out of Poland that they themselves would annex. This first annexation of Poland was the beginning of the end for that beleagured country. Two more divisions twenty years later in 1793 and 1795 would finish the job. Poland would no longer exist. By the time of the third partition, the lion's share would have gone to Russia who took vast lands, inheriting into the bargain almost a million Jews.
1772. HASSIDUT EXCOMMUNICATED.
There were leaders of Eastern European Jewry who saw Hassidut as a dreadful threat to the world of Torah and Jewish law. They were led by the Vilna Gaon the leading light of scholarship in Eastern Europe. In 1772, discovering a group of Hasidim in Vilna itself he published a ban of excommunication against the group and called on other Rabbis and Jewish communities to act likewise. Almost all the Lithuanian communities followed suit but not those of the southern area Poland. The war between the Hassidim and their opponents lasted to the end of the Gaon's life (1797) and beyond.
1778. THE FIRST MODERN JEWISH SCHOOL OPENS IN BERLIN.
The fight over modernity was developing now in the West, as the movement of Haskalah (Jewish enlightenment) gained ground. One of the crucial arenas of the struggle would be in the world of education. In Berlin, a Jewish manufacturer and community activist, David Friedlander, opened up the Jewish Free School. The school, opened in the main for the children of poor families, emphasised commercial subjects and practical skills important to give students the necessary skills to advance in life. French and German language, mathematics and art were all taught there, subjects that were unheard of in a traditional Jewish school. The school would last for almost fifty years.
1782. THE EDICT OF TOLERANCE OF JOSEPH THE SECOND.
The ideas of the enlightenment had influenced a number of the higher nobility of Europe and even some of the monarchs. In the late eighteenth century we encounter the figure of the "Enlightened Despots" a group of monarchs who believed in trying to change and reform their kingdoms from the top without changing the system of government. A prime example was Joseph the Second, the Holy Roman Emperor, who brought in various changes which affected the He tried to bring Jewish life more into line with the lives of the other inhabitants of the Empire. He now published his famous "Edict of Toleration" which attempted to improve the situation of Austrian Jewry, by applying the principles of the enlightenment to the Jews of his realm.
1783. MOSES MENDELSSOHN PUBLISHES HIS TRANSLATION OF THE TORAH IN GERMAN. Mendelssohn was perhaps the most important figure of the early Jewish enlightenment, the movement that sought to make the Jew a part of the modern world. An orthodox Jew till his death in 1786, he tried to distinguish between essence and externals in Judaism arguing that while the essence of belief and observance must not change, a Jew could and should absolutely be part of the modern world and that a Jew could live a modern life while still remaining a conscientious Jew. Jews should speak the language of their host communities and to that end he published his translation of the Torah with a modern commentary so that Jews in the German lands would be able to learn the German language, an essential step, to his way of thinking, towards an integration into German society.
1789. FIRST DEBATE IN FRANCE ON JEWISH EMANCIPATION.
This was the year of the beginning of what is known as the French Revolution. It was the first attempt to thoroughly reorganise a European country in a modern way according to the principles of the Enlightenment. As part of this reorganisation the question was debated whether the Jews should be emancipated - i.e. given total equality under the law with other French people. The initial suggestion was rejected but in 1790, after reconsideration Sephardi Jews of the south were emancipated and a year later the Ashkenazi Jews of France gained the same staus. This was the first time that a Jewish community was actively emancipated.
1791. THE BEGINNING OF THE PALE OF SETTLEMENT IN RUSSIA.
The divisions of Poland and the acquisition of most of Poland's territory by Russia presented the latter with a great problem. They had wanted the land, but with it they acquired altogether almost a million Jews, and this in a land where no Jews had been tolerated for many generations. The solution was initially outlined in 1791 after the first partition and before the second and third, when Catherine the Great of Russia created an area of settlement based on the old Polish provinces where the Jews had lived and would be able to continue. The areas were obviously adjusted after the other partitions. From time to time the areas were enlarged and new areas incorporated according to Russian settlement interests.
1794. BEREK JOSELOWICZ ORGANISES A JEWISH LEGION IN POLAND.
Poland was being swallowed up by its neighbours. In 1794 there developed a heroic Polish rebellion against Russia nad Prussia and Joselewicz a Warsaw Jew organised a Jewish battalion to help in the defence of Warsaw. The Poles were defeated, and Berek fled to France. He returned later and died as a military hero against the Austrians in 1809. He became a folk hero in Poland.
1796-9. ITALIAN JEWS TEMPORARILY EMANCIPATED AND THEIR GHETTOES PULLED DOWN BY NAPOLEON'S ARMIES.
As Napoleon at the head of the French armies moved across Europe, he spread French law where he could. In Italy in 1796, he started to pull down the age old ghettoes, and later on he announced the emancipation of the Jews. At the end of the decade, however, when the French were forced out of Italy, the emancipation was cancelled and the ghettoes rebuilt.
1802. FIRST CHIEF RABBI OF ANGLO-JEWRY APPOINTED.
Solomon Hirschel, a London born but European educated Rabbi was appointed as Rabbi of the important Great Synagogue of London and as such was recognised as the de facto Chief Rabbi of England (and its overseas lands) by the country's Ashkenazi community.
1802. FIRST OF THE GREAT NINETEENTH CENTURY LITHUANIAN YESHIVOT ESTABLISHED.
The Volozhin Yeshiva founded by Rabbi Chaim of Volozhin was the first of an entirely new kind of yeshiva in Eastern Europe which sought to draw its students from all over the Pale and to give them financial help. Many other such yeshivot would follow in its footsteps.
1804. FIRST CONSTITUTION FOR RUSSIA'S JEWS ADOPTED BY TSAR ALEXANDER THE FIRST.
Alexander, a one time liberal and a subsequent mystic and reactionary ordered a committee to recommend a policy for the Jews, and he adopted their suggestions. These were a mixture of restrictive legislation cutting the Jew of from mainstream Russian society so that the Jew would not contaminate his neighbour and other laws encouraging the Jews to improve their situation, formed the basis of most subsequent government legislation towards the Jews.
1805. THE GREAT ALGERIAN MASSACRE.
A massacre broke out for the first time in Algerian history after the ruler of Algeria, the Bey, was felt to be favouring the Jews too much. The Jewish aide to the Bey was assassinated and then riots broke out which took hundreds of Jewish lives.
1806. NAPOLEON CALLS AN ASSEMBLY OF NOTABLES.
Napoleon, the Emperor of France, wished to test the sincerity of the Jews'adherence to France after he was told that they were not sincere in their attitudes. To that end he called a Council of Notables to give him clear answers on a number of questions connected with Frwnch Jewish identity and loyalty. He then called a "Sanhedrin" to ratify and authorise the answers.
1806. THE NEW YESHIVAH IN PRESSBURG, HUNGARY, BECOMES THE CENTRE OF OPPOSITION TO MODERNITY.
Rabbi Moses Sofer, known as the Chatam Sofer, accepted the Rabbinate of the largest community in Hungary and from here he waged an uncompromising war against anything connected with modernity. His pupils became the backbone of European Jewry's ideological war against compromise with modernity.
1812. THE NEAR EMANCIPATION OF THE JEWS OF PRUSSIA.
In a decreee of this year, Prussia explicitly granted the Jews civil and political rights. Napoleon's influence had penetrated here too and it was seen that without modernisation of all aspects of life, Prussia would lag behind other countries in Europe. The legislation regarding the Jews was part of this modernisation process. However, there were still limitations on what professions Jews were allowed to take on. In subsequent years it became that the Prussian ruler was still very interested in limiting the Jews in many aspects and encouraging the Jews to convert.
1819. HEP HEP RIOTS IN GERMANY AND DENMARK.
These riots broke out because of the feeling that the newly emancipated Jews had used their new freedoms to exploit unfairly the "native" population. They were used by the opponents of Jewish emancipation to show that it had not worked and that it was necessary to roll the emancipation back. The last few years had seen the rise of a huge popular movement expressing itself in many different pamphlets arguing against the Jewish threat.
1821. JEWS MASSACRED IN GREECE AS A RESULT OF THE GREEK REVOLT AGAINST THE TURKS.
When the Greeks rebelled against their Ottoman masters, the Jews in the areas of revolt refused to side with the rebels and sided with the Ottomans who had treated the Jews generally well in the past. As a result the Jews were blamed by the rebels and slaughtered for their "treachery". In the Peloponnese area, some five hundred Jews were massacred.
1826. THE LAST AUTO DE FE CEREMONY OF THE SPANISH INQUISITION.
After almost four and a half centuries, the last Spanish cremony of the auto de fe ('Act of faith") the ceremony of condemnation for victims of the Inquisition, was held. But only Jews were condemned in such ceremonies. In this last ceremony in Valencia, the victim was not Jewish. Nevertheless, of the thirty thousand or so victims of the Inquisition condemned in such ceremonies, tens of thousands were Jews.
1827. JUVENILE CONSCRIPTION - THE STORY OF THE CANTONISTS.
In an attempt to break the Jewish spirit, the government of Nicholas the First of Russia passed a law that took child soldiers as well as adult soldiers. The adults would be taken at the age of eighteen for twenty five years in the army. The juvenile conscipts ('cantonists') were taken at twelve years old for six years of preliminary service usually in a peasant village and at eighteen would be turned over for the regular service of twent years. It is estimated that by 1856, when the law was cancelled, some forty to fifty thousand boys were taken away to be cantoniss.
1832. DAVID SASSOON MOVES TO BOMBAY FROM BAGHDAD AND STARTS AN EMPIRE.
David Sassoon was one of a large number of Baghdad Jews who moved to Bombay and became a dominant factor in the Indian community. David built up a commercial empire, and became a major Indian Jewish community leader. He built schools and hospitals and was famous for his philanthropy.
1836. GOVERNMENT CENSORSHIP ON JEWISH BOOKS IN RUSSIA. PRINTING PRESSES CLOSED.
The government of Russia imposed censorship on Jewish books allowing books to be printed only under very close supervision. Strangely enough the move towards censorship had been initiated by the Jews themselves. Already ten years previously, enlightened Jews at ideological war with the Hassidim, had petitioned the government to allow only enlightened books to be printed and not the "superstitious" works of the Hassid Now a censorship was rigidly imposed and nearly all Jewish printing presses in the country were closed.
1837. EARTHQUAKE IN SAFED. THOUSANDS KILLED.
In the last two generations many Jews had started to live in Safed which had become a large Jewish community in Eretz Israel. But tragically, now, an earthquake hit Safed. Thousand