en

Steven Nadler

  • Jan Nohas quoted2 years ago
    But something happened around his twentythird year – whether it was sudden or gradual, we do not know – that led to the harshest excommunication ever proclaimed by the leaders of the Amsterdam Sephardim.
  • Jan Nohas quoted2 years ago
    We have only the cherem document, full of oaths and maledictions, that was composed by the community’s governors.
  • Jan Nohas quoted2 years ago
    But after his excommunication from the Talmud Torah congregation and his voluntary exile from the city of his birth, Spinoza no longer identified himself as a Jew.
  • Jan Nohas quoted2 years ago
    He preferred to see himself as just another citizen of the Dutch Republic – and perhaps, as well, of the transnational Republic of Letters.
  • Jan Nohas quoted2 years ago
    On March 31, 1492, Ferdinand and Isabella signed an expulsion order covering all the territories under the crowns of Castile and Aragon, “to prevent Jews from influencing conversos and to purify the Christian faith.”
  • Jan Nohas quoted2 years ago
    Within months there were, officially, no more Jews in Spain.

    The majority of the exiles (about 120, 000) went to Portugal. Others left for North Africa, Italy, and Turkey.
  • Jan Nohas quoted2 years ago
    The Jews who remained behind in Spain converted to Christianity, as the law required.
  • Jan Nohas quoted2 years ago
    On December 5, 1496, Manuel, the ruler of Portugal, issued a royal decree banishing Jews and Moslems from his realm.
  • Jan Nohas quoted2 years ago
    Thus, to make sure that the financiers and traders remained a part of his economy, he decided that forced conversion was to be the only option offered the Jews. On March 4, 1497, he ordered all Jewish children to be presented for baptism.
  • Jan Nohas quoted2 years ago
    In 1547, a “free and unimpeded Inquisition” was fully established in Portugal by papal order.
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