Some clarifications on several aspects of the history of Jews in Medieval Catalonia

The settling of Jews in the Catalan Countries is prior to the year 1000. In the 12th and 13th centuries many Jews acted as administrators and financiers at the service of the Catalan kings, as well as emissaries to the Moslem governments. In the 13th century Jewish communities spread over a great nu...

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Main Author: Eduard Feliu
Format: Article
Language:Catalan
Published: Institut d'Estudis Catalans 2009-10-01
Series:Catalan Historical Review
Subjects:
Online Access:http://revistes.iec.cat/index.php/CHR/article/viewFile/40597/40496
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spelling doaj-71f873f066bf4d1888e970babf2439712020-11-25T04:00:28ZcatInstitut d'Estudis CatalansCatalan Historical Review2013-407X2013-40882009-10-0124964Some clarifications on several aspects of the history of Jews in Medieval CataloniaEduard FeliuThe settling of Jews in the Catalan Countries is prior to the year 1000. In the 12th and 13th centuries many Jews acted as administrators and financiers at the service of the Catalan kings, as well as emissaries to the Moslem governments. In the 13th century Jewish communities spread over a great number of Catalan towns where they devoted themselves intensely to crafts and commercial activities. At that time the Hebrew denomination of Sepharad indicated the Moslem lands; it never included Catalonia, which formed a political, linguistic and cultural continuum with the Provençal territories. The modern denomination sephardim is, therefore, anachronical when it refers to the times preceding the 1492 expulsion. Jews, considered from antiquity as a separate ethno-religious group, were allowed to apply their own laws in questions concerning private rights, as well as to teach the Hebrew language and culture, although they always used Catalan as their spoken language. Catalonia gave birth to eminent figures of the medieval Hebraic culture: Judah ben Barzillai, Abraham ben Hasday, Solomon ben Adret and Hasday Cresques, from Barcelona; Nissim ben Reuben and Moses ben Nahman, from Girona; Isaac ben Sheshet Perfet, from Barcelona but living in València; Simeon ben Tsemah Duran from Majorca; and Menahem ha-Meiri, from Perpinyà.http://revistes.iec.cat/index.php/CHR/article/viewFile/40597/40496jewish cataloniahebraic lawšetarot‘calls’rashbarambanreligious disputessepharad
collection DOAJ
language Catalan
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eduard Feliu
spellingShingle Eduard Feliu
Some clarifications on several aspects of the history of Jews in Medieval Catalonia
Catalan Historical Review
jewish catalonia
hebraic law
šetarot
‘calls’
rashba
ramban
religious disputes
sepharad
author_facet Eduard Feliu
author_sort Eduard Feliu
title Some clarifications on several aspects of the history of Jews in Medieval Catalonia
title_short Some clarifications on several aspects of the history of Jews in Medieval Catalonia
title_full Some clarifications on several aspects of the history of Jews in Medieval Catalonia
title_fullStr Some clarifications on several aspects of the history of Jews in Medieval Catalonia
title_full_unstemmed Some clarifications on several aspects of the history of Jews in Medieval Catalonia
title_sort some clarifications on several aspects of the history of jews in medieval catalonia
publisher Institut d'Estudis Catalans
series Catalan Historical Review
issn 2013-407X
2013-4088
publishDate 2009-10-01
description The settling of Jews in the Catalan Countries is prior to the year 1000. In the 12th and 13th centuries many Jews acted as administrators and financiers at the service of the Catalan kings, as well as emissaries to the Moslem governments. In the 13th century Jewish communities spread over a great number of Catalan towns where they devoted themselves intensely to crafts and commercial activities. At that time the Hebrew denomination of Sepharad indicated the Moslem lands; it never included Catalonia, which formed a political, linguistic and cultural continuum with the Provençal territories. The modern denomination sephardim is, therefore, anachronical when it refers to the times preceding the 1492 expulsion. Jews, considered from antiquity as a separate ethno-religious group, were allowed to apply their own laws in questions concerning private rights, as well as to teach the Hebrew language and culture, although they always used Catalan as their spoken language. Catalonia gave birth to eminent figures of the medieval Hebraic culture: Judah ben Barzillai, Abraham ben Hasday, Solomon ben Adret and Hasday Cresques, from Barcelona; Nissim ben Reuben and Moses ben Nahman, from Girona; Isaac ben Sheshet Perfet, from Barcelona but living in València; Simeon ben Tsemah Duran from Majorca; and Menahem ha-Meiri, from Perpinyà.
topic jewish catalonia
hebraic law
šetarot
‘calls’
rashba
ramban
religious disputes
sepharad
url http://revistes.iec.cat/index.php/CHR/article/viewFile/40597/40496
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