|
|
|
|
Sponsored
Results:
Jewish World Links
-->
Europe
-- >
Italy |
|
Best Deals found at: |
|
Aharon's Jewish
Books and Judaica
600 South Holly Street Suite 103
Denver, Colorado 80246
303-322-7345
800-830-8660 |
-
Judaic
Online store that
provides a wide selection of all types of Judaica,
Jewish gifts, Jewish books, Jewish ritual items and
more
www.judaic.com
|
|
Kingdom of southern Europe, with a
total population of about 32,000,000, in which there
are about 34,653 Jews (1901). This country, which the
Israelites, punning upon the name, called "I al Yah" =
"the land of the dew of the Lord" (comp. Gen. xxvii.
39), has been prominent in the history of the Jews.
This prominence has not been due to the number of Jews
in Italy, which has never been particularly large, but
rather to the fact that they were not subjected to
those continued and cruel persecutions to which they
were exposed in other countries; and they may be said
to have enjoyed, especially at certain periods, a fair
degree of liberty. |
|
|
Under the Empire.
The first definite appearance of Jews in the history
of Italy was that of the embassy sent by Simon
Maccabeus to Rome to strengthen the alliance with the
Romans against the Syrians. The ambassadors received a
cordial welcome from their coreligionists who were
already established there, and whose number at the
time of the emperor Claudius was comparatively so
great that when, for some unknown reason, he was
desirous of expelling them, he did not dare to do so.
Moreover, when, toward the end of his reign, by reason
of trouble provoked by a Christian propagandist, he
actually expelled a portion of the Jews, there
remained in Rome a fully organized community, presided
over by heads called ρχοντες or γερουσιάρχοι. The Jews
maintained in Rome several synagogues, whose spiritual
head was called ρχισυνάγωγος; in their cemetery the
tombstones bore the symbolic seven-branched
candlestick. Even in the time of Tiberius—who
pretended to be friendly to the Jews, but really was
as hostile to them as Augustus had been—many converts
to Judaism were made in Rome. It was when the wife of
his friend, the senator Saturninus, became a convert
to Judaism, that Tiberius showed his enmity toward the
adherents of this faith by publishing, on the advice
of his minister Sejanus, an edict commanding all Jews
and proselytes who should not have abjured their faith
before a fixed date to leave Rome under penalty of
perpetual bondage. A large number of young Jews was
ordered to fight against the brigands in Sardinia,
where the greater part of them lost their lives. This
was the first persecution of the Jews in the West.
There were other Jewish colonies at that time in
southern Italy, in Sicily, and in Sardinia, but they
were neither large nor important.
From Rome, where Judaism had many adherents and
enjoyed a certain influence even at court, the Jews
spread into other parts of Italy; but the greater
number of those who came to such parts somewhat later
immigrated from other countries. Thus in Sicily there
came from Africa to Palermo about 1,500 families, and
to Messina about 200 families. To Tuscany Jews came
from Spain; to Lombardy, to Piedmont, and to the
territory of Genoa, from central Italy. But they were
never numerous; only in Milan, Turin, and Genoa were
there communities of some importance; and even from
these provinces they were frequently expelled and
after an interval allowed to reenter. From the Orient,
where the Venetian republic had important colonies,
many went to Venice, and also to Ancona and Pesaro.
From these cities, too, as from Ferrara, they were at
times expelled; and, as elsewhere, they were
readmitted. There were some Jews in almost every
village of the Venetian possessions; at Padua, Verona,
Mantua, and Modena there were long-established and
important communities. In the Neapolitan realm the
greater number of the Jews were settled in Naples, in
Capua, and in other large towns along the Adriatic
coast, such as Bari, Otranto, Brindisi, Taranto,
Benevento, Sulmona, Salerno, and Trani. In the
interior there were scarcely any Jews.
After Judea had been declared a Roman province, the
procurators sent thither by the Senate became more and
more cruel in their treatment of the Jews, and finally
incited them to a rebellion which ended in the ruin of
the Jewish state under the emperor Titus (70 C.E.). A
large number of prisoners and soldiers were
transferred to Italy; but naturally the vanquished did
not feel disposed to emigrate to the land of their
conquerors and oppressors. Titus had a reign of short
duration; and his successor, Domitian, treated the
Jews cruelly. To him is attributed the intention to
execute a decree which he had forced the Senate to
approve, and under which, within thirty days after its
promulgation, all the Jewish subjects of Rome were to
be massacred. The patriarch, with three of the most
illustrious tannaim, repaired to Rome in order to
prevent the carrying out of this infamous project;
soon afterward Domitian died, and his successor, Nerva,
showed himself favorable to his Jewish subjects. He
remainedon the throne but a short time and was
succeeded by Trajan, a persistent opponent of the
Jews, and in whose wars many thousands of them lost
their lives in Babylon, in Egypt, and in Cyprus.
Hadrian, in turn, was at first inclined to favor the
Jews, and he even granted them permission to rebuild
the Temple at Jerusalem (118). This concession he
later withdrew, and, indeed, he became one of their
most bitter enemies, issuing an edict forbidding them
to continue their religious practises.
Influence of Christianity.
A few years later this hostile legislation, which for
the most part had never been enforced, was repealed,
and the condition of the Jews was for a short time
improved. Through the growth and diffusion of
Christianity, however, it soon became worse and worse.
As the Christians detached themselves from the Jews,
the former became the fiercest enemies of the latter.
When Constantine, who at the beginning of his reign
had advocated liberty of conscience, became a convert
to Christianity, he established oppressive laws for
the Jews; but these were in turn abolished by Julian
the Apostate, who showed his favor toward the Jews to
the extent of permitting them to resume their scheme
for the reconstruction of the Temple at Jerusalem.
This concession was withdrawn under his successor,
who, again, was a Christian; and then the oppression
grew considerably. Thus periods of persecution were
followed by periods of quiescence, until the fall of
the Roman empire.
At the time of the foundation of the Ostrogothic rule
under Theodoric, there were flourishing communities of
Jews in Rome, Milan, Genoa, Palermo, Messina,
Agrigentum, and in Sardinia. The popes of the period
were not seriously opposed to the Jews; and this
accounts for the ardor with which the latter took up
arms for the Ostrogoths as against the forces of
Justinian—particularly at Naples, where the remarkable
defense of the city was maintained almost entirely by
Jews. After the failure of the various attempts to
make Italy a province of the Byzantine empire, the
Jews had to suffer much oppression from the Exarch of
Ravenna; but it was not long until the greater part of
Italy came into the possession of the Lombards, under
whom they lived in peace. Indeed, the Lombards passed
no exceptional laws relative to the Jews. Even after
the Lombards embraced Catholicism the condition of the
Jews was always favorable, because the popes of that
time not only did not persecute them, but guaranteed
them more or less protection. Pope Gregory the Great
treated them with much consideration. Under succeeding
popes the condition of the Jews did not grow worse;
and the same was the case in the several smaller
states into which Italy was divided. Both popes and
states were so absorbed in continual external and
internal dissensions that the Jews were left in peace.
In every individual state of Italy a certain amount of
protection was granted to them in order to secure the
advantages of their commercial enterprise. The fact
that the historians of this period scarcely make
mention of the Jews, proves that their condition was
tolerable.
There was an expulsion of Jews from Bologna, it is
true, in 1172; but they were soon allowed to return. A
nephew of Rabbi Nathan ben Jehiel acted as
administrator of the property of Alexander III., who
showed his amicable feelings toward the Jews at the
Lateran Council of 1179, where he defeated the designs
of hostile prelates who advocated restrictive and
odious anti-Jewish laws. Under Norman rule the Jews of
southern Italy and of Sicily enjoyed even greater
freedom; they were considered the equals of the
Christians, and were permitted to follow any career;
they even had jurisdiction over their own affairs.
Indeed, in no country were the canonical laws against
the Jews so frequently disregarded as in Italy. A
later pope—either Nicholas IV. (1288-92) or Boniface
VIII. (1294-1303)—had for his physician a Jew, Isaac
ben Mordecai, surnamed Maestro Gajo.
Early Literature.
Among the early Jews of Italy who left behind them
traces of their literary activity was Shabbethai
Donnolo (died 982). Two centuries later (1150) there
became known as poets Shabbethai ben Moses of Rome;
his son Jehiel Kalonymus, once regarded as a Talmudic
authority even beyond Italy; and Rabbi Jehiel of the
Mansi (Anaw) family, also of Rome. Their compositions
are full of thought, but their diction is rather
crude. Nathan, son of the above-mentioned Rabbi Jehiel,
was the author of a Talmudic lexicon ("'Aruk") which
became the key to the study of the Talmud.
Solomon Paron compiled during his residence at Salerno
a Hebrew dictionary which fostered the study of
Biblical exegesis among the Italian Jews. On the
whole, however, Hebrew culture was not in a
flourishing condition. The only liturgical author of
merit was Joab ben Solomon, some of whose compositions
are extant.
Toward the second half of the thirteenth century signs
appeared of a better Hebrew culture and of a more
profound study of the Talmud. Isaiah di Trani the
Elder (1232-79), a high Talmudic authority, was the
author of many celebrated responsa. David, his son,
and Isaiah di Trani the Younger, his nephew, followed
in his footsteps, as did their descendants until the
end of the seventeenth century. Meïr ben Moses
presided over an important Talmudic school in Rome,
and Abraham ben Joseph over one in Pesaro. In Rome two
famous physicians, Abraham and Jehiel, descendants of
Nathan ben Jehiel, taught the Talmud. One of the women
of this gifted family, Paola dei Mansi, also attained
distinction; her Biblical and Talmudic knowledge was
considerable, and she transcribed Biblical
commentaries in a notably beautiful handwriting (see
Jew. Encyc. i. 567, s.v. Paola Anaw).
About this period Frederick II., the last of the
Hohenstaufen, employed Jews to translate from the
Arabic philosophical and astronomical treatises; among
these writers were Judah Kohen of Toledo, later of
Tuscany, and Jacob Anatolio of Provence. This
encouragement naturally led to the study of the works
of Maimonides—particularly of the "Moreh Nebukim"—the
favorite writer of Hillel of Verona (1220-95). This
last-named litterateur and philosopher practised
medicine at Rome and in other Italian cities, and
translated into Hebrew severalmedical works. The
liberal spirit of the writings of Maimonides had other
votaries in Italy; e.g., Shabbethai ben Solomon of
Rome and Zerahiah en of Barcelona, who migrated to
Rome and contributed much to spread the knowledge of
his works. The effect of this on the Italian Jews was
apparent in their love of freedom of thought and their
esteem for literature, as well as in their adherence
to the literal rendering of the Biblical texts and
their opposition to fanatical cabalists and mystic
theories. Among other devotees of these theories was
Immanuel b. Solomon of Rome, the celebrated friend of
Dante. The discord between the followers of Maimonides
and his opponents wrought most serious damage to the
interests of Judaism.
Innocent III.
The political and social status of the Jews was also
destined to suffer because of the advent to the papal
throne of Innocent III. (1198-1216), the chief
originator of the many persecutions suffered in later
times by the Jews in all Christian lands. This
retrogressive pope, the most bitter enemy of freedom
of thought, set into operation against the Jews most
illegitimate measures; especially did he threaten with
excommunication those who placed or maintained Jews in
public positions, and he insisted that every Jew
holding office should be dismissed. The deepest insult
was the order that every Jew must always wear,
conspicuously displayed, a special badge.
In 1235 Pope Gregory IX. published the first bull
against the ritual sacrifice . Other popes followed
his example, particularly Innocent IV. in 1247,
Gregory X. in 1272, Clement VI. in 1348, Gregory XI.
in 1371, Martin V. in 1422, Nicholas V. in 1447,
Sixtus V. in 1475, Paul III. in 1540, and later
Alexander VII., Clement XIII., and Clement XIV.
The rise of poetry in Italy at the time of Dante
influenced the Jews also. The rich and the powerful,
partly by reason of sincere interest, partly in
obedience to the spirit of the times, became patrons
of Jewish writers, thus inducing the greatest activity
on their part. This activity was particularly
noticeable at Rome, where a new Jewish poetry arose,
mainly through the works of Leo Romano, translator of
the writings of Thomas Aquinas and author of
exegetical works of merit; of Judah Siciliano, a
writer in rimed prose; of Kalonymus ben Kalonymus, a
famous satirical poet; and especially of the
above-mentioned Immanuel. On the initiative of the
Roman community, a Hebrew translation of Maimonides'
Arabic commentary on the Mishnah was made. At this
time Pope John XXII. was on the point of pronouncing a
ban against the Jews of Rome. The Jews instituted a
day of public fasting and of prayer to appeal for
divine assistance. King Robert of Sicily, who favored
the Jews, sent an envoy to the pope at Avignon, who
succeeded in averting this great peril. Immanuel
himself described this envoy as a person of high merit
and of great culture. This period of Jewish literature
in Italy is indeed one of great splendor. After
Immanuel there were no other Jewish writers of
importance until Moses da Rieti (1388), a writer of
Hebrew as elegant as his Italian; but despite this,
his wearisome and unnatural style could not compare
with the pleasing and spirited works of Immanuel.
Benedict XIII.
The Jews suffered much from the relentless
persecutions of the antipope Benedict XIII.; and the
accession of his successor, Martin V., was hailed with
delight by the Jews. The synod convoked by the Jews at
Bologna, and continued at Forli, sent a deputation
with costly gifts to the new pope, praying him to
abolish the oppressive laws promulgated by Benedict
and to grant the Jews those privileges which had been
accorded them under previous popes. The deputation
succeeded in its mission, but the period of grace was
short; for Martin's successor, Eugenius IV., at first
favorably disposed toward the Jews, ultimately
reenacted all the restrictive laws issued by Benedict.
In Italy, however, his bull was generally disregarded.
The great centers, such as Venice, Florence, Genoa,
and Pisa, realized that their commercial interests
were of more importance than the affairs of the
spiritual leaders of the Church; and accordingly the
Jews, many of whom were bankers and leading merchants,
found their condition better than ever before. It thus
became easy for Jewish bankers to obtain permission to
establish banks and to engage in monetary
transactions. Indeed, in one instance even the Bishop
of Mantua, in the name of the pope, accorded
permission to the Jews to lend money at interest. All
the banking negotiations of Tuscany were in the hands
of a Jew, Jehiel of Pisa. The influential position of
this successful financier was of the greatest
advantage to his coreligionists at the time of the
exile from Spain.
The Jews were also successful as medical
practitioners. William of Portaleone, physician to
Ferdinand, King of Naples, and to the ducal houses of
Sforza and Gonzaga, was one of the ablest of that
time. He was the first of the long line of illustrious
physicians in his family.
Influence of the Renascence; Printing.
The revival of interest in the studies of ancient
Greece and Rome stimulated the study of Biblical
literature; and such men as Pico di Mirandola and
Cardinals Ægidius da Viterbo and Domenico Grimani
devoted themselves to the study of Hebrew and Hebrew
literature. This produced amicable relations between
Jews and Christians. At the time of the Medicis Jews
frequented the universities and were active in the
renascence of letters and of the sciences; but they
remained strangers to the fine arts, especially
painting and sculpture. The printing establishments of
Reggio, Pieve di Sacco, Mantua, Ferrara, Bologna, and
Naples were founded at this period. Obadiah of
Bertinoro, eloquent preacher and famous commentator of
the Mishnah; Messer Leon (Judah ben Jehiel) of Naples,
rabbi and physician at Mantua; and Elijah Delmedigo,
the philosopher, flourished at this period. Pico di
Mirandola was a disciple of the last-named, as were
many others, who learned from him the Hebrew language
or studied philosophy under his guidance. Driven from
Germany and Poland by persecutions, many learned
rabbis and Talmudists went to Italy; among these were
Judah Minz, who became rabbi at Padua, and Joseph
Colon, of French extraction, rabbi successively at
Bologna and Mantua. Bothwere opposed to the liberal
ideas then dominant in Italy; and soon strife and
controversy arose between Colon and Messer Leon,
between Minz and Elijah Delmedigo.
Toward the end of the fifteenth century the monks
disturbed the relatively peaceful condition of the
Jews. The most bitter enemy was Bernardinus of Feltre.
Not succeeding in inflaming the Italians with his
calumnies, he instigated a bloody persecution of the
Jews of Trent, then under German rule. The murder of
the infant Simon was attributed to them. In their
favor appeared the Doge of Venice, Peter Mocenigo, and
Pope Sixtus IV., who at first refused to proclaim as a
saint the child found dead, firmly declaring the story
of the ritual murder to be an invention.
Refugees from Spain.
A great number of the exiles from Spain (1492) betook
themselves to Italy, where they were given protection
by King Ferdinand I. of Naples. Don Isaac Abravanel
even received a position at the Neapolitan court,
which he retained under the succeeding king, Alfonso
II. The Spanish Jews were well received also in
Ferrara by Duke Hercules I., and in Tuscany through
the mediation of Jehiel of Pisa and his sons. But at
Rome and Genoa they experienced all the vexations and
torments that hunger, plague, and poverty bring with
them, and were forced to accept baptism in order to
escape starvation. In some few cases the immigrants
exceeded in number the Jews already domiciled, and
gave the determining vote in matters of communal
interest and in the direction of studies. From
Alexander VI. to Clement VII. the popes were indulgent
toward the Jews, having more urgent matters to occupy
them. Indeed, the popes themselves and many of the
most influential cardinals openly violated one of the
most severe enactments of the Council of Basel,
namely, that prohibiting Christians from employing
Jewish physicians; and they even gave the latter
positions at the papal court. The Jewish communities
of Naples and of Rome received the greatest number of
accessions; but many Jews passed on from these cities
to Ancona and Venice, and thence to Padua. Venice,
imitating the odious measures of the German cities,
assigned to the Jews a special quarter ("ghetto").
Isaac Abravanel with his sons exercised a beneficent
influence alike upon the native Jews and the
newcomers. Among the sons the most influential was
Samuel; he and his wife, Benvenida, were on terms of
intimacy with the court of Naples. The daughter of the
governor, Don Pedro de Toledo, was attached to
Benvenida, whom she called mother, and continued her
love and respect after her marriage to Cosimo II.,
Duke of Tuscany. These relations with powerful and
illustrious families made Abravanel the pride and
shield of the Italian Israelites.
The Talmudic school at Padua, presided over by Judah
Minz, enjoyed great repute. Not only young men but
those advanced in life came to him from Italy, from
Germany, and even from Turkey, to attend his lectures.
He died at an advanced age; and his son Abraham
continued the school, though with diminished success.
At Bologna during the first half of the sixteenth
century flourished Obadiah Sforno, who, while
practising as a physician, applied himself with much
earnestness to Biblical exegesis and to philosophy. He
dedicated some of his works, written in Hebrew but
furnished with a Latin translation, to King Henry III.
of France. At Ferrara Abraham ben Mordecai Farissol,
philosopher and exegete, enjoyed the protection of
Hercules I. of Este, a patron of literature, science,
and art. It became common in the Italian cities for
learned Jews to enter into discussions of theological
questions with the monks, and in several of these
Farissol took part. By order of the duke his dis
sertations, originally written in Hebrew, were
translated into Italian, so that his opponents could
prepare a defense. Among those who assisted Reuchlin
in aid of the Jews was Ægidius da Viterbo, head of the
Augustinians, disciple and patron of Elijah Levita,
and student of Hebrew literature and poetry. "Fighting
with you," he wrote to Reuchlin, "we fight for light
against darkness, aiming to save not the Talmud, but
the Church." The watchword which went forth from Italy
and passed on everywhere was "For the salvation of the
Talmud."
In Italy Elijah Levita numbered many Christians among
his disciples. Just as many illustrious Italians,
among them princes of the Church, devoted themselves
with zeal to Hebrew studies, so the Jews with equal
ardor devoted their energies to Italian, which they
spoke with ease and elegance and which they sometimes
employed in their writings. A famous writer was Leo
Hebræus (Judah Abravanel), known through his "Dialoghi
di Amore." His language was fluent and correct, and
his work was everywhere enthusiastically received.
Spread of the Cabala.
In the sixteenth century cabalistic doctrines were
introduced into Italy by Spanish exiles, Abraham
Levita, Baruch of Benevento, and Judah Ḥayyaṭ, among
others. These awakened much interest, and their
mystical ideas appealed to many. Moreover, the fact
that prominent Christians, such as Ægidius da Viterbo
and Reuchlin, were devoted to the Cabala, exercised a
great influence upon the Jews. The wide-spread
dispersion of the Jews had weakened in many minds
faith in a final redemption; so that the new Messianic
interpretations of the cabalists appealed to them. The
indefatigable Abravanel wrote three works in which he
attempted to show the truth of the Messianic
doctrines; but, carried away by the dominant error of
the times, he unwisely fixed a date for the advent of
the Messiah. In Istria—a country which had been under
Venetian dominion—appeared Asher Lämmlein, a German,
who pretended to be a prophet, and who announced with
much solemnity the coming of the Messiah in the year
1502. In this "year of penitence" there were much
fasting, much prayer, and a generous distribution of
alms.
Pseudo-Messiahs.
The movement was so general that even Christians
believed Lämmlein to be possessed of the true
prophetic spirit. The year came to an end, and the
prophecy remained unfulfilled. Discouraged, many
embraced Christianity. The cabalists, however, were
not disheartened, and, supported by reports of
miraculous happenings, they began to revive the
courage of their coreligionistsand to preach again
faith in the coming of the Messiah. They were disposed
to place credence in the most improbable assertions;
and accordingly, when David Reubeni made his
appearance in Italy, he found ready a large body of
supporters. His mission was to gain support,
especially from the pope, to fight the Turks. David
went to Venice and to Rome, where he presented himself
before Pope Clement VII., by whom he was received with
all the honors accorded to an ambassador. The idea of
a crusade of Jews against Turks was a most pleasing
one to the pope. After a year's sojourn in Rome David
was called to Portugal. Here he found a champion in a
Marano in service at the court, who, undergoing
circumcision and changing his name to Solomon Molko,
announced his fealty to Judaism. The Maranos and
cabalists maintained generally that the sack of Rome
in 1527 was a sign of the coming of the Messiah. But
David lost favor, and was expelled from Portugal.
Thereupon the Maranos were condemned to the stake by
thousands. Many succeeded in escaping to Italy; and
the pope, together with the college of cardinals,
wishing to restore prosperity to Ancona, assigned to
the exiles an asylum in that city. Molko also went to
Ancona, where, as a professed Jew, he delivered public
Messianic sermons, and held theological disputations
with illustrious Christians. In some of his sermons he
prophesied a great flood. At Rome, where, after thirty
days of fasting, he presented himself to the pope, he
was favorably received, and was given a safe-conduct
through all the papal dominions. The flood which he
had prophesied really came to pass (Oct., 1530); and
on his return to Rome he was greeted as a prophet.
Accompanied by a faithful servant, he escaped the
Inquisition and reached Ancona, where he again began
his preaching. The fierce persecutions suffered by the
Spanish and Portuguese Maranos induced Molko and
Reubeni to repair to Ratisbon and appear before the
emperors Charles V. and Ferdinand of Austria to
solicit their aid. Josel of Rosheim gave them his
support; nevertheless both enthusiasts were made
prisoners. Molko was burned on the pyre at Mantua, and
Reubeni was imprisoned in Spain, where he died three
years later.
Expulsion from Naples.
The ultra-Catholic party tried with all the means at
its disposal to introduce the Inquisition into the
Neapolitan realm, then under Spanish rule. Charles V.,
upon his return from his victories in Africa, was on
the point of exiling the Jews from Naples, but
deferred doing so owing to the influence of Benvenida,
wife of Samuel Abravanel. A few years later, however
(1533), such a decree was proclaimed, but upon this
occasion also Samuel Abravanel and others were able
through their influence to avert for several years the
execution of the edict. Many Jews repaired to Turkey,
some to Ancona, and still others to Ferrara, where
they were received graciously by Duke Hercules II.
After the death of Pope Paul III., who had showed
favor to the Jews, a period of strife, of
persecutions, and of despondency set in. A few years
later the Jews were exiled from Genoa, among the
refugees being Joseph ha-Kohen, physician to the doge
Andrea Dorea and eminent historian. The Maranos,
driven from Spain and Portugal, were allowed by Duke
Hercules to enter his dominions and to profess Judaism
without molestation. Thus, Samuel Usque, also a
historian, who had fled from the Inquisition in
Portugal, settled in Ferrara; and Abraham Usque
founded a large printing establishment there. A third
Usque, Solomon, merchant of Venice and Ancona and poet
of some note, translated the sonnets of Petrarch into
excellent Spanish verse, which was much admired by his
contemporaries.
While the return to Judaism of the Marano Usques
caused much rejoicing among the Italian Jews, this was
counterbalanced by the deep grief into which they were
plunged by the conversion to Christianity of two
grandsons of Elijah Levita, Leone Romano and Vittorio
Eliano. One became a canon of the Church; the other, a
Jesuit. They violently slandered the Talmud to Pope
Julius III. and the Inquisition; and as a consequence
the pope pronounced the sentence of destruction
against this work, to the printing of which one of his
predecessors, Leo X., had given his sanction. On the
Jewish New-Year's Day (Sept. 9), 1553, all the copies
of the Talmud in the principal cities of Italy, in the
printing establishments of Venice, and even in the
distant island of Candia (Crete), were burned. Still
more cruel was the fate of the Jews under Pope
Marcellus III., who wished to exile them from Rome
because of a charge of ritual murder. He was
restrained from the execution of this cruel and unjust
project by Cardinal Alexander Farnese, who, animated
by a true love for his fellow creatures, succeeded in
bringing to light the infamous author of the murder.
Paul IV.
But the most serious misfortune for the Jews was the
election of Paul IV. as Marcellus' successor. This
cruel pontiff, not content with confirming all the
more severe of the bulls against the Jews issued up to
that time, added others still more oppressive and
containing all manner of prohibitions, which condemned
the Jews to the most abject misery, deprived them of
the means of sustenance, and denied to them the
exercise of all professions. They were finally forced
to labor at the restoration of the walls of Rome
without any compensation whatever. Indeed, upon one
occasion the pope had secretly given orders to one of
his nephews to burn at night the quarter inhabited by
the Jews; but Alexander Farnese, hearing of the
infamous proposal, succeeded in frustrating it. Many
Jews now abandoned Rome and Ancona and went to Ferrara
and Pesaro. Here the Duke of Urbino welcomed them
graciously in the hope of directing to the new port of
Pesaro the extensive commerce of the Levant, which was
at that time exclusively in the hands of the Jews of
Ancona. Among the many who were forced to leave Rome
was the illustrious Marano, Amato Lusitano, a
distinguished physician, who had often attended Pope
Julius III. He had even been invited to become
physician to the King of Poland, but had declined the
offer in order to remain in Italy. He fled from the
Inquisition to Pesaro, where he openly professed
Judaism.
Persecution at Ancona.
The persecutions at Ancona now became barbarous. Three
Jews and a Jewess, Donna Maiora, wereburned alive at
the stake, preferring death to apostasy. The glories
of their martyrdom were sung by three Jewish poets in
elegies which are still recited in the synagogue at
Ancona on the anniversary of the destruction of the
Temple. Another interesting personality was Donna
Gracia Mendesia Nasi. Charles V. and other potentates
had frequently had recourse to the bank founded by her
husband in Portugal. At her husband's death Donna
Gracia moved with her children to Antwerp, and thence,
after protracted wanderings with varying fortunes, to
Venice, Ferrara, Rome, Sicily, and finally to Turkey,
where she succeeded in persuading Sulaiman to force
the pope to set at liberty all the Turkish Jews
imprisoned at Ancona. These tragic events, and in
general the unprecedented cruelty and violence of Paul
IV., induced the Jews to unite and to form a plan of
retaliation by allying themselves with the Jews of the
Levant to boycott the port of Ancona, to stop all
commercial relations with that papal state, and
thereby to cripple its activity. This plan was
partially carried out, and the city of Ancona began
rapidly to decline. Special circumstances, however,
interfered with the complete execution of the scheme,
especially the supreme authority of the pope
throughout Europe, which enabled him to prejudice
popular feeling against the Jews in countries other
than Italy and to intensify the antagonism toward them
in his own land. At the end of a year the condition of
Ancona was so desperate that the magistrates of the
city complained to the pope, urging that if steps were
not soon taken the city would be entirely ruined. As
the league against the pope waned in influence, the
Duke of Urbino, who, as stated above, had hoped to
attract to Pesaro all the Eastern Jewish trade and had
been disappointed in his expectation, withdrew his
protection from the Jews. A very large number of them
emigrated, including Lusitano, who settled at Ragusa.
Even the Duke of Ferrara showed himself less favorable
to the Jews at this time, so that Abraham Usque, being
deprived of the duke's protection, was forced to close
his printing-office at Ferrara.
The School of Cremona.
But it was about this time that there was founded in
the city of Cremona and under the protection of the
Spanish governor of Milan, a famous school, directed
by Joseph of Ettlingen (Ottolenghi). This eminent
Talmudist knew where to gather a goodly number of
hidden copies of the Talmud and of other Jewish works;
and he had other copies printed at Riva di Trento,
which were sent to Germany, Poland, etc. Thus the
study of the Talmud was resumed, and learning
flourished in northern Italy. But peace was concluded
between the pope and the Spaniards; and some fanatics,
aided by certain baptized Jews, persuaded the governor
of Milan to destroy all the Hebrew books in Cremona.
Twelve thousand volumes were burned in public in May,
1559, including all Jewish books except the Zohar,
which, according to the opinion of most of the
cardinals and princes of the Church, contained the
mysteries of Christianity, and the introduction to
which had been printed (Mantua, 1558) by Emanuel
Benevento under Paul IV. with the sanction of the
Inquisition. Somewhat later a complete edition of the
Zohar was printed at a Christian establishment in
Cremona, with an introduction by the baptized grandson
of Elijah Levita, Vittorio Eliano, who had already
contributed so much to the destruction of the Talmud.
This predilection of the Church and the clergy for the
Zohar lasted but a short time; for a few years later
this book was likewise placed upon the Index.
Pius IV., the successor of Paul IV., was in every
respect a better man than his predecessors; but, being
sickly and weak, he submitted to the influence of the
Jesuits. Mordecai Soncino appeared before him to
obtain for the emperor Ferdinand absolution from an
oath made by him to expel the Jews from Prague. The
absolution was granted; and the Jews were favored,
particularly during the succeeding reign of
Maximilian. The Soncinos had established
printing-presses in various cities of Lombardy, also
at Constantinople and at Prague. They printed not only
Jewish works, but also Latin ones, among them the
poems of Petrarch. Permission to reprint the Talmud,
but under another name and with the omission of all
that might be considered contrary to Christianity, was
granted to a deputation which waited on Pius IV. with
a large gift of money. The Talmud was immediately
reprinted at Basel.
Expulsion from Papal States.
But this tolerant pope was succeeded by Pius V., even
more cruel than Paul IV., and excelling him in
wickedness. He brought into force all the anti-Jewish
bulls of his predecessors—not only in his own
immediate domains, but throughout the Christian world.
In Lombardy the expulsion of the Jews was threatened,
and, although this extreme measure was not put into
execution, they were tyrannized in countless ways. At
Cremona and at Lodi their books were confiscated; and
Carlo Borromeo, who was afterward canonized,
persecuted them mercilessly. In Genoa, from which city
the Jews were at this time expelled, an exception was
made in favor of Joseph ha-Kohen. In his "'Emeḳ ha-Bakah"
he narrates the history of these persecutions. He had
no desire to take advantage of the sad privilege
accorded to him, and went to Casale Monferrato, where
he was graciously received even by the Christians. In
this same year the pope directed his persecutions
against the Jews of Bologna, who formed a rich
community well worth despoiling. Many of the
wealthiest Jews were imprisoned and placed under
torture in order to force them to make false
confessions. When Rabbi Ishmael Ḥanina was being
racked, he declared that should the pains of torture
elicit from him any words that might be construed as
casting reflection on Judaism, they would be false and
null. It was forbidden to the Jews to absent
themselves from the city; but many succeeded in
escaping by bribing the watchmen at the gates of the
ghetto and of the city. The fugitives, together with
their wives and children, repaired to the neighboring
city of Ferrara. Then Pius V. decided to banish the
Jews from all his dominions, and, despite the enormous
loss which was likely to result from this measure, and
the remonstrances of influential and well-meaning
cardinals,the Jews (in all about 1,000 families) were
actually expelled from all the papal states excepting
Rome and Ancona. A few became Christians; but the
large majority migrated to Turkey. A great sensation
was caused in Italy by the choice of a prominent Jew,
Solomon of Udine, as Turkish ambassador to Venice to
negotiate peace with that republic, which was
accomplished in July, 1574. As there was pending a
decree of expulsion of the Jews from the Venetian
domains, the Senate was at first in doubt whether it
could treat with this Jew; but later, through the
influence of the Venetian diplomats themselves, and
particularly of the consul, Marc Antonio Barbaro, who
esteemed Udine highly, he was received with great
honors at the palace of the doges. In virtue of this
exalted position he was able to render great service
to his coreligionists, and through his influence Jacob
Soranzo, agent of the republic at Constantinople, came
to Venice. Solomon was successful also in having the
decree of expulsion revoked, and he furthermore
obtained a promise that it should never be reissued
and that those Jews who had left Venice should be
allowed to return and settle in peace. Laden with
honors and gifts, Solomon returned to Constantinople,
leaving his son Nathan in Venice to be educated. The
success of this mission cheered the Jews in Turkey,
particularly in Constantinople, where they had
attained great prosperity.
Azariah dei Rossi.
At that time there lived in Italy a man of the highest
intellectual attainments, one who could have done much
for Judaism had he been possessed of greater courage
or had the times been more propitious—Azariah dei
Rossi (Min ha-Adummim), a native of Mantua and the
author of "Me'or 'Enayim." He went from Mantua to
Ferrara, and thence to Bologna; and everywhere he was
regarded as a marvel of learning. Rossi was conversant
with all Jewish literature, Biblical as well as
Talmudical; he was likewise familiar with Latin and
Christian literature, with the works of the Fathers of
the Church as well as with those of Philo and of
Flavius. The orthodox rabbis opposed the "Me'or 'Enayim,"
the rabbi of Mantua prohibiting its study by young men
under twenty-five years of age; but it found favor in
the world at large and was translated into Latin. A
contrast to Rossi was Gedaliah ibn Yaḥya of northern
Italy, who traveled about as a preacher in that part
of the country. His short history of the Jews,
entitled "Shalshelet ha-Ḳabbalah," is a mixture of
fables and fantastical tales; but it was more
generally appreciated than the careful work of Dei
Rossi. At this epoch there became famous in the field
of the new Cabala Vital Calabrese and Isaac Luria,
both of whom were well received at Safed, the center
of the adherents of the new occult doctrine which was
to bring such great loss to Judaism.
Persecutions and Confiscations.
The position of the Jews of Italy at this time was
pitiable; the bulls of Paul IV. and Pius V. had
reduced them to the utmost humiliation and had
materially diminished their numbers. In southern Italy
there were almost none left; in each of the important
communities of Rome, Venice, and Mantua there were
about 2,000 Jews; while in all Lombardy there were
hardly 1,000. Gregory XIII. was not less fanatical
than his predecessors; he noticed that, despite papal
prohibition, Christians employed Jewish physicians; he
therefore strictly prohibited the Jews from attending
Christian patients, and threatened with the most
severe punishment alike Christians who should have
recourse to Hebrew practitioners, and Jewish
physicians who should respond to the calls of
Christians. Furthermore, the slightest assistance
given to the Maranos of Portugal and Spain, in
violation of the canonical laws, was sufficient to
deliver the guilty one into the power of the
Inquisition, which did not hesitate to condemn the
accused to death. Gregory also induced the Inquisition
to consign to the flames a large number of copies of
the Talmud and of other Hebrew books. Special sermons,
designed to convert the Jews, were instituted; and at
these at least one-third of the Jewish community, men,
women, and youths above the age of twelve, was forced
to be present. The sermons were usually delivered by
baptized Jews who had become friars or priests; and
not infrequently the Jews, without any chance of
protest, were forced to listen to such sermons in
their own synagogues. These cruelties forced many Jews
to leave Rome, and thus their number was still further
diminished.
Varied Fortunes.
Under the following pope, Sixtus V., the condition of
the Jews was somewhat improved. He repealed many of
the regulations established by his predecessors,
permitted Jews to sojourn in all parts of his realm,
and accorded to Jewish physicians liberty in the
practise of their profession. David de Pomis, an
eminent physician, profited by this privilege and
published a work in Latin, entitled "De Medico Hebræo,"
dedicated to Duke Francis of Urbino, in which he
proved to the Jews their obligation to consider the
Christians as brothers, to assist them, and to attend
them. The Jews of Mantua, Milan, and Ferrara, taking
advantage of the favorable disposition of the pope,
sent to him an ambassador, Bezaleel Massarano, with a
present of 2,000 scudi, to obtain from him permission
to reprint the Talmud and other Jewish books,
promising at the same time to expurgate all passages
considered offensive to Christianity. Their demand was
granted, partly through the support given by Lopez, a
Marano, who administered the papal finances and who
was in great favor with the pontiff. Scarcely had the
reprinting of the Talmud been begun, and the
conditions of its printing been arranged by the
commission, when Sixtus died. His successor, Gregory
XIV., was as well disposed to the Jews as Sixtus had
been; but during his short pontificate he was almost
always ill. Clement VII., who succeeded him, renewed
the anti-Jewish bulls of Paul IV. and Pius V., and
exiled the Jews from all his territories with the
exception of Rome, Ancona, and Avignon; but, in order
not to lose the commerce with the East, he gave
certain privileges to the Turkish Jews. The exiles
repaired to Tuscany, where they were favorably
received by Duke Ferdinand dei Medici, who assigned to
them the city of Pisa for residence, and by Duke
Vincenzo Gonzaga, at whosecourt Joseph da Fano, a Jew,
was a favorite. They were again permitted to read the
Talmud and other Hebrew books, provided that they were
printed according to the rules of censorship approved
by Sixtus V. From Italy, where these expurgated books
were printed by thousands, they were sent to the Jews
of other countries.
In the Ducal Dominions.
It was strange that under Philip II. the Jews exiled
from all parts of Spain were tolerated in the duchy of
Milan, then under Spanish rule. Such an inconsistency
of policy was designed to work ill for the interests
of the Jews. To avert this misfortune an eloquent
ambassador, Samuel Coen, was sent to the king at
Alessandria; but he was unsuccessful in his mission.
The king, persuaded by his confessor, expelled the
Jews from Milanese territory in the spring of 1597.
The exiles, numbering about 1,000, were received at
Mantua, Modena, Reggio, Verona, and Padua. The princes
of the house of Este had always accorded favor and
protection to the Jews, and were much beloved by them.
Eleonora, a princess of this house, had inspired two
Jewish poets; and when she was ill public prayers were
said in the synagogues for her restoration to health.
But misfortune overtook the Jews of Ferrara as well;
for when Alfonso I., the last of the Este family,
died, the principality of Ferrara was incorporated in
the dominions of the Church under Clement VII., who
decreed the banishment of the Jews. Aldobrandini, a
relative of the pope, took possession of Ferrara in
the pontiff's name. Seeing that all the commerce was
in the hands of the Jews, he complied with their
request for an exemption of five years from the
decree, although this was much against the pope's
wish.
The Mantuan Jews suffered seriously at the time of the
Thirty Years' war. The Jews exiled from the papal
dominions had repeatedly found refuge in Mantua, where
the dukes of Gonzaga had accorded protection to them,
as they had done to the Jews already resident there.
The next to the last duke, although a cardinal,
favored them sufficiently to enact a statute for the
maintenance of order in the ghetto. After the death of
the last of this house the right of succession was
contested at the time of the Thirty Years' war, and
the city was besieged by the German soldiery of
Wallenstein. After a valiant defense, in which the
Jews labored at the walls until the approach of the
Sabbath, the city fell into the power of the
besiegers, and for three days was at the mercy of fire
and sword. The commander-in-chief, Altringer, forbade
the soldiers to sack the ghetto, thereby hoping to
secure the spoils for himself. The Jews were ordered
to leave the city, taking with them only their
personal clothing and three gold ducats per capita.
There were retained enough Jews to act as guides to
the places where their coreligionists were supposed to
have hidden their treasures. Through three Jewish
zealots these circumstances came to the knowledge of
the emperor, who ordered the governor, Collalto, to
issue a decree permitting the Jews to return and
promising them the restoration of their goods. Only
about 800, however, returned, the others having died.
The victories in Europe of the Turks, who brought
their armies up to the very walls of Vienna (1683),
helped even in Italy to incite the Christian
population against the Jews, who remained friendly to
the Turks. In Padua, in 1683, the Jews were in great
danger because of the agitation fomented against them
by the cloth-weavers. A violent tumult broke out; the
lives of the Jews were seriously menaced; and it was
only with the greatest difficulty that the governor of
the city succeeded in rescuing them, in obedience to a
rigorous order from Venice. For several days
thereafter the ghetto had to be especially guarded.
Leon of Modena.
At the end of the sixteenth and during the seventeenth
century several Hebrew writers attained considerable
fame. Among them was Leon of Modena, who wrote Italian
and Latin verse. At Venice, where there was a
population of about 6,000 Jews, he and Simon Luzzatto
(Simḥah), both holding liberal views, were members of
the rabbinical college. Several Jews of this epoch
wrote elegant Italian prose and verse. Two women merit
special mention, Deborah Ascarelli and Sarah Copia
Sullam. Even more cultured and profound than Modena
was his friend and disciple Joseph Solomon Delmedigo,
who had a special aptitude for mathematics, and whose
instructor was the great Galileo. Simon Luzzatto, in
his "Discorso sullo Stato degli Ebrei," without
concealing their faults, took up the defense of the
Jews. Isaac Cardoso of Verona did likewise, in a work
entitled "Sulla Excellenza degli Ebrei." These liberal
Italian thinkers persistently combated, as did others
in various parts of Europe, the spirit of the Cabala
as well as some of the exaggerated practises
introduced later into Judaism; for this reason their
works did not meet with popularity.
Mordecai of Eisenstadt.
A strange phenomenon in the history of the Italian
Jews was Mordecai of Eisenstadt, a man of commanding
presence, and a disciple and partizan of Shabbethai
Ẓebi. Aḅraham Rovigo and Benjamin Coen, rabbis of
Reggio and Italian cabalists of the school of Zacuto,
were captivated by him and greeted him with
enthusiasm. He proposed that they should go to Rome to
preach Messianic sermons. The majority considered him
a madman, and feared the unlucky consequences of this
foolish agitation; others declared that it would be
necessary for him to become a Christian in order to
achieve his purposes. The Inquisition, failing in its
attempts to convert him, became suspicious; and his
friends counseled him to leave Italy and to go to
Bohemia.
Moses Ḥayyim Luzzatto (born at Padua in 1707; died at
the age of forty) was a savant of the highest order
among Italian Jews famous in science and in Hebrew
poetry. He elaborated a new Zohar, which brought upon
him much trouble. Finally he was persecuted,
excommunicated, and forced to abandon his family and
country and to become a wanderer. Isaac Lampronti
compiled a monumental work of rabbinical science, the
great Talmudical cyclopedia entitled "Paḥad Yiẓḥaḳ."
Isaac Reggio, influenced by Mendelssohn's works, above
all by his German translation of the Pentateuch,
translated portions of the Bible into Italian. He was
the author also of various poetical and philosophical
works.
(see image) Map of Italy Showing Places Where Jewish
Communities Have Existed.
Reaction After Napoleon.
Among the first schools to adopt the Reform projects
of Hartwig Wessely were those of Triest, Venice, and
Ferrara. Under the influence of the liberal religious
policy of Napoleon I., the Jews of Italy, like those
of France, were emancipated. The supreme power of the
popes was broken: they had no longer time to give to
framing anti-Jewish enactments, and they no longer
directed canonical laws against the Jews. To the
Sanhedrin convened by Napoleon at Paris (1807), Italy
sent four deputies: Abraham Vita da Cologna; Isaac
Benzion Segre, rabbi of Vercelli; Graziadio Neppi,
physician and rabbi of Cento; and Jacob Israel Karmi,
rabbi of Reggio. Of the four rabbis assigned to the
committee which was to draw up the answers to the
twelve questions proposed to the Assembly of Notables,
two, Cologna and Segre, were Italians, and were
elected respectively first and second vice-presidents
of the Sanhedrin. But the liberty acquired by the Jews
under Napoleon was of short duration; it disappeared
with his downfall. Pius VII., on regaining possession
of his realms, reinstalled the Inquisition; he
deprived the Jews of every liberty and confined them
again in ghettos. Such became to a greater or less
extent their condition in all the states into which
Italy was then divided; at Rome they were again forced
to listen to proselytizing sermons. But the spark of
the French Revolution could not be extinguished so
easily; a short time after it burst forth into a flame
more brilliant and enduring. In the year 1829,
consequent upon an edict of the emperor Francis I.,
there was opened in Padua, with the cooperation of
Venice, of Verona, and of Mantua, the first Italian
rabbinical college, in which Lelio della Torre and
Samuel David Luzzatto taught. Luzzatto was a man of
great intellect; he wrote in pure Hebrew upon
philosophy, history, literature, criticism, and
grammar. Many distinguished rabbis, of whom several
still fill important pulpits, came from the rabbinical
college of Padua. Zelman, Moses Tedeschi, and
Castiglioni followed at Triest the purposes and the
principles of Luzzatto's school. At the same time,
Elijah Benamozegh, a man of great knowledge and the
author of several works, distinguished himself in the
old rabbinical school at Leghorn.
Modern History.
The return to medieval servitude after the Italian
restoration did not last long; and the Revolution of
1848, which convulsed all Europe, brought great
advantages to the Jews. Although this was followed by
another reaction, yet the persecutions and the
violence of past times had disappeared. The last
outrage against the Jews of Italy was connected with
the case of Mortara, which occurred in Bologna in
1858. In 1859 all the papal states became the united
kingdom of Italy under King Victor Emanuel II.; and
except in Rome, where oppression lasted until the end
of the papal dominion (Sept. 20, 1870), the Jews
obtained full emancipation. In behalf of their country
the Jews with great ardor sacrificed life and property
in the memorable campaigns of 1859, 1866, and 1870. Of
the many who deserve mention in this connection may be
singled out Isaac Pesaro Maurogonato. He was minister
of finance to the Venetian republic during the war of
1848 against Austria, and his grateful country erected
to him a memorial in bronze. There was also erected in
the palace of the doges a marble bust of Samuel
Romanin, a celebrated Jewish historian of Venice.
Florence, too, has commemorated a modern Jewish poet,
Solomon Fiorentino, by placing a marble tablet upon
the house in which he was born. The secretary and
faithful friend of Count Cavour was the Piedmontese
Isaac Artom; while L'Olper, later rabbi of Turin, and
also the friend and counselor of Mazzini, was one of
the most courageous advocates of Italian independence.
The names of the Jewish soldiers who died in the cause
of Italian liberty were placed along with those of
their Christian fellow soldiers on the monuments
erected in their honor.
After the death of Luzzatto the rabbinical college
rapidly declined; the wars and the revolutions that
convulsed Italy absorbed the interest of the Jews
entirely. When the Venetian province became part of
Italy the college was abolished with the intention of
establishing another elsewhere. Somewhat later (1887)
such a college was founded at Rome, which had been
made the capital of the kingdom. The rabbinical school
at Leghorn continued its work. The abandonment of the
Jewish college in Padua not only resulted in a loss to
Jewish studies in general, but was felt throughout
Italy likewise in the scarcity of able Italian rabbis.
The rabbinical college at Rome was opened under the
leadership of Rabbi Mortara of Mantua, Professors
Ehrenreich and Sorani being among the instructors. It
was not successful; and it was transferred to
Florence, where it flourished under the direction of
Dr. S. H. Margulies.
In 1853 the rabbis Pontremoli and Levi founded at
Vercelli a monthly review, which was entitled "L'Educatore
Israelita," for the discussion of vital questions of
Jewish literature and history. This was published with
the title "Vessillo Israelitico" at Casale Monferrato,
and was under the direction of Flaminio Servi until
his death (Jan. 23, 1904). About fifteen years ago
another Jewish magazine, the "Corriere Israelitico,"
was founded by Abraham Morpurgo at Triest, where it is
still published.
The small and obscure old synagogues situated in
narrow streets have been replaced by magnificent and
imposing temples in Milan, Turin, Modena, Florence,
and even at Rome, where the community, which is the
largest in Italy, and contains between 12,000 and
14,000 Jews, is now being completely reorganized. As
head of this most important community Prof. Vittorio
Castiglione of Triest has lately been chosen chief
rabbi. In order to make a place in the service for the
choir, the ritual has been shortened, while the
sermons have become more general and elevated in tone.
In exceptional cases Jews have become ministers of
finance (Leone Wollemberg in 1901, and Luigi Luzzatti,
for the fifth time, in 1903) and minister of war (Ottolenghi
in 1902-3). The Italian Jews, like those of other
countries, are worthily represented in all fields of
human activity; and it may be added that Italy remains
free from the contagion of anti-Semitism with which
too many of its influential European neighbors have
become inoculated.See Apulia; Bari; Bologna; Church
Councils; Ferrara; Florence; Leghorn; Mantua; Padua;
Popes; Rome.G. V. C. |
|
|