Here is an interesting article although it does not go into all the tumultuous circumstances which were involved in the decision to expel from Spain all Jews who would not convert to Christianity. In Isabel's time religious unity was seen as the key to political unity. Although t
he biography of the Queen by William Thomas Walsh has sometimes been accused of being anti-Semitic, Walsh details most sympathetically the sufferings of the Jewish people after they left Spain. To quote:
There is no disputing Isabella’s strong religious principles and deep
piety. She also modernised the army, patronised the arts, raised the
level of education of the Spanish clergy, and, like the Dominican
Bartolomé de las Casas, was concerned for the welfare of the Indians
once America was discovered. But was she anti-Jewish? If she was, then
it is extremely odd for, until the expulsion edict of 1492, Jews
occupied influential and high-ranking positions, such as financiers,
astrologers, lion keepers and physicians at both the courts of Castile
and Aragon.
Incidentally, not only was Isabella’s husband Ferdinand descended
from a Jewish great-grandmother, Paloma of Toledo, but Isabella herself
was delivered at birth by the Jewish court physician Maestre Semaya.
Jews such as Abiathar Crescas, a court astrologer and physician to
Ferdinand’s father, John of Aragon, were crucial to the successful suit
of Ferdinand for Isabella’s hand in marriage. Others such as Pedro de la
Caballeria, a convert cleric who observed both Jewish and Christian
customs and was commander of the city of Saragossa, were responsible for
most of the funding of Ferdinand’s suit. Abraham Senior, a tax farmer
to the monarchs of Castile and a professing Jew, was so valued at court
as to be dubbed the Crown Rabbi and Judaism’s own Castilian archbishop.
For both the Reconquista of Spain from the Moors and the Columbus
expedition, Isabella and her husband relied heavily on loans provided by
their favourite conversos such as Luis de Santangel, comptroller of the
royal household in Aragon, together with prominent Jews such as Don
Isaac Abrabanel, a tax farmer, army contractor and chief spokesman for
Spanish Jewry. The president of the commission set up to investigate
Columbus’s ideas, before he was finally invited to proceed with his
expedition, was the New Christian and Dominican confessor of the queen,
Hernando de Talavera, later first Archbishop of Granada.
What is most likely is not that Isabella was anti-Jewish but that,
alongside others of her time, she became deeply suspicious of those
conversos who were suspected of not having converted fully to
Christianity. Incidentally, such people were often just as deeply
distrusted by Orthodox Jews with whom they frequently lived cheek by
jowl.
For Jews who wished to practise their Judaism, it is probable that
Isabella felt no animosity, which is not to say that she did not wish to
see them convert to Christianity. Abraham Senior, who converted in 1492
and for whom Isabella and Ferdinand stood as godparents, is a case in
point. Indeed, some historians today argue that Isabella’s motive for
issuing the edict of expulsion in 1492 was essentially for proselytising
purposes, due to the influence of the Dominican Tomás de Torquemada. In
this, the queen was a child of her times.
We must totally deplore Isabella’s edict and the appalling suffering
and misery it resulted in for the Sephardic Jews. It is nevertheless
anachronistic to describe her action as an example of ethnic cleansing.
One should not forget that England, France, Hungary, Strasbourg,
Austria, Cologne, Augsburg and Breslau all expelled Jews before
Isabella.
It was ironic that, on the very same tide that Columbus set sail on
his voyage of discovery, the last vessel carrying the Jews that Isabella
and Ferdinand had expelled also left Spain. (August 2 1492 was their
deadline and any Jew who remained after that was liable to be executed
unless he or she embraced Christianity.) Thousands of pitiful refugees
were aboard, bound either for the more tolerant lands of Islam or the
only Christian country – the Netherlands – which would welcome them. (Read more.)
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1 comment:
Thanks Elena Maria for this article; I am no expert on Spain and this was fascinating to read. I can remember as a child asking my mother the name of a plant and she answered with " It used to be called a wandering Jew." I thought well that is a terrible name!
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