Travel Info Online
*Home>>>Castilla y Leon

What is the history of the Jews from Castilla y Leon?


What is the history of the Jews from Castilla y Leon?

I, personally, know less about the Jews, in fact the general history, topography, and culture of Catilla-Le贸n than those of
Andaluc铆a, and I recently travelled through some sites to the East, near Barcelona. Contact me personally, and I麓ll connect you to my photos...I think they麓re pretty nice.

Some of the largest Jewish populations in Spain were, in fact, in Toledo, C贸rdoba, Sevilla. There is a synagogue in Gerona which can trace its history, I believe, to before the first century BCE.

Tarshish? There are scholars who think Tarshish was SPAIN? I never heard that! That麓s one of the reasons I like this site. I keep learning new stuff.

Jonathan makes some good points, but saying that the Spanish Jews who weren麓t killed in the Inquisition made it to America is a bit simplistic, and a bit off the mark, though I麓ve heard there are many who believe Columbus was Jewish, or at least that enough of his sailors were to make him wait until one of our most holy days was over to sail on the first voyage. There are those who dispute that, saying that it was weather that delayed the sailing. But it麓s an interesting theory. One which will not be proven or disproven until technology improves. (I won麓t say never, because that麓s a sure way to eventually be disproven.)

The Jews who were expelled from Spain in 1492 went in many different directions. It has been referred to as the second diaspora. Some went to Northern Africa, many of them still own the keys to their houses in Spain, and still get married in their 15th century clothing. Some went to Turkey, Greece, Yemen, and other places along the Mediterranean. Even today, if you go to these places, people will ask Jews if they are Ashkenazi or Sephardi, in the same way that here in the US, one will be asked if they are Orthodox, Conservative or Reform? Still others went to Portugal, and from there, were expelled again, when Spain swallowed Portugal in the 17th century for about a hundred years. Some wound up in Netherlands, Northern Germany, and Poland. There麓s an area in Poland called Galitzia (sound familiar, anyone?) And they pronounce Yiddish a bit differently than others, and I remember my mother scolding one of her cousins for pronouncing something in that accent, saying: "Who do you think you are? a Galit?" Her tone saying that the cousin was putting on airs...Galits having been those who had more money and education than the poor Eastern European neighbors (Think of Tevye and his friends from Fiddler).

Still others returned to Israel, and were the seed of the current country. The language spoken there, I麓m sure most know, is Hebrew, but many people do not realize that what we learned as "Modern Hebrew", not to be confused with "Ashkenazi Hebrew", which our parents speak/spoke, is actually Spanish accented Hebrew, brought back into the country by those very re-settlers. The new settlers who came in dribbles over the years, and then in floods since the late 19th century, adopted that pronunciation, even though many of them came from Eastern Europe (largely Ashkenazi).

Hmmm. Have I covered it all?

Sign me, a Jewish Hispanista. :)

The ones that were not tortured to death in the Inquisition, made their way to AmeriKa... even many, if not most, of Columbus' crew were jews and there is substantial evidence that Columbus was ALSO a Jew.

Spanish Jews once constituted one of the largest and most prosperous Jewish communities under Muslim and Christian rule, before the Jews of Spain were expelled in 1492. Today, a few thousand Jews live in Spain, but the descendants of Spanish (and Portuguese) Jews, the Sephardic Jews, still make up around a fifth of the global Jewish population. The Jews of Spain speak Ladino, a Romance language, derived mainly from Old Castilian (Spanish) and Hebrew.

Some associate the country of Tarshish, as mentioned in the books of Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, I Kings, and Jonah, with a locale in southern Spain. If Tarshish was indeed Spain, Jewish contact with Iberia may date back to the time of Solomon. The relationship would likely have been one based on trade. Ezekiel 27.12 describes such a connection: "Tarshish did business with you out of the abundance of your great wealth; silver, iron, tin, and lead they exchanged with you for your wares", and as much is demonstrated in I Kings 10.22: "For the king had a fleet of ships of Tarshish at sea with the fleet of Hiram. Once every three years the fleet of ships of Tarshish used to come bringing gold, silver, ivory, apes, and peacocks."

1474-1504 Queen Isabel I de Trastamara of Castilla and Le贸n. She was the daughter of Juan II of Castile and Le贸n by his second wife, Isabella of Portugal.

In 1469 she married Fernando de Arag贸n. This union of the two main Spanish kingdoms laid the foundation of Spain's future greatness. They had five children, including Catherine of Aragon, the first wife of Henry VIII of England, and Juana the Mad. Isabella and her husband (known together as "the Catholic monarchs") are remembered for initiating the Inquisition in 1478, for completing the reconquest of Spain from the Moors and for their ruthless expulsion of the Spanish Jews, both in 1492.

The King Fernando and Isabella were Castilla y Leon. The Jews of Spain who did not convert to the Roman Catholic religion were expelled by them in 1492.

Tags
  Islas Canarias   Islas Baleares   Euskadi   Comunidad de Madrid   Comunidad Valenciana   Catalunya   Castilla y Leon   Andalucia   General - New Zealand   Wellington   Queenstown   Dunedin
Related information
  • What is the history of the Jews from Burgos, Spain?

    In Burgos Spain there is the chapel of Corpus Christi contains the chest which the Cid is said to have filled with sand and subsequently pawned for a large sum to the credulous Jews of Burgos. A...

  • Is Castillian the official language of Spain?

    Castillano is the official language of Spain. In the regions of Basque Galicia Catalu帽a Valencia the local languages are official besides Castillano, what is called spanish.

    ...
  • Is Costa de la Luz Spain forgotten?

    Hi I have been the this area of Spain a few times and it is lovely. We usually head for the Chiclana area and the beaches are fantastic there. The Costa de la Luz is not forgotten by the Spani...

  • Are people in Spain familiar with the Judeo Spanish language also known as Ladino?

    Most people are familiar in Spain with the Judeo Spanish language, but it is mostly among the Jews of Spain. The language has a mixture of Old Castillian with Hebrew words from Bible and Jewish l...

  • What are the popular beer brands from Spain?

    San Miguel beer and Estrella damm seem to be popular in Spain.

    ...
  • What is a good restaurant to eat breakfast in Burgos Spain?

    Contact Address: Carretera Madrid-Ir煤n, km 233 09001 Burgos (Burgos) Tel. +34 947257777 / Tel. Bookings +34 947257777 / Fax +34 947264676 Hotel Restaurant The restaurant is housed i...

  • Did Franco really saved Jews during world war 2 in Spain?

    In a way he did and in a way he didn't . Just by allowing Jews to enter throught Spain in order to escape the Nazis, but he had no intentions of doing that without pressure from the country....

  • Weddings in Spain?

    The Telegraph (UK) article on Spanish weddings could be a good start.

    ...
  •  

    Categories--Copyright/IP Policy--Contact Webmaster