31 March 1492 A.D. Ferdinand and Isabella’s Edict Against the Jews
31 March 1492 A.D. Ferdinand and Isabella’s Edict Against the Jews
Editors. “Ferdinand and Isabella’s Edict Against
Jews.” Christianity.com. May 2007. http://www.christianity.com/church/church-history/timeline/1201-1500/ferdinand-and-isabellas-edict-against-jews-11629894.html. Accessed 30 Mar 2015
The year 1492 is most often associated with Columbus and his discovery
of America. But another event of tragic proportions developed that year. It
gave the world the Sephardic Jews (so called because Sepharadh was a region of
Spain where many Jews had settled).
By 1492, Spain, under Ferdinand and Isabella had just emerged as a
defender of the Roman Catholic faith. The marriage of the two rulers eventually
united Aragon and Castile, although while she lived, Isabella did not yield her
authority to her husband. In Granada, the pair defeated the Islamic Moors, who
had long controlled Spain. Spurred on by the cruel Grand Inquisitor Torquemada,
Ferdinand and Isabella felt they must remove all heretics and non-Christians from their land in order to purge it of pagan influences and firmly
establish the Christian faith.
The fires of the Inquisition had already roared in Spain for twelve long
years. The Inquisition's primary purpose was not to deal with Jews and Muslims.
Any person who professed Christianity and then returned to his or her ancestral faith
was tried and punished. In eight years, the tribunal of Seville alone put 700
persons to death and condemned 5,000 others to life in prison.
But what about those Jews who never adopted Christianity? Their
majesties had a plan for them, too. On this day, March 31, 1492, in the city of
Granada, Ferdinand and Isabella signed an edict banishing from the Kingdoms of
Aragon and Castile all Jews unwilling to receive baptism.
"You know well or ought to know, that whereas we have been informed
that in these our kingdoms there were some wicked Christians who Judaized and
apostatized from our holy Catholic faith, the great cause of which was
interaction between the Jews and these Christians...we ordered the separation
of the said Jews in all the cities, towns and villages of our kingdoms and
lordships and [commanded] that they be given Jewish quarters and separate
places where they should live, hoping that by their separation the situation
would remedy itself."
Separation not having worked, the monarchs gave the Jews until July 31st
to sell their goods and leave the country. They were forbidden to carry gold or
silver out of the kingdom. Worse, although signed in March, the edict was not
publicly announced until the end of April, so the Jews actually had only three
months to convert their property to trade goods.
"Christians" took advantage of the situation and paid
ridiculously low prices for Jewish possessions -- a donkey bought a house; a
piece of cloth or linen purchased an entire vineyard.
In July 1492, the exodus began. When Columbus left on his famous voyage
in August, he could not use the port of Cadiz because of the large numbers of
Jews waiting to board ships in the harbor. Many Jews of Castile went to
Portugal, where they were forced to pay a ransom to remain. Others went to
Italy or the northern coast of Africa. Wherever they went, they were robbed.
Spain's economy paid for its mistreatment of the Jews: many had been
skilled craftsmen. Sultan Bajazet of Turkey warmly welcomed those who escaped
to his country. "How can you call Ferdinand of Aragon a wise king--the
same Ferdinand who impoverished his own land and enriched ours?" he asked.
He employed the Jew in making weapons to fight against Europe.
Bibliography:
Adapted from an earlier Christian History Institute story by Diane
Severance, Ph.D.
"Ferdinand V, King of Castile." Encyclopedia Americana.
Chicago: Americana Corp., 1956.
"Jewish History Sourcebook: The Expulsion from Spain, 1492
CE." The Medieval Sourcebook.
"Spanish Expulsion, 1492." http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/
jsource/Judaism/expulsion.html
Last updated June, 2007
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