The Sephardic Frontier: The

The Sephardic Frontier: The "Reconquista" and the Jewish Community in Medieval Iberia

by Jonathan Ray
The Sephardic Frontier: The

The Sephardic Frontier: The "Reconquista" and the Jewish Community in Medieval Iberia

by Jonathan Ray

eBook

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Overview

No subject looms larger over the historical landscape of medieval Spain than that of the reconquista, the rapid expansion of the power of the Christian kingdoms into the Muslim-populated lands of southern Iberia, which created a broad frontier zone that for two centuries remained a region of warfare and peril. Drawing on a large fund of unpublished material in royal, ecclesiastical, and municipal archives as well as rabbinic literature, Jonathan Ray reveals a fluid, often volatile society that transcended religious boundaries and attracted Jewish colonists from throughout the peninsula and beyond.

The result was a wave of Jewish settlements marked by a high degree of openness, mobility, and interaction with both Christians and Muslims. Ray's view challenges the traditional historiography, which holds that Sephardic communities, already fully developed, were simply reestablished on the frontier. In the early years of settlement, Iberia's crusader kings actively supported Jewish economic and political activity, and Jewish interaction with their Christian neighbors was extensive.

Only as the frontier was firmly incorporated into the political life of the peninsular states did these frontier Sephardic populations begin to forge the communal structures that resembled the older Jewish communities of the North and the interior. By the end of the thirteenth century, royal intervention had begun to restrict the amount of contact between Jewish and Christian communities, signaling the end of the open society that had marked the frontier for most of the century.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780801468261
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication date: 02/15/2013
Series: Conjunctions of Religion and Power in the Medieval Past
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 224
File size: 849 KB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Jonathan Ray is the Samuel Eig Assistant Professor of Jewish Studies in the Theology Department at Georgetown University.

Table of Contents

Contents Acknowledgments vii List of Abbreviations ix Introduction 1 Part I. The Jewish Settler and the Frontier 00 1. The Migration of Jewish Settlers to the Frontier 00 2. Jewish Land Ownership 00 3. Moneylending and Beyond: The Jews in the Economic Life of the Frontier 00 Part II. The Jewish Community and the Frontier 000 4. Royal Authority and the Legal Status of Iberian Jewry 000 5. Jewish Communal Organization and Authority 000 6. Communal Tensions and the Question of Jewish Autonomy 000 7. Maintenance of Social Boundaries on the Iberian Frontier 000 Conclusion 000 Glossary 000 Bibliography 000 Index 000

What People are Saying About This

Paul Freedman

The Sephardic Frontier is a new and convincing account of the Sephardic Jews and the Spanish Reconquest. The Jews are here regarded not as beleaguered communities responding to a Christian onslaught, but rather as participants in the expansion: as immigrants, land-holders, entrepreneurs, and pioneers. Jonathan Ray employs many common themes of medieval Spanish history such as the frontier, cultural exchange, and the coexistence of religious communities. These are seen in a new way, however, as the Jews emerge as individuals, not as a confessional group, individuals with a range of opportunities and challenges brought about by the expansion of the Christian kingdoms. This allows historians to look beyond generalizations about a Golden Age of Spanish toleration followed by persecution and to regard the Jewish experience as more dynamic and individual.

Ross Brann

Jonathan Ray's The Sephardic Frontier is an ambitious and very important reconsideration of the establishment of Jewish settlements and the sociopolitical experience of the Jewish communities in southern Iberia during the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. By focusing on the critical notion of frontier in both the geographical and social sense Ray effectively bridges the historiography of the Jews with the historiography of their neighbors and offers the reader a compelling, complex picture of the richness of Sephardic history and society during a critical period in peninsular history.

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