Darrera modificació: 2020-11-23 Bases de dades: Sciència.cat
Guerson, Alexandra, "Seeking remission: Jewish conversion in the Crown of Aragon, c.1378–1391", Jewish History, 24/1 [=Early Modern Conversion: the Crown of Aragon, and Germany] (2010), 33-52.
- Resum
- Despite the expansion of research on the subject of Jewish apostates in Iberia, or conversos as they are more commonly known, we still know distressingly little about the history of Jews converted to Christianity prior to the riots of 1391. Focusing on the royal registers of King Pere III (Pedro IV of Aragon, 1336–1387) and his son Joan I (1387–1396), this article explores the issue of Jewish apostasy in the Crown of Aragon between 1378 and 1391. While Jewish conversion to Christianity is often described as the result of Christian violence, a closer look at Jewish apostates shows that reasons for conversion varied greatly in the late fourteenth-century Crown of Aragon. Jews sought conversion not only as a way out of economic and legal troubles but also in exchange for specific rewards from the king. Conversion led to much conflict between Jews and conversos and records suggest that the period experienced a rise in conversions. Yet rather than being the product of Christian harassment, which is entirely absent from the records, conversion may have been one of the few avenues left for marginal Jews to weather the declining economic conditions of the late fourteenth century.
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- URL
- https://doi-org.sire.ub.edu/10.1007/s10835-009-9103-1
https://www.jstor.org/stable/25653811
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